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+<title>The Life of Lord Byron</title>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Life of Lord Byron, by John Galt</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Life of Lord Byron, by John Galt
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Life of Lord Byron
+
+Author: John Galt
+
+Release Date: December 9, 2003 [eBook #10421]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF LORD BYRON***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<h1>THE LIFE OF LORD BYRON</h1>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>AUTHOR&rsquo;S INTRODUCTION</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>My present task is one of considerable difficulty; but I have long
+had a notion that some time or another it would fall to my lot to perform
+it.&nbsp; I approach it, therefore, without apprehension, entirely in
+consequence of having determined, to my own satisfaction, the manner
+in which the biography of so singular and so richly endowed a character
+as that of the late Lord Byron should be treated, but still with no
+small degree of diffidence; for there is a wide difference between determining
+a rule for one&rsquo;s self, and producing, according to that rule,
+a work which shall please the public.</p>
+<p>It has happened, both with regard to the man and the poet, that from
+the first time his name came before the public, there has been a vehement
+and continual controversy concerning him; and the chief difficulties
+of the task arise out of the heat with which the adverse parties have
+maintained their respective opinions.&nbsp; The circumstances in which
+he was placed, until his accession to the title and estates of his ancestors,
+were not such as to prepare a boy that would be father to a prudent
+or judicious man.&nbsp; Nor, according to the history of his family,
+was his blood without a taint of sullenness, which disqualified him
+from conciliating the good opinion of those whom his innate superiority
+must have often prompted him to desire for friends.&nbsp; He was branded,
+moreover, with a personal deformity; and the grudge against Nature for
+inflicting this defect not only deeply disturbed his happiness, but
+so generally affected his feelings as to embitter them with a vindictive
+sentiment, so strong as, at times, to exhibit the disagreeable energy
+of misanthropy.&nbsp; This was not all.&nbsp; He enjoyed high rank,
+and was conscious of possessing great talents; but his fortune was inadequate
+to his desires, and his talents were not of an order to redeem the deficiencies
+of fortune.&nbsp; It likewise so happened that while indulged by his
+only friend, his mother, to an excess that impaired the manliness of
+his character, her conduct was such as in no degree to merit the affection
+which her wayward fondness inspired.</p>
+<p>It is impossible to reflect on the boyhood of Byron without regret.&nbsp;
+There is not one point in it all which could, otherwise than with pain,
+have affected a young mind of sensibility.&nbsp; His works bear testimony,
+that, while his memory retained the impressions of early youth, fresh
+and unfaded, there was a gloom and shadow upon them, which proved how
+little they had been really joyous.</p>
+<p>The riper years of one so truly the nursling of pride, poverty, and
+pain, could only be inconsistent, wild, and impassioned, even had his
+temperament been moderate and well disciplined.&nbsp; But when it is
+considered that in addition to all the awful influences of these fatalities,
+for they can receive no lighter name, he possessed an imagination of
+unbounded capacity&mdash;was inflamed with those indescribable feelings
+which constitute, in the opinion of many, the very elements of genius&mdash;fearfully
+quick in the discernment of the darker qualities of character&mdash;and
+surrounded by temptation&mdash;his career ceases to surprise.&nbsp;
+It would have been more wonderful had he proved an amiable and well-conducted
+man, than the questionable and extraordinary being who has alike provoked
+the malice and interested the admiration of the world.</p>
+<p>Posterity, while acknowledging the eminence of his endowments, and
+lamenting the habits which his unhappy circumstances induced, will regard
+it as a curious phenomenon in the fortunes of the individual, that the
+progress of his fame as a poet should have been so similar to his history
+as a man.</p>
+<p>His first attempts, though displaying both originality and power,
+were received with a contemptuous disdain, as cold and repulsive as
+the penury and neglect which blighted the budding of his youth.&nbsp;
+The unjust ridicule in the review of his first poems, excited in his
+spirit a discontent as inveterate as the feeling which sprung from his
+deformity: it affected, more or less, all his conceptions to such a
+degree that he may be said to have hated the age which had joined in
+the derision, as he cherished an antipathy against those persons who
+looked curiously at his foot.&nbsp; <i>Childe Harold</i>, the most triumphant
+of his works, was produced when the world was kindliest disposed to
+set a just value on his talents; and his latter productions, in which
+the faults of his taste appear the broadest, were written when his errors
+as a man were harshest in the public voice.</p>
+<p>These allusions to the incidents of a life full of contrarieties,
+and a character so strange as to be almost mysterious, sufficiently
+show the difficulties of the task I have undertaken.&nbsp; But the course
+I intend to pursue will relieve me from the necessity of entering, in
+any particular manner, upon those debatable points of his personal conduct
+which have been so much discussed.&nbsp; I shall consider him, if I
+can, as his character will be estimated when contemporary surmises are
+forgotten, and when the monument he has raised to himself is contemplated
+for its beauty and magnificence, without suggesting recollections of
+the eccentricities of the builder.</p>
+<p>JOHN GALT.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER I</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Ancient Descent</i>&mdash;<i>Pedigree</i>&mdash;<i>Birth</i>&mdash;<i>Troubles
+of his Mother</i>&mdash;<i>Early Education</i>&mdash;<i>Accession to
+the Title</i></p>
+<p>The English branch of the family of Byron came in with William the
+Conqueror; and from that era they have continued to be reckoned among
+the eminent families of the kingdom, under the names of Buron and Biron.&nbsp;
+It was not until the reign of Henry II. that they began to call themselves
+Byron, or de Byron.</p>
+<p>Although for upwards of seven hundred years distinguished for the
+extent of their possessions, it does not appear, that, before the time
+of Charles I., they ranked very highly among the heroic families of
+the kingdom.</p>
+<p>Erneis and Ralph were the companions of the Conqueror; but antiquaries
+and genealogists have not determined in what relation they stood to
+each other.&nbsp; Erneis, who appears to have been the more considerable
+personage of the two, held numerous manors in the counties of York and
+Lincoln.&nbsp; In the Domesday Book, Ralph, the direct ancestor of the
+poet, ranks high among the tenants of the Crown, in Notts and Derbyshire;
+in the latter county he resided at Horestan Castle, from which he took
+his title.&nbsp; One of the lords of Horestan was a hostage for the
+payment of the ransom of Richard C&oelig;ur de Lion; and in the time
+of Edward I., the possessions of his descendants were augmented by the
+addition of the Manor of Rochdale, in Lancashire.&nbsp; On what account
+this new grant was given has not been ascertained; nor is it of importance
+that it should be.</p>
+<p>In the wars of the three Edwards, the de Byrons appeared with some
+distinction; and they were also of note in the time of Henry V.&nbsp;
+Sir John Byron joined Henry VII. on his landing at Milford, and fought
+gallantly at the battle of Bosworth, against Richard III., for which
+he was afterwards appointed Constable of Nottingham Castle and Warden
+of Sherwood Forest.&nbsp; At his death, in 1488, he was succeeded by
+Sir Nicholas, his brother, who, at the marriage of Arthur, Prince of
+Wales, in 1501, was made one of the Knights of the Bath.</p>
+<p>Sir Nicholas died in 1540, leaving an only son, Sir John Byron, whom
+Henry VIII. made Steward of Manchester and Rochdale, and Lieutenant
+of the Forest of Sherwood.&nbsp; It was to him that, on the dissolution
+of the monasteries, the church and priory of Newstead, in the county
+of Nottingham, together with the manor and rectory of Papelwick, were
+granted.&nbsp; The abbey from that period became the family seat, and
+continued so until it was sold by the poet.</p>
+<p>Sir John Byron left Newstead and his other possessions to John Byron,
+whom Collins and other writers have called his fourth, but who was in
+fact his illegitimate son.&nbsp; He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth
+in 1579, and his eldest son, Sir Nicholas, served with distinction in
+the wars of the Netherlands.&nbsp; When the great rebellion broke out
+against Charles I., he was one of the earliest who armed in his defence.&nbsp;
+After the battle of Edgehill, where he courageously distinguished himself,
+he was made Governor of Chester, and gallantly defended that city against
+the Parliamentary army.&nbsp; Sir John Byron, the brother and heir of
+Sir Nicholas, was, at the coronation of James I., made a Knight of the
+Bath.&nbsp; By his marriage with Anne, the eldest daughter of Sir Richard
+Molyneux, he had eleven sons and a daughter.&nbsp; The eldest served
+under his uncle in the Netherlands; and in the year 1641 was appointed
+by King Charles I., Governor of the Tower of London.&nbsp; In this situation
+he became obnoxious to the refractory spirits in the Parliament, and
+was in consequence ordered by the Commons to answer at the bar of their
+House certain charges which the sectaries alleged against him.&nbsp;
+But he refused to leave his post without the king&rsquo;s command; and
+upon&rsquo; this the Commons applied to the Lords to join them in a
+petition to the king to remove him.&nbsp; The Peers rejected the proposition.</p>
+<p>On the 24th October, 1643, Sir John Byron was created Lord Byron
+of Rochdale, in the county of Lancaster, with remainder of the title
+to his brothers, and their male issue, respectively.&nbsp; He was also
+made Field-Marshal-General of all his Majesty&rsquo;s forces in Worcestershire,
+Cheshire, Shropshire and North Wales: nor were these trusts and honours
+unwon, for the Byrons, during the Civil War, were eminently distinguished.&nbsp;
+At the battle of Newbury, seven of the brothers were in the field, and
+all actively engaged.</p>
+<p>Sir Richard, the second brother of the first lord, was knighted by
+Charles I. for his conduct at the battle of Edgehill, and appointed
+Governor of Appleby Castle, in Westmorland, and afterwards of Newark,
+which he defended with great honour.&nbsp; Sir Richard, on the death
+of his brother, in 1652, succeeded to the peerage, and died in 1679.</p>
+<p>His eldest son, William, the third lord, married Elizabeth, the daughter
+of Viscount Chaworth, of Ireland, by whom he had five sons, four of
+whom died young.&nbsp; William, the fourth lord, his son, was Gentleman
+of the Bedchamber to Prince George of Denmark, and married, for his
+first wife, a daughter of the Earl of Bridgewater, who died eleven weeks
+after their nuptials.&nbsp; His second wife was the daughter of the
+Earl of Portland, by whom he had three sons, who all died before their
+father.&nbsp; His third wife was Frances, daughter of Lord Berkley,
+of Stratton, from whom the poet was descended.&nbsp; Her eldest son,
+William, born in 1722, succeeded to the family honours on the death
+of his father in 1736.&nbsp; He entered the naval service, and became
+a lieutenant under Admiral Balchen.&nbsp; In the year 1763 he was made
+Master of the Staghounds; and in 1765, he was sent to the Tower, and
+tried before the House of Peers, for killing his relation and neighbour,
+Mr Chaworth, in a duel fought at the Star and Garter Tavern, in Pall-mall.</p>
+<p>This Lord William was naturally boisterous and vindictive.&nbsp;
+It appeared in evidence that he insisted on fighting with Mr Chaworth
+in the room where the quarrel commenced.&nbsp; They accordingly fought
+without seconds by the dim light of a single candle; and, although Mr
+Chaworth was the more skilful swordsman of the two, he received a mortal
+wound; but he lived long enough to disclose some particulars of the
+rencounter, which induced the coroner&rsquo;s jury to return a verdict
+of wilful murder, and Lord Byron was tried for the crime.</p>
+<p>The trial took place in Westminster Hall, and the public curiosity
+was so great that the Peers&rsquo; tickets of admission were publicly
+sold for six guineas each.&nbsp; It lasted two days, and at the conclusion
+he was unanimously pronounced guilty of manslaughter.&nbsp; On being
+brought up for judgment he pleaded his privilege and was discharged.&nbsp;
+It was to this lord that the poet succeeded, for he died without leaving
+issue.</p>
+<p>His brother, the grandfather of the poet, was the celebrated &ldquo;Hardy
+Byron&rdquo;; or, as the sailors called him, &ldquo;Foulweather Jack,&rdquo;
+whose adventures and services are too well known to require any notice
+here.&nbsp; He married the daughter of John Trevannion, Esq., of Carhais,
+in the county of Cornwall, by whom he had two sons and three daughters.&nbsp;
+John, the eldest, and the father of the poet, was born in 1751, educated
+at Westminster School, and afterwards placed in the Guards, where his
+conduct became so irregular and profligate that his father, the admiral,
+though a good-natured man, discarded him long before his death.&nbsp;
+In 1778 he acquired extraordinary <i>&eacute;clat</i> by the seduction
+of the Marchioness of Caermarthen, under circumstances which have few
+parallels in the licentiousness of fashionable life.&nbsp; The meanness
+with which he obliged his wretched victim to supply him with money would
+have been disgraceful to the basest adulteries of the cellar or garret.&nbsp;
+A divorce ensued, the guilty parties married; but, within two years
+after, such was the brutal and vicious conduct of Captain Byron, that
+the ill-fated lady died literally of a broken heart, after having given
+birth to two daughters, one of whom still survives.</p>
+<p>Captain Byron then married Miss Catharine Gordon, of Gight, a lady
+of honourable descent, and of a respectable fortune for a Scottish heiress,
+the only motive which this Don Juan had for forming the connection.&nbsp;
+She was the mother of the poet.</p>
+<p>Although the Byrons have for so many ages been among the eminent
+families of the realm, they have no claim to the distinction which the
+poet has set up for them as warriors in Palestine, even though he says&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Near Ascalon&rsquo;s tow&rsquo;rs John of Horestan slumbers;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>for unless this refers to the Lord of Horestan, who was one of the
+hostages for the ransom of Richard I., it will not be easy to determine
+to whom he alludes; and it is possible that the poet has no other authority
+for this legend than the tradition which he found connected with two
+groups of heads on the old panels of Newstead.&nbsp; Yet the account
+of them is vague and conjectural, for it was not until ages after the
+Crusades that the abbey came into the possession of the family; and
+it is not probable that the figures referred to any transactions in
+Palestine, in which the Byrons were engaged, if they were put up by
+the Byrons at all.&nbsp; They were probably placed in their present
+situation while the building was in possession of the Churchmen.</p>
+<p>One of the groups, consisting of a female and two Saracens, with
+eyes earnestly fixed upon her, may have been the old favourite ecclesiastical
+story of Susannah and the elders; the other, which represents a Saracen
+with a European female between him and a Christian soldier, is, perhaps,
+an ecclesiastical allegory, descriptive of the Saracen and the Christian
+warrior contending for the liberation of the Church.&nbsp; These sort
+of allegorical stories were common among monastic ornaments, and the
+famous legend of St George and the Dragon is one of them.</p>
+<p>Into the domestic circumstances of Captain and Mrs Byron it would
+be impertinent to institute any particular investigation.&nbsp; They
+were exactly such as might be expected from the sins and follies of
+the most profligate libertine of the age.</p>
+<p>The fortune of Mrs Byron, consisting of various property, and amounting
+to about &pound;23,500, was all wasted in the space of two years; at
+the end of which the unfortunate lady found herself in possession of
+only &pound;150 per annum.</p>
+<p>Their means being thus exhausted she accompanied her husband in the
+summer of 1786 to France, whence she returned to England at the close
+of the year 1787, and on the 22nd of January, 1788, gave birth, in Holles
+Street, London, to her first and only child, the poet.&nbsp; The name
+of Gordon was added to that of his family in compliance with a condition
+imposed by will on whomever should become the husband of the heiress
+of Gight.&nbsp; The late Duke of Gordon and Colonel Duff, of Fetteresso,
+were godfathers to the child.</p>
+<p>In the year 1790 Mrs Byron took up her residence in Aberdeen, where
+she was soon after joined by Captain Byron, with whom she lived in lodgings
+in Queen Street; but their reunion was comfortless, and a separation
+soon took place.&nbsp; Still their rupture was not final, for they occasionally
+visited and drank tea with each other.&nbsp; The Captain also paid some
+attention to the boy, and had him, on one occasion, to stay with him
+for a night, when he proved so troublesome that he was sent home next
+day.</p>
+<p>Byron himself has said that he passed his boyhood at Marlodge, near
+Aberdeen; but the statement is not correct; he visited, with his mother,
+occasionally among their friends, and among other places passed some
+time at Fetteresso, the seat of his godfather, Colonel Duff.&nbsp; In
+1796, after an attack of the scarlet fever, he passed some time at Ballater,
+a summer resort for health and gaiety, about forty miles up the Dee
+from Aberdeen.&nbsp; Although the circumstances of Mrs Byron were at
+this period exceedingly straitened, she received a visit from her husband,
+the object of which was to extort more money; and he was so far successful,
+that she contrived to borrow a sum, which enabled him to proceed to
+Valenciennes, where in the following year he died, greatly to her relief
+and the gratification of all who were connected with him.</p>
+<p>By her advances to Captain Byron, and the expenses she incurred in
+furnishing the flat of the house she occupied after his death, Mrs Byron
+fell into debt to the amount of &pound;300, the interest on which reduced
+her income to &pound;135; but, much to her credit, she contrived to
+live without increasing her embarrassments until the death of her grandmother,
+when she received &pound;1122, a sum which had been set apart for the
+old gentlewoman&rsquo;s jointure, and which enabled her to discharge
+her pecuniary obligations.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the manner in which this unfortunate lady was treated
+by her husband, she always entertained for him a strong affection insomuch
+that, when the intelligence of his death arrived, her grief was loud
+and vehement.&nbsp; She was indeed a woman of quick feelings and strong
+passions; and probably it was by the strength and sincerity of her sensibility
+that she retained so long the affection of her son, towards whom it
+cannot be doubted that her love was unaffected.&nbsp; In the midst of
+the neglect and penury to which she was herself subjected, she bestowed
+upon him all the care, the love and watchfulness of the tenderest mother.</p>
+<p>In his fifth year, on the 19th of November, 1792, she sent him to
+a day-school, where she paid about five shillings a quarter, the common
+rate of the respectable day-schools at that time in Scotland.&nbsp;
+It was kept by a Mr Bowers, whom Byron has described as a dapper, spruce
+person, with whom he made no progress.&nbsp; How long he remained with
+Mr Bowers is not mentioned, but by the day-book of the school it was
+at least twelve months; for on the 19th of November of the following
+year there is an entry of a guinea having been paid for him.</p>
+<p>From this school he was removed and placed with a Mr Ross, one of
+the ministers of the city churches, and to whom he formed some attachment,
+as he speaks of him with kindness, and describes him as a devout, clever
+little man of mild manners, good-natured, and painstaking.&nbsp; His
+third instructor was a serious, saturnine, kind young man, named Paterson,
+the son of a shoemaker, but a good scholar and a rigid Presbyterian.&nbsp;
+It is somewhat curious in the record which Byron has made of his early
+years to observe the constant endeavour with which he, the descendant
+of such a limitless pedigree and great ancestors, attempts to magnify
+the condition of his mother&rsquo;s circumstances.</p>
+<p>Paterson attended him until he went to the grammar-school, where
+his character first began to be developed; and his schoolfellows, many
+of whom are alive, still recollect him as a lively, warm-hearted, and
+high-spirited boy, passionate and resentful, but withal affectionate
+and companionable; this, however, is an opinion given of him after he
+had become celebrated; for a very different impression has unquestionably
+remained among some who carry their recollections back to his childhood.&nbsp;
+By them he has been described as a malignant imp: was often spoken of
+for his pranks by the worthy housewives of the neighbourhood, as &ldquo;Mrs
+Byron&rsquo;s crockit deevil,&rdquo; and generally disliked for the
+deep vindictive anger he retained against those with whom he happened
+to quarrel.</p>
+<p>By the death of William, the fifth lord, he succeeded to the estates
+and titles in the year 1798; and in the autumn of that year, Mrs Byron,
+with her son and a faithful servant of the name of Mary Gray, left Aberdeen
+for Newstead.&nbsp; Previously to their departure, Mrs Byron sold the
+furniture of her humble lodging, with the exception of her little plate
+and scanty linen, which she took with her, and the whole amount of the
+sale did not yield SEVENTY-FIVE POUNDS.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER II</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Moral Effects of local Scenery</i>; <i>a Peculiarity in Taste</i>&mdash;<i>Early
+Love</i>&mdash;<i>Impressions and Traditions</i></p>
+<p>Before I proceed to the regular narrative of the character and adventures
+of Lord Byron, it seems necessary to consider the probable effects of
+his residence, during his boyhood, in Scotland.&nbsp; It is generally
+agreed, that while a schoolboy in Aberdeen, he evinced a lively spirit,
+and sharpness enough to have equalled any of his schoolfellows, had
+he given sufficient application.&nbsp; In the few reminiscences preserved
+of his childhood, it is remarkable that he appears in this period, commonly
+of innocence and playfulness, rarely to have evinced any symptom of
+generous feeling.&nbsp; Silent rages, moody sullenness, and revenge
+are the general characteristics of his conduct as a boy.</p>
+<p>He was, undoubtedly, delicately susceptible of impressions from the
+beauties of nature, for he retained recollections of the scenes which
+interested his childish wonder, fresh and glowing, to his latest days;
+nor have there been wanting plausible theories to ascribe the formation
+of his poetical character to the contemplation of those romantic scenes.&nbsp;
+But, whoever has attended to the influential causes of character will
+reject such theories as shallow, and betraying great ignorance of human
+nature.&nbsp; Genius of every kind belongs to some innate temperament;
+it does not necessarily imply a particular bent, because that may possibly
+be the effect of circumstances: but, without question, the peculiar
+quality is inborn, and particular to the individual.&nbsp; All hear
+and see much alike; but there is an undefinable though wide difference
+between the ear of the musician, or the eye of the painter, compared
+with the hearing and seeing organs of ordinary men; and it is in something
+like that difference in which genius consists.&nbsp; Genius is, however,
+an ingredient of mind more easily described by its effects than by its
+qualities.&nbsp; It is as the fragrance, independent of the freshness
+and complexion of the rose; as the light on the cloud; as the bloom
+on the cheek of beauty, of which the possessor is unconscious until
+the charm has been seen by its influence on others; it is the internal
+golden flame of the opal; a something which may be abstracted from the
+thing in which it appears, without changing the quality of its substance,
+its form, or its affinities.&nbsp; I am not, therefore, disposed to
+consider the idle and reckless childhood of Byron as unfavourable to
+the development of his genius; but, on the contrary, inclined to think,
+that the indulgence of his mother, leaving him so much to the accidents
+of undisciplined impression, was calculated to cherish associations
+which rendered them, in the maturity of his powers, ingredients of spell
+that ruled his memory.</p>
+<p>It is singular, and I am not aware it has been before noticed, that
+with all his tender and impassioned apostrophes to beauty and love,
+Byron has in no instance, not even in the freest passages of <i>Don
+Juan</i>, associated either the one or the other with sensual images.&nbsp;
+The extravagance of Shakespeare&rsquo;s Juliet, when she speaks of Romeo
+being cut after his death into stars, that all the world may be in love
+with night, is flame and ecstasy compared to the icy metaphysical glitter
+of Byron&rsquo;s amorous allusions.&nbsp; The verses beginning with</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>She walks in beauty like the light<br />Of eastern climes and starry
+skies,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>are a perfect example of what I have conceived of his bodiless admiration
+of beauty, and objectless enthusiasm of love.&nbsp; The sentiment itself
+is unquestionably in the highest mood of the intellectual sense of beauty;
+the simile is, however, anything but such an image as the beauty of
+woman would suggest.&nbsp; It is only the remembrance of some impression
+or imagination of the loveliness of a twilight applied to an object
+that awakened the same abstract general idea of beauty.&nbsp; The fancy
+which could conceive in its passion the charms of a female to be like
+the glow of the evening, or the general effect of the midnight stars,
+must have been enamoured of some beautiful abstraction, rather than
+aught of flesh and blood.&nbsp; Poets and lovers have compared the complexion
+of their mistresses to the hues of the morning or of the evening, and
+their eyes to the dewdrops and the stars; but it has no place in the
+feelings of man to think of female charms in the sense of admiration
+which the beauties of the morning or the evening awaken.&nbsp; It is
+to make the simile the principal.&nbsp; Perhaps, however, it may be
+as well to defer the criticism to which this peculiar characteristic
+of Byron&rsquo;s amatory effusions gives rise, until we shall come to
+estimate his general powers as a poet.&nbsp; There is upon the subject
+of love, no doubt, much beautiful composition. throughout his works;
+but not one line in all the thousands which shows a sexual feeling of
+female attraction&mdash;all is vague and passionless, save in the delicious
+rhythm of the verse.</p>
+<p>But these remarks, though premature as criticisms, are not uncalled
+for here, even while we are speaking of a child not more than ten years
+old.&nbsp; Before Byron had attained that age, he describes himself
+as having felt the passion.&nbsp; Dante is said as early as nine years
+old to have fallen in love with Beatrice; Alfieri, who was himself precocious
+in the passion, considered such early sensibility to be an unerring
+sign of a soul formed for the fine arts; and Canova used to say that
+he was in love when but five years old.&nbsp; But these instances, however,
+prove nothing.&nbsp; Calf-love, as it is called in the country, is common;
+and in Italy it may arise earlier than in the bleak and barren regions
+of Lochynagar.&nbsp; This movement of juvenile sentiment is not, however,
+love&mdash;that strong masculine avidity, which, in its highest excitement,
+is unrestrained, by the laws alike of God and man.&nbsp; In truth, the
+feeling of this kind of love is the very reverse of the irrepressible
+passion it is a mean shrinking, stealthy awe, and in no one of its symptoms,
+at least in none of those which Byron describes, has it the slightest
+resemblance to that bold energy which has prompted men to undertake
+the most improbable adventures.</p>
+<p>He was not quite eight years old, when, according to his own account,
+he formed an impassioned attachment to Mary Duff; and he gives the following
+account of his recollection of her, nineteen years afterwards.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have been thinking lately a good deal of Mary Duff.&nbsp;
+How very odd that I should have been so devotedly fond of that girl,
+at an age when I could neither feel passion, nor know the meaning of
+the word and the effect!&nbsp; My mother used always to rally me about
+this childish amour, and at last, many years after, when I was sixteen,
+she told me one day, &lsquo;O Byron, I have had a letter from Edinburgh,
+and your old sweetheart, Mary Duff, is married to Mr C***.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And what was my answer?&nbsp; I really cannot explain or account for
+my feelings at that moment, but they nearly threw me into convulsions,
+and alarmed my mother so much, that after I grew better she generally
+avoided the subject&mdash;to <i>me</i>&mdash;and contented herself with
+telling it to all her acquaintance.&rdquo;&nbsp; But was this agitation
+the effect of natural feeling, or of something in the manner in which
+his mother may have told the news?&nbsp; He proceeds to inquire.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Now what could this be?&nbsp; I had never seen her since her
+mother&rsquo;s <i>faux pas</i> at Aberdeen had been the cause of her
+removal to her grandmother&rsquo;s at Banff.&nbsp; We were both the
+merest children.&nbsp; I had, and have been, attached fifty times since
+that period; yet I recollect all we said to each other, all our caresses,
+her features, my restlessness, sleeplessness, my tormenting my mother&rsquo;s
+maid to write for me to her, which she at last did to quiet me.&nbsp;
+Poor Nancy thought I was wild, and, as I could not write for myself,
+became my secretary.&nbsp; I remember too our walks, and the happiness
+of sitting by Mary, in the children&rsquo;s apartment, at their house,
+not far from the Plainstones, at Aberdeen, while her lesser sister,
+Helen, played with the doll, and we sat gravely making love in our own
+way.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How the deuce did all this occur so early?&nbsp; Where could
+it originate?&nbsp; I certainly had no sexual ideas for years afterward,
+and yet my misery, my love for that girl, were so violent, that I sometimes
+doubt if I have ever been really attached since.&nbsp; Be that as it
+may, hearing of her marriage, several years afterward, was as a thunderstroke.&nbsp;
+It nearly choked me, to the horror of my mother, and the astonishment
+and almost incredulity of everybody; and it is a phenomenon in my existence,
+for I was not eight years old, which has puzzled and will puzzle me
+to the latest hour of it.&nbsp; And, lately, I know not why, the <i>recollection</i>
+(<i>not</i> the attachment) has recurred as forcibly as ever: I wonder
+if she can have the least remembrance of it or me, or remember pitying
+her sister Helen, for not having an admirer too.&nbsp; How very pretty
+is the perfect image of her in my memory.&nbsp; Her dark brown hair
+and hazel eyes, her very dress&mdash;I should be quite grieved to see
+her now.&nbsp; The reality, however beautiful, would destroy, or at
+least confuse, the features of the lovely Peri, which then existed in
+her, and still lives in my imagination, at the distance of more than
+sixteen years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such precocious and sympathetic affections are, as I have already
+mentioned, common among children, and is something very different from
+the love of riper years; but the extract is curious, and shows how truly
+little and vague Byron&rsquo;s experience of the passion must have been.&nbsp;
+In his recollection of the girl, be it observed, there is no circumstance
+noticed which shows, however strong the mutual sympathy, the slightest
+influence of particular attraction.&nbsp; He recollects the colour of
+her hair, the hue of her eyes, her very dress, and he remembers her
+as a Peri, a spirit; nor does it appear that his sleepless restlessness,
+in which the thought of her was ever uppermost, was produced by jealousy,
+or doubt, or fear, or any other concomitant of the passion.</p>
+<p>There is another most important circumstance in what may be called
+the Aberdonian epoch of Lord Byron&rsquo;s life.</p>
+<p>That Byron, in his boyhood, was possessed of lively sensibilities,
+is sufficiently clear; that he enjoyed the advantage of indulging his
+humour and temper without restraint, is not disputable; and that his
+natural temperament made him sensible, in no ordinary degree, to the
+beauties of nature, is also abundantly manifest in all his productions;
+but it is surprising that this admiration of the beauties of Nature
+is but an ingredient in Byron&rsquo;s poetry, and not its most remarkable
+characteristic.&nbsp; Deep feelings of dissatisfaction and disappointment
+are far more obvious; they constitute, indeed, the very spirit of his
+works, and a spirit of such qualities is the least of all likely to
+have arisen from the contemplation of magnificent Nature, or to have
+been inspired by studying her storms or serenity; for dissatisfaction
+and disappointment are the offspring of moral experience, and have no
+natural association with the forms of external things.&nbsp; The habit
+of associating morose sentiments with any particular kind of scenery
+only shows that the sources of the sullenness arose in similar visible
+circumstances.&nbsp; It is from these premises I would infer, that the
+seeds of Byron&rsquo;s misanthropic tendencies were implanted during
+the &ldquo;silent rages&rdquo; of his childhood, and that the effect
+of mountain scenery, which continued so strong upon him after he left
+Scotland, producing the sentiments with which he has imbued his heroes
+in the wild circumstances in which he places them, was mere reminiscence
+and association.&nbsp; For although the sullen tone of his mind was
+not fully brought out until he wrote <i>Childe Harold</i>, it is yet
+evident from his <i>Hours of Idleness</i> that he was tuned to that
+key before he went abroad.&nbsp; The dark colouring of his mind was
+plainly imbibed in a mountainous region, from sombre heaths, and in
+the midst of rudeness and grandeur.&nbsp; He had no taste for more cheerful
+images, and there are neither rural objects nor villagery in the scenes
+he describes, but only loneness and the solemnity of mountains.</p>
+<p>To those who are acquainted with the Scottish character, it is unnecessary
+to suggest how very probable it is that Mrs Byron and her associates
+were addicted to the oral legends of the district and of her ancestors,
+and that the early fancy of the poet was nourished with the shadowy
+descriptions in the tales o&rsquo; the olden time;&mdash;at last this
+is manifest, that although Byron shows little of the melancholy and
+mourning of Ossian, he was yet evidently influenced by some strong bias
+and congeniality of taste to brood and cogitate on topics of the same
+character as those of that bard.&nbsp; Moreover, besides the probability
+of his imagination having been early tinged with the sullen hue of the
+local traditions, it is remarkable, that the longest of his juvenile
+poems is an imitation of the manner of the Homer of Morven.</p>
+<p>In addition to a natural temperament, kept in a state of continual
+excitement, by unhappy domestic incidents, and the lurid legends of
+the past, there were other causes in operation around the young poet
+that could not but greatly affect the formation of his character.</p>
+<p>Descended of a distinguished family, counting among its ancestors
+the fated line of the Scottish kings, and reduced almost to extreme
+poverty, it is highly probable, both from the violence of her temper,
+and the pride of blood, that Mrs Byron would complain of the almost
+mendicant condition to which she was reduced, especially so long as
+there was reason to fear that her son was not likely to succeed to the
+family estates and dignity.&nbsp; Of his father&rsquo;s lineage few
+traditions were perhaps preserved, compared with those of his mother&rsquo;s
+family; but still enough was known to impress the imagination.&nbsp;
+Mr Moore, struck with this circumstance, has remarked, that &ldquo;in
+reviewing the ancestors, both near and remote, of Lord Byron, it cannot
+fail to be remarked how strikingly he combined in his own nature some
+of the best, and perhaps worst qualities that lie scattered through
+the various characters of his predecessors.&rdquo;&nbsp; But still it
+is to his mother&rsquo;s traditions of her ancestors that I would ascribe
+the conception of the dark and guilty beings which he delighted to describe.&nbsp;
+And though it may be contended that there was little in her conduct
+to exalt poetical sentiment, still there was a great deal in her condition
+calculated to affect and impel an impassioned disposition.&nbsp; I can
+imagine few situations more likely to produce lasting recollections
+of interest and affection, than that in which Mrs Byron, with her only
+child, was placed in Aberdeen.&nbsp; Whatever might have been the violence
+of her temper, or the improprieties of her after-life, the fond and
+mournful caresses with which she used to hang over her lame and helpless
+orphan, must have greatly contributed to the formation of that morbid
+sensibility which became the chief characteristic of his life.&nbsp;
+At the same time, if it did contribute to fill his days with anguish
+and anxieties, it also undoubtedly assisted the development of his powers;
+and I am therefore disposed to conclude, that although, with respect
+to the character of the man, the time he spent in Aberdeen can only
+be contemplated with pity, mingled with sorrow, still it must have been
+richly fraught with incidents of inconceivable value to the genius of
+the poet.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Arrival at Newstead</i>&mdash;<i>Find it in Ruins</i>&mdash;<i>The
+old Lord and his Beetles</i>&mdash;<i>The Earl of Carlisle becomes the
+Guardian of Byron</i>&mdash;<i>The Poet&rsquo;s acute Sense of his own
+deformed Foot</i>&mdash;<i>His Mother consults a Fortune-teller</i></p>
+<p>Mrs Byron, on her arrival at Newstead Abbey with her son, found it
+almost in a state of ruin.&nbsp; After the equivocal affair of the duel,
+the old lord lived in absolute seclusion, detested by his tenantry,
+at war with his neighbours, and deserted by all his family.&nbsp; He
+not only suffered the abbey to fall into decay, but, as far as lay in
+his power, alienated the land which should have kept it in repair, and
+denuded the estate of the timber.&nbsp; Byron has described the conduct
+of the morose peer in very strong terms:&mdash;&ldquo;After his trial
+he shut himself up at Newstead, and was in the habit of feeding crickets,
+which were his only companions.&nbsp; He made them so tame that they
+used to crawl over him, and, when they were too familiar, he whipped
+them with a wisp of straw: at his death, it is said, they left the house
+in a body.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>However this may have been, it is certain that Byron came to an embarrassed
+inheritance, both as respected his property and the character of his
+race; and, perhaps, though his genius suffered nothing by the circumstance,
+it is to be regretted that he was still left under the charge of his
+mother: a woman without judgment or self-command; alternately spoiling
+her child by indulgence, irritating him by her self-willed obstinacy,
+and, what was still worse, amusing him by her violence, and disgusting
+him by fits of inebriety.&nbsp; Sympathy for her misfortunes would be
+no sufficient apology for concealing her defects; they undoubtedly had
+a material influence on her son, and her appearance was often the subject
+of his childish ridicule.&nbsp; She was a short and corpulent person.&nbsp;
+She rolled in her gait, and would, in her rage, sometimes endeavour
+to catch him for the purpose of inflicting punishment, while he would
+run round the room, mocking her menaces and mimicking her motion.</p>
+<p>The greatest weakness in Lord Byron&rsquo;s character was a morbid
+sensibility to his lameness.&nbsp; He felt it with as much vexation
+as if it had been inflicted ignominy.&nbsp; One of the most striking
+passages in some memoranda which he has left of his early days, is where,
+in speaking of his own sensitiveness on the subject of his deformed
+foot, he described the feeling of horror and humiliation that came over
+him when his mother, in one of her fits of passion, called him a &ldquo;lame
+brat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sense which Byron always retained of the innocent fault in his
+foot was unmanly and excessive; for it was not greatly conspicuous,
+and he had a mode of walking across a room by which it was scarcely
+at all perceptible.&nbsp; I was several days on board the same ship
+with him before I happened to discover the defect; it was indeed so
+well concealed, that I was in doubt whether his lameness was the effect
+of a temporary accident, or a malformation, until I asked Mr Hobhouse.</p>
+<p>On their arrival from Scotland, Byron was placed by his mother under
+the care of an empirical pretender of the name of Lavender, at Nottingham,
+who professed the cure of such cases; and that he might not lose ground
+in his education, he was attended by a respectable schoolmaster, Mr
+Rodgers, who read parts of Virgil and Cicero with him.&nbsp; Of this
+gentleman he always entertained a kind remembrance.&nbsp; Nor was his
+regard in this instance peculiar; for it may be said to have been a
+distinguishing trait in his character, to recollect with affection all
+who had been about him in his youth.&nbsp; The quack, however, was an
+exception; whom (from having caused him to suffer much pain, and whose
+pretensions, even young as he then was, he detected) he delighted to
+expose.&nbsp; On one occasion, he scribbled down on a sheet of paper,
+the letters of the alphabet at random, but in the form of words and
+sentences, and placing them before Lavender, asked him gravely, what
+language it was.&nbsp; &ldquo;Italian,&rdquo; was the reply, to the
+infinite amusement of the little satirist, who burst into a triumphant
+laugh at the success of his stratagem.</p>
+<p>It is said that about this time the first symptom of his predilection
+for rhyming showed itself.&nbsp; An elderly lady, a visitor to his mother,
+had been indiscreet enough to give him some offence, and slights he
+generally resented with more energy than they often deserved.&nbsp;
+This venerable personage entertained a singular notion respecting the
+soul, which she believed took its flight at death to the moon.&nbsp;
+One day, after a repetition of her original contumely, he appeared before
+his nurse in a violent rage, and complained vehemently of the old lady,
+declaring that he could not bear the sight of her, and then he broke
+out into the following doggerel, which he repeated over and over, crowing
+with delight.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>In Nottingham county, there lives at Swan-green,<br />As curs&rsquo;d
+an old lady as ever was seen;<br />And when she does die, which I hope
+will be soon,<br />She firmly believes she will go to the moon.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Mrs Byron, by the accession of her son to the family honours and
+estate, received no addition to her small income; and he, being a minor,
+was unable to make any settlement upon her.&nbsp; A representation of
+her case was made to Government, and in consequence she was placed on
+the pension-list for &pound;300 a-year.</p>
+<p>Byron not having received any benefit from the Nottingham quack,
+was removed to London, put under the care of Dr Bailey, and placed in
+the school of Dr Glennie, at Dulwich; Mrs Byron herself took a house
+on Sloan Terrace.&nbsp; Moderation in all athletic exercises was prescribed
+to the boy, but Dr Glennie had some difficulty in restraining his activity.&nbsp;
+He was quiet enough while in the house with the Doctor, but no sooner
+was he released to play, than he showed as much ambition to excel in
+violent exercises as the most robust youth of the school; an ambition
+common to young persons who have the misfortune to labour under bodily
+defects.</p>
+<p>While under the charge of Dr Glennie, he was playful, good-humoured,
+and beloved by his companions; and addicted to reading history and poetry
+far beyond the usual scope of his age.&nbsp; In these studies he showed
+a predilection for the Scriptures; and certainly there are many traces
+in his works which show that, whatever the laxity of his religious principles
+may have been in after-life, he was not unacquainted with the records
+and history of our religion.</p>
+<p>During this period, Mrs Byron often indiscreetly interfered with
+the course of his education; and if his classical studies were in consequence
+not so effectually conducted as they might have been, his mind derived
+some of its best nutriment from the loose desultory course of his reading.</p>
+<p>Among the books to which the boys at Dr Glennie&rsquo;s school had
+access was a pamphlet containing the narrative of a shipwreck on the
+coast of Arracan, filled with impressive descriptions.&nbsp; It had
+not attracted much public attention, but it was a favourite with the
+pupils, particularly with Byron, and furnished him afterwards with the
+leading circumstances in the striking description of the shipwreck in
+<i>Don Juan.</i></p>
+<p>Although the rhymes upon the lunar lady of Notts are supposed to
+have been the first twitter of his muse, he has said himself, &ldquo;My
+first dash into poetry was as early as 1800.&nbsp; It was the ebullition
+of a passion for my first cousin, Margaret Parker.&nbsp; I was then
+about twelve, she rather older, perhaps a year.&rdquo;&nbsp; And it
+is curious to remark, that in his description of this beautiful girl
+there is the same lack of animal admiration which we have noticed in
+all his loves; he says of her:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not recollect scarcely anything equal to the transparent
+beauty of my cousin, or to the sweetness of her temper, during the short
+period of our intimacy: she looked as if she had been made out of a
+rainbow, all beauty and peace.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is certainly poetically
+expressed; but there was more true love in Pygmalion&rsquo;s passion
+for his statue, and in the Parisian maiden&rsquo;s adoration of the
+Apollo.</p>
+<p>When he had been nearly two years under the tuition of Dr Glennie,
+he was removed to Harrow, chiefly in consequence of his mother&rsquo;s
+interference with his studies, and especially by withdrawing him often
+from school.</p>
+<p>During the time he was under the care of Dr Glennie, he was more
+amiable than at any other period of his life, a circumstance which justifies
+the supposition, that, had he been left more to the discipline of that
+respectable person, he would have proved a better man; for, however
+much his heart afterwards became incrusted with the leprosy of selfishness,
+at this period his feelings were warm and kind.&nbsp; Towards his nurse
+he evinced uncommon affection, which he cherished as long as she lived.&nbsp;
+He presented her with his watch, the first he possessed, and also a
+full-length miniature of himself, when he was only between seven and
+eight years old, representing him with a profusion of curling locks,
+and in his hands a bow and arrow.&nbsp; The sister of this woman had
+been his first nurse, and after he had left Scotland he wrote to her,
+in a spirit which betokened a gentle and sincere heart, informing her
+with much joy of a circumstance highly important to himself.&nbsp; It
+was to tell her that at last he had got his foot so far restored as
+to be able to put on a common boot, an event which he was sure would
+give her great pleasure; to himself it is difficult to imagine any incident
+which could have been more gratifying.</p>
+<p>I dwell with satisfaction on these descriptions of his early dispositions;
+for, although there are not wanting instances of similar warm-heartedness
+in his later years, still he never formed any attachments so pure and
+amiable after he went to Harrow.&nbsp; The change of life came over
+him, and when the vegetable period of boyhood was past, the animal passions
+mastered all the softer affections of his character.</p>
+<p>In the summer of 1801 he accompanied his mother to Cheltenham, and
+while he resided there the views of the Malvern hills recalled to his
+memory his enjoyments amid the wilder scenery of Aberdeenshire.&nbsp;
+The recollections were reimpressed on his heart and interwoven with
+his strengthened feelings.&nbsp; But a boy gazing with emotion on the
+hills at sunset, because they remind him of the mountains where he passed
+his childhood, is no proof that he is already in heart and imagination
+a poet.&nbsp; To suppose so is to mistake the materials for the building.</p>
+<p>The delight of Byron in contemplating the Malvern hills, was not
+because they resembled the scenery of Lochynagar, but because they awoke
+trains of thought and fancy, associated with recollections of that scenery.&nbsp;
+The poesy of the feeling lay not in the beauty of the objects, but in
+the moral effect of the traditions, to which these objects served as
+talismans of the memory.&nbsp; The scene at sunset reminded him of the
+Highlands, but it was those reminiscences which similar scenes recalled,
+that constituted the impulse which gave life and elevation to his reflections.&nbsp;
+There is not more poesy in the sight of mountains than of plains; it
+is the local associations that throw enchantment over all scenes, and
+resemblance that awakens them, binding them to new connections: nor
+does this admit of much controversy; for mountainous regions, however
+favourable to musical feeling, are but little to poetical.</p>
+<p>The Welsh have no eminent bard; the Swiss have no renown as poets;
+nor are the mountainous regions of Greece, nor of the Apennines, celebrated
+for poetry.&nbsp; The Highlands of Scotland, save the equivocal bastardy
+of Ossian, have produced no poet of any fame, and yet mountainous countries
+abound in local legends, which would seem to be at variance with this
+opinion, were it not certain, though I cannot explain the cause, that
+local poetry, like local language or local melody, is in proportion
+to the interest it awakens among the local inhabitants, weak and ineffectual
+in its influence on the sentiments of the general world.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Rans
+de Vaches,&rdquo; the most celebrated of all local airs, is tame and
+commonplace,&mdash;unmelodious, to all ears but those of the Swiss &ldquo;forlorn
+in a foreign land.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While in Cheltenham, Mrs Byron consulted a fortune-teller respecting
+the destinies of her son, and according to her feminine notions, she
+was very cunning and guarded with the sybil, never suspecting that she
+might have been previously known, and, unconscious to herself, an object
+of interest to the spaewife.&nbsp; She endeavoured to pass herself off
+as a maiden lady, and regarded it as no small testimony of the wisdom
+of the oracle, that she declared her to be not only a married woman,
+but the mother of a son who was lame.&nbsp; After such a marvellous
+proof of second-sightedness, it may easily be conceived with what awe
+and faith she listened to the prediction, that his life should be in
+danger from poison before he was of age, and that he should be twice
+married; the second time to a foreign lady.&nbsp; Whether it was this
+same fortune-teller who foretold that he would, in his twenty-seventh
+year, incur some great misfortune, is not certain; but, considering
+his unhappy English marriage, and his subsequent Italian <i>liaison</i>
+with the Countess Guiccioli, the marital prediction was not far from
+receiving its accomplishment.&nbsp; The fact of his marriage taking
+place in his twenty-seventh year, is at least a curious circumstance,
+and has been noticed by himself with a sentiment of superstition.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Placed at Harrow</i>&mdash;<i>Progress there</i>&mdash;<i>Love
+for Miss Chaworth</i>&mdash;<i>His Reading</i>&mdash;<i>Oratorical Powers</i></p>
+<p>In passing from the quiet academy of Dulwich Grove to the public
+school of Harrow, the change must have been great to any boy&mdash;to
+Byron it was punishment; and for the first year and a half he hated
+the place.&nbsp; In the end, however, he rose to be a leader in all
+the sports and mischiefs of his schoolfellows; but it never could be
+said that he was a popular boy, however much he was distinguished for
+spirit and bravery; for if he was not quarrelsome, he was sometimes
+vindictive.&nbsp; Still it could not have been to any inveterate degree;
+for, undoubtedly, in his younger years, he was susceptible of warm impressions
+from gentle treatment, and his obstinacy and arbitrary humour were perhaps
+more the effects of unrepressed habit than of natural bias; they were
+the prickles which surrounded his genius in the bud.</p>
+<p>At Harrow he acquired no distinction as a student; indeed, at no
+period was he remarkable for steady application.&nbsp; Under Dr Glennie
+he had made but little progress; and it was chiefly in consequence of
+his backwardness that he was removed from his academy.&nbsp; When placed
+with Dr Drury, it was with an intimation that he had a cleverness about
+him, but that his education had been neglected.</p>
+<p>The early dislike which Byron felt towards the Earl of Carlisle is
+abundantly well known, and he had the magnanimity to acknowledge that
+it was in some respects unjust.&nbsp; But the antipathy was not all
+on one side; nor will it be easy to parallel the conduct of the Earl
+with that of any guardian.&nbsp; It is but justice, therefore, to Byron,
+to make the public aware that the dislike began on the part of Lord
+Carlisle, and originated in some distaste which he took to Mrs Byron&rsquo;s
+manners, and at the trouble she sometimes gave him on account of her
+son.</p>
+<p>Dr Drury, in his communication to Mr Moore respecting the early history
+of Byron, mentions a singular circumstance as to this subject, which
+we record with the more pleasure, because Byron has been blamed, and
+has blamed himself, for his irreverence towards Lord Carlisle, while
+it appears that the fault lay with the Earl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After some continuance at Harrow,&rdquo; says Dr Drury, &ldquo;and
+when the powers of his mind had begun to expand, the late Lord Carlisle,
+his relation, desired to see me in town.&nbsp; I waited on his Lordship.&nbsp;
+His object was to inform me of Lord Byron&rsquo;s expectations of property
+when he came of age, which he represented as contracted, and to inquire
+respecting his abilities.&nbsp; On the former circumstance I made no
+remark; as to the latter, I replied, &lsquo;He has talents, my Lord,
+which will add lustre to his rank.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Indeed,&rsquo;
+said his Lordship, with a degree of surprise, that, according to my
+feelings, did not express in it all the satisfaction I expected.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lord Carlisle had, indeed, much of the Byron humour in him.&nbsp;
+His mother was a sister of the homicidal lord, and possessed some of
+the family peculiarity: she was endowed with great talent, and in her
+latter days she exhibited great singularity.&nbsp; She wrote beautiful
+verses and piquant epigrams among others, there is a poetical effusion
+of her pen addressed to Mrs Greville, on her <i>Ode to Indifference</i>,
+which, at the time, was much admired, and has been, with other poems
+of her Ladyship&rsquo;s, published in Pearch&rsquo;s collection.&nbsp;
+After moving, for a long time, as one of the most brilliant orbs in
+the sphere of fashion, she suddenly retired, and like her morose brother,
+shut herself up from the world.&nbsp; While she lived in this seclusion,
+she became an object of the sportive satire of the late Mr Fox, who
+characterized her as</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Carlisle, recluse in pride and rags.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>I have heard a still coarser apostrophe by the same gentleman.&nbsp;
+It seems they had quarrelled, and on his leaving her in the drawing-room,
+she called after him, that he might go about his business, for she did
+not care two skips of a louse for him.&nbsp; On coming to the hall,
+finding paper and ink on the table, he wrote two lines in answer, and
+sent it up to her Ladyship, to the effect that she always spoke of what
+was running in her head.</p>
+<p>Byron has borne testimony to the merits of his guardian, her son,
+as a tragic poet, by characterizing his publications as paper books.&nbsp;
+It is, however, said that they nevertheless showed some talent, and
+that <i>The Father&rsquo;s Revenge</i>, one of the tragedies, was submitted
+to the judgment of Dr Johnson, who did not despise it.</p>
+<p>But to return to the progress of Byron at Harrow; it is certain that
+notwithstanding the affectionate solicitude of Dr Drury to encourage
+him, he never became an eminent scholar; at least, we have his own testimony
+to that effect, in the fourth canto of <i>Childe Harold</i>; the lines,
+however, in which that testimony stands recorded, are among the weakest
+he ever penned.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;May he who will his recollections rake<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+quote in classic raptures, and awake<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The hills
+with Latin echoes: I abhorr&rsquo;d<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Too much
+to conquer, for the poet&rsquo;s sake,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The drill&rsquo;d,
+dull lesson forced down word by word,<br />In my repugnant youth with
+pleasure to record.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And, as an apology for the defect, he makes the following remarks
+in a note subjoined:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish to express that we become tired of the task before
+we can comprehend the beauty; that we learn by rote before we can get
+by heart; that the freshness is worn away, and the future pleasure and
+advantage deadened and destroyed by the didactic anticipation, at an
+age when we can neither feel nor understand the power of compositions,
+which it requires an acquaintance with life, as well as Latin and Greek,
+to relish or to reason upon.&nbsp; For the same reason, we never can
+be aware of the fulness of some of the finest passages of Shakspeare
+(&lsquo;To be, or not to be,&rsquo; for instance), from the habit of
+having them hammered into us at eight years old, as an exercise not
+of mind but of memory; so that when we are old enough to enjoy them,
+the taste is gone, and the appetite palled.&nbsp; In some parts of the
+Continent, young persons are taught from mere common authors, and do
+not read the best classics until their maturity.&nbsp; I certainly do
+not speak on this point from any pique or aversion towards the place
+of my education.&nbsp; I was not a slow or an idle boy; and I believe
+no one could be more attached to Harrow than I have always been, and
+with reason: a part of the time passed there was the happiest of my
+life; and my preceptor, the Rev. Dr Joseph Drury, was the best and worthiest
+friend I ever possessed; whose warnings I have remembered but too well,
+though too late, when I have erred; and whose counsels I have but followed
+when I have done well and wisely.&nbsp; If ever this imperfect record
+of my feelings towards him should reach his eyes, let it remind him
+of one who never thinks of him but with gratitude and veneration; of
+one who would more gladly boast of having been his pupil if, by more
+closely following his injunctions, he could reflect any honour upon
+his instructor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lord Byron, however, is not singular in his opinion of the inutility
+of premature classical studies; and notwithstanding the able manner
+in which the late Dean Vincent defended public education, we have some
+notion that his reasoning upon this point will not be deemed conclusive.&nbsp;
+Milton, says Dr Vincent, complained of the years that were wasted in
+teaching the dead languages.&nbsp; Cowley also complained that classical
+education taught words only and not things; and Addison deemed it an
+inexpiable error, that boys with genius or without were all to be bred
+poets indiscriminately.&nbsp; As far, then, as respects the education
+of a poet, we should think that the names of Milton, Cowley, Addison,
+and Byron would go well to settle the question; especially when it is
+recollected how little Shakspeare was indebted to the study of the classics,
+and that Burns knew nothing of them at all.&nbsp; I do not, however,
+adopt the opinion as correct; neither do I think that Dean Vincent took
+a right view of the subject; for, as discipline, the study of the classics
+may be highly useful, at the same time, the mere hammering of Greek
+and Latin into English cannot be very conducive to the refinement of
+taste or the exaltation of sentiment.&nbsp; Nor is there either common
+sense or correct logic in the following observations made on the passage
+and note, quoted by the anonymous author of <i>Childe Harold&rsquo;s
+Monitor.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;This doctrine of antipathies, contracted by the impatience
+of youth against the noblest authors of antiquity, from the circumstance
+of having been made the vehicle of early instruction, is a most dangerous
+doctrine indeed; since it strikes at the root, not only of all pure
+taste, but of all praiseworthy industry.&nbsp; It would, if acted upon
+(as Harold by the mention of the Continental practice of using inferior
+writers in the business of tuition would seem to recommend), destroy
+the great source of the intellectual vigour of our countrymen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This is, undoubtedly, assuming too much; for those who have objected
+to the years &ldquo;wasted&rdquo; in teaching the dead languages, do
+not admit that the labour of acquiring them either improves the taste
+or adds to the vigour of the understanding; and, therefore, before the
+soundness of the opinion of Milton, of Cowley, of Addison, and of many
+other great men can be rejected, it falls on those who are of Dean Vincent&rsquo;s
+opinion, and that of <i>Childe Harold&rsquo;s Monitor</i>, to prove
+that the study of the learned languages is of so much primary importance
+as they claim for it.</p>
+<p>But it appears that Byron&rsquo;s mind, during the early period of
+his residence at Harrow, was occupied with another object than his studies,
+and which may partly account for his inattention to them.&nbsp; He fell
+in love with Mary Chaworth.&nbsp; &ldquo;She was,&rdquo; he is represented
+to have said, &ldquo;several years older than myself, but at my age
+boys like something older than themselves, as they do younger later
+in life.&nbsp; Our estates adjoined, but owing to the unhappy circumstances
+of the feud (the affair of the fatal duel), our families, as is generally
+the case with neighbours, who happen to be near relations, were never
+on terms of more than common civility, scarcely those.&nbsp; She was
+the beau ideal of all that my youthful fancy could paint of the beautiful!
+and I have taken all my fables about the celestial nature of women from
+the perfection my imagination created in her.&nbsp; I say created, for
+I found her, like the rest of the sex, anything but angelic.&nbsp; I
+returned to Harrow, after my trip to Cheltenham, more deeply enamoured
+than ever, and passed the next holidays at Newstead.&nbsp; I now began
+to fancy myself a man, and to make love in earnest.&nbsp; Our meetings
+were stolen ones, and my letters passed through the medium of a confidant.&nbsp;
+A gate leading from Mr Chaworth&rsquo;s grounds to those of my mother,
+was the place of our interviews, but the ardour was all on my side;
+I was serious, she was volatile.&nbsp; She liked me as a younger brother,
+and treated and laughed at me as a boy; she, however, gave me her picture,
+and that was something to make verses upon.&nbsp; Had I married Miss
+Chaworth, perhaps the whole tenor of my life would have been different;
+she jilted me, however, but her marriage proved anything but a happy
+one.&rdquo;&nbsp; It is to this attachment that we are indebted for
+the beautiful poem of <i>The Dream</i>, and the stanzas beginning</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Oh, had my fate been joined to thine!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Although this love affair a little interfered with his Greek and
+Latin, his time was not passed without some attention to reading.&nbsp;
+Until he was eighteen years old, he had never seen a review; but his
+general information was so extensive on modern topics, as to induce
+a suspicion that he could only have collected so much information from
+reviews, as he was never seen reading, but always idle, and in mischief,
+or at play.&nbsp; He was, however, a devourer of books; he read eating,
+read in bed, read when no one else read, and had perused all sorts of
+books from the time he first could spell, but had never read a review,
+and knew not what the name implied.</p>
+<p>It should be here noticed, that while he was at Harrow, his qualities
+were rather oratorical than poetical; and if an opinion had then been
+formed of the likely result of his character, the prognostication would
+have led to the expectation of an orator.&nbsp; Altogether, his conduct
+at Harrow indicated a clever, but not an extraordinary boy.&nbsp; He
+formed a few friendships there, in which his attachment appears to have
+been, in some instances, remarkable.&nbsp; The late Duke of Dorset was
+his fag, and he was not considered a very hard taskmaster.&nbsp; He
+certainly did not carry with him from Harrow any anticipation of that
+splendid career he was destined to run as a poet.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Character at Harrow</i>&mdash;<i>Poetical Predilections</i>&mdash;<i>Byron
+at Cambridge</i>&mdash;<i>His</i> &ldquo;<i>Hours of Idleness</i>&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In reconsidering the four years which Byron spent at Harrow, while
+we can clearly trace the development of the sensibilities of his character,
+and an increased tension of his susceptibility, by which impressions
+became more acute and delicate, it seems impossible not to perceive
+by the records which he has himself left of his feelings, that something
+morbid was induced upon them.&nbsp; Had he not afterwards so magnificently
+distinguished himself as a poet, it is not probable that he would have
+been recollected by his schoolfellows as having been in any respect
+different from the common herd.&nbsp; His activity and spirit, in their
+controversies and quarrels, were but the outbreakings of that temperament
+which the discipline of riper years, and the natural awe of the world,
+afterward reduced into his hereditary cast of character, in which so
+much of sullenness and misanthropy was exhibited.&nbsp; I cannot, however,
+think that there was anything either in the nature of his pastimes,
+or his studies, unfavourable to the formation of the poetical character.&nbsp;
+His amusements were active; his reading, though without method, was
+yet congenial to his impassioned imagination; and the phantom of an
+enthusiastic attachment, of which Miss Chaworth was not the only object
+(for it was altogether intellectual, and shared with others), were circumstances
+calculated to open various sources of reflection, and to concentrate
+the elements of an energetic and original mind.</p>
+<p>But it is no easy matter to sketch what may have been the outline
+of a young poet&rsquo;s education.&nbsp; The supposition that poets
+must be dreamers, because there is often much dreaminess in poesy, is
+a mere hypothesis.&nbsp; Of all the professors of metaphysical discernment,
+poets require the finest tact; and contemplation is with them a sign
+of inward abstract reflection, more than of any process of mind by which
+resemblance is traced, and associations awakened.&nbsp; There is no
+account of any great poet, whose genius was of that dreamy cartilaginous
+kind, which hath its being in haze, and draws its nourishment from lights
+and shadows; which ponders over the mysteries of trees, and interprets
+the oracles of babbling waters.&nbsp; They have all been men&mdash;worldly
+men, different only from others in reasoning more by feeling than induction.&nbsp;
+Directed by impulse, in a greater degree than other men, poets are apt
+to be betrayed into actions which make them singular, as compared by
+those who are less imaginative; but the effects of earnestness should
+never be confounded with the qualities of talent.</p>
+<p>No greater misconception has ever been obtruded upon the world as
+philosophic criticism, than the theory of poets being the offspring
+of &ldquo;capering lambkins and cooing doves&rdquo;; for they differ
+in no respect from other men of high endowment, but in the single circumstance
+of the objects to which their taste is attracted.&nbsp; The most vigorous
+poets, those who have influenced longest and are most quoted, have indeed
+been all men of great shrewdness of remark, and anything but your chin-on-hand
+contemplators.&nbsp; To adduce many instances is unnecessary.&nbsp;
+Are there any symptoms of the gelatinous character of the effusions
+of the Lakers in the compositions of Homer?&nbsp; The <i>London Gazette</i>
+does not tell us things more like facts than the narratives of Homer,
+and it often states facts that are much more like fictions than his
+most poetical inventions.&nbsp; So much is this the case with the works
+of all the higher poets, that as they recede from that worldly standard
+which is found in the Epics of Homer, they sink in the scale of poets.&nbsp;
+In what does the inferiority of Virgil, for example, consist, but in
+his having hatched fancies in his contemplations which the calm mind
+rejects as absurdities.&nbsp; Then Tasso, with his enchanted forests
+and his other improbabilities; are they more than childish tales? tales,
+too, not in fancy to be compared with those of that venerable dry-nurse,
+Mother Bunch.&nbsp; Compare the poets that babble of green fields with
+those who deal in the actions and passions of men, such as Shakspeare,
+and it must be confessed that it is not those who have looked at external
+nature who are the true poets, but those who have seen and considered
+most about the business and bosom of man.&nbsp; It may be an advantage
+that a poet should have the benefit of landscapes and storms, as children
+are the better for country air and cow&rsquo;s milk; but the true scene
+of their manly work and business is in the populous city.&nbsp; Inasmuch
+as Byron was a lover of solitude, he was deficient as an observer of
+men.</p>
+<p>The barrenest portion, as to materials for biography, in the life
+of this interesting man, is the period he spent at the University of
+Cambridge.&nbsp; Like that of most young men, it is probable the major
+part of his time was passed between the metropolis and the university.&nbsp;
+Still it was in that period he composed the different poems which make
+up the little volume of <i>The Hours of Idleness</i>; a work which will
+ever be regarded, more by its consequences than its importance, as of
+great influence on the character and career of the poet.</p>
+<p>It has been supposed, I see not how justly, that there was affectation
+in the title.&nbsp; It is probable that Byron intended no more by it
+than to imply that its contents were sketches of leisure.&nbsp; This
+is the less doubtful, as he was at that period particularly sensitive
+concerning the opinion that might be entertained of his works.&nbsp;
+Before he made the collection, many of the pieces had been circulated,
+and he had gathered opinions as to their merits with a degree of solicitude
+that can only be conceived by those who were acquainted with the constantly
+excited sensibility of his mind.&nbsp; When he did publish the collection,
+nothing appeared in the style and form of the publication that indicated
+any arrogance of merit.&nbsp; On the contrary, it was brought forward
+with a degree of diffidence, which, if it did not deserve the epithet
+of modesty, could incur nothing harsher than that of bashfulness.&nbsp;
+It was printed at the obscure market-town press of Newark, was altogether
+a very homely, rustic work, and no attempt was made to bespeak for it
+a good name from the critics.&nbsp; It was truly an innocent affair
+and an unpretending performance.&nbsp; But notwithstanding these, at
+least seeming, qualities of young doubtfulness and timidity, they did
+not soften the austere nature of the bleak and blighting criticism which
+was then characteristic of Edinburgh.</p>
+<p>A copy was somehow communicated to one of the critics in that city,
+and was reviewed by him in the <i>Edinburgh Review</i> in an article
+replete with satire and insinuations calculated to prey upon the author&rsquo;s
+feelings, while the injustice of the estimate which was made of his
+talent and originality, could not but be as iron in his heart.&nbsp;
+Owing to the deep and severe impression which it left, it ought to be
+preserved in every memoir which treats of the development of his genius
+and character; and for this reason I insert it entire, as one of the
+most influential documents perhaps in the whole extent of biography.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Criticism of the</i> &ldquo;<i>Edinburgh Review</i>&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The poesy of this young lord belongs to the class which neither
+God nor man are said to permit.&nbsp; Indeed we do not recollect to
+have seen a quantity of verse with so few deviations in either direction
+from that exact standard.&nbsp; His effusions are spread over a dead
+flat, and can no more get above or below the level than if they were
+so much stagnant water.&nbsp; As an extenuation of this offence, the
+noble author is peculiarly forward in pleading minority.&nbsp; We have
+it in the title-page, and on the very back of the volume; it follows
+his name like a favourite part of his style.&nbsp; Much stress is laid
+upon it in the preface; and the poems are connected with this general
+statement of his case by particular dates, substantiating the age at
+which each was written.&nbsp; Now, the law upon the point of minority
+we hold to be perfectly clear.&nbsp; It is a plea available only to
+the defendant; no plaintiff can offer it as a supplementary ground of
+action.&nbsp; Thus, if any suit could be brought against Lord Byron,
+for the purpose of compelling him to put into court a certain quantity
+of poetry, and if judgment were given against him, it is highly probable
+that an exception would be taken, were he to deliver <i>for</i> <i>poetry</i>
+the contents of this volume.&nbsp; To this he might plead <i>minority</i>;
+but as he now makes voluntary tender of the article, he hath no right
+to sue on that ground for the price in good current praise, should the
+goods be unmarketable.&nbsp; This is our view of the law on the point;
+and we dare to say, so will it be ruled.&nbsp; Perhaps, however, in
+reality, all that he tells us about his youth is rather with a view
+to increase our wonder, than to soften our censures.&nbsp; He possibly
+means to say, &lsquo;See how a minor can write!&nbsp; This poem was
+actually composed by a young man of eighteen! and this by one of only
+sixteen!&rsquo;&nbsp; But, alas, we all remember the poetry of Cowley
+at ten, and Pope at twelve; and, so far from hearing with any degree
+of surprise that very poor verses were written by a youth from his leaving
+school to his leaving college inclusive, we really believe this to be
+the most common of all occurrences;&mdash;that it happens in the life
+of nine men in ten who are educated in England, and that the tenth man
+writes better verse than Lord Byron.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;His other plea of privilege our author brings forward to waive
+it.&nbsp; He certainly, however, does allude frequently to his family
+and ancestors, sometimes in poetry, sometimes in notes; and while giving
+up his claim on the score of rank, he takes care to remind us of Dr
+Johnson&rsquo;s saying, that when a nobleman appears as an author, his
+merit should be handsomely acknowledged.&nbsp; In truth, it is this
+consideration only that induces us to give Lord Byron&rsquo;s poems
+a place in our Review, besides our desire to counsel him, that he do
+forthwith abandon poetry, and turn his talents, which are considerable,
+and his opportunities, which are great, to better account.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With this view we must beg leave seriously to assure him,
+that the mere rhyming of the final syllable, even when accompanied by
+the presence of a certain number of feet; nay, although (which does
+not always happen) these feet should scan regularly, and have been all
+counted upon the fingers, is not the whole art of poetry.&nbsp; We would
+entreat him to believe that a certain portion of liveliness, somewhat
+of fancy, is necessary to constitute a poem; and that a poem in the
+present day, to be read, must contain at least one thought, even in
+a little degree different from the ideas of former writers, or differently
+expressed.&nbsp; We put it to his candour, whether there is anything
+so deserving the name of poetry, in verses like the following, written
+in 1806, and whether, if a youth of eighteen could say anything so uninteresting
+to his ancestors, a youth of nineteen should publish it:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Shades of heroes, farewell! your descendant, departing<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From
+the seat of his ancestors, bids you adieu;<br />Abroad or at home, your
+remembrance imparting<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;New courage, he&rsquo;ll
+think upon glory and you.</p>
+<p>Though a tear dim his eye at this sad separation,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis
+nature, not fear, that excites his regret;<br />Far distant he goes
+with the same emulation,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The fame of his fathers
+he ne&rsquo;er can forget.</p>
+<p>That fame and that memory still will he cherish,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He
+vows that he ne&rsquo;er will disgrace your renown;<br />Like you will
+he live, or like you will he perish,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When decay&rsquo;d,
+may he mingle his dust with your own.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Now, we positively do assert, that there is nothing better
+than these stanzas in the whole compass of the noble minor&rsquo;s volume.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord Byron should also have a care of attempting what the
+greatest poets have done before him, for comparisons (as he must have
+had occasion to see at his writing-master&rsquo;s) are odious.&nbsp;
+Gray&rsquo;s <i>Ode to Eton College</i> should really have kept out
+the ten hobbling stanzas on a distant view of the village and school
+at Harrow.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Where fancy yet joys to trace the resemblance<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+comrades in friendship or mischief allied,<br />How welcome to me your
+ne&rsquo;er-fading remembrance,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which rests in
+the bosom, though hope is denied.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;In like manner, the exquisite lines of Mr Rogers, <i>On a
+Tear</i>, might have warned the noble author of these premises, and
+spared us a whole dozen such stanzas as the following:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Mild charity&rsquo;s glow,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+us mortals below,<br />Shows the soul from barbarity clear;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Compassion
+will melt<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where the virtue is felt.<br />And
+its dew is diffused in a tear.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The man doom&rsquo;d to sail<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With
+the blast of the gale,<br />Through billows Atlantic to steer,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As
+he bends o&rsquo;er the wave,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which may soon
+be his grave,<br />The green sparkles bright with a tear.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And so of instances in which former poets had failed.&nbsp;
+Thus, we do not think Lord Byron was made for translating, during his
+nonage, Adrian&rsquo;s <i>Address to his Soul</i>, when Pope succeeded
+indifferently in the attempt.&nbsp; If our readers, however, are of
+another opinion, they may look at it.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav&rsquo;ring sprite,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Friend
+and associate of this clay,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To what unknown region
+borne<br />Wilt thou now wing thy distant flight?<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;No
+more with wonted humour gay,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But pallid, cheerless,
+and forlorn.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;However, be this as it may, we fear his translations and imitations
+are great favourities with Lord Byron.&nbsp; We have them of all kinds,
+from Anacreon to Ossian; and, viewing them as school-exercises, they
+may pass.&nbsp; Only, why print them after they have had their day and
+served their turn?&nbsp; And why call the thing in p. 79 a translation,
+where <i>two</i> words (&theta;&epsilon;&lambda;&omicron; &lambda;&epsilon;y&epsilon;&iota;&nu;)
+of the original are expanded into four lines, and the other thing in
+p. 81, where &mu;&epsilon;&sigma;&omicron;&nu;&upsilon;&kappa;&tau;&iota;&kappa;&iota;&sigmaf;
+&pi;&omicron;&theta;&rsquo; &omicron;&rho;&alpha;&iota;&sigmaf; is rendered
+by means of six hobbling verses.&nbsp; As to his Ossian poesy, we are
+not very good judges; being, in truth, so moderately skilled in that
+species of composition, that we should, in all probability, be criticising
+some bit of genuine Macpherson itself, were we to express our opinion
+of Lord Byron&rsquo;s rhapsodies.&nbsp; If, then, the following beginning
+of a Song of Bards is by his Lordship, we venture to object to it, as
+far as we can comprehend it; &lsquo;What form rises on the roar of clouds,
+whose dark ghost gleams on the red stream of tempests?&nbsp; His voice
+rolls on the thunder; &rsquo;tis Oila, the brown chief of Otchona.&nbsp;
+He was,&rsquo; etc.&nbsp; After detaining this &lsquo;brown chief&rsquo;
+some time, the bards conclude by giving him their advice to &lsquo;raise
+his fair locks&rsquo;; then to &lsquo;spread them on the arch of the
+rainbow&rsquo;; and to &lsquo;smile through the tears of the storm.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Of this kind of thing there are no less than nine pages: and we can
+so far venture an opinion in their favour, that they look very like
+Macpherson; and we are positive they are pretty nearly as stupid and
+tiresome.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is some sort of privilege of poets to be egotists; but
+they should &lsquo;use it as not abusing it&rsquo;; and particularly
+one who piques himself (though, indeed, at the ripe age of nineteen)
+on being an infant bard&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The artless Helicon I boast is youth&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>should either not know, or should seem not to know, so much about
+his own ancestry.&nbsp; Besides a poem, above cited, on the family-seat
+of the Byrons, we have another of eleven pages on the selfsame subject,
+introduced with an apology, &lsquo;he certainly had no intention of
+inserting it,&rsquo; but really &lsquo;the particular request of some
+friends,&rsquo; etc. etc.&nbsp; It concludes with five stanzas on himself,
+&lsquo;the last and youngest of the noble line.&rsquo;&nbsp; There is
+also a good deal about his maternal ancestors, in a poem on Lachion-y-Gair,
+a mountain, where he spent part of his youth, and might have learned
+that <i>pibroach</i> is not a bagpipe, any more than a duet means a
+fiddle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As the author has dedicated so large a part of his volume
+to immortalize his employments at school and college, we cannot possibly
+dismiss it without presenting the reader with a specimen of these ingenious
+effusions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In an ode, with a Greek motto, called <i>Granta</i>, we have
+the following magnificent stanzas:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>There, in apartments small and damp,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The candidate
+for college prizes<br />Sits poring by the midnight lamp,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Goes
+late to bed, yet early rises:</p>
+<p>Who reads false quantities in Seale,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or puzzles
+o&rsquo;er the deep triangle,<br />Depriv&rsquo;d of many a wholesome
+meal,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In barbarous Latin doomed to wrangle.</p>
+<p>Renouncing every pleasing page<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From authors
+of historic use;<br />Preferring to the letter&rsquo;d sage<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+square of the hypotenuse.<br />Still harmless are these occupations,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That
+hurt none but the hapless student,<br />Compared with other recreations<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which
+bring together the imprudent.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;We are sorry to hear so bad an account of the college-psalmody,
+as is contained in the following attic stanzas</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Our choir could scarcely be excused,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Even
+as a band of raw beginners;<br />All mercy now must be refused<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+such a set of croaking sinners.</p>
+<p>If David, when his toils were ended,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Had heard
+these blockheads sing before him,<br />To us his psalms had ne&rsquo;er
+descended&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In furious mood he would have
+tore &rsquo;em.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But whatever judgment may be passed on the poems of this noble
+minor, it seems we must take them as we find them, and be content for
+they are the last we shall ever have from him.&nbsp; He is at best,
+he says, but an intruder into the groves of Parnassus; he never lived
+in a garret, like thoroughbred poets, and though he once roved a careless
+mountaineer in the Highlands of Scotland, he has not of late enjoyed
+this advantage.&nbsp; Moreover, he expects no profit from his publication;
+and whether it succeeds or not, it is highly improbable, from his situation
+and pursuits, that he should again condescend to become an author.&nbsp;
+Therefore, let us take what we get and be thankful.&nbsp; What right
+have we poor devils to be nice?&nbsp; We are well off to have got so
+much from a man of this lord&rsquo;s station, who does not live in a
+garret, but has got the sway of Newstead Abbey.&nbsp; Again we say,
+let us be thankful; and, with honest Sancho, bid God bless the giver,
+nor look the gift-horse in the mouth.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The criticism is ascribed to Mr Francis Jeffrey, an eloquent member
+of the Scottish bar, and who was at that time supposed to be the editor
+of the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>.&nbsp; That it was neither just nor fair
+is sufficiently evident, by the degree of care and artificial point
+with which it has been drawn up.&nbsp; Had the poetry been as insignificant
+as the critic affected to consider it, it would have argued little for
+the judgment of Mr Jeffrey, to take so much pains on a work which he
+considered worthless.&nbsp; But the world has no cause to repine at
+the severity of his strictures, for they unquestionably had the effect
+of kindling the indignation of Byron, and of instigating him to that
+retaliation which he so spiritedly inflicted in his satire of <i>English
+Bards and Scotch Reviewers.</i></p>
+<p>It is amusing to compare the respective literary reputation of the
+poet and the critic, as they are estimated by the public, now that the
+one is dead, and the other dormant.&nbsp; The voice of all the age acknowledges
+Byron to have been the greatest poetical genius of his time.&nbsp; Mr
+Jeffrey, though still enjoying the renown of being a shrewd and intelligent
+critic of the productions of others, has established no right to the
+honour of being an original or eminent author.</p>
+<p>At the time when Byron published the satire alluded to, he had obtained
+no other distinction than the college reputation of being a clever,
+careless, dissipated student.&nbsp; But his dissipation was not intense,
+nor did it ever become habitual.&nbsp; He affected to be much more so
+than he was: his pretensions were moderated by constitutional incapacity.&nbsp;
+His health was not vigorous; and his delicacy defeated his endeavours
+to show that he inherited the recklessness of his father.&nbsp; He affected
+extravagance and eccentricity of conduct, without yielding much to the
+one, or practising a great deal of the other.&nbsp; He was seeking notoriety;
+and his attempts to obtain it gave more method to his pranks and follies
+than belonged to the results of natural impulse and passion.&nbsp; He
+evinced occasional instances of the generous spirit of youth; but there
+was in them more of ostentation than of that discrimination which dignifies
+kindness, and makes prodigality munificence.&nbsp; Nor were his attachments
+towards those with whom he preferred to associate, characterised by
+any nobler sentiment than self-indulgence; he was attached, more from
+the pleasure he himself received in their society, than from any reciprocal
+enjoyment they had with him.&nbsp; As he became a man of the world,
+his early friends dropped from him; although it is evident, by all the
+contemporary records of his feelings, that he cherished for them a kind,
+and even brotherly, affection.&nbsp; This secession, the common effect
+of the new cares, hopes, interests, and wishes, which young men feel
+on entering the world, Byron regarded as something analogous to desertion;
+and the notion tainted his mind, and irritated that hereditary sullenness
+of humour, which constituted an ingredient so remarkable in the composition
+of his more mature character.</p>
+<p>An anecdote of this period, characteristic of his eccentricity, and
+the means which he scrupled not to employ in indulging it, deserves
+to be mentioned.</p>
+<p>In repairing Newstead Abbey, a skull was found in a secret niche
+of the walls.&nbsp; It might have been that of the monk who haunted
+the house, or of one of his own ancestors, or of some victim of the
+morose race.&nbsp; It was converted into a goblet, and used at Odin-like
+orgies.&nbsp; Though the affair was but a whim of youth, more odious
+than poetical, it caused some talk, and raised around the extravagant
+host the haze of a mystery, suggesting fantasies of irreligion and horror.&nbsp;
+The inscription on the cup is not remarkable either for point or poetry.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Start not, nor deem my spot fled;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In me behold
+the only skull<br />From which, unlike a living head,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whatever
+flows is never dull.</p>
+<p>I liv&rsquo;d, I lov&rsquo;d, I quaff&rsquo;d like thee;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I
+died, but earth my bones resign:<br />Fill up&mdash;thou canst not injure
+me,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The worm hath fouler lips than thine.</p>
+<p>Better to hold the sparkling grape<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Than nurse
+the earth-worm&rsquo;s slimy brood,<br />And circle in the goblet&rsquo;s
+shape<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The drink of gods than reptile&rsquo;s
+food.</p>
+<p>Where once my wit perchance hath shone,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+aid of others let me shine;<br />And when, alas, our brains are gone,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What
+nobler substitute than wine?</p>
+<p>Quaff while thou canst&mdash;another race,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When
+thou and thine like me are sped,<br />May rescue thee from earth&rsquo;s
+embrace,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And rhyme and revel with the dead.</p>
+<p>Why not? since through life&rsquo;s little day,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our
+heads such sad effects produce;<br />Redeem&rsquo;d from worms and wasting
+clay,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;This chance is theirs, to be use.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Effect of the Criticism in the</i> &ldquo;<i>Edinburgh Review</i>&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;<i>English
+Bards and Scotch Reviewers</i>&rdquo;&mdash;<i>His Satiety</i>&mdash;<i>Intention
+to Travel</i>&mdash;<i>Publishes his Satire</i>&mdash;<i>Takes his Seat
+in the House of Lords</i>&mdash;<i>Departs for Lisbon</i>; <i>thence
+to Gibraltar</i></p>
+<p>The impression which the criticism of the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>
+produced upon the juvenile poet was deep and envenomed.&nbsp; It stung
+his heart, and prompted him to excess.&nbsp; But the paroxysms did not
+endure long; strong volitions of revenge succeeded, and the grasps of
+his mind were filled, as it were, with writhing adders.&nbsp; All the
+world knows, that this unquenchable indignation found relief in the
+composition of <i>English Bards and Scotch Reviewers</i>; a satire which,
+in many passages, equals, in fervour and force, the most vigorous in
+the language.</p>
+<p>It was during the summer of 1808, while the poet was residing at
+Newstead, that <i>English Bards and Scotch Reviewers</i> was principally
+written.&nbsp; He bestowed more pains upon it than perhaps on any other
+of his works; and, though different from them all, it still exhibits
+strong indications of the misanthropy with which, after quitting Cambridge,
+he became more and more possessed.&nbsp; It is painful to reflect, in
+considering the splendid energy displayed in the poem, that the unprovoked
+malice which directed him to make the satire so general, was, perhaps,
+the main cause of that disposition to wither his reputation, which was
+afterwards so fervently roused.&nbsp; He could not but expect, that,
+in stigmatising with contempt and ridicule so many persons by name,
+some of them would retaliate.&nbsp; Nor could he complain of injustice
+if they did; for his attack was so wilful, that the rage of it can only
+be explained by supposing he was instigated to &ldquo;the one fell swoop,&rdquo;
+by a resentful conviction, that his impillory in the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>
+had amused them all.</p>
+<p>I do not conceive, that the generality of the satire can be well
+extenuated; but I am not inclined to regard it as having been a very
+heinous offence.&nbsp; The ability displayed in it is a sufficient compensation.&nbsp;
+The beauty of the serpent&rsquo;s skin appeases the aversion to its
+nature.&nbsp; Moreover, a toothless satire is verse without poetry&mdash;the
+most odious of all respectable things.</p>
+<p>But, without regard to the merits or delinquency of the poem, to
+the acumen of its animadversions, or to the polish of the lines, it
+possesses, in the biography of the author, a value of the most interesting
+kind.&nbsp; It was the first burst of that dark, diseased ichor, which
+afterwards coloured his effusions; the overflowing suppuration of that
+satiety and loathing, which rendered <i>Childe Harold</i>, in particular,
+so original, incomprehensible, and antisocial; and bears testimony to
+the state of his feelings at that important epoch, while he was yet
+upon the threshold of the world, and was entering it with a sense of
+failure and humiliation, and premature disgust.&nbsp; For, notwithstanding
+his unnecessary expositions concerning his dissipation, it is beyond
+controversy, that at no time could it be said he was a dissipated young
+man.&nbsp; That he indulged in occasional excesses is true; but his
+habits were never libertine, nor did his health or stamina permit him
+to be distinguished in licentiousness.&nbsp; The declaration in which
+he first discloses his sobriety, contains more truth than all his pretensions
+to his father&rsquo;s qualities.&nbsp; &ldquo;I took my gradations in
+the vices,&rdquo; says he, in that remarkable confession, &ldquo;with
+great promptitude, but they were not to my taste; for my early passions,
+though violent in the extreme, were concentrated, and hated division
+or spreading abroad.&nbsp; I could have left or lost the whole world
+with or for that which I loved; but, though my temperament was naturally
+burning, I could not share in the common libertinism of the place and
+time without disgust; and yet this very disgust, and my heart thrown
+back upon itself, threw me into excesses perhaps more fatal than those
+from which I shrunk, as fixing upon one at a time the passions, which,
+spread among many, would have hurt only myself.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is
+vague and metaphysical enough; but it bears corroborative intimations,
+that the impression which he early made upon me was not incorrect.&nbsp;
+He was vain of his experiments in profligacy, but they never grew to
+habitude.</p>
+<p>While he was engaged in the composition of his satire, he formed
+a plan of travelling; but there was a great shortcoming between the
+intention and the performance.&nbsp; He first thought of Persia; he
+afterwards resolved to sail for India; and had so far matured this project,
+as to write for information to the Arabic professor at Cambridge; and
+to his mother, who was not then with him at Newstead, to inquire of
+a friend, who had resided in India, what things would be necessary for
+the voyage.&nbsp; He formed his plan of travelling upon different reasons
+from those which he afterward gave out, and which have been imputed
+to him.&nbsp; He then thought that all men should in some period of
+their lives travel; he had at that time no tie to prevent him; he conceived
+that when he returned home he might be induced to enter into political
+life, to which his having travelled would be an advantage; and he wished
+to know the world by sight, and to judge of men by experience.</p>
+<p>When his satire was ready for the press, he carried it with him to
+London.&nbsp; He was then just come of age, or about to be so; and one
+of his objects in this visit to the metropolis was, to take his seat
+in the House of Lords before going abroad; but, in advancing to this
+proud distinction, so soothing to the self-importance of youth, he was
+destined to suffer a mortification which probably wounded him as deeply
+as the sarcasms of the <i>Edinburgh Review</i>.&nbsp; Before the meeting
+of Parliament, he wrote to his relation and guardian, the Earl of Carlisle,
+to remind him that he should be of age at the commencement of the Session,
+in the natural hope that his Lordship would make an offer to introduce
+him to the House: but he was disappointed.&nbsp; He only received a
+formal reply, acquainting him with the technical mode of proceeding,
+and the etiquette to be observed on such occasions.&nbsp; It is therefore
+not wonderful that he should have resented such treatment; and he avenged
+it by those lines in his satire, for which he afterwards expressed his
+regret in the third canto of <i>Childe Harold.</i></p>
+<p>Deserted by his guardian at a crisis so interesting, he was prevented
+for some time from taking his seat in Parliament; being obliged to procure
+affidavits in proof of his grandfather&rsquo;s marriage with Miss Trevannion,
+which having taken place in a private chapel at Carhais, no regular
+certificate of the ceremony could be produced.&nbsp; At length, all
+the necessary evidence having been obtained, on the 13th of March, 1809,
+he presented himself in the House of Lords alone&mdash;a proceeding
+consonant to his character, for he was not so friendless nor unknown,
+but that he might have procured some peer to have gone with him.&nbsp;
+It, however, served to make his introduction remarkable.</p>
+<p>On entering the House, he is described to have appeared abashed and
+pale: he passed the woolsack without looking round, and advanced to
+the table where the proper officer was attending to administer the oaths.&nbsp;
+When he had gone through them, the chancellor quitted his seat, and
+went towards him with a smile, putting out his hand in a friendly manner
+to welcome him, but he made a stiff bow, and only touched with the tip
+of his fingers the chancellor&rsquo;s hand, who immediately returned
+to his seat.&nbsp; Such is the account given of this important incident
+by Mr Dallas, who went with him to the bar; but a characteristic circumstance
+is wanting.&nbsp; When Lord Eldon advanced with the cordiality described,
+he expressed with becoming courtesy his regret that the rules of the
+House had obliged him to call for the evidence of his grandfather&rsquo;s
+marriage.&mdash;&ldquo;Your Lordship has done your duty, and no more,&rdquo;
+was the cold reply, in the words of Tom Thumb, and which probably was
+the cause of the marked manner of the chancellor&rsquo;s cool return
+to his seat.</p>
+<p>The satire was published anonymously, and immediately attracted attention;
+the sale was rapid, and a new edition being called for, Byron revised
+it.&nbsp; The preparations for his travels being completed, he then
+embarked in July of the same year, with Mr Hobhouse, for Lisbon, and
+thence proceeded by the southern provinces of Spain to Gibraltar.</p>
+<p>In the account of his adventures during this journey, he seems to
+have felt, to an exaggerated degree, the hazards to which he was exposed.&nbsp;
+But many of his descriptions are given with a bright pen.&nbsp; That
+of Lisbon has always been admired for its justness, and the mixture
+of force and familiarity.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What beauties doth Lisboa&rsquo;s port unfold!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Her
+image floating on that noble tide,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which poets
+vainly pave with sands of gold,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But now whereon
+a thousand keels did ride,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of mighty strength
+since Albion was allied,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And to the Lusians did
+her aid afford.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A nation swoln with ignorance
+and pride,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who lick, yet loathe, the hand that
+waves the sword<br />To save them from the wrath of Gaul&rsquo;s unsparing
+lord.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But whoso entereth within this town,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That
+sheening for celestial seems to be,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Disconsolate
+will wander up and down,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Mid many things
+unsightly strange to see,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For hut and palace
+show like filthily;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The dingy denizens are reared
+in dirt;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;No personage of high or mean degree<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Doth
+care for cleanness of surtout and shirt,<br />Though shent with Egypt&rsquo;s
+plague, unkempt, unwash&rsquo;d, unhurt.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Considering the interest which he afterwards took in the affairs
+of Greece, it is remarkable that he should have passed through Spain,
+at the period he has described, without feeling any sympathy with the
+spirit which then animated that nation.&nbsp; Intent, however, on his
+travels, pressing onward to an unknown goal, he paused not to inquire
+as to the earnestness of the patriotic zeal of the Spaniards, nor once
+dreamed, even for adventure, of taking a part in their heroic cause.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>First Acquaintance with Byron</i>&mdash;<i>Embark together</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Voyage</i></p>
+<p>It was at Gibraltar that I first fell in with Lord Byron.&nbsp; I
+had arrived there in the packet from England, in indifferent health,
+on my way to Sicily.&nbsp; I had then no intention of travelling.&nbsp;
+I only went a trip, intending to return home after spending a few weeks
+in Malta, Sicily, and Sardinia; having, before my departure, entered
+into the Society of Lincoln&rsquo;s Inn, with the design of studying
+the law.</p>
+<p>At this time, my friend, the late Colonel Wright, of the artillery,
+was secretary to the Governor; and during the short stay of the packet
+at the Rock, he invited me to the hospitalities of his house, and among
+other civilities gave me admission to the garrison library.</p>
+<p>The day, I well remember, was exceedingly sultry.&nbsp; The air was
+sickly; and if the wind was not a sirocco, it was a withering levanter&mdash;oppressive
+to the functions of life, and to an invalid denying all exercise.&nbsp;
+Instead of rambling over the fortifications, I was, in consequence,
+constrained to spend the hottest part of the day in the library; and,
+while sitting there, a young man came in and seated himself opposite
+to me at the table where I was reading.&nbsp; Something in his appearance
+attracted my attention.&nbsp; His dress indicated a Londoner of some
+fashion, partly by its neatness and simplicity, with just so much of
+a peculiarity of style as served to show, that although he belonged
+to the order of metropolitan beaux, he was not altogether a common one.</p>
+<p>I thought his face not unknown to me; I began to conjecture where
+I could have seen him; and, after an unobserved scrutiny, to speculate
+both as to his character and vocation.&nbsp; His physiognomy was prepossessing
+and intelligent, but ever and anon his brows lowered and gathered; a
+habit, as I then thought, with a degree of affectation in it, probably
+first assumed for picturesque effect and energetic expression; but which
+I afterwards discovered was undoubtedly the occasional scowl of some
+unpleasant reminiscence: it was certainly disagreeable&mdash;forbidding&mdash;but
+still the general cast of his features was impressed with elegance and
+character.</p>
+<p>At dinner, a large party assembled at Colonel Wright&rsquo;s; among
+others the Countess of Westmorland, with Tom Sheridan and his beautiful
+wife; and it happened that Sheridan, in relating the local news of the
+morning, mentioned that Lord Byron and Mr Hobhouse had come in from
+Spain, and were to proceed up the Mediterranean in the packet.&nbsp;
+He was not acquainted with either.</p>
+<p>Hobhouse had, a short time before I left London,, published certain
+translations and poems rather respectable in their way, and I had seen
+the work, so that his name was not altogether strange to me.&nbsp; Byron&rsquo;s
+was familiar&mdash;the <i>Edinburgh Review</i> had made it so, and still
+more the satire of <i>English Bards and Scotch Reviewers</i>, but I
+was not conscious of having seen the persons of either.</p>
+<p>On the following evening I embarked early, and soon after the two
+travellers came on board; in one of whom I recognised the visitor to
+the library, and he proved to be Lord Byron.&nbsp; In the little bustle
+and process of embarking their luggage, his Lordship affected, as it
+seemed to me, more aristocracy than befitted his years, or the occasion;
+and I then thought of his singular scowl, and suspected him of pride
+and irascibility.&nbsp; The impression that evening was not agreeable,
+but it was interesting; and that forehead mark, the frown, was calculated
+to awaken curiosity, and beget conjectures.</p>
+<p>Hobhouse, with more of the commoner, made himself one of the passengers
+at once; but Byron held himself aloof, and sat on the rail, leaning
+on the mizzen shrouds, inhaling, as it were, poetical sympathy, from
+the gloomy Rock, then dark and stern in the twilight.&nbsp; There was
+in all about him that evening much waywardness; he spoke petulantly
+to Fletcher, his valet; and was evidently ill at ease with himself,
+and fretful towards others.&nbsp; I thought he would turn out an unsatisfactory
+shipmate; yet there was something redeeming in the tones of his voice,
+when, some time after he had indulged his sullen meditation, he again
+addressed Fletcher; so that, instead of finding him ill-natured, I was
+soon convinced he was only capricious.</p>
+<p>Our passage to Sardinia was tardy, owing to calms; but, in other
+respects, pleasant.&nbsp; About the third day Byron relented from his
+rapt mood, as if he felt it was out of place, and became playful, and
+disposed to contribute his fair proportion to the general endeavour
+to wile away the tediousness of the dull voyage.&nbsp; Among other expedients
+for that purpose, we had recourse to shooting at bottles.&nbsp; Byron,
+I think, supplied the pistols, and was the best shot, but not very pre-eminently
+so.&nbsp; In the calms, the jolly-boat was several times lowered; and,
+on one of those occasions, his Lordship, with the captain, caught a
+turtle&mdash;I rather think two&mdash;we likewise hooked a shark, part
+of which was dressed for breakfast, and tasted, without relish; your
+shark is but a cannibal dainty.</p>
+<p>As we approached the gulf, or bay, of Cagliari, in Sardinia, a strong
+north wind came from the shore, and we had a whole disagreeable day
+of tacking, but next morning, it was Sunday, we found ourselves at anchor
+near the mole, where we landed.&nbsp; Byron, with the captain, rode
+out some distance into the country, while I walked with Mr Hobhouse
+about the town: we left our cards for the consul, and Mr Hill, the ambassador,
+who invited us to dinner.&nbsp; In the evening we landed again, to avail
+ourselves of the invitation; and, on this occasion, Byron and his Pylades
+dressed themselves as aides-de-camp&mdash;a circumstance which, at the
+time, did not tend to improve my estimation of the solidity of the character
+of either.&nbsp; But such is the force of habit: it appeared a less
+exceptionable affectation in the young peer than in the commoner.</p>
+<p>Had we parted at Cagliari, it is probable that I should have retained
+a much more favourable recollection of Mr Hobhouse than of Lord Byron;
+for he was a cheerful companion, full of odd and droll stories, which
+he told extremely well; he was also good-humoured and intelligent&mdash;altogether
+an advantageous specimen of a well-educated English gentleman.&nbsp;
+Moreover, I was at the time afflicted with a nervous dejection, which
+the occasional exhilaration produced by his anecdotes and college tales
+often materially dissipated, though, for the most part, they were more
+after the manner and matter of Swift than of Addison.</p>
+<p>Byron was, during the passage, in delicate health, and upon an abstemious
+regimen.&nbsp; He rarely tasted wine, nor more than half a glass, mingled
+with water, when he did.&nbsp; He ate little; no animal food, but only
+bread and vegetables.&nbsp; He reminded me of the ghoul that picked
+rice with a needle; for it was manifest, that he had not acquired his
+knowledge of the world by always dining so sparely.&nbsp; If my remembrance
+is not treacherous, he only spent one evening in the cabin with us&mdash;the
+evening before we came to anchor at Cagliari; for, when the lights were
+placed, he made himself a man forbid, took his station on the railing
+between the pegs on which the sheets are belayed and the shrouds, and
+there, for hours, sat in silence, enamoured, it may be, of the moon.&nbsp;
+All these peculiarities, with his caprices, and something inexplicable
+in the cast of his metaphysics, while they served to awaken interest,
+contributed little to conciliate esteem.&nbsp; He was often strangely
+rapt&mdash;it may have been from his genius; and, had its grandeur and
+darkness been then divulged, susceptible of explanation; but, at the
+time, it threw, as it were, around him the sackcloth of penitence.&nbsp;
+Sitting amid the shrouds and rattlins, in the tranquillity of the moonlight,
+churming an inarticulate melody, he seemed almost apparitional, suggesting
+dim reminiscences of him who shot the albatross.&nbsp; He was as a mystery
+in a winding-sheet, crowned with a halo.</p>
+<p>The influence of the incomprehensible phantasma which hovered about
+Lord Byron has been more or less felt by all who ever approached him.&nbsp;
+That he sometimes came out of the cloud, and was familiar and earthly,
+is true; but his dwelling was amid the murk and the mist, and the home
+of his spirit in the abysm of the storm, and the hiding-places of guilt.&nbsp;
+He was, at the time of which I am speaking, scarcely two-and-twenty,
+and could claim no higher praise than having written a clever worldly-minded
+satire; and yet it was impossible, even then, to reflect on the bias
+of his mind, as it was revealed by the casualties of conversation, without
+experiencing a presentiment, that he was destined to execute some singular
+and ominous purpose.&nbsp; The description he has given of Manfred in
+his youth was of himself.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>My spirit walk&rsquo;d not with the souls of men,<br />Nor look&rsquo;d
+upon the earth with human eyes;<br />The thirst of their ambition was
+not mine;<br />The aim of their existence was not mine.<br />My joys,
+my griefs, my passions, and my powers,<br />Made me a stranger.&nbsp;
+Though I wore the form,<br />I had no sympathy with breathing flesh.<br />My
+joy was in the wilderness&mdash;to breathe<br />The difficult air of
+the iced mountain&rsquo;s top.<br />Where the birds dare not build,
+nor insect&rsquo;s wing<br />Flit o&rsquo;er the herbless granite; or
+to plunge<br />Into the torrent, and to roll along<br />On the swift
+whirl of the new-breaking wave<br />Of river, stream, or ocean, in their
+flow&mdash;<br />In these my early strength exulted; or<br />To follow
+through the night the moving moon,<br />The stars, and their development;
+or catch<br />The dazzling lightnings till my eyes grew dim;<br />Or
+to look listening on the scatter&rsquo;d leaves,<br />While autumn winds
+were at their evening song;&mdash;<br />These were my pastimes&mdash;and
+to be alone.<br />For if the beings, of whom I was one&mdash;<br />Hating
+to be so&mdash;cross&rsquo;d me in my path,<br />I felt myself degraded
+back to them,<br />And was all clay again.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Dinner at the Ambassador&rsquo;s</i>&mdash;<i>Opera</i>&mdash;<i>Disaster
+of Byron at Malta</i>&mdash;<i>Mrs Spencer Smith</i></p>
+<p>I shall always remember Cagliari with particular pleasure; for it
+so happened that I formed there three of the most agreeable acquaintances
+of my life, and one of them was with Lord Byron; for although we had
+been eight days together, I yet could not previously have accounted
+myself acquainted with his Lordship.</p>
+<p>After dinner, we all went to the theatre, which was that evening,
+on account of some Court festival, brilliantly illuminated.&nbsp; The
+Royal Family were present, and the opera was performed with more taste
+and execution than I had expected to meet with in so remote a place,
+and under the restrictions which rendered the intercourse with the Continent
+then so difficult.&nbsp; Among other remarkable characters pointed out
+to us was a nobleman in the pit, actually under the ban of outlawry
+for murder.&nbsp; I have often wondered if the incident had any effect
+on the creation of <i>Lara</i>; for we know not in what small germs
+the conceptions of genius originate.</p>
+<p>But the most important occurrence of that evening arose from a delicate
+observance of etiquette on the part of the ambassador.&nbsp; After carrying
+us to his box, which was close to that of the Royal Family, in order
+that we might see the members of it properly, he retired with Lord Byron
+to another box, an inflection of manners to propriety in the best possible
+taste&mdash;for the ambassador was doubtless aware that his Lordship&rsquo;s
+rank would be known to the audience, and I conceive that this little
+arrangement was adopted to make his person also known, by showing him
+with distinction apart from the other strangers.</p>
+<p>When the performance was over, Mr Hill came down with Lord Byron
+to the gate of the upper town, where his Lordship, as we were taking
+leave, thanked him with more elocution than was precisely requisite.&nbsp;
+The style and formality of the speech amused Mr Hobhouse, as well as
+others; and, when the minister retired, he began to rally his Lordship
+on the subject.&nbsp; But Byron really fancied that he had acquitted
+himself with grace and dignity, and took the jocularity of his friend
+amiss&mdash;a little banter ensued&mdash;the poet became petulant, and
+Mr Hobhouse walked on; while Byron, on account of his lameness, and
+the roughness of the pavement, took hold of my arm, appealing to me,
+if he could have said less, after the kind and hospitable treatment
+we had all received.&nbsp; Of course, though I thought pretty much as
+Mr Hobhouse did, I could not do otherwise than civilly assent, especially
+as his Lordship&rsquo;s comfort, at the moment, seemed in some degree
+dependent on being confirmed in the good opinion he was desirous to
+entertain of his own courtesy.&nbsp; From that night I evidently rose
+in his good graces; and, as he was always most agreeable and interesting
+when familiar, it was worth my while to advance, but by cautious circumvallations,
+into his intimacy; for his uncertain temper made his favour precarious.</p>
+<p>The next morning, either owing to the relaxation of his abstinence,
+which he could not probably well avoid amid the good things of the ambassadorial
+table; or, what was, perhaps, less questionable, some regret for his
+petulance towards his friend, he was indisposed, and did not make his
+appearance till late in the evening.&nbsp; I rather suspect, though
+there was no evidence of the fact, that Hobhouse received any concession
+which he may have made with indulgence; for he remarked to me, in a
+tone that implied both forbearance and generosity of regard, that it
+was necessary to humour him like a child.&nbsp; But, in whatever manner
+the reconciliation was accomplished, the passengers partook of the blessings
+of the peace.&nbsp; Byron, during the following day, as we were sailing
+along the picturesque shores of Sicily, was in the highest spirits overflowing
+with glee, and sparkling with quaint sentences.&nbsp; The champagne
+was uncorked and in the finest condition.</p>
+<p>Having landed the mail at Girgenti, we stretched over to Malta, where
+we arrived about noon next day&mdash;all the passengers, except Orestes
+and Pylades, being eager to land, went on shore with the captain.&nbsp;
+They remained behind for a reason&mdash;which an accidental expression
+of Byron let out&mdash;much to my secret amusement; for I was aware
+they would be disappointed, and the anticipation was relishing.&nbsp;
+They expected&mdash;at least he did&mdash;a salute from the batteries,
+and sent ashore notice to Sir Alexander Ball, the Governor, of his arrival;
+but the guns were sulky, and evinced no respect of persons; so that
+late in the afternoon, about the heel of the evening, the two magnates
+were obliged to come on shore, and slip into the city unnoticed and
+unknown.</p>
+<p>At this time Malta was in great prosperity.&nbsp; Her commerce was
+flourishing; and the goodly clusters of its profits hung ripe and rich
+at every door.&nbsp; The merchants were truly hospitable, and few more
+so than Mr Chabot.&nbsp; As I had letters to him, he invited me to dinner,
+along with several other friends previously engaged.&nbsp; In the cool
+of the evening, as we were sitting at our wine, Lord Byron and Mr Hobhouse
+were announced.&nbsp; His Lordship was in better spirits than I had
+ever seen him.&nbsp; His appearance showed, as he entered the room,
+that they had met with some adventure, and he chuckled with an inward
+sense of enjoyment, not altogether without spleen&mdash;a kind of malicious
+satisfaction&mdash;as his companion recounted with all becoming gravity
+their woes and sufferings, as an apology for begging a bed and morsel
+for the night.&nbsp; God forgive me! but I partook of Byron&rsquo;s
+levity at the idea of personages so consequential wandering destitute
+in the streets, seeking for lodgings, as it were, from door to door,
+and rejected at all.</p>
+<p>Next day, however, they were accommodated by the Governor with an
+agreeable house in the upper part of Valetta; and his Lordship, as soon
+as they were domiciled, began to take lessons in Arabic from a monk&mdash;I
+believe one of the librarians of the public library.&nbsp; His whole
+time was not, however, devoted to study; for he formed an acquaintance
+with Mrs Spencer Smith, the lady of the gentleman of that name, who
+had been our resident minister at Constantinople: he affected a passion
+for her; but it was only Platonic.&nbsp; She, however, beguiled him
+of his valuable yellow diamond ring.&nbsp; She is the Florence of <i>Childe
+Harold</i>, and merited the poetical embalmment, or rather the amber
+immortalisation, she possesses there&mdash;being herself a heroine.&nbsp;
+There was no exaggeration in saying that many incidents of her life
+would appear improbable in fiction.&nbsp; Her adventures with the Marquis
+de Salvo form one of the prettiest romances in the Italian language;
+everything in her destiny was touched with adventure: nor was it the
+least of her claims to sympathy that she had incurred the special enmity
+of Napoleon.</p>
+<p>After remaining about three weeks at Malta, Byron embarked with his
+friend in a brig of war, appointed to convoy a fleet of small merchantmen
+to Prevesa.&nbsp; I had, about a fortnight before, passed over with
+the packet on her return from Messina to Girgenti, and did not fall
+in with them again till the following spring, when we met at Athens.&nbsp;
+In the meantime, besides his Platonic dalliance with Mrs Spencer Smith,
+Byron had involved himself in a quarrel with an officer; but it was
+satisfactorily settled.</p>
+<p>His residence at Malta did not greatly interest him.&nbsp; The story
+of its chivalrous masters made no impression on his imagination&mdash;none
+that appears in his works&mdash;but it is not the less probable that
+the remembrance of the place itself occupied a deep niche in his bosom:
+for I have remarked, that he had a voluntary power of forgetfulness,
+which, on more than one occasion, struck me as singular: and I am led
+in consequence to think, that something unpleasant, connected with this
+quarrel, may have been the cause of his suppression of all direct allusion
+to the island.&nbsp; It was impossible that his imagination could avoid
+the impulses of the spirit which haunts the walls and ramparts of Malta;
+and the silence of his muse on a topic so rich in romance, and so well
+calculated to awaken associations concerning the knights, in unison
+with the ruminations of <i>Childe Harold</i>, persuades me that there
+must have been some specific cause for the omission.&nbsp; If it were
+nothing in the duel, I should be inclined to say, notwithstanding the
+seeming improbability of the notion, that it was owing to some curious
+modification of vindictive spite.&nbsp; It might not be that Malta should
+receive no celebrity from his pen; but assuredly he had met with something
+there which made him resolute to forget the place.&nbsp; The question
+as to what it was, he never answered the result would throw light into
+the labyrinths of his character.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Sails from Malta to Prevesa</i>&mdash;<i>Lands at Patras</i>&mdash;<i>Sails
+again</i>&mdash;<i>Passes Ithaca</i>&mdash;<i>Arrival at Prevesa</i></p>
+<p>It was on the 19th of September, 1809, that Byron sailed in the <i>Spider</i>
+brig from Malta for Prevesa, and on the morning of the fourth day after,
+he first saw the mountains of Greece; next day he landed at Patras,
+and walked for some time among the currant grounds between the town
+and the shore.&nbsp; Around him lay one of the noblest landscapes in
+the world, and afar in the north-east rose the purple summits of the
+Grecian mountains.</p>
+<p>Having re-embarked, the <i>Spider</i> proceeded towards her destination;
+the poet not receiving much augmentation to his ideas of the grandeur
+of the ancients, from the magnitude of their realms and states.&nbsp;
+Ithaca, which he doubtless regarded with wonder and disappointment,
+as he passed its cliffy shores, was then in the possession of the French.&nbsp;
+In the course of a month after, the kingdom of Ulysses surrendered to
+a British serjeant and seven men.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Childe Harold sail&rsquo;d, and pass&rsquo;d the
+barren spot,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where sad Penelope o&rsquo;erlook&rsquo;d
+the wave;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And onward view&rsquo;d the mount,
+not yet forgot.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The lover&rsquo;s refuge, and
+the Lesbian&rsquo;s grave.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But when he saw the
+evening star above<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leucadia&rsquo;s far-projecting
+rock of woe,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And hail&rsquo;d the last resort
+of fruitless love,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He felt, or deem&rsquo;d he
+felt, no common glow;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as the stately vessel
+glided slow<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beneath the shadow of that ancient
+mount,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He watch&rsquo;d the billows&rsquo; melancholy
+flow,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And, sunk albeit in thought as he was wont&mdash;<br />More
+placid seem&rsquo;d his eye, and smooth his pallid front.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>At seven in the evening, of the same day on which he passed Leucadia,
+the vessel came to anchor off Prevesa.&nbsp; The day was wet and gloomy,
+and the appearance of the town was little calculated to bespeak cheerfulness.&nbsp;
+But the novelty in the costume and appearance of the inhabitants and
+their dwellings, produced an immediate effect on the imagination of
+Byron, and we can trace the vivid impression animating and adorning
+his descriptions.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The wild Albanian, kirtled to his knee,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With
+shawl-girt head and ornamented gun,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And gold-embroider&rsquo;d
+garments, fair to see;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The crimson-scarfed men
+of Macedon;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Delhi with his cap of terror
+on,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And crooked glaive; the lively, supple Greek,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+swarthy Nubia&rsquo;s mutilated son;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The bearded
+Turk, that rarely deigns to speak,<br />Master of all around, too potent
+to be meek.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Having partaken of a consecutive dinner, dish after dish, with the
+brother of the English consul, the travellers proceeded to visit the
+Governor of the town: he resided within the enclosure of a fort, and
+they were conducted towards him by a long gallery, open on one side,
+and through several large unfurnished rooms.&nbsp; In the last of this
+series, the Governor received them with the wonted solemn civility of
+the Turks, and entertained them with pipes and coffee.&nbsp; Neither
+his appearance, nor the style of the entertainment, were distinguished
+by any display of Ottoman grandeur; he was seated on a sofa in the midst
+of a group of shabby Albanian guards, who had but little reverence for
+the greatness of the guests, as they sat down beside them, and stared
+and laughed at their conversation with the Governor.</p>
+<p>But if the circumstances and aspect of the place derived no importance
+from visible splendour, every object around was enriched with stories
+and classical recollections.&nbsp; The battle of Actium was fought within
+the gulf.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ambracia&rsquo;s gulf behold, where once was lost<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+world for woman&mdash;lovely, harmless thing!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+yonder rippling bay, their naval host<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Did many
+a Roman chief and Asian king<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To doubtful conflict,
+certain slaughter bring.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Look where the second
+C&aelig;sar&rsquo;s trophies rose!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now, like
+the lands that rear&rsquo;d them, withering;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Imperial
+monarchs doubling human woes!<br />God! was Thy globe ordained for such
+to win and lose?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Having inspected the ruins of Nicopolis, which are more remarkable
+for their desultory extent and scattered remnants, than for any remains
+of magnificence or of beauty,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Childe Harold pass&rsquo;d o&rsquo;er many a mount
+sublime,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Through lands scarce noticed in historic
+tales.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet in famed Attica such lovely dales<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are
+rarely seen; nor can fair Tempe boast<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A charm
+they know not; loved Parnassus fails,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Though
+classic ground and consecrated most,<br />To match some spots that lurk
+within this lowering coast.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>In this journey he was still accompanied by Mr Hobhouse.&nbsp; They
+had provided themselves with a Greek to serve as a dragoman.&nbsp; With
+this person they soon became dissatisfied, in consequence of their general
+suspicion of Greek integrity, and because of the necessary influence
+which such an appendage acquires in the exercise of his office.&nbsp;
+He is the tongue and purse-bearer of his master; he procures him lodging,
+food, horses, and all conveniences; must support his dignity with the
+Turks&mdash;a difficult task in those days for a Greek&mdash;and his
+manifold trusts demand that he should be not only active and ingenious,
+but prompt and resolute.&nbsp; In the qualifications of this essential
+servant, the travellers were not fortunate&mdash;he never lost an opportunity
+of pilfering;&mdash;he was, however, zealous, bustling, and talkative,
+and withal good-humoured; and, having his mind intent on one object&mdash;making
+money&mdash;was never lazy nor drunken, negligent nor unprepared.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of October they embarked, and sailed up the Gulf of Salona,
+where they were shown into an empty barrack for lodgings.&nbsp; In this
+habitation twelve Albanian soldiers and an officer were quartered, who
+behaved towards them with civility.&nbsp; On their entrance, the officer
+gave them pipes and coffee, and after they had dined in their own apartment,
+he invited them to spend the evening with him, and they condescended
+to partake of his hospitality.</p>
+<p>Such instances as these in ordinary biography would be without interest;
+but when it is considered how firmly the impression of them was retained
+in the mind of the poet, and how intimately they entered into the substance
+of his reminiscences of Greece, they acquire dignity, and become epochal
+in the history of the development of his intellectual powers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All the Albanians,&rdquo; says Mr Hobhouse, &ldquo;strut very
+much when they walk, projecting their chests, throwing back their heads,
+and moving very slowly from side to side.&nbsp; Elmas (as the officer
+was called) had this strut more than any man perhaps we saw afterwards;
+and as the sight was then quite new to us, we could not help staring
+at the magisterial and superlatively dignified air of a man with great
+holes in his elbows, and looking altogether, as to his garment, like
+what we call a bull-beggar.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mr Hobhouse describes him as
+a captain, but by the number of men under him, he could have been of
+no higher rank than serjeant.&nbsp; Captains are centurions.</p>
+<p>After supper, the officer washed his hands with soap, inviting the
+travellers to do the same, for they had eaten a little with him; he
+did not, however, give the soap, but put it on the floor with an air
+so remarkable, as to induce Mr Hobhouse to inquire the meaning of it,
+and he was informed that there is a superstition in Turkey against giving
+soap: it is thought it will wash away love.</p>
+<p>Next day it rained, and the travellers were obliged to remain under
+shelter.&nbsp; The evening was again spent with the soldiers, who did
+their utmost to amuse them with Greek and Albanian songs and freaks
+of jocularity.</p>
+<p>In the morning of the 3rd of October they set out for Arta, with
+ten horses; four for themselves and servants, four for their luggage,
+and two for two soldiers whom they were induced to take with them as
+guards.&nbsp; Byron takes no notice of his visit to Arta in <i>Childe
+Harold</i>; but Mr Hobhouse has given a minute account of the town.&nbsp;
+They met there with nothing remarkable.</p>
+<p>The remainder of the journey to Joannina, the capital then of the
+famous Ali Pasha, was rendered unpleasant by the wetness of the weather;
+still it was impossible to pass through a country so picturesque in
+its features, and rendered romantic by the traditions of robberies and
+conflicts, without receiving impressions of that kind of imagery which
+constitutes the embroidery on the vestment of poetry.</p>
+<p>The first view of Joannina seen in the morning light, or glittering
+in the setting sun, is lively and alluring.&nbsp; The houses, domes,
+and minarets, shining through gardens of orange and lemon trees and
+groves of cypresses; the lake, spreading its broad mirror at the foot
+of the town, and the mountains rising abrupt around, all combined to
+present a landscape new and beautiful.&nbsp; Indeed, where may be its
+parallel? the lake was the Acherusian, Mount Pindus was in sight, and
+the Elysian fields of mythology spread in the lovely plains over which
+they passed in approaching the town.</p>
+<p>On entering Joannina, they were appalled by a spectacle characteristic
+of the country.&nbsp; Opposite a butcher&rsquo;s shop, they beheld hanging
+from the boughs of a tree a man&rsquo;s arm, with part of the side torn
+from the body.&nbsp; How long is it since Temple Bar, in the very heart
+of London, was adorned with the skulls of the Scottish noblemen who
+were beheaded for their loyalty to the son and representative of their
+ancient kings!</p>
+<p>The object of the visit to Joannina was to see Ali Pasha, in those
+days the most celebrated Vizier in all the western provinces of the
+Ottoman empire; but he was then at Tepellen&eacute;.&nbsp; The luxury
+of resting, however, in a capital, was not to be resisted, and they
+accordingly suspended their journey until they had satisfied their curiosity
+with an inspection of every object which merited attention.&nbsp; Of
+Joannina, it may be said, they were almost the discoverers, so little
+was known of it in England&mdash;I may say in Western Europe&mdash;previous
+to their visit.</p>
+<p>The palace and establishment of Ali Pasha were of regal splendour,
+combining with Oriental pomp the elegance of the Occident, and the travellers
+were treated by the Vizier&rsquo;s officers with all the courtesy due
+to the rank of Lord Byron, and every facility was afforded them to prosecute
+their journey.&nbsp; The weather, however&mdash;the season being far
+advanced&mdash;was wet and unsettled, and they suffered more fatigue
+and annoyance than travellers for information or pleasure should have
+had to encounter.</p>
+<p>The journey from Joannina to Zitza is among the happiest sketches
+in the <i>Pilgrimage of Childe Harold.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He pass&rsquo;d bleak Pindus, Acherusia&rsquo;s
+lake,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And left the primal city of the land,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+onwards did his farther journey take<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To greet
+Albania&rsquo;s chief, whose dread command<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is
+lawless law; for with a bloody hand<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He sways
+a nation, turbulent and bold:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet here and there
+some daring mountain-band<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Disdain his power,
+and from their rocky hold<br />Hurl their defiance far, nor yield unless
+to gold.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Monastic Zitza! from thy shady brow,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thou
+small, but favour&rsquo;d spot of holy ground!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where&rsquo;er
+we gaze, above, around, below,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What rainbow tints,
+what magic charms are found;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Rock, river, forest,
+mountain, all abound;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And bluest skies that harmonize
+the whole.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beneath, the distant torrent&rsquo;s
+rushing sound<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tells where the volumed cataract
+doth roll<br />Between those hanging rocks that shock yet please the
+soul.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>In the course of this journey the poet happened to be alone with
+his guides, when they lost their way during a tremendous thunderstorm,
+and he has commemorated the circumstance in the spirited stanzas beginning&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Chill and mink is the nightly blast.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Halt at Zitza</i>&mdash;<i>The River Acheron</i>&mdash;<i>Greek
+Wine</i>&mdash;<i>A Greek Chariot</i>&mdash;<i>Arrival at Tepellen&eacute;</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Vizier&rsquo;s Palace</i></p>
+<p>The travellers, on their arrival at Zitza, went to the monastery
+to solicit accommodation; and after some parley with one of the monks,
+through a small grating in a door plated with iron, on which marks of
+violence were visible, and which, before the country had been tranquillised
+under the vigorous dominion of Ali Pasha, had been frequently battered
+in vain by the robbers who then infested the neighbourhood.&nbsp; The
+prior, a meek and lowly man, entertained them in a warm chamber with
+grapes and a pleasant white wine, not trodden out by the feet, as he
+informed them, but expressed by the hand.&nbsp; To this gentle and kind
+host Byron alludes in his description of &ldquo;Monastic Zitza.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Amid the grove that crowns yon tufted hill,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which,
+were it not for many a mountain nigh<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Rising in
+lofty ranks, and loftier still,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Might well itself
+be deem&rsquo;d of dignity;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The convent&rsquo;s
+white walls glisten fair on high:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here dwells
+the caloyer, nor rude is he,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor niggard of his
+cheer; the passer-by<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is welcome still; nor heedless
+will he flee<br />From hence, if he delight kind Nature&rsquo;s sheen
+to see.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Having halted a night at Zitza, the travellers proceeded on their
+journey next morning, by a road which led through the vineyards around
+the villages, and the view from a barren hill, which they were obliged
+to cross, is described with some of the most forcible touches of the
+poet&rsquo;s pencil.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dusky and huge, enlarging on the sight,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nature&rsquo;s
+volcanic amphitheatre,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Chimera&rsquo;s Alps,
+extend from left to right;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beneath, a living
+valley seems to stir.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Flocks play, trees wave,
+streams flow, the mountain fir<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nodding above;
+behold Black Acheron!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Once consecrated to the
+sepulchre.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Pluto! if this be hell I look upon,<br />Close
+shamed Elysium&rsquo;s gates; my shade shall seek for none!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The Acheron, which they crossed in this route, is now called the
+Kalamas, a considerable stream, as large as the Avon at Bath but towards
+the evening they had some cause to think the Acheron had not lost all
+its original horror; for a dreadful thunderstorm came on, accompanied
+with deluges of rain, which more than once nearly carried away their
+luggage and horses.&nbsp; Byron himself does not notice this incident
+in <i>Childe Harold</i>, nor even the adventure more terrific which
+he met with alone in similar circumstances on the night before their
+arrival at Zitza, when his guides lost their way in the defiles of the
+mountains&mdash;adventures sufficiently disagreeable in the advent,
+but full of poesy in the remembrance.</p>
+<p>The first halt, after leaving Zitza, was at the little village of
+Mosure, where they were lodged in a miserable cabin, the residence of
+a poor priest, who treated them with all the kindness his humble means
+afforded.&nbsp; From this place they proceeded next morning through
+a wild and savage country, interspersed with vineyards, to Delvinaki,
+where it would seem they first met with genuine Greek wine, that is,
+wine mixed with resin and lime&mdash;a more odious draught at the first
+taste than any drug the apothecary mixes.&nbsp; Considering how much
+of allegory entered into the composition of the Greek mythology, it
+is probable that in representing the infant Bacchus holding a pine,
+the ancient sculptors intended an impersonation of the circumstance
+of resin being employed to preserve new wine.</p>
+<p>The travellers were now in Albania, the native region of Ali Pasha,
+whom they expected to find at Libokavo; but on entering the town, they
+were informed that he was further up the country at Tepellen&eacute;,
+or Tepalen, his native place.&nbsp; In their route from Libokavo to
+Tepalen they met with no adventure, nor did they visit Argyro-castro,
+which they saw some nine or ten miles off&mdash;a large city, supposed
+to contain about twenty thousand inhabitants, chiefly Turks.&nbsp; When
+they reached Cezarades, a distance of not more than nine miles, which
+had taken them five hours to travel, they were agreeably accommodated
+for the night in a neat cottage; and the Albanian landlord, in whose
+demeanour they could discern none of that cringing, downcast, sinister
+look which marked the degraded Greek, received them with a hearty welcome.</p>
+<p>Next morning they resumed their journey, and halted one night more
+before they reached Tepellen&eacute;, in approaching which they met
+a carriage, not inelegantly constructed after the German fashion, with
+a man on the box driving four-in-hand, and two Albanian soldiers standing
+on the footboard behind.&nbsp; They were floundering on at a trot through
+mud and mire, boldly regardless of danger; but it seemed to the English
+eyes of the travellers impossible that such a vehicle should ever be
+able to reach Libokavo, to which it was bound.&nbsp; In due time they
+crossed the river Laos, or Voioutza, which was then full, and appeared
+both to Byron and his friend as broad as the Thames at Westminster;
+after crossing it on a stone bridge, they came in sight of Tepellen&eacute;,
+when</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The sun had sunk behind vast Tomerit,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+Laos, wide and fierce, came roaring by;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The shades
+of wonted night were gathering yet,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When down
+the steep banks, winding warily,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Childe Harold
+saw, like meteors in the sky,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The glittering
+minarets of Tepalen,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whose walls o&rsquo;erlook
+the stream; and drawing nigh,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He heard the busy
+hum of warrior-men<br />Swelling the breeze that sigh&rsquo;d along
+the lengthening glen.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>On their arrival, they proceeded at once to the residence of Ali
+Pasha, an extensive rude pile, where they witnessed a scene, not dissimilar
+to that which they might, perhaps, have beheld some hundred years ago,
+in the castle-yard of a great feudal baron.&nbsp; Soldiers, with their
+arms piled against the wall, were assembled in different parts of the
+court, several horses, completely caparisoned, were led about, others
+were neighing under the hands of the grooms; and for the feast of the
+night, armed cooks were busy dressing kids and sheep.&nbsp; The scene
+is described with the poet&rsquo;s liveliest pencil.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Richly caparison&rsquo;d a ready row<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+armed horse, and many a warlike store,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Circled
+the wide extending court below;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Above, strange
+groups adorn&rsquo;d the corridor,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And ofttimes
+through the area&rsquo;s echoing door,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Some high-capp&rsquo;d
+Tartar spurr&rsquo;d his steed away.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Turk,
+the Greek, the Albanian, and the Moor<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here mingled
+in their many-hued array,<br />While the deep war-drum&rsquo;s sound
+announced the close of day.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Some recline
+in groups,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Scanning the motley scene that varies
+round.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There some grave Moslem to devotion stoops,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+some that smoke, and some that play, are found.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here
+the Albanian proudly treads the ground<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Half-whispering,
+there the Greek is heard to prate.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hark! from
+the mosque the nightly solemn sound;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Muezzin&rsquo;s
+call doth shake the minaret.<br />&ldquo;There is no god but God!&mdash;to
+prayer&mdash;lo, God is great!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The peculiar quietness and ease with which the Mahommedans say their
+prayers, struck the travellers as one of the most peculiar characteristics
+which they had yet witnessed of that people.&nbsp; Some of the graver
+sort began their devotions in the places where they were sitting, undisturbed
+and unnoticed by those around them who were otherwise engaged.&nbsp;
+The prayers last about ten minutes they are not uttered aloud, but generally
+in a low voice, sometimes with only a motion of the lips; and, whether
+performed in the public street or in a room, attract no attention from
+the bystanders.&nbsp; Of more than a hundred of the guards in the gallery
+of the Vizier&rsquo;s mansion at Tepellen&eacute;, not more than five
+or six were seen at prayers.&nbsp; The Albanians are not reckoned strict
+Mahommedans; but no Turk, however irreligious himself, ever disturbs
+the devotion of others.</p>
+<p>It was then the fast of Ramazan, and the travellers, during the night,
+were annoyed with the perpetual noise of the carousal kept up in the
+gallery, and by the drum, and the occasional voice of the Muezzin.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just at this season, Ramazani&rsquo;s fast<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Through
+the long day its penance did maintain:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But when
+the lingering twilight hour was past,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Revel and
+feast assumed the rule again.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Now all was bustle,
+and the menial train<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Prepared and spread the
+plenteous board within;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The vacant gallery now
+seem&rsquo;d made in vain,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But from the chambers
+came the mingling din,<br />And page and slave, anon, were passing out
+and in.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Audience appointed with Ali Pasha</i>&mdash;<i>Description of
+the Vizier&rsquo;s Person</i>&mdash;<i>An Audience of the Vizier of
+the Morea</i></p>
+<p>The progress of no other poet&rsquo;s mind can be to clearly traced
+to personal experience as that of Byron&rsquo;s.&nbsp; The minute details
+in the <i>Pilgrimage of Childe Harold</i> are the observations of an
+actual traveller.&nbsp; Had they been given in prose, they could not
+have been less imbued with fiction.&nbsp; From this fidelity they possess
+a value equal to the excellence of the poetry, and ensure for themselves
+an interest as lasting as it is intense.&nbsp; When the manners and
+customs of the inhabitants shall have been changed by time and the vicissitudes
+of society, the scenery and the mountains will bear testimony to the
+accuracy of Lord Byron&rsquo;s descriptions.</p>
+<p>The day after the travellers&rsquo; arrival at Tepellen&eacute; was
+fixed by the Vizier for their first audience; and about noon, the time
+appointed, an officer of the palace with a white wand announced to them
+that his highness was ready to receive them, and accordingly they proceeded
+from their own apartment, accompanied by the secretary of the Vizier,
+and attended by their own dragoman.&nbsp; The usher of the white rod
+led the way, and conducted them through a suite of meanly-furnished
+apartments to the presence chamber.&nbsp; Ali when they entered was
+standing, a courtesy of marked distinction from a Turk.&nbsp; As they
+advanced towards him, he seated himself, and requested them to sit near
+him.&nbsp; The room was spacious and handsomely fitted up, surrounded
+by that species of continued sofa which the upholsterers call a divan,
+covered with richly-embroidered velvet; in the middle of the floor was
+a large marble basin, in which a fountain was playing.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In marble-paved pavilion, where a spring<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+living water from the centre rose,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Whose bubbling
+did a genial freshness fling,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And soft voluptuous
+couches breathed repose,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;ALI reclined; a man
+of war and woes.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet in his lineaments ye cannot
+trace,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;While Gentleness her milder radiance throws<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Along
+that aged, venerable face,<br />The deeds that lurk beneath and stain
+him with disgrace.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;It is not that yon hoary, lengthening beard,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ill
+suits the passions that belong to youth;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Love
+conquers age&mdash;so Hafiz hath averr&rsquo;d:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So
+sings the Teian, and he sings in sooth&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But
+crimes that scorn the tender voice of Ruth,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beseeming
+all men ill, but most the man<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In years, have
+mark&rsquo;d him with a tiger&rsquo;s tooth;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Blood
+follows blood, and through their mortal span,<br />In bloodier acts
+conclude those who with blood began.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>When this was written Ali Pasha was still living; but the prediction
+which it implies was soon after verified, and he closed his stern and
+energetic life with a catastrophe worthy of its guilt and bravery.&nbsp;
+He voluntarily perished by firing a powder-magazine, when surrounded,
+beyond all chance of escape, by the troops of the Sultan his master,
+whose authority he had long contemned.</p>
+<p>Mr Hobhouse describes him at this audience as a short fat man, about
+five feet five inches in height; with a very pleasing face, fair and
+round; and blue fair eyes, not settled into a Turkish gravity.&nbsp;
+His beard was long and hoary, and such a one as any other Turk would
+have been proud of; nevertheless, he, who was more occupied in attending
+to his guests than himself, neither gazed at it, smelt it, nor stroked
+it, according to the custom of his countrymen, when they seek to fill
+up the pauses in conversation.&nbsp; He was not dressed with the usual
+magnificence of dignitaries of his degree, except that his high turban,
+composed of many small rolls, was of golden muslin, and his yataghan
+studded with diamonds.</p>
+<p>He was civil and urbane in the entertainment of his guests, and requested
+them to consider themselves as his children.&nbsp; It was on this occasion
+he told Lord Byron, that he discovered his noble blood by the smallness
+of his hands and ears: a remark which has become proverbial, and is
+acknowledged not to be without truth in the evidence of pedigree.</p>
+<p>The ceremonies on such visits are similar all over Turkey, among
+personages of the same rank; and as Lord Byron has not described in
+verse the details of what took place with him, it will not be altogether
+obtrusive here to recapitulate what happened to myself during a visit
+to Velhi Pasha, the son of Ali: he was then Vizier of the Morea, and
+residing at Tripolizza.</p>
+<p>In the afternoon, about four o&rsquo;clock, I set out for the seraglio
+with Dr Teriano, the Vizier&rsquo;s physician, and the Vizier&rsquo;s
+Italian secretary.&nbsp; The gate of the palace was not unlike the entrance
+to some of the closes in Edinburgh, and the court within reminded me
+of Smithfield, in London; but it was not surrounded by such lofty buildings,
+nor in any degree of comparison so well constructed.&nbsp; We ascended
+a ruinous staircase, which led to an open gallery, where three or four
+hundred of the Vizier&rsquo;s Albanian guards were lounging.&nbsp; In
+an antechamber, which opened from the gallery, a number of officers
+were smoking, and in the middle, on the floor, two old Turks were seriously
+engaged at chess.</p>
+<p>My name being sent in to the Vizier, a guard of ceremony was called,
+and after they had arranged themselves in the presence chamber, I was
+admitted.&nbsp; The doctor and the secretary having, in the meantime,
+taken off their shoes, accompanied me in to act as interpreters.</p>
+<p>The presence chamber was about forty feet square, showy and handsome:
+round the walls were placed sofas, which, from being covered with scarlet,
+reminded me of the woolsacks in the House of Lords.&nbsp; In the farthest
+corner of the room, elevated on a crimson velvet cushion, sat the Vizier,
+wrapped in a superb pelisse: on his head was a vast turban, in his belt
+a dagger, incrusted with jewels, and on the little finger of his right
+hand he wore a solitaire as large as the knob on the stopper of a vinegar-cruet,
+and which was said to have cost two thousand five hundred pounds sterling.&nbsp;
+In his left hand he held a string of small coral beads, a comboloio
+which he twisted backwards and forwards during the greater part of the
+visit.&nbsp; On the sofa beside him lay a pair of richly-ornamented
+London-made pistols.&nbsp; At some distance, on the same sofa, but not
+on a cushion, sat Memet, the Pasha of Napoli Romania, whose son was
+contracted in marriage to the Vizier&rsquo;s daughter.&nbsp; On the
+floor, at the foot of this pasha, and opposite to the Vizier, a secretary
+was writing despatches.&nbsp; These were the only persons in the room
+who had the honour of being seated; for, according to the etiquette
+of this viceregal court, those who received the Vizier&rsquo;s pay were
+not allowed to sit down in his presence.</p>
+<p>On my entrance, his highness motioned to me to sit beside him, and
+through the medium of the interpreters began with some commonplace courtly
+insignificancies, as a prelude to more interesting conversation.&nbsp;
+In his manners I found him free and affable, with a considerable tincture
+of humour and drollery.&nbsp; Among other questions, he inquired if
+I had a wife: and being answered in the negative, he replied to me himself
+in Italian, that I was a happy man, for he found his very troublesome:
+considering their probable number, this was not unlikely.&nbsp; Pipes
+and coffee were in the mean-time served.&nbsp; The pipe presented to
+the Vizier was at least twelve feet long; the mouth-piece was formed
+of a single block of amber, about the size of an ordinary cucumber,
+and fastened to the shaft by a broad hoop of gold, decorated with jewels.&nbsp;
+While the pipes and coffee were distributing, a musical clock, which
+stood in a niche, began to play, and continued doing so until this ceremony
+was over.&nbsp; The coffee was literally a drop of dregs in a very small
+china cup, placed in a golden socket.&nbsp; His highness was served
+with his coffee by Pasha Bey, his generalissimo, a giant, with the tall
+crown of a dun-coloured beaver-hat on his head.&nbsp; In returning the
+cup to him, the Vizier elegantly eructed in his face.&nbsp; After the
+regale of the pipes and coffee, the attendants withdrew, and his highness
+began a kind of political discussion, in which, though making use of
+an interpreter, he managed to convey his questions with delicacy and
+address.</p>
+<p>On my rising to retire, his highness informed me, with more polite
+condescension than a Christian of a thousandth part of his authority
+would have done, that during my stay at Tripolizza horses were at my
+command, and guards who would accompany me to any part of the country
+I might choose to visit.</p>
+<p>Next morning, he sent a complimentary message, importing, that he
+had ordered dinner to be prepared at the doctor&rsquo;s for me and two
+of his officers.&nbsp; The two officers were lively fellows; one of
+them in particular seemed to have acquired, by instinct, a large share
+of the ease and politeness of Christendom.&nbsp; The dinner surpassed
+all count and reckoning, dish followed dish, till I began to fancy that
+the cook either expected I would honour his highness&rsquo;s entertainment
+as C&aelig;sar did the supper of Cicero, or supposed that the party
+were not finite beings.&nbsp; During the course of this amazing service,
+the principal singers and musicians of the seraglio arrived, and sung
+and played several pieces of very sweet Turkish music.&nbsp; Among others
+was a song composed by the late unfortunate Sultan Selim, the air of
+which was pleasingly simple and pathetic.&nbsp; I had heard of the Sultan&rsquo;s
+poetry before, a small collection of which has been printed.&nbsp; It
+is said to be interesting and tender, consisting chiefly of little sonnets,
+written after he was deposed; in which he contrasts the tranquillity
+of his retirement with the perils and anxieties of his former grandeur.&nbsp;
+After the songs, the servants of the officers, who were Albanians, danced
+a Macedonian reel, in which they exhibited several furious specimens
+of Highland agility.&nbsp; The officers then took their leave, and I
+went to bed, equally gratified by the hospitality of the Vizier and
+the incidents of the entertainment.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>The Effect of Ali Pasha&rsquo;s Character on Lord Byron</i>&mdash;<i>Sketch
+of the Career of Ali</i>, <i>and the Perseverance with which he pursued
+the Objects of his Ambition</i></p>
+<p>Although many traits and lineaments of Lord Byron&rsquo;s own character
+may be traced in the portraits of his heroes, I have yet often thought
+that Ali Pasha was the model from which he drew several of their most
+remarkable features; and on this account it may be expedient to give
+a sketch of that bold and stern personage&mdash;if I am correct in my
+conjecture&mdash;and the reader can judge for himself when the picture
+is before him&mdash;it would be a great defect, according to the plan
+of this work, not to do so.</p>
+<p>Ali Pasha was born at Tepellen&eacute;, about the year 1750.&nbsp;
+His father was a pasha of two tails, but possessed of little influence.&nbsp;
+At his death Ali succeeded to no inheritance but the house in which
+he was born; and it was his boast, in the plenitude of his power, that
+he began his fortune with sixty paras, about eighteen pence sterling,
+and a musket.&nbsp; At that time the country was much infested with
+cattle-stealers, and the flocks and herds of the neighbouring villages
+were often plundered.</p>
+<p>Ali collected a few followers from among the retainers of his father,
+made himself master, first of one village, then of another, amassed
+money, increased his power, and at last found himself at the head of
+a considerable body of Albanians, whom he paid by plunder; for he was
+then only a great robber&mdash;the Rob Roy of Albania: in a word, one
+of those independent freebooters who divide among themselves so much
+of the riches and revenues of the Ottoman dominions.</p>
+<p>In following up this career, he met with many adventures and reverses,
+but his course was still onwards, and uniformly distinguished by enterprise
+and cruelty.&nbsp; His enemies expected no mercy when vanquished in
+the field; and when accidentally seized in private, they were treated
+with equal rigour.&nbsp; It is reported that he even roasted alive on
+spits some of his most distinguished adversaries.</p>
+<p>When he had collected money enough, he bought a pashalic; and being
+invested with that dignity, he became still more eager to enlarge his
+possessions.&nbsp; He continued in constant war with the neighbouring
+pashas; and cultivating, by adroit agents, the most influential interest
+at Constantinople, he finally obtained possession of Joannina, and was
+confirmed pasha of the territory attached to it, by an imperial firman.&nbsp;
+He then went to war with the pashas of Arta, of Delvino, and of Ocrida,
+whom he subdued, together with that of Triccala, and established a predominant
+influence over the agas of Thessaly.&nbsp; The pasha of Vallona he poisoned
+in a bath at Sophia; and strengthened his power by marrying his two
+sons, Mouctar and Velhi, to the daughters of the successor and brother
+of the man whom he had murdered.&nbsp; In <i>The Bride of Abydos</i>,
+Lord Byron describes the assassination, but applies it to another party.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Reclined and feverish in the bath,<br />He, when the hunter&rsquo;s
+sport was up,<br />But little deem&rsquo;d a brother&rsquo;s wrath<br />To
+quench his thirst had such a cup:<br />The bowl a bribed attendant bore&mdash;<br />He
+drank one draught, nor needed more.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>During this progression of his fortunes, he had been more than once
+called upon to furnish his quota of troops to the imperial armies, and
+had served at their head with distinction against the Russians.&nbsp;
+He knew his countrymen, however, too well ever to trust himself at Constantinople.&nbsp;
+It was reported that he had frequently been offered some of the highest
+offices in the empire, but he always declined them and sought for power
+only among the fastnesses of his native region.&nbsp; Stories of the
+skill and courage with which he counteracted several machinations to
+procure his head were current and popular throughout the country, and
+among the Greeks in general he was certainly regarded as inferior only
+to the Grand Vizier himself.&nbsp; But though distrusting and distrusted,
+he always in the field fought for the Sultan with great bravery, particularly
+against the famous rebel Paswan Oglou.&nbsp; On his return from that
+war in 1798, he was, in consequence, made a pasha of three tails, or
+vizier, and was more than once offered the ultimate dignity of Grand
+Vizier, but he still declined all the honours of the metropolis.&nbsp;
+The object of his ambition was not temporary power, but to found a kingdom.</p>
+<p>He procured, however, pashalics for his two sons, the younger of
+whom, Velhi, saved sufficient money in his first government to buy the
+pashalic of the Morea, with the dignity of vizier, for which he paid
+seventy-five thousand pounds sterling.&nbsp; His eldest son, Mouctar,
+was of a more warlike turn, with less ambition than his brother.&nbsp;
+At the epoch of which I am speaking, he supplied his father&rsquo;s
+place at the head of the Albanians in the armies of the Sultan, in which
+he greatly distinguished himself in the campaign of 1809 against the
+Russians.</p>
+<p>The difficulties which Ali Pasha had to encounter in establishing
+his ascendancy, did not arise so much from the opposition he met with
+from the neighbouring pashas as from the nature of the people, and of
+the country of which he was determined to make himself master.&nbsp;
+Many of the plains and valleys which composed his dominions were occupied
+by inhabitants who had been always in rebellion, and were never entirely
+conquered by the Turks, such as the Chimeriotes, the Sulliotes, and
+the nations living among the mountains adjacent to the coast of the
+Ionian Sea.&nbsp; Besides this, the woods and hills of every part of
+his dominions were in a great degree possessed by formidable bands of
+robbers, who, recruited and protected by the villages, and commanded
+by chiefs as brave and as enterprising as himself, laid extensive tracts
+under contribution, burning and plundering regardless of his jurisdiction.&nbsp;
+Against these he proceeded with the most iron severity; they were burned,
+hanged, beheaded, and impaled, in all parts of the country, until they
+were either exterminated or expelled.</p>
+<p>A short time before the arrival of Lord Byron at Joannina, a large
+body of insurgents who infested the mountains between that city and
+Triccala, were defeated and dispersed by Mouctar Pasha, who cut to pieces
+a hundred of them on the spot.&nbsp; These robbers had been headed by
+a Greek priest, who, after the defeat, went to Constantinople and procured
+a firman of protection, with which he ventured to return to Joannina,
+where the Vizier invited him to a conference, and made him a prisoner.&nbsp;
+In deference to the firman, Ali confined him in prison, but used him
+well until a messenger could bring from Constantinople a permission
+from the Porte to authorise him to do what he pleased with the rebel.&nbsp;
+It was the arm of this man which Byron beheld suspended from the bough
+on entering Joannina.</p>
+<p>By these vigorous measures, Ali Pasha rendered the greater part of
+Albania and the contiguous districts safely accessible, which were before
+overrun by bandits and freebooters; and consequently, by opening the
+country to merchants, and securing their persons and goods, not only
+increased his own revenues, but improved the condition of his subjects.&nbsp;
+He built bridges over the rivers, raised causeways over the marshes,
+opened roads, adorned the country and the towns with new buildings,
+and by many salutary regulations, acted the part of a just, though a
+merciless, prince.</p>
+<p>In private life he was no less distinguished for the same unmitigated
+cruelty, but he afforded many examples of strong affection.&nbsp; The
+wife of his son Mouctar was a great favourite with the old man.&nbsp;
+Upon paying her a visit one morning, he found her in tears.&nbsp; He
+questioned her several times as to the cause of her grief; she at last
+reluctantly acknowledged that it arose from the diminution of her husband&rsquo;s
+regard.&nbsp; He inquired if she thought he paid attention to other
+women; the reply was in the affirmative; and she related that a lady
+of the name of Phrosyn&egrave;, the wife of a rich Jew, had beguiled
+her of her husband&rsquo;s love; for she had seen at the bath, upon
+the finger of Phrosyn&egrave;, a rich ring, which had belonged to Mouctar,
+and which she had often in vain entreated him to give to her.&nbsp;
+Ali immediately ordered the lady to be seized, and to be tied up in
+a sack, and cast into the lake.&nbsp; Various versions of this tragical
+tale are met with in all parts of the country, and the fate of Phrosyn&egrave;
+is embodied in a ballad of touching pathos and melody.</p>
+<p>That the character of this intrepid and ruthless warrior made a deep
+impression on the mind of Byron cannot be questioned.&nbsp; The scenes
+in which he acted were, as the poet traversed the country, everywhere
+around him; and his achievements, bloody, dark, and brave, had become
+themes of song and admiration.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Leave Joannina for Prevesa</i>&mdash;<i>Land at Fanari</i>&mdash;<i>Albania</i>&mdash;<i>Byron&rsquo;s
+Character of the Inhabitants</i></p>
+<p>Having gratified their curiosity with an inspection of every object
+of interest at Tepellen&eacute;, the travellers returned Joannina, where
+they again resided several days, partaking of the hospitality of the
+principal inhabitants.&nbsp; On the 3rd of November they bade it adieu,
+and returned to Salona, on the Golf of Arta; where, in consequence of
+hearing that the inhabitants of Carnia were up in arms, that numerous
+bands of robbers had descended from the mountains of Ziccola and Agrapha,
+and had made their appearance on the other side of the gulf, they resolved
+to proceed by water to Prevesa, and having presented an order which
+they had received from Ali Pasha, for the use of his galliot, she was
+immediately fitted out to convey them.&nbsp; In the course of the voyage
+they suffered a great deal of alarm, ran some risk, and were obliged
+to land on the mainland of Albania, in a bay called Fanari, contiguous
+to the mountainous district of Sulli.&nbsp; There they procured horses,
+and rode to Volondorako, a town belonging to the Vizier, by the primate
+of which and his highness&rsquo;s garrison they were received with all
+imaginable civility.&nbsp; Having passed the night there, they departed
+in the morning, which, proving bright and beautiful, afforded them interesting
+views of the steep romantic environs of Sulli.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Land of Albania, where Iskander rose,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Theme
+of the young, and beacon of the wise,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And he
+his namesake whose oft-baffled foes<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shrunk from
+his deeds of chivalrous emprise;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Land of Albania!
+let me bend mine eyes<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On thee, thou rugged nurse
+of savage men!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The Cross descends, thy minarets
+arise,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And the pale crescent sparkles in the
+glen,<br />Through many a cypress grove within each city&rsquo;s ken.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Of the inhabitants of Albania&mdash;the Arnaouts or Albanese&mdash;Lord
+Byron says they reminded him strongly of the Highlanders of Scotland,
+whom they undoubtedly resemble in dress, figure, and manner of living.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The very mountains seemed Caledonian with a kinder climate.&nbsp;
+The kilt, though white, the spare active form, their dialect, Celtic
+in its sound, and their hardy habits, all carried me back to Morven.&nbsp;
+No nation are so detested and dreaded by their neighbours as the Albanese;
+the Greeks hardly regard them as Christians, or the Turks as Moslems,
+and in fact they are a mixture of both, and sometimes neither.&nbsp;
+Their habits are predatory: all are armed, and the red-shawled Arnaouts,
+the Montenegrins, Chimeriotes, and Gedges, are treacherous; the others
+differ somewhat in garb, and essentially in character.&nbsp; As far
+as my own experience goes, I can speak favourably.&nbsp; I was attended
+by two, an infidel and a Mussulman, to Constantinople and every other
+part of Turkey which came within my observations, and men more faithful
+in peril and indefatigable in service are nowhere to be found.&nbsp;
+The infidel was named Basilius, the Moslem Dervish Tahiri; the former
+a man of middle age, and the latter about my own.&nbsp; Basili was strictly
+charged by Ali Pasha in person to attend us, and Dervish was one of
+fifty who accompanied us through the forests of Acarnania, to the banks
+of the Achelous, and onward to Missolonghi.&nbsp; There I took him into
+my own service, and never had occasion to repent it until the moment
+of my departure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When in 1810, after my friend, Mr Hobhouse, left me for England,
+I was seized with a severe fever in the Morea, these men saved my life
+by frightening away my physician, whose throat they threatened to cut
+if I was not cured within a given time.&nbsp; To this consolatory assurance
+of posthumous retribution, and a resolute refusal of Dr Romanelli&rsquo;s
+prescriptions, I attributed my recovery.&nbsp; I had left my last remaining
+English servant at Athens; my dragoman was as ill as myself; and my
+poor Arnaouts nursed me with an attention which would have done honour
+to civilization.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They had a variety of adventures, for the Moslem, Dervish,
+being a remarkably handsome man, was always squabbling with the husbands
+of Athens; insomuch that four of the principal Turks paid me a visit
+of remonstrance at the convent, on the subject of his having taken a
+woman to the bath&mdash;whom he had lawfully bought, however&mdash;a
+thing quite contrary to etiquette.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Basili also was extremely gallant among his own persuasion,
+and had the greatest veneration for the Church, mixed with the highest
+contempt of Churchmen, whom he cuffed upon occasion in a most heterodox
+manner.&nbsp; Yet he never passed a church without crossing himself;
+and I remember the risk he ran on entering St Sophia, in Stamboul, because
+it had once been a place of his worship.&nbsp; On remonstrating with
+him on his inconsistent proceedings, he invariably answered, &lsquo;Our
+church is holy, our priests are thieves&rsquo;; and then he crossed
+himself as usual, and boxed the ears of the first papas who refused
+to assist in any required operation, as was always found to be necessary
+where a priest had any influence with the Cogia Bashi of his village.&nbsp;
+Indeed, a more abandoned race of miscreants cannot exist than the lower
+orders of the Greek clergy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When preparations were made for my return, my Albanians were
+summoned to receive their pay.&nbsp; Basili took his with an awkward
+show of regret at my intended departure, and marched away to his quarters
+with his bag of piastres.&nbsp; I sent for Dervish, but for some time
+he was not to be found; at last he entered just as Signor Logotheti,
+father to the <i>ci-devant</i> Anglo-consul of Athens, and some other
+of my Greek acquaintances, paid me a visit.&nbsp; Dervish took the money,
+but on a sudden dashed it on the ground; and clasping his hands, which
+he raised to his forehead, rushed out of the room weeping bitterly.&nbsp;
+From that moment to the hour of my embarkation, he continued his lamentations,
+and all our efforts to console him only produced this answer, &lsquo;He
+leaves me.&rsquo;&nbsp; Signor Logotheti, who never wept before for
+anything less than the loss of a paras, melted; the padre of the convent,
+my attendants, my visitors, and I verily believe that even Sterne&rsquo;s
+foolish fat scullion would have left her fish-kettle to sympathise with
+the unaffected and unexpected sorrow of this barbarian.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For my part, when I remembered that a short time before my
+departure from England, a noble and most intimate associate had excused
+himself from taking leave of me, because he had to attend a relation
+&lsquo;to a milliner&rsquo;s,&rsquo; I felt no less surprised than humiliated
+by the present occurrence and the past recollection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Albanians in general (I do not mean the cultivators of
+the earth in the provinces, who have also that appellation, but the
+mountaineers) have a fine cast of countenance; and the most beautiful
+women I have ever beheld, in stature and in features, we saw levelling
+the road broken down by the torrents between Delvinaki and Libokavo.&nbsp;
+Their manner of walking is truly theatrical, but this strut is probably
+the effect of the capote or cloak depending from one shoulder.&nbsp;
+Their long hair reminds you of the Spartans, and their courage in desultory
+warfare is unquestionable.&nbsp; Though they have some cavalry among
+the Gedges, I never saw a good Arnaout horseman, but on foot they are
+never to be subdued.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The travellers having left Volondorako proceeded southward until
+they came near to the seaside, and passing along the shore, under a
+castle belonging to Ali Pasha, on the lofty summit of a steep rock,
+they at last reached Nicopolis again, the ruins of which they revisited.</p>
+<p>On their arrival at Prevesa, they had no choice left but that of
+crossing Carnia, and the country being, as already mentioned, overrun
+with robbers, they provided themselves with a guard of thirty-seven
+soldiers, and procured another galliot to take them down the Gulf of
+Arta, to the place whence they were to commence their land journey.</p>
+<p>Having embarked, they continued sailing with very little wind until
+they reached the fortress of Vonitza, where they waited all night for
+the freshening of the morning breeze, with which they again set sail,
+and about four o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon arrived at Utraikee.</p>
+<p>At this place there was only a custom house and a barrack for troops
+close to each other, and surrounded, except towards the water, by a
+high wall.&nbsp; In the evening the gates were secured, and preparations
+made for feeding their Albanian guards; a goat was killed and roasted
+whole, and four fires were kindled in the yard, around which the soldiers
+seated themselves in parties.&nbsp; After eating and drinking, the greater
+part of them assembled at the largest of the fires, and, while the travellers
+were themselves with the elders of the party seated on the ground, danced
+round the blaze to their own songs, with astonishing Highland energy.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Childe Harold at a little distance stood,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+view&rsquo;d, but not displeased, the revelry,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor
+hated harmless mirth, however rude;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In sooth,
+it was no vulgar sight to see<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Their barbarous,
+yet their not indecent glee;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And as the flames
+along their faces gleam&rsquo;d,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Their gestures
+nimble, dark eyes flashing free,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The long wild
+locks that to their girdles stream&rsquo;d,<br />While thus in concert
+they this lay half sang, half scream&rsquo;d.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;I talk not of mercy, I talk not of fear;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He
+neither must know who would serve the vizier;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Since
+the days of our prophet, the crescent ne&rsquo;er saw<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+chief ever glorious like Ali Pashaw.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Leave Utraikee</i>&mdash;<i>Dangerous Pass in the Woods</i>&mdash;<i>Catoona</i>&mdash;<i>Quarrel
+between the Guard and Primate of the Village</i>&mdash;<i>Makala</i>&mdash;<i>Gouri</i>&mdash;<i>Missolonghi</i>&mdash;<i>Parnassus</i></p>
+<p>Having spent the night at Utraikee, Byron and his friend continued
+their journey southward.&nbsp; The reports of the state of the country
+induced them to take ten additional soldiers with them, as their road
+for the first two hours lay through dangerous passes in the forest.&nbsp;
+On approaching these places fifteen or twenty of the party walked briskly
+on before, and when they had gone through the pass halted until the
+travellers came up.&nbsp; In the woods two or three green spots were
+discovered on the road-side, and on them Turkish tombstones, generally
+under a clump of trees, and near a well or fountain.</p>
+<p>When they had passed the forest they reached an open country, whence
+they sent back the ten men whom they had brought from Utraikee.&nbsp;
+They then passed on to a village called Catoona, where they arrived
+by noon.&nbsp; It was their intention to have proceeded farther that
+day, but their progress was interrupted by an affair between their Albanian
+guard and the primate of the village.&nbsp; As they were looking about,
+while horses were collecting to carry their luggage, one of the soldiers
+drew his sword at the primate, the Greek head magistrate; guns were
+cocked, and in an instant, before either Lord Byron or Mr Hobhouse could
+stop the affray, the primate, throwing off his shoes and cloak, fled
+so precipitately that he rolled down the hill and dislocated his shoulder.&nbsp;
+It was a long time before they could persuade him to return to his house,
+where they lodged, and when he did return he remarked that he cared
+comparatively little about his shoulder to the loss of a purse with
+fifteen sequins, which had dropped out of his pocket during the tumble.&nbsp;
+The hint was understood.</p>
+<p>Catoona is inhabited by Greeks only, and is a rural, well-built village.&nbsp;
+The primate&rsquo;s house was neatly fitted up with sofas.&nbsp; Upon
+a knoll, in the middle of the village, stood a schoolhouse, and from
+that spot the view was very extensive.&nbsp; To the west are lofty mountains,
+ranging from north to south, near the coast; to the east a grand romantic
+prospect in the distance, and in the foreground a green valley, with
+a considerable river winding through a long line of country.</p>
+<p>They had some difficulty in procuring horses at Catoona, and in consequence
+were detained until past eleven o&rsquo;clock the next morning, and
+only travelled four hours that day to Makala, a well-built stone village,
+containing about forty houses distinct from each other, and inhabited
+by Greeks, who were a little above the condition of peasants, being
+engaged in pasturage and a small wool-trade.</p>
+<p>The travellers were now in Carnia, where they found the inhabitants
+much better lodged than in the Albanian villages.&nbsp; The house in
+which they slept at this place resembled those old mansions which are
+to be met with in the bottoms of the Wiltshire Downs.&nbsp; Two green
+courts, one before and the other behind, were attached to it, and the
+whole was surrounded by a high and thick wall, which shut out the prospect,
+but was necessary in a country so frequently overrun by strong bands
+of freebooters.</p>
+<p>From Makala they proceeded through the woods, and in the course of
+their journey passed three new-made graves, which the Albanians pointing
+at as they rode by, said they were &ldquo;robbers.&rdquo;&nbsp; In the
+course of the journey they had a distant view of the large town of Vraikore,
+on the left bank of the Aspro, but they did not approach it, crossing
+the river by a ferry to the village of Gouria, where they passed the
+night.</p>
+<p>Leaving that place in the morning, they took an easterly direction,
+and continued to ride across a plain of cornfields, near the banks of
+the river, in a rich country; sometimes over stone causeways, and between
+the hedges of gardens and olive-groves, until they were stopped by the
+sea.&nbsp; This was that fruitful region formerly called Parachelo&iuml;tis,
+which, according to classic allegory, was drained or torn from the river
+Achelous, by the perseverance of Hercules and presented by him for a
+nuptial present to the daughter of O&euml;neus.</p>
+<p>The water at which they had now arrived was rather a salt marsh than
+the sea, a shallow bay stretching from the mouth of the Gulf of Lepanto
+into the land for several miles.&nbsp; Having dismissed their horses,
+they passed over in boats to Natolico, a town which stood in the water.&nbsp;
+Here they fell in with a hospitable Jew, who made himself remembered
+by saying that he was honoured in their having partaken of his little
+misery.</p>
+<p>Natolico, where they stayed for the night, was a well-built town;
+the houses of timber, chiefly of two stories, and about six hundred
+in number.&nbsp; Having sent on their baggage in boats, they themselves
+proceeded to the town of Missolonghi, so celebrated since as having
+suffered greatly during the recent rebellion of the Greeks, but more
+particularly as the place where Lord Byron died.</p>
+<p>Missolonghi is situated on the south side of the salt marsh or shallow,
+along the north coast of the Gulf of Corinth, nearly opposite to Patras.&nbsp;
+It is a dull, and I should think an unwholesome place.&nbsp; The marsh,
+for miles on each side, has only from a foot to two feet of water on
+it, but there is a channel for boats marked out by perches.&nbsp; When
+I was there the weather was extremely wet, and I had no other opportunity
+of seeing the character of the adjacent country than during the intervals
+of the showers.&nbsp; It was green and pastoral, with a short skirt
+of cultivation along the bottom of the hills.</p>
+<p>Abrupt and rapid as the foregoing sketch of the journey through Albania
+has been, it is evident from the novelty of its circumstances that it
+could not be performed without leaving deep impressions on the susceptible
+mind of the poet.&nbsp; It is impossible, I think, not to allow that
+far more of the wildness and romantic gloom of his imagination was derived
+from the incidents of this tour, than from all the previous experience
+of his life.&nbsp; The scenes he visited, the characters with whom he
+became familiar, and above all, the chartered feelings, passions, and
+principles of the inhabitants, were greatly calculated to supply his
+mind with rare and valuable poetical materials.&nbsp; It is only in
+this respect that the details of his travels are interesting.&mdash;Considered
+as constituting a portion of the education of his genius, they are highly
+curious, and serve to show how little, after all, of great invention
+is requisite to make interesting and magnificent poetry.</p>
+<p>From Missolonghi the travellers passed over the Gulf of Corinth to
+Patras, then a rude, half-ruined, open town with a fortress on the top
+of a hill; and on the 4th of December, in the afternoon, they proceeded
+towards Corinth, but halted at Vostizza, the ancient &AElig;gium, where
+they obtained their first view of Parnassus, on the opposite side of
+the gulf; rising high above the other peaks of that hilly region, and
+capped with snow.&nbsp; It probably was during this first visit to Vostizza
+that the Address to Parnassus was suggested.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh, thou Parnassus! whom I now survey<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not
+in the frensy of a dreamer&rsquo;s eye,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not in
+the fabled landscape of a lay,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But soaring snow-clad
+through thy native sky,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the wild pomp of mountain
+majesty!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;What marvel if I thus essay to sing?<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+humblest of thy pilgrims passing by<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Would gladly
+woo thine echoes with his string,<br />Though from thy heights no more
+one muse will wave her wing.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oft have I dream&rsquo;d of thee! whose glorious
+name<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who knows not, knows not man&rsquo;s divinest
+lore;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And now I view thee, &rsquo;tis, alas!
+with shame<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That I in feeblest accents must adore.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When
+I recount thy worshippers of yore<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I tremble,
+and can only bend the knee;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor raise my voice,
+nor vainly dare to soar,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But gaze beneath thy
+cloudy canopy<br />In silent joy, to think at last I look on thee.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Vostizza</i>&mdash;<i>Battle of Lepanto</i>&mdash;<i>Parnassus</i>&mdash;<i>Livadia</i>&mdash;<i>Cave
+at Trophonius</i>&mdash;<i>The Fountains of Oblivion and Memory&mdash;Ch&aelig;ron&eacute;a</i>&mdash;<i>Thebes</i>&mdash;<i>Athens</i></p>
+<p>Vostizza was then a considerable town, containing between three and
+four thousand inhabitants, chiefly Greeks.&nbsp; It stands on a rising
+ground on the Peloponnesian side of the Gulf of Corinth.&nbsp; I say
+stands, but I know not if it has survived the war.&nbsp; The scenery
+around it will always make it delightful, while the associations connected
+with the Achaian League, and the important events which have happened
+in the vicinity, will ever render the site interesting.&nbsp; The battle
+of Lepanto, in which Cervantes lost his hand, was fought within sight
+of it.</p>
+<p>What a strange thing is glory!&nbsp; Three hundred years ago all
+Christendom rang with the battle of Lepanto, and yet it is already probable
+that it will only be interesting to posterity as an incident in the
+life of one of the private soldiers engaged in it.&nbsp; This is certainly
+no very mournful reflection to one who is of opinion that there is no
+permanent fame, but that which is obtained by adding to the comforts
+and pleasures of mankind.&nbsp; Military transactions, after their immediate
+effects cease to be felt, are little productive of such a result.&nbsp;
+Not that I value military virtues the less by being of this opinion;
+on the contrary, I am the more convinced of their excellence.&nbsp;
+Burke has unguardedly said, &lsquo;that vice loses half its malignity
+by losing its grossness&rsquo;; but public virtue ceases to be useful
+when it sickens at the calamities of necessary war.&nbsp; The moment
+that nations become confident of security, they give way to corruption.&nbsp;
+The evils and dangers of war seem as requisite for the preservation
+of public morals as the laws themselves; at least it is the melancholy
+moral of history, that when nations resolve to be peaceful with respect
+to their neighbours, they begin to be vicious with respect to themselves.&nbsp;
+But to return to the travellers.</p>
+<p>On the 14th of December they hired a boat with fourteen men and ten
+oars, and sailed to Salona; thence they proceeded to Crisso, and rode
+on to Delphi, ascending the mountain on horseback, by a steep, craggy
+path towards the north-east.&nbsp; After scaling the side of Parnassus
+for about an hour, they saw vast masses of rock, and fragments of stone,
+piled in a perilous manner above them, with niches and sepulchres, and
+relics, and remains on all sides.</p>
+<p>They visited and drank of Castalia, and the prophetic font, Cassotis;
+but still, like every other traveller, they were disappointed.&nbsp;
+Parnassus is an emblem of the fortune that attends the votaries of the
+Muses, harsh, rugged, and barren.&nbsp; The woods that once waved on
+Delphi&rsquo;s steep have all passed away, and may now be sought in
+vain.</p>
+<p>A few traces of terraces may yet be discovered&mdash;here and there
+the stump of a column, while niches for receiving votive offerings are
+numerous among the cliffs, but it is a lone and dismal place; Desolation
+sits with Silence, and Ruin there is so decayed as to be almost Oblivion.</p>
+<p>Parnassus is not so much a single mountain as the loftiest of a range;
+the cloven summit appears most conspicuous when seen from the south.&nbsp;
+The northern view is, however, more remarkable, for the cleft is less
+distinguishable, and seven lower peaks suggest, in contemplation with
+the summits, the fancy of so many seats of the Muses.&nbsp; These peaks,
+nine in all, are the first of the hills which receive the rising sun,
+and the last that in the evening part with his light.</p>
+<p>From Delphi the travellers proceeded towards Livadia, passing in
+the course of the journey the confluence of the three roads where &OElig;dipus
+slew his father, an event with its hideous train of fatalities which
+could not be recollected by Byron on the spot, even after the tales
+of guilt he had gathered in his Albanian journeys, without agitating
+associations.</p>
+<p>At Livadia they remained the greater part of three days, during which
+they examined with more than ordinary minuteness the cave of Trophonius,
+and the streams of the Hercyna, composed of the mingled waters of the
+two fountains of Oblivion and Memory.</p>
+<p>From Livadia, after visiting the battlefield of Ch&aelig;ron&eacute;a
+(the birthplace of Plutarch), and also many of the almost innumerable
+storied and consecrated spots in the neighbourhood, the travellers proceeded
+to Thebes&mdash;a poor town, containing about five hundred wooden houses,
+with two shabby mosques and four humble churches.&nbsp; The only thing
+worthy of notice in it is a public clock, to which the inhabitants direct
+the attention of strangers as proudly as if it were indeed one of the
+wonders of the world.&nbsp; There they still affect to show the fountain
+of Dirce and the ruins of the house of Pindar.&nbsp; But it is unnecessary
+to describe the numberless relics of the famous things of Greece, which
+every hour, as they approached towards Athens, lay more and more in
+their way.&nbsp; Not that many remarkable objects met their view; yet
+fragments of antiquity were often seen, though many of them were probably
+brought far from the edifices to which they had originally belonged;
+not for their beauty, or on account of the veneration which the sight
+of them inspired, but because they would burn into better lime than
+the coarser rock of the hills.&nbsp; Nevertheless, abased and returned
+into rudeness as all things were, the presence of Greece was felt, and
+Byron could not resist the inspirations of her genius.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fair Greece! sad relic of departed worth!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Immortal!
+though no more; though fallen, great;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who now
+shall lead thy scatter&rsquo;d children forth<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+long-accustom&rsquo;d bondage uncreate?<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not such
+thy Sons who whilom did await,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The hopeless warriors
+of a willing doom,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In bleak Thermopyl&aelig;&rsquo;s
+sepulchral strait:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh! who that gallant spirit
+shall resume,<br />Leap from Eurotas&rsquo; banks, and call thee from
+the tomb!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>In the course of the afternoon of the day after they had left Thebes,
+in attaining the summit of a mountain over which their road lay, the
+travellers beheld Athens at a distance, rising loftily, crowned with
+the Acropolis in the midst of the plain, the sea beyond, and the misty
+hills of Egina blue in the distance.</p>
+<p>On a rugged rock rising abruptly on the right, near to the spot where
+this interesting vista first opened, they beheld the remains of the
+ancient walls of Phyle, a fortress which commanded one of the passes
+from B&aelig;otia into Attica, and famous as the retreat of the chief
+patriots concerned in destroying the thirty tyrants of Athens.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Spirit of freedom! when on Phyle&rsquo;s brow<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thou
+sat&rsquo;st with Thrasybulus and his train,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Couldst
+thou forebode the dismal hour which now<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dims
+the green beauties of thine Attic plain?<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not
+thirty tyrants now enforce the chain,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But every
+carle can lord it o&rsquo;er thy land;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor rise
+thy sons, but idly rail in vain,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Trembling beneath
+the scourge of Turkish hand,<br />From birth till death enslaved; in
+word, in deed unmann&rsquo;d.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Such was the condition in which the poet found the country as he
+approached Athens; and although the spirit he invoked has reanimated
+the dejected race he then beheld around him, the traveller who even
+now revisits the country will still look in vain for that lofty mien
+which characterises the children of liberty.&nbsp; The fetters of the
+Greeks have been struck off, but the blains and excoriated marks of
+slavery are still conspicuous upon them; the sinister eye, the fawning
+voice, the skulking, crouching, base demeanour, time and many conflicts
+only can efface.</p>
+<p>The first view of the city was fleeting and unsatisfactory; as the
+travellers descended from the mountains the windings of the road among
+the hills shut it out.&nbsp; Having passed the village of Casha, they
+at last entered upon the slope, and thence into the plain of Attica
+but the intervening heights and the trees kept the town concealed, till
+a turn of the path brought it full again before them; the Acropolis
+crowned with the ruins of the Parthenon&mdash;the Museum hill&mdash;and
+the Monument of Philopappus&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ancient of Days&mdash;august Athena! where,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Where
+are thy men of might? thy grand in soul?<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gone&mdash;glimmering
+through the dreams of things that were:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;First
+in the race that led to glory&rsquo;s goal,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They
+won, and pass&rsquo;d away:&mdash;is this the whole?<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+schoolboy&rsquo;s tale, the wonder of an hour!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+warrior&rsquo;s weapon, and the sophist&rsquo;s stole<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are
+sought in vain, and o&rsquo;er each mouldering tower,<br />Dim with
+the mist of years, gray flits the shade of power.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Athens</i>&mdash;<i>Byron&rsquo;s Character of the modern Athenians</i>&mdash;<i>Visit
+to Eleusis</i>&mdash;<i>Visit to the Caverns at Vary and Kerat&eacute;a</i>&mdash;<i>Lost
+in the Labyrinths of the latter</i></p>
+<p>It has been justly remarked, that were there no other vestiges of
+the ancient world in existence than those to be seen at Athens, they
+are still sufficient of themselves to justify the admiration entertained
+for the genius of Greece.&nbsp; It is not, however, so much on account
+of their magnificence as of their exquisite beauty, that the fragments
+obtain such idolatrous homage from the pilgrims to the shattered shrines
+of antiquity.&nbsp; But Lord Byron had no feeling for art, perhaps it
+would be more correct to say he affected none: still, Athens was to
+him a text, a theme; and when the first rush of curiosity has been satisfied,
+where else can the palled fancy find such a topic.</p>
+<p>To the mere antiquary, this celebrated city cannot but long continue
+interesting, and to the classic enthusiast, just liberated from the
+cloisters of his college, the scenery and the ruins may for a season
+inspire delight.&nbsp; Philosophy may there point her moral apophthegms
+with stronger emphasis, virtue receive new incitements to perseverance,
+by reflecting on the honour which still attends the memory of the ancient
+great, and patriotism there more pathetically deplore the inevitable
+effects of individual corruption on public glory; but to the man who
+seeks a solace from misfortune, or is &ldquo;a-weary of the sun&rdquo;;
+how wretched, how solitary, how empty is Athens!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet to the remnants of thy splendour past<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shall
+pilgrims, pensive, but unwearied throng;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Long
+shall the voyager, with th&rsquo; Ionian blast,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hail
+the bright clime of battle and of song;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Long
+shall thy annals and immortal tongue<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fill with
+thy fame the youth of many a shore;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Boast of
+the aged! lesson of the young!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which sages venerate
+and bards adore,<br />As Pallas and the Muse unveil their awful lore!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Of the existing race of Athenians Byron has observed, that they are
+remarkable for their cunning: &ldquo;Among the various foreigners resident
+in Athens there was never a difference of opinion in their estimate
+of the Greek character, though on all other topics they disputed with
+great acrimony.&nbsp; M. Fauvel, the French consul, who has passed thirty
+years at Athens, frequently declared in my hearing, that the Greeks
+do not deserve to be emancipated, reasoning on the ground of their national
+and individual depravity&mdash;while he forgot that such depravity is
+to be attributed to causes which can only be removed by the measures
+he reprobates.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;M. Roque, a French merchant of respectability long settled
+in Athens, asserted with the most amusing gravity, &lsquo;Sir, they
+are the same canaille that existed in the days of Themistocles.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The ancients banished Themistocles; the moderns cheat Monsieur Roque:
+thus great men have ever been treated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In short, all the Franks who are fixtures, and most of the
+Englishmen, Germans, Danes, etc., of passage, came over by degrees to
+their opinion, on much the same grounds that a Turk in England would
+condemn the nation by wholesale, because he was wronged by his lackey
+and overcharged by his washerwoman.&nbsp; Certainly, it was not a little
+staggering when the Sieurs Fauvel and Lusieri, the two greatest demagogues
+of the day, who divide between them the power of Pericles and the popularity
+of Cleon, and puzzle the poor Waywode with perpetual differences, agreed
+in the utter condemnation of the Greeks in general, and of the Athenians
+in particular.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I have quoted his Lordship thus particularly because after his arrival
+at Athens he laid down his pen.&nbsp; <i>Childe Harold</i> there disappears.&nbsp;
+Whether he had written the pilgrimage up to that point at Athens I have
+not been able to ascertain; while I am inclined to think it was so,
+as I recollect he told me there that he had then described or was describing
+the reception he had met with at Tepellen&eacute; from Ali Pasha.</p>
+<p>After having halted some time at Athens, where they established their
+headquarters, the travellers, when they had inspected the principal
+antiquities of the city (those things which all travellers must visit),
+made several excursions into the environs, and among other places went
+to Eleusis.</p>
+<p>On the 13th of January they mounted earlier than usual, and set out
+on that road which has the site of the Academy and the Colonos, the
+retreat of &OElig;dipus during his banishment, a little to the right;
+they then entered the Olive Groves, crossed the Cephessus, and came
+to an open, well-cultivated plain, extending on the left to the Pir&aelig;us
+and the sea.&nbsp; Having ascended by a gentle acclivity through a pass,
+at the distance of eight or ten miles from Athens, the ancient Corydallus,
+now called Daphn&eacute;rouni, they came, at the bottom of a piney mountain,
+to the little monastery of Daphn&eacute;, the appearance and situation
+of which are in agreeable unison.&nbsp; The monastery was then fast
+verging into that state of the uninhabitable picturesque so much admired
+by young damsels and artists of a romantic vein.&nbsp; The pines on
+the adjacent mountains hiss as they ever wave their boughs, and somehow,
+such is the lonely aspect of the place, that their hissing may be imagined
+to breathe satire against the pretensions of human vanity.</p>
+<p>After passing through the hollow valley in which this monastic habitation
+is situated, the road sharply turns round an elbow of the mountain,
+and the Eleusinian plain opens immediately in front.&nbsp; It is, however,
+for a plain, but of small dimensions.&nbsp; On the left is the Island
+of Salamis, and the straits where the battle was fought; but neither
+of it nor of the mysteries for which the Temple of Ceres was for so
+many ages celebrated, has the poet given us description or suggestion;
+and yet few topics among all his wild and wonderful subjects were so
+likely to have furnished such &ldquo;ample room, and verge enough&rdquo;
+to his fancy.</p>
+<p>The next excursion in any degree interesting, if a qualification
+of that kind can be applied to excursions, in Attica, was to Cape Colonna.&nbsp;
+Crossing the bed of the Ilissus and keeping nearer to Mount Hymettus,
+the travellers arrived at Vary, a farm belonging to the monastery of
+Agios Asomatos, and under the charge of a caloyer.&nbsp; Here they stopped
+for the night, and being furnished with lights, and attended by the
+caloyer&rsquo;s servant as a guide, they proceeded to inspect the Paneum,
+or sculptured cavern in that neighbourhood, into which they descended.&nbsp;
+Having satisfied their curiosity there, they proceeded, in the morning,
+to Kerat&eacute;a, a small town containing about two hundred and fifty
+houses, chiefly inhabited by rural Albanians.</p>
+<p>The wetness of the weather obliged them to remain several days at
+Kerat&eacute;a, during which they took the opportunity of a few hours
+of sunshine to ascend the mountain of Parn&eacute; in quest of a cave
+of which many wonderful things were reported in the country.&nbsp; Having
+found the entrance, kindled their pine torches, and taken a supply of
+strips of the same wood, they let themselves down through a narrow aperture;
+creeping still farther down, they came into what seemed a large subterranean
+hall, arched as it were with high cupolas of crystal, and divided into
+long aisles by columns of glittering spar, in some parts spread into
+wide horizontal chambers, in others terminated by the dark mouths of
+deep and steep abysses receding into the interior of the mountain.</p>
+<p>The travellers wandered from one grotto to another until they came
+to a fountain of pure water, by the side of which they lingered some
+time, till, observing that their torches were wasting, they resolved
+to return; but after exploring the labyrinth for a few minutes, they
+found themselves again close beside this mysterious spring.&nbsp; It
+was not without reason they then became alarmed, for the guide confessed
+with trepidation that he had forgotten the intricacies of the cave,
+and knew not how to recover the outlet.</p>
+<p>Byron often described this adventure with spirit and humour, magnifying
+both his own and his friend&rsquo;s terrors; and though, of course,
+there was caricature in both, yet the distinction was characteristic.&nbsp;
+Mr Hobhouse, being of a more solid disposition naturally, could discern
+nothing but a grave cause for dread in being thus lost in the bowels
+of the earth; Byron, however, described his own anxiety as a species
+of excitement and titillation which moved him to laughter.&nbsp; Their
+escape from starvation and being buried alive was truly providential.</p>
+<p>While roaming in a state of despair from cave to cell; climbing up
+narrow apertures; their last pine-torch fast consuming; totally ignorant
+of their position, and all around darkness, they discovered, as it were
+by accident, a ray of light gleaming towards them; they hastened towards
+it, and arrived at the mouth of the cave.</p>
+<p>Although the poet has not made any use of this incident in description,
+the actual experience which it gave him of what despair is, could not
+but enrich his metaphysical store, and increase his knowledge of terrible
+feelings; of the workings of the darkest and dreadest anticipations&mdash;slow
+famishing death&mdash;cannibalism and the rage of self-devouring hunger.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Proceed from Kerat&eacute;a to Cape Colonna</i>&mdash;<i>Associations
+connected with the Spot</i>&mdash;<i>Second-hearing of the Albanians</i>&mdash;<i>Journey
+to Marathon</i>&mdash;<i>Effect of his Adventures on the Mind of the
+Poet</i>&mdash;<i>Return to Athens</i>&mdash;<i>I join the Travellers
+there</i>&mdash;<i>Maid of Athens</i></p>
+<p>From Kerat&eacute;a the travellers proceeded to Cape Colonna, by
+the way of Katapheke.&nbsp; The road was wild and rude, but the distant
+view of the ruins of the temple of Minerva, standing on the loneliness
+of the promontory, would have repaid them for the trouble, had the road
+been even rougher.</p>
+<p>This once elegant edifice was of the Doric order, a hexastyle, the
+columns twenty-seven feet in height.&nbsp; It was built entirely of
+white marble, and esteemed one of the finest specimens of architecture.&nbsp;
+The rocks on which the remains stand are celebrated alike by the English
+and the Grecian muses; for it was amid them that Falconer laid the scene
+of his <i>Shipwreck</i>; and the unequalled description of the climate
+of Greece, in <i>The Giaour</i>, was probably inspired there, although
+the poem was written in London.&nbsp; It was also here, but not on this
+occasion, that the poet first became acquainted with the Albanian belief
+in second-hearing, to which he alludes in the same poem:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Deep in whose darkly-boding ear<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+death-shot peal&rsquo;d of murder near.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;This superstition of a second-hearing,&rdquo; says Lord Byron,
+&ldquo;fell once under my own observation.&nbsp; On my third journey
+to Cape Colonna, as we passed through the defile that leads from the
+hamlet between Kerat&eacute;a and Colonna, I observed Dervish Tahiri
+(one of his Albanian servants) riding rather out of the path, and leaning
+his head upon his hand as if in pain.&nbsp; I rode up and inquired.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;We are in peril!&rsquo; he answered.&nbsp; &lsquo;What peril?
+we are not now in Albania, nor in the passes to Ephesus, Missolonghi,
+or Lepanto; there are plenty of us well armed, and the Choriotes have
+not courage to be thieves.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;True, Affendi; but, nevertheless,
+the shot is ringing in my ears.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;The shot! not a
+tophaike has been fired this morning.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;I hear it,
+notwithstanding&mdash;bom&mdash;bom&mdash;as plainly as I hear your
+voice.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Bah.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;As you please, Affendi;
+if it is written, so will it be.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I left this quick-eared predestinarian, and rode up to Basili,
+his Christian compatriot, whose ears, though not at all prophetic, by
+no means relished the intelligence.&nbsp; We all arrived at Colonna,
+remained some hours, and returned leisurely, saying a variety of brilliant
+things, in more languages than spoiled the building of Babel, upon the
+mistaken seer; Romaic, Arnaout, Turkish, Italian, and English were all
+exercised, in various conceits, upon the unfortunate Mussulman.&nbsp;
+While we were contemplating the beautiful prospect, Dervish was occupied
+about the columns.&nbsp; I thought he was deranged into an antiquarian,
+and asked him if he had become a palaocastro man.&nbsp; &lsquo;No,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;but these pillars will be useful in making a stand&rsquo;
+and added some remarks, which at least evinced his own belief in his
+troublesome faculty of fore-hearing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On our return to Athens we heard from Leon&eacute; (a prisoner
+set on shore some days after) of the intended attack of the Mainotes,
+with the cause of its not taking place.&nbsp; I was at some pains to
+question the man, and he described the dresses, arms, and marks of the
+horses of our party so accurately, that, with other circumstances, we
+could not doubt of his having been in &lsquo;villainous company,&rsquo;
+and ourselves in a bad neighbourhood.&nbsp; Dervish became a soothsayer
+for life, and I dare say is now hearing more musketry than ever will
+be fired, to the great refreshment of the Arnaouts of Berat and his
+native mountains.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In all Attica, if we except Athens itself, and Marathon,&rdquo;
+Byron remarks, &ldquo;there is no scene more interesting than Cape Colonna.&nbsp;
+To the antiquary and artist, sixteen columns are an inexhaustible source
+of observation and design; to the philosopher the supposed scene of
+some of Plato&rsquo;s conversations will not be unwelcome; and the traveller
+will be struck with the prospect over &lsquo;Isles that crown the &AElig;gean
+deep.&rsquo;&nbsp; But, for an Englishman, Colonna has yet an additional
+interest in being the actual spot of Falconer&rsquo;s <i>Shipwreck</i>.&nbsp;
+Pallas and Plato are forgotten in the recollection of Falconer and Campbell.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;There, in the dead of night, by Donna&rsquo;s steep,<br />The
+seamen&rsquo;s cry was heard along the deep.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>From the ruins of the temple the travellers returned to Kerat&eacute;a,
+by the eastern coast of Attica, passing through that district of country
+where the silver mines are situated; which, according to Sir George
+Wheler, were worked with some success about a hundred and fifty years
+ago.&nbsp; They then set out for Marathon, taking Rapthi in their way;
+where, in the lesser port, on a steep rocky island, they beheld, from
+a distance, the remains of a colossal statue.&nbsp; They did not, however,
+actually inspect it, but it has been visited by other travellers, who
+have described it to be of white marble, sedent on a pedestal.&nbsp;
+The head and arms are broken off; but when entire, it is conjectured
+to have been twelve feet in height.&nbsp; As they were passing round
+the shore they heard the barking of dogs, and a shout from a shepherd,
+and on looking round saw a large dun-coloured wolf, galloping slowly
+through the bushes.</p>
+<p>Such incidents and circumstances, in the midst of the most romantic
+scenery of the world, with wild and lawless companions, and a constant
+sense of danger, were full of poetry, and undoubtedly contributed to
+the formation of the peculiar taste of Byron&rsquo;s genius.&nbsp; As
+it has been said of Salvator Rosa, the painter, that he derived the
+characteristic savage force of his pencil from his youthful adventures
+with banditti; it may be added of Byron, that much of his most distinguished
+power was the result of his adventures as a traveller in Greece.&nbsp;
+His mind and memory were filled with stores of the fittest imagery,
+to supply becoming backgrounds and appendages, to the characters and
+enterprises which he afterward depicted with such truth of nature and
+poetical effect.</p>
+<p>After leaving Rapthi, keeping Mount Pentilicus on the left, the travellers
+came in sight of the ever-celebrated Plain of Marathon.&nbsp; The evening
+being advanced, they passed the barrow of the Athenian slain unnoticed,
+but next morning they examined minutely the field of battle, and fancied
+they had made antiquarian discoveries.&nbsp; In their return to Athens
+they inspected the different objects of research and fragments of antiquity,
+which still attract travellers, and with the help of Chandler and Pausanias,
+endeavoured to determine the local habitation and the name of many things,
+of which the traditions have perished and the forms have relapsed into
+rock.</p>
+<p>Soon after their arrival at Athens, Mr Hobhouse left Lord Byron to
+visit the Negropont, where he was absent some few days.&nbsp; I think
+he had only been back three or four when I arrived from Zante.&nbsp;
+My visit to Athens at that period was accidental.&nbsp; I had left Malta
+with the intention of proceeding to Candia, by Specia, and Idra; but
+a dreadful storm drove us up the Adriatic, as far as Valona; and in
+returning, being becalmed off the Island of Zante, I landed there, and
+allowed the ship, with my luggage, to proceed to her destination, having
+been advised to go on by the Gulf of Corinth to Athens; from which place,
+I was informed, there would be no difficulty in recovering my trunks.</p>
+<p>In carrying this arrangement into effect, I was induced to go aside
+from the direct route, and to visit Velhi Pasha, at Tripolizza, to whom
+I had letters.&nbsp; Returning by Argos and Corinth, I crossed the isthmus,
+and taking the road by Megara, reached Athens on the 20th of February.&nbsp;
+In the course of this journey, I heard of two English travellers being
+in the city; and on reaching the convent of the Propaganda, where I
+had been advised to take up my lodgings, the friar in charge of the
+house informed me of their names.&nbsp; Next morning, Mr Hobhouse, having
+heard of my arrival, kindly called on me, and I accompanied him to Lord
+Byron, who then lodged with the widow of a Greek, who had been British
+Consul.&nbsp; She was, I believe, a respectable person, with several
+daughters; one of whom has been rendered more famous by his Lordship&rsquo;s
+verses than her degree of beauty deserved.&nbsp; She was a pale and
+pensive-looking girl, with regular Grecian features.&nbsp; Whether he
+really cherished any sincere attachment to her I much doubt.&nbsp; I
+believe his passion was equally innocent and poetical, though he spoke
+of buying her from her mother.&nbsp; It was to this damsel that he addressed
+the stanzas beginning,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Maid of Athens, ere we part,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Give,
+oh! give me back my heart.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Occupation at Athens</i>&mdash;<i>Mount Pentilicus</i>&mdash;<i>We
+descend into the Caverns</i>&mdash;<i>Return to Athens</i>&mdash;<i>A
+Greek Contract of Marriage</i>&mdash;<i>Various Athenian and Albanian
+Superstitions</i>&mdash;<i>Effect of their Impression on the Genius
+of the Poet</i></p>
+<p>During his residence at Athens, Lord Byron made almost daily excursions
+on horseback, chiefly for exercise and to see the localities of celebrated
+spots.&nbsp; He affected to have no taste for the arts, and he certainly
+took but little pleasure in the examination of the ruins.</p>
+<p>The marble quarry of Mount Pentilicus, from which the materials for
+the temples and principal edifices of Athens are supposed to have been
+brought, was, in those days, one of the regular staple curiosities of
+Greece.&nbsp; This quarry is a vast excavation in the side of the hill;
+a drapery of woodbine hangs like the festoons of a curtain over the
+entrance; the effect of which, seen from the outside, is really worth
+looking at, but not worth the trouble of riding three hours over a road
+of rude and rough fragments to see: the interior is like that of any
+other cavern.&nbsp; To this place I one day was induced to accompany
+the two travellers.</p>
+<p>We halted at a monastery close by the foot of the mountain, where
+we procured a guide, and ate a repast of olives and fried eggs.&nbsp;
+Dr Chandler says that the monks, or caloyers, of this convent are summoned
+to prayers by a tune which is played on a piece of an iron hoop; and,
+on the outside of the church, we certainly saw a piece of crooked iron
+suspended.&nbsp; When struck, it uttered a bell-like sound, by which
+the hour of prayer was announced.&nbsp; What sort of tune could be played
+on such an instrument the doctor has judiciously left his readers to
+imagine.</p>
+<p>When we reached the mouth of the grotto, by that &ldquo;very bad
+track&rdquo; which the learned personage above mentioned clambered up,
+we saw the ruins of the building which the doctor at first thought had
+been possibly a hermit&rsquo;s cell; but which, upon more deliberate
+reflection, he became of opinion &ldquo;was designed, perhaps, for a
+sentinel to look out, and regulate, by signals, the approach of the
+men and teams employed in carrying marble to the city.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This, we agreed, was a very sagacious conjecture.&nbsp; It was, indeed,
+highly probable that sentinels were appointed to regulate, by signals,
+the manoeuvres of carts coming to fetch away stones.</p>
+<p>Having looked at the outside of the quarry, and the guide having
+lighted candles, we entered into the interior, and beheld on all sides
+what Dr Chandler saw, &ldquo;chippings of marble.&rdquo;&nbsp; We then
+descended, consecutively, into a hole, just wide enough to let a man
+pass; and when we had descended far enough, we found ourselves in a
+cell, or cave; it might be some ten or twelve feet square.&nbsp; Here
+we stopped, and, like many others who had been there before us, attempted
+to engrave our names.&nbsp; Mine was without success; Lord Byron&rsquo;s
+was not much better; but Mr Hobhouse was making some progress to immortality,
+when the blade of his knife snapped, or shutting suddenly, cut his finger.&nbsp;
+These attempts having failed, we inscribed our initials on the ceiling
+with the smoke of our candles.&nbsp; After accomplishing this notable
+feat, we got as well out of the scrape as we could, and returned to
+Athens by the village of Callandris.&nbsp; In the evening, after dinner,
+as there happened to be a contract of marriage performing in the neighbourhood,
+we went to see the ceremony.</p>
+<p>Between the contract and espousal two years are generally permitted
+to elapse among the Greeks in the course of which the bride, according
+to the circumstances of her relations, prepares domestic chattels for
+her future family.&nbsp; The affections are rarely consulted on either
+side, for the mother of the bridegroom commonly arranges the match for
+her son.&nbsp; In this case, the choice had been evidently made according
+to the principle on which Mrs Primrose chose her wedding gown; viz.
+for the qualities that would wear well.&nbsp; For the bride was a stout
+household quean; her face painted with vermilion, and her person arrayed
+in uncouth embroidered garments.&nbsp; Unfortunately, we were disappointed
+of seeing the ceremony, as it was over before we arrived.</p>
+<p>This incident led me to inquire particularly into the existing usages
+and customs of the Athenians; and I find in the notes of my journal
+of the evening of that day&rsquo;s adventures, a memorandum of a curious
+practice among the Athenian maidens when they become anxious to get
+husbands.&nbsp; On the first evening of the new moon, they put a little
+honey, a little salt, and a piece of bread on a plate, which they leave
+at a particular spot on the east bank of the Ilissus, near the Stadium,
+and muttering some ancient words, to the effect that Fate may send them
+a handsome young man, return home, and long for the fulfilment of the
+charm.&nbsp; On mentioning this circumstance to the travellers, one
+of them informed me, that above the spot where these offerings are made,
+a statue of Venus, according to Pausanias, formerly stood.&nbsp; It
+is, therefore, highly probable that what is now a superstitious, was
+anciently a religious rite.</p>
+<p>At this period my fellow-passengers were full of their adventures
+in Albania.&nbsp; The country was new, and the inhabitants had appeared
+to them a bold and singular race.&nbsp; In addition to the characteristic
+descriptions which I have extracted from Lord Byron&rsquo;s notes, as
+well as Mr Hobhouse&rsquo;s travels, I am indebted to them, as well
+as to others, for a number of memoranda obtained in conversation, which
+they have themselves neglected to record, but which probably became
+unconsciously mingled with the recollections of both; at least, I can
+discern traces of them in different parts of the poet&rsquo;s works.</p>
+<p>The Albanians are a race of mountaineers, and it has been often remarked
+that mountaineers, more than any other people, are attached to their
+native land, while no other have so strong a thirst of adventure.&nbsp;
+The affection which they cherish for the scenes of their youth tends,
+perhaps, to excite their migratory spirit.&nbsp; For the motive of their
+adventures is to procure the means of subsisting in ease at home.</p>
+<p>This migratory humour is not, however, universal to the Albanians,
+but applies only to those who go in quest of rural employment, and who
+are found in a state of servitude among even the Greeks.&nbsp; It deserves,
+however, to be noticed, that with the Greeks they rarely ever mix or
+intermarry, and that they retain both their own national dress and manners
+unchanged among them.&nbsp; Several of their customs are singular.&nbsp;
+It is, for example, in vain to ask a light or any fire from the houses
+of the Albanians after sunset, if the husband or head of the family
+be still afield; a custom in which there is more of police regulation
+than of superstition, as it interdicts a plausible pretext for entering
+the cottages in the obscurity of twilight, when the women are defenceless
+by the absence of the men.</p>
+<p>Some of their usages, with respect to births, baptisms, and burials,
+are also curious.&nbsp; When the mother feels the fulness of time at
+hand, the priestess of Lucina, the midwife, is duly summoned, and she
+comes bearing in her hand a tripod, better known as a three-legged stool,
+the uses of which are only revealed to the initiated.&nbsp; She is received
+by the matronly friends of the mother, and begins the mysteries by opening
+every lock and lid in the house.&nbsp; During this ceremony the maiden
+females are excluded.</p>
+<p>The rites which succeed the baptism of a child are still more recondite.&nbsp;
+Four or five days after the christening, the midwife prepares, with
+her own mystical hands, certain savoury messes, spreads a table, and
+places them on it.&nbsp; She then departs, and all the family, leaving
+the door open, in silence retire to sleep.&nbsp; This table is covered
+for the Miri of the child, an occult being, that is supposed to have
+the care of its destiny.&nbsp; In the course of the night, if the child
+is to be fortunate, the Miri comes and partakes of the feast, generally
+in the shape of a cat; but if the Miri do not come, nor taste of the
+food, the child is considered to have been doomed to misfortune and
+misery; and no doubt the treatment it afterwards receives is consonant
+to its evil predestination.</p>
+<p>The Albanians have, like the vulgar of all countries, a species of
+hearth or household superstitions, distinct from their wild and imperfect
+religion.&nbsp; They imagine that mankind, after death, become voorthoolakases,
+and often pay visits to their friends and foes for the same reasons,
+and in the same way, that our own country ghosts walk abroad; and their
+visiting hour is, also, midnight.&nbsp; But the collyvillory is another
+sort of personage.&nbsp; He delights in mischief and pranks, and is,
+besides, a lewd and foul spirit; and, therefore, very properly detested.&nbsp;
+He is let loose on the night of the nativity, with licence for twelve
+nights to plague men&rsquo;s wives; at which time some one of the family
+must keep wakeful vigil all the livelong night, beside a clear and cheerful
+fire, otherwise this naughty imp would pour such an aqueous stream on
+the hearth, that fire could never be kindled there again.</p>
+<p>The Albanians are also pestered with another species of malignant
+creatures; men and women whose gifts are followed by misfortunes, whose
+eyes glimpse evil, and by whose touch the most prosperous affairs are
+blasted.&nbsp; They work their malicious sorceries in the dark, collect
+herbs of baleful influence; by the help of which, they strike their
+enemies with palsy, and cattle with distemper.&nbsp; The males are called
+<i>maissi</i>, and the females <i>maissa</i>&mdash;witches and warlocks.</p>
+<p>Besides these curious superstitious peculiarities, they have among
+them persons who pretend to know the character of approaching events
+by hearing sounds which resemble those that shall accompany the actual
+occurrence.&nbsp; Having, however, given Lord Byron&rsquo;s account
+of the adventure of his servant Dervish, at Cape Colonna, it is unnecessary
+to be more particular with the subject here.&nbsp; Indeed, but for the
+great impression which everything about the Albanians made on the mind
+of the poet, the insertion of these memoranda would be irrelevant.&nbsp;
+They will, however, serve to elucidate several allusions, not otherwise
+very clear, in those poems of which the scenes are laid in Greece; and
+tend, in some measure, to confirm the correctness of the opinion, that
+his genius is much more indebted to facts and actual adventures, than
+to the force of his imagination.&nbsp; Many things regarded in his most
+original productions, as fancies and invention, may be traced to transactions
+in which he was himself a spectator or an actor.&nbsp; The impress of
+experience is vivid upon them all.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Local Pleasures</i>&mdash;<i>Byron&rsquo;s Grecian Poems</i>&mdash;<i>His
+Departure from Athens</i>&mdash;<i>Description of Evening in</i> &ldquo;<i>The
+Corsair</i>&rdquo;&mdash;<i>The Opening of</i> &ldquo;<i>The Giaour</i>&rdquo;&mdash;<i>State
+of Patriotic Feeling then in Greece</i>&mdash;<i>Smyrna</i>&mdash;<i>Change
+in Lord Byron&rsquo;s Manners</i></p>
+<p>The genii that preside over famous places have less influence on
+the imagination than on the memory.&nbsp; The pleasures enjoyed on the
+spot spring from the reminiscences of reading; and the subsequent enjoyment
+derived from having visited celebrated scenes, comes again from the
+remembrance of objects seen there, and the associations connected with
+them.</p>
+<p>A residence at Athens, day after day, is but little more interesting
+than in a common country town: but afterwards, in reading either of
+the ancient or of the modern inhabitants, it is surprising to find how
+much local knowledge the memory had unconsciously acquired on the spot,
+arising from the variety of objects to which the attention had been
+directed.</p>
+<p>The best of all Byron&rsquo;s works, the most racy and original,
+are undoubtedly those which relate to Greece; but it is only travellers
+who have visited the scenes that can appreciate them properly.&nbsp;
+In them his peculiar style and faculty are most eminent; in all his
+other productions, imitation, even mere translation may be often traced,
+and though, without question, everything he touched became transmuted
+into something more beautiful and precious, yet he was never so masterly
+as in describing the scenery of Greece, and Albanian manners.&nbsp;
+In a general estimate of his works, it may be found that he has produced
+as fine or finer passages than any in his Grecian poems; but their excellence,
+either as respects his own, or the productions of others, is comparative.&nbsp;
+In the Grecian poems he is only truly original; in them the excellence
+is all his own, and they possess the rare and distinguished quality
+of being as true to fact and nature, as they are brilliant in poetical
+expression.&nbsp; <i>Childe Harold&rsquo;s Pilgrimage</i> is the most
+faithful descriptive poem which has been written since the <i>Odyssey</i>;
+and the occasional scenes introduced into the other poems, when the
+action is laid in Greece, are equally vivid and glowing.</p>
+<p>When I saw him at Athens, the spring was still shrinking in the bud.&nbsp;
+It was not until he returned from Constantinople in the following autumn,
+that he saw the climate and country with those delightful aspects which
+he has delineated with so much felicity in <i>The Giaour</i> and <i>The
+Corsair</i>.&nbsp; It may, however, be mentioned, that the fine description
+of a calm sunset, with which the third canto of <i>The Corsair</i> opens,
+has always reminded me of the evening before his departure from Athens,
+owing to the circumstance of my having, in the course of the day, visited
+the spot which probably suggested the scene described.</p>
+<p>It was the 4th of March, 1810; the <i>Pylades</i> sloop of war came
+that morning into the Pir&aelig;us, and landed Dr Darwin, a son of the
+poet, with his friend, Mr Galton, who had come out in her for a cruise.&nbsp;
+Captain Ferguson, her commander, was so kind as to offer the English
+then in Athens, viz., Lord Byron, Mr Hobhouse, and myself, a passage
+to Smyrna.&nbsp; As I had not received my luggage from Specia, I could
+not avail myself of the offer, but the other two did: I accompanied
+Captain Ferguson, however, and Dr Darwin, in a walk to the Straits of
+Salamis; the ship, in the meantime, after landing them, having been
+moored there.</p>
+<p>It was one of those serene and cloudless days of the early spring,
+when the first indications of leaf and blossom may just be discerned.&nbsp;
+The islands slept, as it were, on their glassy couch, and a slight dun
+haze hung upon the mountains, as if they too were drowsy.&nbsp; After
+an easy walk of about two hours, passing through the olive groves, and
+along the bottom of the hill on which Xerxes sat to view the battle,
+we came opposite to a little cove near the ferry, and made a signal
+to the ship for a boat.&nbsp; Having gone on board and partaken of some
+refreshment, the boat then carried us back to the Pir&aelig;us, where
+we landed, about an hour before sundown&mdash;all the wide landscape
+presenting at the time the calm and genial tranquillity which is almost
+experienced anew in reading these delicious lines:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Slow sinks more lovely e&rsquo;er his race be run,<br />Along Morea&rsquo;s
+hills, the setting sun<br />Not, as in northern climes, obscurely bright,<br />But
+one unclouded blaze of living light.<br />O&rsquo;er the hush&rsquo;d
+deep the yellow beam he throws,<br />Gilds the green wave that trembles
+as it flows.<br />On old Egina&rsquo;s rock, and Idra&rsquo;s isle,<br />The
+god of gladness sheds his parting smile;<br />O&rsquo;er his own regions
+lingering, loves to shine,<br />Though there his altars are no more
+divine;&mdash;<br />Descending fast, the mountain shadows kiss<br />Thy
+glorious gulf, unconquer&rsquo;d Salamis!</p>
+<p>Their azure arches, through the long expanse,<br />More deeply purpled
+meet his mellowing glance,<br />And tenderest tints, along their summits
+driven,<br />Mark his gay course, and own the hues of heaven;<br />Till
+darkly shaded from the land and deep,<br />Behind his Delphian cliff
+he sinks to sleep.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The opening of <i>The Giaour</i> is a more general description, but
+the locality is distinctly marked by reference to the tomb above the
+rocks of the promontory, commonly said to be that of Themistocles; and
+yet the scene included in it certainly is rather the view from Cape
+Colonna, than from the heights of Munychia.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>No breath of air to break the wave<br />That rolls below the Athenian&rsquo;s
+grave,<br />That tomb, which, gleaming o&rsquo;er the cliff,<br />First
+greets the homeward-veering skiff,<br />High o&rsquo;er the land he
+saved in vain&mdash;<br />When shall such hero live again!</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The environs of the Pir&aelig;us were indeed, at that time, well
+calculated to inspire those mournful reflections with which the poet
+introduces the Infidel&rsquo;s impassioned tale.&nbsp; The solitude,
+the relics, the decay, and sad uses to which the pirate and the slave-dealer
+had put the shores and waters so honoured by freedom, rendered a visit
+to the Pir&aelig;us something near in feeling to a pilgrimage.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Such is the aspect of this shore,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis
+Greece, but living Greece no more!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;So coldly
+sweet, so deadly fair,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We start, for soul is
+wanting there.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Hers is the loveliness in death,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That
+parts not quite with parting breath;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But beauty
+with that fearful bloom,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That hue which haunts
+it to the tomb,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Expression&rsquo;s last receding
+ray,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A gilded halo hov&rsquo;ring round decay,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+farewell beam of feeling past away.<br />Spark of that flame, perchance
+of heavenly birth,<br />Which gleams, but warms no more its cherish&rsquo;d
+earth.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>At that time Lord Byron, if he did pity the condition of the Greeks,
+evinced very little confidence in the resurrection of the nation, even
+although symptoms of change and reanimation were here and there perceptible,
+and could not have escaped his observation.&nbsp; Greece had indeed
+been so long ruined, that even her desolation was then in a state of
+decay.&nbsp; The new cycle in her fortunes had certainly not commenced,
+but it was manifest, by many a sign, that the course of the old was
+concluding, and that the whole country felt the assuring auguries of
+undivulged renovation.&nbsp; The influence of that period did not, however,
+penetrate the bosom of the poet; and when he first quitted Athens, assuredly
+he cared as little about the destinies of the Greeks, as he did for
+those of the Portuguese and Spaniards, when he arrived at Gibraltar.</p>
+<p>About three weeks or a month after he had left Athens, I went by
+a circuitous route to Smyrna, where I found him waiting with Mr Hobhouse,
+to proceed with the <i>Salsette</i> frigate, then ordered to Constantinople,
+to bring away Mr Adair, the ambassador.&nbsp; He had, in the meantime,
+visited Ephesus, and acquired some knowledge of the environs of Smyrna;
+but he appeared to have been less interested by what he had seen there
+than by the adventures of his Albanian tour.&nbsp; Perhaps I did him
+injustice, but I thought he was also, in that short space, something
+changed, and not with improvement.&nbsp; Towards Mr Hobhouse, he seemed
+less cordial, and was altogether, I should say, having no better phrase
+to express what I would describe, more of a Captain Grand than improved
+in his manners, and more disposed to hold his own opinion than I had
+ever before observed in him.&nbsp; I was particularly struck with this
+at dinner, on the day after my arrival.&nbsp; We dined together with
+a large party at the consul&rsquo;s, and he seemed inclined to exact
+a deference to his dogmas, that was more lordly than philosophical.&nbsp;
+One of the naval officers present, I think the captain of the <i>Salsette</i>,
+felt, as well as others, this overweening, and announced a contrary
+opinion on some question connected with the politics of the late Mr
+Pitt with so much firm good sense, that Lord Byron was perceptibly rebuked
+by it, and became reserved, as if he deemed that sullenness enhanced
+dignity.&nbsp; I never in the whole course of my acquaintance saw him
+kithe so unfavourably as he did on that occasion.&nbsp; In the course
+of the evening, however, he condescended to thaw, and before the party
+broke up, his austerity began to leaf, and hide its thorns under the
+influence of a relenting temperament.&nbsp; It was, however, too evident&mdash;at
+least it was so to me&mdash;that without intending wrong, or any offence,
+the unchecked humour of his temper was, by its caprices, calculated
+to prevent him from ever gaining that regard to which his talents and
+freer moods, independently of his rank, ought to have entitled him.&nbsp;
+Such men become objects of solicitude, but never of esteem.</p>
+<p>I was also on this occasion struck with another new phase in his
+character; he seemed to be actuated by no purpose&mdash;he spoke no
+more of passing &ldquo;beyond Aurora and the Ganges,&rdquo; but seemed
+disposed to let the current of chances carry him as it might.&nbsp;
+If he had any specific object in view, it was something that made him
+hesitate between going home and returning to Athens when he should have
+reached Constantinople, now become the ultimate goal of his intended
+travels.&nbsp; To what cause this sudden and singular change, both in
+demeanour and design, was owing, I was on the point of saying, it would
+be fruitless to conjecture; but a letter to his mother, written a few
+days before my arrival at Smyrna, throws some light on the sources of
+his unsatisfied state.&nbsp; He appears by it to have been disappointed
+of letters and remittances from his agent, and says:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I arrive at Constantinople, I shall determine whether
+to proceed into Persia, or return&mdash;which latter I do not wish if
+I can avoid it.&nbsp; But I have no intelligence from Mr H., and but
+one letter from yourself.&nbsp; I shall stand in need of remittances,
+whether I proceed or return.&nbsp; I have written to him repeatedly,
+that he may not plead ignorance of my situation for neglect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here is sufficient evidence that the cause of the undetermined state
+of his mind, which struck me so forcibly, was owing to the incertitude
+of his affairs at home; and it is easy to conceive that the false dignity
+he assumed, and which seemed so like arrogance, was the natural effect
+of the anxiety and embarrassment he suffered, and of the apprehension
+of a person of his rank being, on account of his remittances, exposed
+to require assistance among strangers.&nbsp; But as the scope of my
+task relates more to the history of his mind, than of his private affairs,
+I shall resume the narrative of his travels, in which the curiosity
+of the reader ought to be more legitimately interested.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Smyrna</i>&mdash;<i>The Sport of the Djerid</i>&mdash;<i>Journey
+to Ephesus</i>&mdash;<i>The dead City</i>&mdash;<i>The desolate Country</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Ruins and Obliteration of the Temple</i>&mdash;<i>The slight Impression
+of all on Byron</i></p>
+<p>The passage in the <i>Pylades</i> from Athens to Smyrna was performed
+without accident or adventure.</p>
+<p>At Smyrna Lord Byron remained several days, and saw for the first
+time the Turkish pastime of the Djerid, a species of tournament to which
+he more than once alludes.&nbsp; I shall therefore describe the amusement.</p>
+<p>The Musselim or Governor, with the chief agas of the city, mounted
+on horses superbly caparisoned, and attended by slaves, meet, commonly
+on Sunday morning, on their playground.&nbsp; Each of the riders is
+furnished with one or two djerids, straight white sticks, a little thinner
+than an umbrella-stick, less at one end than at the other and about
+an ell in length, together with a thin cane crooked at the head.&nbsp;
+The horsemen, perhaps a hundred in number, gallop about in as narrow
+a space as possible, throwing the djerids at each other and shouting.&nbsp;
+Each man then selects an opponent who has darted his djerid or is for
+the moment without a weapon, and rushes furiously towards him, screaming
+&ldquo;Olloh!&nbsp; Olloh!&rdquo;&nbsp; The other flies, looking behind
+him, and the instant the dart is launched stoops downwards as low as
+possible, or wields his horse with inconceivable rapidity, and picking
+up a djerid with his cane, or taking one from a running slave, pursues
+in his turn the enemy, who wheels on the instant he darts his weapon.&nbsp;
+The greatest dexterity is requisite in these mimic battles to avoid
+the concurrence of the &ldquo;javelin-darting crowd,&rdquo; and to escape
+the random blows of the flying djerids.</p>
+<p>Byron, having satisfied his curiosity with Smyrna, which is so like
+every other Turkish town as to excite but little interest, set out with
+Mr Hobhouse on the 13th of March, for Ephesus.&nbsp; As I soon after
+passed along the same road, I shall here describe what I met with myself
+in the course of the journey, it being probable that the incidents were
+in few respects different from those which they encountered.</p>
+<p>On ascending the heights after leaving Smyrna, the road was remarkable
+in being formed of the broken relics of ancient edifices partly macadamised.&nbsp;
+On the brow of the hill I met a numerous caravan of camels coming from
+the interior of Asia.&nbsp; These ships of the desert, variously loaded,
+were moving slowly to their port, and it seemed to me as I rode past
+them, that the composed docile look of the animals possessed a sort
+of domesticated grace which lessened the effect of their deformity.</p>
+<p>A caravan, owing to the oriental dresses of the passengers and attendants,
+with the numerous grotesque circumstances which it presents to the stranger,
+affords an amusing spectacle.&nbsp; On the back of one camel three or
+four children were squabbling in a basket; in another cooking utensils
+were clattering; and from a crib on a third a young camel looked forth
+inquiringly on the world: a long desultory train of foot-passengers
+and cattle brought up the rear.</p>
+<p>On reaching the summit of the hills behind Smyrna the road lies through
+fields and cotton-grounds, well cultivated and interspersed with country
+houses.&nbsp; After an easy ride of three or four hours I passed through
+the ruins of a considerable Turkish town, containing four or five mosques,
+one of them, a handsome building, still entire; about twenty houses
+or so might be described as tenantable, but only a place of sepulchres
+could be more awful: it had been depopulated by the plague&mdash;all
+was silent, and the streets were matted with thick grass.&nbsp; In passing
+through an open space, which reminded me of a market-place, I heard
+the cuckoo with an indescribable sensation of pleasure mingled with
+solemnity.&nbsp; The sudden presence of a raven at a bridal banquet
+could scarcely have been a greater phantasma.</p>
+<p>Proceeding briskly from this forsaken and dead city, I arrived in
+the course of about half an hour at a coffee-house on the banks of a
+small stream, where I partook of some refreshment in the shade of three
+or four trees, on which several storks were conjugally building their
+nests.&nbsp; While resting there, I became interested in their work,
+and observed, that when any of their acquaintances happened to fly past
+with a stick, they chattered a sort of How-d&rsquo;ye-do to one another.&nbsp;
+This civility was so uniformly and reciprocally performed, that the
+politeness of the stork may be regarded as even less disputable than
+its piety.</p>
+<p>The road from that coffee-house lies for a mile or two along the
+side of a marshy lake, the environs of which are equally dreary and
+barren; an extensive plain succeeds, on which I noticed several broken
+columns of marble, and the evident traces of an ancient causeway, which
+apparently led through the water.&nbsp; Near the extremity of the lake
+was another small coffee-house, with a burial-ground and a mosque near
+it; and about four or five miles beyond I passed a spot, to which several
+Turks brought a coffinless corpse, and laid it on the grass while they
+silently dug a grave to receive it.</p>
+<p>The road then ascended the hills on the south side of the plain,
+of which the marshy lake was the centre, and passed through a tract
+of country calculated to inspire only apprehension and melancholy.&nbsp;
+Not a habitation nor vestige of living man was in sight, but several
+cemeteries, with their dull funereal cypresses and tombstones served
+to show that the country had once been inhabited.</p>
+<p>Just as the earliest stars began to twinkle I arrived at a third
+coffee-house on the roadside, with a little mosque before it, a spreading
+beech tree for travellers to recline under in the spring, and a rude
+shed for them in showers or the more intense sunshine of summer.&nbsp;
+Here I rested for the night, and in the morning at daybreak resumed
+my journey.</p>
+<p>After a short ride I reached the borders of the plain of Ephesus,
+across which I passed along a road rudely constructed, and raised above
+the marsh, consisting of broken pillars, entablatures, and inscriptions,
+at the end of which two other paths diverge; one strikes off to the
+left, and leads over the Cayster by a bridge above the castle of Aiasaluk&mdash;the
+other, leading to the right, or west, goes directly to Scala Nuova,
+the ancient Neapolis.&nbsp; By the latter Byron and his friend proceeded
+towards the ferry, which they crossed, and where they found the river
+about the size of the Cam at Cambridge, but more rapid and deeper.&nbsp;
+They then rode up the south bank, and about three o&rsquo;clock in the
+afternoon arrived at Aiasaluk, the miserable village which now represents
+the city of Ephesus.</p>
+<p>Having put up their beds in a mean khan, the only one in the town,
+they partook of some cold provisions which they had brought with them
+on a stone seat by the side of a fountain, on an open green near to
+a mosque, shaded with tall cypresses.&nbsp; During their repast a young
+Turk approached the fountain, and after washing his feet and hands,
+mounted a flat stone, placed evidently for the purpose on the top of
+the wall surrounding the mosque, and devoutly said his prayers, totally
+regardless of their appearance and operations.</p>
+<p>The remainder of the afternoon was spent in exploring the ruins of
+Aiasaluk, and next morning they proceeded to examine those of the castle,
+and the mouldering magnificence of Ephesus.&nbsp; The remains of the
+celebrated temple of Diana, one of the wonders of the ancient world,
+could not be satisfactorily traced; fragments of walls and arches, which
+had been plated with marble, were all they could discover, with many
+broken columns that had once been mighty in their altitude and strength:
+several fragments were fifteen feet long, and of enormous circumference.&nbsp;
+Such is the condition of that superb edifice, which was, in its glory,
+four hundred and twenty feet long by two hundred and twenty feet broad,
+and adorned with more than a hundred and twenty columns sixty feet high.</p>
+<p>When the travellers had satisfied their curiosity, if that can be
+called satisfaction which found no entire form, but saw only the rubbish
+of desolation and the fragments of destruction, they returned to Smyrna.</p>
+<p>The investigation of the ruins of Ephesus was doubtless interesting
+at the time, but the visit produced no such impression on the mind of
+Byron as might have been expected.&nbsp; He never directly refers to
+it in his works: indeed, after Athens, the relics of Ephesus are things
+but of small import, especially to an imagination which, like that of
+the poet, required the action of living characters to awaken its dormant
+sympathies.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Embarks for Constantinople</i>&mdash;<i>Touches at Tenedos</i>&mdash;<i>Visits
+Alexandria</i>&mdash;<i>Trees</i>&mdash;<i>The Trojan Plain</i>&mdash;<i>Swims
+the Hellespont</i>&mdash;<i>Arrival at Constantinople</i></p>
+<p>On the 11th of April Lord Byron embarked at Smyrna, in the <i>Salsette</i>
+frigate for Constantinople.&nbsp; The wind was fair during the night,
+and at half past six next morning, the ship was off the Sygean promontory,
+the north end of the ancient Lesbos or Mitylene.&nbsp; Having passed
+the headland, north of the little town of Baba, she came in sight of
+Tenedos, where she anchored, and the poet went on shore to view the
+island.</p>
+<p>The port was full of small craft, which in their voyage to the Archipelago
+had put in to wait for a change of wind, and a crowd of Turks belonging
+to these vessels were lounging about on the shore.&nbsp; The town was
+then in ruins, having been burned to the ground by a Russian squadron
+in the year 1807.</p>
+<p>Next morning, Byron, with a party of officers, left the ship to visit
+the ruins of Alexandria Troas, and landed at an open port, about six
+or seven miles to the south of where the <i>Salsette</i> was at anchor.&nbsp;
+The spot near to where they disembarked was marked by several large
+cannon-balls of granite; for the ruins of Alexandria have long supplied
+the fortresses of the Dardanelles with these gigantic missiles.</p>
+<p>They rambled some time through the shaggy woods, with which the country
+is covered, and the first vestiges of antiquity which attracted their
+attention were two large granite sarcophagi; a little beyond they found
+two or three fragments of granite pillars, one of them about twenty-five
+feet in length, and at least five in diameter.&nbsp; Near these they
+saw arches of brick-work, and on the east of them those magnificent
+remains, to which early travellers have given the name of the palace
+of Priam, but which are, in fact, the ruins of ancient baths.&nbsp;
+An earthquake in the course of the preceding winter had thrown down
+large portions of them, and the internal divisions of the edifice were,
+in consequence, choked with huge masses of mural wrecks and marbles.</p>
+<p>The visitors entered the interior through a gap, and found themselves
+in the midst of enormous ruins, enclosed on two sides by walls, raised
+on arches, and by piles of ponderous fragments.&nbsp; The fallen blocks
+were of vast dimensions, and showed that no cement had been used in
+the construction&mdash;an evidence of their great antiquity.&nbsp; In
+the midst of this crushed magnificence stood several lofty portals and
+arches, pedestals of gigantic columns and broken steps and marble cornices,
+heaped in desolate confusion.</p>
+<p>From these baths the distance to the sea is between two and three
+miles&mdash;a gentle declivity covered with low woods, and partially
+interspersed with spots of cultivated ground.&nbsp; On this slope the
+ancient city of Alexandria Troas was built.&nbsp; On the north-west,
+part of the walls, to the extent of a mile, may yet be traced; the remains
+of a theatre are also still to be seen on the side of the hill fronting
+the sea, commanding a view of Tenedos, Lemnos, and the whole expanse
+of the &AElig;gean.</p>
+<p>Having been conducted by the guide, whom they had brought with them
+from Tenedos, to the principal antiquities of Alexandria Troas, the
+visitors returned to the frigate, which immediately after got under
+way.&nbsp; On the 14th of April she came to anchor about a mile and
+a half from Cape Janissary, the Sygean promontory, where she remained
+about a fortnight; during which ample opportunity was afforded to inspect
+the plain of Troy, that scene of heroism, which, for three thousand
+years, has attracted the attention and interested the feelings and fancy
+of the civilized world.</p>
+<p>Whether Lord Byron entertained any doubt of Homer&rsquo;s Troy ever
+having existed, is not very clear.&nbsp; It is probable, from the little
+he says on the subject, that he took no interest in the question.&nbsp;
+For although no traveller could enter with more sensibility into the
+local associations of celebrated places, he yet never seemed to care
+much about the visible features of antiquity, and was always more inclined
+to indulge in reflections than to puzzle his learning with dates or
+dimensions.&nbsp; His ruminations on the Troad, in <i>Don Juan</i>,
+afford an instance of this, and are conceived in the very spirit of
+<i>Childe Harold.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And so great names are nothing more than nominal,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+love of glory&rsquo;s but an airy lust,<br />Too often in its fury overcoming
+all<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who would, as &rsquo;twere, identify their
+dust<br />From out the wide destruction which, entombing all,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leaves
+nothing till the coming of the just,<br />Save change.&nbsp; I&rsquo;ve
+stood upon Achilles&rsquo; tomb,<br />And heard Troy doubted&mdash;time
+will doubt of Rome.</p>
+<p>The very generations of the dead<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are swept
+away, and tomb inherits tomb,<br />Until the memory of an age is fled,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+buried, sinks beneath its offspring&rsquo;s doom.<br />Where are the
+epitaphs our fathers read,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Save a few glean&rsquo;d
+from the sepulchral gloom,<br />Which once named myriads, nameless,
+lie beneath,<br />And lose their own in universal death?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>No task of curiosity can indeed be less satisfactory that the examination
+of the sites of ancient cities; for the guides, not content with leading
+the traveller to the spot, often attempt to mislead his imagination,
+by directing his attention to circumstances which they suppose to be
+evidence that verifies their traditions.&nbsp; Thus, on the Trojan plain,
+several objects are still shown which are described as the self-same
+mentioned in the <i>Iliad</i>.&nbsp; The wild fig-trees, and the tomb
+of Ilus, are yet there&mdash;if the guides may be credited.&nbsp; But
+they were seen with incredulous eyes by the poet; even the tomb of Achilles
+appears to have been regarded by him with equal scepticism; still his
+description of the scene around is striking, and tinted with some of
+his happiest touches.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>There on the green and village-cotted hill is<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Flanked
+by the Hellespont, and by the sea,<br />Entomb&rsquo;d the bravest of
+the brave, Achilles&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They say so.&nbsp;
+Bryant says the contrary.<br />And farther downward tall and towering
+still is<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The tumulus, of whom Heaven knows it
+may be,<br />Patroclus, Ajax, or Protesilaus,&mdash;<br />All heroes,
+who, if living still, would slay us.</p>
+<p>High barrows without marble or a name,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A vast
+untill&rsquo;d and mountain-skirted plain,<br />And Ida in the distance
+still the same,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And old Scamander, if &rsquo;tis
+he, remain;<br />The situation seems still form&rsquo;d for fame,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+hundred thousand men might fight again<br />With ease.&nbsp; But where
+I sought for Ilion&rsquo;s walls<br />The quiet sheep feeds, and the
+tortoise crawls.</p>
+<p>Troops of untended horses; here and there<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Some
+little hamlets, with new names uncouth,<br />Some shepherds unlike Paris,
+led to stare<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A moment at the European youth,<br />Whom
+to the spot their schoolboy feelings bear;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+Turk with beads in hand and pipe in mouth,<br />Extremely taken with
+his own religion,<br />Are what I found there, but the devil a Phrygian.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It was during the time that the <i>Salsette</i> lay off Cape Janissary
+that Lord Byron first undertook to swim across the Hellespont.&nbsp;
+Having crossed from the castle of Chanak-Kalessi, in a boat manned by
+four Turks, he landed at five o&rsquo;clock in the evening half a mile
+above the castle of Chelit-Bauri, where, with an officer of the frigate
+who accompanied him, they began their enterprise, emulous of the renown
+of Leander.&nbsp; At first they swam obliquely upwards, rather towards
+Nagara Point than the Dardanelles, but notwithstanding their skill and
+efforts they made little progress.&nbsp; Finding it useless to struggle
+with <a name="citation156"></a><a href="#footnote156">{156}</a> the
+current, they then turned and went with the stream, still however endeavouring
+to cross.&nbsp; It was not until they had been half an hour in the water,
+and found themselves in the middle of the strait, about a mile and a
+half below the castles, that they consented to be taken into the boat,
+which had followed them.&nbsp; By that time the coldness of the water
+had so benumbed their limbs that they were unable to stand, and were
+otherwise much exhausted.&nbsp; The second attempt was made on the 3rd
+of May, when the weather was warmer.&nbsp; They entered the water at
+the distance of a mile and a-half above Chelit-Bauri, near a point of
+land on the western bank of the Bay of Maito, and swam against the stream
+as before, but not for so long a time.&nbsp; In less than half an hour
+they came floating down the current close to the ship, which was then
+anchored at the Dardanelles, and in passing her steered for the bay
+behind the castle, which they soon succeeded in reaching, and landed
+about a mile and a-half below the ship.&nbsp; Lord Byron has recorded
+that he found the current very strong and the water cold; that some
+large fish passed him in the middle of the channel, and though a little
+chilled he was not fatigued, and performed the feat without much difficulty,
+but not with impunity, for by the verses in which he commemorated the
+exploit it appears he incurred the ague.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>WRITTEN AFTER SWIMMING FROM SESTOS TO ABYDOS</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>If in the month of dark December<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Leander who
+was nightly wont<br />(What maid will not the tale remember)<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+cross thy stream, broad Hellespont,</p>
+<p>If when the wintry tempest roar&rsquo;d<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He
+sped to Hero nothing loath,<br />And thus of old thy current pour&rsquo;d,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fair
+Venus! how I pity both.</p>
+<p>For me, degenerate modern wretch,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Though in
+the genial month of May,<br />My dripping limbs I faintly stretch,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+think I&rsquo;ve done a feat to-day.</p>
+<p>But since he crossed the rapid tide,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;According
+to the doubtful story,<br />To woo, and&mdash;Lord knows what beside,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+swam for love as I for glory,</p>
+<p>&rsquo;Twere hard to say who fared the best;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sad
+mortals thus the gods still plague you;<br />He lost his labour, I my
+jest&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;For he was drown&rsquo;d, and I&rsquo;ve
+the ague.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The whole distance,&rdquo; says his Lordship, &ldquo;from
+the place whence we started to our landing on the other side, including
+the length we were carried by the current, was computed by those on
+board the frigate at upwards of four English miles, though the actual
+breadth is barely one.&nbsp; The rapidity of the current is such that
+no boat can row directly across, and it may in some measure be estimated
+from the circumstance of the whole distance being accomplished by one
+of the parties in an hour and five, and by the other (Byron) in an hour
+and ten minutes.&nbsp; The water was extremely cold from the melting
+of the mountain snows.&nbsp; About three weeks before, in April, we
+had made an attempt; but having ridden all the way from the Troad the
+same morning, and the water being of an icy chilliness, we found it
+necessary to postpone the completion till the frigate anchored below
+the castles, when we swam the straits as just stated, entering a considerable
+way above the European, and landing below the Asiatic fort.&nbsp; Chevallier
+says that a young Jew swam the same distance for his mistress; and Oliver
+mentions it having been done by a Neapolitan; but our consul (at the
+Dardanelles), Tarragona, remembered neither of these circumstances,
+and tried to dissuade us from the attempt.&nbsp; A number of the <i>Salsette&rsquo;s</i>
+crew were known to have accomplished a greater distance and the only
+thing that surprised me was, that as doubts had been entertained of
+the truth of Leander&rsquo;s story, no traveller had ever endeavoured
+to ascertain its practicability.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While the <i>Salsette</i> lay off the Dardanelles, Lord Byron saw
+the body of a man who had been executed by being cast into the sea,
+floating on the stream, moving to and fro with the tumbling of the water,
+which gave to his arms the effect of scaring away several sea-fowl that
+were hovering to devour.&nbsp; This incident he has strikingly depicted
+in <i>The Bride of Abydos.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The sea-birds shriek above the prey<br />O&rsquo;er which their hungry
+beaks delay,<br />As shaken on his restless pillow,<br />His head heaves
+with the heaving billow;<br />That hand whose motion is not life,<br />Yet
+feebly seems to menace strife,<br />Flung by the tossing tide on high,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then
+levell&rsquo;d with the wave&mdash;<br />What reeks it tho&rsquo; that
+corse shall lie<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Within a living grave.<br />The
+bird that tears that prostrate form<br />Hath only robb&rsquo;d the
+meaner worm.<br />The only heart, the only eye,<br />That bled or wept
+to see him die,<br />Had seen those scatter&rsquo;d limbs composed,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+mourned above his turban stone;<br />That heart hath burst&mdash;that
+eye was closed&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yea&mdash;closed before
+his own.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Between the Dardanelles and Constantinople no other adventure was
+undertaken or befel the poet.&nbsp; On the 13th of May, the frigate
+came to anchor at sunset, near the headland to the west of the Seraglio
+Point; and when the night closed in, the silence and the darkness were
+so complete &ldquo;that we might have believed ourselves,&rdquo; says
+Mr Hobhouse, &ldquo;moored in the lonely cove of some desert island,
+and not at the foot of a city which, from its vast extent and countless
+population, is fondly imagined by its present masters to be worthy to
+be called &lsquo;The Refuge of the World.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Constantinople</i>&mdash;<i>Description</i>&mdash;<i>The Dogs
+and the Dead</i>&mdash;<i>Landed at Tophana</i>&mdash;<i>The Masterless
+Dogs</i>&mdash;<i>The Slave Market</i>&mdash;<i>The Seraglio</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Defects in the Description</i></p>
+<p>The spot where the frigate came to anchor affords but an imperfect
+view of the Ottoman capital.&nbsp; A few tall white minarets, and the
+domes of the great mosques only are in sight, interspersed with trees
+and mean masses of domestic buildings.&nbsp; In the distance, inland
+on the left, the redoubted Castle of the Seven Towers is seen rising
+above the gloomy walls; and, unlike every other European city, a profound
+silence prevails over all.&nbsp; This remarkable characteristic of Constantinople
+is owing to the very few wheel-carriages employed in the city.&nbsp;
+In other respects the view around is lively, and in fine weather quickened
+with innumerable objects in motion.&nbsp; In the calmest days the rippling
+in the flow of the Bosphorus is like the running of a river.&nbsp; In
+the fifth canto of <i>Don Juan</i>, Lord Byron has seized the principal
+features, and delineated them with sparkling effect.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The European with the Asian shore,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sprinkled
+with palaces, the ocean stream<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here and there
+studded with a seventy-four,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sophia&rsquo;s cupola
+with golden gleam;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The cypress groves; Olympus
+high and hoar;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The twelve isles, and the more
+than I could dream,<br />Far less describe, present the very view<br />Which
+charm&rsquo;d the charming Mary Montague.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>In the morning, when his Lordship left the ship, the wind blew strongly
+from the north-east, and the rushing current of the Bosphorus dashed
+with great violence against the rocky projections of the shore, as the
+captain&rsquo;s boat was rowed against the stream.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The wind swept down the Euxine, and the wave<br />Broke foaming o&rsquo;er
+the blue Symplegades.<br />&rsquo;Tis a grand sight, from off the giant&rsquo;s
+grave,<br />To watch the progress of those rolling seas<br />Between
+the Bosphorus, as they lash and lave<br />Europe and Asia, you being
+quite at ease.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The sensations produced by the state of the weather, and leaving
+a comfortable cabin, were,&rdquo; says Mr Hobhouse, &ldquo;in unison
+with the impressions which we felt, when, passing under the palace of
+the sultans, and gazing at the gloomy cypresses, which rise above the
+walls, we saw two dogs gnawing a dead body.&rdquo;&nbsp; The description
+in <i>The Siege of Corinth</i> of the dogs devouring the dead, owes
+its origin to this incident of the dogs and the body under the walls
+of the seraglio.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And he saw the lean dogs beneath the wall,<br />Hold o&rsquo;er the
+dead their carnival.<br />Gorging and growling o&rsquo;er carcase and
+limb,<br />They were too busy to bark at him.<br />From a Tartar&rsquo;s
+scull they had stripp&rsquo;d the flesh,<br />As ye peel the fig when
+its fruit is fresh,<br />And their white tusks crunched on the whiter
+scull,<br />As it slipp&rsquo;d through their jaws when their edge grew
+dull.<br />As they lazily mumbled the bones of the dead,<br />When they
+scarce could rise from the spot where they fed.<br />So well had they
+broken a lingering fast,<br />With those who had fallen for that night&rsquo;s
+repast.<br />And Alp knew by the turbans that rolled on the sand,<br />The
+foremost of these were the best of his band.<br />Crimson and green
+were the shawls of their wear,<br />And each scalp had a single long
+tuft of hair,<br />All the rest was shaven and bare.<br />The scalps
+were in the wild dogs&rsquo; maw,<br />The hair was tangled round his
+jaw.<br />But close by the shore on the edge of the gulf,<br />There
+sat a vulture flapping a wolf,<br />Who had stolen from the hills but
+kept away,<br />Scared by the dogs from the human prey;<br />But he
+seized on his share of a steed that lay,<br />Pick&rsquo;d by the birds
+on the sands of the bay.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>This hideous picture is a striking instance of the uses to which
+imaginative power may turn the slightest hint, and of horror augmented
+till it reach that extreme point at which the ridiculous commences.&nbsp;
+The whole compass of English poetry affords no parallel to this passage.&nbsp;
+It even exceeds the celebrated catalogue of dreadful things on the sacramental
+table in <i>Tam O&rsquo; Shanter</i>.&nbsp; It is true, that the revolting
+circumstances described by Byron are less sublime in their associations
+than those of Burns, being mere visible images, unconnected with ideas
+of guilt, and unlike</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The knife a father&rsquo;s throat had mangled,<br />Which his ain
+son of life bereft:<br />The gray hairs yet stuck to the heft.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Nor is there in the vivid group of the vulture flapping the wolf,
+any accessory to rouse stronger emotions, than those which are associated
+with the sight of energy and courage, while the covert insinuation,
+that the bird is actuated by some instigation of retribution in pursuing
+the wolf for having run away with the bone, approaches the very point
+and line where the horrible merges in the ludicrous.&nbsp; The whole
+passage is fearfully distinct, and though in its circumstances, as the
+poet himself says, &ldquo;sickening,&rdquo; is yet an amazing display
+of poetical power and high invention.</p>
+<p>The frigate sent the travellers on shore at Tophana, from which the
+road ascends to Pera.&nbsp; Near this landing-place is a large fountain,
+and around it a public stand of horses ready saddled, attended by boys.&nbsp;
+On some of these Lord Byron and his friend, with the officers who had
+accompanied them, mounted and rode up the steep hill, to the principal
+Frank Hotel, in Pera, where they intended to lodge.&nbsp; In the course
+of the ride their attention was attracted to the prodigious number of
+masterless dogs which lounge and lurk about the corners of the streets;
+a nuisance both dangerous and disagreeable, but which the Turks not
+only tolerate but protect.&nbsp; It is no uncommon thing to see a litter
+of puppies with their mother nestled in a mat placed on purpose for
+them in a nook by some charitable Mussulman of the neighbourhood; for
+notwithstanding their merciless military practices, the Turks are pitiful-hearted
+Titans to dumb animals and slaves.&nbsp; Constantinople has, however,
+been so often and so well described, that it is unnecessary to notice
+its different objects of curiosity here, except in so far as they have
+been contributory to the stores of the poet.</p>
+<p>The slave market was of course not unvisited, but the description
+in <i>Don Juan</i> is more indebted to the author&rsquo;s fancy, than
+any of those other bright reflections of realities to which I have hitherto
+directed the attention of the reader.&nbsp; The market now-a-days is
+in truth very uninteresting; few slaves are ever to be seen in it, and
+the place itself has an odious resemblance to Smithfield.&nbsp; I imagine,
+therefore, that the trade in slaves is chiefly managed by private bargaining.&nbsp;
+When there, I saw only two men for sale, whites, who appeared very little
+concerned about their destination, certainly not more than English rustics
+offering themselves for hire to the farmers at a fair or market.&nbsp;
+Doubtless, there was a time when the slave market of Constantinople
+presented a different spectacle, but the trade itself has undergone
+a change&mdash;the Christians are now interdicted from purchasing slaves.&nbsp;
+The luxury of the guilt is reserved for the exclusive enjoyment of the
+Turks.&nbsp; Still, as a description of things which may have been,
+Byron&rsquo;s market is probable and curious.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A crowd of shivering slaves of every nation<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+age and sex were in the market ranged,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Each busy
+with the merchant in his station.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Poor creatures,
+their good looks were sadly changed.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All save the blacks seem&rsquo;d jaded with vexation,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From
+friends, and home, and freedom far estranged.<br />The negroes more
+philosophy displayed,<br />Used to it no doubt, as eels are to be flayed.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Like a backgammon board, the place was dotted<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With
+whites and blacks in groups, on show for sale,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Though
+rather more irregularly spotted;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Some bought
+the jet, while others chose the pale.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;No lady e&rsquo;er is ogled by a lover,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Horse
+by a black-leg, broadcloth by a tailor,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Fee by
+a counsel, felon by a jailer,</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;As is a slave by his intended bidder.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis
+pleasant purchasing our fellow-creatures,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+all are to be sold, if you consider<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Their passions,
+and are dext&rsquo;rous, some by features<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are
+bought up, others by a warlike leader;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Some by
+a place, as tend their years or natures;<br />The most by ready cash,
+but all have prices,<br />From crowns to kicks, according to their vices.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The account of the interior of the seraglio in <i>Don Juan</i> is
+also only probably correct, and may have been drawn in several particulars
+from an inspection of some of the palaces, but the descriptions of the
+imperial harem are entirely fanciful.&nbsp; I am persuaded, by different
+circumstances, that Byron could not have been in those sacred chambers
+of any of the seraglios.&nbsp; At the time I was in Constantinople,
+only one of the imperial residences was accessible to strangers, and
+it was unfurnished.&nbsp; The great seraglio was not accessible beyond
+the courts, except in those apartments where the Sultan receives his
+officers and visitors of state.&nbsp; Indeed, the whole account of the
+customs and usages of the interior of the seraglio, as described in
+<i>Don Juan</i>, can only be regarded as inventions; and though the
+descriptions abound in picturesque beauty, they have not that air of
+truth and fact about them which render the pictures of Byron so generally
+valuable, independent of their poetical excellence.&nbsp; In those he
+has given of the apartments of the men, the liveliness and fidelity
+of his pencil cannot be denied; but the Arabian tales and <i>Vathek</i>
+seem to have had more influence on his fancy in describing the imperial
+harem, than a knowledge of actual things and appearances.&nbsp; Not
+that the latter are inferior to the former in beauty, or are without
+images and lineaments of graphic distinctness, but they want that air
+of reality which constitutes the singular excellence of his scenes drawn
+from nature; and there is a vagueness in them which has the effect of
+making them obscure, and even fantastical.&nbsp; Indeed, except when
+he paints from actual models, from living persons and existing things,
+his superiority, at least his originality, is not so obvious; and thus
+it happens, that his gorgeous description of the sultan&rsquo;s seraglio
+is like a versified passage of an Arabian tale, while the imagery of
+Childe Harold&rsquo;s visit to Ali Pasha has all the freshness and life
+of an actual scene.&nbsp; The following is, indeed, more like an imitation
+of <i>Vathek</i>, than anything that has been seen, or is in existence.&nbsp;
+I quote it for the contrast it affords to the visit referred to, and
+in illustration of the distinction which should be made between beauties
+derived from actual scenes and adventures, and compilations from memory
+and imagination, which are supposed to display so much more of creative
+invention.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And thus they parted, each by separate doors,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Raba
+led Juan onward, room by room,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Through glittering
+galleries and o&rsquo;er marble floors,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Till
+a gigantic portal through the gloom<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Haughty and
+huge along the distance towers,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And wafted far
+arose a rich perfume,<br />It seem&rsquo;d as though they came upon
+a shrine,<br />For all was vast, still, fragrant, and divine.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The giant door was broad and bright and high,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+gilded bronze, and carved in curious guise;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Warriors
+thereon were battling furiously;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Here stalks
+the victor, there the vanquish&rsquo;d lies;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There
+captives led in triumph droop the eye,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And in
+perspective many a squadron flies.<br />It seems the work of times before
+the line<br />Of Rome transplanted fell with Constantine.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;This massy portal stood at the wide close<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+a huge hall, and on its either side<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Two little
+dwarfs, the least you could suppose,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Were sate,
+like ugly imps, as if allied<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In mockery to the
+enormous gate which rose<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;O&rsquo;er them in almost
+pyramidic pride.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Dispute with the Ambassador</i>&mdash;<i>Reflections on Byron&rsquo;s
+Pride of Rank</i>&mdash;<i>Abandons his Oriental Travels</i>&mdash;<i>Re-embarks
+in the &ldquo;Salsette&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>The Dagger Scene</i>&mdash;<i>Zea</i>&mdash;<i>Returns
+to Athens</i>&mdash;<i>Tour in the Morea</i>&mdash;<i>Dangerous Illness</i>&mdash;<i>Return
+to Athens</i>&mdash;<i>The Adventure on which</i> &ldquo;<i>The Giaour</i>&rdquo;
+<i>is founded</i></p>
+<p>Although Lord Byron remained two months in Constantinople, and visited
+every object of interest and curiosity within and around it, he yet
+brought away with him fewer poetical impressions than from any other
+part of the Ottoman dominions; at least he has made less use in his
+works of what he saw and learned there, than of the materials he collected
+in other places.</p>
+<p>From whatever cause it arose, the self-abstraction which I had noticed
+at Smyrna, was remarked about him while he was in the capital, and the
+same jealousy of his rank was so nervously awake, that it led him to
+attempt an obtrusion on the ambassadorial etiquettes&mdash;which he
+probably regretted.</p>
+<p>It has grown into a custom, at Constantinople, when the foreign ministers
+are admitted to audiences of ceremony with the Sultan, to allow the
+subjects and travellers of their respective nations to accompany them,
+both to swell the pomp of the spectacle, and to gratify their curiosity.&nbsp;
+Mr Adair, our ambassador, for whom the <i>Salsette</i> had been sent,
+had his audience of leave appointed soon after Lord Byron&rsquo;s arrival,
+and his Lordship was particularly anxious to occupy a station of distinction
+in the procession.&nbsp; The pretension was ridiculous in itself, and
+showed less acquaintance with courtly ceremonies than might have been
+expected in a person of his rank and intelligence.&nbsp; Mr Adair assured
+him that he could obtain no particular place; that in the arrangements
+for the ceremonial, only the persons connected with the embassy could
+be considered, and that the Turks neither acknowledged the precedence,
+nor could be requested to consider the distinctions of our nobility.&nbsp;
+Byron, however, still persisted, and the minister was obliged to refer
+him on the subject to the Austrian Internuncio, a high authority in
+questions of etiquette, whose opinion was decidedly against the pretension.</p>
+<p>The pride of rank was indeed one of the greatest weaknesses of Lord
+Byron, and everything, even of the most accidental kind, which seemed
+to come between the wind and his nobility, was repelled on the spot.&nbsp;
+I recollect having some debate with him once respecting a pique of etiquette,
+which happened between him and Sir William Drummond, somewhere in Portugal
+or Spain.&nbsp; Sir William was at the time an ambassador (not, however,
+I believe, in the country where the incident occurred), and was on the
+point of taking precedence in passing from one room to another, when
+Byron stepped in before him.&nbsp; The action was undoubtedly rude on
+the part of his Lordship, even though Sir William had presumed too far
+on his riband: to me it seemed also wrong; for, by the custom of all
+nations from time immemorial, ambassadors have been allowed their official
+rank in passing through foreign countries, while peers in the same circumstances
+claim no rank at all; even in our own colonies it has been doubted if
+they may take precedence of the legislative counsellors.&nbsp; But the
+rights of rank are best determined by the heralds, and I have only to
+remark, that it is almost inconceivable that such things should have
+so morbidly affected the sensibility of Lord Byron; yet they certainly
+did so, and even to a ridiculous degree.&nbsp; On one occasion, when
+he lodged in St James&rsquo;s Street, I recollect him rating the footman
+for using a double knock in accidental thoughtlessness.</p>
+<p>These little infirmities are, however, at most only calculated to
+excite a smile; there is no turpitude in them, and they merit notice
+but as indications of the humour of character.&nbsp; It was his Lordship&rsquo;s
+foible to overrate his rank, to grudge his deformity beyond reason,
+and to exaggerate the condition of his family and circumstances.&nbsp;
+But the alloy of such small vanities, his caprice and feline temper,
+were as vapour compared with the mass of rich and rare ore which constituted
+the orb and nucleus of his brilliancy.</p>
+<p>He had not been long in Constantinople, when a change came over his
+intentions; the journey to Persia was abandoned, and the dreams of India
+were dissolved.&nbsp; The particular causes which produced this change
+are not very apparent&mdash;but Mr Hobhouse was at the same time directed
+to return home, and perhaps that circumstance had some influence on
+his decision, which he communicated to his mother, informing her, that
+he should probably return to Greece.&nbsp; As in that letter he alludes
+to his embarrassment on account of remittances, it is probable that
+the neglect of his agent, with respect to them, was the main cause which
+induced him to determine on going no farther.</p>
+<p>Accordingly, on the 14th of July, he embarked with Mr Hobhouse and
+the ambassador on board the <i>Salsette</i>.&nbsp; It was in the course
+of the passage to the island of Zea, where he was put on shore, that
+one of the most emphatic incidents of his life occurred; an incident
+which throws a remarkable gleam into the springs and intricacies of
+his character&mdash;more, perhaps, than anything which has yet been
+mentioned.</p>
+<p>One day, as he was walking the quarter-deck, he lifted an ataghan
+(it might be one of the midshipmen&rsquo;s weapons), and unsheathing
+it, said, contemplating the blade, &ldquo;I should like to know how
+a person feels after committing murder.&rdquo;&nbsp; By those who have
+inquiringly noticed the extraordinary cast of his metaphysical associations,
+this dagger-scene must be regarded as both impressive and solemn; although
+the wish to know how a man felt after committing murder does not imply
+any desire to perpetrate the crime.&nbsp; The feeling might be appreciated
+by experiencing any actual degree of guilt; for it is not the deed&mdash;the
+sentiment which follows it makes the horror.&nbsp; But it is doing injustice
+to suppose the expression of such a wish dictated by desire.&nbsp; Lord
+Byron has been heard to express, in the eccentricity of conversation,
+wishes for a more intense knowledge of remorse than murder itself could
+give.&nbsp; There is, however, a wide and wild difference between the
+curiosity that prompts the wish to know the exactitude of any feeling
+or idea, and the direful passions that instigate to guilty gratifications.</p>
+<p>Being landed, according to his request, with his valet, two Albanians,
+and a Tartar, on the shore of Zea, it may be easily conceived that he
+saw the ship depart with a feeling before unfelt.&nbsp; It was the first
+time he was left companionless, and the scene around was calculated
+to nourish stern fancies, even though there was not much of suffering
+to be withstood.</p>
+<p>The landing-place in the port of Zea, I recollect distinctly.&nbsp;
+The port itself is a small land-locked gulf, or, as the Scottish Highlander
+would call it, a loch.&nbsp; The banks are rocky and forbidding; the
+hills, which rise to the altitude of mountains, have, in a long course
+of ages, been always inhabited by a civilized people.&nbsp; Their precipitous
+sides are formed into innumerable artificial terraces, the aspect of
+which, austere, ruinous, and ancient, produces on the mind of the stranger
+a sense of the presence of a greater antiquity than the sight of monuments
+of mere labour and art.&nbsp; The town stands high upon the mountain,
+I counted on the lower side of the road which leads to it forty-nine
+of those terraces at one place under me, and on the opposite hills,
+in several places, upwards of sixty.&nbsp; Whether Lord Byron ascended
+to the town is doubtful.&nbsp; I have never heard him mention that he
+had; and I am inclined to think that he proceeded at once to Athens
+by one of the boats which frequent the harbour.</p>
+<p>At Athens he met an old fellow-collegian, the Marquis of Sligo, with
+whom he soon after travelled as far as Corinth; the Marquis turning
+off there for Tripolizza, while Byron went forward to Patras, where
+he had some needful business to transact with the consul.&nbsp; He then
+made the tour of the Morea, in the course of which he visited the Vizier
+Velhi Pasha, by whom he was treated, as every other English traveller
+of the time was, with great distinction and hospitality.</p>
+<p>Having occasion to go back to Patras, he was seized by the local
+fever there, and reduced to death&rsquo;s door.&nbsp; On his recovery
+he returned to Athens, where he found the Marquis, with Lady Hester
+Stanhope, and Mr Bruce, afterward so celebrated for his adventures in
+assisting the escape of the French General Lavalette.&nbsp; He took
+possession of the apartments which I had occupied in the monastery,
+and made them his home during the remainder of his residence in Greece;
+but when I returned to Athens, in October, he was not there himself.&nbsp;
+I found, however, his valet, Fletcher, in possession.</p>
+<p>There is no very clear account of the manner in which Lord Byron
+employed himself after his return to Athens; but various intimations
+in his correspondence show that during the winter his pen was not idle.&nbsp;
+It would, however, be to neglect an important occurrence, not to notice
+that during the time when he was at Athens alone, the incident which
+he afterwards embodied in the impassioned fragments of <i>The Giaour</i>
+came to pass; and to apprise the reader that the story is founded on
+an adventure which happened to himself&mdash;he was, in fact, the cause
+of the girl being condemned, and ordered to be sewn up in a sack and
+thrown into the sea.</p>
+<p>One day, as he was returning from bathing in the Pir&aelig;us, he
+met the procession going down to the shore to execute the sentence which
+the Waywode had pronounced on the girl; and learning the object of the
+ceremony, and who was the victim, he immediately interfered with great
+resolution; for, on observing some hesitation on the part of the leader
+of the escort to return with him to the Governor&rsquo;s house, he drew
+a pistol and threatened to shoot him on the spot.&nbsp; The man then
+turned about, and accompanied him back, when, partly by bribery and
+entreaty, he succeeded in obtaining a pardon for her, on condition that
+she was sent immediately out of the city.&nbsp; Byron conveyed her to
+the monastery, and on the same night sent her off to Thebes, where she
+found a safe asylum.</p>
+<p>With this affair, I may close his adventures in Greece; for, although
+he remained several months subsequent at Athens, he was in a great measure
+stationary.&nbsp; His health, which was never robust, was impaired by
+the effects of the fever, which lingered about him; perhaps, too, by
+the humiliating anxiety he suffered on account of the uncertainty in
+his remittances.&nbsp; But however this may have been, it was fortunate
+for his fame that he returned to England at the period he did, for the
+climate of the Mediterranean was detrimental to his constitution.&nbsp;
+The heat oppressed him so much as to be positive suffering, and scarcely
+had he reached Malta on his way home, when he was visited again with
+a tertian ague.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Arrival in London</i>&mdash;<i>Mr Dallas&rsquo;s Patronage</i>&mdash;<i>Arranges
+for the Publication of &ldquo;Childe Harold&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Death of Mrs Byron</i>&mdash;<i>His Sorrow</i>&mdash;<i>His Affair with
+Mr Moore</i>&mdash;<i>Their Meeting at Mr Rogers&rsquo;s House, and
+Friendship</i></p>
+<p>Lord Byron arrived in London about the middle of July, 1811, having
+been absent a few days more than two years.&nbsp; The embarrassed condition
+in which he found his affairs sufficiently explains the dejection and
+uneasiness with which he was afflicted during the latter part of his
+residence in Greece; and yet it was not such as ought to have affected
+him so deeply, nor have I ever been able to comprehend wherefore so
+much stress has been laid on his supposed friendlessness.&nbsp; In respect
+both to it and to his ravelled fortune, a great deal too much has been
+too often said; and the manliness of his character has suffered by the
+puling.</p>
+<p>His correspondence shows that he had several friends to whom he was
+much attached, and his disposition justifies the belief that, had he
+not been well persuaded the attachment was reciprocal, he would not
+have remained on terms of intimacy with them.&nbsp; And though for his
+rank not rich, he was still able to maintain all its suitable exhibition.&nbsp;
+The world could never regard as an object of compassion or of sympathy
+an English noble, whose income was enough to support his dignity among
+his peers, and whose poverty, however grievous to his pride, caused
+only the privation of extravagance.&nbsp; But it cannot be controverted,
+that there was an innate predilection in the mind of Lord Byron to mystify
+everything about himself: he was actuated by a passion to excite attention,
+and, like every other passion, it was often indulged at the expense
+of propriety.&nbsp; He had the infirmity of speaking, though vaguely,
+and in obscure hints and allusions, more of his personal concerns than
+is commonly deemed consistent with a correct estimate of the interest
+which mankind take in the cares of one another.&nbsp; But he lived to
+feel and to rue the consequences: to repent he could not, for the cause
+was in the very element of his nature.&nbsp; It was a blemish as incurable
+as the deformity of his foot.</p>
+<p>On his arrival in London, his relation, Mr Dallas, called on him,
+and in the course of their first brief conversation his Lordship mentioned
+that he had written a paraphrase of Horace&rsquo;s <i>Art of Poetry</i>,
+but said nothing then of <i>Childe Harold</i>, a circumstance which
+leads me to suspect that he offered him the slighter work first, to
+enjoy his surprise afterward at the greater.&nbsp; If so, the result
+answered the intent.&nbsp; Mr Dallas carried home with him the paraphrase
+of Horace, with which he was grievously disappointed; so much so, that
+on meeting his Lordship again in the morning, and being reluctant to
+speak of it as he really thought, he only expressed some surprise that
+his noble friend should have produced nothing else during his long absence.</p>
+<p>I can easily conceive the emphatic indifference, if my conjecture
+be well founded, with which Lord Byron must have said to him, &ldquo;I
+have occasionally written short poems, besides a great many stanzas
+in Spenser&rsquo;s measure, relative to the countries I have visited:
+they are not worth troubling you with, but you shall have them all with
+you, if you like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><i>Childe Harold&rsquo;s Pilgrimage</i> was accordingly placed in
+his hands; Mr Dallas took it home, and was not slow in discovering its
+beauties, for in the course of the same evening he despatched a note
+to his Lordship, as fair a specimen of the style of an elderly patronising
+gentleman as can well be imagined: &ldquo;You have written,&rdquo; said
+he, &ldquo;one of the most delightful poems I ever read.&nbsp; If I
+wrote this in flattery, I should deserve your contempt rather than your
+friendship.&nbsp; I have been so fascinated with <i>Childe Harold</i>,
+that I have not been able to lay it down; I would almost pledge my life
+on its advancing the reputation of your poetical powers, and on its
+gaining you great honour and regard, if you will do me the credit and
+favour of attending to my suggestions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For some reason or another, Lord Byron, however, felt or feigned
+great reluctance to publish <i>Childe Harold</i>.&nbsp; Possibly his
+repugnance was dictated by diffidence, not with respect to its merits,
+but from a consciousness that the hero of the poem exhibited traits
+and resemblances of himself.&nbsp; It would indeed be injustice to his
+judgment and taste, to suppose he was not sensible of the superiority
+of the terse and energetic poetry which brightens and burns in every
+stanza of the <i>Pilgrimage</i>, compared with the loose and sprawling
+lines, and dull rhythm, of the paraphrase.&nbsp; It is true that he
+alleged it had been condemned by a good critic&mdash;the only one who
+had previously seen it&mdash;probably Mr Hobhouse, who was with him
+during the time he was writing it; but still I cannot conceive he was
+so blind to excellence, as to prefer in sincerity the other composition,
+which was only an imitation.&nbsp; But the arguments of Mr Dallas prevailed
+and in due season <i>Childe Harold</i> was prepared for the press.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, while busily engaged in his literary projects with
+Mr Dallas, and in law affairs with his agent, he was suddenly summoned
+to Newstead by the state of his mother&rsquo;s health: before he had
+reached the Abbey she had breathed her last.&nbsp; The event deeply
+affected him; he had not seen her since his return, and a presentiment
+possessed her when they parted, that she was never to see him again.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding her violent temper and other unseemly conduct, her
+affection for him had been so fond and dear, that he undoubtedly returned
+it with unaffected sincerity; and from many casual and incidental expressions
+which I have heard him employ concerning her, I am persuaded that his
+filial love was not at any time even of an ordinary kind.&nbsp; During
+her life he might feel uneasy respecting her, apprehensive on account
+of her ungovernable passions and indiscretions, but the manner in which
+he lamented her death, clearly proves that the integrity of his affection
+had never been impaired.</p>
+<p>On the night after his arrival at the Abbey, the waiting-woman of
+Mrs Byron, in passing the door of the room where the corpse lay, heard
+the sound of some one sighing heavily within, and on entering found
+his Lordship sitting in the dark beside the bed.&nbsp; She remonstrated
+with him for so giving way to grief, when he burst into tears, and exclaimed,
+&ldquo;I had but one friend in the world, and she is gone.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Of the fervency of his sorrow I do therefore think there can be no doubt;
+the very endeavour which he made to conceal it by indifference, was
+a proof of its depth and anguish, though he hazarded the strictures
+of the world by the indecorum of his conduct on the occasion of the
+funeral.&nbsp; Having declined to follow the remains himself, he stood
+looking from the hall door at the procession, till the whole had moved
+away; and then, turning to one of the servants, the only person left,
+he desired him to fetch the sparring-gloves, and proceeded with him
+to his usual exercise.&nbsp; But the scene was impressive, and spoke
+eloquently of a grieved heart; he sparred in silence all the time, and
+the servant thought that he hit harder than was his habit: at last he
+suddenly flung away the gloves and retired to his own room.</p>
+<p>As soon as the funeral was over the publication of <i>Childe Harold</i>
+was resumed, but it went slowly through the press.&nbsp; In the meantime,
+an incident occurred to him which deserves to be noted&mdash;because
+it is one of the most remarkable in his life, and has given rise to
+consequences affecting his fame&mdash;with advantage.</p>
+<p>In <i>English Bards and Scotch Reviewers</i>, he had alluded, with
+provoking pleasantry, to a meeting which had taken place at Chalk Farm
+some years before, between Mr Jeffrey, the Edinburgh reviewer, and Mr
+Moore, without recollecting, indeed without having heard, that Mr Moore
+had explained, through the newspapers, what was alleged to have been
+ridiculous in the affair.&nbsp; This revival of the subject, especially
+as it called in question the truth of Mr Moore&rsquo;s statement, obliged
+that gentleman to demand an explanation; but Lord Byron, being abroad,
+did not receive this letter, and of course knew not of its contents,
+so that, on his return, Mr Moore was induced to address his Lordship
+again.&nbsp; The correspondence which ensued is honourable to the spirit
+and feelings of both.</p>
+<p>Mr Moore, after referring to his first letter, restated the nature
+of the insult which the passage in the note to the poem was calculated
+to convey, adding, &ldquo;It is now useless to speak of the steps with
+which it was my intention to follow up that letter, the time which has
+elapsed since then, though it has done away neither the injury nor the
+feeling of it, has, in many respects, materially altered my situation,
+and the only object I have now in writing to your Lordship, is to preserve
+some consistency with that former letter, and to prove to you that the
+injured feeling still exists, however circumstances may compel me to
+be deaf to its dictates at present.&nbsp; When I say &lsquo;injured
+feeling,&rsquo; let me assure your Lordship that there is not a single
+vindictive sentiment in my mind towards you; I mean but to express that
+uneasiness under what I consider to be a charge of falsehood, which
+must haunt a man of any feeling to his grave, unless the insult be retracted,
+or atoned for, and which, if I did not feel, I should indeed deserve
+far worse than your Lordship&rsquo;s satire could inflict upon me.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+And he concluded by saying, that so far from being influenced by any
+angry or resentful feeling, it would give him sincere pleasure if, by
+any satisfactory explanation, his Lordship would enable him to seek
+the honour of being ranked among his acquaintance.</p>
+<p>The answer of Lord Byron was diplomatic but manly.&nbsp; He declared
+that he never received Mr Moore&rsquo;s letter, and assured him that
+in whatever part of the world it had reached him, he would have deemed
+it his duty to return and answer it in person; that he knew nothing
+of the advertisement to which Mr Moore had alluded, and consequently
+could not have had the slightest idea of &ldquo;giving the lie&rdquo;
+to an address which he had never seen.&nbsp; &ldquo;When I put my name
+to the production,&rdquo; said his Lordship, &ldquo;which has occasioned
+this correspondence, I became responsible to all whom it might concern,
+to explain where it requires explanation, and where insufficiently or
+too sufficiently explicit, at all events to satisfy; my situation leaves
+me no choice; it rests with the injured and the angry to obtain reparation
+in their own way.&nbsp; With regard to the passage in question, <i>you</i>
+were certainly <i>not</i> the person towards whom I felt personally
+hostile: on the contrary, my whole thoughts were engrossed by one whom
+I had reason to consider as my worst literary enemy, nor could I foresee
+that his former antagonist was about to become his champion.&nbsp; You
+do not specify what you would wish to have done.&nbsp; I can neither
+retract nor apologize for a charge of falsehood which I never advanced.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In reply, Mr Moore commenced by acknowledging that his Lordship&rsquo;s
+letter was upon the whole as satisfactory as he could expect; and after
+alluding to specific circumstances in the case, concluded thus: &ldquo;As
+your Lordship does not show any wish to proceed beyond the rigid formulary
+of explanation, it is not for me to make any farther advances.&nbsp;
+We Irishmen, in business of this kind, seldom know any medium between
+decided hostility and decided friendship.&nbsp; But as any approaches
+towards the latter alternative must now depend entirely on your Lordship,
+I have only to repeat that I am satisfied with your letter.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Here the correspondence would probably, with most people, have been
+closed, but Lord Byron&rsquo;s sensibility was interested, and would
+not let it rest.&nbsp; Accordingly, on the following day, he rejoined:
+&ldquo;Soon after my return to England, my friend Mr Hodgson apprised
+me that a letter for me was in his possession; but a domestic event
+hurrying me from London immediately after, the letter, which may most
+probably be your own, is still unopened in his keeping.&nbsp; If, on
+examination of the address, the similarity of the handwriting should
+lead to such a conclusion, it shall be opened in your presence, for
+the satisfaction of all parties.&nbsp; Mr H. is at present out of town;
+on Friday I shall see him, and request him to forward it to my address.&nbsp;
+With regard to the latter part of both your letters, until the principal
+point was discussed between us, I felt myself at a loss in what manner
+to reply.&nbsp; Was I to anticipate friendship from one who conceived
+me to have charged him with falsehood? were not advances under such
+circumstances to be misconstrued, not perhaps by the person to whom
+they were addressed, but by others?&nbsp; In my case such a step was
+impracticable.&nbsp; If you, who conceived yourself to be the offended
+person, are satisfied that you had no cause for offence, it will not
+be difficult to convince me of it.&nbsp; My situation, as I have before
+stated, leaves me no choice.&nbsp; I should have felt proud of your
+acquaintance had it commenced under other circumstances, but it must
+rest with you to determine how far it may proceed after so <i>auspicious</i>
+a beginning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mr Moore acknowledges that he was somewhat piqued at the manner in
+which his efforts towards a more friendly understanding were received,
+and hastened to close the correspondence by a short note, saying that
+his Lordship had made him feel the imprudence he was guilty of in wandering
+from the point immediately in discussion between them.&nbsp; This drew
+immediately from Lord Byron the following frank and openhearted reply:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must excuse my troubling you once more upon this very
+unpleasant subject.&nbsp; It would be a satisfaction to me, and I should
+think to yourself, that the unopened letter in Mr Hodgson&rsquo;s possession
+(supposing it to prove your own) should be returned <i>in statu quo</i>
+to the writer, particularly as you expressed yourself &lsquo;not quite
+easy under the manner in which I had dwelt on its miscarriage.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A few words more and I shall not trouble you further.&nbsp;
+I felt, and still feel, very much flattered by those parts of your correspondence
+which held out the prospect of our becoming acquainted.&nbsp; If I did
+not meet them, in the first instance, as perhaps I ought, let the situation
+in which I was placed be my defence.&nbsp; You have <i>now</i> declared
+yourself <i>satisfied</i>, and on that point we are no longer at issue.&nbsp;
+If, therefore, you still retain any wish to do me the honour you hinted
+at, I shall be most happy to meet you when, where, and how you please,
+and I presume you will not attribute my saying thus much to any unworthy
+motive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The result was a dinner at the house of Mr Rogers, the amiable and
+celebrated author of <i>The Pleasures of Memory</i>, and the only guest
+besides the two adversaries was Mr Campbell, author of <i>The Pleasures
+of Hope</i>: a poetical group of four not easily to be matched, among
+contemporaries in any age or country.</p>
+<p>The meeting could not but be interesting, and Mr Moore has described
+the effect it had on himself with a felicitous warmth, which showed
+how much he enjoyed the party, and was pleased with the friendship that
+ensued.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Among the impressions,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;which this meeting
+left on me, what I chiefly remember to have remarked was, the nobleness
+of his air, his beauty, the gentleness of his voice and manners, and&mdash;what
+was naturally not the least attraction&mdash;his marked kindness for
+myself.&nbsp; Being in mourning for his mother, the colour as well of
+his dress as of his glossy, curling, and picturesque hair, gave more
+effect to the pure spiritual paleness of his features, in the expression
+of which, when he spoke, there was a perpetual play of lively thought,
+though melancholy was their habitual character when in repose.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>The Libel in &ldquo;The Scourge&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>The general
+Impression of his Character</i>&mdash;<i>Improvement in his Manners,
+as his Merit was acknowledgement by the Public</i>&mdash;<i>His Address
+in Management</i>&mdash;<i>His first Speech in Parliament</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Publication of &ldquo;Childe Harold&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>Its Reception
+and Effect</i></p>
+<p>During the first winter after Lord Byron had returned to England,
+I was frequently with him.&nbsp; <i>Childe Harold</i> was not then published;
+and although the impression of his satire, <i>English Bards and Scotch
+Reviewers</i>, was still strong upon the public, he could not well be
+said to have been then a celebrated character.&nbsp; At that time the
+strongest feeling by which he appeared to be actuated was indignation
+against a writer in a scurrilous publication, called <i>The Scourge</i>;
+in which he was not only treated with unjustifiable malignity, but charged
+with being, as he told me himself, the illegitimate son of a murderer.&nbsp;
+I had not read the work; but the writer who could make such an absurd
+accusation, must have been strangely ignorant of the very circumstances
+from which he derived the materials of his own libel.&nbsp; When Lord
+Byron mentioned the subject to me, and that he was consulting Sir Vickery
+Gibbs, with the intention of prosecuting the publisher and the author,
+I advised him, as well as I could, to desist, simply because the allegation
+referred to well-known occurrences.&nbsp; His grand-uncle&rsquo;s duel
+with Mr. Chaworth, and the order of the House of Peers to produce evidence
+of his grandfather&rsquo;s marriage with Miss Trevannion; the facts
+of which being matter of history and public record, superseded the necessity
+of any proceeding.</p>
+<p>Knowing how deeply this affair agitated him at that time, I was not
+surprised at the sequestration in which he held himself&mdash;and which
+made those who were not acquainted with his shy and mystical nature,
+apply to him the description of his own Lara:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The chief of Lara is return&rsquo;d again,</p>
+<p>And why had Lara cross&rsquo;d the bounding main?&mdash;<br />Left
+by his sire too young such loss to know,<br />Lord of himself; that
+heritage of woe.<br />In him, inexplicably mix&rsquo;d, appear&rsquo;d<br />Much
+to be loved and hated, sought and fear&rsquo;d,<br />Opinion varying
+o&rsquo;er his hidden lot,<br />In praise or railing ne&rsquo;er his
+name forgot.<br />His silence form&rsquo;d a theme for others&rsquo;
+prate;<br />They guess&rsquo;d, they gazed, they fain would know his
+fate,<br />What had he been? what was he, thus unknown,<br />Who walk&rsquo;d
+their world, his lineage only known?<br />A hater of his kind? yet some
+would say,<br />With them he could seem gay amid the gay;<br />But own&rsquo;d
+that smile, if oft observed and near<br />Waned in its mirth and wither&rsquo;d
+to a sneer;<br />That smile might reach his lip, but pass&rsquo;d not
+by;<br />None e&rsquo;er could trace its laughter to his eye:<br />Yet
+there was softness, too, in his regard,<br />At times a heart is not
+by nature hard.<br />But once perceived, his spirit seem&rsquo;d to
+hide<br />Such weakness as unworthy of its pride,<br />And stretch&rsquo;d
+itself as scorning to redeem<br />One doubt from others&rsquo; half-withheld
+esteem;<br />In self-inflicted penance of a breast<br />Which tenderness
+might once have wrung from rest,<br />In vigilance of grief that would
+compel<br />The soul to hate for having loved too well.<br />There was
+in him a vital scorn of all,<br />As if the worst had fall&rsquo;n which
+could befall.<br />He stood a stranger in this breathing world,<br />An
+erring spirit from another hurl&rsquo;d;<br />A thing of dark imaginings,
+that shaped<br />By choice the perils he by chance escaped.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Such was Byron to common observance on his return.&nbsp; I recollect
+one night meeting him at the Opera.&nbsp; Seeing me with a gentleman
+whom he did not know, and to whom he was unknown, he addressed me in
+Italian, and we continued to converse for some time in that language.&nbsp;
+My friend, who in the meanwhile had been observing him with curiosity,
+conceiving him to be a foreigner, inquired in the course of the evening
+who he was, remarking that he had never seen a man with such a Cain-like
+mark on the forehead before, alluding to that singular scowl which struck
+me so forcibly when I first saw him, and which appears to have made
+a stronger impression upon me than it did upon many others.&nbsp; I
+never, in fact, could overcome entirely the prejudice of the first impression,
+although I ought to have been gratified by the friendship and confidence
+with which he always appeared disposed to treat me.&nbsp; When <i>Childe
+Harold</i> was printed, he sent me a quarto copy before the publication;
+a favour and distinction I have always prized; and the copy which he
+gave me of <i>The Bride of Abydos</i> was one he had prepared for a
+new edition, and which contains, in his own writing, these six lines
+in no other copy:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Bless&rsquo;d&mdash;as the Muezzin&rsquo;s strain from Mecca&rsquo;s
+wall<br />To pilgrims pure and prostrate at his call,<br />Soft&mdash;as
+the melody of youthful days<br />That steals the trembling tear of speechless
+praise,<br />Sweet&mdash;as his native song to exile&rsquo;s ears<br />Shall
+sound each tone thy long-loved voice endears.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>He had not, it is true, at the period of which I am speaking, gathered
+much of his fame; but the gale was rising&mdash;and though the vessel
+was evidently yielding to the breeze, she was neither crank nor unsteady.&nbsp;
+On the contrary, the more he became an object of public interest, the
+less did he indulge his capricious humour.&nbsp; About the time when
+<i>The Bride of Abydos</i> was published, he appeared disposed to settle
+into a consistent character&mdash;especially after the first sale of
+Newstead.&nbsp; Before that particular event, he was often so disturbed
+in his mind, that he could not conceal his unhappiness, and frequently
+spoke of leaving England for ever.</p>
+<p>Although few men were more under the impulses of passion than Lord
+Byron, there was yet a curious kind of management about him which showed
+that he was well aware how much of the world&rsquo;s favour was to be
+won by it.&nbsp; Long before <i>Childe Harold</i> appeared, it was generally
+known that he had a poem in the press, and various surmises to stimulate
+curiosity were circulated concerning it: I do not say that these were
+by his orders, or under his directions, but on one occasion I did fancy
+that I could discern a touch of his own hand in a paragraph in the <i>Morning
+Post</i>, in which he was mentioned as having returned from an excursion
+into the interior of Africa; and when I alluded to it, my suspicion
+was confirmed by his embarrassment.</p>
+<p>I mention this incident not in the spirit of detraction; for in the
+paragraph there was nothing of puff, though certainly something of oddity&mdash;but
+as a tint of character, indicative of the appetite for distinction by
+which, about this period, he became so powerfully incited, that at last
+it grew into a diseased crave, and to such a degree, that were the figure
+allowable, it might be said, the mouth being incapable of supplying
+adequate means to appease it&mdash;every pore became another mouth greedy
+of nourishment.&nbsp; I am, however, hastening on too fast.&nbsp; Lord
+Byron was, at that time, far indeed from being ruled by any such inordinate
+passion; the fears, the timidity, and bashfulness of young desire still
+clung to him, and he was throbbing with doubt if he should be found
+worthy of the high prize for which he was about to offer himself a candidate.&nbsp;
+The course he adopted on the occasion, whether dictated by management,
+or the effect of accident, was, however, well calculated to attract
+attention to his <i>d&eacute;but</i> as a public man.</p>
+<p>When <i>Childe Harold</i> was ready for publication, he determined
+to make his first appearance as an orator in the House of Lords: the
+occasion was judiciously chosen, being a debate on the Nottingham frame-breaking
+bill; a subject on which it was natural to suppose he possessed some
+local knowledge that might bear upon a question directed so exclusively
+against transactions in his own county.&nbsp; He prepared himself as
+the best orators do in their first essays, not only by composing, but
+writing down, the whole of his speech beforehand.&nbsp; The reception
+he met with was flattering; he was complimented warmly by some of the
+speakers on his own side; but it must be confessed that his <i>d&eacute;but</i>
+was more showy than promising.&nbsp; It lacked weight in metal, as was
+observed at the time, and the mode of delivery was more like a schoolboy&rsquo;s
+recital than a masculine grapple with an argument.&nbsp; It was, moreover,
+full of rhetorical exaggerations, and disfigured with conceits.&nbsp;
+Still it scintillated with talent, and justified the opinion that he
+was an extraordinary young man, probably destined to distinction, though
+he might not be a statesman.</p>
+<p>Mr Dallas gives a lively account of his elation on the occasion.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;When he left the great chamber,&rdquo; says that gentleman, &ldquo;I
+went and met him in the passage; he was glowing with success, and much
+agitated.&nbsp; I had an umbrella in my right hand, not expecting that
+he would put out his hand to me; in my haste to take it when offered,
+I had advanced my left hand: &lsquo;What!&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;give
+your friend your left hand upon such an occasion?&rsquo;&nbsp; I showed
+the cause, and immediately changing the umbrella to the other, I gave
+him my right hand, which he shook and pressed warmly.&nbsp; He was greatly
+elated, and repeated some of the compliments which had been paid him,
+and mentioned one or two of the peers who had desired to be introduced
+to him.&nbsp; He concluded by saying, that he had, by his speech, given
+me the best advertisement for <i>Childe Harold&rsquo;s Pilgrimage</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is upon this latter circumstance, that I have ventured to state
+my suspicion, that there was a degree of worldly management in making
+his first appearance in the House of Lords, so immediately preceding
+the publication of his poem.&nbsp; The speech was, indeed, a splendid
+advertisement, but the greater and brighter merits of the poem soon
+proved that it was not requisite, for the speech made no impression,
+but the poem was at once hailed with delight and admiration.&nbsp; It
+filled a vacancy in the public mind, which the excitement and inflation
+arising from the mighty events of the age, had created.&nbsp; The world,
+in its condition and circumstances, was prepared to receive a work,
+so original, vigorous, and beautiful; and the reception was such that
+there was no undue extravagance in the noble author saying in his memorandum,
+&ldquo;I awoke one morning and found myself famous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But he was not to be allowed to revel in such triumphant success
+with impunity.&nbsp; If the great spirits of the time were smitten with
+astonishment at the splendour of the rising fire, the imps and elves
+of malignity and malice fluttered their bat-wings in all directions.&nbsp;
+Those whom the poet had afflicted in his satire, and who had remained
+quietly crouching with lacerated shoulders in the hope that their flagellation
+would be forgotten, and that the avenging demon who had so punished
+their imbecility would pass away, were terrified from their obscurity.&nbsp;
+They came like moths to the candle, and sarcasms in the satire which
+had long been unheeded, in the belief that they would soon be forgotten,
+were felt to have been barbed with irremediable venom, when they beheld
+the avenger</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Towering in his pride of place.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Sketches of Character</i>&mdash;<i>His Friendly Dispositions</i>&mdash;<i>Introduce
+Prince K</i>&mdash;<i>to him</i>&mdash;<i>Our last Interview</i>&mdash;<i>His
+continued Kindness towards me</i>&mdash;<i>Instance of it to one of
+my Friends.</i></p>
+<p>For some time after the publication of <i>Childe Harold</i>, the
+noble author appeared to more advantage than I ever afterwards saw him.&nbsp;
+He was soothed by success; and the universal applause which attended
+his poem seemed to make him think more kindly of the world, of which
+he has too often complained, while it would be difficult to discover,
+in his career and fortunes, that he had ever received any cause from
+it to justify his complaint.</p>
+<p>At no time, I imagine, could it be said that Lord Byron was one of
+those men who interest themselves in the concerns of others.&nbsp; He
+had always too much to do with his own thoughts about himself, to afford
+time for the consideration of aught that was lower in his affections.&nbsp;
+But still he had many amiable fits, and at the particular period to
+which I allude, he evinced a constancy in the disposition to oblige,
+which proved how little self-control was wanting to have made him as
+pleasant as he was uniformly interesting.&nbsp; I felt this towards
+myself in a matter which had certainly the grace of condescension in
+it, at the expense of some trouble to him.&nbsp; I then lived at the
+corner of Bridge Street, Westminster, and in going to the House of Lords
+he frequently stopped to inquire if I wanted a frank.&nbsp; His conversation,
+at the same time, was of a milder vein, and with the single exception
+of one day, while dining together at the St Alban&rsquo;s, it was light
+and playful, as if gaiety had become its habitude.</p>
+<p>Perhaps I regarded him too curiously, and more than once it struck
+me that he thought so.&nbsp; For at times, when he was in his comfortless
+moods, he has talked of his affairs and perplexities as if I had been
+much more acquainted with them than I had any opportunity of being.&nbsp;
+But he was a subject for study, such as is rarely met with&mdash;at
+least, he was so to me; for his weaknesses were as interesting as his
+talents, and he often indulged in expressions which would have been
+blemishes in the reflections of other men, but which in him often proved
+the germs of philosophical imaginings.&nbsp; He was the least qualified
+for any sort of business of all men I have ever known; so skinless in
+sensibility as respected himself, and so distrustful in his universal
+apprehensions of human nature, as respected others.&nbsp; It was, indeed,
+a wild, though a beautiful, error of nature, to endow a spirit with
+such discerning faculties, and yet render it unfit to deal with mankind.&nbsp;
+But these reflections belong more properly to a general estimate of
+his character, than to the immediate purpose before me, which was principally
+to describe the happy effects which the splendid reception of <i>Childe
+Harold</i> had on his feelings; effects which, however, did not last
+long.&nbsp; He was gratified to the fullness of his hopes; but the adulation
+was enjoyed to excess, and his infirmities were aggravated by the surfeit.&nbsp;
+I did not, however, see the progress of the change, as in the course
+of the summer I went to Scotland, and soon after again abroad.&nbsp;
+But on my return, in the following spring, it was very obvious.</p>
+<p>I found him, in one respect, greatly improved; there was more of
+a formed character about him; he was evidently, at the first glance,
+more mannered, or endeavouring to be so, and easier with the proprieties
+of his rank; but he had risen in his own estimation above the honours
+so willingly paid to his genius, and was again longing for additional
+renown.&nbsp; Not content with being acknowledged as the first poet
+of the age, and a respectable orator in the House of Lords, he was aspiring
+to the <i>&eacute;clat</i> of a man of gallantry; so that many of the
+most ungracious peculiarities of his temper, though brought under better
+discipline, were again in full activity.</p>
+<p>Considering how much he was then caressed, I ought to have been proud
+of the warmth with which he received me.&nbsp; I did not, however, so
+often see him as in the previous year; for I was then on the eve of
+my marriage, and I should not so soon, after my return to London, have
+probably renewed my visits, but a foreign nobleman of the highest rank,
+who had done me the honour to treat me as a friend, came at that juncture
+to this country, and knowing I had been acquainted with Lord Byron,
+he requested me to introduce him to his Lordship.&nbsp; This rendered
+a visit preliminary to the introduction necessary; and so long as my
+distinguished friend remained in town, we again often met.&nbsp; But
+after he left the country my visits became few and far between; owing
+to nothing but that change in a man&rsquo;s pursuits and associates
+which is one among some of the evils of matrimony.&nbsp; It is somewhat
+remarkable, that of the last visit I ever paid him, he has made rather
+a particular memorandum.&nbsp; I remember well, that it was in many
+respects an occasion not to be at once forgotten; for, among other things,
+after lighter topics, he explained to me a variety of tribulations in
+his affairs, and I urged him, in consequence, to marry, with the frankness
+which his confidence encouraged; subjoining certain items of other good
+advice concerning a <i>liaison</i> which he was supposed to have formed,
+and which Mr Moore does not appear to have known, though it was much
+talked of at the time.</p>
+<p>During that visit the youthful peculiarities of his temper and character
+showed all their original blemish.&nbsp; But, as usual, when such was
+the case, he was often more interesting than when in his discreeter
+moods.&nbsp; He gave me the copy of <i>The Bride of Abydos</i>, with
+a very kind inscription on it, which I have already mentioned; but still
+there was an impression on my mind that led me to believe he could not
+have been very well pleased with some parts of my counselling.&nbsp;
+This, however, appears not to have been the case; on the contrary, the
+tone of his record breathes something of kindness; and long after I
+received different reasons to believe his recollection of me was warm
+and friendly.</p>
+<p>When he had retired to Genoa, I gave a gentleman a letter to him,
+partly that I might hear something of his real way of life, and partly
+in the hope of gratifying my friend by the sight of one of whom he had
+heard so much.&nbsp; The reception from his Lordship was flattering
+to me; and, as the account of it contains what I think a characteristic
+picture, the reader will, I doubt not, be pleased to see so much of
+it as may be made public without violating the decorum which should
+always be observed in describing the incidents of private intercourse,
+when the consent of all parties cannot be obtained to the publication.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><i>Edinburgh</i>, <i>June</i> 3, 1830.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;DEAR GALT,&mdash;Though I shall always retain a lively general
+recollection of my agreeable interview with Lord Byron, at Genoa, in
+May, 1823, so long a time has since elapsed that much of the aroma of
+the pleasure has evaporated, and I can but recall generalities.&nbsp;
+At that time there was an impression in Genoa that he was averse to
+receive visits from Englishmen, and I was indeed advised not to think
+of calling on him, as I might run the risk of meeting with a savage
+reception.&nbsp; However, I resolved to send your note, and to the surprise
+of every one the messenger brought a most polite answer, in which, after
+expressing the satisfaction of hearing of his old friend and fellow-traveller,
+he added that he would do himself the honour of calling on me the next
+day, which he accordingly did; but owing to the officious blundering
+of an Italian waiter, who mentioned I was at dinner, his Lordship sent
+up his card with his compliments that he would not <i>deranger</i> the
+party.&nbsp; I was determined, however, that he should not escape me
+in this way, and drove out to his residence next morning, when, upon
+his English valet taking up my name, I was immediately admitted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As every one forms a picture to himself of remarkable characters,
+I had depicted his Lordship in my mind as a tall, sombre, <i>Childe
+Harold</i> personage, tinctured somewhat with aristocratic hauteur.&nbsp;
+You may therefore guess my surprise when the door opened, and I saw
+leaning upon the lock, a light animated figure, rather <i>petite</i>
+than otherwise, dressed in a nankeen hussar-braided jacket, trousers
+of the same material, with a white waistcoat; his countenance pale but
+the complexion clear and healthful, with the hair coming down in little
+curls on each side of his fine forehead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He came towards me with an easy cheerfulness of manner, and
+after some preliminary inquiries concerning yourself, we entered into
+a conversation which lasted two hours, in the course of which I felt
+myself perfectly at ease, from his Lordship&rsquo;s natural and simple
+manners; indeed, so much so, that, forgetting all my anticipations,
+I found myself conversing with him with as fluent an intercourse of
+mind as I ever experienced, even with yourself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is impossible for me at present to overtake a detail of
+what passed, but as it produced a kind of scene, I may mention one incident.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Having remarked that in a long course of desultory reading,
+I had read most of what had been said by English travellers concerning
+Italy; yet, on coming to it I found there was no country of which I
+had less accurate notions: that among other things I was much struck
+with the harshness of the language.&nbsp; He seemed to jerk at this,
+and immediately observed, that perhaps in going rapidly through the
+country, I might not have had many opportunities of hearing it politely
+spoken.&nbsp; &lsquo;Now,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;there are supposed
+to be nineteen dialects of the Italian language, and I shall let you
+hear a lady speak the principal of them, who is considered to do it
+very well.&rsquo;&nbsp; I pricked up my ears at hearing this, as I considered
+it would afford me an opportunity of seeing the far-famed Countess Guiccioli.&nbsp;
+His Lordship immediately rose and left the apartment, returning in the
+course of a minute or two leading in the lady, and while arranging chairs
+for the trio, he said to me, &lsquo;I shall make her speak each of the
+principal dialects, but you are not to mind how I pronounce, for I do
+not speak Italian well.&rsquo;&nbsp; After the scene had been performed
+he resumed to me, &lsquo;Now what do you think?&rsquo;&nbsp; To which
+I answered, that my opinion still remained unaltered.&nbsp; He seemed
+at this to fall into a little revery, and then said, abruptly, &lsquo;Why
+&rsquo;tis very odd, Moore thought the same.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Does
+your Lordship mean Tom Moore?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Ah, then, my Lord, I shall adhere with more pertinacity to my
+opinion, when I hear that a man of his exquisite taste in poetry and
+harmony was also of that opinion.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will be asking what I thought of the lady; I had certainly
+heard much of her high personal attractions, but all I can say is, that
+in my eyes her graces did not rank above mediocrity.&nbsp; They were
+youth, plumpness, and good-nature.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>A Miff with Lord Byron</i>&mdash;<i>Remarkable Coincidences</i>&mdash;<i>Plagiarisms
+of his Lordship</i></p>
+<p>There is a curious note in the memoranda which Lord Byron kept in
+the year 1813, that I should not pass unnoticed, because it refers to
+myself, and moreover is characteristic of the excoriated sensibility
+with which his Lordship felt everything that touched or affected him
+or his.</p>
+<p>When I had read <i>The Bride of Abydos</i>, I wrote to him my opinion
+of it, and mentioned that there was a remarkable coincidence in the
+story, with a matter in which I had been interested.&nbsp; I have no
+copy of the letter, and I forget the expressions employed, but Lord
+Byron seemed to think they implied that he had taken the story from
+something of mine.</p>
+<p>The note is:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Galt says there is a coincidence between the first part of
+<i>The Bride</i> and some story of his, whether published or not, I
+know not, never having seen it.&nbsp; He is almost the last person on
+whom any one would commit literary larceny, and I am not conscious of
+any witting thefts on any of the genus.&nbsp; As to originality, all
+pretensions are ludicrous; there is nothing new under the sun.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is sufficiently clear that he was offended with what I had said,
+and was somewhat excited.&nbsp; I have not been able at present to find
+his answer to my letter, but it would appear by the subjoined that he
+had written to me something which led me to imagine he was offended
+at my observations, and that I had in consequence deprecated his wrath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Dec</i>. 11, 1813.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;MY DEAR GALT,&mdash;There was no offence&mdash;there <i>could</i>
+be none.&nbsp; I thought it by no means impossible that we might have
+hit on something similar, particularly as you are a dramatist, and was
+anxious to assure you of the truth, viz. that I had not wittingly seized
+upon plot, sentiment, or incident; and I am very glad that I have not
+in any respect trenched upon your subjects.&nbsp; Something still more
+singular is, that the <i>first</i> part, where you have found a coincidence
+in some events within your observations on <i>life</i>, was <i>drawn</i>
+from <i>observation</i> of mine also, and I meant to have gone on with
+the story, but on <i>second</i> thoughts, I thought myself <i>two centuries</i>
+at least too late for the subject; which, though admitting of very powerful
+feeling and description, yet is not adapted for this age, at least this
+country.&nbsp; Though the finest works of the Greeks, one of Schiller&rsquo;s
+and Alfieri&rsquo;s, in modern times, besides several of our <i>old</i>
+(and best) dramatists, have been grounded on incidents of a similar
+cast, I therefore altered it as you perceive, and in so doing have weakened
+the whole, by interrupting the train of thought; and in composition
+I do not think <i>second</i> thoughts are the best, though <i>second</i>
+expressions may improve the first ideas.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not know how other men feel towards those they have met
+abroad, but to me there seems a kind of tie established between all
+who have met together in a foreign country, as if we had met in a state
+of pre-existence, and were talking over a life that has ceased; but
+I always look forward to renewing my travels; and though <i>you</i>,
+I think, are now stationary, if I can at all forward your pursuits <i>there</i>
+as well as here, I shall be truly glad in the opportunity.&nbsp; Ever
+yours very sincerely,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;B.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P.S.&nbsp; I believe I leave town for a day or two on Monday,
+but after that I am always at home, and happy to see you till half-past
+two.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>This letter was dated on Saturday, the 11th of December, 1813.&nbsp;
+On Sunday, the 12th, he made the following other note in his memorandum
+book:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Galt&rsquo;s answer, I find it is some story in <i>real</i>
+life, and not any work with which my late composition coincides.&nbsp;
+It is still more singular, for mine is drawn from <i>existence</i> also.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The most amusing part of this little fracas is the denial of his
+Lordship, as to pilfering the thoughts and fancies of others; for it
+so happens, that the first passage of <i>The Bride of Abydos</i>, the
+poem in question, is almost a literal and unacknowledged translation
+from Goethe, which was pointed out in some of the periodicals soon after
+the work was published.</p>
+<p>Then, as to his not thieving from me or mine, I believe the fact
+to be as he has stated; but there are singular circumstances connected
+with some of his other productions, of which the account is at least
+curious.</p>
+<p>On leaving England I began to write a poem in the Spenserian measure.&nbsp;
+It was called <i>The Unknown</i>, and was intended to describe, in narrating
+the voyages and adventures of a pilgrim, who had embarked for the Holy
+Land, the scenes I expected to visit.&nbsp; I was occasionally engaged
+in this composition during the passage with Lord Byron from Gibraltar
+to Malta, and he knew what I was about.&nbsp; In stating this, I beg
+to be distinctly understood, as in no way whatever intending to insinuate
+that this work had any influence on the composition of <i>Childe Harold&rsquo;s
+Pilgrimage</i>, which Lord Byron began to write in Albania; but it must
+be considered as something extraordinary, that the two works should
+have been so similar in plan, and in the structure of the verse.&nbsp;
+His Lordship never saw my attempt that I know of, nor did I his poem
+until it was printed.&nbsp; It is needless to add, that beyond the plan
+and verse there was no other similarity between the two works; I wish
+there had been.</p>
+<p>His Lordship has published a poem, called <i>The Curse of Minerva</i>,
+the subject of which is the vengeance of the goddess on Lord Elgin for
+the rape of the Parthenon.&nbsp; It has so happened that I wrote at
+Athens a burlesque poem on nearly the same subject (mine relates to
+the vengeance of all the gods) which I called <i>The Atheniad</i>; the
+manuscript was sent to his Lordship in Asia Minor, and returned to me
+through Mr Hobhouse.&nbsp; His <i>Curse of Minerva</i>, I saw for the
+first time in 1828, in Galignani&rsquo;s edition of his works.</p>
+<p>In <i>The Giaour</i>, which he published a short time before <i>The
+Bride of Abydos</i>, he has this passage, descriptive of the anxiety
+with which the mother of Hassan looks out for the arrival of her son:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The browsing camels&rsquo; bells are tinkling&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His
+mother look&rsquo;d from her lattice high;<br />She saw the dews of
+eve besprinkling<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The parterre green beneath her
+eye:<br />She saw the planets faintly twinkling&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis
+twilight&mdash;sure his train is nigh.<br />She could not rest in the
+garden bower,<br />But gazed through the grate of his steepest tower:<br />Why
+comes he not&mdash;and his steeds are fleet&mdash;<br />Nor shrink they
+from the summer heat?<br />Why sends not the bridegroom his promised
+gift;<br />Is his heart more cold or his barb less swift?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>His Lordship was well read in the Bible, and the book of Judges,
+chap. 5, and verse 28, has the following passage:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The mother of Sisera looked out at a window, and cried through
+the lattice, Why is his chariot so long in coming; why tarry the wheels
+of his chariot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was, indeed, an early trick of his Lordship to filch good things.&nbsp;
+In the lamentation for Kirke White, in which he compares him to an eagle
+wounded by an arrow feathered from his own wing, he says,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>So the struck eagle, stretch&rsquo;d upon the plain,<br />No more
+through rolling clouds to soar again,<br />View&rsquo;d his own feather
+on the fatal dart<br />And winged the shaft that quivered in his heart.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The ancients have certainly stolen the best ideas of the moderns;
+this very thought may be found in the works of that ancient-modern,
+Waller:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>That eagle&rsquo;s fate and mine are one,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which
+on the shaft that made him die,<br />Espied a feather of his own<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Wherewith
+he wont to soar on high.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>His Lordship disdained to commit any larceny on me; and no doubt
+the following passage from <i>The Giaour</i> is perfectly original:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It is as if the dead could feel<br />The icy worm around them steal;<br />And
+shudder as the reptiles creep<br />To revel o&rsquo;er their rotting
+sleep,<br />Without the power to scare away<br />The cold consumers
+of their clay.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>I do not claim any paternity in these lines: but not the most judicious
+action of all my youth was to publish certain dramatic sketches, and
+his Lordship had the printed book in his possession long before <i>The
+Giaour</i> was published, and may have read the following passage in
+a dream, which was intended to be very hideous:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Then did I hear around<br />The churme and chirruping
+of busy reptiles<br />At hideous banquet on the royal dead:&mdash;<br />Full
+soon methought the loathsome epicures<br />Came thick on me, and underneath
+my shroud<br />I felt the many-foot and beetle creep,<br />And on my
+breast the cold worm coil and crawl.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>However, I have said quite enough on this subject, both as respects
+myself and his seeming plagiarisms, which might be multiplied to legions.&nbsp;
+Such occasional accidental imitations are not things of much importance.&nbsp;
+All poets, and authors in general, avail themselves of their reading
+and knowledge to enhance the interest of their works.&nbsp; It can only
+be considered as one of Lord Byron&rsquo;s spurts of spleen, that he
+felt so much about a &ldquo;coincidence,&rdquo; which ought not to have
+disturbed him; but it may be thought by the notice taken of it, that
+it disturbs myself more than it really does; and that it would have
+been enough to have merely said&mdash;Perhaps, when some friend is hereafter
+doing as indulgently for me, the same kind of task that I have undertaken
+for Byron, there may be found among my memoranda notes as little flattering
+to his Lordship, as those in his concerning me.&nbsp; I hope, however,
+that friend will have more respect for my memory than to imitate the
+taste of Mr Moore.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Lord Byron in 1813</i>&mdash;<i>The Lady&rsquo;s Tragedy</i>&mdash;<i>Miss
+Milbanke</i>&mdash;<i>Growing Uneasiness of Lord Byron&rsquo;s Mind</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Friar&rsquo;s Ghost</i>&mdash;<i>The Marriage</i>&mdash;<i>A Member
+of the Drury Lane Committee</i>&mdash;<i>Embarrassed Affairs</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Separation</i></p>
+<p>The year 1813 was perhaps the period of all Lord Byron&rsquo;s life
+in which he was seen to most advantage.&nbsp; The fame of <i>Childe
+Harold</i> was then in its brightest noon; and in that year he produced
+<i>The Giaour</i> and <i>The Bride of Abydos</i>&mdash;compositions
+not only of equal power, but even tinted with superior beauties.&nbsp;
+He was himself soothed by the full enjoyment of his political rank and
+station; and though his manners and character had not exactly answered
+to the stern and stately imaginations which had been formed of his dispositions
+and appearance, still he was acknowledged to be no common man, and his
+company in consequence was eagerly courted.</p>
+<p>It forms no part of the plan of this work to repeat the gossip and
+tattle of private society, but occurrences happened to Lord Byron which
+engaged both, and some of them cannot well be passed over unnoticed.&nbsp;
+One of these took place during the spring of this year, and having been
+a subject of newspaper remark, it may with less impropriety be mentioned
+than others which were more indecorously made the topics of general
+discussion.&nbsp; The incident alluded to was an extravagant scene enacted
+by a lady of high rank, at a rout given by Lady Heathcote; in which,
+in revenge, as it was reported, for having been rejected by Lord Byron,
+she made a suicidal attempt with an instrument, which scarcely penetrated,
+if it could even inflict any permanent mark on, the skin.</p>
+<p>The insane attachment of this eccentric lady to his Lordship was
+well known; insane is the only epithet that can be applied to the actions
+of a married woman, who, in the disguise of her page, flung herself
+to a man, who, as she told a friend of mine, was ashamed to be in love
+with her because she was not beautiful&mdash;an expression at once curious
+and just, evincing a shrewd perception of the springs of his Lordship&rsquo;s
+conduct, and the acuteness blended with frenzy and talent which distinguished
+herself.&nbsp; Lord Byron unquestionably at that time cared little for
+her.&nbsp; In showing me her picture, some two or three days after the
+affair, and laughing at the absurdity of it, he bestowed on her the
+endearing diminutive of vixen, with a hard-hearted adjective that I
+judiciously omit.</p>
+<p>The immediate cause of this tragical flourish was never very well
+understood; but in the course of the evening she had made several attempts
+to fasten on his Lordship, and was shunned: certain it is, she had not,
+like Burke in the House of Commons, premeditatedly brought a dagger
+in her reticule, on purpose for the scene; but, seeing herself an object
+of scorn, she seized the first weapon she could find&mdash;some said
+a pair of scissors&mdash;others, more scandalously, broken jelly-glass,
+and attempted an incision of the jugular, to the consternation of all
+the dowagers, and the pathetic admiration of every Miss who witnessed
+or heard of the rapture.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron at the time was in another room, talking with Prince K&mdash;,
+when Lord P&mdash; came, with a face full of consternation, and told
+them what had happened.&nbsp; The cruel poet, instead of being agitated
+by the tidings, or standing in the smallest degree in need of a smelling-bottle,
+knitted his scowl, and said, with a contemptuous indifference, &ldquo;It
+is only a trick.&rdquo;&nbsp; All things considered, he was perhaps
+not uncharitable; and a man of less vanity would have felt pretty much
+as his Lordship appeared to do on the occasion.&nbsp; The whole affair
+was eminently ridiculous; and what increased the absurdity was a letter
+she addressed to a friend of mine on the subject, and which he thought
+too good to be reserved only for his own particular study.</p>
+<p>It was in this year that Lord Byron first proposed for Miss Milbanke;
+having been urged by several of his friends to marry, that lady was
+specially recommended to him for a wife.&nbsp; It has been alleged,
+that he deeply resented her rejection of his proposal; and I doubt not,
+in the first instance, his vanity may have been a little piqued; but
+as he cherished no very animated attachment to her, and moreover, as
+she enjoyed no celebrity in public opinion to make the rejection important,
+the resentment was not, I am persuaded, either of an intense or vindictive
+kind.&nbsp; On the contrary, he has borne testimony to the respect in
+which he held her character and accomplishments; and an incidental remark
+in his journal, &ldquo;I shall be in love with her again, if I don&rsquo;t
+take care,&rdquo; is proof enough that his anger was not of a very fierce
+or long-lived kind.</p>
+<p>The account ascribed to him of his introduction to Miss Milbanke,
+and the history of their attachment, ought not to be omitted, because
+it serves to illustrate, in some degree, the state of his feelings towards
+her, and is so probable, that I doubt not it is in the main correct:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first time of my seeing Miss Milbanke was at Lady ***&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+It was a fatal day; and I remember, that in going upstairs I stumbled,
+and remarked to Moore, who accompanied me, that it was a bad omen.&nbsp;
+I ought to have taken the warning.&nbsp; On entering the room, I observed
+a young lady more simply dressed than the rest of the assembly sitting
+alone upon a sofa.&nbsp; I took her for a female companion, and asked
+if I was right in my conjecture.&nbsp; &lsquo;She is a great heiress,&rsquo;
+said he, in a whisper, that became lower as he proceeded, &lsquo;you
+had better marry her, and repair the old place, Newstead.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was something piquant, and what we term pretty, in Miss
+Milbanke.&nbsp; Her features were small and feminine, though not regular.&nbsp;
+She had the fairest skin imaginable.&nbsp; Her figure was perfect for
+her height, and there was a simplicity, a retired modesty about her,
+which was very characteristic, and formed a happy contrast to the cold
+artificial formality and studied stiffness which is called fashion.&nbsp;
+She interested me exceedingly.&nbsp; I became daily more attached to
+her, and it ended in my making her a proposal, that was rejected.&nbsp;
+Her refusal was couched in terms which could not offend me.&nbsp; I
+was, besides, persuaded, that in declining my offer, she was governed
+by the influence of her mother; and was the more confirmed in my opinion,
+by her reviving our correspondence herself twelve months after.&nbsp;
+The tenour of her letter was, that, although she could not love me,
+she desired my friendship.&nbsp; Friendship is a dangerous word for
+young ladies; it is love full-fledged, and waiting for a fine day to
+fly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Lord Byron possessed this sort of irrepressible predilections&mdash;was
+so much the agent of impulses, that he could not keep long in unison
+with the world, or in harmony with his friends.&nbsp; Without malice,
+or the instigation of any ill spirit, he was continually provoking malignity
+and revenge.&nbsp; His verses on the Princess Charlotte weeping, and
+his other merciless satire on her father, begot him no friends, and
+armed the hatred of his enemies.&nbsp; There was, indeed, something
+like ingratitude in the attack on the Regent, for his Royal Highness
+had been particularly civil; had intimated a wish to have him introduced
+to him; and Byron, fond of the distinction, spoke of it with a sense
+of gratification.&nbsp; These instances, as well as others, of gratuitous
+spleen, only justified the misrepresentations which had been insinuated
+against himself, and what was humour in his nature, was ascribed to
+vice in his principles.</p>
+<p>Before the year was at an end, his popularity was evidently beginning
+to wane: of this he was conscious himself, and braved the frequent attacks
+on his character and genius with an affectation of indifference, under
+which those who had at all observed the singular associations of his
+recollections and ideas, must have discerned the symptoms of a strange
+disease.&nbsp; He was tainted with a Herodian malady of the mind: his
+thoughts were often hateful to himself; but there was an ecstasy in
+the conception, as if delight could be mingled with horror.&nbsp; I
+think, however, he struggled to master the fatality, and that his resolution
+to marry was dictated by an honourable desire to give hostages to society,
+against the wild wilfulness of his imagination.</p>
+<p>It is a curious and a mystical fact, that at the period to which
+I am alluding, and a very short time, only a little month, before he
+successfully solicited the hand of Miss Milbanke, being at Newstead,
+he fancied that he saw the ghost of the monk which is supposed to haunt
+the abbey, and to make its ominous appearance when misfortune or death
+impends over the master of the mansion.&mdash;The story of the apparition
+in the sixteenth canto of <i>Don Juan</i> is derived from this family
+legend, and Norman Abbey, in the thirteenth of the same poem, is a rich
+and elaborate description of Newstead.</p>
+<p>After his proposal to Miss Milbanke had been accepted, a considerable
+time, nearly three months, elapsed before the marriage was completed,
+in consequence of the embarrassed condition in which, when the necessary
+settlements were to be made, he found his affairs.&nbsp; This state
+of things, with the previous unhappy controversy with himself, and anger
+at the world, was ill-calculated to gladden his nuptials: but, besides
+these real evils, his mind was awed with gloomy presentiments, a shadow
+of some advancing misfortune darkened his spirit, and the ceremony was
+performed with sacrificial feelings, and those dark and chilling circumstances,
+which he has so touchingly described in <i>The Dream</i>:&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I saw him stand<br />Before an
+altar with a gentle bride;<br />Her face was fair, but was not that
+which made<br />The starlight of his boyhood:&mdash;as he stood<br />Even
+at the altar, o&rsquo;er his brow there came<br />The self-same aspect,
+and the quivering shock<br />That in the antique oratory shook<br />His
+bosom in its solitude; and then&mdash;<br />As in that hour&mdash;a
+moment o&rsquo;er his face<br />The tablet of unutterable thoughts<br />Was
+traced&mdash;and then it faded as it came,<br />And he stood calm and
+quiet, and he spoke<br />The faltering vows, but heard not his own words,<br />And
+all things reeled around him: he could see<br />Not that which was,
+nor that which should have been&mdash;<br />But the old mansion and
+the accustom&rsquo;d hall,<br />And the remembered chambers, and the
+place,<br />The day, the hour, the sunshine and the shade,<br />All
+things pertaining to that place and hour.<br />And her, who was his
+destiny, came back,<br />And thrust themselves between him and the light.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>This is very affectingly described; and his prose description bears
+testimony to its correctness.&nbsp; &ldquo;It had been predicted by
+Mrs Williams that twenty-seven was to be a dangerous age for me.&nbsp;
+The fortune-telling witch was right; it was destined to prove so.&nbsp;
+I shall never forget the 2nd of January, 1815, Lady Byron was the only
+unconcerned person present; Lady Noel, her mother, cried; I trembled
+like a leaf, made the wrong responses, and after the ceremony called
+her Miss Milbanke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is a singular history attached to the ring.&nbsp; The
+very day the match was concluded a ring of my mother&rsquo;s, that had
+been lost, was dug up by the gardener at Newstead.&nbsp; I thought it
+was sent on purpose for the wedding; but my mother&rsquo;s marriage
+had not been a fortunate one, and this ring was doomed to be the seal
+of an unhappier union still.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After the ordeal was over, we set off for a country-scat of
+Sir Ralph&rsquo;s (Lady B.&rsquo;s father), and I was surprised at the
+arrangements for the journey, and somewhat out of humour, to find the
+lady&rsquo;s maid stuck between me and my bride.&nbsp; It was rather
+too early to assume the husband; so I was forced to submit, but it was
+not with a very good grace.&nbsp; I have been accused of saying, on
+getting into the carriage, that I had married Lady Byron out of spite,
+and because she had refused me twice.&nbsp; Though I was for a moment
+vexed at her prudery, or whatever you may choose to call it, if I had
+made so uncavalier, not to say brutal, a speech, I am convinced Lady
+Byron would instantly have left the carriage to me and the maid.&nbsp;
+She had spirit enough to have done so, and would properly have resented
+the affront.&nbsp; Our honeymoon was not all sunshine; it had its clouds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was not so young when my father died, but that I perfectly
+remember him, and had a very early horror of matrimony from the sight
+of domestic broils: this feeling came over me very strongly at my wedding.&nbsp;
+Something whispered me that I was sealing my own death-warrant.&nbsp;
+I am a great believer in presentiments: Socrates&rsquo;s demon was not
+a fiction; Monk Lewis had his monitor, and Napoleon many warnings.&nbsp;
+At the last moment I would have retreated, could I have done so; I called
+to mind a friend of mine, who had married a young, beautiful, and rich
+girl, and yet was miserable; he had strongly urged me against putting
+my neck in the same yoke.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For some time after the marriage things went on in the usual matrimonial
+routine, until he was chosen into the managing committee of Drury Lane;
+an office in which, had he possessed the slightest degree of talent
+for business, he might have done much good.&nbsp; It was justly expected
+that the illiterate presumption which had so long deterred poetical
+genius from approaching the stage, would have shrunk abashed from before
+him; but he either felt not the importance of the duty he had been called
+to perform, or, what is more probable, yielding to the allurements of
+the moment, forgot that duty, in the amusement which he derived from
+the talents and peculiarities of the players.&nbsp; No situation could
+be more unfit for a man of his temperament, than one which exposed him
+to form intimacies with persons whose profession, almost necessarily,
+leads them to undervalue the domestic virtues.</p>
+<p>It is said, that the course of life into which he was drawn after
+he joined the managing committee of Drury Lane was not in unison with
+the methodical habits of Lady Byron.&nbsp; But independently of outdoor
+causes of connubial discontent and incompatibility of temper, their
+domestic affairs were falling into confusion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My income at this period,&rdquo; says Lord Byron, &ldquo;was
+small, and somewhat bespoken.&nbsp; We had a house in town, gave dinner-parties,
+had separate carriages, and launched into every sort of extravagance.&nbsp;
+This could not last long; my wife&rsquo;s ten thousand pounds soon melted
+away.&nbsp; I was beset by duns, and at length an execution was levied,
+and the bailiffs put in possession of the very beds we had to sleep
+on.&nbsp; This was no very agreeable state of affairs, no very pleasant
+scene for Lady Byron to witness; and it was agreed she should pay her
+father a visit till the storm had blown over, and some arrangement had
+been made with my creditors.&rdquo;&nbsp; From this visit her Ladyship
+never returned; a separation took place; but too much has been said
+to the world respecting it, and I have no taste for the subject.&nbsp;
+Whatever was the immediate cause, the event itself was not of so rare
+a kind as to deserve that the attention of the public should be indelicately
+courted to it.</p>
+<p>Beyond all question, however, Lord Byron&rsquo;s notions of connubial
+obligations were rather philosophical.&nbsp; &ldquo;There are,&rdquo;
+said he to Captain Parry, &ldquo;so many undefinable and nameless, and
+not to be named, causes of dislike, aversion, and disgust in the matrimonial
+state, that it is always impossible for the public, or the friends of
+the parties, to judge between man and wife.&nbsp; Theirs is a relation
+about which nobody but themselves can form a correct idea, or have any
+right to speak.&nbsp; As long as neither party commits gross injustice
+towards the other; as long as neither the woman nor the man is guilty
+of any offence which is injurious to the community; as long as the husband
+provides for his offspring, and secures the public against the dangers
+arising from their neglected education, or from the charge of supporting
+them; by what right does it censure him for ceasing to dwell under the
+same roof with a woman, who is to him, because he knows her, while others
+do not, an object of loathing?&nbsp; Can anything be more monstrous,
+than for the public voice to compel individuals who dislike each other
+to continue their cohabitation?&nbsp; This is at least the effect of
+its interfering with a relationship, of which it has no possible means
+of judging.&nbsp; It does not indeed drag a man to a woman&rsquo;s bed
+by physical force, but it does exert a moral force continually and effectively
+to accomplish the same purpose.&nbsp; Nobody can escape this force,
+but those who are too high or those who are too low for public opinion
+to reach; or those hypocrites who are, before others, the loudest in
+their approbation of the empty and unmeaning forms of society, that
+they may securely indulge all their propensities in secret.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the course of the conversation, in which he is represented to
+have stated these opinions, he added what I have pleasure in quoting,
+because the sentiments are generous in respect to his wife, and strikingly
+characteristic of himself:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lady Byron has a liberal mind, particularly as to religious
+opinions: and I wish when I married her that I had possessed the same
+command over myself that I now do.&nbsp; Had I possessed a little more
+wisdom and more forbearance, we might have been happy.&nbsp; I wished,
+when I was just married to have remained in the country, particularly
+till my pecuniary embarrassments were over.&nbsp; I knew the society
+of London; I knew the characters of many who are called ladies, with
+whom Lady Byron would necessarily have to associate, and I dreaded her
+contact with them.&nbsp; But I have too much of my mother about me to
+be dictated to; I like freedom from constraint; I hate artificial regulations:
+my conduct has always been dictated by my own feelings, and Lady Byron
+was quite the creature of rules.&nbsp; She was not permitted either
+to ride, or run, or walk, but as the physician prescribed.&nbsp; She
+was not suffered to go out when I wished to go: and then the old house
+was a mere ghost-house, I dreamed of ghosts and thought of them waking.&nbsp;
+It was an existence I could not support.&rdquo;&nbsp; Here Lord Byron
+broke off abruptly, saying, &ldquo;I hate to speak of my family affairs,
+though I have been compelled to talk nonsense concerning them to some
+of my butterfly visitors, glad on any terms to get rid of their importunities.&nbsp;
+I long to be again on the mountains.&nbsp; I am fond of solitude, and
+should never talk nonsense, if I always found plain men to talk to.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Reflections on his domestic Verses</i>&mdash;<i>Consideration
+of his Works</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;The Corsair&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>Probabilities
+of the Character and Incidents of the Story</i>&mdash;<i>On the Difference
+between poetical Invention and moral Experience: illustrated by the
+Difference between the Genius of Shakespeare and that of Byron</i></p>
+<p>The task just concluded may disappoint the expectations of some of
+my readers, but I would rather have said less than so much, could so
+little have been allowed; for I have never been able to reconcile to
+my notions of propriety, the exposure of domestic concerns which the
+world has no right claim to know, and can only urge the plea of curiosity
+for desiring to see explained.&nbsp; The scope of my undertaking comprehends
+only the public and intellectual character of Lord Byron; every word
+that I have found it necessary to say respecting his private affairs
+has been set down with reluctance; nor should I have touched so freely
+on his failings, but that the consequences have deeply influenced his
+poetical conceptions.</p>
+<p>There is, however, one point connected with his conjugal differences
+which cannot be overlooked, nor noticed without animadversion.&nbsp;
+He was too active himself in bespeaking the public sympathy against
+his lady.&nbsp; It is true that but for that error the world might never
+have seen the verses written by him on the occasion; and perhaps it
+was the friends who were about him at the time who ought chiefly to
+be blamed for having given them circulation: but in saying this, I am
+departing from the rule I had prescribed to myself, while I ought only
+to have remarked that the compositions alluded to, both the <i>Fare-thee-well</i>
+and the <i>Anathema on Mrs Charlemont</i>, are splendid corroborations
+of the metaphysical fact which it is the main object of this work to
+illustrate, namely, that Byron was only original and truly great when
+he wrote from the dictates of his own breast, and described from the
+suggestions of things he had seen.&nbsp; When his imagination found
+not in his subject uses for the materials of his experience, and opportunities
+to embody them, it seemed to be no longer the same high and mysterious
+faculty that so ruled the tides of the feelings of others.&nbsp; He
+then appeared a more ordinary poet&mdash;&mdash;a skilful verse-maker.&nbsp;
+The necromancy which held the reader spellbound became ineffectual;
+and the charm and the glory which interested so intensely, and shone
+so radiantly on his configurations from realities, all failed and faded;
+for his genius dealt not with airy fancies, but had its power and dominion
+amid the living and the local of the actual world.</p>
+<p>I shall now return to the consideration of his works, and the first
+in order is <i>The Corsair</i>, published in 1814.&nbsp; He seems to
+have been perfectly sensible that this beautiful composition was in
+his best peculiar manner.&nbsp; It is indeed a pirate&rsquo;s isle,
+peopled with his own creatures.</p>
+<p>It has been alleged that Lord Byron was indebted to Sir Walter Scott&rsquo;s
+poem of <i>Rokeby</i> for the leading incidents of <i>The Corsair</i>,
+but the resemblance is not to me very obvious: besides, the whole style
+of the poem is so strikingly in his own manner, that even had he borrowed
+the plan, it was only as a thread to string his own original conceptions
+upon; the beauty and brilliancy of them could not be borrowed, and are
+not imitations.</p>
+<p>There were two islands in the Archipelago, when Lord Byron was in
+Greece, considered as the chief haunts of the pirates, Stampalia, and
+a long narrow island between Cape Colonna and Zea.&nbsp; Jura also was
+a little tainted in its reputation.&nbsp; I think, however, from the
+description, that the pirate&rsquo;s isle of <i>The Corsair</i> is the
+island off Cape Colonna.&nbsp; It is a rude, rocky mass.&nbsp; I know
+not to what particular Coron, if there be more than one, the poet alludes;
+for the Coron of the Morea is neighbour to, if not in, the Mainote territory,
+a tract of country which never submitted to the Turks, and was exempted
+from the jurisdiction of Mussulman officers by the payment of an annual
+tribute.&nbsp; The Mainotes themselves are all pirates and robbers.&nbsp;
+If it be in that Coron that Byron has placed Seyd the pasha, it must
+be attributed to inadvertency.&nbsp; His Lordship was never there, nor
+in any part of Maina; nor does he describe the place, a circumstance
+which of itself goes far to prove the inadvertency.&nbsp; It is, however,
+only in making it the seat of a Turkish pasha that any error has been
+committed.&nbsp; In working out the incidents of the poem where descriptions
+of scenery are given, they relate chiefly to Athens and its neighbourhood.&nbsp;
+In themselves these descriptions are executed with an exquisite felicity;
+but they are brought in without any obvious reason wherefore.&nbsp;
+In fact, they appear to have been written independently of the poem,
+and are patched on &ldquo;shreds of purple&rdquo; which could have been
+spared.</p>
+<p>The character of Conrad the Corsair may be described as a combination
+of the warrior of Albania and a naval officer&mdash;Childe Harold mingled
+with the hero of <i>The Giaour.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A man of loneliness and mystery,<br />Scarce seen
+to smile, and seldom heard to sigh;<br />Robust, but not Herculean,
+to the sight,<br />No giant frame sets forth his common height;<br />Yet
+in the whole, who paused to look again<br />Saw more than marks the
+crowd of vulgar men:<br />They gaze and marvel how, and still confess<br />That
+thus it is, but why they cannot guess.<br />Sun-burnt his cheek, his
+forehead high and pale,<br />The sable curls in wild profusion veil.<br />And
+oft perforce his rising lip reveals<br />The haughtier thought it curbs,
+but scarce conceals:<br />Though smooth his voice, and calm his general
+mien,<br />Still seems there something he would not have seen.<br />His
+features&rsquo; deepening lines and varying hue<br />At times attracted,
+yet perplex&rsquo;d the view,<br />As if within that murkiness of mind<br />Work&rsquo;d
+feelings fearful, and yet undefined:<br />Such might he be that none
+could truly tell,<br />Too close inquiry his stern glance could quell.<br />There
+breathed but few whose aspect could defy<br />The full encounter of
+his searching eye;<br />He had the skill, when cunning gaze to seek<br />To
+probe his heart and watch his changing cheek,<br />At once the observer&rsquo;s
+purpose to espy,<br />And on himself roll back his scrutiny,<br />Lest
+he to Conrad rather should betray<br />Some secret thought, than drag
+that chief&rsquo;s to day.</p>
+<p>There was a laughing devil in his sneer<br />That raised emotions
+both of rage and fear;<br />And where his frown of hatred darkly fell<br />Hope
+withering fled, and mercy sigh&rsquo;d, farewell.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It will be allowed that, in this portrait, some of the darker features
+and harsher lineaments of Byron himself are very evident, but with a
+more fixed sternness than belonged to him; for it was only by fits that
+he could put on such severity.&nbsp; Conrad is, however, a higher creation
+than any which he had previously described.&nbsp; Instead of the listlessness
+of Childe Harold, he is active and enterprising; such as the noble pilgrim
+would have been, but for the satiety which had relaxed his energies.&nbsp;
+There is also about him a solemnity different from the animation of
+the Giaour&mdash;a penitential despair arising from a cause undisclosed.&nbsp;
+The Giaour, though wounded and fettered, and laid in a dungeon, would
+not have felt as Conrad is supposed to feel in that situation.&nbsp;
+The following bold and terrific verses, descriptive of the maelstrom
+agitations of remorse, could not have been appropriately applied to
+the despair of grief, the predominant source of emotion in <i>The Giaour.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>There is a war, a chaos of the mind<br />When all its elements convulsed
+combined,<br />Lie dark and jarring with perturbed force,<br />And gnashing
+with impenitent remorse.<br />That juggling fiend who never spake before,<br />But
+cries, &ldquo;I warn&rsquo;d thee,&rdquo; when the deed is o&rsquo;er;<br />Vain
+voice, the spirit burning, but unbent,<br />May writhe, rebel&mdash;the
+weak alone repent.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The character of Conrad is undoubtedly finely imagined; as the painters
+would say, it is in the highest style of art, and brought out with sublime
+effect; but still it is only another phase of the same portentous meteor,
+that was nebulous in <i>Childe Harold</i>, and fiery in <i>The Giaour</i>.&nbsp;
+To the safe and shop-resorting inhabitants of Christendom, <i>The Corsair</i>
+seems to present many improbabilities; nevertheless, it is true to nature,
+and in every part of the Levant the traveller meets with individuals
+whose air and physiognomy remind him of Conrad.&nbsp; The incidents
+of the story, also, so wild and extravagant to the snug and legal notions
+of England, are not more in keeping with the character, than they are
+in accordance with fact and reality.&nbsp; The poet suffers immeasurable
+injustice, when it is attempted to determine the probability of the
+wild scenes and wilder adventurers of his tales, by the circumstances
+and characters of the law-regulated system of our diurnal affairs.&nbsp;
+Probability is a standard formed by experience, and it is not surprising
+that the anchorets of libraries should object to the improbability of
+<i>The Corsair</i>, and yet acknowledge the poetical power displayed
+in the composition; for it is a work which could only have been written
+by one who had himself seen or heard on the spot of transactions similar
+to those he has described.&nbsp; No course of reading could have supplied
+materials for a narration so faithfully descriptive of the accidents
+to which an &AElig;gean pirate is exposed as <i>The Corsair</i>.&nbsp;
+Had Lord Byron never been out of England, the production of a work so
+appropriate in reflection, so wild in spirit, and so bold in invention,
+as in that case it would have been, would have entitled him to the highest
+honours of original conception, or been rejected as extravagant; considered
+as the result of things seen, and of probabilities suggested, by transactions
+not uncommon in the region where his genius gathered the ingredients
+of its sorceries, more than the half of its merits disappear, while
+the other half brighten with the lustre of truth.</p>
+<p>The manners, the actions, and the incidents were new to the English
+mind; but to the inhabitant of the Levant they have long been familiar,
+and the traveller who visits that region will hesitate to admit that
+Lord Byron possessed those creative powers, and that discernment of
+dark bosoms for which he is so much celebrated; because he will see
+there how little of invention was necessary to form such heroes as Conrad,
+and how much the actual traffic of life and trade is constantly stimulating
+enterprise and bravery.&nbsp; But let it not, therefore, be supposed,
+that I would undervalue either the genius of the poet, or the merits
+of the poem, in saying so, for I do think a higher faculty has been
+exerted in <i>The Corsair</i> than in <i>Childe Harold</i>.&nbsp; In
+the latter, only actual things are described, freshly and vigorously
+as they were seen, and feelings expressed eloquently as they were felt;
+but in the former, the talent of combination has been splendidly employed.&nbsp;
+The one is a view from nature, the other is a composition both from
+nature and from history.</p>
+<p><i>Lara</i>, which appeared soon after <i>The Corsair</i>, is an
+evident supplement to it; the description of the hero corresponds in
+person and character with Conrad; so that the remarks made on <i>The
+Corsair</i> apply, in all respects, to <i>Lara</i>.&nbsp; The poem itself
+is perhaps, in elegance, superior; but the descriptions are not so vivid,
+simply because they are more indebted to imagination.&nbsp; There is
+one of them, however, in which the lake and abbey of Newstead are dimly
+shadowed, equal in sweetness and solemnity to anything the poet has
+ever written.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It was the night, and Lara&rsquo;s glassy stream<br />The stars are
+studding each with imaged beam:<br />So calm, the waters scarcely seem
+to stray,<br />And yet they glide, like happiness, away;<br />Reflecting
+far and fairy-like from high<br />The immortal lights that live along
+the sky;<br />Its banks are fringed with many a goodly tree,<br />And
+flowers the fairest that may feast the bee:<br />Such in her chaplet
+infant Dian wove,<br />And innocence would offer to her love;<br />These
+deck the shore, the waves their channel make<br />In windings bright
+and mazy, like the snake.<br />All was so still, so soft in earth and
+air,<br />You scarce would start to meet a spirit there,<br />Secure
+that naught of evil could delight<br />To walk in such a scene, in such
+a night!<br />It was a moment only for the good:<br />So Lara deemed:
+nor longer there he stood;<br />But turn&rsquo;d in silence to his castle-gate:<br />Such
+scene his soul no more could contemplate:<br />Such scene reminded him
+of other days,<br />Of skies more cloudless, moons of purer blaze;<br />Of
+nights more soft and frequent, hearts that now&mdash;<br />No, no! the
+storm may beat upon his brow<br />Unfelt, unsparing; but a night like
+this,<br />A night of beauty, mock&rsquo;d such breast as his.</p>
+<p>He turn&rsquo;d within his solitary hall,<br />And his high shadow
+shot along the wall:<br />There were the painted forms of other times&mdash;<br />&rsquo;Twas
+all they left of virtues or of crimes,<br />Save vague tradition; and
+the gloomy vaults<br />That hid their dust, their foibles, and their
+faults,<br />And half a column of the pompous page,<br />That speeds
+the spacious tale from age to age;<br />Where history&rsquo;s pen its
+praise or blame supplies<br />And lies like truth, and still most truly
+lies;<br />He wand&rsquo;ring mused, and as the moonbeam shone<br />Through
+the dim lattice o&rsquo;er the floor of stone,<br />And the high-fretted
+roof and saints that there<br />O&rsquo;er Gothic windows knelt in pictured
+prayer;<br />Reflected in fantastic figures grew<br />Like life, but
+not like mortal life to view;<br />His bristling locks of sable, brow
+of gloom,<br />And the wide waving of his shaken plume<br />Glanced
+like a spectre&rsquo;s attributes, and gave<br />His aspect all that
+terror gives the grave.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>That Byron wrote best when he wrote of himself and of his own, has
+probably been already made sufficiently apparent.&nbsp; In this respect
+he stands alone and apart from all other poets, and there will be occasion
+to show, that this peculiarity extended much farther over all his works,
+than merely to those which may be said to have required him to be thus
+personal.&nbsp; The great distinction, indeed, of his merit consists
+in that singularity.&nbsp; Shakspeare, in drawing the materials of his
+dramas from tales and history has, with wonderful art, given from his
+own invention and imagination the fittest and most appropriate sentiments
+and language; and admiration at the perfection with which he has accomplished
+this, can never be exhausted.&nbsp; The difference between Byron and
+Shakspeare consists in the curious accident, if it may be so called,
+by which the former was placed in circumstances which taught him to
+feel in himself the very sentiments that he has ascribed to his characters.&nbsp;
+Shakspeare created the feelings of his, and with such excellence, that
+they are not only probable to the situations, but give to the personifications
+the individuality of living persons.&nbsp; Byron&rsquo;s are scarcely
+less so; but with him there was no invention, only experience, and when
+he attempts to express more than he has himself known, he is always
+comparatively feeble.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Byron determines to reside abroad</i>&mdash;<i>Visits the Plain
+of Waterloo</i>&mdash;<i>State of his Feelings</i></p>
+<p>From different incidental expressions in his correspondence it is
+sufficiently evident that Byron, before his marriage, intended to reside
+abroad.&nbsp; In his letter to me of the 11th December, 1813, he distinctly
+states this intention, and intimates that he then thought of establishing
+his home in Greece.&nbsp; It is not therefore surprising that, after
+his separation from Lady Byron, he should have determined to carry this
+intention into effect; for at that period, besides the calumny heaped
+upon him from all quarters, the embarrassment of his affairs, and the
+retaliatory satire, all tended to force him into exile; he had no longer
+any particular tie to bind him to England.</p>
+<p>On the 25th of April, 1816, he sailed for Ostend, and resumed the
+composition of <i>Childe Harold</i>, it may be said, from the moment
+of his embarkation.&nbsp; In it, however, there is no longer the fiction
+of an imaginary character stalking like a shadow amid his descriptions
+and reflections&mdash;&mdash;he comes more decidedly forwards as the
+hero in his own person.</p>
+<p>In passing to Brussels he visited the field of Waterloo, and the
+slight sketch which he has given in the poem of that eventful conflict
+is still the finest which has yet been written on the subject.</p>
+<p>But the note of his visit to the field is of more importance to my
+present purpose, inasmuch as it tends to illustrate the querulous state
+of his own mind at the time.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I went on horseback twice over the field, comparing it with
+my recollection of similar scenes.&nbsp; As a plain, Waterloo seems
+marked out for the scene of some great action, though this may be mere
+imagination.&nbsp; I have viewed with attention those of Platea, Troy,
+Mantinea, Leuctra, Ch&aelig;vron&aelig;, and Marathon, and the field
+round Mont St Jean and Hugoumont appears to want little but a better
+cause and that indefinable but impressive halo which the lapse of ages
+throws around a celebrated spot, to vie in interest with any or all
+of these, except perhaps the last-mentioned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The expression &ldquo;a better cause,&rdquo; could only have been
+engendered in mere waywardness; but throughout his reflections at this
+period a peevish ill-will towards England is often manifested, as if
+he sought to attract attention by exasperating the national pride; that
+pride which he secretly flattered himself was to be augmented by his
+own fame.</p>
+<p>I cannot, in tracing his travels through the third canto, test the
+accuracy of his descriptions as in the former two; but as they are all
+drawn from actual views they have the same vivid individuality impressed
+upon them.&nbsp; Nothing can be more simple and affecting than the following
+picture, nor less likely to be an imaginary scene:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By Coblentz, on a rise of gentle ground,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There
+is a small and simple pyramid,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Crowning the summit
+of the verdant mound;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Beneath its base are heroes&rsquo;
+ashes hid,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Our enemies.&nbsp; And let not that
+forbid<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Honour to Marceau, o&rsquo;er whose early
+tomb<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Tears, big tears, rush&rsquo;d from the
+rough soldier&rsquo;s lid,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lamenting and yet
+envying such a doom,<br />Falling for France, whose rights he battled
+to resume.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Perhaps few passages of descriptive poetry excel that in which reference
+is made to the column of Avenches, the ancient Aventicum.&nbsp; It combines
+with an image distinct and picturesque, poetical associations full of
+the grave and moral breathings of olden forms and hoary antiquity.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;By a lone wall, a lonelier column rears<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+gray and grief-worn aspect of old days:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis
+the last remnant of the wreck of years,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And looks
+as with the wild-bewilder&rsquo;d gaze<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of one
+to stone converted by amaze,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet still with consciousness;
+and there it stands,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Making a marvel that it
+not decays,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When the coeval pride of human hands,<br />Levell&rsquo;d
+Aventicum, hath strew&rsquo;d her subject lands.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>But the most remarkable quality in the third canto is the deep, low
+bass of thought which runs through several passages, and which gives
+to it, when considered with reference to the circumstances under which
+it was written, the serious character of documentary evidence as to
+the remorseful condition of the poet&rsquo;s mind.&nbsp; It would be,
+after what has already been pointed out in brighter incidents, affectation
+not to say, that these sad bursts of feeling and wild paroxysms, bear
+strong indications of having been suggested by the wreck of his domestic
+happiness, and dictated by contrition for the part he had himself taken
+in the ruin.&nbsp; The following reflections on the unguarded hour,
+are full of pathos and solemnity, amounting almost to the deep and dreadful
+harmony of <i>Manfred</i>:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To fly from, need not be to hate, mankind;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;All
+are not fit with them to stir and toil,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor is
+it discontent to keep the mind<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Deep in its fountain,
+lest it overboil<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the hot throng, where we
+become the spoil<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of our infection, till too late
+and long<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;We may deplore and struggle with the
+coil,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In wretched interchange of wrong for wrong<br />&rsquo;Midst
+a contentious world, striving where none are strong.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;There, in a moment, we may plunge our years<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+fatal penitence, and in the blight<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of our own
+soul, turn all our blood to tears,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And colour
+things to come with hues of night;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The race of
+life becomes a hopeless flight<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To those who walk
+in darkness: on the sea,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The boldest steer but
+where their ports invite;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But there are wanderers
+o&rsquo;er eternity,<br />Whose bark drives on and on, and anchor&rsquo;d
+ne&rsquo;er shall be.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>These sentiments are conceived in the mood of an awed spirit; they
+breathe of sorrow and penitence.&nbsp; Of the weariness of satiety the
+pilgrim no more complains; he is no longer despondent from exhaustion,
+and the lost appetite of passion, but from the weight of a burden which
+he cannot lay down; and he clings to visible objects, as if from their
+nature he could extract a moral strength.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I live not in myself, but I become<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Portion
+of that around me; and to me,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;High mountains
+are a feeling, but the hum<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of human cities tortures:
+I can see<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nothing to loathe in nature, save to
+be<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A link reluctant in a fleshly chain,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Class&rsquo;d
+among creatures, where the soul can flee,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+with the sky, the peak, the heaving plain<br />Of ocean, or the stars,
+mingle, and not in vain.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>These dim revelations of black and lowering thought are overshadowed
+with a darker hue than sorrow alone could have cast.&nbsp; A consciousness
+of sinful blame is evident amid them; and though the fantasies that
+loom through the mystery, are not so hideous as the guilty reveries
+in the weird caldron of Manfred&rsquo;s conscience, still they have
+an awful resemblance to them.&nbsp; They are phantoms of the same murky
+element, and, being more akin to fortitude than despair, prophesy not
+of hereafter, but oracularly confess suffering.</p>
+<p>Manfred himself hath given vent to no finer horror than the oracle
+that speaks in this magnificent stanza:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I have not loved the world, nor the world me;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I
+have not flatter&rsquo;d its rank breath, nor bow&rsquo;d<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+its idolatries a patient knee&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor coin&rsquo;d
+my cheek to smiles&mdash;nor cried aloud<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In worship
+of an echo;&mdash;in the crowd<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They could not
+deem me one of such; I stood<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Among them, but
+not of them; in a shroud<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of thoughts which were
+not of their thoughts, and still could,<br />Had I not filed my mind,
+which thus itself subdued.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>There are times in life when all men feel their sympathies extinct,
+and Lord Byron was evidently in that condition, when he penned these
+remarkable lines; but independently of their striking beauty, the scenery
+in which they were conceived deserves to be considered with reference
+to the sentiment that pervades them.&nbsp; For it was amid the same
+obscure ravines, pine-tufted precipices and falling waters of the Alps,
+that he afterward placed the outcast Manfred&mdash;an additional corroboration
+of the justness of the remarks which I ventured to offer, in adverting
+to his ruminations in contemplating, while yet a boy, the Malvern hills,
+as if they were the scenes of his impassioned childhood.&nbsp; In &ldquo;the
+palaces of nature,&rdquo; he first felt the consciousness of having
+done some wrong, and when he would infuse into another, albeit in a
+wilder degree, the feelings he had himself felt, he recalled the images
+which had ministered to the cogitations of his own contrition.&nbsp;
+But I shall have occasion to speak more of this, when I come to consider
+the nature of the guilt and misery of Manfred.</p>
+<p>That <i>Manfred</i> is the greatest of Byron&rsquo;s works will probably
+not be disputed.&nbsp; It has more than the fatal mysticism of <i>Macbeth</i>,
+with the satanic grandeur of the <i>Paradise Lost</i>, and the hero
+is placed in circumstances, and amid scenes, which accord with the stupendous
+features of his preternatural character.&nbsp; How then, it may be asked,
+does this moral phantom, that has never been, bear any resemblance to
+the poet himself?&nbsp; Must not, in this instance, the hypothesis which
+assigns to Byron&rsquo;s heroes his own sentiments and feelings be abandoned?&nbsp;
+I think not.&nbsp; In noticing the deep and solemn reflections with
+which he was affected in ascending the Rhine, and which he has embodied
+in the third canto of Childe Harold, I have already pointed out a similarity
+in the tenour of the thoughts to those of Manfred, as well as the striking
+acknowledgment of the &ldquo;filed&rdquo; mind.&nbsp; There is, moreover,
+in the drama, the same distaste of the world which Byron himself expressed
+when cogitating on the desolation of his hearth, and the same contempt
+of the insufficiency of his genius and renown to mitigate contrition&mdash;all
+in strange harmony with the same magnificent objects of sight.&nbsp;
+Is not the opening soliloquy of Manfred the very echo of the reflections
+on the Rhine?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>My slumbers&mdash;if I slumber&mdash;are not sleep,<br />But a continuance
+of enduring thought,<br />Which then I can resist not; in my heart<br />There
+is a vigil, and these eyes but close<br />To look within&mdash;and yet
+I live and bear<br />The aspect and the form of breathing man.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>But the following is more impressive: it is the very phrase he would
+himself have employed to have spoken of the consequences of his fatal
+marriage:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>My in juries came down on those who lov&rsquo;d me,<br />On those
+whom I best lov&rsquo;d; I never quell&rsquo;d<br />An enemy, save in
+my just defence&mdash;<br />But my embrace was fatal.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>He had not, indeed, been engaged in any duel of which the issue was
+mortal; but he had been so far engaged with more than one, that he could
+easily conceive what it would have been to have quelled an enemy in
+just defence.&nbsp; But unless the reader can himself discern, by his
+sympathies, that there is the resemblance I contend for, it is of no
+use to multiply instances.&nbsp; I shall, therefore, give but one other
+extract, which breathes the predominant spirit of all Byron &lsquo;s
+works&mdash;that sad translation of the preacher&rsquo;s &ldquo;vanity
+of vanities; all is vanity!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Look on me! there is an order<br />Of mortals on
+the earth, who do become<br />Old in their youth and die ere middle
+age,<br />Without the violence of warlike death;<br />Some perishing
+of pleasure&mdash;some of study&mdash;<br />Some worn with toil&mdash;some
+of mere weariness&mdash;<br />Some of disease&mdash;and some insanity&mdash;<br />And
+some of wither&rsquo;d or of broken hearts;<br />For this last is a
+malady which slays<br />More than are number&rsquo;d in the lists of
+Fate;<br />Taking all shapes, and bearing many names.<br />Look upon
+me! for even of all these things<br />Have I partaken&mdash;and of all
+these things<br />One were enough; then wonder not that I<br />Am what
+I am, but that I ever was,<br />Or, having been, that I am still on
+earth.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Byron&rsquo;s Residence in Switzerland</i>&mdash;<i>Excursion
+to the Glaciers</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Manfred&rdquo; founded on a magical
+Sacrifice, not on Guilt</i>&mdash;<i>Similarity between Sentiments given
+to Manfred and those expressed by Lord Byron in his own Person</i></p>
+<p>The account given by Captain Medwin of the manner in which Lord Byron
+spent his time in Switzerland, has the raciness of his Lordship&rsquo;s
+own quaintness, somewhat diluted.&nbsp; The reality of the conversations
+I have heard questioned, but they relate in some instances to matters
+not generally known, to the truth of several of which I can myself bear
+witness; moreover they have much of the poet&rsquo;s peculiar modes
+of thinking about them, though weakened in effect by the reporter.&nbsp;
+No man can give a just representation of another who is not capable
+of putting himself into the character of his original, and of thinking
+with his power and intelligence.&nbsp; Still there are occasional touches
+of merit in the feeble outlines of Captain Medwin, and with this conviction
+it would be negligence not to avail myself of them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Switzerland,&rdquo; said his Lordship, &ldquo;is a country
+I have been satisfied with seeing once; Turkey I could live in for ever.&nbsp;
+I never forget my predilections: I was in a wretched state of health
+and worse spirits when I was at Geneva; but quiet and the lake, better
+physicians than Polidori, soon set me up.&nbsp; I never led so moral
+a life as during my residence in that country; but I gained no credit
+by it.&nbsp; Where there is mortification there ought to be reward.&nbsp;
+On the contrary, there is no story so absurd that they did not invent
+at my cost.&nbsp; I was watched by glasses on the opposite side of the
+lake, and by glasses, too, that must have had very distorted optics;
+I was waylaid in my evening drives.&nbsp; I believe they looked upon
+me as a man-monster.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I knew very few of the Genevese.&nbsp; Hentsh was very civil
+to me, and I have a great respect for Sismondi.&nbsp; I was forced to
+return the civilities of one of their professors by asking him and an
+old gentleman, a friend of Gray&rsquo;s, to dine with me I had gone
+out to sail early in the morning, and the wind prevented me from returning
+in time for dinner.&nbsp; I understand that I offended them mortally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Among our countrymen I made no new acquaintances; Shelley,
+Monk Lewis, and Hobhouse were almost the only English people I saw.&nbsp;
+No wonder; I showed a distaste for society at that time, and went little
+among the Genevese; besides, I could not speak French.&nbsp; When I
+went the tour of the lake with Shelley and Hobhouse, the boat was nearly
+wrecked near the very spot where St Preux and Julia were in danger of
+being drowned.&nbsp; It would have been classical to have been lost
+there, but not agreeable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The third canto of <i>Childe Harold</i>, <i>Manfred</i>, and <i>The
+Prisoner of Chillon</i> are the fruits of his travels up the Rhine and
+of his sojourn in Switzerland.&nbsp; Of the first it is unnecessary
+to say more; but the following extract from the poet&rsquo;s travelling
+memorandum-book, has been supposed to contain the germ of the tragedy</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>September</i> 22, 18 16.&mdash;Left Thun in a boat, which
+carried us the length of the lake in three hours.&nbsp; The lake small,
+but the banks fine; rocks down to the water&rsquo;s edge: landed at
+Newhouse; passed Interlachen; entered upon a range of scenes beyond
+all description or previous conception; passed a rock bearing an inscription;
+two brothers, one murdered the other; just the place for it.&nbsp; After
+a variety of windings, came to an enormous rock; arrived at the foot
+of the mountain (the Jungfrau) glaciers; torrents, one of these nine
+hundred feet, visible descent; lodge at the curate&rsquo;s; set out
+to see the valley; heard an avalanche fall like thunder; glaciers; enormous
+storm comes on thunder and lightning and hail, all in perfection and
+beautiful.&nbsp; The torrent is in shape, curving over the rock, like
+the tail of the white horse streaming in the wind, just as might be
+conceived would be that of the pale horse on which Death is mounted
+in the Apocalypse: it is neither mist nor water, but a something between
+both; its immense height gives a wave, a curve, a spreading here, a
+condensation there, wonderful, indescribable</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>September</i> 23.&mdash;Ascent of the Wingren, the <i>dent
+d&rsquo;argent</i> shining like truth on one side, on the other the
+clouds rose from the opposite valley, curling up perpendicular precipices
+like the foam of the ocean of hell during a spring-tide.&nbsp; It was
+white and sulphury, and immeasurably deep in appearance; the side we
+ascended was of course not of so precipitous a nature; but on arriving
+at the summit, we looked down on the other side upon a boiling sea of
+cloud dashing against the crag on which we stood.&nbsp; Arrived at the
+Greenderwold, mounted and rode to the higher glacier, twilight, but
+distinct, very fine; glacier like a frozen hurricane; starlight beautiful;
+the whole of the day was fine, and, in point of weather, as the day
+in which Paradise was made.&nbsp; Passed whole woods of withered pines,
+all withered, trunks stripped and lifeless, done by a single winter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Undoubtedly in these brief and abrupt but masterly touches, hints
+for the scenery of Manfred may be discerned, but I can perceive nothing
+in them which bears the least likelihood to their having influenced
+the conception of that sublime work.</p>
+<p>There has always been from the first publication of <i>Manfred</i>,
+a strange misapprehension with respect to it in the public mind.&nbsp;
+The whole poem has been misunderstood, and the odious supposition that
+ascribes the fearful mystery and remorse of a hero to a foul passion
+for his sister, is probably one of those coarse imaginations which have
+grown out of the calumnies and accusations heaped upon the author.&nbsp;
+How can it have happened that none of the critics have noticed that
+the story is derived from the human sacrifices supposed to have been
+in use among the students of the black art?</p>
+<p>Manfred is represented as being actuated by an insatiable curiosity&mdash;a
+passion to know the forbidden secrets of the world.&nbsp; The scene
+opens with him at his midnight studies&mdash;his lamp is almost burned
+out&mdash;and he has been searching for knowledge and has not found
+it, but only that</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Sorrow is knowledge: they who know the most<br />Must mourn the deepest
+o&rsquo;er the fatal truth,<br />The tree of knowledge is not that of
+life.<br />Philosophy and science and the springs<br />Of wonder, and
+the wisdom of the world<br />I have essayed, and in my mind there is,<br />A
+power to make these subject to itself.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>He is engaged in calling spirits; and, as the incantation proceeds,
+they obey his bidding, and ask him what he wants; he replies, &ldquo;forgetfulness.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>FIRST SPIRIT</p>
+<p>Of what&mdash;of whom&mdash;and why?</p>
+<p>MANFRED</p>
+<p>Of that which is within me; read it there&mdash;&mdash;<br />Ye know
+it, and I cannot utter it.</p>
+<p>SPIRIT</p>
+<p>We can but give thee that which we possess;&mdash;<br />Ask of us
+subjects, sovereignty, the power<br />O&rsquo;er earth, the whole or
+portion, or a sign<br />Which shall control the elements, whereof<br />We
+are the dominators.&nbsp; Each and all&mdash;<br />These shall be thine.</p>
+<p>MANFRED</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oblivion, self oblivion&mdash;<br />Can ye not
+wring from out the hidden realms<br />Ye offer so profusely, what I
+ask?</p>
+<p>SPIRIT</p>
+<p>It is not in our essence, in our skill,<br />But&mdash;thou may&rsquo;st
+die.</p>
+<p>MANFRED</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Will death bestow it on me?</p>
+<p>SPIRIT</p>
+<p>We are immortal, and do not forget;<br />We are eternal, and to us
+the past<br />Is as the future, present.&nbsp; Art thou answer&rsquo;d?</p>
+<p>MANFRED</p>
+<p>Ye mock me, but the power which brought ye here<br />Hath made you
+mine.&nbsp; Slaves! scoff not at my will;<br />The mind, the spirit,
+the Promethean spark,<br />The lightning of my being is as bright,<br />Pervading
+and far darting as your own,<br />And shall not yield to yours though
+coop&rsquo;d in clay.<br />Answer, or I will teach you what I am.</p>
+<p>SPIRIT</p>
+<p>We answer as we answer&rsquo;d.&nbsp; Our reply<br />Is even in thine
+own words.</p>
+<p>MANFRED</p>
+<p>Why say ye so?</p>
+<p>SPIRIT</p>
+<p>If, as thou say&rsquo;st, thine essence be as ours,<br />We have
+replied in telling thee the thing<br />Mortals call death hath naught
+to do with us.</p>
+<p>MANFRED</p>
+<p>I then have call&rsquo;d you from your realms in vain.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>This impressive and original scene prepares the reader to wonder
+why it is that Manfred is so desirous to drink of Lethe.&nbsp; He has
+acquired dominion over spirits, and he finds, in the possession of the
+power, that knowledge has only brought him sorrow.&nbsp; They tell him
+he is immortal, and what he suffers is as inextinguishable as his own
+being: why should he desire forgetfulness?&mdash;Has he not committed
+a great secret sin?&nbsp; What is it?&mdash;He alludes to his sister,
+and in his subsequent interview with the witch we gather a dreadful
+meaning concerning her fate.&nbsp; Her blood has been shed, not by his
+hand nor in punishment, but in the shadow and occultations of some unutterable
+crime and mystery.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>She was like me in lineaments; her eyes,<br />Her hair, her features,
+all to the very tone<br />Even of her voice, they said were like to
+mine,<br />But soften&rsquo;d all and temper&rsquo;d into beauty.<br />She
+had the same lone thoughts and wanderings,<br />The quest of hidden
+knowledge, and a mind<br />To comprehend the universe; nor these<br />Alone,
+but with them gentler powers than mine,<br />Pity, and smiles, and tears,
+which I had not;<br />And tenderness&mdash;but that I had for her;<br />Humility,
+and that I never had:<br />Her faults were mine&mdash;her virtues were
+her own;<br />I lov&rsquo;d her and&mdash;destroy&rsquo;d her&mdash;</p>
+<p>WITCH</p>
+<p>With thy hand?</p>
+<p>MANFRED</p>
+<p>Not with my hand, but heart, which broke her heart.<br />It gaz&rsquo;d
+on mine, and withered.&nbsp; I have shed<br />Blood, but not hers, and
+yet her blood was shed;&mdash;<br />I saw, and could not stanch it.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>There is in this little scene, perhaps, the deepest pathos ever expressed;
+but it is not of its beauty that I am treating; my object in noticing
+it here is, that it may be considered in connection with that where
+Manfred appears with his insatiate thirst of knowledge, and manacled
+with guilt.&nbsp; It indicates that his sister, Astarte, had been self-sacrificed
+in the pursuit of their magical knowledge.&nbsp; Human sacrifices were
+supposed to be among the initiate propitiations of the demons that have
+their purposes in magic&mdash;as well as compacts signed with the blood
+of the self-sold.&nbsp; There was also a dark Egyptian art, of which
+the knowledge and the efficacy could only be obtained by the novitiate&rsquo;s
+procuring a voluntary victim&mdash;the dearest object to himself and
+to whom he also was the dearest; <a name="citation241"></a><a href="#footnote241">{241}</a>
+and the primary spring of Byron&rsquo;s tragedy lies, I conceive, in
+a sacrifice of that kind having been performed, without obtaining that
+happiness which the votary expected would be found in the knowledge
+and power purchased at such a price.&nbsp; His sister was sacrificed
+in vain.&nbsp; The manner of the sacrifice is not divulged, but it is
+darkly intimated to have been done amid the perturbations of something
+horrible.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Night after night for years<br />He hath pursued
+long vigils in this tower<br />Without a witness.&mdash;I have been
+within it&mdash;<br />So have we all been ofttimes; but from it,<br />Or
+its contents, it were impossible<br />To draw conclusions absolute of
+aught<br />His studies tend to.&mdash;To be sure there is<br />One chamber
+where none enter&mdash;. . .<br />Count Manfred was, as now, within
+his tower:<br />How occupied&mdash;we know not&mdash;but with him,<br />The
+sole companion of his wanderings<br />And watchings&mdash;her&mdash;whom
+of all earthly things<br />That liv&rsquo;d, the only thing he seem&rsquo;d
+to love.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>With admirable taste, and its thrilling augmentation of the horror,
+the poet leaves the deed which was done in that unapproachable chamber
+undivulged, while we are darkly taught, that within it lie the relics
+or the ashes of the &ldquo;one without a tomb.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>State of Byron in Switzerland</i>&mdash;<i>He goes to Venice</i>&mdash;<i>The
+fourth Canto of &ldquo;Childe Harold&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>Rumination
+on his own Condition</i>&mdash;<i>Beppo</i>&mdash;<i>Lament of Tasso</i>&mdash;<i>Curious
+Example of Byron&rsquo;s metaphysical Love</i></p>
+<p>The situation of Lord Byron in Switzerland was comfortless.&nbsp;
+He found that &ldquo;the montain palaces of Nature&rdquo; afforded no
+asylum to a haunted heart; he was ill at ease with himself, even dissatisfied
+that the world had not done him enough of wrong to justify his misanthropy.</p>
+<p>Some expectation that his lady would repent of her part in the separation
+probably induced him to linger in the vicinity of Geneva, the thoroughfare
+of the travelling English, whom he affected to shun.&nbsp; If it were
+so, he was disappointed, and, his hopes being frustrated, he broke up
+the establishment he had formed there and crossed the Alps.&nbsp; After
+visiting some of the celebrated scenes and places in the north of Italy
+he passed on to Venice, where he domiciled himself for a time.</p>
+<p>During his residence at Venice Lord Byron avoided as much as possible
+any intercourse with his countrymen.&nbsp; This was perhaps in some
+degree necessary, and it was natural in the state of his mind.&nbsp;
+He had become an object of great public interest by his talents; the
+stories connected with his domestic troubles had also increased his
+notoriety, and in such circumstances he could not but shrink from the
+inquisition of mere curiosity.&nbsp; But there was an insolence in the
+tone with which he declares his &ldquo;utter abhorrence of any contact
+with the travelling English,&rdquo; that can neither be commended for
+its spirit, nor palliated by any treatment he had suffered.&nbsp; Like
+Coriolanus he may have banished his country, but he had not, like the
+Roman, received provocation: on the contrary, he had been the aggressor
+in the feuds with his literary adversaries; and there was a serious
+accusation against his morals, or at least his manners, in the circumstances
+under which Lady Byron withdrew from his house.&nbsp; It was, however,
+his misfortune throughout life to form a wrong estimate of himself in
+everything save in his poetical powers.</p>
+<p>A life in Venice is more monotonous than in any other great city;
+but a man of genius carries with him everywhere a charm, which secures
+to him both variety and enjoyment.&nbsp; Lord Byron had scarcely taken
+up his abode in Venice, when he began the fourth canto of <i>Childe
+Harold</i>, which he published early in the following year, and dedicated
+to his indefatigable friend Mr Hobhouse by an epistle dated on the anniversary
+of his marriage, &ldquo;the most unfortunate day,&rdquo; as he says,
+&ldquo;of his past existence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In this canto he has indulged his excursive moralizing beyond even
+the wide licence he took in the three preceding parts; but it bears
+the impression of more reading and observation.&nbsp; Though not superior
+in poetical energy, it is yet a higher work than any of them, and something
+of a more resolved and masculine spirit pervades the reflections, and
+endows, as it were, with thought and enthusiasm the aspect of the things
+described.&nbsp; Of the merits of the descriptions, as of real things,
+I am not qualified to judge: the transcripts from the tablets of the
+author&rsquo;s bosom he has himself assured us are faithful.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With regard to the conduct of the last canto, there will be
+found less of the pilgrim than in any of the preceding, and that little
+slightly, if at all, separated from the author speaking in his own person.&nbsp;
+The fact is, that I had become weary of drawing a line, which every
+one seemed determined not to perceive: like the Chinese, in Goldsmith&rsquo;s
+<i>Citizen of the World</i>, whom nobody would believe to be a Chinese,
+it was in vain that I asserted and imagined that I had drawn a distinction
+between the author and the pilgrim; and the very anxiety to preserve
+this difference, and the disappointment at finding it unavailing, so
+far crushed my efforts in the composition, that I determined to abandon
+it altogether&mdash;and have done so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This confession, though it may not have been wanted, gives a pathetic
+emphasis to those passages in which the poet speaks of his own feelings.&nbsp;
+That his mind was jarred, and out of joint, there is too much reason
+to believe; but he had in some measure overcome the misery that clung
+to him during the dismal time of his sojourn in Switzerland, and the
+following passage, though breathing the sweet and melancholy spirit
+of dejection, possesses a more generous vein of nationality than is
+often met with in his works, even when the same proud sentiment might
+have been more fitly expressed:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I&rsquo;ve taught me other tongues&mdash;and in
+strange eyes<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Have made me not a stranger; to
+the mind<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Which is itself, no changes bring surprise,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor
+is it harsh to make or hard to find<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A country
+with&mdash;aye, or without mankind.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Yet was I
+born where men are proud to be,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Not without cause;
+and should I leave behind<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Th&rsquo; inviolate
+island of the sage and free,<br />And seek me out a home by a remoter
+sea?</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps I lov&rsquo;d it well, and should I lay<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My
+ashes in a soil which is not mine,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My spirit
+shall resume it&mdash;if we may,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Unbodied, choose
+a sanctuary.&nbsp; I twine<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My hopes of being
+remember&rsquo;d in my line,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With my land&rsquo;s
+language; if too fond and far<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;These aspirations
+in their hope incline&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If my fame should
+be as my fortunes are,<br />Of hasty growth and blight, and dull oblivion
+bar</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My name from out the temple where the dead<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are
+honour&rsquo;d by the nations&mdash;let it be,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+light the laurels on a loftier head,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And be the
+Spartan&rsquo;s epitaph on me:<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Sparta
+had many a worthier son than he&rdquo;;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Meantime
+I seek no sympathies, nor need;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The thorns which
+I have reap&rsquo;d are of the tree<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I planted&mdash;they
+have torn me&mdash;and I bleed:<br />I should have known what fruit
+would spring from such a seed.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It will strike the reader as remarkable, that although the poet,
+in the course of this canto, takes occasion to allude to Dante and Tasso,
+in whose destinies there was a shadowy likeness of his own, the rumination
+is mingled with less of himself than might have been expected, especially
+when it is considered how much it was a habit with him, to make his
+own feelings the basis and substratum of the sentiments he ascribed
+to others.&nbsp; It has also more than once surprised me that he has
+so seldom alluded to Alfieri, whom of all poets, both in character and
+conduct, he most resembled; with this difference, however, that Alfieri
+was possessed of affections equally intense and durable, whereas the
+caprice of Byron made him uncertain in his partialities, or what was
+the same in effect, made his friends set less value on them than perhaps
+they were entitled to.</p>
+<p>Before <i>Childe Harold</i> was finished, an incident occurred which
+suggested to Byron a poem of a very different kind to any he had yet
+attempted:&mdash;without vouching for the exact truth of the anecdote,
+I have been told, that he one day received by the mail a copy of Whistlecraft&rsquo;s
+prospectus and specimen of an intended national work; and, moved by
+its playfulness, immediately after reading it, began Beppo, which he
+finished at a sitting.&nbsp; The facility with which he composed renders
+the story not improbable; but, singular as it may seem, the poem itself
+has the facetious flavour in it of his gaiety, stronger than even his
+grave works have of his frowardness, commonly believed to have been&mdash;I
+think, unjustly&mdash;the predominant mood of his character.</p>
+<p>The <i>Ode to Venice</i> is also to be numbered among his compositions
+in that city; a spirited and indignant effusion, full of his peculiar
+lurid fire, and rich in a variety of impressive and original images.&nbsp;
+But there is a still finer poem which belongs to this period of his
+history, though written, I believe, before he reached Venice&mdash;<i>The
+Lament of Tasso</i>: and I am led to notice it the more particularly,
+as one of its noblest passages affords an illustration of the opinion
+which I have early maintained&mdash;that Lord Byron&rsquo;s extraordinary
+pretensions to the influence of love was but a metaphysical conception
+of the passion.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It is no marvel&mdash;from my very birth<br />My soul was drunk with
+love, which did pervade<br />And mingle with whate&rsquo;er I saw on
+earth;<br />Of objects all inanimate I made<br />Idols, and out of wild
+and lovely flowers,<br />And rocks whereby they grew, a paradise,<br />Where
+I did lay me down within the shade<br />Of waving trees, and dream&rsquo;d
+uncounted hours.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It has been remarked by an anonymous author of <i>Memoirs of Lord
+Byron</i>, a work written with considerable talent and acumen, that
+&ldquo;this is so far from being in character, that it is the very reverse;
+for whether Tasso was in his senses or not, if his love was sincere,
+he would have made the object of his affection the sole theme of his
+meditation, instead of generalising his passion, and talking about the
+original sympathies of his nature.&rdquo;&nbsp; In truth, no poet has
+better described love than Byron has his own peculiar passion.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;His love was passion&rsquo;s essence&mdash;as a
+tree<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On fire by lightning; with ethereal flame<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Kindled
+he was, and blasted; for to be<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thus enamour&rsquo;d
+were in him the same.<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But his was not the love
+of living dame,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Nor of the dead who rise upon
+our dreams,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But of ideal beauty, which became<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In
+him existence, and o&rsquo;erflowing teems<br />Along his burning page,
+distemper&rsquo;d though it seems.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>In tracing the course of Lord Byron&rsquo;s career, I have not deemed
+it at all necessary to advert to the instances of his generosity, or
+to conduct less pleasant to record.&nbsp; Enough has appeared to show
+that he was neither deficient in warmth of heart nor in less amiable
+feelings; but, upon the whole, it is not probable that either in his
+charities or his pleasures he was greatly different from other young
+men, though he undoubtedly had a wayward delight in magnifying his excesses,
+not in what was to his credit, like most men, but in what was calculated
+to do him no honour.&nbsp; More notoriety has been given to an instance
+of lavish liberality at Venice, than the case deserved, though it was
+unquestionably prompted by a charitable impulse.&nbsp; The house of
+a shoemaker, near his Lordship&rsquo;s residence, in St Samuel, was
+burned to the ground, with all it contained, by which the proprietor
+was reduced to indigence.&nbsp; Byron not only caused a new but a superior
+house to be erected, and also presented the sufferer with a sum of money
+equal in value to the whole of his stock in trade and furniture.&nbsp;
+I should endanger my reputation for impartiality if I did not, as a
+fair set-off to this, also mention that it is said he bought for five
+hundred crowns a baker&rsquo;s wife.&nbsp; There might be charity in
+this, too.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Removes to Ravenna</i>&mdash;<i>The Countess Guiccioli</i></p>
+<p>Although Lord Byron resided between two and three years at Venice,
+he was never much attached to it.&nbsp; &ldquo;To see a city die daily,
+as she does,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is a sad contemplation.&nbsp; I
+sought to distract my mind from a sense of her desolation and my own
+solitude, by plunging into a vortex that was anything but pleasure.&nbsp;
+When one gets into a mill-stream, it is difficult to swim against it,
+and keep out of the wheels.&rdquo;&nbsp; He became tired and disgusted
+with the life he led at Venice, and was glad to turn his back on it.&nbsp;
+About the close of the year 1819 he accordingly removed to Ravenna;
+but before I proceed to speak of the works which he composed at Ravenna,
+it is necessary to explain some particulars respecting a personal affair,
+the influence of which on at least one of his productions is as striking
+as any of the many instances already described upon others.&nbsp; I
+allude to the intimacy which he formed with the young Countess Guiccioli.</p>
+<p>This lady, at the age of sixteen, was married to the Count, one of
+the richest noblemen in Romagna, but far advanced in life.&nbsp; &ldquo;From
+the first,&rdquo; said Lord Byron, in his account of her, &ldquo;they
+had separate apartments, and she always called him, Sir!&nbsp; What
+could be expected from such a preposterous connection.&nbsp; For some
+time she was an <i>Angiolina</i> and he a <i>Marino Faliero</i>, a good
+old man; but young Italian women are not satisfied with good old men,
+and the venerable Count did not object to her availing herself of the
+privileges of her country in selecting a cicisbeo; an Italian would
+have made it quite agreeable: indeed, for some time he winked at our
+intimacy, but at length made an exception against me, as a foreigner,
+a heretic, an Englishman, and, what was worse than all, a Liberal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He insisted&mdash;Teresa was as obstinate&mdash;her family
+took her part.&nbsp; Catholics cannot get divorces; but to the scandal
+of all Romagna, the matter was at last referred to the Pope, who ordered
+her a separate maintenance on condition that she should reside under
+her father&rsquo;s roof.&nbsp; All this was not agreeable, and at length
+I was forced to smuggle her out of Ravenna, having discovered a plot
+laid with the sanction of the legate, for shutting her up in a convent
+for life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Countess Guiccioli was at this time about twenty, but she appeared
+younger; her complexion was fair, with large, dark, languishing eyes;
+and her auburn hair fell in great profusion of natural ringlets over
+her shapely shoulders.&nbsp; Her features were not so regular as in
+their expression pleasing, and there was an amiable gentleness in her
+voice which was peculiarly interesting.&nbsp; Leigh Hunt&rsquo;s account
+of her is not essentially dissimilar from any other that I have either
+heard of or met with.&nbsp; He differs, however, in one respect, from
+every other, in saying that her hair was <i>yellow</i>; but considering
+the curiosity which this young lady has excited, perhaps it may be as
+well to transcribe his description at length, especially as he appears
+to have taken some pains on it, and more particularly as her destiny
+seems at present to promise that the interest for her is likely to be
+revived by another unhappy English connection.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Her appearance,&rdquo; says Mr Hunt, &ldquo;might have reminded
+an English spectator of Chaucer&rsquo;s heroine:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Yclothed was she, fresh for to devise,<br />Her yellow hair was braided
+in a tress<br />Behind her back, a yard&eacute; long I guess,<br />And
+in the garden (as the same uprist)<br />She walketh up and down, where
+as her list.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And then, as Dryden has it:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>At every turn she made a little stand,<br />And thrust among the
+thorns her lily hand.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Madame Guiccioli, who was at that time about twenty, was handsome
+and lady-like, with an agreeable manner, and a voice not partaking too
+much of the Italian fervour to be gentle.&nbsp; She had just enough
+of it to give her speaking a grace&mdash;none of her graces appeared
+entirely free from art; nor, on the other hand, did they betray enough
+of it to give you an ill opinion of her sincerity and good-humour .
+. . Her hair was what the poet has described, or rather <i>blond</i>,
+with an inclination to yellow; a very fair and delicate yellow, at all
+events, and within the limits of the poetical.&nbsp; She had regular
+features of the order properly called handsome, in distinction to prettiness
+or piquancy; being well proportioned to one another, large, rather than
+otherwise, but without coarseness, and more harmonious than interesting.&nbsp;
+Her nose was the handsomest of the kind I ever saw; and I have known
+her both smile very sweetly, and look intelligently, when Lord Byron
+has said something kind to her.&nbsp; I should not say, however, that
+she was a very intelligent person.&nbsp; Both her wisdom and her want
+of wisdom were on the side of her feelings, in which there was doubtless
+mingled a good deal of the self-love natural to a flattered beauty.
+. . .&nbsp; In a word, Madame Guiccioli was a kind of buxom parlour-boarder,
+compressing herself artificially into dignity and elegance, and fancying
+she walked, in the eyes of the whole world, a heroine by the side of
+a poet.&nbsp; When I saw her at Monte Nero, near Leghorn, she was in
+a state of excitement and exultation, and had really something of this
+look.&nbsp; At that time, also, she looked no older than she was; in
+which respect, a rapid and very singular change took place, to the surprise
+of everybody.&nbsp; In the course of a few months she seemed to have
+lived as many years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This is not very perspicuous portraiture, nor does it show that Mr
+Hunt was a very discerning observer of character.&nbsp; Lord Byron himself
+is represented to have said, that extraordinary pains were taken with
+her education: &ldquo;Her conversation is lively without being frivolous;
+without being learned, she has read all the best authors of her own
+and the French language.&nbsp; She often conceals what she knows, from
+the fear of being thought to know too much; possibly because she knows
+I am not fond of blues.&nbsp; To use an expression of Jeffrey&rsquo;s,
+&lsquo;If she has blue stockings, she contrives that her petticoats
+shall hide them.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lord Byron was at one time much attached to her; nor could it be
+doubted that their affection was reciprocal; but in both, their union
+outlived their affection, for before his departure to Greece his attachment
+had perished, and he left her, as it is said, notwithstanding the rank
+and opulence she had forsaken on his account, without any provision.&nbsp;
+He had promised, it was reported, to settle two thousand pounds on her,
+but he forgot the intention, or died before it was carried into effect.
+<a name="citation255"></a><a href="#footnote255">{255}</a>&nbsp; On
+her part, the estrangement was of a different and curious kind&mdash;she
+had not come to hate him, but she told a lady, the friend of a mutual
+acquaintance of Lord Byron and mine, that she feared more than loved
+him.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Residence in Ravenna</i>&mdash;<i>The Carbonari</i>&mdash;<i>Byron&rsquo;s
+Part in their Plot</i>&mdash;<i>The Murder of the military Commandant</i>&mdash;<i>The
+poetical Use of the Incident</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Marino Faliero&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>Reflections</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;The
+Prophecy of Dante&rdquo;</i></p>
+<p>Lord Byron has said himself, that except Greece, he was never so
+attached to any place in his life as to Ravenna.&nbsp; The peasantry
+he thought the best people in the world, and their women the most beautiful.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Those at Tivoli and Frescati,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;are mere
+Sabines, coarse creatures, compared to the Romagnese.&nbsp; You may
+talk of your English women; and it is true, that out of one hundred
+Italian and English you will find thirty of the latter handsome; but
+then there will be one Italian on the other side of the scale, who will
+more than balance the deficit in numbers&mdash;one who, like the Florence
+Venus, has no rival, and can have none in the North.&nbsp; I found also
+at Ravenna much education and liberality of thinking among the higher
+classes.&nbsp; The climate is delightful.&nbsp; I was not broken in
+upon by society.&nbsp; Ravenna lies out of the way of travellers.&nbsp;
+I was never tired of my rides in the pine forest: it breathes of the
+Decameron; it is poetical ground.&nbsp; Francesca lived and Dante was
+exiled and died at Ravenna.&nbsp; There is something inspiring in such
+an air.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The people liked me as much as they hated the government.&nbsp;
+It is not a little to say, I was popular with all the leaders of the
+constitutional party.&nbsp; They knew that I came from a land of liberty,
+and wished well to their cause.&nbsp; I would have espoused it, too,
+and assisted them to shake off their fetters.&nbsp; They knew my character,
+for I had been living two years at Venice, where many of the Ravennese
+have houses.&nbsp; I did not, however, take part in their intrigues,
+nor join in their political coteries; but I had a magazine of one hundred
+stand of arms in the house, when everything was ripe for revolt&mdash;&mdash;a
+curse on Carignan&rsquo;s imbecility!&nbsp; I could have pardoned him
+that, too, if he had not impeached his partisans.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The proscription was immense in Romagna, and embraced many
+of the first nobles: almost all my friends, among the rest the Gambas
+(the father and brother of the Countess Guiccioli), who took no part
+in the affair, were included in it.&nbsp; They were exiled, and their
+possessions confiscated.&nbsp; They knew that this must eventually drive
+me out of the country.&nbsp; I did not follow them immediately: I was
+not to be bullied&mdash;I had myself fallen under the eye of the government.&nbsp;
+If they could have got sufficient proof they would have arrested me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The latter part of this declaration bears, in my opinion, indubitable
+marks of being genuine.&nbsp; It has that magnifying mysticism about
+it which more than any other quality characterized Lord Byron&rsquo;s
+intimations concerning himself and his own affairs; but it is a little
+clearer than I should have expected in the acknowledgment of the part
+he was preparing to take in the insurrection.&nbsp; He does not seem
+<i>here</i> to be sensible, that in confessing so much, he has justified
+the jealousy with which he was regarded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shortly after the plot was discovered,&rdquo; he proceeds
+to say, &ldquo;I received several anonymous letters, advising me to
+discontinue my forest rides; but I entertained no apprehensions of treachery,
+and was more on horseback than ever.&nbsp; I never stir out without
+being well armed, nor sleep without pistols.&nbsp; They knew that I
+never missed my aim; perhaps this saved me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>An event occurred at this time at Ravenna that made a deep impression
+on Lord Byron.&nbsp; The commandant of the place, who, though suspected
+of being secretly a Carbonaro, was too powerful a man to be arrested,
+was assassinated opposite to his residence.&nbsp; The measures adopted
+to screen the murderer proved, in the opinion of his Lordship, that
+the assassination had taken place by order of the police, and that the
+spot where it was perpetrated had been selected by choice.&nbsp; Byron
+at the moment had his foot in the stirrup, and his horse started at
+the report of the shot.&nbsp; On looking round he saw a man throw down
+a carbine and run away, and another stretched on the pavement near him.&nbsp;
+On hastening to the spot, he found it was the commandant; a crowd collected,
+but no one offered any assistance.&nbsp; His Lordship directed his servant
+to lift the bleeding body into the palace&mdash;he assisted himself
+in the act, though it was represented to him that he might incur the
+displeasure of the government&mdash;and the gentleman was already dead.&nbsp;
+His adjutant followed the body into the house.&nbsp; &ldquo;I remember,&rdquo;
+says his Lordship, &ldquo;his lamentation over him&mdash;&lsquo;Poor
+devil he would not have harmed a dog.&rsquo;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was from the murder of this commandant that the poet sketched
+the scene of the assassination in the fifth canto of <i>Don Juan.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The other evening (&rsquo;twas on Friday last),<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;This
+is a fact, and no poetic fable&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Just as
+my great coat was about me cast,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My
+hat and gloves still lying on the table,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I heard
+a shot&mdash;&rsquo;twas eight o&rsquo;clock scarce past,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+running out as fast as I was able,<br />I found the military commandant<br />Stretch&rsquo;d
+in the street, and able scarce to pant.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Poor fellow! for some reason, surely bad,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They
+had him slain with five slugs, and left him there<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;To
+perish on the pavement: so I had<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Him
+borne into the house, and up the stair;<br />The man was gone: in some
+Italian quarrel<br />Kill&rsquo;d by five bullets from an old gun-barrel.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The scars of his old wounds were near his new,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Those
+honourable scars which bought him fame,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And horrid
+was the contrast to the view&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But
+let me quit the theme, as such things claim<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Perhaps
+ev&rsquo;n more attention than is due<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;From
+me: I gazed (as oft I&rsquo;ve gazed the same)<br />To try if I could
+wrench aught out of death<br />Which should confirm, or shake, or make
+a faith.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Whether <i>Marino Faliero</i> was written at Ravenna or completed
+there, I have not ascertained, but it was planned at Venice, and as
+far back as 1817.&nbsp; I believe this is considered about the most
+ordinary performance of all Lord Byron&rsquo;s works; but if it is considered
+with reference to the time in which it was written, it will probably
+be found to contain many great and impressive passages.&nbsp; Has not
+the latter part of the second scene in the first act reference to the
+condition of Venice when his Lordship was there?&nbsp; And is not the
+description which Israel Bertuccio gives of the conspirators applicable
+to, as it was probably derived from, the Carbonari, with whom there
+is reason to say Byron was himself disposed to take a part?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Know, then, that there are met and sworn in secret<br />A band of
+brethren, valiant hearts and true;<br />Men who have proved all fortunes,
+and have long<br />Grieved over that of Venice, and have right<br />To
+do so; having served her in all climes,<br />And having rescued her
+from foreign foes,<br />Would do the same for those within her walls.<br />They
+are not numerous, nor yet too few<br />For their great purpose; they
+have arms, and means,<br />And hearts, and hopes, and faith, and patient
+courage.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>This drama, to be properly appreciated, both in its taste and feeling
+should be considered as addressed to the Italians of the epoch at which
+it was written.&nbsp; Had it been written in the Italian instead of
+the English language, and could have come out in any city of Italy,
+the effect would have been prodigious.&nbsp; It is, indeed, a work not
+to be estimated by the delineations of character nor the force of passion
+expressed in it, but altogether by the apt and searching sarcasm of
+the political allusions.&nbsp; Viewed with reference to the time and
+place in which it was composed, it would probably deserve to be ranked
+as a high and bold effort: simply as a drama, it may not be entitled
+to rank above tragedies of the second or third class.&nbsp; But I mean
+not to set my opinion of this work against that of the public, the English
+public; all I contend for is, that it possesses many passages of uncommon
+beauty, and that its chief tragic merit consists in its political indignation;
+but above all, that is another and a strong proof too, of what I have
+been endeavouring to show, that the power of the poet consisted in giving
+vent to his own feelings, and not, like his great brethren, or even
+his less, in the invention of situations or of appropriate sentiments.&nbsp;
+It is, perhaps, as it stands, not fit to succeed in representation;
+but it is so rich in matter that it would not be a difficult task to
+make out of little more than the third part a tragedy which would not
+dishonour the English stage.</p>
+<p>I have never been able to understand why it has been so often supposed
+that Lord Byron was actuated in the composition of his different works
+by any other motive than enjoyment: perhaps no poet had ever less of
+an ulterior purpose in his mind during the fits of inspiration (for
+the epithet may be applied correctly to him and to the moods in which
+he was accustomed to write) than this singular and impassioned man.&nbsp;
+Those who imagine that he had any intention to impair the reverence
+due to religion, or to weaken the hinges of moral action, give him credit
+for far more design and prospective purpose than he possessed.&nbsp;
+They could have known nothing of the man, the main defect of whose character,
+in relation to everything, was in having too little of the element or
+principle of purpose.&nbsp; He was a thing of impulses, and to judge
+of what he either said or did, as the results of predetermination, was
+not only to do the harshest injustice, but to show a total ignorance
+of his character.&nbsp; His whole fault, the darkest course of those
+flights and deviations from propriety which have drawn upon him the
+severest animadversion, lay in the unbridled state of his impulses.&nbsp;
+He felt, but never reasoned.&nbsp; I am led to make these observations
+by noticing the ungracious, or, more justly, the illiberal spirit in
+which <i>The Prophecy of Dante</i>, which was published with the <i>Marino
+Faliero</i>, has been treated by the anonymous author of <i>Memoirs
+of the Life and Writings of Lord Byron.</i></p>
+<p>Of <i>The Prophecy of Dante</i> I am no particular admirer.&nbsp;
+It contains, unquestionably, stanzas of resounding energy, but the general
+verse of the poem is as harsh and abrupt as the clink and clang of the
+cymbal; moreover, even for a prophecy, it is too obscure, and though
+it possesses abstractedly too many fine thoughts, and too much of the
+combustion of heroic passion to be regarded as a failure, yet it will
+never be popular.&nbsp; It is a quarry, however, of very precious poetical
+expression.</p>
+<p>It was written at Ravenna, and at the suggestion of the Guiccioli,
+to whom it is dedicated in a sonnet, prettily but inharmoniously turned.&nbsp;
+Like all his other best performances, this rugged but masterly composition
+draws its highest interest from himself and his own feelings, and can
+only be rightly appreciated by observing how fitly many of the bitter
+breathings of Dante apply to his own exiled and outcast condition.&nbsp;
+For, however much he was himself the author of his own banishment, he
+felt when he wrote these haughty verses that he had been sometimes shunned.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>The Tragedy of &ldquo;Sardanapalus&rdquo; considered, with Reference
+to Lord Byron&rsquo;s own Circumstances</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Cain&rdquo;</i></p>
+<p>Among the mental enjoyments which endeared Ravenna to Lord Byron,
+the composition of <i>Sardanapalus</i> may be reckoned the chief.&nbsp;
+It seems to have been conceived in a happier mood than any of all his
+other works; for, even while it inculcates the dangers of voluptuous
+indulgence, it breathes the very essence of benevolence and philosophy.&nbsp;
+Pleasure takes so much of the character of virtue in it, that but for
+the moral taught by the consequences, enjoyment might be mistaken for
+duty.&nbsp; I have never been able to satisfy myself in what the resemblance
+consists, but from the first reading it has always appeared to me that
+there was some elegant similarity between the characters of Sardanapalus
+and Hamlet, and my inclination has sometimes led me to imagine that
+the former was the nobler conception of the two.</p>
+<p>The Assyrian monarch, like the Prince of Denmark, is highly endowed,
+capable of the greatest undertakings; he is yet softened by a philosophic
+indolence of nature that makes him undervalue the enterprises of ambition,
+and all those objects in the attainment of which so much of glory is
+supposed to consist.&nbsp; They are both alike incapable of rousing
+themselves from the fond reveries of moral theory, even when the strongest
+motives are presented to them.&nbsp; Hamlet hesitates to act, though
+his father&rsquo;s spirit hath come from death to incite him; and Sardanapalus
+derides the achievements that had raised his ancestors to an equality
+with the gods.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Thou wouldst have me go<br />Forth as a conqueror.&mdash;By
+all the stars<br />Which the Chaldeans read! the restless slaves<br />Deserve
+that I should curse them with their wishes<br />And lead them forth
+to glory.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Again:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The ungrateful and ungracious slaves! they murmur<br />Because I
+have not shed their blood, nor led them<br />To dry into the deserts&rsquo;
+dust by myriads,<br />Or whiten with their bones the banks of Ganges,<br />Nor
+decimated them with savage laws,<br />Nor sweated them to build up pyramids<br />Or
+Babylonian walls.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The nothingness of kingly greatness and national pride were never
+before so finely contemned as by the voluptuous Assyrian, and were the
+scorn not mitigated by the skilful intermixture of mercifulness and
+philanthropy, the character would not be endurable.&nbsp; But when the
+same voice which pronounced contempt on the toils of honour says,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Enough<br />For me if I can make
+my subjects feel<br />The weight of human misery less,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>it is impossible to repress the liking which the humane spirit of
+that thought is calculated to inspire.&nbsp; Nor is there any want of
+dignity in Sardanapalus, even when lolling softest in his luxury.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Must I consume my life&mdash;this little life&mdash;<br />In guarding
+against all may make it less!<br />It is not worth so much&mdash;It
+were to die<br />Before my hour to live in dread of death. . . .<br />Till
+now no drop of an Assyrian vein<br />Hath flow&rsquo;d for me, nor hath
+the smallest coin<br />Of Nineveh&rsquo;s vast treasure e&rsquo;er been
+lavish&rsquo;d<br />On objects which could cost her sons a tear.<br />If
+then they hate me &rsquo;tis because I hate not,<br />If they rebel
+&rsquo;tis because I oppress not.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>This is imagined in the true tone of Epicurean virtue, and it rises
+to magnanimity when he adds in compassionate scorn,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Oh, men! ye must be ruled with scythes, not sceptres,<br />And mow&rsquo;d
+down like the grass, else all we reap<br />Is rank abundance and a rotten
+harvest<br />Of discontents infecting the fair soil,<br />Making a desert
+of fertility.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>But the graciousness in the conception of the character of Sardanapalus,
+is not to be found only in these sentiments of his meditations, but
+in all and every situation in which the character is placed.&nbsp; When
+Salamenes bids him not sheath his sword&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis the sole sceptre left you now with safety,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>the king replies&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A heavy one;&rdquo; and subjoins, as if to conceal his distaste
+for war, by ascribing a dislike to the sword itself,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The hilt, too, hurts my hand.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It may be asked why I dwell so particularly on the character of Sardanapalus.&nbsp;
+It is admitted that he is the most heroic of voluptuaries, the most
+philosophical of the licentious.&nbsp; The first he is undoubtedly,
+but he is not licentious; and in omitting to make him so, the poet has
+prevented his readers from disliking his character upon principle.&nbsp;
+It was a skilful stroke of art to do this; had it been otherwise, and
+had there been no affection shown for the Ionian slave, Sardanapalus
+would have engaged no sympathy.&nbsp; It is not, however, with respect
+to the ability with which the character has been imagined, nor to the
+poetry with which it is invested, that I have so particularly made it
+a subject of criticism; it was to point out how much in it Lord Byron
+has interwoven of his own best nature.</p>
+<p>At the time when he was occupied with this great work, he was confessedly
+in the enjoyment of the happiest portion of his life.&nbsp; The Guiccioli
+was to him a Myrrha, but the Carbonari were around, and in the controversy,
+in which Sardanapalus is engaged, between the obligations of his royalty
+and his inclinations for pleasure, we have a vivid insight of the cogitation
+of the poet, whether to take a part in the hazardous activity which
+they were preparing, or to remain in the seclusion and festal repose
+of which he was then in possession.&nbsp; The Assyrian is as much Lord
+Byron as Childe Harold was, and bears his lineaments in as clear a likeness,
+as a voluptuary unsated could do those of the emaciated victim of satiety.&nbsp;
+Over the whole drama, and especially in some of the speeches of Sardanapalus,
+a great deal of fine but irrelevant poetry and moral reflection has
+been profusely spread; but were the piece adapted to the stage, these
+portions would of course be omitted, and the character denuded of them
+would then more fully justify the idea which I have formed of it, than
+it may perhaps to many readers do at present, hidden as it is, both
+in shape and contour, under an excess of ornament.</p>
+<p>That the character of Myrrha was also drawn from life, and that the
+Guiccioli was the model, I have no doubt.&nbsp; She had, when most enchanted
+by her passion for Byron&mdash;at the very time when the drama was written&mdash;many
+sources of regret; and he was too keen an observer, and of too jealous
+a nature, not to have marked every shade of change in her appearance,
+and her every moment of melancholy reminiscence; so that, even though
+she might never have given expression to her sentiments, still such
+was her situation, that it could not but furnish him with fit suggestions
+from which to fill up the moral being of the Ionian slave.&nbsp; Were
+the character of Myrrha scanned with this reference, while nothing could
+be discovered to detract from the value of the composition, a great
+deal would be found to lessen the merit of the poet&rsquo;s invention.&nbsp;
+He had with him the very being in person whom he has depicted in the
+drama, of dispositions and endowments greatly similar, and in circumstances
+in which she could not but feel as Myrrha is supposed to have felt&mdash;and
+it must be admitted, that he has applied the good fortune of that incident
+to a beautiful purpose.</p>
+<p>This, however, is not all that the tragedy possesses of the author.&nbsp;
+The character of Zarina is, perhaps, even still more strikingly drawn
+from life.&nbsp; There are many touches in the scene with her which
+he could not have imagined, without thinking of his own domestic disasters.&nbsp;
+The first sentiment she utters is truly conceived in the very frame
+and temper in which Byron must have wished his lady to think of himself,
+and he could not embody it without feeling <i>that</i>&mdash;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How many a year has pass&rsquo;d,<br />Though we
+are still so young, since we have met<br />Which I have borne in widowhood
+of heart.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The following delicate expression has reference to his having left
+his daughter with her mother, and unfolds more of his secret feelings
+on the subject than anything he has expressed more ostentatiously elsewhere:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>I wish&rsquo;d to thank you, that you have not divided<br />My heart
+from all that&rsquo;s left it now to love.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And what Sardanapalus says of his children is not less applicable
+to Byron, and is true:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Deem not<br />I have not done
+you justice: rather make them<br />Resemble your own line, than their
+own sire;<br />I trust them with you&mdash;to you.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And when Zarina says,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They ne&rsquo;er<br />Shall know
+from me aught but what may honour<br />Their father&rsquo;s memory,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>he puts in her mouth only a sentiment which he knew, if his wife
+never expressed to him, she profoundly acknowledged in resolution to
+herself.&nbsp; The whole of this scene is full of the most penetrating
+pathos; and did the drama not contain, in every page, indubitable evidence
+to me, that he has shadowed out in it himself his wife, and his mistress,
+this little interview would prove a vast deal in confirmation of the
+opinion so often expressed, that where his genius was most in its element,
+it was when it dealt with his own sensibilities and circumstances.&nbsp;
+It is impossible to read the following speech, without a conviction
+that it was written at Lady Byron:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;My gentle, wrong&rsquo;d Zarina!<br />I am the
+very slave of circumstance<br />And impulse&mdash;borne away with every
+breath!<br />Misplaced upon the throne&mdash;misplaced in life.<br />I
+know not what I could have been, but feel<br />I am not what I should
+be&mdash;let it end.<br />But take this with thee: if I was not form&rsquo;d<br />To
+prize a love like thine&mdash;a mind like thine&mdash;<br />Nor dote
+even on thy beauty&mdash;as I&rsquo;ve doted<br />On lesser charms,
+for no cause save that such<br />Devotion was a duty, and I hated<br />All
+that look&rsquo;d like a chain for me or others<br />(This even rebellion
+must avouch); yet hear<br />These words, perhaps among my last&mdash;that
+none<br />E&rsquo;er valued more thy virtues, though he knew not<br />To
+profit by them.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>At Ravenna <i>Cain</i> was also written; a dramatic poem, in some
+degree, chiefly in its boldness, resembling the ancient mysteries of
+the monasteries before the secular stage was established.&nbsp; This
+performance, in point of conception, is of a sublime order.&nbsp; The
+object of the poem is to illustrate the energy and the art of Lucifer
+in accomplishing the ruin of the first-born.&nbsp; By an unfair misconception,
+the arguments of Lucifer have been represented as the sentiments of
+the author upon some imaginary warranty derived from the exaggerated
+freedom of his life; and yet the moral tendency of the reflections are
+framed in a mood of reverence as awful towards Omnipotence as the austere
+divinity of Milton.&nbsp; It would be presumption in me, however, to
+undertake the defence of any question in theology; but I have not been
+sensible to the imputed impiety, while I have felt in many passages
+influences that have their being amid the shadows and twilights of &ldquo;old
+religion&rdquo;;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&ldquo;Stupendous spirits<br />That mock the pride
+of man, and people space<br />With life and mystical predominance.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The morning hymns and worship with which the mystery opens are grave,
+solemn, and scriptural, and the dialogue which follows with Cain is
+no less so: his opinion of the tree of life is, I believe, orthodox;
+but it is daringly expressed: indeed, all the sentiments ascribed to
+Cain are but the questions of the sceptics.&nbsp; His description of
+the approach of Lucifer would have shone in the <i>Paradise Lost.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A shape like to the angels,<br />Yet of a sterner
+and a sadder aspect,<br />Of spiritual essence.&nbsp; Why do I quake?<br />Why
+should I fear him more than other spirits<br />Whom I see daily wave
+their fiery swords<br />Before the gates round which I linger oft<br />In
+twilight&rsquo;s hour, to catch a glimpse of those<br />Gardens which
+are my just inheritance,<br />Ere the night closes o&rsquo;er the inhibited
+walls,<br />And the immortal trees which overtop<br />The cherubim-defended
+battlements?<br />I shrink not from these, the fire-arm&rsquo;d angels;<br />Why
+should I quail from him who now approaches?<br />Yet he seems mightier
+far than them, nor less<br />Beauteous; and yet not all as beautiful<br />As
+he hath been, or might be: sorrow seems<br />Half of his immortality.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>There is something spiritually fine in this conception of the terror
+or presentiment of coming evil.&nbsp; The poet rises to the sublime
+in making Lucifer first inspire Cain with the knowledge of his immortality&mdash;a
+portion of truth which hath the efficacy of falsehood upon the victim;
+for Cain, feeling himself already unhappy, knowing that his being cannot
+be abridged, has the less scruple to desire to be as Lucifer, &ldquo;mighty.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The whole speech of Lucifer, beginning,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Souls who dare use their immortality,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>is truly satanic; a daring and dreadful description given by everlasting
+despair of the Deity.</p>
+<p>But, notwithstanding its manifold immeasurable imaginations, <i>Cain</i>
+is only a polemical controversy, the doctrines of which might have been
+better discussed in the pulpit of a college chapel.&nbsp; As a poem
+it is greatly unequal; many passages consist of mere metaphysical disquisition,
+but there are others of wonderful scope and energy.&nbsp; It is a thing
+of doubts and dreams and reveries&mdash;dim and beautiful, yet withal
+full of terrors.&nbsp; The understanding finds nothing tangible; but
+amid dread and solemnity, sees only a shapen darkness with eloquent
+gestures.&nbsp; It is an argument invested with the language of oracles
+and omens, conceived in some religious trance, and addressed to spirits.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Removal to Pisa</i>&mdash;<i>The Lanfranchi Palace</i>&mdash;<i>Affair
+with the Guard at Pisa</i>&mdash;<i>Removal to Monte Nero</i>&mdash;<i>Junction
+with Mr Hunt</i>&mdash;<i>Mr Shelley&rsquo;s Letter</i></p>
+<p>The unhappy distrusts and political jealousies of the times obliged
+Lord Byron, with the Gambas, the family of the Guiccioli, to remove
+from Ravenna to Pisa.&nbsp; In this compulsion he had no cause to complain;
+a foreigner meddling with the politics of the country in which he was
+only accidentally resident, could expect no deferential consideration
+from the government.&nbsp; It has nothing to do with the question whether
+his Lordship was right or wrong in his principles.&nbsp; The government
+was in the possession of the power, and in self-defence he could expect
+no other course towards him than what he did experience.&nbsp; He was
+admonished to retreat: he did so.&nbsp; Could he have done otherwise,
+he would not.&nbsp; He would have used the Austrian authority as ill
+as he was made to feel it did him.</p>
+<p>In the autumn of 1821, Lord Byron removed from Ravenna to Pisa, where
+he hired the Lanfranchi palace for a year&mdash;one of those massy marble
+piles which appear</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;So old, as if they had for ever stood&mdash;<br />So strong,
+as if they would for ever stand!&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Both in aspect and character it was interesting to the boding fancies
+of the noble tenant.&nbsp; It is said to have been constructed from
+a design of Michael Angelo; and in the grandeur of its features exhibits
+a bold and colossal style not unworthy of his genius.</p>
+<p>The Lanfranchi family, in the time of Dante, were distinguished in
+the factions of those days, and one of them has received his meed of
+immortality from the poet, as the persecutor of Ugolino.&nbsp; They
+are now extinct, and their traditionary reputation is illustrated by
+the popular belief in the neighbourhood, that their ghosts are restless,
+and still haunt their former gloomy and gigantic habitation.</p>
+<p>The building was too vast for the establishment of Lord Byron, and
+he occupied only the first floor.</p>
+<p>The life he led at this period was dull and unvaried.&nbsp; Billiards,
+conversations, reading, and occasionally writing, constituted the regular
+business of the day.&nbsp; In the cool of the afternoon, he sometimes
+went out in his carriage, oftener on horseback, and generally amused
+himself with pistol practice at a five-paul piece.&nbsp; He dined at
+half an hour after sunset, and then drove to Count Gamba&rsquo;s, where
+he passed several hours with the Countess Guiccioli, who at that time
+still resided with her father.&nbsp; On his return he read or wrote
+till the night was far spent, or rather till the morning was come again,
+sipping at intervals spirits diluted with water, as medicine to counteract
+some nephritic disorder to which he considered himself liable.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding the tranquillity of this course of life, he was accidentally
+engaged in a transaction which threatened unpleasant consequences, and
+had a material effect on his comfort.&nbsp; On the 21st of March, 1822,
+as he was returning from his usual ride, in company with several of
+his friends, a hussar officer, at full speed, dashed through the party,
+and violently jostled one of them.&nbsp; Lord Byron, with his characteristic
+impetuosity, instantly pushed forwards, and the rest followed, and overtook
+the hussar.&nbsp; His Lordship inquired what he meant by the insult;
+but for answer, received the grossest abuse: on which he and one of
+his companions gave their cards, and passed on.&nbsp; The officer followed,
+hallooing, and threatening with his hand on his sabre.&nbsp; They were
+now near the Paggia gate.&nbsp; During this altercation, a common artilleryman
+interfered, and called out to the hussar, &ldquo;Why don&rsquo;t you
+arrest them?&mdash;command us to arrest them.&rdquo;&nbsp; Upon which
+the officer gave the word to the guard at the gate.&nbsp; His Lordship,
+hearing the order, spurred his horse, and one of his party doing the
+same, they succeeded in forcing their way through the soldiers, while
+the gate was closed on the rest of the party, with whom an outrageous
+scuffle ensued.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron, on reaching his palace, gave directions to inform the
+police, and, not seeing his companions coming up, rode back towards
+the gate.&nbsp; On his way the hussar met him, and said, &ldquo;Are
+you satisfied?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;No: tell me your name!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Serjeant-major
+Masi.&rdquo;&nbsp; One of his Lordship&rsquo;s servants, who at this
+moment joined them, seized the hussar&rsquo;s horse by the bridle, but
+his master commanded him to let it go.&nbsp; The hussar then spurred
+his horse through the crowd, which by this time had collected in front
+of the Lanfranchi palace, and in the attempt was wounded by a pitchfork.&nbsp;
+Several of the servants were arrested, and imprisoned: and, during the
+investigation of the affair before the police, Lord Byron&rsquo;s house
+was surrounded by the dragoons belonging to Serjeant-major Masi&rsquo;s
+troop, who threatened to force the doors.&nbsp; The result upon these
+particulars was not just; all Lord Byron&rsquo;s Italian servants were
+banished from Pisa; and with them the father and brother of the Guiccioli,
+who had no concern whatever in the affair.&nbsp; Lord Byron himself
+was also advised to quit the town, and, as the Countess accompanied
+her father, he soon after joined them at Leghorn, and passed six weeks
+at Monte Nero, a country house in the vicinity of that city.</p>
+<p>It was during his Lordship&rsquo;s residence at Monte Nero, that
+an event took place&mdash;his junction with Mr Leigh Hunt&mdash;which
+had some effect both on his literary and his moral reputation.&nbsp;
+Previous to his departure from England, there had been some intercourse
+between them&mdash;Byron had been introduced by Moore to Hunt, when
+the latter was suffering imprisonment for the indiscretion of his pen,
+and by his civility had encouraged him, perhaps, into some degree of
+forgetfulness as to their respective situations in society.&mdash;Mr
+Hunt at no period of their acquaintance appears to have been sufficiently
+sensible that a man of positive rank has it always in his power, without
+giving anything like such a degree of offence as may be resented otherwise
+than by estrangement, to inflict mortification, and, in consequence,
+presumed too much to an equality with his Lordship&mdash;at least this
+is the impression his conduct made upon me, from the familiarity of
+his dedicatory epistle prefixed to <i>Rimini</i> to their riding out
+at Pisa together dressed alike&mdash;&ldquo;We had blue frock-coats,
+white waistcoats and trousers, and velvet caps, <i>&agrave; la Raphael</i>,
+and cut a gallant figure.&rdquo;&nbsp; I do not discover on the part
+of Lord Byron, that his Lordship ever forgot his rank; nor was he a
+personage likely to do so; in saying, therefore, that Mr Hunt presumed
+upon his condescension, I judge entirely by his own statement of facts.&nbsp;
+I am not undertaking a defence of his lordship, for the manner in which
+he acted towards Mr Hunt, because it appears to me to have been, in
+many respects, mean; but I do think there was an original error, a misconception
+of himself on the part of Mr Hunt, that drew down about him a degree
+of humiliation that he might, by more self-respect, have avoided.&nbsp;
+However, I shall endeavour to give as correct a summary of the whole
+affair as the materials before me will justify.</p>
+<p>The occasion of Hunt&rsquo;s removal to Italy will be best explained
+by quoting the letter from his friend Shelley, by which he was induced
+to take that obviously imprudent step.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Pisa</i>, <i>Aug</i>. 26, 1821.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;MY DEAREST FRIEND,&mdash;Since I last wrote to you, I have
+been on a visit to Lord Byron at Ravenna.&nbsp; The result of this visit
+was a determination on his part to come and live at Pisa, and I have
+taken the finest palace on the Lung&rsquo; Arno for him.&nbsp; But the
+material part of my visit consists in a message which he desires me
+to give you, and which I think ought to add to your determination&mdash;for
+such a one I hope you have formed&mdash;of restoring your shattered
+health and spirits by a migration to these &lsquo;regions mild, of calm
+and serene air.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He proposes that you should come, and go shares with him and
+me in a periodical work to be conducted here, in which each of the contracting
+parties should publish all their original compositions, and share the
+profits.&nbsp; He proposed it to Moore, but for some reason it was never
+brought to bear.&nbsp; There can be no doubt that the profits of any
+scheme in which you and Lord Byron engage must, for various yet co-operating
+reasons, be very great.&nbsp; As to myself, I am, for the present, only
+a sort of link between you and him, until you can know each other, and
+effectuate the arrangement; since (to intrust you with a secret, which
+for your sake I withhold from Lord Byron) nothing would induce me to
+share in the profits, and still less in the borrowed splendour of such
+a partnership.&nbsp; You and he, in different manners, would be equal,
+and would bring in a different manner, but in the same proportion, equal
+stocks of reputation and success.&nbsp; Do not let my frankness with
+you, nor my belief that you deserve it more than Lord Byron, have the
+effect of deterring you from assuming a station in modern literature,
+which the universal voice of my contemporaries forbids me either to
+stoop or aspire to.&nbsp; I am, and I desire to be, nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did not ask Lord Byron to assist me in sending a remittance
+for your journey; because there are men, however excellent, from whom
+we would never receive an obligation in the worldly sense of the word;
+and I am as jealous for my friend as for myself.&nbsp; I, as you know,
+have it not; but I suppose that at last I shall make up an impudent
+face, and ask Horace Smith to add to the many obligations he has conferred
+on me.&nbsp; I know I need only ask.&rdquo; . . .</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Now, before proceeding farther, it seems from this epistle, and there
+is no reason to question Shelley&rsquo;s veracity, that Lord Byron was
+the projector of <i>The Liberal</i>; that Hunt&rsquo;s political notoriety
+was mistaken for literary reputation, and that there was a sad lack
+of common sense in the whole scheme.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXVIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Mr Hunt arrives in Italy</i>&mdash;<i>Meeting with Lord Byron</i>&mdash;<i>Tumults
+in the House</i>&mdash;<i>Arrangements for Mr Hunt&rsquo;s Family</i>&mdash;<i>-Extent
+of his Obligations to Lord Byron</i>&mdash;<i>Their Copartnery</i>&mdash;<i>Meanness
+of the whole Business</i></p>
+<p>On receiving Mr Shelley&rsquo;s letter, Mr Hunt prepared to avail
+himself of the invitation which he was the more easily enabled to do,
+as his friend, notwithstanding what he had intimated, borrowed two hundred
+pounds from Lord Byron, and remitted to him.&nbsp; He reached Leghorn
+soon after his Lordship had taken up his temporary residence at Monte
+Nero.</p>
+<p>The meeting with his Lordship was in so many respects remarkable,
+that the details of it cannot well be omitted.&nbsp; The day was very
+hot; and when Hunt reached the house he found the hottest-looking habitation
+he had ever seen.&nbsp; Not content with having a red wash over it,
+the red was the most unseasonable of all reds&mdash;a salmon-colour;
+but the greatest of all heats was within.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron was grown so fat that he scarcely knew him; and was dressed
+in a loose nankeen jacket and white trousers, his neckcloth open, and
+his hair in thin ringlets about his throat; altogether presenting a
+very different aspect from the compact, energetic, and curly-headed
+person whom Hunt had known in England.</p>
+<p>His Lordship took the stranger into an inner room, and introduced
+him to a young lady who was in a state of great agitation.&nbsp; This
+was the Guiccioli; presently her brother also, in great agitation, entered,
+having his arm in a sling.&nbsp; This scene and confusion had arisen
+from a quarrel among the servants, in which the young Count, having
+interfered, had been stabbed.&nbsp; He was very angry, the Countess
+was more so, and would not listen to the comments of Lord Byron, who
+was for making light of the matter.&nbsp; Indeed, it looked somewhat
+serious, for though the stab was not much, the inflicter threatened
+more, and was at that time revengefully keeping watch, with knotted
+brows, under the portico, with the avowed intention of assaulting the
+first person who issued forth.&nbsp; He was a sinister-looking, meager
+caitiff, with a red cap&mdash;gaunt, ugly, and unshaven; his appearance
+altogether more squalid and miserable than Englishmen would conceive
+it possible to find in such an establishment.&nbsp; An end, however,
+was put to the tragedy by the fellow throwing himself on a bench, and
+bursting into tears&mdash;wailing and asking pardon for his offence,
+and perfecting his penitence by requesting Lord Byron to kiss him in
+token of forgiveness.&nbsp; In the end, however, he was dismissed; and
+it being arranged that Mr Hunt should move his family to apartments
+in the Lanfranchi palace at Pisa, that gentleman returned to Leghorn.</p>
+<p>The account which Mr Hunt has given, in his memoir of Lord Byron,
+is evidently written under offended feeling; and, in consequence, though
+he does not appear to have been much indebted to the munificence of
+his Lordship, the tendency is to make his readers sensible that he was,
+if not ill used, disappointed.&nbsp; The Casa Lanfranchi was a huge
+and gaunt building, capable, without inconvenience or intermixture,
+of accommodating several families.&nbsp; It was, therefore, not a great
+favour in his Lordship, considering that he had invited Mr Hunt from
+England, to become a partner with him in a speculation purely commercial,
+to permit him to occupy the ground-floor or flat, as it would be called
+in Scotland.&nbsp; The apartments being empty, furniture was necessary,
+and the plainest was provided; good of its kind and respectable, it
+yet could not have cost a great deal.&nbsp; It was chosen by Mr Shelley,
+who intended to make a present of it to Mr Hunt; but when the apartments
+were fitted up, Lord Byron insisted upon paying the account, and to
+that extent Mr Hunt incurred a pecuniary obligation to his Lordship.&nbsp;
+The two hundred pounds already mentioned was a debt to Mr Shelley, who
+borrowed the money from Lord Byron.</p>
+<p>Soon after Mr Hunt&rsquo;s family were settled in their new lodgings,
+Shelley returned to Leghorn, with the intention of taking a sea excursion&mdash;in
+the course of which he was lost: Lord Byron knowing how much Hunt was
+dependent on that gentleman, immediately offered him the command of
+his purse, and requested to be considered as standing in the place of
+Shelley, his particular friend.&nbsp; This was both gentlemanly and
+generous, and the offer was accepted, but with feelings neither just
+nor gracious: &ldquo;Stern necessity and a large family compelled me,&rdquo;
+says Mr Hunt, &ldquo;and during our residence at Pisa I had from him,
+or rather from his steward, to whom he always sent me for the money,
+and who doled it out to me as if my disgraces were being counted, the
+sum of seventy pounds.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This sum,&rdquo; he adds, &ldquo;together with the payment
+of our expenses when we accompanied him from Pisa to Genoa, and thirty
+pounds with which he enabled us subsequently to go from Genoa to Florence,
+was all the money I ever received from Lord Byron, exclusive of the
+two hundred pounds, which, in the first instance, he made a debt of
+Mr Shelley, by taking his bond.&rdquo;&mdash;The whole extent of the
+pecuniary obligation appears certainly not to have exceeded five hundred
+pounds; no great sum&mdash;but little or great, the manner in which
+it was recollected reflects no credit either on the head or heart of
+the debtor.</p>
+<p>Mr Hunt, in extenuation of the bitterness with which he has spoken
+on the subject, says, that &ldquo;Lord Byron made no scruple of talking
+very freely of me and mine.&rdquo;&nbsp; It may, therefore, be possible,
+that Mr Hunt had cause for his resentment, and to feel the humiliation
+of being under obligations to a mean man; at the same time Lord Byron,
+on his side, may upon experience have found equal reason to repent of
+his connection with Mr Hunt.&nbsp; And it is certain that each has sought
+to justify, both to himself and to the world, the rupture of a copartnery
+which ought never to have been formed.&nbsp; But his Lordship&rsquo;s
+conduct is the least justifiable.&nbsp; He had allured Hunt to Italy
+with flattering hopes; he had a perfect knowledge of his hampered circumstances,
+and he was thoroughly aware that, until their speculation became productive,
+he must support him.&nbsp; To the extent of about five hundred pounds
+he did so: a trifle, considering the glittering anticipations of their
+scheme.</p>
+<p>Viewing their copartnery, however, as a mere commercial speculation,
+his Lordship&rsquo;s advance could not be regarded as liberal, and no
+modification of the term munificence or patronage could be applied to
+it.&nbsp; But, unless he had harassed Hunt for the repayment of the
+money, which does not appear to have been the case, nor could he morally,
+perhaps even legally, have done so, that gentleman had no cause to complain.&nbsp;
+The joint adventure was a failure, and except a little repining on the
+part of the one for the loss of his advance, and of grudging on that
+of the other for the waste of his time, no sharper feeling ought to
+have arisen between them.&nbsp; But vanity was mingled with their golden
+dreams.&nbsp; Lord Byron mistook Hunt&rsquo;s political notoriety for
+literary reputation, and Mr Hunt thought it was a fine thing to be chum
+and partner with so renowned a lord.&nbsp; After all, however, the worst
+which can be said of it is, that formed in weakness it could produce
+only vexation.</p>
+<p>But the dissolution of the vapour with which both parties were so
+intoxicated, and which led to their quarrel, might have occasioned only
+amusement to the world, had it not left an ignoble stigma on the character
+of Lord Byron, and given cause to every admirer of his genius to deplore,
+that he should have so forgotten his dignity and fame.</p>
+<p>There is no disputing the fact, that his Lordship, in conceiving
+the plan of <i>The Liberal</i>, was actuated by sordid motives, and
+of the basest kind, inasmuch as it was intended that the popularity
+of the work should rest upon satire; or, in other words, on the ability
+to be displayed by it in the art of detraction.&nbsp; Being disappointed
+in his hopes of profit, he shuffled out of the concern as meanly as
+any higgler could have done who had found himself in a profitless business
+with a disreputable partner.&nbsp; There is no disguising this unvarnished
+truth; and though his friends did well in getting the connection ended
+as quickly as possible, they could not eradicate the original sin of
+the transaction, nor extinguish the consequences which it of necessity
+entailed.&nbsp; Let me not, however, be misunderstood: my objection
+to the conduct of Byron does not lie against the wish to turn his extraordinary
+talents to profitable account, but to the mode in which he proposed
+to, and did, employ them.&nbsp; Whether Mr Hunt was or was not a fit
+copartner for one of his Lordship&rsquo;s rank and celebrity, I do not
+undertake to judge; but any individual was good enough for that vile
+prostitution of his genius, to which, in an unguarded hour, he submitted
+for money.&nbsp; Indeed, it would be doing injustice to compare the
+motives of Mr Hunt in the business with those by which Lord Byron was
+infatuated.&nbsp; He put nothing to hazard; happen what might, he could
+not be otherwise than a gainer; for if profit failed, it could not be
+denied that the &ldquo;foremost&rdquo; poet of all the age had discerned
+in him either the promise or the existence of merit, which he was desirous
+of associating with his own.&nbsp; This advantage Mr Hunt did gain by
+the connection; and it is his own fault that he cannot be recollected
+as the associate of Byron, but only as having attempted to deface his
+monument.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XXXIX</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Mr Shelley</i>&mdash;<i>Sketch of his Life</i>&mdash;<i>His Death</i>&mdash;<i>The
+Burning of his Body</i>, <i>and the Return of the Mourners</i></p>
+<p>It has been my study in writing these sketches to introduce as few
+names as the nature of the work would admit of; but Lord Byron connected
+himself with persons who had claims to public consideration on account
+of their talents; and, without affectation, it is not easy to avoid
+taking notice of his intimacy with some of them, especially, if in the
+course of it any circumstance came to pass which was in itself remarkable,
+or likely to have produced an impression on his Lordship&rsquo;s mind.&nbsp;
+His friendship with Mr Shelley, mentioned in the preceding chapter,
+was an instance of this kind.</p>
+<p>That unfortunate gentleman was undoubtedly a man of genius&mdash;full
+of ideal beauty and enthusiasm.&nbsp; And yet there was some defect
+in his understanding by which he subjected himself to the accusation
+of atheism.&nbsp; In his dispositions he is represented to have been
+ever calm and amiable; and but for his metaphysical errors and reveries,
+and a singular incapability of conceiving the existing state of things
+as it practically affects the nature and condition of man, to have possessed
+many of the gentlest qualities of humanity.&nbsp; He highly admired
+the endowments of Lord Byron, and in return was esteemed by his Lordship;
+but even had there been neither sympathy nor friendship between them,
+his premature fate could not but have saddened Byron with no common
+sorrow.</p>
+<p>Mr Shelley was some years younger than his noble friend; he was the
+eldest son of Sir Timothy Shelley, Bart., of Castle Goring, Sussex.&nbsp;
+At the age of thirteen he was sent to Eton, where he rarely mixed in
+the common amusements of the other boys; but was of a shy, reserved
+disposition, fond of solitude, and made few friends.&nbsp; He was not
+distinguished for his proficiency in the regular studies of the school;
+on the contrary, he neglected them for German and chemistry.&nbsp; His
+abilities were superior, but deteriorated by eccentricity.&nbsp; At
+the age of sixteen he was sent to the University of Oxford, where he
+soon distinguished himself by publishing a pamphlet, under the absurd
+and world-defying title of <i>The Necessity of Atheism</i>; for which
+he was expelled from the University.</p>
+<p>The event proved fatal to his prospects in life; and the treatment
+he received from his family was too harsh to win him from error.&nbsp;
+His father, however, in a short time relented, and he was received home;
+but he took so little trouble to conciliate the esteem of his friends,
+that he found the house uncomfortable, and left it.&nbsp; He then went
+to London; where he eloped with a young lady to Gretna Green.&nbsp;
+Their united ages amounted to thirty-two; and the match being deemed
+unsuitable to his rank and prospects, it so exasperated his father,
+that he broke off all communication with him.</p>
+<p>After their marriage the young couple resided some time in Edinburgh.&nbsp;
+They then passed over to Ireland, which being in a state of disturbance,
+Shelley took a part in politics, more reasonable than might have been
+expected.&nbsp; He inculcated moderation.</p>
+<p>About this tune he became devoted to the cultivation of his poetical
+talents; but his works were sullied with the erroneous inductions of
+an understanding which, inasmuch as he regarded all the existing world
+in the wrong, must be considered as having been either shattered or
+defective.</p>
+<p>His rash marriage proved, of course, an unhappy one.&nbsp; After
+the birth of two children, a separation, by mutual consent, took place,
+and Mrs Shelley committed suicide.</p>
+<p>He then married a daughter of Mr Godwin, the author of <i>Caleb Williams</i>,
+and they resided for some time at Great Marlow, in Buckinghamshire,
+much respected for their charity.&nbsp; In the meantime, his irreligious
+opinions had attracted public notice, and, in consequence of his unsatisfactory
+notions of the Deity, his children, probably at the instance of his
+father, were taken from him by a decree of the Lord Chancellor: an event
+which, with increasing pecuniary embarrassments, induced him to quit
+England, with the intention of never returning.</p>
+<p>Being in Switzerland when Lord Byron, after his domestic tribulations,
+arrived at Geneva, they became acquainted.&nbsp; He then crossed the
+Alps, and again at Venice renewed his friendship with his Lordship;
+he thence passed to Rome, where he resided some time; and after visiting
+Naples, fixed his permanent residence in Tuscany.&nbsp; His acquirements
+were constantly augmenting, and he was without question an accomplished
+person.&nbsp; He was, however, more of a metaphysician than a poet,
+though there are splendid specimens of poetical thought in his works.&nbsp;
+As a man, he was objected to only on account of his speculative opinions;
+for he possessed many amiable qualities, was just in his intentions,
+and generous to excess.</p>
+<p>When he had seen Mr Hunt established in the Casa Lanfranchi with
+Lord Byron at Pisa, Mr Shelley returned to Leghorn, for the purpose
+of taking a sea excursion; an amusement to which he was much attached.&nbsp;
+During a violent storm the boat was swamped, and the party on board
+were all drowned.&nbsp; Their bodies were, however, afterwards cast
+on shore; Mr Shelley&rsquo;s was found near Via Reggio, and, being greatly
+decomposed, and unfit to be removed, it was determined to reduce the
+remains to ashes, that they might be carried to a place of sepulture.&nbsp;
+Accordingly preparations were made for the burning.</p>
+<p>Wood in abundance was found on the shore, consisting of old trees
+and the wreck of vessels: the spot itself was well suited for the ceremony.&nbsp;
+The magnificent bay of Spezzia was on the right, and Leghorn on the
+left, at equal distances of about two-and-twenty miles.&nbsp; The headlands
+project boldly far into the sea; in front lie several islands, and behind
+dark forests and the cliffy Apennines.&nbsp; Nothing was omitted that
+could exalt and dignify the mournful rites with the associations of
+classic antiquity; frankincense and wine were not forgotten.&nbsp; The
+weather was serene and beautiful, and the pacified ocean was silent,
+as the flame rose with extraordinary brightness.&nbsp; Lord Byron was
+present; but he should himself have described the scene and what he
+felt.</p>
+<p>These antique obsequies were undoubtedly affecting; but the return
+of the mourners from the burning is the most appalling orgia, without
+the horror of crime, of which I have ever heard.&nbsp; When the duty
+was done, and the ashes collected, they dined and drank much together,
+and bursting from the calm mastery with which they had repressed their
+feelings during the solemnity, gave way to frantic exultation.&nbsp;
+They were all drunk; they sang, they shouted, and their barouche was
+driven like a whirlwind through the forest.&nbsp; I can conceive nothing
+descriptive of the demoniac revelry of that flight, but scraps of the
+dead man&rsquo;s own song of Faust, Mephistophiles, and Ignis Fatuus,
+in alternate chorus.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The limits of the sphere of dream,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The bounds
+of true and false are past;<br />Lead us on, thou wand&rsquo;ring Gleam;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Lead
+us onwards, far and fast,<br />To the wide, the desert waste.</p>
+<p>But see how swift, advance and shift,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Trees
+behind trees&mdash;row by row,<br />Now clift by clift, rocks bend and
+lift,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Their frowning foreheads as we go;<br />The
+giant-snouted crags, ho! ho!<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How they snort,
+and how they blow.<br />Honour her to whom honour is due,<br />Old mother
+Baubo, honour to you.<br />An able sow with old Baubo upon her<br />Is
+worthy of glory and worthy of honour.</p>
+<p>The way is wide, the way is long,<br />But what is that for a Bedlam
+throng?<br />Some on a ram, and some on a prong,<br />On poles and on
+broomsticks we flutter along.</p>
+<p>Every trough will be boat enough,<br />With a rag for a sail, we
+can sweep through the sky.<br />Who flies not to-night, when means he
+to fly?</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XL</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>&ldquo;The Two Foscari&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Werner&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;The
+Deformed Transformed&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Don Juan&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;The
+Liberal&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>Removes from Pisa to Genoa</i></p>
+<p>I have never heard exactly where the tragedy of <i>The Two Foscari</i>
+was written: that it was imagined in Venice is probable.&nbsp; The subject
+is, perhaps, not very fit for a drama, for it has no action; but it
+is rich in tragic materials, revenge and affection, and the composition
+is full of the peculiar stuff of the poet&rsquo;s own mind.&nbsp; The
+exulting sadness with which Jacopo Foscari looks in the first scene
+from the window, on the Adriatic, is Byron himself recalling his enjoyment
+of the sea.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;How many a time have I<br />Cloven
+with arm still lustier, heart more daring,<br />The wave all roughen&rsquo;d:
+with a swimmer&rsquo;s stroke<br />Flinging the billows back from my
+drench&rsquo;d hair,<br />And laughing from my lip th&rsquo; audacious
+brine<br />Which kiss&rsquo;d it like a wine-cup.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The whole passage, both prelude and remainder, glows with the delicious
+recollections of laying and revelling in the summer waves.&nbsp; But
+the exile&rsquo;s feeling is no less beautifully given and appropriate
+to the author&rsquo;s condition, far more so, indeed, than to that of
+Jacopo Foscari.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Had I gone forth<br />From my
+own land, like the old patriarchs, seeking<br />Another region with
+their flocks and herds;<br />Had I been cast out like the Jews from
+Zion,<br />Or like our fathers driven by Attila<br />From fertile Italy
+to barren islets,<br />I would have given some tears to my late country,<br />And
+many thoughts; but afterward address&rsquo;d<br />Myself to those about
+me, to create<br />A new home and first state.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>What follows is still more pathetic:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ay&mdash;we but hear<br />Of the survivors&rsquo;
+toil in their new lands,<br />Their numbers and success; but who can
+number<br />The hearts which broke in silence of that parting,<br />Or
+after their departure; of that malady <a name="citation291a"></a><a href="#footnote291a">{291a}</a><br />Which
+calls up green and native fields to view<br />From the rough deep with
+such identity<br />To the poor exile&rsquo;s fever&rsquo;d eye, that
+he<br />Can scarcely be restrained from treading them?<br />That melody
+<a name="citation291b"></a><a href="#footnote291b">{291b}</a> which
+out of tones and tunes<br />Collects such pastime for the ling&rsquo;ring
+sorrow<br />Of the sad mountaineer, when far away<br />From his snow-canopy
+of cliffs and clouds,<br />That he feeds on the sweet but poisonous
+thought<br />And dies.&mdash;You call this weakness!&nbsp; It is strength,<br />I
+say&mdash;the parent of all honest feeling:<br />He who loves not his
+country can love nothing.</p>
+<p>MARINA</p>
+<p>Obey her then, &rsquo;tis she that puts thee forth.</p>
+<p>JACOPO FOSCARI</p>
+<p>Ay, there it is.&nbsp; &rsquo;Tis like a mother&rsquo;s curse<br />Upon
+my soul&mdash;the mark is set upon me.<br />The exiles you speak of
+went forth by nations;<br />Their hands upheld each other by the way;<br />Their
+tents were pitch&rsquo;d together&mdash;I&rsquo;m alone&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Ah,
+you never yet<br />Were far away from Venice&mdash;never saw<br />Her
+beautiful towers in the receding distance,<br />While every furrow of
+the vessel&rsquo;s track<br />Seem&rsquo;d ploughing deep into your
+heart; you never<br />Saw day go down upon your native spires<br />So
+calmly with its gold and crimson glory,<br />And after dreaming a disturbed
+vision<br />Of them and theirs, awoke and found them not.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>All this speaks of the voluntary exile&rsquo;s own regrets, and awakens
+sympathy for the anguish which pride concealed, but unable to repress,
+gave vent to in the imagined sufferings of one that was to him as Hecuba.</p>
+<p>It was at Pisa that <i>Werner</i>, <i>or The Inheritance</i>, a tragedy,
+was written, or at least completed.&nbsp; It is taken entirely from
+the German&rsquo;s tale, Kruitzner, published many years before, by
+one of the Miss Lees, in their <i>Canterbury Tales</i>.&nbsp; So far
+back as 1815, Byron began a drama upon the same subject, and nearly
+completed an act when he was interrupted.&nbsp; &ldquo;I have adopted,&rdquo;
+he says himself, &ldquo;the characters, plan, and even the language
+of many parts of this story&rdquo;; an acknowledgment which exempts
+it from that kind of criticism to which his principal works are herein
+subjected.</p>
+<p>But <i>The Deformed Transformed</i>, which was also written at Pisa,
+is, though confessedly an imitation of Goethe&rsquo;s <i>Faust</i>,
+substantially an original work.&nbsp; In the opinion of Mr Moore, it
+probably owes something to the author&rsquo;s painful sensibility to
+the defect in his own foot; an accident which must, from the acuteness
+with which he felt it, have essentially contributed to enable him to
+comprehend and to express the envy of those afflicted with irremediable
+exceptions to the ordinary course of fortune, or who have been amerced
+by nature of their fair proportions.&nbsp; But save only a part of the
+first scene, the sketch will not rank among the felicitous works of
+the poet.&nbsp; It was intended to be a satire&mdash;probably, at least&mdash;but
+it is only a fragment&mdash;a failure.</p>
+<p>Hitherto I have not noticed <i>Don Juan</i> otherwise than incidentally.&nbsp;
+It was commenced in Venice, and afterward continued at intervals to
+the end of the sixteenth canto, until the author left Pisa, when it
+was not resumed, at least no more has been published.&nbsp; Strong objections
+have been made to its moral tendency; but, in the opinion of many, it
+is the poet&rsquo;s masterpiece, and undoubtedly it displays all the
+variety of his powers, combined with a quaint playfulness not found
+to an equal degree in any other of his works.&nbsp; The serious and
+pathetic portions are exquisitely beautiful; the descriptive have all
+the distinctness of the best pictures in <i>Childe Harold</i>, and are,
+moreover, generally drawn from nature, while the satire is for the most
+part curiously associated and sparklingly witty.&nbsp; The characters
+are sketched with amazing firmness and freedom, and though sometimes
+grotesque, are yet not often overcharged.&nbsp; It is professedly an
+epic poem, but it may be more properly described as a poetical novel.&nbsp;
+Nor can it be said to inculcate any particular moral, or to do more
+than unmantle the decorum of society.&nbsp; Bold and buoyant throughout,
+it exhibits a free irreverent knowledge of the world, laughing or mocking
+as the thought serves, in the most unexpected antitheses to the proprieties
+of time, place, and circumstance.</p>
+<p>The object of the poem is to describe the progress of a libertine
+through life, not an unprincipled prodigal, whose profligacy, growing
+with his growth, and strengthening with his strength, passes from voluptuous
+indulgence into the sordid sensuality of systematic debauchery, but
+a young gentleman, who, whirled by the vigour and vivacity of his animal
+spirits into a world of adventures, in which his stars are chiefly in
+fault for his <i>liaisons</i>, settles at last into an honourable lawgiver,
+a moral speaker on divorce bills, and possibly a subscriber to the Society
+for the Suppression of Vice.&nbsp; The author has not completed his
+design, but such appears to have been the drift of it, affording ample
+opportunities to unveil the foibles and follies of all sorts of men&mdash;and
+women too.&nbsp; It is generally supposed to contain much of the author&rsquo;s
+own experience, but still, with all its riant knowledge of bowers and
+boudoirs, it is deficient as a true limning of the world, by showing
+man as if he were always ruled by one predominant appetite.</p>
+<p>In the character of Donna Inez and Don Jos&eacute;, it has been imagined
+that Lord Byron has sketched himself and his lady.&nbsp; It may be so;
+and if it were, he had by that time got pretty well over the lachrymation
+of their parting.&nbsp; It is no longer doubtful that the twenty-seventh
+stanza records a biographical fact, and the thirty-sixth his own feelings,
+when,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Poor fellow! he had many things to wound him,<br />Let&rsquo;s own,
+since it can do no good on earth;<br />It was a trying moment that which
+found him<br />Standing alone beside his desolate hearth,<br />Where
+all his household gods lay shiver&rsquo;d round him:<br />No choice
+was left his feelings or his pride,<br />Save death or Doctors&rsquo;
+Commons.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>It has been already mentioned, that while the poet was at Dr Glennie&rsquo;s
+academy at Dulwich, he read an account of a shipwreck, which has been
+supposed to have furnished some of the most striking incidents in the
+description of the disastrous voyage in the second canto in <i>Don Juan</i>.&nbsp;
+I have not seen that work; but whatever Lord Byron may have found in
+it suitable to his purpose, he has undoubtedly made good use of his
+grandfather&rsquo;s adventures.&nbsp; The incident of the spaniel is
+related by the admiral.</p>
+<p>In the licence of <i>Don Juan</i>, the author seems to have considered
+that his wonted accuracy might be dispensed with.</p>
+<p>The description of Haidee applies to an Albanian, not a Greek girl.&nbsp;
+The splendour of her father&rsquo;s house is altogether preposterous;
+and the island has no resemblance to those of the Cyclades.&nbsp; With
+the exception of Zea, his Lordship, however, did not visit them.&nbsp;
+Some degree of error and unlike description, runs indeed through the
+whole of the still life around the portrait of Haidee.&nbsp; The f&ecirc;te
+which Lambro discovers on his return, is, however, prettily described;
+and the dance is as perfect as true.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>And farther on a group of Grecian girls,<br />The first and tallest
+her white kerchief waving,<br />Were strung together like a row of pearls,<br />Link&rsquo;d
+hand in hand and dancing; each too having<br />Down her white neck long
+floating auburn curls.<br />Their leader sang, and bounded to her song,<br />With
+choral step and voice, the virgin throng.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The account of Lambro proceeding to the house is poetically imagined;
+and, in his character, may be traced a vivid likeness of Ali Pasha,
+and happy illustrative allusions to the adventures of that chief.</p>
+<p>The fourth canto was written at Ravenna; it is so said within itself;
+and the description of Dante&rsquo;s sepulchre there may be quoted for
+its truth, and the sweet modulation of the moral reflection interwoven
+with it.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>I pass each day where Dante&rsquo;s bones are laid;<br />A little
+cupola, more neat than solemn,<br />Protects his dust; but reverence
+here is paid<br />To the bard&rsquo;s tomb and not the warrior&rsquo;s
+column.<br />The time must come when both alike decay&rsquo;d,<br />The
+chieftain&rsquo;s trophy and the poet&rsquo;s volume<br />Will sink
+where lie the songs and wars of earth,<br />Before Pelides&rsquo; death
+or Homer&rsquo;s birth.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The fifth canto was also written in Ravenna.&nbsp; But it is not
+my intention to analyze this eccentric and meandering poem; a composition
+which cannot be well estimated by extracts.&nbsp; Without, therefore,
+dwelling at greater length on its variety and merits.&nbsp; I would
+only observe that the general accuracy of the poet&rsquo;s descriptions
+is verified by that of the scenes in which Juan is placed in England,
+a point the reader may determine for himself; while the vagueness of
+the parts derived from books, or sketched from fancy, as contrasted
+with them, justifies the opinion, that invention was not the most eminent
+faculty of Byron, either in scenes or in characters.&nbsp; Of the demerits
+of the poem it is only necessary to remark, that it has been proscribed
+on account of its immorality; perhaps, however, there was more of prudery
+than of equity in the decision, at least it is liable to be so considered,
+so long as reprints are permitted of the older dramatists, with all
+their unpruned licentiousness.</p>
+<p>But the wheels of Byron&rsquo;s destiny were now hurrying.&nbsp;
+Both in the conception and composition of <i>Don Juan</i> he evinced
+an increasing disregard of the world&rsquo;s opinion; and the project
+of <i>The Liberal</i> was still more fatal to his reputation.&nbsp;
+Not only were the invidious eyes of bigotry now eagerly fixed upon his
+conduct, but those of admiration were saddened and turned away from
+him.&nbsp; His principles, which would have been more correctly designated
+as paradoxes, were objects of jealousy to the Tuscan Government; and
+it has been already seen that there was a disorderliness about the Casa
+Lanfranchi which attracted the attention of the police.&nbsp; His situation
+in Pisa became, in consequence, irksome; and he resolved to remove to
+Genoa, an intention which he carried into effect about the end of September,
+1822, at which period his thoughts began to gravitate towards Greece.&nbsp;
+Having attained to the summit of his literary eminence, he grew ambitious
+of trying fortune in another field of adventure.</p>
+<p>In all the migrations of Lord Byron there was ever something grotesque
+and desultory.&nbsp; In moving from Ravenna to Pisa, his caravan consisted
+of seven servants, five carriages, nine horses, a monkey, a bulldog,
+and a mastiff, two cats, three peafowl, a harem of hens, books, saddles,
+and firearms, with a chaos of furniture nor was the exodus less fantastical;
+for in addition to all his own clanjamphry, he had Mr Hunt&rsquo;s miscellaneous
+assemblage of chattels and chattery and little ones.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Genoa</i>&mdash;<i>Change in the Manners of Lord Byron</i>&mdash;<i>Residence
+at the Casa Saluzzi</i>&mdash;<i>&ldquo;The Liberal&rdquo;</i>&mdash;<i>Remarks
+on the Poet&rsquo;s Works in general and on Hunt&rsquo;s Strictures
+on his Character</i></p>
+<p>Previously to their arrival at Genoa, a house had been taken for
+Lord Byron and the Guiccioli in Albaro, a pleasant village on a hill,
+in the vicinity of the city; it was the Casa Saluzzi, and I have been
+told, that during the time he resided there, he seemed to enjoy a more
+uniform and temperate gaiety than in any former period of his life.&nbsp;
+There might have been less of sentiment in his felicity, than when he
+lived at Ravenna, as he seldom wrote poetry, but he appeared to some
+of his occasional visitors, who knew him in London, to have become more
+agreeable and manly.&nbsp; I may add, at the risk of sarcasm for the
+vanity, that in proof of his mellowed temper towards me, besides the
+kind frankness with which he received my friend, as already mentioned,
+he sent me word, by the Earl of Blesinton, that he had read my novel
+of <i>The Entail</i> three times, and thought the old Leddy Grippy one
+of the most living-like heroines he had ever met with.&nbsp; This was
+the more agreeable, as I had heard within the same week, that Sir Walter
+Scott had done and said nearly the same thing.&nbsp; Half the compliment
+from two such men would be something to be proud of.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron&rsquo;s residence at Albaro was separate from that of
+Mr Hunt, and, in consequence, they were more rarely together than when
+domiciled under the same roof as at Pisa.&nbsp; Indeed, by this time,
+if one may take Mr Hunt&rsquo;s own account of the matter, they appear
+to have become pretty well tired of each other.&nbsp; He had found out
+that a peer is, as a friend, but as a plebeian, and a great poet not
+always a high-minded man.&nbsp; His Lordship had, on his part, discovered
+that something more than smartness or ingenuity is necessary to protect
+patronage from familiarity.&nbsp; Perhaps intimate acquaintance had
+also tended to enable him to appreciate, with greater accuracy, the
+meretricious genius and artificial tastes of his copartner in <i>The
+Liberal</i>.&nbsp; It is certain that he laughed at his affected admiration
+of landscapes, and considered his descriptions of scenery as drawn from
+pictures.</p>
+<p>One day, as a friend of mine was conversing with his Lordship at
+the Casa Saluzzi, on the moral impressions of magnificent scenery, he
+happened to remark that he thought the view of the Alps in the evening,
+from Turin, the sublimest scene he had ever beheld.&nbsp; &ldquo;It
+is impossible,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;at such a time, when all the west
+is golden and glowing behind them, to contemplate such vast masses of
+the Deity without being awed into rest, and forgetting such things as
+man and his follies.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Hunt,&rdquo; said his Lordship,
+smiling, &ldquo;has no perception of the sublimity of Alpine scenery;
+he calls a mountain a great impostor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the mean time the materials for the first number of <i>The Liberal</i>
+had been transmitted to London, where the manuscript of <i>The Vision
+of Judgment</i> was already, and something of its quality known.&nbsp;
+All his Lordship&rsquo;s friends were disturbed at the idea of the publication.&nbsp;
+They did not like the connection he had formed with Mr Shelley&mdash;they
+liked still less the copartnery with Mr Hunt.&nbsp; With the justice
+or injustice of these dislikes I have nothing to do.&nbsp; It is an
+historical fact that they existed, and became motives with those who
+deemed themselves the custodiers of his Lordship&rsquo;s fame, to seek
+a dissolution of the association.</p>
+<p>The first number of <i>The Liberal</i>, containing <i>The Vision
+of Judgment</i>, was received soon after the copartnery had established
+themselves at Genoa, accompanied with hopes and fears.&nbsp; Much good
+could not be anticipated from a work which outraged the loyal and decorous
+sentiments of the nation towards the memory of George III.&nbsp; To
+the second number Lord Byron contributed the <i>Heaven and Earth</i>,
+a sacred drama, which has been much misrepresented in consequence of
+its fraternity with <i>Don Juan</i> and <i>The Vision of Judgment</i>;
+for it contains no expression to which religion can object, nor breathes
+a thought at variance with the Genesis.&nbsp; The history of literature
+affords no instance of a condemnation less justifiable, on the plea
+of profanity, than that of this Mystery.&nbsp; That it abounds in literary
+blemishes, both of plan and language, and that there are harsh jangles
+and discords in the verse, is not disputed; but still it abounds in
+a grave patriarchal spirit, and is echo to the oracles of Adam and Melchisedek.&nbsp;
+It may not be worthy of Lord Byron&rsquo;s genius, but it does him no
+dishonour, and contains passages which accord with the solemn diapasons
+of ancient devotion.&nbsp; The disgust which <i>The Vision of Judgment</i>
+had produced, rendered it easy to persuade the world that there was
+impiety in the <i>Heaven and Earth</i>, although, in point of fact,
+it may be described as hallowed with the Scriptural theology of Milton.&nbsp;
+The objections to its literary defects were magnified into sins against
+worship and religion.</p>
+<p><i>The Liberal</i> stopped with the fourth number, I believe.&nbsp;
+It disappointed not merely literary men in general, but even the most
+special admirers of the talents of the contributors.&nbsp; The main
+defect of the work was a lack of knowledge.&nbsp; Neither in style nor
+genius, nor even in general ability, was it wanting; but where it showed
+learning it was not of a kind in which the age took much interest.&nbsp;
+Moreover, the manner and cast of thinking of all the writers in it were
+familiar to the public, and they were too few in number to variegate
+their pages with sufficient novelty.&nbsp; But the main cause of the
+failure was the antipathy formed and fostered against it before it appeared.&nbsp;
+It was cried down, and it must be acknowledged that it did not much
+deserve a better fate.</p>
+<p>With <i>The Liberal</i> I shall close my observations on the works
+of Lord Byron.&nbsp; They are too voluminous to be examined even in
+the brief and sketchy manner in which I have considered those which
+are deemed the principal.&nbsp; Besides, they are not, like them, all
+characteristic of the author, though possessing great similarity in
+style and thought to one another.&nbsp; Nor would such general criticism
+accord with the plan of this work.&nbsp; Lord Byron was not always thinking
+of himself; like other authors, he sometimes wrote from imaginary circumstances;
+and often fancied both situations and feelings which had no reference
+to his own, nor to his experience.&nbsp; But were the matter deserving
+of the research, I am persuaded, that with Mr Moore&rsquo;s work, and
+the poet&rsquo;s original journals, notes, and letters, innumerable
+additions might be made to the list of passages which the incidents
+of his own life dictated.</p>
+<p>The abandonment of <i>The Liberal</i> closed his Lordship&rsquo;s
+connection with Mr Hunt; their friendship, if such ever really existed,
+was ended long before.&nbsp; It is to be regretted that Byron has not
+given some account of it himself; for the manner in which he is represented
+to have acted towards his unfortunate partner, renders another version
+of the tale desirable.&nbsp; At the same time&mdash;and I am not one
+of those who are disposed to magnify the faults and infirmities of Byron&mdash;I
+fear there is no excess of truth in Hunt&rsquo;s opinion of him.&nbsp;
+I judge by an account which Lord Byron gave himself to a mutual friend,
+who did not, however, see the treatment in exactly the same light as
+that in which it appeared to me.&nbsp; But, while I cannot regard his
+Lordship&rsquo;s conduct as otherwise than unworthy, still the pains
+which Mr Hunt has taken to elaborate his character and dispositions
+into every modification of weakness, almost justifies us in thinking
+that he was treated according to his deserts.&nbsp; Byron had at least
+the manners of a gentleman, and though not a judicious knowledge of
+the world, he yet possessed prudence enough not to be always unguarded.&nbsp;
+Mr Hunt informs us, that when he joined his Lordship at Leghorn, his
+own health was impaired, and that his disease rather increased than
+diminished during his residence at Pisa and Genoa; to say nothing of
+the effect which the loss of his friend had on him, and the disappointment
+he suffered in <i>The Liberal</i>; some excuse may, therefore, be made
+for him.&nbsp; In such a condition, misapprehensions were natural; jocularity
+might be mistaken for sarcasm, and caprice felt as insolence.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Lord Byron resolves to join the Greeks</i>&mdash;<i>Arrives at
+Cephalonia</i>&mdash;<i>Greek Factions</i>&mdash;<i>Sends Emissaries
+to the Grecian Chiefs</i>&mdash;<i>Writes to London about the Loan</i>&mdash;<i>To
+Mavrocordato on the Dissensions</i>&mdash;<i>Embarks at lest for Missolonghi</i></p>
+<p>While <i>The Liberal</i> was halting onward to its natural doom,
+the attention of Lord Byron was attracted towards the struggles of Greece.</p>
+<p>In that country his genius was first effectually developed; his name
+was associated with many of its most romantic scenes, and the cause
+was popular with all the educated and refined of Europe.&nbsp; He had
+formed besides a personal attachment to the land, and perhaps many of
+his most agreeable local associations were fixed amid the ruins of Greece,
+and in her desolated valleys.&nbsp; The name is indeed alone calculated
+to awaken the noblest feelings of humanity.&nbsp; The spirit of her
+poets, the wisdom and the heroism of her worthies; whatever is splendid
+in genius, unparalleled in art, glorious in arms, and wise in philosophy,
+is associated in their highest excellence with that beautiful region.</p>
+<p>Had Lord Byron never been in Greece, he was, undoubtedly, one of
+those men whom the resurrection of her spirit was likeliest to interest;
+but he was not also one fitted to do her cause much service.&nbsp; His
+innate indolence, his sedentary habits, and that all-engrossing consideration
+for himself, which, in every situation, marred his best impulses, were
+shackles upon the practice of the stern bravery in himself which he
+has so well expressed in his works.</p>
+<p>It was expected when he sailed for Greece, nor was the expectation
+unreasonable with those who believe imagination and passion to be of
+the same element, that the enthusiasm which flamed so highly in his
+verse was the spirit of action, and would prompt him to undertake some
+great enterprise.&nbsp; But he was only an artist; he could describe
+bold adventures and represent high feeling, as other gifted individuals
+give eloquence to canvas and activity to marble; but he did not possess
+the wisdom necessary for the instruction of councils.&nbsp; I do, therefore,
+venture to say, that in embarking for Greece, he was not entirely influenced
+by such exoterical motives as the love of glory or the aspirations of
+heroism.&nbsp; His laurels had for some time ceased to flourish, the
+sear and yellow, the mildew and decay, had fallen upon them, and he
+was aware that the bright round of his fame was ovalling from the full
+and showing the dim rough edge of waning.</p>
+<p>He was, moreover, tired of the Guiccioli, and again afflicted with
+a desire for some new object with which to be in earnest.&nbsp; The
+Greek cause seemed to offer this, and a better chance for distinction
+than any other pursuit in which he could then engage.&nbsp; In the spring
+of 1823 he accordingly made preparations for transferring himself from
+Genoa to Greece, and opened a correspondence with the leaders of the
+insurrection, that the importance of his adhesion might be duly appreciated.</p>
+<p>Greece, with a fair prospect of ultimate success, was at that time
+as distracted in her councils as ever.&nbsp; Her arms had been victorious,
+but the ancient jealousy of the Greek mind was unmitigated.&nbsp; The
+third campaign had commenced, and yet no regular government had been
+organized; the fiscal resources of the country were neglected: a wild
+energy against the Ottomans was all that the Greeks could depend on
+for continuing the war.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron arrived in Cephalonia about the middle of August, 1823,
+where he fixed his residence for some time.&nbsp; This was prudent,
+but it said nothing for that spirit of enterprise with which a man engaging
+in such a cause, in such a country, and with such a people, ought to
+have been actuated&mdash;especially after Marco Botzaris, one of the
+best and most distinguished of the chiefs, had earnestly urged him to
+join him at Missolonghi.&nbsp; I fear that I may not be able to do justice
+to Byron&rsquo;s part in the affairs of Greece; but I shall try.&nbsp;
+He did not disappoint me, for he only acted as might have been expected,
+from his unsteady energies.&nbsp; Many, however, of his other friends
+longed in vain to hear of that blaze of heroism, by which they anticipated
+that his appearance in the field would be distinguished.</p>
+<p>Among his earliest proceedings was the equipment of forty Suliotes,
+or Albanians, whom he sent to Marco Botzaris to assist in the defence
+of Missolonghi.&nbsp; An adventurer of more daring would have gone with
+them; and when the battle was over, in which Botzaris fell, he transmitted
+bandages and medicines, of which he had brought a large supply from
+Italy, and pecuniary succour, to the wounded.</p>
+<p>This was considerate, but there was too much consideration in all
+that he did at this time, neither in unison with the impulses of his
+natural character, nor consistent with the heroic enthusiasm with which
+the admirers of his poetry imagined he was kindled.</p>
+<p>In the mean time he had offered to advance one thousand dollars a
+month for the succour of Missolonghi and the troops with Marco Botzaris;
+but the government, instead of accepting the offer, intimated that they
+wished previously to confer with him, which he interpreted into a desire
+to direct the expenditure of the money to other purposes.&nbsp; In his
+opinion his Lordship was probably not mistaken; but his own account
+of his feeling in the business does not tend to exalt the magnanimity
+of his attachment to the cause: &ldquo;I will take care,&rdquo; says
+he, &ldquo;that it is for the public cause, otherwise I will not advance
+a para.&nbsp; The opposition say they want to cajole me, and the party
+in power say the others wish to seduce me; so, between the two, I have
+a difficult part to play; however, I will have nothing to do with the
+factions, unless to reconcile them, if possible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is difficult to conceive that Lord Byron, &ldquo;the searcher
+of dark bosoms,&rdquo; could have expressed himself so weakly and with
+such vanity; but the shadow of coming fate had already reached him,
+and his judgment was suffering in the blight that had fallen on his
+reputation.&nbsp; To think of the possibility of reconciling two Greek
+factions, or any factions, implies a degree of ignorance of mankind,
+which, unless it had been given in his Lordship&rsquo;s own writing,
+would not have been credible; and as to having nothing to do with the
+factions, for what purpose went he to Greece, unless it was to take
+a part with one of them?&nbsp; I abstain from saying what I think of
+his hesitation in going to the government instead of sending two of
+his associated adventurers, Mr Trelawney and Mr Hamilton Brown, whom
+he despatched to collect intelligence as to the real state of things,
+substituting their judgment for his own.&nbsp; When the <i>Hercules</i>,
+the ship he chartered to carry him to Greece, weighed anchor, he was
+committed with the Greeks, and everything short of unequivocal folly
+he was bound to have done with and for them.</p>
+<p>His two emissaries or envoys proceeded to Tripolizza, where they
+found Colocotroni seated in the palace of the late vizier, Velhi Pasha,
+in great power; the court-yard and galleries filled with armed men in
+garrison, while there was no enemy at that time in the Morea able to
+come against them!&nbsp; The Greek chieftains, like their classic predecessors,
+though embarked in the same adventure, were personal adversaries to
+each other.&nbsp; Colocotroni spoke of his compeer Mavrocordato in the
+very language of Agamemnon, when he said that he had declared to him,
+unless he desisted from his intrigues, he would mount him on an ass
+and whip him out of the Morea; and that he had only been restrained
+from doing so by the representation of his friends, who thought it would
+injure their common cause.&nbsp; Such was the spirit of the chiefs of
+the factions which Lord Byron thought it not impossible to reconcile!</p>
+<p>At this time Missolonghi was in a critical state, being blockaded
+both by land and sea; and the report of Trelawney to Lord Byron concerning
+it, was calculated to rouse his Lordship to activity.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+have been,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;thirty battles fought and won by the
+late Marco Botzaris, and his gallant tribe of Suliotes, who are shut
+up in Missolonghi.&nbsp; If it fall, Athens will be in danger, and thousands
+of throats cut: a few thousand dollars would provide ships to relieve
+it; a portion of this sum is raised, and I would coin my heart to save
+this key of Greece.&rdquo;&nbsp; Bravely said! but deserving of little
+attention.&nbsp; The fate of Missolonghi could have had no visible effect
+on that of Athens.</p>
+<p>The distance between these two places is more than a hundred miles,
+and Lord Byron was well acquainted with the local difficulties of the
+intervening country; still it was a point to which the eyes of the Greeks
+were all at that time directed; and Mavrocordato, then in correspondence
+with Lord Byron, and who was endeavouring to collect a fleet for the
+relief of the place, induced his Lordship to undertake to provide the
+money necessary for the equipment of the fleet, to the extent of twelve
+thousand pounds.&nbsp; It was on this occasion his Lordship addressed
+a letter to the Greek chiefs, that deserves to be quoted, for the sagacity
+with which it suggests what may be the conduct of the great powers of
+Christendom.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I must frankly confess,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;that unless
+union and order are confirmed, all hopes of a loan will be in vain,
+and all the assistance which the Greeks could expect from abroad, an
+assistance which might be neither trifling nor worthless, will be suspended
+or destroyed; and what is worse, the great powers of Europe, of whom
+no one was an enemy to Greece, but seemed inclined to favour her in
+consenting to the establishment of an independent power, will be persuaded
+that the Greeks are unable to govern themselves, and will, perhaps,
+undertake to arrange your disorders in such a way, as to blast the brightest
+hopes you indulge, and that are indulged by your friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the meantime, Lord Byron was still at the villa he had hired in
+Cephalonia, where his conduct was rather that of a spectator than an
+ally.&nbsp; Colonel Stanhope, in a letter of the 26th of November, describes
+him as having been there about three months, and spending his time exactly
+as every one acquainted with his habits must have expected.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+first six weeks he spent on board a merchant-vessel, and seldom went
+on shore, except on business.&nbsp; Since that period he has lived in
+a little villa in the country, in absolute retirement, Count Gamba (brother
+to the Guiccioli) being his only companion.&rdquo;&mdash;Such, surely,
+was not exactly playing that part in the Greek cause which he had taught
+the world to look for.&nbsp; It is true, that the accounts received
+there of the Greek affairs were not then favourable.&nbsp; Everybody
+concurred in representing the executive government as devoid of public
+virtue, and actuated by avarice or personal ambition.&nbsp; This intelligence
+was certainly not calculated to increase Lord Byron&rsquo;s ardour,
+and may partly excuse the causes of his personal inactivity.&nbsp; I
+say personal, because he had written to London to accelerate the attempt
+to raise a loan, and, at the suggestion of Colonel Stanhope, he addressed
+a letter to Mavrocordato respecting the inevitable consequences of their
+calamitous dissensions.&nbsp; The object of this letter was to induce
+a reconciliation between the rival factions, or to throw the odium,
+of having thwarted the loan, upon the Executive, and thereby to degrade
+the members of it in the opinion of the people.&nbsp; &ldquo;I am very
+uneasy,&rdquo; said his Lordship to the prince, &ldquo;at hearing that
+the dissensions of Greece still continue; and at a moment when she might
+triumph over everything in general, as she has triumphed in part.&nbsp;
+Greece is at present placed between three measures; either to reconquer
+her liberty, or to become a dependence of the sovereigns of Europe,
+or to return to a Turkish province; she has already the choice only
+of these three alternatives.&nbsp; Civil war is but a road which leads
+to the two latter.&nbsp; If she is desirous of the fate of Wallachia
+and the Crimea, she may obtain it <i>to-morrow</i>; if that of Italy,
+<i>the day after</i>.&nbsp; But if she wishes to become <i>truly Greece</i>,
+<i>free and independent</i>, she must resolve <i>to-day</i>, or she
+will never again have the opportunity,&rdquo; etc., etc.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the Greek people became impatient for Lord Byron to come
+among them.&nbsp; They looked forward to his arrival as to the coming
+of a Messiah.&nbsp; Three boats were successively despatched for him
+and two of them returned, one after the other, without him.&nbsp; On
+the 29th of December, 1823, however, his Lordship did at last embark.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Lord Byron&rsquo;s Conversations on Religion with Dr Kennedy</i></p>
+<p>While Lord Byron was hesitating, in the Island of Cephalonia, about
+proceeding to Greece, an occurrence took place, of which much has been
+made.&nbsp; I allude to the acquaintance he formed with a Dr Kennedy,
+the publication of whose conversations with him on religion has attracted
+some degree of public attention.</p>
+<p>This gentleman was originally destined for the Scottish bar, but
+afterwards became a student of medicine, and entering the medical department
+of the army, happened to be stationed in Cephalonia when Lord Byron
+arrived.&nbsp; He appears to have been a man of kind dispositions, possessed
+of a better heart than judgment; in all places wherever his duty bore
+him he took a lively interest in the condition of the inhabitants, and
+was active, both in his official and private capacity, to improve it.&nbsp;
+He had a taste for circulating pious tracts, and zealously co-operated
+in distributing copies of the Scriptures.</p>
+<p>Firmly settled, himself, in a conviction of the truth of Christianity,
+he was eager to make converts to his views of the doctrines; but whether
+he was exactly the kind of apostle to achieve the conversion of Lord
+Byron may, perhaps, be doubted.&nbsp; His sincerity and the disinterestedness
+of his endeavours would secure to him from his Lordship an indulgent
+and even patient hearing.&nbsp; But I fear that without some more effectual
+calling, the arguments he appears to have employed were not likely to
+have made Lord Byron a proselyte.&nbsp; His Lordship was so constituted
+in his mind, and by his temperament, that nothing short of regeneration
+could have made him a Christian, according to the gospel of Dr Kennedy.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron had but loose feelings in religion&mdash;scarcely any.&nbsp;
+His sensibility and a slight constitutional leaning towards superstition
+and omens showed that the sense of devotion was, however, alive and
+awake within him; but with him religion was a sentiment, and the convictions
+of the understanding had nothing whatever to do with his creed.&nbsp;
+That he was deeply imbued with the essence of natural piety; that he
+often felt the power and being of a God thrilling in all his frame,
+and glowing in his bosom, I declare my thorough persuasion; and that
+he believed in some of the tenets and in the philosophy of Christianity,
+as they influence the spirit and conduct of men, I am as little disposed
+to doubt; especially if those portions of his works which only trend
+towards the subject, and which bear the impression of fervour and earnestness,
+may be admitted as evidence.&nbsp; But he was not a member of any particular
+church, and, without a reconstruction of his mind and temperament, I
+venture to say, he could not have become such; not in consequence, as
+too many have represented, of any predilection, either of feeling or
+principle, against Christianity, but entirely owing to an organic peculiarity
+of mind.&nbsp; He reasoned on every topic by instinct, rather than by
+induction or any process of logic; and could never be so convinced of
+the truth or falsehood of an abstract proposition, as to feel it affect
+the current of his actions.&nbsp; He may have assented to arguments,
+without being sensible of their truth; merely because they were not
+objectionable to his feelings at the time.&nbsp; And, in the same manner,
+he may have disputed even fair inferences, from admitted premises, if
+the state of his feelings happened to be indisposed to the subject.&nbsp;
+I am persuaded, nevertheless, that to class him among absolute infidels
+were to do injustice to his memory, and that he has suffered uncharitably
+in the opinion of &ldquo;the rigidly righteous,&rdquo; who, because
+he had not attached himself to any particular sect or congregation,
+assumed that he was an adversary to religion.&nbsp; To claim for him
+any credit, as a pious man, would be absurd; but to suppose he had not
+as deep an interest as other men &ldquo;in his soul&rsquo;s health&rdquo;
+and welfare, was to impute to him a nature which cannot exist.&nbsp;
+Being, altogether, a creature of impulses, he certainly could not be
+ever employed in doxologies, or engaged in the logomachy of churchmen;
+but he had the sentiment which at a tamer age might have made him more
+ecclesiastical.&nbsp; There was as much truth as joke in the expression,
+when he wrote,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>I am myself a moderate Presbyterian.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>A mind constituted like that of Lord Byron, was little susceptible
+of impressions from the arguments of ordinary men.&nbsp; It was necessary
+that Truth, in visiting him, should come arrayed in her solemnities,
+and with Awe and Reverence for her precursors.&nbsp; Acknowledged superiority,
+yea, celebrated wisdom, were indispensable, to bespeak his sincere attention;
+and, without disparagement, it may be fairly said, these were not the
+attributes of Dr Kennedy.&nbsp; On the contrary, there was a taint of
+cant about him&mdash;perhaps he only acted like those who have it&mdash;but
+still he was not exactly the dignitary to command unaffected deference
+from the shrewd and irreverent author of <i>Don Juan</i>.&nbsp; The
+result verified what ought to have been the anticipation.&nbsp; The
+doctor&rsquo;s attempt to quicken Byron to a sense of grace failed;
+but his Lordship treated him with politeness.&nbsp; The history of the
+affair will, however, be more interesting than any reflections which
+it is in my humble power to offer.</p>
+<p>Some of Dr Kennedy&rsquo;s acquaintances wished to hear him explain,
+in &ldquo;a logical and demonstrative manner, the evidences and doctrines
+of Christianity&rdquo;; and Lord Byron, hearing of the intended meeting,
+desired to be present, and was accordingly invited.&nbsp; He attended;
+but was not present at several others which followed; he however intimated
+to the doctor, that he would be glad to converse with him, and the invitation
+was accepted.&nbsp; &ldquo;On religion,&rdquo; says the doctor, &ldquo;his
+Lordship was in general a hearer, proposing his difficulties and objections
+with more fairness than could have been expected from one under similar
+circumstances; and with so much candour, that they often seemed to be
+proposed more for the purpose of procuring information, or satisfactory
+answers, than from any other motive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the first meeting, Dr Kennedy explained, becomingly, his views
+of the subject, and that he had read every work against Christianity
+which fell in his way.&nbsp; It was this consideration which had induced
+him with such confidence to enter upon the discussion, knowing, on the
+one hand, the strength of Christianity, and, on the other, the weakness
+of its assailants.&nbsp; &ldquo;To show you, therefore,&rdquo; said
+the doctor, &ldquo;the grounds on which I demand your attention to what
+I may say on the nature and evidence of Christianity, I shall mention
+the names of some of the authors whose works I have read or consulted.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+When he had mentioned all these names, Lord Byron asked if he had read
+Barrow&rsquo;s and Stillingfleet&rsquo;s works?&nbsp; The doctor replied,
+&ldquo;I have seen them, but I have not read them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After a disquisition, chiefly relative to the history of Christianity,
+Dr Kennedy observed, &ldquo;We must, on all occasions, but more particularly
+in fair and logical discussions with sceptics, or Deists, make a distinction
+between Christianity, as it is found in the Scriptures, and the errors,
+abuses, and imperfections of Christians themselves.&rdquo;&nbsp; To
+this his Lordship remarked, that he always had taken care to make that
+distinction, as he knew enough of Christianity to feel that it was both
+necessary and just.&nbsp; The doctor remarked that the contrary was
+almost universally the case with those who doubted or denied the truth
+of Christianity, and proceeded to illustrate the statement.&nbsp; He
+then read a summary of the fundamental doctrines of Christianity; but
+he had not proceeded far, when he observed signs of impatience in Lord
+Byron, who inquired if these sentiments accorded with the doctor&rsquo;s?
+and being answered they did, and with those of all sound Christians,
+except in one or two minor things, his Lordship rejoined, that he did
+not wish to hear the opinions of others, whose writings he could read
+at any time, but only his own.&nbsp; The doctor then read on till coming
+to the expression &ldquo;grace of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; His Lordship inquired,
+&ldquo;What do you mean by grace?&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The primary and
+fundamental meaning of the word,&rdquo; replied the doctor, somewhat
+surprised at his ignorance (I quote his own language), &ldquo;is favour;
+though it varies according to the context to express that disposition
+of God which leads Him to grant a favour, the action of doing so, or
+the favour itself, or its effects on those who receive it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The arrogance of the use of the term ignorance here, requires no animadversion;
+but to suppose the greatest master, then in existence, of the English
+language, not acquainted with the meaning of the word, when he asked
+to be informed of the meaning attached to it by the individual making
+use of it, gives us some insight into the true character of the teacher.&nbsp;
+The doctor closed the book, as he perceived that Lord Byron, as he says,
+had no distinct conception of many of the words used; and his Lordship
+subjoined, &ldquo;What we want is, to be convinced that the Bible is
+true; because if we can believe that, it will follow as a matter of
+course, that we must believe all the doctrines it contains.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The reply to this was to the effect, that the observation was partly
+just; but though the strongest evidence were produced of the Scriptures
+being the revealed will of God, they (his Lordship and others present)
+would still remain unbelievers, unless they knew and comprehended the
+doctrines contained in the Scriptures.&nbsp; This was not conclusive,
+and Lord Byron replied, that they wished him to prove that the Scriptures
+were the Word of God, which the doctor, with more than apostolic simplicity,
+said that such was his object, but he should like to know what they
+deemed the clearest course to follow with that object in view.&nbsp;
+After some farther conversation&mdash;&ldquo;No other plan was proposed
+by them,&rdquo; says the doctor; and he adds, &ldquo;they had violated
+their engagement to hear me for twelve hours, for which I had stipulated.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This may, perhaps, satisfy the reader as to the quality of the doctor&rsquo;s
+understanding; but as the subject, in its bearing, touches Lord Byron&rsquo;s
+character, I shall proceed a little farther into the marrow of the matter.</p>
+<p>The inculcation being finished for that evening, Lord Byron said,
+that when he was young his mother brought him up strictly; and that
+he had access to a great many theological works, and remembered that
+he was particularly pleased with Barrow&rsquo;s writings, and that he
+also went regularly to church.&nbsp; He declared that he was not an
+infidel, who denied the Scriptures and wished to remain in unbelief;
+on the contrary, he was desirous to believe, as he experienced no happiness
+in having his religious opinions so unsteady and unfixed.&nbsp; But
+he could not, he added, understand the Scriptures.&nbsp; &ldquo;Those
+people who conscientiously believe, I always have respected, and was
+always disposed to trust in them more than in others.&rdquo;&nbsp; A
+desultory conversation then ensued, respecting the language and translations
+of the Scriptures; in the course of which his Lordship remarked, that
+Scott, in his Commentary on the Bible, did not say that it was the devil
+who tempted Eve, nor does the Bible say a word about the devil.&nbsp;
+It is only said that the serpent spoke, and that it was the subtlest
+of all the beasts of the field.&mdash;Will it be said that truth and
+reason were served by Dr Kennedy&rsquo;s <a name="citation319"></a><a href="#footnote319">{319}</a>
+answer?&nbsp; &ldquo;As beasts have not the faculty of speech, the just
+inference is, that the beast was only an instrument made use of by some
+invisible and superior being.&nbsp; The Scriptures accordingly tell
+us, that the devil is the father of lies&mdash;the lie made by the serpent
+to Eve being the first we have on record; they call him also a murderer
+from the beginning, as he was the cause of the sentence of death which
+was pronounced against Adam and all his posterity; and still farther,
+to remove all doubt, and to identify him as the agent who used the serpent
+as an instrument, he is called the serpent&mdash;the devil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lord Byron inquired what the doctor thought of the theory of Warburton,
+that the Jews had no distinct idea of a future state?&nbsp; The doctor
+acknowledged that he had often seen, but had never read <i>The Divine
+Legation</i>.&nbsp; And yet, he added, had Warburton read his Bible
+with more simplicity and attention, he would have enjoyed a more solid
+and honourable fame.</p>
+<p>His Lordship then said, that one of the greatest difficulties he
+had met with was the existence of so much pure and unmixed evil in the
+world, and which he could not reconcile to the idea of a benevolent
+Creator.&nbsp; The doctor set aside the question as to the origin of
+evil; but granted the extensive existence of evil in the universe; to
+remedy which, he said, the Gospel was proclaimed; and after some of
+the customary commonplaces, he ascribed much of the existing evil to
+the slackness of Christians in spreading the Gospel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there not,&rdquo; said his Lordship, &ldquo;some part of
+the New Testament where it appears that the disciples were struck with
+the state of physical evil, and made inquiries into the cause?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;There
+are two passages,&rdquo; was the reply.&nbsp; The disciples inquired,
+when they saw a man who had been born blind, whether it was owing to
+his own or his parents&rsquo; sin?&mdash;and, after quoting the other
+instance, he concludes, that moral and physical evil in individuals
+are not always a judgment or punishment, but are intended to answer
+certain ends in the government of the world.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there not,&rdquo; said his Lordship, &ldquo;a prophecy
+in the New Testament which it is alleged has not been fulfilled, although
+it was declared that the end of the world would come before the generation
+then existing should pass away?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;The prediction,&rdquo;
+said Dr Kennedy, &ldquo;related to the destruction of Jerusalem, which
+certainly took place within the time assigned; though some of the expressions
+descriptive of the signs of that remarkable event are of such a nature
+as to appear to apply to Christ&rsquo;s coming to judge the world at
+the end of time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His Lordship then asked, if the doctor thought that there had been
+fewer wars and persecutions, and less slaughter and misery, in the world
+since the introduction of Christianity than before?&nbsp; The doctor
+answered this by observing, that since Christianity inculcates peace
+and good-will to all men, we must always separate pure religion from
+the abuses of which its professors are guilty.</p>
+<p>Two other opinions were expressed by his Lordship in the conversation.&nbsp;
+The doctor, in speaking of the sovereignty of God, had alluded to the
+similitude of the potter and his clay; for his Lordship said, if he
+were broken in pieces, he would say to the potter, &ldquo;Why do you
+treat me thus?&rdquo;&nbsp; The other was an absurdity.&nbsp; It was&mdash;if
+the whole world were going to hell, he would prefer going with them
+than go alone to heaven.</p>
+<p>Such was the result of the first council of Cephalonia, if one may
+venture the allusion.&nbsp; It is manifest, without saying much for
+Lord Byron&rsquo;s ingenuity, that he was fully a match for the doctor,
+and that he was not unacquainted with the subject under discussion.</p>
+<p>In the next conversation Lord Byron repeated, &ldquo;I have no wish
+to reject Christianity without investigation; on the contrary, I am
+very desirous of believing.&nbsp; But I do not see very much the need
+of a Saviour, nor the utility of prayer.&nbsp; Devotion is the affection
+of the heart, and this I feel.&nbsp; When I view the wonders of creation,
+I bow to the Majesty of Heaven; and when I feel the enjoyments of life,
+I feel grateful to God for having bestowed them upon me.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Upon this some discussion arose, turning chiefly on the passage in the
+third chapter of John, &ldquo;Unless a man is converted, he cannot enter
+the kingdom of Heaven&rdquo;; which naturally led to an explanatory
+interlocutor, concerning new birth, regeneration, etc.; and thence diverged
+into the topics which had been the subject of the former conversation.</p>
+<p>Among other things, Lord Byron inquired, &ldquo;if the doctor really
+thought that the devil appeared before God, as is mentioned in the Book
+of Job, or is it only an allegorical or poetical mode of speaking?&rdquo;&mdash;The
+reply was, &ldquo;I believe it in the strict and literal meaning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If it be received in a literal sense,&rdquo; said his Lordship,
+&ldquo;it gives me a much higher idea of the majesty, power, and wisdom
+of God, to believe that the devils themselves are at His nod, and are
+subject to His control, with as much ease as the elements of nature
+follow the respective laws which His will has assigned them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This notion was characteristic, and the poetical feeling in which
+it originated, when the doctor attempted to explain the doctrine of
+the Manicheans, was still more distinctly developed; for his Lordship
+again expressed how much the belief of the real appearance of Satan,
+to hear and obey the commands of God, added to his views of the grandeur
+and majesty of the Creator.</p>
+<p>This second conversation was more desultory than the first; religion
+was brought in only incidentally, until his Lordship said, &ldquo;I
+do not reject the doctrines of Christianity; I want only sufficient
+proofs of it, to take up the profession in earnest; and I do not believe
+myself to be so bad a Christian as many of them who preach against me
+with the greatest fury&mdash;many of whom I have never seen nor injured.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have only to examine the causes which prevent you&rdquo;
+(from being a true believer), said the doctor, &ldquo;and you will find
+they are futile, and only tend to withhold you from the enjoyment of
+real happiness; which at present it is impossible you can find.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, then, you think me in a very bad way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I certainly think you are,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;and
+this I say, not on my own authority, but on that of the Scriptures.&mdash;Your
+Lordship must be converted, and must be reformed, before anything can
+be said of you, except that you are bad, and in a bad way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; replied his Lordship, &ldquo;I already believe
+in predestination, which I know you believe, and in the depravity of
+the human heart in general, and of my own in particular; thus you see
+there are two points in which we agree.&nbsp; I shall get at the others
+by-and-by.&nbsp; You cannot expect me to become a perfect Christian
+at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And farther his Lordship subjoined:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Predestination appears to me just; from my own reflection
+and experience, I am influenced in a way which is incomprehensible,
+and am led to do things which I never intended; and if there is, as
+we all admit, a Supreme Ruler of the universe; and if, as you say, he
+has the actions of the devils, as well as of his own angels, completely
+at his command, then those influences, or those arrangements of circumstances,
+which lead us to do things against our will, or with ill-will, must
+be also under his directions.&nbsp; But I have never entered into the
+depths of the subject; I have contented myself with believing that there
+is a predestination of events, and that predestination depends on the
+will of God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr Kennedy, in speaking of this second conversation, bears testimony
+to the respectfulness of his Lordship&rsquo;s attention.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+was nothing in his manner which approached to levity, or anything that
+indicated a wish to mock at religion; though, on the other hand, an
+able dissembler would have done and said all that he did, with such
+feelings and intentions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Subsequent to the second conversation, Dr Kennedy asked a gentleman
+who was intimate with Lord Byron, if he really thought his Lordship
+serious in his desire to hear religion explained.&nbsp; &ldquo;Has he
+exhibited any contempt or ridicule at what I have said?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This gentleman assured him that he had never heard Byron allude to the
+subject in any way which could induce him to suspect that he was merely
+amusing himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;But, on the contrary, he always names
+you with respect.&nbsp; I do not, however, think you have made much
+impression on him: he is just the same fellow as before.&nbsp; He says,
+he does not know what religion you are of, for you neither adhere to
+creeds nor councils.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It ought here to be noticed, as showing the general opinion entertained
+of his Lordship with respect to these polemical conversations, that
+the wits of the garrison made themselves merry with what was going on.&nbsp;
+Some of them affected to believe, or did so, that Lord Byron&rsquo;s
+wish to hear Dr Kennedy proceeded from a desire to have an accurate
+idea of the opinions and manners of the Methodists, in order that he
+might make Don Juan become one for a time, and so be enabled to paint
+their conduct with greater accuracy.</p>
+<p>The third conversation took place soon after this comment had been
+made on Lord Byron&rsquo;s conduct.&nbsp; The doctor inquired if his
+Lordship had read any of the religious books he had sent.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+have looked,&rdquo; replied Byron, &ldquo;into Boston&rsquo;s <i>Fourfold
+State</i>, but I have not had time to read it far: I am afraid it is
+too deep for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Although there was no systematic design, on the part of Lord Byron,
+to make Dr Kennedy subservient to any scheme of ridicule; yet it is
+evident that he was not so serious as the doctor so meritoriously desired.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have begun,&rdquo; said his Lordship, &ldquo;very fairly;
+I have given some of your tracts to Fletcher (his valet), who is a good
+sort of man, but still wants, like myself, some reformation; and I hope
+he will spread them among the other servants, who require it still more.&nbsp;
+Bruno, the physician, and Gamba, are busy, reading some of the Italian
+tracts; and I hope it will have a good effect on them.&nbsp; The former
+is rather too decided against it at present; and too much engaged with
+a spirit of enthusiasm for his own profession, to attend to other subjects;
+but we must have patience, and we shall see what has been the result.&nbsp;
+I do not fail to read, from time to time, my Bible, though not, perhaps,
+so much as I should.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you begun to pray that you may understand it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not yet.&nbsp; I have not arrived at that pitch of faith yet;
+but it may come by-and-by.&nbsp; You are in too great a hurry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His Lordship then went to a side-table, on which a great number of
+books were ranged; and, taking hold of an octavo, gave it to the doctor.&nbsp;
+It was <i>Illustrations of the Moral Government of God</i>, by E. Smith,
+M.D., London.&nbsp; &ldquo;The author,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;proves
+that the punishment of hell is not eternal; it will have a termination.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The author,&rdquo; replied the doctor, &ldquo;is, I suppose,
+one of the Socinians; who, in a short time, will try to get rid of every
+doctrine in the Bible.&nbsp; How did your Lordship get hold of this
+book?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They sent it out to me from England, to make a convert of
+me, I suppose.&nbsp; The arguments are strong, drawn from the Bible
+itself; and by showing that a time will come when every intelligent
+creature shall be supremely happy, and eternally so, it expunges that
+shocking doctrine, that sin and misery will for ever exist under the
+government of God, Whose highest attribute is love and goodness.&nbsp;
+To my present apprehension, it would be a most desirable thing, could
+it be proved that, alternately, all created beings were to be happy.&nbsp;
+This would appear to be most consistent with the nature of God.&mdash;I
+cannot yield to your doctrine of the eternal duration of punishment.&mdash;This
+author&rsquo;s opinion is more humane; and, I think, he supports it
+very strongly from Scripture.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The fourth conversation was still more desultory, being carried on
+at table amid company; in the course of it Lord Byron, however, declared
+&ldquo;that he was so much of a believer as to be of opinion that there
+is no contradiction in the Scriptures which cannot be reconciled by
+an attentive consideration and comparison of passages.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is needless to remark that Lord Byron, in the course of these
+conversations, was incapable of preserving a consistent seriousness.&nbsp;
+The volatility of his humour was constantly leading him into playfulness,
+and he never lost an opportunity of making a pun or saying a quaint
+thing.&nbsp; &ldquo;Do you know,&rdquo; said he to the doctor, &ldquo;I
+am nearly reconciled to St Paul; for he says there is no difference
+between the Jews and the Greeks, and I am exactly of the same opinion,
+for the character of both is equally vile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Upon the whole it must be conceded, that whatever was the degree
+of Lord Byron&rsquo;s dubiety as to points of faith and doctrine, he
+could not be accused of gross ignorance, nor described as animated by
+any hostile feeling against religion.</p>
+<p>In this sketch of these conversations, I have restricted myself chiefly
+to those points which related to his Lordship&rsquo;s own sentiments
+and belief.&nbsp; It would have been inconsistent with the concise limits
+of this work to have detailed the controversies.&nbsp; A fair summary
+of what Byron did not believe, what he was disposed to believe but had
+not satisfied himself with the evidence, and what he did believe, seemed
+to be the task I ought to undertake.&nbsp; The result confirmed the
+statement of his Lordship&rsquo;s religious condition, given in the
+preliminary remarks which, I ought to mention, were written before I
+looked into Dr Kennedy&rsquo;s book; and the statement is not different
+from the estimate which the conversations warrant.&nbsp; It is true
+that Lord Byron&rsquo;s part in the conversations is not very characteristic;
+but the integrity of Dr Kennedy is a sufficient assurance that they
+are substantially correct.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLIV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Voyage to Cephalonia</i>&mdash;<i>Letter</i>&mdash;<i>Count Gamba&rsquo;s
+Address</i>&mdash;<i>Grateful Feelings of the Turks</i>&mdash;<i>Endeavours
+of Lord Byron to mitigate the Horrors of the War</i></p>
+<p>Lord Byron, after leaving Argostoli, on the 29th December, 1823,
+the port of Cephalonia, sailed for Zante, where he took on board a quantity
+of specie.&nbsp; Although the distance from Zante to Missolonghi is
+but a few hours&rsquo; sail, the voyage was yet not without adventures.&nbsp;
+Missolonghi, as I have already mentioned, was then blockaded by the
+Turks, and some address was necessary, on that account, to effect an
+entrance, independent of the difficulties, at all times, of navigating
+the canals which intersect the shallows.&nbsp; In the following letter
+to Colonel Stanhope, his Lordship gives an account of what took place.&nbsp;
+It is very characteristic; I shall therefore quote it.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><i>&ldquo;Scrofer</i>, <i>or some such name</i>, <i>on board a<br />Cephaloniate
+Mistice</i>, <i>Dec</i>. 31, 1823.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;MY DEAR STANHOPE,&mdash;We are just arrived here&mdash;that
+is, part of my people and I, with some things, etc., and which it may
+be as well not to specify in a letter (which has a risk of being intercepted,
+perhaps); but Gamba and my horses, negro, steward, and the press, and
+all the committee things, also some eight thousand dollars of mine (but
+never mind, we have more left&mdash;do you understand?) are taken by
+the Turkish frigates; and my party and myself in another boat, have
+had a narrow escape, last night (being close under their stern, and
+hailed, but we would not answer, and bore away) as well as this morning.&nbsp;
+Here we are, with sun and charming weather, within a pretty little port
+enough; but whether our Turkish friends may not send in their boats,
+and take us out (for we have no arms, except two carbines and some pistols,
+and, I suspect, not more than four fighting people on board), is another
+question; especially if we remain long here, since we are blocked out
+of Missolonghi by the direct entrance.&nbsp; You had better send my
+friend George Drake, and a body of Suliotes, to escort us by land or
+by the canals, with all convenient speed.&nbsp; Gamba and our <i>Bombard</i>
+are taken into Patras, I suppose, and we must take a turn at the Turks
+to get them out.&nbsp; But where the devil is the fleet gone? the Greek,
+I mean&mdash;leaving us to get in without the least intimation to take
+heed that the Moslems were out again.&nbsp; Make my respects to Mavrocordato,
+and say that I am here at his disposal.&nbsp; I am uneasy at being here.&nbsp;
+We are very well.&mdash;Yours, etc.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;N. B.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;P.S.&nbsp; The <i>Bombard</i> was twelve miles out when taken;
+at least, so it appeared to us (if taken she actually be, for it is
+not certain), and we had to escape from another vessel that stood right
+in between us and the port.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Colonel Stanhope on receiving this despatch, which was carried to
+him by two of Lord Byron&rsquo;s servants, sent two armed boats, and
+a company of Suliotes, to escort his Lordship to Missolonghi, where
+he arrived on the 5th of January, and was received with military honours,
+and the most enthusiastic demonstrations of popular joy.&nbsp; No mark
+of respect which the Greeks could think of was omitted.&nbsp; The ships
+fired a salute as he passed.&nbsp; Prince Mavrocordato, and all the
+authorities, with the troops and the population, met him on his landing,
+and accompanied him to the house which had been prepared for him, amid
+the shouts of the multitude and the discharge of cannon.</p>
+<p>In the meantime, Count Gamba and his companions being taken before
+Yusuff Pasha at Patras, expected to share the fate of certain unfortunate
+prisoners whom that stern chief had sacrificed the preceding year at
+Prevesa; and their fears would probably have been realised but for the
+intrepid presence of mind displayed by the Count, who, assuming a haughty
+style, accused the Ottoman captain of the frigate of a breach of neutrality,
+in detaining a vessel under English colours, and concluded by telling
+the Pasha that he might expect the vengeance of the British Government
+in thus interrupting a nobleman who was merely on his travels, and bound
+to Calamata.&nbsp; Perhaps, however, another circumstance had quite
+as much influence with the Pasha as this bravery.&nbsp; In the master
+of the vessel he recognised a person who had saved his life in the Black
+Sea fifteen years before, and in consequence not only consented to the
+vessel&rsquo;s release, but treated the whole of the passengers with
+the utmost attention, and even urged them to take a day&rsquo;s shooting
+in the neighbourhood.</p>
+<p>The first measure which his Lordship attempted after his arrival,
+was to mitigate the ferocity with which the war was carried on; one
+of the objects, as he explained to my friend who visited him at Genoa,
+which induced him to embark in the cause.&nbsp; And it happened that
+the very day he reached the town was signalised by his rescuing a Turk
+who had fallen into the hands of some Greek sailors.&nbsp; This man
+was clothed by his Lordship&rsquo;s orders, and sent over to Patras;
+and soon after Count Gamba&rsquo;s release, hearing that four other
+Turks were prisoners in Missolonghi, he requested that they might be
+placed in his hands, which was immediately granted.&nbsp; These he also
+sent to Patras, with a letter addressed to Yusuff, expressing his hope
+that the prisoners thence-forward taken on both sides would be treated
+with humanity.&nbsp; This act was followed by another equally praiseworthy.&nbsp;
+A Greek cruiser having captured a Turkish boat, in which there was a
+number of passengers, chiefly women and children, they were also placed
+at the disposal of his Lordship, at his particular request.&nbsp; Captain
+Parry has given a description of the scene between Lord Byron, and that
+multitude of mothers and children, too interesting to be omitted here.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I was summoned to attend him, and receive his orders that everything
+should be done which might contribute to their comfort.&nbsp; He was
+seated on a cushion at the upper end of the room, the women and children
+were standing before him with their eyes fixed steadily on him; and
+on his right hand was his interpreter, who was extracting from the women
+a narrative of their sufferings.&nbsp; One of them, apparently about
+thirty years of age, possessing great vivacity, and whose manners and
+dress, though she was then dirty and disfigured, indicated that she
+was superior in rank and condition to her companions, was spokeswoman
+for the whole.&nbsp; I admired the good order the others preserved,
+never interfering with the explanation, or interrupting the single speaker.&nbsp;
+I also admired the rapid manner in which the interpreter explained everything
+they said, so as to make it almost appear that there was but one speaker.&nbsp;
+After a short time it was evident that what Lord Byron was hearing affected
+his feelings; his countenance changed, his colour went and came, and
+I thought he was ready to weep.&nbsp; But he had, on all occasions,
+a ready and peculiar knack in turning conversation from any disagreeable
+or unpleasant subject; and he had recourse to this expedient.&nbsp;
+He rose up suddenly, and, turning round on his heel as was his wont,
+he said something to his interpreter, who immediately repeated it to
+the women.&nbsp; All eyes were immediately fixed on me; and one of the
+party, a young and beautiful woman, spoke very warmly.&nbsp; Lord Byron
+seemed satisfied, and said they might retire.&nbsp; The women all slipped
+off their shoes in an instant, and, going up to his Lordship, each in
+succession, accompanied by their children, kissed his hand fervently,
+invoked, in the Turkish manner, a blessing, both on his hand and heart,
+and then quitted the room.&nbsp; This was too much for Lord Byron, and
+he turned his face away to conceal his emotion&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A vessel was then hired, and the whole of them, to the number of
+twenty-four, were sent to Prevesa, provided with every requisite for
+their comfort during the passage.&nbsp; These instances of humanity
+excited a sympathy among the Turks.&nbsp; The Governor of Prevesa thanked
+his Lordship, and assured him that he would take care that equal attention
+should be in future paid to the Greeks, who might fall into his hands.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLV</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Proceedings at Missolonghi</i>&mdash;<i>Byron&rsquo;s Suliote
+Brigade</i>&mdash;<i>Their Insubordination</i>&mdash;<i>Difference with
+Colonel Stanhope</i>&mdash;<i>Imbecility of the Plans for the Independence
+of Greece</i></p>
+<p>The arrival of Lord Byron at Missolonghi was not only hailed as a
+new era in the history of Greece, but as the beginning of a new cycle
+in his own extraordinary life.&nbsp; His natural indolence disappeared;
+the Sardanapalian sloth was thrown off, and he took a station in the
+van of her efforts that bespoke heroic achievement.</p>
+<p>After paying the fleet, which indeed had only come out in the expectation
+of receiving the arrears from the loan he had promised to Mavrocordato,
+he resolved to form a brigade of Suliotes.&nbsp; Five hundred of the
+remains of Marco Botzaris&rsquo;s gallant followers were accordingly
+taken into his pay.&nbsp; &ldquo;He burns with military ardour and chivalry,&rdquo;
+says Colonel Stanhope, &ldquo;and will proceed with the expedition to
+Lepanto.&rdquo;&nbsp; But the expedition was delayed by causes which
+ought to have been foreseen.</p>
+<p>The Suliotes, conceiving that in his Lordship they had found a patron
+whose wealth and generosity were equally boundless, refused to quit
+Missolonghi till their arrears were paid.&nbsp; Savage in the field,
+and untamable in the city, they became insubordinate and mercenary;
+nor was their conduct without excuse.&nbsp; They had long defended the
+town with untired bravery; their families had been driven into it in
+the most destitute condition; and all the hopes that had led them to
+take up arms were still distant and prospective.&nbsp; Besides, Mavrocordato,
+unlike the other Grecian captains, having no troops of his own, affected
+to regard these mercenaries as allies, and was indulgent to their excesses.&nbsp;
+The town was overawed by their turbulence, conflicts took place in the
+street; riot and controversy everywhere prevailed, and blood was shed.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron&rsquo;s undisciplined spirit could ill brook delay; he
+partook of the general vehemence, and lost the power of discerning the
+comparative importance both of measures and things.&nbsp; He was out
+of his element; confusion thickened around him; his irritability grew
+into passion; and there was the rush and haste, the oblivion and alarm
+of fatality in all he undertook and suggested.</p>
+<p>One day, a party of German adventurers reached the fortress so demoralized
+by hardships, that few of them were fit for service.&nbsp; It was intended
+to form a corps of artillery, and these men were destined for that branch
+of the service; but their condition was such, that Stanhope doubted
+the practicability of carrying the measure into effect at that time.&nbsp;
+He had promised to contribute a hundred pounds to their equipment.&nbsp;
+Byron attributed the Colonel&rsquo;s objections to reluctance to pay
+the money; and threatened him if it were refused, with a punishment,
+new in Grecian war&mdash;&mdash;to libel him in the <i>Greek Chronicle</i>!
+a newspaper which Stanhope had recently established.</p>
+<p>It is, however, not easy to give a correct view of the state of affairs
+at that epoch in Missolonghi.&nbsp; All parties seem to have been deplorably
+incompetent to understand the circumstances in which they were placed;&mdash;the
+condition of the Greeks, and that their exigencies required only physical
+and military means.&nbsp; They talked of newspapers and types, and libels,
+as if the moral instruments of civil exhortation were adequate to wrench
+the independence of Greece from the bloody grasp of the Ottoman.&nbsp;
+No wonder that Byron, accustomed to the management only of his own fancies,
+was fluttered amid the conflicts of such riot and controversy.</p>
+<p>His situation at this period was indeed calculated to inspire pity.&nbsp;
+Had he survived, it might, instead of awakening the derision of history,
+have supplied to himself materials for another canto of <i>Don Juan</i>.&nbsp;
+I shall select one instance of his afflictions.</p>
+<p>The captain of a British gun-brig came to Missolonghi to demand an
+equivalent for an Ionian boat, which had been taken in the act of going
+out of the Gulf of Lepanto, with provisions and arms.&nbsp; The Greek
+fleet at that time blockading the port consisted of five brigs, and
+the Turks had fourteen vessels of war in the gulf.&nbsp; The captain
+maintained that the British Government recognised no blockade which
+was not efficient, and that the efficiency depended on the numerical
+superiority of cannon.&nbsp; On this principle he demanded restitution
+of the property.&nbsp; Mavrocordato offered to submit the case to the
+decision of the British Government, but the captain would only give
+him four hours to consider.&nbsp; The indemnification was granted.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron conducted the business in behalf of the captain.&nbsp;
+In the evening, conversing with Stanhope on the subject, the colonel
+said the affair was conducted in a bullying manner.&nbsp; His Lordship
+started into a passion and contended that law, justice, and equity had
+nothing to do with politics.&nbsp; &ldquo;That may be,&rdquo; replied
+Stanhope, &ldquo;but I will never lend myself to injustice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His Lordship then began to attack Jeremy Bentham.&nbsp; The colonel
+complained of such illiberality, as to make personal attacks on that
+gentleman before a friend who held him in high estimation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I only attack his public principles,&rdquo; replied Byron,
+&ldquo;which are mere theories, but dangerous,&mdash;injurious to Spain,
+and calculated to do great mischief in Greece.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Stanhope vindicated Bentham, and said, &ldquo;He possesses a truly
+British heart; but your Lordship, after professing liberal principles
+from boyhood, have, when called upon to act, proved yourself a Turk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What proofs have you of this?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your conduct in endeavouring to crush the press by declaiming
+against it to Mavrocordato, and your general abuse of liberal principles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I had held up my finger,&rdquo; retorted his Lordship,
+&ldquo;I could have crushed the press.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;With all this power,&rdquo; said Stanhope, &ldquo;which by
+the way you never possessed, you went to the prince, and poisoned his
+ear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lord Byron then disclaimed against the liberals.&nbsp; &ldquo;What
+liberals?&rdquo; cried Stanhope.&nbsp; &ldquo;Did you borrow your notions
+of freemen from the Italians?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No: from the Hunts, Cartwrights, and such.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet your Lordship presented Cartwright&rsquo;s Reform
+Bill, and aided Hunt by praising his poetry and giving him the sale
+of your works.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are worse than Wilson,&rdquo; exclaimed Byron, &ldquo;and
+should quit the army.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am a mere soldier,&rdquo; replied Stanhope, &ldquo;but never
+will I abandon my principles.&nbsp; Our principles are diametrically
+opposite, so let us avoid the subject.&nbsp; If Lord Byron acts up to
+his professions, he will be the greatest, if not, the meanest of mankind.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My character,&rdquo; said his Lordship, &ldquo;I hope, does
+not depend on your assertions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No: your genius has immortalized you.&nbsp; The worst will
+not deprive you of fame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Lord Byron then rejoined, &ldquo;Well; you shall see: judge of me
+by my acts.&rdquo;&nbsp; And, bidding the colonel good night, who took
+up the light to conduct him to the passage, he added, &ldquo;What! hold
+up a light to a Turk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such were the Franklins, the Washingtons, and the Hamiltons who undertook
+the regeneration of Greece.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLVI</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>Lord Byron appointed to the command of three thousand Men to besiege
+Lepanto</i>&mdash;<i>The Siege abandoned for a Blockade</i>&mdash;<i>Advanced
+Guard ordered to proceed</i>&mdash;<i>Lord Byron&rsquo;s first Illness</i>&mdash;<i>A
+Riot</i>&mdash;<i>He is urged to leave Greece</i>&mdash;<i>The Expedition
+against Lepanto abandoned</i>&mdash;<i>Byron dejected</i>&mdash;<i>A
+wild diplomatic Scheme</i></p>
+<p>Three days after the conversation related in the preceding chapter,
+Byron was officially placed in the command of about three thousand men,
+destined for the attack on Lepanto; but the Suliotes remained refractory,
+and refused to quit their quarters; his Lordship, however, employed
+an argument which proved effectual.&nbsp; He told them that if they
+did not obey his commands, he would discharge them from his service.</p>
+<p>But the impediments were not to be surmounted; in less than a week
+it was formally reported to Byron that Missolonghi could not furnish
+the means of undertaking the siege of Lepanto, upon which his Lordship
+proposed that Lepanto should be only blockaded by two thousand men.&nbsp;
+Before any actual step was, however, taken, two spies came in with a
+report that the Albanians in garrison at Lepanto had seized the citadel,
+and were determined to surrender it to his Lordship.&nbsp; Still the
+expedition lingered; at last, on the 14th of February, six weeks after
+Byron&rsquo;s arrival at Missolonghi, it was determined that an advanced
+guard of three hundred soldiers, under the command of Count Gamba, should
+march for Lepanto, and that Lord Byron, with the main body, should follow.&nbsp;
+The Suliotes were, however, still exorbitant, calling for fresh contributions
+for themselves and their families.&nbsp; His troubles were increasing,
+and every new rush of the angry tide rose nearer and nearer his heart;
+still his fortitude enabled him to preserve an outward show of equanimity.&nbsp;
+But, on the very day after the determination had been adopted, to send
+forward the advanced guard, his constitution gave way.</p>
+<p>He was sitting in Colonel Stanhope&rsquo;s room, talking jestingly,
+according to his wonted manner, with Captain Parry, when his eyes and
+forehead occasionally discovered that he was agitated by strong feelings.&nbsp;
+On a sudden he complained of a weakness in one of his legs; he rose,
+but finding himself unable to walk, called for assistance; he then fell
+into a violent nervous convulsion, and was placed upon a bed: while
+the fit lasted, his face was hideously distorted; but in the course
+of a few minutes the convulsion ceased, and he began to recover his
+senses: his speech returned, and he soon rose, apparently well.&nbsp;
+During the struggle his strength was preternaturally augmented, and
+when it was over, he behaved with his usual firmness.&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+conceive,&rdquo; says Colonel Stanhope, &ldquo;that this fit was occasioned
+by over-excitement.&nbsp; The mind of Byron is like a volcano; it is
+full of fire, wrath, and combustibles, and when this matter comes to
+be strongly agitated, the explosion is dreadful.&nbsp; With respect
+to the causes which produced the excess of feeling, they are beyond
+my reach, except one great cause, the provoking conduct of the Suliotes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A few days after this distressing incident, a new occurrence arose,
+which materially disturbed the tranquillity of Byron.&nbsp; A Suliote,
+accompanied by the son, a little boy, of Marco Botzaris, with another
+man, walked into the Seraglio, a kind of citadel, which had been used
+as a barrack for the Suliotes, and out of which they had been ejected
+with difficulty, when it was required for the reception of stores and
+the establishment of a laboratory.&nbsp; The sentinel ordered them back,
+but the Suliote advanced.&nbsp; The sergeant of the guard, a German,
+pushed him back.&nbsp; The Suliote struck the sergeant; they closed
+and struggled.&nbsp; The Suliote drew his pistol; the German wrenched
+it from him, and emptied the pan.&nbsp; At this moment a Swedish adventurer,
+Captain Sass, seeing the quarrel, ordered the Suliote to be taken to
+the guard-room.&nbsp; The Suliote would have departed, but the German
+still held him.&nbsp; The Swede drew his sabre; the Suliote his other
+pistol.&nbsp; The Swede struck him with the flat of his sword; the Suliote
+unsheathed his ataghan, and nearly cut off the left arm of his antagonist,
+and then shot him through the head.&nbsp; The other Suliotes would not
+deliver up their comrade, for he was celebrated among them for distinguished
+bravery.&nbsp; The workmen in the laboratory refused to work: they required
+to be sent home to England, declaring, they had come out to labour peaceably,
+and not to be exposed to assassination.&nbsp; These untoward occurrences
+deeply vexed Byron, and there was no mind of sufficient energy with
+him to control the increasing disorders.&nbsp; But, though convinced,
+as indeed he had been persuaded from the beginning in his own mind,
+that he could not render any assistance to the cause beyond mitigating
+the ferocious spirit in which the war was conducted, his pride and honour
+would not allow him to quit Greece.</p>
+<p>In a letter written soon after his first attack, he says, &ldquo;I
+am a good deal better, though of course weakly.&nbsp; The leeches took
+too much blood from my temples the day after, and there was some difficulty
+in stopping it; but I have been up daily, and out in boats or on horseback.&nbsp;
+To-day I have taken a warm bath, and live as temperately as can well
+be, without any liquid but water, and without any animal food&rdquo;;
+then adverting to the turbulences of the Suliotes, he adds, &ldquo;but
+I still hope better things, and will stand by the cause as long as my
+health and circumstances will permit me to be supposed useful.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Subsequently, when pressed to leave the marshy and deleterious air of
+Missolonghi, he replied, still more forcibly, &ldquo;I cannot quit Greece
+while there is a chance of my being of (even supposed) utility.&nbsp;
+There is a stake worth millions such as I am, and while I can stand
+at all I must stand by the cause.&nbsp; While I say this, I am aware
+of the difficulties, and dissensions, and defects of the Greeks themselves;
+but allowance must be made for them by all reasonable people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After this attack of epilepsy Lord Byron because disinclined to pursue
+his scheme against Lepanto.&nbsp; Indeed, it may be said that in his
+circumstances it was impracticable; for although the Suliotes repented
+of their insubordination, they yet had an objection to the service,
+and said &ldquo;they would not fight against stone walls.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+All thought of the expedition was in consequence abandoned, and the
+destinies of poor Byron were hastening to their consummation.&nbsp;
+He began to complain!</p>
+<p>In speaking to Parry one day of the Greek Committee in London, he
+said, &ldquo;I have been grossly ill-treated by the Committee.&nbsp;
+In Italy Mr Blaquiere, their agent, informed me that every requisite
+supply would be forwarded with all despatch.&nbsp; I was disposed to
+come to Greece, but I hastened my departure in consequence of earnest
+solicitations.&nbsp; No time was to be lost, I was told, and Mr Blaquiere,
+instead of waiting on me at his return from Greece, left a paltry note,
+which gave me no information whatever.&nbsp; If ever I meet with him,
+I shall not fail to mention my surprise at his conduct; but it has been
+all of a piece.&nbsp; I wish the acting Committee had had some of the
+trouble which has fallen on me since my arrival here: they would have
+been more prompt in their proceedings, and would have known better what
+the country stood in need of.&nbsp; They would not have delayed the
+supplies a day nor have sent out German officers, poor fellows, to starve
+at Missolonghi, but for my assistance.&nbsp; I am a plain man, and cannot
+comprehend the use of printing-presses to a people who do not read.&nbsp;
+Here the Committee have sent supplies of maps.&nbsp; I suppose that
+I may teach the young mountaineers geography.&nbsp; Here are bugle-horns
+without bugle-men, and it is a chance if we can find anybody in Greece
+to blow them.&nbsp; Books are sent to people who want guns; they ask
+for swords, and the Committee give them the lever of a printing-press.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My future intentions,&rdquo; continued his Lordship, &ldquo;as
+to Greece, may be explained in a few words.&nbsp; I will remain here
+until she is secure against the Turks, or till she has fallen under
+their power.&nbsp; All my income shall be spent in her service; but,
+unless driven by some great necessity, I will not touch a farthing of
+the sum intended for my sister&rsquo;s children.&nbsp; Whatever I can
+accomplish with my income, and my personal exertions, shall be cheerfully
+done.&nbsp; When Greece is secure against external enemies, I will leave
+the Greeks to settle their government as they like.&nbsp; One service
+more, and an eminent service it will be, I think I may perform for them.&nbsp;
+You, Parry, shall have a schooner built for me, or I will buy a vessel;
+the Greeks shall invest me with the character of their ambassador, or
+agent: I will go to the United States, and procure that free and enlightened
+government to set the example of recognising the federation of Greece
+as an independent state.&nbsp; This done, England must follow the example,
+and then the fate of Greece will be permanently fixed, and she will
+enter into all her rights as a member of the great commonwealth of Christian
+Europe.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This intention will, to all who have ever looked at the effects of
+fortune on individuals, sufficiently show that Byron&rsquo;s part in
+the world was nearly done.&nbsp; Had he lived, and recovered health,
+it might have proved that he was then only in another lunation: his
+first was when he passed from poesy to heroism.&nbsp; But as it was,
+it has only served to show that his mind had suffered by the decadency
+of his circumstances, and how much the idea of self-exaltation weakly
+entered into all his plans.&nbsp; The business was secondary to the
+style in which it should be performed.&nbsp; Building a vessel! why
+think of the conveyance at all? as if the means of going to America
+were so scarce that there might be difficulty in finding them.&nbsp;
+But his mind was passing from him.&nbsp; The intention was unsound&mdash;a
+fantasy&mdash;a dream of bravery in old age&mdash;begotten of the erroneous
+supposition that the cabinets of Christendom would remain unconcerned
+spectators of the triumph of the Greeks, or even of any very long procrastination
+of their struggle.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLVII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>The last Illness and Death of Lord Byron</i>&mdash;<i>His last
+Poem</i></p>
+<p>Although in common parlance it may be said, that after the attack
+of epilepsy Lord Byron&rsquo;s general health did not appear to have
+been essentially impaired, the appearance was fallacious; his constitution
+had received a vital shock, and the exciting causes, vexation and confusion,
+continued to exasperate his irritation.</p>
+<p>On the 1st of March he complained of frequent vertigoes, which made
+him feel as though he were intoxicated; but no effectual means were
+taken to remove these portentous symptoms; and he regularly enjoyed
+his daily exercise, sometimes in boats, but oftener on horseback.&nbsp;
+His physician thought him convalescent; his mind, however, was in constant
+excitement; it rested not even during sleep.</p>
+<p>On the 9th of April, while sailing, he was overtaken by the rain,
+and got very wet: on his return home, he changed the whole of his dress;
+but he had been too long in his wet clothes, and the stamina of his
+constitution being shaken could not withstand the effects.&nbsp; In
+little more than two hours he was seized with rigors, fever, and rheumatic
+pains.&nbsp; During the night, however, he slept in his accustomed manner,
+but in the morning he complained of pains and headache; still this did
+not prevent him from going out on horseback in the afternoon&mdash;it
+was for the last time.</p>
+<p>On returning home, he observed to one of the servants that the saddle
+was not perfectly dry, from having been so wet the day before, and that
+he thought it had made him worse.&nbsp; He soon after became affected
+with almost constant shivering; sudorific medicines were administered,
+and blood-letting proposed; but though he took the drugs, he objected
+to the bleeding.&nbsp; Another physician was in consequence called in
+to see if the rheumatic fever could be appeased without the loss of
+blood.&nbsp; This doctor approved of the medicines prescribed, and was
+not opposed to the opinion that bleeding was necessary, but said it
+might be deferred till the next day.</p>
+<p>On the 11th he seemed rather better, but the medicines had produced
+no effect.</p>
+<p>On the 12th he was confined to bed with fever, and his illness appeared
+to be increasing; he was very low, and complained of not having had
+any sleep during the night; but the medical gentlemen saw no cause for
+alarm.&nbsp; Dr Bruno, his own physician, again proposed bleeding; the
+stranger still, however, thought it might be deferred, and Byron himself
+was opposed to it.&nbsp; &ldquo;You will die,&rdquo; said Dr Bruno,
+&ldquo;if you do not allow yourself to be bled.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;You
+wish to get the reputation of curing my disease,&rdquo; replied his
+Lordship, &ldquo;that is why you tell me it is so serious; but I will
+not permit you to bleed me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the 13th he sat up for some time, after a sleepless night, and
+still complained of pain in his bones and head.</p>
+<p>On the 14th he also left his bed.&nbsp; The fever was less, but the
+debility greater, and the pain in his head was undiminished.&nbsp; His
+valet became alarmed, and, doubtful of the skill of the doctors around
+him, entreated permission to send to Zante for an English physician
+of greater reputation.&nbsp; His Lordship desired him to consult the
+others, which he did, and they told him there was no occasion to call
+in any person, as they hoped all would be well in a few days.</p>
+<p>His Lordship now began to doubt if his disease was understood, and
+remarked repeatedly in the course of this day, that he was sure the
+doctors did not understand it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then, my Lord,&rdquo; said
+Fletcher, his valet, &ldquo;have other advice.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;They
+tell me,&rdquo; rejoined his Lordship, &ldquo;that it is only a common
+cold, which you know I have had a thousand times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am sure you never had one of so serious a nature.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I never had.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fletcher then went again to the physicians, and repeated his solicitations
+that the doctor in Zante might be sent for; but was again assured that
+his master would be better in two or three days.</p>
+<p>At length, the doctor who had too easily consented to the postponement
+of the bleeding, seeing the prognostications of Dr Bruno more and more
+confirmed, urged the necessity of bleeding, and of no longer delay.&nbsp;
+This convinced Byron, who was himself greatly averse to the operation,
+that they did not understand his case.</p>
+<p>On the 15th his Lordship felt the pains abated, insomuch that he
+was able to transact some business.</p>
+<p>On the 16th he wrote a letter, but towards the evening he became
+worse, and a pound of blood was taken from him.&nbsp; Still the disease
+was making progress, but Dr Bruno did not yet seem much alarmed; on
+the contrary, he thought were more blood removed his recovery was certain.&nbsp;
+Fletcher immediately told his master, urging him to comply with the
+doctor&rsquo;s wishes.&nbsp; &ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; said his Lordship,
+&ldquo;they know nothing about my disorder, but&rdquo;&mdash;and he
+stretched out his arm&mdash;&ldquo;here, take my arm and do whatever
+you like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the 17th his countenance was changed; during the night he had
+become weaker, and a slight degree of delirium, in which he raved of
+fighting, had come on.&nbsp; In the course of the day he was bled twice;
+in the morning, and at two in the afternoon.&nbsp; The bleeding, on
+both occasions, was followed by fainting fits.&nbsp; On this day he
+said to Fletcher, &ldquo;I cannot sleep, and you well know I have not
+been able to sleep for more than a week.&nbsp; I know that a man can
+only be a certain time without sleep, and then he must go mad, without
+anyone being able to save him; and I would ten times sooner shoot myself
+than be mad, for I am not afraid of dying&mdash;I am more fit to die
+than people think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the 18th his Lordship first began to dread that his fate was inevitable.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I fear,&rdquo; said he to Fletcher, &ldquo;you and Tita will
+be ill by sitting up constantly, night and day&rdquo;; and he appeared
+much dissatisfied with his medical treatment.&nbsp; Fletcher again entreated
+permission to send for Dr Thomas, at Zante: &ldquo;Do so, but be quick,&rdquo;
+said his Lordship, &ldquo;I am sorry I did not let you do so before,
+as I am sure they have mistaken my disease; write yourself, for I know
+they would not like to see other doctors here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not a moment was lost in executing the order, and on Fletcher informing
+the doctors what he had done, they said it was right, as they now began
+to be afraid themselves.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have you sent?&rdquo; said his
+Lordship, when Fletcher returned to him.&mdash;&ldquo;I have, my Lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You have done well, for I should like to know what is the
+matter with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>From that time his Lordship grew every hour weaker and weaker; and
+he had occasional flights of delirium.&nbsp; In the intervals he was,
+however, quite self-possessed, and said to Fletcher, &ldquo;I now begin
+to think I am seriously ill; and in case I should be taken off suddenly,
+I wish to give you several directions, which I hope you will be particular
+in seeing executed.&rdquo;&nbsp; Fletcher in reply expressed his hope
+that he would live many years, and execute them himself.&nbsp; &ldquo;No,
+it is now nearly over; I must tell you all without losing a moment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shall I go, my Lord, and fetch pen, ink, and paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, my God! no, you will lose too much time, and I have it
+not to spare, for my time is now short.&nbsp; Now pay attention&mdash;you
+will be provided for.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I beseech you, my Lord, to proceed with things of more consequence.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His Lordship then added,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, my poor dear child!&mdash;my dear Ada!&mdash;My God! could
+I have but seen her&mdash;give her my blessing&mdash;and my dear sister
+Augusta, and her children&mdash;and you will go to Lady Byron and say&mdash;tell
+her everything&mdash;you are friends with her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He appeared to be greatly affected at this moment.&nbsp; His voice
+failed, and only words could be caught at intervals; but he kept muttering
+something very seriously for some time, and after raising his voice,
+said,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fletcher, now if you do not execute every order which I have
+given you, I will torment you hereafter, if possible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This little speech is the last characteristic expression which escaped
+from the dying man.&nbsp; He knew Fletcher&rsquo;s superstitious tendency,
+and it cannot be questioned that the threat was the last feeble flash
+of his prankfulness.&nbsp; The faithful valet replied in consternation
+that he had not understood one word of what his Lordship had been saying.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh! my God!&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;then all is lost,
+for it is now too late!&nbsp; Can it be possible you have not understood
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my Lord; but I pray you to try and inform me once more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can I? it is now too late, and all is over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not our will, but God&rsquo;s be done,&rdquo; said Fletcher,
+and his Lordship made another effort, saying,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, not mine be done&mdash;but I will try&rdquo;&mdash;and
+he made several attempts to speak, but could only repeat two or three
+words at a time; such as,</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My wife! my child&mdash;my sister&mdash;you know all&mdash;you
+must say all&mdash;you know my wishes&rdquo;&mdash;&mdash;The rest was
+unintelligible.</p>
+<p>A consultation with three other doctors, in addition to the two physicians
+in regular attendance, was now held; and they appeared to think the
+disease was changing from inflammatory diathesis to languid, and ordered
+stimulants to be administered.&nbsp; Dr Bruno opposed this with the
+greatest warmth; and pointed out that the symptoms were those, not of
+an alteration in the disease, but of a fever flying to the brain, which
+was violently attacked by it; and, that the stimulants they proposed
+would kill more speedily than the disease itself.&nbsp; While, on the
+other hand, by copious bleeding, and the medicines that had been taken
+before, he might still be saved.&nbsp; The other physicians, however,
+were of a different opinion; and then Dr Bruno declared he would risk
+no farther responsibility.&nbsp; Peruvian bark and wine were then administered.&nbsp;
+After taking these stimulants, his Lordship expressed a wish to sleep.&nbsp;
+His last words were, &ldquo;I must sleep now&rdquo;; and he composed
+himself accordingly, but never awoke again.</p>
+<p>For four-and-twenty hours he continued in a state of lethargy, with
+the rattles occasionally in his throat.&nbsp; At six o&rsquo;clock in
+the morning of the 19th, Fletcher, who was watching by his bed-side,
+saw him open his eyes and then shut them, apparently without pain or
+moving hand or foot.&nbsp; &ldquo;My God!&rdquo; exclaimed the faithful
+valet, &ldquo;I fear his Lordship is gone.&rdquo;&nbsp; The doctors
+felt his pulse&mdash;it was so.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>After life&rsquo;s fitful fever he sleeps well.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>But the fittest dirge is his own last lay, written on the day he
+completed his thirty-sixth year, soon after his arrival at Missolonghi,
+when his hopes of obtaining distinction in the Greek cause were, perhaps,
+brightest; and yet it breathes of dejection almost to boding.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&rsquo;Tis time this heart should be unmoved<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Since
+others it has ceased to move,<br />Yet though I cannot be beloved<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Still
+let me love.</p>
+<p>My days are in the yellow leaf,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The flowers
+and fruits of love are gone,<br />The worm, the canker, and the grief<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are
+mine alone.</p>
+<p>The fire that in my bosom preys<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Is like to
+some volcanic isle,<br />No torch is kindled at its blaze&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+funeral pile.</p>
+<p>The hope, the fears, the jealous care,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Th&rsquo;
+exalted portion of the pain,<br />And power of love I cannot share,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But
+wear the chain.</p>
+<p>But &rsquo;tis not here&mdash;it is not here&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Such
+thoughts should shake my soul; nor now<br />Where glory seals the hero&rsquo;s
+bier,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or binds his brow.</p>
+<p>The sword, the banner, and the field,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Glory
+and Greece around us see;<br />The Spartan borne upon his shield<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Was
+not more free.</p>
+<p>Awake! not Greece&mdash;she is awake&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Awake
+my spirit! think through whom<br />My life-blood tastes its parent lake,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+then strike home!</p>
+<p>I tread reviving passions down,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Unworthy manhood!&nbsp;
+Unto thee<br />Indifferent should the smile or frown<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of
+beauty be.</p>
+<p>If thou regrett&rsquo;st thy youth, why live?<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The
+land of honourable death<br />Is here, up to the field and give<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Away
+thy breath.</p>
+<p>Seek out&mdash;less often sought than found&mdash;<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A
+soldier&rsquo;s grave&mdash;for thee the best<br />Then look around,
+and choose thy ground,<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And
+take thy rest.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLVIII</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>The funeral Preparations and final Obsequies</i></p>
+<p>The death of Lord Byron was felt by all Greece as a national misfortune.&nbsp;
+From the moment it was known that fears were entertained for his life,
+the progress of the disease was watched with the deepest anxiety and
+sorrow.&nbsp; On Easter Sunday, the day on which he expired, thousands
+of the inhabitants of Missolonghi had assembled on the spacious plain
+on the outside of the city, according to an ancient custom, to exchange
+the salutations of the morning; but on this occasion it was remarked,
+that instead of the wonted congratulations, &ldquo;Christ is risen,&rdquo;
+they inquired first, &ldquo;How is Lord Byron?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the event being made known, the Provisional Government assembled,
+and a proclamation, of which the following is a translation, was issued</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Provisional Government of Western Greece.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;The day of festivity and rejoicing is turned into one of sorrow
+and morning.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Lord Noel Byron departed this life at eleven <a name="citation354"></a><a href="#footnote354">{354}</a>
+o&rsquo;clock last night, after an illness of ten days.&nbsp; His death
+was caused by an inflammatory fever.&nbsp; Such was the effect of his
+Lordship&rsquo;s illness on the public mind, that all classes had forgotten
+their usual recreations of Easter, even before the afflicting event
+was apprehended.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The loss of this illustrious individual is undoubtedly to
+be deplored by all Greece; but it must be more especially a subject
+of lamentation at Missolonghi, where his generosity has been so conspicuously
+displayed, and of which he had become a citizen, with the ulterior determination
+of participating in all the dangers of the war.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Everybody is acquainted with the beneficent acts of his Lordship,
+and none can cease to hail his name as that of a real benefactor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Until, therefore, the final determination of the national
+Government be known, and by virtue of the powers with which it has been
+pleased to invest me, I hereby decree:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;1st.&nbsp; To-morrow morning, at daylight, thirty-seven minute-guns
+shall be fired from the grand battery, being the number which corresponds
+with the age of the illustrious deceased.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;2nd.&nbsp; All the public offices, even to the tribunals,
+are to remain closed for three successive days.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;3rd.&nbsp; All the shops, except those in which provisions
+or medicines are sold, will also be shut; and it is strictly enjoined
+that every species of public amusement and other demonstrations of festivity
+at Easter may be suspended.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;4th.&nbsp; A general mourning will be observed for twenty-one
+days.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;5th.&nbsp; Prayers and a funeral service are to be offered
+up in all the churches.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A.&nbsp; MAVROCORDATOS.<br />&ldquo;GEORGIS PRAIDIS, <i>Secretary.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Given at Missolonghi, this 19th of April, 1824.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>The funeral oration was written and delivered on the occasion, by
+Spiridion Tricoupi, and ordered by the government to be published.&nbsp;
+No token of respect that reverence could suggest, or custom and religion
+sanction, was omitted by the public authorities, nor by the people.</p>
+<p>Lord Byron having omitted to give directions for the disposal of
+his body, some difficulty arose about fixing the place of interment.&nbsp;
+But after being embalmed it was sent, on the 2nd of May, to Zante, where
+it was met by Lord Sidney Osborne, a relation of Lord Byron, by marriage&mdash;the
+secretary of the senate at Corfu.</p>
+<p>It was the wish of Lord Sidney Osborne, and others, that the interment
+should be in Zante; but the English opposed the proposition in the most
+decided manner.&nbsp; It was then suggested that it should be conveyed
+to Athens, and deposited in the temple of Theseus, or in the Parthenon&mdash;Ulysses
+Odysseus, the Governor of Athens, having sent an express to Missolonghi,
+to solicit the remains for that city; but, before it arrived, they were
+already in Zante, and a vessel engaged to carry them to London, in the
+expectation that they would be deposited in Westminster Abbey or St
+Paul&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>On the 25th of May, the <i>Florida</i> left Zante with the body,
+which Colonel Stanhope accompanied; and on the 29th of June it reached
+the Downs.&nbsp; After the ship was cleared from quarantine, Mr Hobhouse,
+with his Lordship&rsquo;s solicitor, received it from Colonel Stanhope,
+and, by their directions it was removed to the house of Sir E. Knatchbull,
+in Westminster, where it lay in state several days.</p>
+<p>The dignitaries of the Abbey and of St Paul&rsquo;s having, as it
+was said, refused permission to deposit the remains in either of these
+great national receptacles of the illustrious dead, it was determined
+that they should be laid in the ancestral vault of the Byrons.&nbsp;
+The funeral, instead of being public, was in consequence private, and
+attended by only a few select friends to Hucknell, a small village about
+two miles from Newstead Abbey, in the church of which the vault is situated;
+there the coffin was deposited, in conformity to a wish early expressed
+by the poet, that his dust might be mingled with his mother&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+Yet, unmeet and plain as the solemnity was in its circumstances, a remarkable
+incident gave it interest and distinction: as it passed along the streets
+of London, a sailor was observed walking uncovered near the hearse,
+and on being asked what he was doing there, replied that he had served
+Lord Byron in the Levant, and had come to pay his last respects to his
+remains; a simple but emphatic testimony to the sincerity of that regard
+which his Lordship often inspired, and which with more steadiness might
+always have commanded.</p>
+<p>The coffin bears the following inscription:</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>LORD BYRON, OF ROCHDALE,<br />BORN IN LONDON, JANUARY 22, 1788;<br />DIED
+AT MISSOLONGHI,<br />IN WESTERN GREECE,<br />APRIL 19, 1824.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p>Beside the coffin the urn is placed, the inscription on which is,</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines1"><br /></div>
+<p><i>Within this urn are deposited the heart</i>, <i>brains</i>, <i>etc.
+of the deceased Lord Byron.</i></p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<h2>CHAPTER XLIX</h2>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p><i>The Character of Lord Byron</i></p>
+<p>My endeavour, in the foregoing pages, has been to give a general
+view of the intellectual character of Lord Byron.&nbsp; It did not accord
+with the plan to enter minutely into the details of his private life,
+which I suspect was not greatly different from that of any other person
+of his rank, not distinguished for particular severity of manners.&nbsp;
+In some respects his Lordship was, no doubt, peculiar.&nbsp; He possessed
+a vivacity of sensibility not common, and talents of a very extraordinary
+kind.&nbsp; He was also distinguished for superior personal elegance,
+particularly in his bust.&nbsp; The style and character of his head
+were universally admired; but perhaps the beauty of his physiognomy
+has been more highly spoken of than it really merited.&nbsp; Its chief
+grace consisted, when he was in a gay humour, of a liveliness which
+gave a joyous meaning to every articulation of the muscles and features:
+when he was less agreeably disposed, the expression was morose to a
+very repulsive degree.&nbsp; It is, however, unnecessary to describe
+his personal character here.&nbsp; I have already said enough incidentally,
+to explain my full opinion of it.&nbsp; In the mass, I do not think
+it was calculated to attract much permanent affection or esteem.&nbsp;
+In the detail it was the reverse: few men possessed more companionable
+qualities than Lord Byron did occasionally; and seen at intervals in
+those felicitous moments, I imagine it would have been difficult to
+have said, that a more interesting companion had been previously met
+with.&nbsp; But he was not always in that fascinating state of pleasantry:
+he was as often otherwise; and no two individuals could be more distinct
+from each other than Byron in his gaiety and in his misanthropy.&nbsp;
+This antithesis was the great cause of that diversity of opinion concerning
+him, which has so much divided his friends and adversaries.&nbsp; Of
+his character as a poet there can be no difference of opinion, but only
+a difference in the degree of admiration.</p>
+<p>Excellence in talent, as in every other thing, is comparative; but
+the universal republic of letters will acknowledge, that in energy of
+expression and liveliness of imagery Byron had no equal in his own time.&nbsp;
+Doubts, indeed, may be entertained, if in these high qualities even
+Shakspeare himself was his superior.</p>
+<p>I am not disposed to think with many of those who rank the genius
+of Byron almost as supreme, that he has shown less skill in the construction
+of his plots, and the development of his tales, than might have been
+expected from one so splendidly endowed; for it has ever appeared to
+me that he has accomplished in them everything he proposed to attain,
+and that in this consists one of his great merits.&nbsp; His mind, fervid
+and impassioned, was in all his compositions, except <i>Don Juan</i>,
+eagerly fixed on the catastrophe.&nbsp; He ever held the goal full in
+view, and drove to it in the most immediate manner.&nbsp; By this straightforward
+simplicity all the interest which intricacy excites was of necessity
+disregarded.&nbsp; He is therefore not treated justly when it is supposed
+that he might have done better had he shown more art: the wonder is,
+that he should have produced such magnificent effects with so little.&nbsp;
+He could not have made the satiated and meditative Harold so darkling
+and excursive, so lone, &ldquo;aweary,&rdquo; and misanthropical, had
+he treated him as the hero of a scholastic epic.&nbsp; The might of
+the poet in such creations lay in the riches of his diction and in the
+felicity with which he described feelings in relation to the aspect
+of scenes amid the reminiscences with which the scenes themselves were
+associated.</p>
+<p>If in language and plan he be so excellent, it may be asked why should
+he not be honoured with that pre-eminent niche in the temple which so
+many in the world have by suffrage assigned to him?&nbsp; Simply because,
+with all the life and beauty of his style, the vigour and truth of his
+descriptions, the boldness of his conceptions, and the reach of his
+vision in the dark abysses of passion, Lord Byron was but imperfectly
+acquainted with human nature.&nbsp; He looked but on the outside of
+man.&nbsp; No characteristic action distinguishes one of his heroes
+from another, nor is there much dissimilarity in their sentiments; they
+have no individuality; they stalk and pass in mist and gloom, grim,
+ghastly, and portentous, mysterious shadows, entities of the twilight,
+weird things like the sceptred effigies of the unborn issue of Banquo.</p>
+<p>Combined with vast power, Lord Byron possessed, beyond all question,
+the greatest degree of originality of any poet of this age.&nbsp; In
+this rare quality he has no parallel in any age.&nbsp; All other poets
+and inventive authors are measured in their excellence by the accuracy
+with which they fit sentiments appropriate not only to the characters
+they create, but to the situations in which they place them: the works
+of Lord Byron display the opposite to this, and with the most extraordinary
+splendour.&nbsp; He endows his creations with his own qualities; he
+finds in the situations in which he places them only opportunities to
+express what he has himself felt or suffered; and yet he mixes so much
+probability in the circumstances, that they are always eloquently proper.&nbsp;
+He does everything, as it were, the reverse of other poets; in the air
+and sea, which have been in all times the emblems of change and the
+similitudes of inconstancy, he has discovered the very principles of
+permanency.&nbsp; The ocean in his view, not by its vastness, its unfathomable
+depths, and its limitless extent, becomes an image of deity, by its
+unchangeable character!</p>
+<p>The variety of his productions present a prodigious display of power.&nbsp;
+In his short career he has entitled himself to be ranked in the first
+class of the British poets for quantity alone.&nbsp; By <i>Childe Harold</i>,
+and his other poems of the same mood, he has extended the scope of feeling,
+made us acquainted with new trains of association, awakened sympathies
+which few suspected themselves of possessing; and he has laid open darker
+recesses in the bosom than were previously supposed to exist.&nbsp;
+The deep and dreadful caverns of remorse had long been explored but
+he was the first to visit the bottomless pit of satiety.</p>
+<p>The delineation of that Promethean fortitude which defied conscience,
+as he has shown it in <i>Manfred</i>, is his greatest achievement.&nbsp;
+The terrific fables of Marlowe and of Goethe, in their respective versions
+of the legend of Faustus, had disclosed the utmost writhings which remorse
+in the fiercest of its torments can express; but what are those Laocoon
+agonies to the sublime serenity of <i>Manfred</i>.&nbsp; In the power,
+the originality, and the genius combined, of that unexampled performance,
+Lord Byron has placed himself on an equality with Milton.&nbsp; The
+Satan of the <i>Paradise Lost</i> is animated by motives, and dignified
+by an eternal enterprise.&nbsp; He hath purposes of infinite prospect
+to perform, and an immeasurable ambition to satisfy.&nbsp; Manfred hath
+neither purpose nor ambition, nor any desire that seeks gratification.&nbsp;
+He hath done a deed which severs him from hope, as everlastingly as
+the apostacy with the angels has done Satan.&nbsp; He acknowledges no
+contrition to bespeak commiseration, he complains of no wrong to justify
+revenge, for he feels none; he despises sympathy, and almost glories
+in his perdition.</p>
+<p>The creation of such a character is in the sublimest degree of originality;
+to give it appropriate thoughts and feelings required powers worthy
+of the conception; and to make it susceptible of being contemplated
+as within the scope and range of human sympathy, places Byron above
+all his contemporaries and antecedents.&nbsp; Milton has described in
+Satan the greatest of human passions, supernatural attributes, directed
+to immortal intents, and stung with inextinguishable revenge; but Satan
+is only a dilatation of man.&nbsp; Manfred is loftier, and worse than
+Satan; he has conquered punishment, having within himself a greater
+than hell can inflict.&nbsp; There is a fearful mystery in this conception;
+it is only by solemnly questioning the spirits that lurk within the
+dark metaphors in which Manfred expresses himself, that the hideous
+secrets of the character can be conjectured.</p>
+<p>But although in intellectual power, and in creative originality,
+Byron is entitled to stand on the highest peak of the mountain, his
+verse is often so harsh, and his language so obscure, that in the power
+of delighting he is only a poet of the second class.&nbsp; He had all
+the talent and the means requisite to embody his conceptions in a manner
+worthy of their might and majesty; his treasury was rich in everything
+rare and beautiful for illustration, but he possessed not the instinct
+requisite to guide him in the selection of the things necessary to the
+inspiration of delight:&mdash;he could give his statue life and beauty,
+and warmth, and motion, and eloquence, but not a tuneful voice.</p>
+<p>Some curious metaphysicians, in their subtle criticism, have said
+that <i>Don Juan</i> was but the bright side of <i>Childe Harold</i>,
+and that all its most brilliant imagery was similar to that of which
+the dark and the shadows were delineated in his other works.&nbsp; It
+may be so.&nbsp; And, without question, a great similarity runs through
+everything that has come from the poet&rsquo;s pen; but it is a family
+resemblance, the progeny are all like one another; but where are those
+who are like them?&nbsp; I know of no author in prose or rhyme, in the
+English language, with whom Byron can be compared.&nbsp; Imitators of
+his manner there will be often and many, but he will ever remain one
+of the few whom the world acknowledges are alike supreme, and yet unlike
+each other&mdash;epochal characters, who mark extraordinary periods
+in history.</p>
+<p>Raphael is the only man of pre-eminence whose career can be compared
+with that of Byron; at an age when the genius of most men is but in
+the dawning, they had both attained their meridian of glory, and they
+both died so early, that it may be said they were lent to the world
+only to show the height to which the mind may ascend when time shall
+be allowed to accomplish the full cultivations of such extraordinary
+endowments.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines2"><br /><br /></div>
+<p>Footnotes:</p>
+<p><a name="footnote156"></a><a href="#citation156">{156}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>I.e</i>., against.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote241"></a><a href="#citation241">{241}</a>&nbsp;
+The sacrifice of Antinous by the emperor Adrian is supposed to have
+been a sacrifice of that kind.&nbsp; Dion Cassius says, that Adrian,
+who had applied himself to the study of magic, being deceived by the
+principles of that black Egyptian art into a belief that he would be
+rendered immortal by a voluntary human sacrifice to the infernal gods,
+accepted the offer which Antinous made of himself.</p>
+<p>I have somewhere met with a commentary on this to the following effect:</p>
+<p>The Christian religion, in the time of Adrian, was rapidly spreading
+throughout the empire, and the doctrine of gaining eternal life by the
+expiatory offering was openly preached.&nbsp; The Egyptian priests,
+who pretended to be in possession of all knowledge, affected to be acquainted
+with this mystery also.&nbsp; The emperor was, by his taste and his
+vices, attached to the old religion; but he trembled at the truths disclosed
+by the revelation; and in this state of apprehension, his thirst of
+knowledge and his fears led him to consult the priests of Osiris and
+Isis; and they impressed him with a notion that the infernal deities
+would be appeased by the sacrifice of a human being dear to him, and
+who loved him so entirely as to lay down his life for him.&nbsp; Antinous,
+moved by the anxiety of his imperial master, when all others had refused,
+consented to sacrifice himself; and it was for this devotion that Adrian
+caused his memory to be hallowed with religious rites.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote255"></a><a href="#citation255">{255}</a>&nbsp;
+Mr Hobhouse has assured me that this information is not correct.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I happen,&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;to know that Lord Byron offered
+to give the Guiccioli a sum of money outright, or to leave it to her
+by his will.&nbsp; I also happen to know that the lady would not hear
+of any such present or provision; for I have a letter in which Lord
+Byron extols her disinterestedness, and mentions that he has met with
+a similar refusal from another female.&nbsp; As to the being in destitute
+circumstances, I cannot believe it; for Count Gamba, her brother, whom
+I knew very well after Lord Byron&rsquo;s death, never made any complaint
+or mention of such a fact: add to which, I know a maintenance was provided
+for her by her husband, in consequence of a law process, before the
+death of Lord Byron.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote291a"></a><a href="#citation291a">{291a}</a>&nbsp;
+The calenture.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote291b"></a><a href="#citation291b">{291b}</a>&nbsp;
+The Swiss air.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote319"></a><a href="#citation319">{319}</a>&nbsp;
+The doctor evidently makes a mistake in confounding Sir William Hamilton
+with Sir William Drummond.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote354"></a><a href="#citation354">{354}</a>&nbsp;
+Fletcher&rsquo;s narrative implies at six that evening, the 19th April,
+1824.</p>
+<div class="GutenbergBlankLines3"><br /><br /><br /></div>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF LORD BYRON***</p>
+<pre>
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+</html>
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+++ b/10421.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Life of Lord Byron, by John Galt
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Life of Lord Byron
+
+Author: John Galt
+
+Release Date: December 9, 2003 [eBook #10421]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: US-ASCII
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIFE OF LORD BYRON***
+
+
+Transcribed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+THE LIFE OF LORD BYRON
+
+
+
+
+AUTHOR'S INTRODUCTION
+
+
+
+My present task is one of considerable difficulty; but I have long
+had a notion that some time or another it would fall to my lot to
+perform it. I approach it, therefore, without apprehension, entirely
+in consequence of having determined, to my own satisfaction, the
+manner in which the biography of so singular and so richly endowed a
+character as that of the late Lord Byron should be treated, but still
+with no small degree of diffidence; for there is a wide difference
+between determining a rule for one's self, and producing, according
+to that rule, a work which shall please the public.
+
+It has happened, both with regard to the man and the poet, that from
+the first time his name came before the public, there has been a
+vehement and continual controversy concerning him; and the chief
+difficulties of the task arise out of the heat with which the adverse
+parties have maintained their respective opinions. The circumstances
+in which he was placed, until his accession to the title and estates
+of his ancestors, were not such as to prepare a boy that would be
+father to a prudent or judicious man. Nor, according to the history
+of his family, was his blood without a taint of sullenness, which
+disqualified him from conciliating the good opinion of those whom his
+innate superiority must have often prompted him to desire for
+friends. He was branded, moreover, with a personal deformity; and
+the grudge against Nature for inflicting this defect not only deeply
+disturbed his happiness, but so generally affected his feelings as to
+embitter them with a vindictive sentiment, so strong as, at times, to
+exhibit the disagreeable energy of misanthropy. This was not all.
+He enjoyed high rank, and was conscious of possessing great talents;
+but his fortune was inadequate to his desires, and his talents were
+not of an order to redeem the deficiencies of fortune. It likewise
+so happened that while indulged by his only friend, his mother, to an
+excess that impaired the manliness of his character, her conduct was
+such as in no degree to merit the affection which her wayward
+fondness inspired.
+
+It is impossible to reflect on the boyhood of Byron without regret.
+There is not one point in it all which could, otherwise than with
+pain, have affected a young mind of sensibility. His works bear
+testimony, that, while his memory retained the impressions of early
+youth, fresh and unfaded, there was a gloom and shadow upon them,
+which proved how little they had been really joyous.
+
+The riper years of one so truly the nursling of pride, poverty, and
+pain, could only be inconsistent, wild, and impassioned, even had his
+temperament been moderate and well disciplined. But when it is
+considered that in addition to all the awful influences of these
+fatalities, for they can receive no lighter name, he possessed an
+imagination of unbounded capacity--was inflamed with those
+indescribable feelings which constitute, in the opinion of many, the
+very elements of genius--fearfully quick in the discernment of the
+darker qualities of character--and surrounded by temptation--his
+career ceases to surprise. It would have been more wonderful had he
+proved an amiable and well-conducted man, than the questionable and
+extraordinary being who has alike provoked the malice and interested
+the admiration of the world.
+
+Posterity, while acknowledging the eminence of his endowments, and
+lamenting the habits which his unhappy circumstances induced, will
+regard it as a curious phenomenon in the fortunes of the individual,
+that the progress of his fame as a poet should have been so similar
+to his history as a man.
+
+His first attempts, though displaying both originality and power,
+were received with a contemptuous disdain, as cold and repulsive as
+the penury and neglect which blighted the budding of his youth. The
+unjust ridicule in the review of his first poems, excited in his
+spirit a discontent as inveterate as the feeling which sprung from
+his deformity: it affected, more or less, all his conceptions to
+such a degree that he may be said to have hated the age which had
+joined in the derision, as he cherished an antipathy against those
+persons who looked curiously at his foot. Childe Harold, the most
+triumphant of his works, was produced when the world was kindliest
+disposed to set a just value on his talents; and his latter
+productions, in which the faults of his taste appear the broadest,
+were written when his errors as a man were harshest in the public
+voice.
+
+These allusions to the incidents of a life full of contrarieties, and
+a character so strange as to be almost mysterious, sufficiently show
+the difficulties of the task I have undertaken. But the course I
+intend to pursue will relieve me from the necessity of entering, in
+any particular manner, upon those debatable points of his personal
+conduct which have been so much discussed. I shall consider him, if
+I can, as his character will be estimated when contemporary surmises
+are forgotten, and when the monument he has raised to himself is
+contemplated for its beauty and magnificence, without suggesting
+recollections of the eccentricities of the builder.
+
+JOHN GALT.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+
+Ancient Descent--Pedigree--Birth--Troubles of his Mother--Early
+Education--Accession to the Title
+
+The English branch of the family of Byron came in with William the
+Conqueror; and from that era they have continued to be reckoned among
+the eminent families of the kingdom, under the names of Buron and
+Biron. It was not until the reign of Henry II. that they began to
+call themselves Byron, or de Byron.
+
+Although for upwards of seven hundred years distinguished for the
+extent of their possessions, it does not appear, that, before the
+time of Charles I., they ranked very highly among the heroic families
+of the kingdom.
+
+Erneis and Ralph were the companions of the Conqueror; but
+antiquaries and genealogists have not determined in what relation
+they stood to each other. Erneis, who appears to have been the more
+considerable personage of the two, held numerous manors in the
+counties of York and Lincoln. In the Domesday Book, Ralph, the
+direct ancestor of the poet, ranks high among the tenants of the
+Crown, in Notts and Derbyshire; in the latter county he resided at
+Horestan Castle, from which he took his title. One of the lords of
+Horestan was a hostage for the payment of the ransom of Richard Coeur
+de Lion; and in the time of Edward I., the possessions of his
+descendants were augmented by the addition of the Manor of Rochdale,
+in Lancashire. On what account this new grant was given has not been
+ascertained; nor is it of importance that it should be.
+
+In the wars of the three Edwards, the de Byrons appeared with some
+distinction; and they were also of note in the time of Henry V. Sir
+John Byron joined Henry VII. on his landing at Milford, and fought
+gallantly at the battle of Bosworth, against Richard III., for which
+he was afterwards appointed Constable of Nottingham Castle and Warden
+of Sherwood Forest. At his death, in 1488, he was succeeded by Sir
+Nicholas, his brother, who, at the marriage of Arthur, Prince of
+Wales, in 1501, was made one of the Knights of the Bath.
+
+Sir Nicholas died in 1540, leaving an only son, Sir John Byron, whom
+Henry VIII. made Steward of Manchester and Rochdale, and Lieutenant
+of the Forest of Sherwood. It was to him that, on the dissolution of
+the monasteries, the church and priory of Newstead, in the county of
+Nottingham, together with the manor and rectory of Papelwick, were
+granted. The abbey from that period became the family seat, and
+continued so until it was sold by the poet.
+
+Sir John Byron left Newstead and his other possessions to John Byron,
+whom Collins and other writers have called his fourth, but who was in
+fact his illegitimate son. He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth in
+1579, and his eldest son, Sir Nicholas, served with distinction in
+the wars of the Netherlands. When the great rebellion broke out
+against Charles I., he was one of the earliest who armed in his
+defence. After the battle of Edgehill, where he courageously
+distinguished himself, he was made Governor of Chester, and gallantly
+defended that city against the Parliamentary army. Sir John Byron,
+the brother and heir of Sir Nicholas, was, at the coronation of James
+I., made a Knight of the Bath. By his marriage with Anne, the eldest
+daughter of Sir Richard Molyneux, he had eleven sons and a daughter.
+The eldest served under his uncle in the Netherlands; and in the year
+1641 was appointed by King Charles I., Governor of the Tower of
+London. In this situation he became obnoxious to the refractory
+spirits in the Parliament, and was in consequence ordered by the
+Commons to answer at the bar of their House certain charges which the
+sectaries alleged against him. But he refused to leave his post
+without the king's command; and upon' this the Commons applied to the
+Lords to join them in a petition to the king to remove him. The
+Peers rejected the proposition.
+
+On the 24th October, 1643, Sir John Byron was created Lord Byron of
+Rochdale, in the county of Lancaster, with remainder of the title to
+his brothers, and their male issue, respectively. He was also made
+Field-Marshal-General of all his Majesty's forces in Worcestershire,
+Cheshire, Shropshire and North Wales: nor were these trusts and
+honours unwon, for the Byrons, during the Civil War, were eminently
+distinguished. At the battle of Newbury, seven of the brothers were
+in the field, and all actively engaged.
+
+Sir Richard, the second brother of the first lord, was knighted by
+Charles I. for his conduct at the battle of Edgehill, and appointed
+Governor of Appleby Castle, in Westmorland, and afterwards of Newark,
+which he defended with great honour. Sir Richard, on the death of
+his brother, in 1652, succeeded to the peerage, and died in 1679.
+
+His eldest son, William, the third lord, married Elizabeth, the
+daughter of Viscount Chaworth, of Ireland, by whom he had five sons,
+four of whom died young. William, the fourth lord, his son, was
+Gentleman of the Bedchamber to Prince George of Denmark, and married,
+for his first wife, a daughter of the Earl of Bridgewater, who died
+eleven weeks after their nuptials. His second wife was the daughter
+of the Earl of Portland, by whom he had three sons, who all died
+before their father. His third wife was Frances, daughter of Lord
+Berkley, of Stratton, from whom the poet was descended. Her eldest
+son, William, born in 1722, succeeded to the family honours on the
+death of his father in 1736. He entered the naval service, and
+became a lieutenant under Admiral Balchen. In the year 1763 he was
+made Master of the Staghounds; and in 1765, he was sent to the Tower,
+and tried before the House of Peers, for killing his relation and
+neighbour, Mr Chaworth, in a duel fought at the Star and Garter
+Tavern, in Pall-mall.
+
+This Lord William was naturally boisterous and vindictive. It
+appeared in evidence that he insisted on fighting with Mr Chaworth in
+the room where the quarrel commenced. They accordingly fought
+without seconds by the dim light of a single candle; and, although Mr
+Chaworth was the more skilful swordsman of the two, he received a
+mortal wound; but he lived long enough to disclose some particulars
+of the rencounter, which induced the coroner's jury to return a
+verdict of wilful murder, and Lord Byron was tried for the crime.
+
+The trial took place in Westminster Hall, and the public curiosity
+was so great that the Peers' tickets of admission were publicly sold
+for six guineas each. It lasted two days, and at the conclusion he
+was unanimously pronounced guilty of manslaughter. On being brought
+up for judgment he pleaded his privilege and was discharged. It was
+to this lord that the poet succeeded, for he died without leaving
+issue.
+
+His brother, the grandfather of the poet, was the celebrated "Hardy
+Byron"; or, as the sailors called him, "Foulweather Jack," whose
+adventures and services are too well known to require any notice
+here. He married the daughter of John Trevannion, Esq., of Carhais,
+in the county of Cornwall, by whom he had two sons and three
+daughters. John, the eldest, and the father of the poet, was born in
+1751, educated at Westminster School, and afterwards placed in the
+Guards, where his conduct became so irregular and profligate that his
+father, the admiral, though a good-natured man, discarded him long
+before his death. In 1778 he acquired extraordinary eclat by the
+seduction of the Marchioness of Caermarthen, under circumstances
+which have few parallels in the licentiousness of fashionable life.
+The meanness with which he obliged his wretched victim to supply him
+with money would have been disgraceful to the basest adulteries of
+the cellar or garret. A divorce ensued, the guilty parties married;
+but, within two years after, such was the brutal and vicious conduct
+of Captain Byron, that the ill-fated lady died literally of a broken
+heart, after having given birth to two daughters, one of whom still
+survives.
+
+Captain Byron then married Miss Catharine Gordon, of Gight, a lady of
+honourable descent, and of a respectable fortune for a Scottish
+heiress, the only motive which this Don Juan had for forming the
+connection. She was the mother of the poet.
+
+Although the Byrons have for so many ages been among the eminent
+families of the realm, they have no claim to the distinction which
+the poet has set up for them as warriors in Palestine, even though he
+says--
+
+
+Near Ascalon's tow'rs John of Horestan slumbers;
+
+
+for unless this refers to the Lord of Horestan, who was one of the
+hostages for the ransom of Richard I., it will not be easy to
+determine to whom he alludes; and it is possible that the poet has no
+other authority for this legend than the tradition which he found
+connected with two groups of heads on the old panels of Newstead.
+Yet the account of them is vague and conjectural, for it was not
+until ages after the Crusades that the abbey came into the possession
+of the family; and it is not probable that the figures referred to
+any transactions in Palestine, in which the Byrons were engaged, if
+they were put up by the Byrons at all. They were probably placed in
+their present situation while the building was in possession of the
+Churchmen.
+
+One of the groups, consisting of a female and two Saracens, with eyes
+earnestly fixed upon her, may have been the old favourite
+ecclesiastical story of Susannah and the elders; the other, which
+represents a Saracen with a European female between him and a
+Christian soldier, is, perhaps, an ecclesiastical allegory,
+descriptive of the Saracen and the Christian warrior contending for
+the liberation of the Church. These sort of allegorical stories were
+common among monastic ornaments, and the famous legend of St George
+and the Dragon is one of them.
+
+Into the domestic circumstances of Captain and Mrs Byron it would be
+impertinent to institute any particular investigation. They were
+exactly such as might be expected from the sins and follies of the
+most profligate libertine of the age.
+
+The fortune of Mrs Byron, consisting of various property, and
+amounting to about 23,500 pounds, was all wasted in the space of two
+years; at the end of which the unfortunate lady found herself in
+possession of only 150 pounds per annum.
+
+Their means being thus exhausted she accompanied her husband in the
+summer of 1786 to France, whence she returned to England at the close
+of the year 1787, and on the 22nd of January, 1788, gave birth, in
+Holles Street, London, to her first and only child, the poet. The
+name of Gordon was added to that of his family in compliance with a
+condition imposed by will on whomever should become the husband of
+the heiress of Gight. The late Duke of Gordon and Colonel Duff, of
+Fetteresso, were godfathers to the child.
+
+In the year 1790 Mrs Byron took up her residence in Aberdeen, where
+she was soon after joined by Captain Byron, with whom she lived in
+lodgings in Queen Street; but their reunion was comfortless, and a
+separation soon took place. Still their rupture was not final, for
+they occasionally visited and drank tea with each other. The Captain
+also paid some attention to the boy, and had him, on one occasion, to
+stay with him for a night, when he proved so troublesome that he was
+sent home next day.
+
+Byron himself has said that he passed his boyhood at Marlodge, near
+Aberdeen; but the statement is not correct; he visited, with his
+mother, occasionally among their friends, and among other places
+passed some time at Fetteresso, the seat of his godfather, Colonel
+Duff. In 1796, after an attack of the scarlet fever, he passed some
+time at Ballater, a summer resort for health and gaiety, about forty
+miles up the Dee from Aberdeen. Although the circumstances of Mrs
+Byron were at this period exceedingly straitened, she received a
+visit from her husband, the object of which was to extort more money;
+and he was so far successful, that she contrived to borrow a sum,
+which enabled him to proceed to Valenciennes, where in the following
+year he died, greatly to her relief and the gratification of all who
+were connected with him.
+
+By her advances to Captain Byron, and the expenses she incurred in
+furnishing the flat of the house she occupied after his death, Mrs
+Byron fell into debt to the amount of 300 pounds, the interest on
+which reduced her income to 135 pounds; but, much to her credit, she
+contrived to live without increasing her embarrassments until the
+death of her grandmother, when she received 1122 pounds, a sum which
+had been set apart for the old gentlewoman's jointure, and which
+enabled her to discharge her pecuniary obligations.
+
+Notwithstanding the manner in which this unfortunate lady was treated
+by her husband, she always entertained for him a strong affection
+insomuch that, when the intelligence of his death arrived, her grief
+was loud and vehement. She was indeed a woman of quick feelings and
+strong passions; and probably it was by the strength and sincerity of
+her sensibility that she retained so long the affection of her son,
+towards whom it cannot be doubted that her love was unaffected. In
+the midst of the neglect and penury to which she was herself
+subjected, she bestowed upon him all the care, the love and
+watchfulness of the tenderest mother.
+
+In his fifth year, on the 19th of November, 1792, she sent him to a
+day-school, where she paid about five shillings a quarter, the common
+rate of the respectable day-schools at that time in Scotland. It was
+kept by a Mr Bowers, whom Byron has described as a dapper, spruce
+person, with whom he made no progress. How long he remained with Mr
+Bowers is not mentioned, but by the day-book of the school it was at
+least twelve months; for on the 19th of November of the following
+year there is an entry of a guinea having been paid for him.
+
+From this school he was removed and placed with a Mr Ross, one of the
+ministers of the city churches, and to whom he formed some
+attachment, as he speaks of him with kindness, and describes him as a
+devout, clever little man of mild manners, good-natured, and
+painstaking. His third instructor was a serious, saturnine, kind
+young man, named Paterson, the son of a shoemaker, but a good scholar
+and a rigid Presbyterian. It is somewhat curious in the record which
+Byron has made of his early years to observe the constant endeavour
+with which he, the descendant of such a limitless pedigree and great
+ancestors, attempts to magnify the condition of his mother's
+circumstances.
+
+Paterson attended him until he went to the grammar-school, where his
+character first began to be developed; and his schoolfellows, many of
+whom are alive, still recollect him as a lively, warm-hearted, and
+high-spirited boy, passionate and resentful, but withal affectionate
+and companionable; this, however, is an opinion given of him after he
+had become celebrated; for a very different impression has
+unquestionably remained among some who carry their recollections back
+to his childhood. By them he has been described as a malignant imp:
+was often spoken of for his pranks by the worthy housewives of the
+neighbourhood, as "Mrs Byron's crockit deevil," and generally
+disliked for the deep vindictive anger he retained against those with
+whom he happened to quarrel.
+
+By the death of William, the fifth lord, he succeeded to the estates
+and titles in the year 1798; and in the autumn of that year, Mrs
+Byron, with her son and a faithful servant of the name of Mary Gray,
+left Aberdeen for Newstead. Previously to their departure, Mrs Byron
+sold the furniture of her humble lodging, with the exception of her
+little plate and scanty linen, which she took with her, and the whole
+amount of the sale did not yield SEVENTY-FIVE POUNDS.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+
+Moral Effects of local Scenery; a Peculiarity in Taste--Early Love--
+Impressions and Traditions
+
+Before I proceed to the regular narrative of the character and
+adventures of Lord Byron, it seems necessary to consider the probable
+effects of his residence, during his boyhood, in Scotland. It is
+generally agreed, that while a schoolboy in Aberdeen, he evinced a
+lively spirit, and sharpness enough to have equalled any of his
+schoolfellows, had he given sufficient application. In the few
+reminiscences preserved of his childhood, it is remarkable that he
+appears in this period, commonly of innocence and playfulness, rarely
+to have evinced any symptom of generous feeling. Silent rages, moody
+sullenness, and revenge are the general characteristics of his
+conduct as a boy.
+
+He was, undoubtedly, delicately susceptible of impressions from the
+beauties of nature, for he retained recollections of the scenes which
+interested his childish wonder, fresh and glowing, to his latest
+days; nor have there been wanting plausible theories to ascribe the
+formation of his poetical character to the contemplation of those
+romantic scenes. But, whoever has attended to the influential causes
+of character will reject such theories as shallow, and betraying
+great ignorance of human nature. Genius of every kind belongs to
+some innate temperament; it does not necessarily imply a particular
+bent, because that may possibly be the effect of circumstances: but,
+without question, the peculiar quality is inborn, and particular to
+the individual. All hear and see much alike; but there is an
+undefinable though wide difference between the ear of the musician,
+or the eye of the painter, compared with the hearing and seeing
+organs of ordinary men; and it is in something like that difference
+in which genius consists. Genius is, however, an ingredient of mind
+more easily described by its effects than by its qualities. It is as
+the fragrance, independent of the freshness and complexion of the
+rose; as the light on the cloud; as the bloom on the cheek of beauty,
+of which the possessor is unconscious until the charm has been seen
+by its influence on others; it is the internal golden flame of the
+opal; a something which may be abstracted from the thing in which it
+appears, without changing the quality of its substance, its form, or
+its affinities. I am not, therefore, disposed to consider the idle
+and reckless childhood of Byron as unfavourable to the development of
+his genius; but, on the contrary, inclined to think, that the
+indulgence of his mother, leaving him so much to the accidents of
+undisciplined impression, was calculated to cherish associations
+which rendered them, in the maturity of his powers, ingredients of
+spell that ruled his memory.
+
+It is singular, and I am not aware it has been before noticed, that
+with all his tender and impassioned apostrophes to beauty and love,
+Byron has in no instance, not even in the freest passages of Don
+Juan, associated either the one or the other with sensual images.
+The extravagance of Shakespeare's Juliet, when she speaks of Romeo
+being cut after his death into stars, that all the world may be in
+love with night, is flame and ecstasy compared to the icy
+metaphysical glitter of Byron's amorous allusions. The verses
+beginning with
+
+
+She walks in beauty like the light
+Of eastern climes and starry skies,
+
+
+are a perfect example of what I have conceived of his bodiless
+admiration of beauty, and objectless enthusiasm of love. The
+sentiment itself is unquestionably in the highest mood of the
+intellectual sense of beauty; the simile is, however, anything but
+such an image as the beauty of woman would suggest. It is only the
+remembrance of some impression or imagination of the loveliness of a
+twilight applied to an object that awakened the same abstract general
+idea of beauty. The fancy which could conceive in its passion the
+charms of a female to be like the glow of the evening, or the general
+effect of the midnight stars, must have been enamoured of some
+beautiful abstraction, rather than aught of flesh and blood. Poets
+and lovers have compared the complexion of their mistresses to the
+hues of the morning or of the evening, and their eyes to the dewdrops
+and the stars; but it has no place in the feelings of man to think of
+female charms in the sense of admiration which the beauties of the
+morning or the evening awaken. It is to make the simile the
+principal. Perhaps, however, it may be as well to defer the
+criticism to which this peculiar characteristic of Byron's amatory
+effusions gives rise, until we shall come to estimate his general
+powers as a poet. There is upon the subject of love, no doubt, much
+beautiful composition. throughout his works; but not one line in all
+the thousands which shows a sexual feeling of female attraction--all
+is vague and passionless, save in the delicious rhythm of the verse.
+
+But these remarks, though premature as criticisms, are not uncalled
+for here, even while we are speaking of a child not more than ten
+years old. Before Byron had attained that age, he describes himself
+as having felt the passion. Dante is said as early as nine years old
+to have fallen in love with Beatrice; Alfieri, who was himself
+precocious in the passion, considered such early sensibility to be an
+unerring sign of a soul formed for the fine arts; and Canova used to
+say that he was in love when but five years old. But these
+instances, however, prove nothing. Calf-love, as it is called in the
+country, is common; and in Italy it may arise earlier than in the
+bleak and barren regions of Lochynagar. This movement of juvenile
+sentiment is not, however, love--that strong masculine avidity,
+which, in its highest excitement, is unrestrained, by the laws alike
+of God and man. In truth, the feeling of this kind of love is the
+very reverse of the irrepressible passion it is a mean shrinking,
+stealthy awe, and in no one of its symptoms, at least in none of
+those which Byron describes, has it the slightest resemblance to that
+bold energy which has prompted men to undertake the most improbable
+adventures.
+
+He was not quite eight years old, when, according to his own account,
+he formed an impassioned attachment to Mary Duff; and he gives the
+following account of his recollection of her, nineteen years
+afterwards.
+
+"I have been thinking lately a good deal of Mary Duff. How very odd
+that I should have been so devotedly fond of that girl, at an age
+when I could neither feel passion, nor know the meaning of the word
+and the effect! My mother used always to rally me about this
+childish amour, and at last, many years after, when I was sixteen,
+she told me one day, 'O Byron, I have had a letter from Edinburgh,
+and your old sweetheart, Mary Duff, is married to Mr C***.' And what
+was my answer? I really cannot explain or account for my feelings at
+that moment, but they nearly threw me into convulsions, and alarmed
+my mother so much, that after I grew better she generally avoided the
+subject--to ME--and contented herself with telling it to all her
+acquaintance." But was this agitation the effect of natural feeling,
+or of something in the manner in which his mother may have told the
+news? He proceeds to inquire. "Now what could this be? I had never
+seen her since her mother's faux pas at Aberdeen had been the cause
+of her removal to her grandmother's at Banff. We were both the
+merest children. I had, and have been, attached fifty times since
+that period; yet I recollect all we said to each other, all our
+caresses, her features, my restlessness, sleeplessness, my tormenting
+my mother's maid to write for me to her, which she at last did to
+quiet me. Poor Nancy thought I was wild, and, as I could not write
+for myself, became my secretary. I remember too our walks, and the
+happiness of sitting by Mary, in the children's apartment, at their
+house, not far from the Plainstones, at Aberdeen, while her lesser
+sister, Helen, played with the doll, and we sat gravely making love
+in our own way.
+
+"How the deuce did all this occur so early? Where could it
+originate? I certainly had no sexual ideas for years afterward, and
+yet my misery, my love for that girl, were so violent, that I
+sometimes doubt if I have ever been really attached since. Be that
+as it may, hearing of her marriage, several years afterward, was as a
+thunderstroke. It nearly choked me, to the horror of my mother, and
+the astonishment and almost incredulity of everybody; and it is a
+phenomenon in my existence, for I was not eight years old, which has
+puzzled and will puzzle me to the latest hour of it. And, lately, I
+know not why, the RECOLLECTION (NOT the attachment) has recurred as
+forcibly as ever: I wonder if she can have the least remembrance of
+it or me, or remember pitying her sister Helen, for not having an
+admirer too. How very pretty is the perfect image of her in my
+memory. Her dark brown hair and hazel eyes, her very dress--I should
+be quite grieved to see her now. The reality, however beautiful,
+would destroy, or at least confuse, the features of the lovely Peri,
+which then existed in her, and still lives in my imagination, at the
+distance of more than sixteen years."
+
+Such precocious and sympathetic affections are, as I have already
+mentioned, common among children, and is something very different
+from the love of riper years; but the extract is curious, and shows
+how truly little and vague Byron's experience of the passion must
+have been. In his recollection of the girl, be it observed, there is
+no circumstance noticed which shows, however strong the mutual
+sympathy, the slightest influence of particular attraction. He
+recollects the colour of her hair, the hue of her eyes, her very
+dress, and he remembers her as a Peri, a spirit; nor does it appear
+that his sleepless restlessness, in which the thought of her was ever
+uppermost, was produced by jealousy, or doubt, or fear, or any other
+concomitant of the passion.
+
+There is another most important circumstance in what may be called
+the Aberdonian epoch of Lord Byron's life.
+
+That Byron, in his boyhood, was possessed of lively sensibilities, is
+sufficiently clear; that he enjoyed the advantage of indulging his
+humour and temper without restraint, is not disputable; and that his
+natural temperament made him sensible, in no ordinary degree, to the
+beauties of nature, is also abundantly manifest in all his
+productions; but it is surprising that this admiration of the
+beauties of Nature is but an ingredient in Byron's poetry, and not
+its most remarkable characteristic. Deep feelings of dissatisfaction
+and disappointment are far more obvious; they constitute, indeed, the
+very spirit of his works, and a spirit of such qualities is the least
+of all likely to have arisen from the contemplation of magnificent
+Nature, or to have been inspired by studying her storms or serenity;
+for dissatisfaction and disappointment are the offspring of moral
+experience, and have no natural association with the forms of
+external things. The habit of associating morose sentiments with any
+particular kind of scenery only shows that the sources of the
+sullenness arose in similar visible circumstances. It is from these
+premises I would infer, that the seeds of Byron's misanthropic
+tendencies were implanted during the "silent rages" of his childhood,
+and that the effect of mountain scenery, which continued so strong
+upon him after he left Scotland, producing the sentiments with which
+he has imbued his heroes in the wild circumstances in which he places
+them, was mere reminiscence and association. For although the sullen
+tone of his mind was not fully brought out until he wrote Childe
+Harold, it is yet evident from his Hours of Idleness that he was
+tuned to that key before he went abroad. The dark colouring of his
+mind was plainly imbibed in a mountainous region, from sombre heaths,
+and in the midst of rudeness and grandeur. He had no taste for more
+cheerful images, and there are neither rural objects nor villagery in
+the scenes he describes, but only loneness and the solemnity of
+mountains.
+
+To those who are acquainted with the Scottish character, it is
+unnecessary to suggest how very probable it is that Mrs Byron and her
+associates were addicted to the oral legends of the district and of
+her ancestors, and that the early fancy of the poet was nourished
+with the shadowy descriptions in the tales o' the olden time;--at
+last this is manifest, that although Byron shows little of the
+melancholy and mourning of Ossian, he was yet evidently influenced by
+some strong bias and congeniality of taste to brood and cogitate on
+topics of the same character as those of that bard. Moreover,
+besides the probability of his imagination having been early tinged
+with the sullen hue of the local traditions, it is remarkable, that
+the longest of his juvenile poems is an imitation of the manner of
+the Homer of Morven.
+
+In addition to a natural temperament, kept in a state of continual
+excitement, by unhappy domestic incidents, and the lurid legends of
+the past, there were other causes in operation around the young poet
+that could not but greatly affect the formation of his character.
+
+Descended of a distinguished family, counting among its ancestors the
+fated line of the Scottish kings, and reduced almost to extreme
+poverty, it is highly probable, both from the violence of her temper,
+and the pride of blood, that Mrs Byron would complain of the almost
+mendicant condition to which she was reduced, especially so long as
+there was reason to fear that her son was not likely to succeed to
+the family estates and dignity. Of his father's lineage few
+traditions were perhaps preserved, compared with those of his
+mother's family; but still enough was known to impress the
+imagination. Mr Moore, struck with this circumstance, has remarked,
+that "in reviewing the ancestors, both near and remote, of Lord
+Byron, it cannot fail to be remarked how strikingly he combined in
+his own nature some of the best, and perhaps worst qualities that lie
+scattered through the various characters of his predecessors." But
+still it is to his mother's traditions of her ancestors that I would
+ascribe the conception of the dark and guilty beings which he
+delighted to describe. And though it may be contended that there was
+little in her conduct to exalt poetical sentiment, still there was a
+great deal in her condition calculated to affect and impel an
+impassioned disposition. I can imagine few situations more likely to
+produce lasting recollections of interest and affection, than that in
+which Mrs Byron, with her only child, was placed in Aberdeen.
+Whatever might have been the violence of her temper, or the
+improprieties of her after-life, the fond and mournful caresses with
+which she used to hang over her lame and helpless orphan, must have
+greatly contributed to the formation of that morbid sensibility which
+became the chief characteristic of his life. At the same time, if it
+did contribute to fill his days with anguish and anxieties, it also
+undoubtedly assisted the development of his powers; and I am
+therefore disposed to conclude, that although, with respect to the
+character of the man, the time he spent in Aberdeen can only be
+contemplated with pity, mingled with sorrow, still it must have been
+richly fraught with incidents of inconceivable value to the genius of
+the poet.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+
+Arrival at Newstead--Find it in Ruins--The old Lord and his Beetles--
+The Earl of Carlisle becomes the Guardian of Byron--The Poet's acute
+Sense of his own deformed Foot--His Mother consults a Fortune-teller
+
+Mrs Byron, on her arrival at Newstead Abbey with her son, found it
+almost in a state of ruin. After the equivocal affair of the duel,
+the old lord lived in absolute seclusion, detested by his tenantry,
+at war with his neighbours, and deserted by all his family. He not
+only suffered the abbey to fall into decay, but, as far as lay in his
+power, alienated the land which should have kept it in repair, and
+denuded the estate of the timber. Byron has described the conduct of
+the morose peer in very strong terms:--"After his trial he shut
+himself up at Newstead, and was in the habit of feeding crickets,
+which were his only companions. He made them so tame that they used
+to crawl over him, and, when they were too familiar, he whipped them
+with a wisp of straw: at his death, it is said, they left the house
+in a body."
+
+However this may have been, it is certain that Byron came to an
+embarrassed inheritance, both as respected his property and the
+character of his race; and, perhaps, though his genius suffered
+nothing by the circumstance, it is to be regretted that he was still
+left under the charge of his mother: a woman without judgment or
+self-command; alternately spoiling her child by indulgence,
+irritating him by her self-willed obstinacy, and, what was still
+worse, amusing him by her violence, and disgusting him by fits of
+inebriety. Sympathy for her misfortunes would be no sufficient
+apology for concealing her defects; they undoubtedly had a material
+influence on her son, and her appearance was often the subject of his
+childish ridicule. She was a short and corpulent person. She rolled
+in her gait, and would, in her rage, sometimes endeavour to catch him
+for the purpose of inflicting punishment, while he would run round
+the room, mocking her menaces and mimicking her motion.
+
+The greatest weakness in Lord Byron's character was a morbid
+sensibility to his lameness. He felt it with as much vexation as if
+it had been inflicted ignominy. One of the most striking passages in
+some memoranda which he has left of his early days, is where, in
+speaking of his own sensitiveness on the subject of his deformed
+foot, he described the feeling of horror and humiliation that came
+over him when his mother, in one of her fits of passion, called him a
+"lame brat."
+
+The sense which Byron always retained of the innocent fault in his
+foot was unmanly and excessive; for it was not greatly conspicuous,
+and he had a mode of walking across a room by which it was scarcely
+at all perceptible. I was several days on board the same ship with
+him before I happened to discover the defect; it was indeed so well
+concealed, that I was in doubt whether his lameness was the effect of
+a temporary accident, or a malformation, until I asked Mr Hobhouse.
+
+On their arrival from Scotland, Byron was placed by his mother under
+the care of an empirical pretender of the name of Lavender, at
+Nottingham, who professed the cure of such cases; and that he might
+not lose ground in his education, he was attended by a respectable
+schoolmaster, Mr Rodgers, who read parts of Virgil and Cicero with
+him. Of this gentleman he always entertained a kind remembrance.
+Nor was his regard in this instance peculiar; for it may be said to
+have been a distinguishing trait in his character, to recollect with
+affection all who had been about him in his youth. The quack,
+however, was an exception; whom (from having caused him to suffer
+much pain, and whose pretensions, even young as he then was, he
+detected) he delighted to expose. On one occasion, he scribbled down
+on a sheet of paper, the letters of the alphabet at random, but in
+the form of words and sentences, and placing them before Lavender,
+asked him gravely, what language it was. "Italian," was the reply,
+to the infinite amusement of the little satirist, who burst into a
+triumphant laugh at the success of his stratagem.
+
+It is said that about this time the first symptom of his predilection
+for rhyming showed itself. An elderly lady, a visitor to his mother,
+had been indiscreet enough to give him some offence, and slights he
+generally resented with more energy than they often deserved. This
+venerable personage entertained a singular notion respecting the
+soul, which she believed took its flight at death to the moon. One
+day, after a repetition of her original contumely, he appeared before
+his nurse in a violent rage, and complained vehemently of the old
+lady, declaring that he could not bear the sight of her, and then he
+broke out into the following doggerel, which he repeated over and
+over, crowing with delight.
+
+
+In Nottingham county, there lives at Swan-green,
+As curs'd an old lady as ever was seen;
+And when she does die, which I hope will be soon,
+She firmly believes she will go to the moon.
+
+
+Mrs Byron, by the accession of her son to the family honours and
+estate, received no addition to her small income; and he, being a
+minor, was unable to make any settlement upon her. A representation
+of her case was made to Government, and in consequence she was placed
+on the pension-list for 300 pounds a-year.
+
+Byron not having received any benefit from the Nottingham quack, was
+removed to London, put under the care of Dr Bailey, and placed in the
+school of Dr Glennie, at Dulwich; Mrs Byron herself took a house on
+Sloan Terrace. Moderation in all athletic exercises was prescribed
+to the boy, but Dr Glennie had some difficulty in restraining his
+activity. He was quiet enough while in the house with the Doctor,
+but no sooner was he released to play, than he showed as much
+ambition to excel in violent exercises as the most robust youth of
+the school; an ambition common to young persons who have the
+misfortune to labour under bodily defects.
+
+While under the charge of Dr Glennie, he was playful, good-humoured,
+and beloved by his companions; and addicted to reading history and
+poetry far beyond the usual scope of his age. In these studies he
+showed a predilection for the Scriptures; and certainly there are
+many traces in his works which show that, whatever the laxity of his
+religious principles may have been in after-life, he was not
+unacquainted with the records and history of our religion.
+
+During this period, Mrs Byron often indiscreetly interfered with the
+course of his education; and if his classical studies were in
+consequence not so effectually conducted as they might have been, his
+mind derived some of its best nutriment from the loose desultory
+course of his reading.
+
+Among the books to which the boys at Dr Glennie's school had access
+was a pamphlet containing the narrative of a shipwreck on the coast
+of Arracan, filled with impressive descriptions. It had not
+attracted much public attention, but it was a favourite with the
+pupils, particularly with Byron, and furnished him afterwards with
+the leading circumstances in the striking description of the
+shipwreck in Don Juan.
+
+Although the rhymes upon the lunar lady of Notts are supposed to have
+been the first twitter of his muse, he has said himself, "My first
+dash into poetry was as early as 1800. It was the ebullition of a
+passion for my first cousin, Margaret Parker. I was then about
+twelve, she rather older, perhaps a year." And it is curious to
+remark, that in his description of this beautiful girl there is the
+same lack of animal admiration which we have noticed in all his
+loves; he says of her:--
+
+"I do not recollect scarcely anything equal to the transparent beauty
+of my cousin, or to the sweetness of her temper, during the short
+period of our intimacy: she looked as if she had been made out of a
+rainbow, all beauty and peace." This is certainly poetically
+expressed; but there was more true love in Pygmalion's passion for
+his statue, and in the Parisian maiden's adoration of the Apollo.
+
+When he had been nearly two years under the tuition of Dr Glennie, he
+was removed to Harrow, chiefly in consequence of his mother's
+interference with his studies, and especially by withdrawing him
+often from school.
+
+During the time he was under the care of Dr Glennie, he was more
+amiable than at any other period of his life, a circumstance which
+justifies the supposition, that, had he been left more to the
+discipline of that respectable person, he would have proved a better
+man; for, however much his heart afterwards became incrusted with the
+leprosy of selfishness, at this period his feelings were warm and
+kind. Towards his nurse he evinced uncommon affection, which he
+cherished as long as she lived. He presented her with his watch, the
+first he possessed, and also a full-length miniature of himself, when
+he was only between seven and eight years old, representing him with
+a profusion of curling locks, and in his hands a bow and arrow. The
+sister of this woman had been his first nurse, and after he had left
+Scotland he wrote to her, in a spirit which betokened a gentle and
+sincere heart, informing her with much joy of a circumstance highly
+important to himself. It was to tell her that at last he had got his
+foot so far restored as to be able to put on a common boot, an event
+which he was sure would give her great pleasure; to himself it is
+difficult to imagine any incident which could have been more
+gratifying.
+
+I dwell with satisfaction on these descriptions of his early
+dispositions; for, although there are not wanting instances of
+similar warm-heartedness in his later years, still he never formed
+any attachments so pure and amiable after he went to Harrow. The
+change of life came over him, and when the vegetable period of
+boyhood was past, the animal passions mastered all the softer
+affections of his character.
+
+In the summer of 1801 he accompanied his mother to Cheltenham, and
+while he resided there the views of the Malvern hills recalled to his
+memory his enjoyments amid the wilder scenery of Aberdeenshire. The
+recollections were reimpressed on his heart and interwoven with his
+strengthened feelings. But a boy gazing with emotion on the hills at
+sunset, because they remind him of the mountains where he passed his
+childhood, is no proof that he is already in heart and imagination a
+poet. To suppose so is to mistake the materials for the building.
+
+The delight of Byron in contemplating the Malvern hills, was not
+because they resembled the scenery of Lochynagar, but because they
+awoke trains of thought and fancy, associated with recollections of
+that scenery. The poesy of the feeling lay not in the beauty of the
+objects, but in the moral effect of the traditions, to which these
+objects served as talismans of the memory. The scene at sunset
+reminded him of the Highlands, but it was those reminiscences which
+similar scenes recalled, that constituted the impulse which gave life
+and elevation to his reflections. There is not more poesy in the
+sight of mountains than of plains; it is the local associations that
+throw enchantment over all scenes, and resemblance that awakens them,
+binding them to new connections: nor does this admit of much
+controversy; for mountainous regions, however favourable to musical
+feeling, are but little to poetical.
+
+The Welsh have no eminent bard; the Swiss have no renown as poets;
+nor are the mountainous regions of Greece, nor of the Apennines,
+celebrated for poetry. The Highlands of Scotland, save the equivocal
+bastardy of Ossian, have produced no poet of any fame, and yet
+mountainous countries abound in local legends, which would seem to be
+at variance with this opinion, were it not certain, though I cannot
+explain the cause, that local poetry, like local language or local
+melody, is in proportion to the interest it awakens among the local
+inhabitants, weak and ineffectual in its influence on the sentiments
+of the general world. The "Rans de Vaches," the most celebrated of
+all local airs, is tame and commonplace,--unmelodious, to all ears
+but those of the Swiss "forlorn in a foreign land."
+
+While in Cheltenham, Mrs Byron consulted a fortune-teller respecting
+the destinies of her son, and according to her feminine notions, she
+was very cunning and guarded with the sybil, never suspecting that
+she might have been previously known, and, unconscious to herself, an
+object of interest to the spaewife. She endeavoured to pass herself
+off as a maiden lady, and regarded it as no small testimony of the
+wisdom of the oracle, that she declared her to be not only a married
+woman, but the mother of a son who was lame. After such a marvellous
+proof of second-sightedness, it may easily be conceived with what awe
+and faith she listened to the prediction, that his life should be in
+danger from poison before he was of age, and that he should be twice
+married; the second time to a foreign lady. Whether it was this same
+fortune-teller who foretold that he would, in his twenty-seventh
+year, incur some great misfortune, is not certain; but, considering
+his unhappy English marriage, and his subsequent Italian liaison with
+the Countess Guiccioli, the marital prediction was not far from
+receiving its accomplishment. The fact of his marriage taking place
+in his twenty-seventh year, is at least a curious circumstance, and
+has been noticed by himself with a sentiment of superstition.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+
+Placed at Harrow--Progress there--Love for Miss Chaworth--His
+Reading--Oratorical Powers
+
+In passing from the quiet academy of Dulwich Grove to the public
+school of Harrow, the change must have been great to any boy--to
+Byron it was punishment; and for the first year and a half he hated
+the place. In the end, however, he rose to be a leader in all the
+sports and mischiefs of his schoolfellows; but it never could be said
+that he was a popular boy, however much he was distinguished for
+spirit and bravery; for if he was not quarrelsome, he was sometimes
+vindictive. Still it could not have been to any inveterate degree;
+for, undoubtedly, in his younger years, he was susceptible of warm
+impressions from gentle treatment, and his obstinacy and arbitrary
+humour were perhaps more the effects of unrepressed habit than of
+natural bias; they were the prickles which surrounded his genius in
+the bud.
+
+At Harrow he acquired no distinction as a student; indeed, at no
+period was he remarkable for steady application. Under Dr Glennie he
+had made but little progress; and it was chiefly in consequence of
+his backwardness that he was removed from his academy. When placed
+with Dr Drury, it was with an intimation that he had a cleverness
+about him, but that his education had been neglected.
+
+The early dislike which Byron felt towards the Earl of Carlisle is
+abundantly well known, and he had the magnanimity to acknowledge that
+it was in some respects unjust. But the antipathy was not all on one
+side; nor will it be easy to parallel the conduct of the Earl with
+that of any guardian. It is but justice, therefore, to Byron, to
+make the public aware that the dislike began on the part of Lord
+Carlisle, and originated in some distaste which he took to Mrs
+Byron's manners, and at the trouble she sometimes gave him on account
+of her son.
+
+Dr Drury, in his communication to Mr Moore respecting the early
+history of Byron, mentions a singular circumstance as to this
+subject, which we record with the more pleasure, because Byron has
+been blamed, and has blamed himself, for his irreverence towards Lord
+Carlisle, while it appears that the fault lay with the Earl.
+
+"After some continuance at Harrow," says Dr Drury, "and when the
+powers of his mind had begun to expand, the late Lord Carlisle, his
+relation, desired to see me in town. I waited on his Lordship. His
+object was to inform me of Lord Byron's expectations of property when
+he came of age, which he represented as contracted, and to inquire
+respecting his abilities. On the former circumstance I made no
+remark; as to the latter, I replied, 'He has talents, my Lord, which
+will add lustre to his rank.' 'Indeed,' said his Lordship, with a
+degree of surprise, that, according to my feelings, did not express
+in it all the satisfaction I expected."
+
+Lord Carlisle had, indeed, much of the Byron humour in him. His
+mother was a sister of the homicidal lord, and possessed some of the
+family peculiarity: she was endowed with great talent, and in her
+latter days she exhibited great singularity. She wrote beautiful
+verses and piquant epigrams among others, there is a poetical
+effusion of her pen addressed to Mrs Greville, on her Ode to
+Indifference, which, at the time, was much admired, and has been,
+with other poems of her Ladyship's, published in Pearch's collection.
+After moving, for a long time, as one of the most brilliant orbs in
+the sphere of fashion, she suddenly retired, and like her morose
+brother, shut herself up from the world. While she lived in this
+seclusion, she became an object of the sportive satire of the late Mr
+Fox, who characterized her as
+
+
+Carlisle, recluse in pride and rags.
+
+
+I have heard a still coarser apostrophe by the same gentleman. It
+seems they had quarrelled, and on his leaving her in the drawing-
+room, she called after him, that he might go about his business, for
+she did not care two skips of a louse for him. On coming to the
+hall, finding paper and ink on the table, he wrote two lines in
+answer, and sent it up to her Ladyship, to the effect that she always
+spoke of what was running in her head.
+
+Byron has borne testimony to the merits of his guardian, her son, as
+a tragic poet, by characterizing his publications as paper books. It
+is, however, said that they nevertheless showed some talent, and that
+The Father's Revenge, one of the tragedies, was submitted to the
+judgment of Dr Johnson, who did not despise it.
+
+But to return to the progress of Byron at Harrow; it is certain that
+notwithstanding the affectionate solicitude of Dr Drury to encourage
+him, he never became an eminent scholar; at least, we have his own
+testimony to that effect, in the fourth canto of Childe Harold; the
+lines, however, in which that testimony stands recorded, are among
+the weakest he ever penned.
+
+
+ May he who will his recollections rake
+ And quote in classic raptures, and awake
+ The hills with Latin echoes: I abhorr'd
+ Too much to conquer, for the poet's sake,
+ The drill'd, dull lesson forced down word by word,
+In my repugnant youth with pleasure to record.
+
+
+And, as an apology for the defect, he makes the following remarks in
+a note subjoined:--
+
+"I wish to express that we become tired of the task before we can
+comprehend the beauty; that we learn by rote before we can get by
+heart; that the freshness is worn away, and the future pleasure and
+advantage deadened and destroyed by the didactic anticipation, at an
+age when we can neither feel nor understand the power of
+compositions, which it requires an acquaintance with life, as well as
+Latin and Greek, to relish or to reason upon. For the same reason,
+we never can be aware of the fulness of some of the finest passages
+of Shakspeare ('To be, or not to be,' for instance), from the habit
+of having them hammered into us at eight years old, as an exercise
+not of mind but of memory; so that when we are old enough to enjoy
+them, the taste is gone, and the appetite palled. In some parts of
+the Continent, young persons are taught from mere common authors, and
+do not read the best classics until their maturity. I certainly do
+not speak on this point from any pique or aversion towards the place
+of my education. I was not a slow or an idle boy; and I believe no
+one could be more attached to Harrow than I have always been, and
+with reason: a part of the time passed there was the happiest of my
+life; and my preceptor, the Rev. Dr Joseph Drury, was the best and
+worthiest friend I ever possessed; whose warnings I have remembered
+but too well, though too late, when I have erred; and whose counsels
+I have but followed when I have done well and wisely. If ever this
+imperfect record of my feelings towards him should reach his eyes,
+let it remind him of one who never thinks of him but with gratitude
+and veneration; of one who would more gladly boast of having been his
+pupil if, by more closely following his injunctions, he could reflect
+any honour upon his instructor."
+
+Lord Byron, however, is not singular in his opinion of the inutility
+of premature classical studies; and notwithstanding the able manner
+in which the late Dean Vincent defended public education, we have
+some notion that his reasoning upon this point will not be deemed
+conclusive. Milton, says Dr Vincent, complained of the years that
+were wasted in teaching the dead languages. Cowley also complained
+that classical education taught words only and not things; and
+Addison deemed it an inexpiable error, that boys with genius or
+without were all to be bred poets indiscriminately. As far, then, as
+respects the education of a poet, we should think that the names of
+Milton, Cowley, Addison, and Byron would go well to settle the
+question; especially when it is recollected how little Shakspeare was
+indebted to the study of the classics, and that Burns knew nothing of
+them at all. I do not, however, adopt the opinion as correct;
+neither do I think that Dean Vincent took a right view of the
+subject; for, as discipline, the study of the classics may be highly
+useful, at the same time, the mere hammering of Greek and Latin into
+English cannot be very conducive to the refinement of taste or the
+exaltation of sentiment. Nor is there either common sense or correct
+logic in the following observations made on the passage and note,
+quoted by the anonymous author of Childe Harold's Monitor.
+
+"This doctrine of antipathies, contracted by the impatience of youth
+against the noblest authors of antiquity, from the circumstance of
+having been made the vehicle of early instruction, is a most
+dangerous doctrine indeed; since it strikes at the root, not only of
+all pure taste, but of all praiseworthy industry. It would, if acted
+upon (as Harold by the mention of the Continental practice of using
+inferior writers in the business of tuition would seem to recommend),
+destroy the great source of the intellectual vigour of our
+countrymen."
+
+This is, undoubtedly, assuming too much; for those who have objected
+to the years "wasted" in teaching the dead languages, do not admit
+that the labour of acquiring them either improves the taste or adds
+to the vigour of the understanding; and, therefore, before the
+soundness of the opinion of Milton, of Cowley, of Addison, and of
+many other great men can be rejected, it falls on those who are of
+Dean Vincent's opinion, and that of Childe Harold's Monitor, to prove
+that the study of the learned languages is of so much primary
+importance as they claim for it.
+
+But it appears that Byron's mind, during the early period of his
+residence at Harrow, was occupied with another object than his
+studies, and which may partly account for his inattention to them.
+He fell in love with Mary Chaworth. "She was," he is represented to
+have said, "several years older than myself, but at my age boys like
+something older than themselves, as they do younger later in life.
+Our estates adjoined, but owing to the unhappy circumstances of the
+feud (the affair of the fatal duel), our families, as is generally
+the case with neighbours, who happen to be near relations, were never
+on terms of more than common civility, scarcely those. She was the
+beau ideal of all that my youthful fancy could paint of the
+beautiful! and I have taken all my fables about the celestial nature
+of women from the perfection my imagination created in her. I say
+created, for I found her, like the rest of the sex, anything but
+angelic. I returned to Harrow, after my trip to Cheltenham, more
+deeply enamoured than ever, and passed the next holidays at Newstead.
+I now began to fancy myself a man, and to make love in earnest. Our
+meetings were stolen ones, and my letters passed through the medium
+of a confidant. A gate leading from Mr Chaworth's grounds to those
+of my mother, was the place of our interviews, but the ardour was all
+on my side; I was serious, she was volatile. She liked me as a
+younger brother, and treated and laughed at me as a boy; she,
+however, gave me her picture, and that was something to make verses
+upon. Had I married Miss Chaworth, perhaps the whole tenor of my
+life would have been different; she jilted me, however, but her
+marriage proved anything but a happy one." It is to this attachment
+that we are indebted for the beautiful poem of The Dream, and the
+stanzas beginning
+
+
+Oh, had my fate been joined to thine!
+
+
+Although this love affair a little interfered with his Greek and
+Latin, his time was not passed without some attention to reading.
+Until he was eighteen years old, he had never seen a review; but his
+general information was so extensive on modern topics, as to induce a
+suspicion that he could only have collected so much information from
+reviews, as he was never seen reading, but always idle, and in
+mischief, or at play. He was, however, a devourer of books; he read
+eating, read in bed, read when no one else read, and had perused all
+sorts of books from the time he first could spell, but had never read
+a review, and knew not what the name implied.
+
+It should be here noticed, that while he was at Harrow, his qualities
+were rather oratorical than poetical; and if an opinion had then been
+formed of the likely result of his character, the prognostication
+would have led to the expectation of an orator. Altogether, his
+conduct at Harrow indicated a clever, but not an extraordinary boy.
+He formed a few friendships there, in which his attachment appears to
+have been, in some instances, remarkable. The late Duke of Dorset
+was his fag, and he was not considered a very hard taskmaster. He
+certainly did not carry with him from Harrow any anticipation of that
+splendid career he was destined to run as a poet.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+
+Character at Harrow--Poetical Predilections--Byron at Cambridge--His
+"Hours of Idleness"
+
+In reconsidering the four years which Byron spent at Harrow, while we
+can clearly trace the development of the sensibilities of his
+character, and an increased tension of his susceptibility, by which
+impressions became more acute and delicate, it seems impossible not
+to perceive by the records which he has himself left of his feelings,
+that something morbid was induced upon them. Had he not afterwards
+so magnificently distinguished himself as a poet, it is not probable
+that he would have been recollected by his schoolfellows as having
+been in any respect different from the common herd. His activity and
+spirit, in their controversies and quarrels, were but the
+outbreakings of that temperament which the discipline of riper years,
+and the natural awe of the world, afterward reduced into his
+hereditary cast of character, in which so much of sullenness and
+misanthropy was exhibited. I cannot, however, think that there was
+anything either in the nature of his pastimes, or his studies,
+unfavourable to the formation of the poetical character. His
+amusements were active; his reading, though without method, was yet
+congenial to his impassioned imagination; and the phantom of an
+enthusiastic attachment, of which Miss Chaworth was not the only
+object (for it was altogether intellectual, and shared with others),
+were circumstances calculated to open various sources of reflection,
+and to concentrate the elements of an energetic and original mind.
+
+But it is no easy matter to sketch what may have been the outline of
+a young poet's education. The supposition that poets must be
+dreamers, because there is often much dreaminess in poesy, is a mere
+hypothesis. Of all the professors of metaphysical discernment, poets
+require the finest tact; and contemplation is with them a sign of
+inward abstract reflection, more than of any process of mind by which
+resemblance is traced, and associations awakened. There is no
+account of any great poet, whose genius was of that dreamy
+cartilaginous kind, which hath its being in haze, and draws its
+nourishment from lights and shadows; which ponders over the mysteries
+of trees, and interprets the oracles of babbling waters. They have
+all been men--worldly men, different only from others in reasoning
+more by feeling than induction. Directed by impulse, in a greater
+degree than other men, poets are apt to be betrayed into actions
+which make them singular, as compared by those who are less
+imaginative; but the effects of earnestness should never be
+confounded with the qualities of talent.
+
+No greater misconception has ever been obtruded upon the world as
+philosophic criticism, than the theory of poets being the offspring
+of "capering lambkins and cooing doves"; for they differ in no
+respect from other men of high endowment, but in the single
+circumstance of the objects to which their taste is attracted. The
+most vigorous poets, those who have influenced longest and are most
+quoted, have indeed been all men of great shrewdness of remark, and
+anything but your chin-on-hand contemplators. To adduce many
+instances is unnecessary. Are there any symptoms of the gelatinous
+character of the effusions of the Lakers in the compositions of
+Homer? The London Gazette does not tell us things more like facts
+than the narratives of Homer, and it often states facts that are much
+more like fictions than his most poetical inventions. So much is
+this the case with the works of all the higher poets, that as they
+recede from that worldly standard which is found in the Epics of
+Homer, they sink in the scale of poets. In what does the inferiority
+of Virgil, for example, consist, but in his having hatched fancies in
+his contemplations which the calm mind rejects as absurdities. Then
+Tasso, with his enchanted forests and his other improbabilities; are
+they more than childish tales? tales, too, not in fancy to be
+compared with those of that venerable dry-nurse, Mother Bunch.
+Compare the poets that babble of green fields with those who deal in
+the actions and passions of men, such as Shakspeare, and it must be
+confessed that it is not those who have looked at external nature who
+are the true poets, but those who have seen and considered most about
+the business and bosom of man. It may be an advantage that a poet
+should have the benefit of landscapes and storms, as children are the
+better for country air and cow's milk; but the true scene of their
+manly work and business is in the populous city. Inasmuch as Byron
+was a lover of solitude, he was deficient as an observer of men.
+
+The barrenest portion, as to materials for biography, in the life of
+this interesting man, is the period he spent at the University of
+Cambridge. Like that of most young men, it is probable the major
+part of his time was passed between the metropolis and the
+university. Still it was in that period he composed the different
+poems which make up the little volume of The Hours of Idleness; a
+work which will ever be regarded, more by its consequences than its
+importance, as of great influence on the character and career of the
+poet.
+
+It has been supposed, I see not how justly, that there was
+affectation in the title. It is probable that Byron intended no more
+by it than to imply that its contents were sketches of leisure. This
+is the less doubtful, as he was at that period particularly sensitive
+concerning the opinion that might be entertained of his works.
+Before he made the collection, many of the pieces had been
+circulated, and he had gathered opinions as to their merits with a
+degree of solicitude that can only be conceived by those who were
+acquainted with the constantly excited sensibility of his mind. When
+he did publish the collection, nothing appeared in the style and form
+of the publication that indicated any arrogance of merit. On the
+contrary, it was brought forward with a degree of diffidence, which,
+if it did not deserve the epithet of modesty, could incur nothing
+harsher than that of bashfulness. It was printed at the obscure
+market-town press of Newark, was altogether a very homely, rustic
+work, and no attempt was made to bespeak for it a good name from the
+critics. It was truly an innocent affair and an unpretending
+performance. But notwithstanding these, at least seeming, qualities
+of young doubtfulness and timidity, they did not soften the austere
+nature of the bleak and blighting criticism which was then
+characteristic of Edinburgh.
+
+A copy was somehow communicated to one of the critics in that city,
+and was reviewed by him in the Edinburgh Review in an article replete
+with satire and insinuations calculated to prey upon the author's
+feelings, while the injustice of the estimate which was made of his
+talent and originality, could not but be as iron in his heart. Owing
+to the deep and severe impression which it left, it ought to be
+preserved in every memoir which treats of the development of his
+genius and character; and for this reason I insert it entire, as one
+of the most influential documents perhaps in the whole extent of
+biography.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+
+Criticism of the "Edinburgh Review"
+
+"The poesy of this young lord belongs to the class which neither God
+nor man are said to permit. Indeed we do not recollect to have seen
+a quantity of verse with so few deviations in either direction from
+that exact standard. His effusions are spread over a dead flat, and
+can no more get above or below the level than if they were so much
+stagnant water. As an extenuation of this offence, the noble author
+is peculiarly forward in pleading minority. We have it in the title-
+page, and on the very back of the volume; it follows his name like a
+favourite part of his style. Much stress is laid upon it in the
+preface; and the poems are connected with this general statement of
+his case by particular dates, substantiating the age at which each
+was written. Now, the law upon the point of minority we hold to be
+perfectly clear. It is a plea available only to the defendant; no
+plaintiff can offer it as a supplementary ground of action. Thus, if
+any suit could be brought against Lord Byron, for the purpose of
+compelling him to put into court a certain quantity of poetry, and if
+judgment were given against him, it is highly probable that an
+exception would be taken, were he to deliver FOR POETRY the contents
+of this volume. To this he might plead MINORITY; but as he now makes
+voluntary tender of the article, he hath no right to sue on that
+ground for the price in good current praise, should the goods be
+unmarketable. This is our view of the law on the point; and we dare
+to say, so will it be ruled. Perhaps, however, in reality, all that
+he tells us about his youth is rather with a view to increase our
+wonder, than to soften our censures. He possibly means to say, 'See
+how a minor can write! This poem was actually composed by a young
+man of eighteen! and this by one of only sixteen!' But, alas, we all
+remember the poetry of Cowley at ten, and Pope at twelve; and, so far
+from hearing with any degree of surprise that very poor verses were
+written by a youth from his leaving school to his leaving college
+inclusive, we really believe this to be the most common of all
+occurrences;--that it happens in the life of nine men in ten who are
+educated in England, and that the tenth man writes better verse than
+Lord Byron.
+
+"His other plea of privilege our author brings forward to waive it.
+He certainly, however, does allude frequently to his family and
+ancestors, sometimes in poetry, sometimes in notes; and while giving
+up his claim on the score of rank, he takes care to remind us of Dr
+Johnson's saying, that when a nobleman appears as an author, his
+merit should be handsomely acknowledged. In truth, it is this
+consideration only that induces us to give Lord Byron's poems a place
+in our Review, besides our desire to counsel him, that he do
+forthwith abandon poetry, and turn his talents, which are
+considerable, and his opportunities, which are great, to better
+account.
+
+"With this view we must beg leave seriously to assure him, that the
+mere rhyming of the final syllable, even when accompanied by the
+presence of a certain number of feet; nay, although (which does not
+always happen) these feet should scan regularly, and have been all
+counted upon the fingers, is not the whole art of poetry. We would
+entreat him to believe that a certain portion of liveliness, somewhat
+of fancy, is necessary to constitute a poem; and that a poem in the
+present day, to be read, must contain at least one thought, even in a
+little degree different from the ideas of former writers, or
+differently expressed. We put it to his candour, whether there is
+anything so deserving the name of poetry, in verses like the
+following, written in 1806, and whether, if a youth of eighteen could
+say anything so uninteresting to his ancestors, a youth of nineteen
+should publish it:
+
+
+Shades of heroes, farewell! your descendant, departing
+ From the seat of his ancestors, bids you adieu;
+Abroad or at home, your remembrance imparting
+ New courage, he'll think upon glory and you.
+
+Though a tear dim his eye at this sad separation,
+ 'Tis nature, not fear, that excites his regret;
+Far distant he goes with the same emulation,
+ The fame of his fathers he ne'er can forget.
+
+That fame and that memory still will he cherish,
+ He vows that he ne'er will disgrace your renown;
+Like you will he live, or like you will he perish,
+ When decay'd, may he mingle his dust with your own.
+
+
+"Now, we positively do assert, that there is nothing better than
+these stanzas in the whole compass of the noble minor's volume.
+
+"Lord Byron should also have a care of attempting what the greatest
+poets have done before him, for comparisons (as he must have had
+occasion to see at his writing-master's) are odious. Gray's Ode to
+Eton College should really have kept out the ten hobbling stanzas on
+a distant view of the village and school at Harrow.
+
+
+Where fancy yet joys to trace the resemblance
+ Of comrades in friendship or mischief allied,
+How welcome to me your ne'er-fading remembrance,
+ Which rests in the bosom, though hope is denied.
+
+
+"In like manner, the exquisite lines of Mr Rogers, On a Tear, might
+have warned the noble author of these premises, and spared us a whole
+dozen such stanzas as the following:
+
+
+ Mild charity's glow,
+ To us mortals below,
+Shows the soul from barbarity clear;
+ Compassion will melt
+ Where the virtue is felt.
+And its dew is diffused in a tear.
+
+ The man doom'd to sail
+ With the blast of the gale,
+Through billows Atlantic to steer,
+ As he bends o'er the wave,
+ Which may soon be his grave,
+The green sparkles bright with a tear.
+
+
+"And so of instances in which former poets had failed. Thus, we do
+not think Lord Byron was made for translating, during his nonage,
+Adrian's Address to his Soul, when Pope succeeded indifferently in
+the attempt. If our readers, however, are of another opinion, they
+may look at it.
+
+
+Ah! gentle, fleeting, wav'ring sprite,
+ Friend and associate of this clay,
+ To what unknown region borne
+Wilt thou now wing thy distant flight?
+ No more with wonted humour gay,
+ But pallid, cheerless, and forlorn.
+
+
+"However, be this as it may, we fear his translations and imitations
+are great favourities with Lord Byron. We have them of all kinds,
+from Anacreon to Ossian; and, viewing them as school-exercises, they
+may pass. Only, why print them after they have had their day and
+served their turn? And why call the thing in p. 79 a translation,
+where TWO words ([Greek]) of the original are expanded into four
+lines, and the other thing in p. 81, where [Greek] is rendered by
+means of six hobbling verses. As to his Ossian poesy, we are not
+very good judges; being, in truth, so moderately skilled in that
+species of composition, that we should, in all probability, be
+criticising some bit of genuine Macpherson itself, were we to express
+our opinion of Lord Byron's rhapsodies. If, then, the following
+beginning of a Song of Bards is by his Lordship, we venture to object
+to it, as far as we can comprehend it; 'What form rises on the roar
+of clouds, whose dark ghost gleams on the red stream of tempests?
+His voice rolls on the thunder; 'tis Oila, the brown chief of
+Otchona. He was,' etc. After detaining this 'brown chief' some
+time, the bards conclude by giving him their advice to 'raise his
+fair locks'; then to 'spread them on the arch of the rainbow'; and to
+'smile through the tears of the storm.' Of this kind of thing there
+are no less than nine pages: and we can so far venture an opinion in
+their favour, that they look very like Macpherson; and we are
+positive they are pretty nearly as stupid and tiresome.
+
+"It is some sort of privilege of poets to be egotists; but they
+should 'use it as not abusing it'; and particularly one who piques
+himself (though, indeed, at the ripe age of nineteen) on being an
+infant bard--
+
+
+The artless Helicon I boast is youth--
+
+
+should either not know, or should seem not to know, so much about his
+own ancestry. Besides a poem, above cited, on the family-seat of the
+Byrons, we have another of eleven pages on the selfsame subject,
+introduced with an apology, 'he certainly had no intention of
+inserting it,' but really 'the particular request of some friends,'
+etc. etc. It concludes with five stanzas on himself, 'the last and
+youngest of the noble line.' There is also a good deal about his
+maternal ancestors, in a poem on Lachion-y-Gair, a mountain, where he
+spent part of his youth, and might have learned that pibroach is not
+a bagpipe, any more than a duet means a fiddle.
+
+"As the author has dedicated so large a part of his volume to
+immortalize his employments at school and college, we cannot possibly
+dismiss it without presenting the reader with a specimen of these
+ingenious effusions.
+
+"In an ode, with a Greek motto, called Granta, we have the following
+magnificent stanzas:--
+
+
+There, in apartments small and damp,
+ The candidate for college prizes
+Sits poring by the midnight lamp,
+ Goes late to bed, yet early rises:
+
+Who reads false quantities in Seale,
+ Or puzzles o'er the deep triangle,
+Depriv'd of many a wholesome meal,
+ In barbarous Latin doomed to wrangle.
+
+Renouncing every pleasing page
+ From authors of historic use;
+Preferring to the letter'd sage
+ The square of the hypotenuse.
+Still harmless are these occupations,
+ That hurt none but the hapless student,
+Compared with other recreations
+ Which bring together the imprudent.
+
+
+"We are sorry to hear so bad an account of the college-psalmody, as
+is contained in the following attic stanzas
+
+
+Our choir could scarcely be excused,
+ Even as a band of raw beginners;
+All mercy now must be refused
+ To such a set of croaking sinners.
+
+If David, when his toils were ended,
+ Had heard these blockheads sing before him,
+To us his psalms had ne'er descended--
+ In furious mood he would have tore 'em.
+
+
+"But whatever judgment may be passed on the poems of this noble
+minor, it seems we must take them as we find them, and be content for
+they are the last we shall ever have from him. He is at best, he
+says, but an intruder into the groves of Parnassus; he never lived in
+a garret, like thoroughbred poets, and though he once roved a
+careless mountaineer in the Highlands of Scotland, he has not of late
+enjoyed this advantage. Moreover, he expects no profit from his
+publication; and whether it succeeds or not, it is highly improbable,
+from his situation and pursuits, that he should again condescend to
+become an author. Therefore, let us take what we get and be
+thankful. What right have we poor devils to be nice? We are well
+off to have got so much from a man of this lord's station, who does
+not live in a garret, but has got the sway of Newstead Abbey. Again
+we say, let us be thankful; and, with honest Sancho, bid God bless
+the giver, nor look the gift-horse in the mouth."
+
+
+The criticism is ascribed to Mr Francis Jeffrey, an eloquent member
+of the Scottish bar, and who was at that time supposed to be the
+editor of the Edinburgh Review. That it was neither just nor fair is
+sufficiently evident, by the degree of care and artificial point with
+which it has been drawn up. Had the poetry been as insignificant as
+the critic affected to consider it, it would have argued little for
+the judgment of Mr Jeffrey, to take so much pains on a work which he
+considered worthless. But the world has no cause to repine at the
+severity of his strictures, for they unquestionably had the effect of
+kindling the indignation of Byron, and of instigating him to that
+retaliation which he so spiritedly inflicted in his satire of English
+Bards and Scotch Reviewers.
+
+It is amusing to compare the respective literary reputation of the
+poet and the critic, as they are estimated by the public, now that
+the one is dead, and the other dormant. The voice of all the age
+acknowledges Byron to have been the greatest poetical genius of his
+time. Mr Jeffrey, though still enjoying the renown of being a shrewd
+and intelligent critic of the productions of others, has established
+no right to the honour of being an original or eminent author.
+
+At the time when Byron published the satire alluded to, he had
+obtained no other distinction than the college reputation of being a
+clever, careless, dissipated student. But his dissipation was not
+intense, nor did it ever become habitual. He affected to be much
+more so than he was: his pretensions were moderated by
+constitutional incapacity. His health was not vigorous; and his
+delicacy defeated his endeavours to show that he inherited the
+recklessness of his father. He affected extravagance and
+eccentricity of conduct, without yielding much to the one, or
+practising a great deal of the other. He was seeking notoriety; and
+his attempts to obtain it gave more method to his pranks and follies
+than belonged to the results of natural impulse and passion. He
+evinced occasional instances of the generous spirit of youth; but
+there was in them more of ostentation than of that discrimination
+which dignifies kindness, and makes prodigality munificence. Nor
+were his attachments towards those with whom he preferred to
+associate, characterised by any nobler sentiment than self-
+indulgence; he was attached, more from the pleasure he himself
+received in their society, than from any reciprocal enjoyment they
+had with him. As he became a man of the world, his early friends
+dropped from him; although it is evident, by all the contemporary
+records of his feelings, that he cherished for them a kind, and even
+brotherly, affection. This secession, the common effect of the new
+cares, hopes, interests, and wishes, which young men feel on entering
+the world, Byron regarded as something analogous to desertion; and
+the notion tainted his mind, and irritated that hereditary sullenness
+of humour, which constituted an ingredient so remarkable in the
+composition of his more mature character.
+
+An anecdote of this period, characteristic of his eccentricity, and
+the means which he scrupled not to employ in indulging it, deserves
+to be mentioned.
+
+In repairing Newstead Abbey, a skull was found in a secret niche of
+the walls. It might have been that of the monk who haunted the
+house, or of one of his own ancestors, or of some victim of the
+morose race. It was converted into a goblet, and used at Odin-like
+orgies. Though the affair was but a whim of youth, more odious than
+poetical, it caused some talk, and raised around the extravagant host
+the haze of a mystery, suggesting fantasies of irreligion and horror.
+The inscription on the cup is not remarkable either for point or
+poetry.
+
+
+Start not, nor deem my spot fled;
+ In me behold the only skull
+From which, unlike a living head,
+ Whatever flows is never dull.
+
+I liv'd, I lov'd, I quaff'd like thee;
+ I died, but earth my bones resign:
+Fill up--thou canst not injure me,
+ The worm hath fouler lips than thine.
+
+Better to hold the sparkling grape
+ Than nurse the earth-worm's slimy brood,
+And circle in the goblet's shape
+ The drink of gods than reptile's food.
+
+Where once my wit perchance hath shone,
+ In aid of others let me shine;
+And when, alas, our brains are gone,
+ What nobler substitute than wine?
+
+Quaff while thou canst--another race,
+ When thou and thine like me are sped,
+May rescue thee from earth's embrace,
+ And rhyme and revel with the dead.
+
+Why not? since through life's little day,
+ Our heads such sad effects produce;
+Redeem'd from worms and wasting clay,
+ This chance is theirs, to be use.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+
+Effect of the Criticism in the "Edinburgh Review"--"English Bards and
+Scotch Reviewers"--His Satiety--Intention to Travel--Publishes his
+Satire--Takes his Seat in the House of Lords--Departs for Lisbon;
+thence to Gibraltar
+
+The impression which the criticism of the Edinburgh Review produced
+upon the juvenile poet was deep and envenomed. It stung his heart,
+and prompted him to excess. But the paroxysms did not endure long;
+strong volitions of revenge succeeded, and the grasps of his mind
+were filled, as it were, with writhing adders. All the world knows,
+that this unquenchable indignation found relief in the composition of
+English Bards and Scotch Reviewers; a satire which, in many passages,
+equals, in fervour and force, the most vigorous in the language.
+
+It was during the summer of 1808, while the poet was residing at
+Newstead, that English Bards and Scotch Reviewers was principally
+written. He bestowed more pains upon it than perhaps on any other of
+his works; and, though different from them all, it still exhibits
+strong indications of the misanthropy with which, after quitting
+Cambridge, he became more and more possessed. It is painful to
+reflect, in considering the splendid energy displayed in the poem,
+that the unprovoked malice which directed him to make the satire so
+general, was, perhaps, the main cause of that disposition to wither
+his reputation, which was afterwards so fervently roused. He could
+not but expect, that, in stigmatising with contempt and ridicule so
+many persons by name, some of them would retaliate. Nor could he
+complain of injustice if they did; for his attack was so wilful, that
+the rage of it can only be explained by supposing he was instigated
+to "the one fell swoop," by a resentful conviction, that his
+impillory in the Edinburgh Review had amused them all.
+
+I do not conceive, that the generality of the satire can be well
+extenuated; but I am not inclined to regard it as having been a very
+heinous offence. The ability displayed in it is a sufficient
+compensation. The beauty of the serpent's skin appeases the aversion
+to its nature. Moreover, a toothless satire is verse without poetry-
+-the most odious of all respectable things.
+
+But, without regard to the merits or delinquency of the poem, to the
+acumen of its animadversions, or to the polish of the lines, it
+possesses, in the biography of the author, a value of the most
+interesting kind. It was the first burst of that dark, diseased
+ichor, which afterwards coloured his effusions; the overflowing
+suppuration of that satiety and loathing, which rendered Childe
+Harold, in particular, so original, incomprehensible, and antisocial;
+and bears testimony to the state of his feelings at that important
+epoch, while he was yet upon the threshold of the world, and was
+entering it with a sense of failure and humiliation, and premature
+disgust. For, notwithstanding his unnecessary expositions concerning
+his dissipation, it is beyond controversy, that at no time could it
+be said he was a dissipated young man. That he indulged in
+occasional excesses is true; but his habits were never libertine, nor
+did his health or stamina permit him to be distinguished in
+licentiousness. The declaration in which he first discloses his
+sobriety, contains more truth than all his pretensions to his
+father's qualities. "I took my gradations in the vices," says he, in
+that remarkable confession, "with great promptitude, but they were
+not to my taste; for my early passions, though violent in the
+extreme, were concentrated, and hated division or spreading abroad.
+I could have left or lost the whole world with or for that which I
+loved; but, though my temperament was naturally burning, I could not
+share in the common libertinism of the place and time without
+disgust; and yet this very disgust, and my heart thrown back upon
+itself, threw me into excesses perhaps more fatal than those from
+which I shrunk, as fixing upon one at a time the passions, which,
+spread among many, would have hurt only myself." This is vague and
+metaphysical enough; but it bears corroborative intimations, that the
+impression which he early made upon me was not incorrect. He was
+vain of his experiments in profligacy, but they never grew to
+habitude.
+
+While he was engaged in the composition of his satire, he formed a
+plan of travelling; but there was a great shortcoming between the
+intention and the performance. He first thought of Persia; he
+afterwards resolved to sail for India; and had so far matured this
+project, as to write for information to the Arabic professor at
+Cambridge; and to his mother, who was not then with him at Newstead,
+to inquire of a friend, who had resided in India, what things would
+be necessary for the voyage. He formed his plan of travelling upon
+different reasons from those which he afterward gave out, and which
+have been imputed to him. He then thought that all men should in
+some period of their lives travel; he had at that time no tie to
+prevent him; he conceived that when he returned home he might be
+induced to enter into political life, to which his having travelled
+would be an advantage; and he wished to know the world by sight, and
+to judge of men by experience.
+
+When his satire was ready for the press, he carried it with him to
+London. He was then just come of age, or about to be so; and one of
+his objects in this visit to the metropolis was, to take his seat in
+the House of Lords before going abroad; but, in advancing to this
+proud distinction, so soothing to the self-importance of youth, he
+was destined to suffer a mortification which probably wounded him as
+deeply as the sarcasms of the Edinburgh Review. Before the meeting
+of Parliament, he wrote to his relation and guardian, the Earl of
+Carlisle, to remind him that he should be of age at the commencement
+of the Session, in the natural hope that his Lordship would make an
+offer to introduce him to the House: but he was disappointed. He
+only received a formal reply, acquainting him with the technical mode
+of proceeding, and the etiquette to be observed on such occasions.
+It is therefore not wonderful that he should have resented such
+treatment; and he avenged it by those lines in his satire, for which
+he afterwards expressed his regret in the third canto of Childe
+Harold.
+
+Deserted by his guardian at a crisis so interesting, he was prevented
+for some time from taking his seat in Parliament; being obliged to
+procure affidavits in proof of his grandfather's marriage with Miss
+Trevannion, which having taken place in a private chapel at Carhais,
+no regular certificate of the ceremony could be produced. At length,
+all the necessary evidence having been obtained, on the 13th of
+March, 1809, he presented himself in the House of Lords alone--a
+proceeding consonant to his character, for he was not so friendless
+nor unknown, but that he might have procured some peer to have gone
+with him. It, however, served to make his introduction remarkable.
+
+On entering the House, he is described to have appeared abashed and
+pale: he passed the woolsack without looking round, and advanced to
+the table where the proper officer was attending to administer the
+oaths. When he had gone through them, the chancellor quitted his
+seat, and went towards him with a smile, putting out his hand in a
+friendly manner to welcome him, but he made a stiff bow, and only
+touched with the tip of his fingers the chancellor's hand, who
+immediately returned to his seat. Such is the account given of this
+important incident by Mr Dallas, who went with him to the bar; but a
+characteristic circumstance is wanting. When Lord Eldon advanced
+with the cordiality described, he expressed with becoming courtesy
+his regret that the rules of the House had obliged him to call for
+the evidence of his grandfather's marriage.--"Your Lordship has done
+your duty, and no more," was the cold reply, in the words of Tom
+Thumb, and which probably was the cause of the marked manner of the
+chancellor's cool return to his seat.
+
+The satire was published anonymously, and immediately attracted
+attention; the sale was rapid, and a new edition being called for,
+Byron revised it. The preparations for his travels being completed,
+he then embarked in July of the same year, with Mr Hobhouse, for
+Lisbon, and thence proceeded by the southern provinces of Spain to
+Gibraltar.
+
+In the account of his adventures during this journey, he seems to
+have felt, to an exaggerated degree, the hazards to which he was
+exposed. But many of his descriptions are given with a bright pen.
+That of Lisbon has always been admired for its justness, and the
+mixture of force and familiarity.
+
+
+ What beauties doth Lisboa's port unfold!
+ Her image floating on that noble tide,
+ Which poets vainly pave with sands of gold,
+ But now whereon a thousand keels did ride,
+ Of mighty strength since Albion was allied,
+ And to the Lusians did her aid afford.
+ A nation swoln with ignorance and pride,
+ Who lick, yet loathe, the hand that waves the sword
+To save them from the wrath of Gaul's unsparing lord.
+
+ But whoso entereth within this town,
+ That sheening for celestial seems to be,
+ Disconsolate will wander up and down,
+ 'Mid many things unsightly strange to see,
+ For hut and palace show like filthily;
+ The dingy denizens are reared in dirt;
+ No personage of high or mean degree
+ Doth care for cleanness of surtout and shirt,
+Though shent with Egypt's plague, unkempt, unwash'd, unhurt.
+
+
+Considering the interest which he afterwards took in the affairs of
+Greece, it is remarkable that he should have passed through Spain, at
+the period he has described, without feeling any sympathy with the
+spirit which then animated that nation. Intent, however, on his
+travels, pressing onward to an unknown goal, he paused not to inquire
+as to the earnestness of the patriotic zeal of the Spaniards, nor
+once dreamed, even for adventure, of taking a part in their heroic
+cause.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+
+First Acquaintance with Byron--Embark together--The Voyage
+
+It was at Gibraltar that I first fell in with Lord Byron. I had
+arrived there in the packet from England, in indifferent health, on
+my way to Sicily. I had then no intention of travelling. I only
+went a trip, intending to return home after spending a few weeks in
+Malta, Sicily, and Sardinia; having, before my departure, entered
+into the Society of Lincoln's Inn, with the design of studying the
+law.
+
+At this time, my friend, the late Colonel Wright, of the artillery,
+was secretary to the Governor; and during the short stay of the
+packet at the Rock, he invited me to the hospitalities of his house,
+and among other civilities gave me admission to the garrison library.
+
+The day, I well remember, was exceedingly sultry. The air was
+sickly; and if the wind was not a sirocco, it was a withering
+levanter--oppressive to the functions of life, and to an invalid
+denying all exercise. Instead of rambling over the fortifications, I
+was, in consequence, constrained to spend the hottest part of the day
+in the library; and, while sitting there, a young man came in and
+seated himself opposite to me at the table where I was reading.
+Something in his appearance attracted my attention. His dress
+indicated a Londoner of some fashion, partly by its neatness and
+simplicity, with just so much of a peculiarity of style as served to
+show, that although he belonged to the order of metropolitan beaux,
+he was not altogether a common one.
+
+I thought his face not unknown to me; I began to conjecture where I
+could have seen him; and, after an unobserved scrutiny, to speculate
+both as to his character and vocation. His physiognomy was
+prepossessing and intelligent, but ever and anon his brows lowered
+and gathered; a habit, as I then thought, with a degree of
+affectation in it, probably first assumed for picturesque effect and
+energetic expression; but which I afterwards discovered was
+undoubtedly the occasional scowl of some unpleasant reminiscence: it
+was certainly disagreeable--forbidding--but still the general cast of
+his features was impressed with elegance and character.
+
+At dinner, a large party assembled at Colonel Wright's; among others
+the Countess of Westmorland, with Tom Sheridan and his beautiful
+wife; and it happened that Sheridan, in relating the local news of
+the morning, mentioned that Lord Byron and Mr Hobhouse had come in
+from Spain, and were to proceed up the Mediterranean in the packet.
+He was not acquainted with either.
+
+Hobhouse had, a short time before I left London,, published certain
+translations and poems rather respectable in their way, and I had
+seen the work, so that his name was not altogether strange to me.
+Byron's was familiar--the Edinburgh Review had made it so, and still
+more the satire of English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, but I was not
+conscious of having seen the persons of either.
+
+On the following evening I embarked early, and soon after the two
+travellers came on board; in one of whom I recognised the visitor to
+the library, and he proved to be Lord Byron. In the little bustle
+and process of embarking their luggage, his Lordship affected, as it
+seemed to me, more aristocracy than befitted his years, or the
+occasion; and I then thought of his singular scowl, and suspected him
+of pride and irascibility. The impression that evening was not
+agreeable, but it was interesting; and that forehead mark, the frown,
+was calculated to awaken curiosity, and beget conjectures.
+
+Hobhouse, with more of the commoner, made himself one of the
+passengers at once; but Byron held himself aloof, and sat on the
+rail, leaning on the mizzen shrouds, inhaling, as it were, poetical
+sympathy, from the gloomy Rock, then dark and stern in the twilight.
+There was in all about him that evening much waywardness; he spoke
+petulantly to Fletcher, his valet; and was evidently ill at ease with
+himself, and fretful towards others. I thought he would turn out an
+unsatisfactory shipmate; yet there was something redeeming in the
+tones of his voice, when, some time after he had indulged his sullen
+meditation, he again addressed Fletcher; so that, instead of finding
+him ill-natured, I was soon convinced he was only capricious.
+
+Our passage to Sardinia was tardy, owing to calms; but, in other
+respects, pleasant. About the third day Byron relented from his rapt
+mood, as if he felt it was out of place, and became playful, and
+disposed to contribute his fair proportion to the general endeavour
+to wile away the tediousness of the dull voyage. Among other
+expedients for that purpose, we had recourse to shooting at bottles.
+Byron, I think, supplied the pistols, and was the best shot, but not
+very pre-eminently so. In the calms, the jolly-boat was several
+times lowered; and, on one of those occasions, his Lordship, with the
+captain, caught a turtle--I rather think two--we likewise hooked a
+shark, part of which was dressed for breakfast, and tasted, without
+relish; your shark is but a cannibal dainty.
+
+As we approached the gulf, or bay, of Cagliari, in Sardinia, a strong
+north wind came from the shore, and we had a whole disagreeable day
+of tacking, but next morning, it was Sunday, we found ourselves at
+anchor near the mole, where we landed. Byron, with the captain, rode
+out some distance into the country, while I walked with Mr Hobhouse
+about the town: we left our cards for the consul, and Mr Hill, the
+ambassador, who invited us to dinner. In the evening we landed
+again, to avail ourselves of the invitation; and, on this occasion,
+Byron and his Pylades dressed themselves as aides-de-camp--a
+circumstance which, at the time, did not tend to improve my
+estimation of the solidity of the character of either. But such is
+the force of habit: it appeared a less exceptionable affectation in
+the young peer than in the commoner.
+
+Had we parted at Cagliari, it is probable that I should have retained
+a much more favourable recollection of Mr Hobhouse than of Lord
+Byron; for he was a cheerful companion, full of odd and droll
+stories, which he told extremely well; he was also good-humoured and
+intelligent--altogether an advantageous specimen of a well-educated
+English gentleman. Moreover, I was at the time afflicted with a
+nervous dejection, which the occasional exhilaration produced by his
+anecdotes and college tales often materially dissipated, though, for
+the most part, they were more after the manner and matter of Swift
+than of Addison.
+
+Byron was, during the passage, in delicate health, and upon an
+abstemious regimen. He rarely tasted wine, nor more than half a
+glass, mingled with water, when he did. He ate little; no animal
+food, but only bread and vegetables. He reminded me of the ghoul
+that picked rice with a needle; for it was manifest, that he had not
+acquired his knowledge of the world by always dining so sparely. If
+my remembrance is not treacherous, he only spent one evening in the
+cabin with us--the evening before we came to anchor at Cagliari; for,
+when the lights were placed, he made himself a man forbid, took his
+station on the railing between the pegs on which the sheets are
+belayed and the shrouds, and there, for hours, sat in silence,
+enamoured, it may be, of the moon. All these peculiarities, with his
+caprices, and something inexplicable in the cast of his metaphysics,
+while they served to awaken interest, contributed little to
+conciliate esteem. He was often strangely rapt--it may have been
+from his genius; and, had its grandeur and darkness been then
+divulged, susceptible of explanation; but, at the time, it threw, as
+it were, around him the sackcloth of penitence. Sitting amid the
+shrouds and rattlins, in the tranquillity of the moonlight, churming
+an inarticulate melody, he seemed almost apparitional, suggesting dim
+reminiscences of him who shot the albatross. He was as a mystery in
+a winding-sheet, crowned with a halo.
+
+The influence of the incomprehensible phantasma which hovered about
+Lord Byron has been more or less felt by all who ever approached him.
+That he sometimes came out of the cloud, and was familiar and
+earthly, is true; but his dwelling was amid the murk and the mist,
+and the home of his spirit in the abysm of the storm, and the hiding-
+places of guilt. He was, at the time of which I am speaking,
+scarcely two-and-twenty, and could claim no higher praise than having
+written a clever worldly-minded satire; and yet it was impossible,
+even then, to reflect on the bias of his mind, as it was revealed by
+the casualties of conversation, without experiencing a presentiment,
+that he was destined to execute some singular and ominous purpose.
+The description he has given of Manfred in his youth was of himself.
+
+
+My spirit walk'd not with the souls of men,
+Nor look'd upon the earth with human eyes;
+The thirst of their ambition was not mine;
+The aim of their existence was not mine.
+My joys, my griefs, my passions, and my powers,
+Made me a stranger. Though I wore the form,
+I had no sympathy with breathing flesh.
+My joy was in the wilderness--to breathe
+The difficult air of the iced mountain's top.
+Where the birds dare not build, nor insect's wing
+Flit o'er the herbless granite; or to plunge
+Into the torrent, and to roll along
+On the swift whirl of the new-breaking wave
+Of river, stream, or ocean, in their flow--
+In these my early strength exulted; or
+To follow through the night the moving moon,
+The stars, and their development; or catch
+The dazzling lightnings till my eyes grew dim;
+Or to look listening on the scatter'd leaves,
+While autumn winds were at their evening song;--
+These were my pastimes--and to be alone.
+For if the beings, of whom I was one--
+Hating to be so--cross'd me in my path,
+I felt myself degraded back to them,
+And was all clay again.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+
+Dinner at the Ambassador's--Opera--Disaster of Byron at Malta--Mrs
+Spencer Smith
+
+I shall always remember Cagliari with particular pleasure; for it so
+happened that I formed there three of the most agreeable
+acquaintances of my life, and one of them was with Lord Byron; for
+although we had been eight days together, I yet could not previously
+have accounted myself acquainted with his Lordship.
+
+After dinner, we all went to the theatre, which was that evening, on
+account of some Court festival, brilliantly illuminated. The Royal
+Family were present, and the opera was performed with more taste and
+execution than I had expected to meet with in so remote a place, and
+under the restrictions which rendered the intercourse with the
+Continent then so difficult. Among other remarkable characters
+pointed out to us was a nobleman in the pit, actually under the ban
+of outlawry for murder. I have often wondered if the incident had
+any effect on the creation of Lara; for we know not in what small
+germs the conceptions of genius originate.
+
+But the most important occurrence of that evening arose from a
+delicate observance of etiquette on the part of the ambassador.
+After carrying us to his box, which was close to that of the Royal
+Family, in order that we might see the members of it properly, he
+retired with Lord Byron to another box, an inflection of manners to
+propriety in the best possible taste--for the ambassador was
+doubtless aware that his Lordship's rank would be known to the
+audience, and I conceive that this little arrangement was adopted to
+make his person also known, by showing him with distinction apart
+from the other strangers.
+
+When the performance was over, Mr Hill came down with Lord Byron to
+the gate of the upper town, where his Lordship, as we were taking
+leave, thanked him with more elocution than was precisely requisite.
+The style and formality of the speech amused Mr Hobhouse, as well as
+others; and, when the minister retired, he began to rally his
+Lordship on the subject. But Byron really fancied that he had
+acquitted himself with grace and dignity, and took the jocularity of
+his friend amiss--a little banter ensued--the poet became petulant,
+and Mr Hobhouse walked on; while Byron, on account of his lameness,
+and the roughness of the pavement, took hold of my arm, appealing to
+me, if he could have said less, after the kind and hospitable
+treatment we had all received. Of course, though I thought pretty
+much as Mr Hobhouse did, I could not do otherwise than civilly
+assent, especially as his Lordship's comfort, at the moment, seemed
+in some degree dependent on being confirmed in the good opinion he
+was desirous to entertain of his own courtesy. From that night I
+evidently rose in his good graces; and, as he was always most
+agreeable and interesting when familiar, it was worth my while to
+advance, but by cautious circumvallations, into his intimacy; for his
+uncertain temper made his favour precarious.
+
+The next morning, either owing to the relaxation of his abstinence,
+which he could not probably well avoid amid the good things of the
+ambassadorial table; or, what was, perhaps, less questionable, some
+regret for his petulance towards his friend, he was indisposed, and
+did not make his appearance till late in the evening. I rather
+suspect, though there was no evidence of the fact, that Hobhouse
+received any concession which he may have made with indulgence; for
+he remarked to me, in a tone that implied both forbearance and
+generosity of regard, that it was necessary to humour him like a
+child. But, in whatever manner the reconciliation was accomplished,
+the passengers partook of the blessings of the peace. Byron, during
+the following day, as we were sailing along the picturesque shores of
+Sicily, was in the highest spirits overflowing with glee, and
+sparkling with quaint sentences. The champagne was uncorked and in
+the finest condition.
+
+Having landed the mail at Girgenti, we stretched over to Malta, where
+we arrived about noon next day--all the passengers, except Orestes
+and Pylades, being eager to land, went on shore with the captain.
+They remained behind for a reason--which an accidental expression of
+Byron let out--much to my secret amusement; for I was aware they
+would be disappointed, and the anticipation was relishing. They
+expected--at least he did--a salute from the batteries, and sent
+ashore notice to Sir Alexander Ball, the Governor, of his arrival;
+but the guns were sulky, and evinced no respect of persons; so that
+late in the afternoon, about the heel of the evening, the two
+magnates were obliged to come on shore, and slip into the city
+unnoticed and unknown.
+
+At this time Malta was in great prosperity. Her commerce was
+flourishing; and the goodly clusters of its profits hung ripe and
+rich at every door. The merchants were truly hospitable, and few
+more so than Mr Chabot. As I had letters to him, he invited me to
+dinner, along with several other friends previously engaged. In the
+cool of the evening, as we were sitting at our wine, Lord Byron and
+Mr Hobhouse were announced. His Lordship was in better spirits than
+I had ever seen him. His appearance showed, as he entered the room,
+that they had met with some adventure, and he chuckled with an inward
+sense of enjoyment, not altogether without spleen--a kind of
+malicious satisfaction--as his companion recounted with all becoming
+gravity their woes and sufferings, as an apology for begging a bed
+and morsel for the night. God forgive me! but I partook of Byron's
+levity at the idea of personages so consequential wandering destitute
+in the streets, seeking for lodgings, as it were, from door to door,
+and rejected at all.
+
+Next day, however, they were accommodated by the Governor with an
+agreeable house in the upper part of Valetta; and his Lordship, as
+soon as they were domiciled, began to take lessons in Arabic from a
+monk--I believe one of the librarians of the public library. His
+whole time was not, however, devoted to study; for he formed an
+acquaintance with Mrs Spencer Smith, the lady of the gentleman of
+that name, who had been our resident minister at Constantinople: he
+affected a passion for her; but it was only Platonic. She, however,
+beguiled him of his valuable yellow diamond ring. She is the
+Florence of Childe Harold, and merited the poetical embalmment, or
+rather the amber immortalisation, she possesses there--being herself
+a heroine. There was no exaggeration in saying that many incidents
+of her life would appear improbable in fiction. Her adventures with
+the Marquis de Salvo form one of the prettiest romances in the
+Italian language; everything in her destiny was touched with
+adventure: nor was it the least of her claims to sympathy that she
+had incurred the special enmity of Napoleon.
+
+After remaining about three weeks at Malta, Byron embarked with his
+friend in a brig of war, appointed to convoy a fleet of small
+merchantmen to Prevesa. I had, about a fortnight before, passed over
+with the packet on her return from Messina to Girgenti, and did not
+fall in with them again till the following spring, when we met at
+Athens. In the meantime, besides his Platonic dalliance with Mrs
+Spencer Smith, Byron had involved himself in a quarrel with an
+officer; but it was satisfactorily settled.
+
+His residence at Malta did not greatly interest him. The story of
+its chivalrous masters made no impression on his imagination--none
+that appears in his works--but it is not the less probable that the
+remembrance of the place itself occupied a deep niche in his bosom:
+for I have remarked, that he had a voluntary power of forgetfulness,
+which, on more than one occasion, struck me as singular: and I am
+led in consequence to think, that something unpleasant, connected
+with this quarrel, may have been the cause of his suppression of all
+direct allusion to the island. It was impossible that his
+imagination could avoid the impulses of the spirit which haunts the
+walls and ramparts of Malta; and the silence of his muse on a topic
+so rich in romance, and so well calculated to awaken associations
+concerning the knights, in unison with the ruminations of Childe
+Harold, persuades me that there must have been some specific cause
+for the omission. If it were nothing in the duel, I should be
+inclined to say, notwithstanding the seeming improbability of the
+notion, that it was owing to some curious modification of vindictive
+spite. It might not be that Malta should receive no celebrity from
+his pen; but assuredly he had met with something there which made him
+resolute to forget the place. The question as to what it was, he
+never answered the result would throw light into the labyrinths of
+his character.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+
+Sails from Malta to Prevesa--Lands at Patras--Sails again--Passes
+Ithaca--Arrival at Prevesa
+
+It was on the 19th of September, 1809, that Byron sailed in the
+Spider brig from Malta for Prevesa, and on the morning of the fourth
+day after, he first saw the mountains of Greece; next day he landed
+at Patras, and walked for some time among the currant grounds between
+the town and the shore. Around him lay one of the noblest landscapes
+in the world, and afar in the north-east rose the purple summits of
+the Grecian mountains.
+
+Having re-embarked, the Spider proceeded towards her destination; the
+poet not receiving much augmentation to his ideas of the grandeur of
+the ancients, from the magnitude of their realms and states. Ithaca,
+which he doubtless regarded with wonder and disappointment, as he
+passed its cliffy shores, was then in the possession of the French.
+In the course of a month after, the kingdom of Ulysses surrendered to
+a British serjeant and seven men.
+
+
+ Childe Harold sail'd, and pass'd the barren spot,
+ Where sad Penelope o'erlook'd the wave;
+ And onward view'd the mount, not yet forgot.
+ The lover's refuge, and the Lesbian's grave.
+ But when he saw the evening star above
+ Leucadia's far-projecting rock of woe,
+ And hail'd the last resort of fruitless love,
+ He felt, or deem'd he felt, no common glow;
+ And as the stately vessel glided slow
+ Beneath the shadow of that ancient mount,
+ He watch'd the billows' melancholy flow,
+ And, sunk albeit in thought as he was wont--
+More placid seem'd his eye, and smooth his pallid front.
+
+
+At seven in the evening, of the same day on which he passed Leucadia,
+the vessel came to anchor off Prevesa. The day was wet and gloomy,
+and the appearance of the town was little calculated to bespeak
+cheerfulness. But the novelty in the costume and appearance of the
+inhabitants and their dwellings, produced an immediate effect on the
+imagination of Byron, and we can trace the vivid impression animating
+and adorning his descriptions.
+
+
+ The wild Albanian, kirtled to his knee,
+ With shawl-girt head and ornamented gun,
+ And gold-embroider'd garments, fair to see;
+ The crimson-scarfed men of Macedon;
+ The Delhi with his cap of terror on,
+ And crooked glaive; the lively, supple Greek,
+ And swarthy Nubia's mutilated son;
+ The bearded Turk, that rarely deigns to speak,
+Master of all around, too potent to be meek.
+
+
+Having partaken of a consecutive dinner, dish after dish, with the
+brother of the English consul, the travellers proceeded to visit the
+Governor of the town: he resided within the enclosure of a fort, and
+they were conducted towards him by a long gallery, open on one side,
+and through several large unfurnished rooms. In the last of this
+series, the Governor received them with the wonted solemn civility of
+the Turks, and entertained them with pipes and coffee. Neither his
+appearance, nor the style of the entertainment, were distinguished by
+any display of Ottoman grandeur; he was seated on a sofa in the midst
+of a group of shabby Albanian guards, who had but little reverence
+for the greatness of the guests, as they sat down beside them, and
+stared and laughed at their conversation with the Governor.
+
+But if the circumstances and aspect of the place derived no
+importance from visible splendour, every object around was enriched
+with stories and classical recollections. The battle of Actium was
+fought within the gulf.
+
+
+ Ambracia's gulf behold, where once was lost
+ A world for woman--lovely, harmless thing!
+ In yonder rippling bay, their naval host
+ Did many a Roman chief and Asian king
+ To doubtful conflict, certain slaughter bring.
+ Look where the second Caesar's trophies rose!
+ Now, like the lands that rear'd them, withering;
+ Imperial monarchs doubling human woes!
+God! was Thy globe ordained for such to win and lose?
+
+
+Having inspected the ruins of Nicopolis, which are more remarkable
+for their desultory extent and scattered remnants, than for any
+remains of magnificence or of beauty,
+
+
+ Childe Harold pass'd o'er many a mount sublime,
+ Through lands scarce noticed in historic tales.
+ Yet in famed Attica such lovely dales
+ Are rarely seen; nor can fair Tempe boast
+ A charm they know not; loved Parnassus fails,
+ Though classic ground and consecrated most,
+To match some spots that lurk within this lowering coast.
+
+
+In this journey he was still accompanied by Mr Hobhouse. They had
+provided themselves with a Greek to serve as a dragoman. With this
+person they soon became dissatisfied, in consequence of their general
+suspicion of Greek integrity, and because of the necessary influence
+which such an appendage acquires in the exercise of his office. He
+is the tongue and purse-bearer of his master; he procures him
+lodging, food, horses, and all conveniences; must support his dignity
+with the Turks--a difficult task in those days for a Greek--and his
+manifold trusts demand that he should be not only active and
+ingenious, but prompt and resolute. In the qualifications of this
+essential servant, the travellers were not fortunate--he never lost
+an opportunity of pilfering;--he was, however, zealous, bustling, and
+talkative, and withal good-humoured; and, having his mind intent on
+one object--making money--was never lazy nor drunken, negligent nor
+unprepared.
+
+On the 1st of October they embarked, and sailed up the Gulf of
+Salona, where they were shown into an empty barrack for lodgings. In
+this habitation twelve Albanian soldiers and an officer were
+quartered, who behaved towards them with civility. On their
+entrance, the officer gave them pipes and coffee, and after they had
+dined in their own apartment, he invited them to spend the evening
+with him, and they condescended to partake of his hospitality.
+
+Such instances as these in ordinary biography would be without
+interest; but when it is considered how firmly the impression of them
+was retained in the mind of the poet, and how intimately they entered
+into the substance of his reminiscences of Greece, they acquire
+dignity, and become epochal in the history of the development of his
+intellectual powers.
+
+"All the Albanians," says Mr Hobhouse, "strut very much when they
+walk, projecting their chests, throwing back their heads, and moving
+very slowly from side to side. Elmas (as the officer was called) had
+this strut more than any man perhaps we saw afterwards; and as the
+sight was then quite new to us, we could not help staring at the
+magisterial and superlatively dignified air of a man with great holes
+in his elbows, and looking altogether, as to his garment, like what
+we call a bull-beggar." Mr Hobhouse describes him as a captain, but
+by the number of men under him, he could have been of no higher rank
+than serjeant. Captains are centurions.
+
+After supper, the officer washed his hands with soap, inviting the
+travellers to do the same, for they had eaten a little with him; he
+did not, however, give the soap, but put it on the floor with an air
+so remarkable, as to induce Mr Hobhouse to inquire the meaning of it,
+and he was informed that there is a superstition in Turkey against
+giving soap: it is thought it will wash away love.
+
+Next day it rained, and the travellers were obliged to remain under
+shelter. The evening was again spent with the soldiers, who did
+their utmost to amuse them with Greek and Albanian songs and freaks
+of jocularity.
+
+In the morning of the 3rd of October they set out for Arta, with ten
+horses; four for themselves and servants, four for their luggage, and
+two for two soldiers whom they were induced to take with them as
+guards. Byron takes no notice of his visit to Arta in Childe Harold;
+but Mr Hobhouse has given a minute account of the town. They met
+there with nothing remarkable.
+
+The remainder of the journey to Joannina, the capital then of the
+famous Ali Pasha, was rendered unpleasant by the wetness of the
+weather; still it was impossible to pass through a country so
+picturesque in its features, and rendered romantic by the traditions
+of robberies and conflicts, without receiving impressions of that
+kind of imagery which constitutes the embroidery on the vestment of
+poetry.
+
+The first view of Joannina seen in the morning light, or glittering
+in the setting sun, is lively and alluring. The houses, domes, and
+minarets, shining through gardens of orange and lemon trees and
+groves of cypresses; the lake, spreading its broad mirror at the foot
+of the town, and the mountains rising abrupt around, all combined to
+present a landscape new and beautiful. Indeed, where may be its
+parallel? the lake was the Acherusian, Mount Pindus was in sight, and
+the Elysian fields of mythology spread in the lovely plains over
+which they passed in approaching the town.
+
+On entering Joannina, they were appalled by a spectacle
+characteristic of the country. Opposite a butcher's shop, they
+beheld hanging from the boughs of a tree a man's arm, with part of
+the side torn from the body. How long is it since Temple Bar, in the
+very heart of London, was adorned with the skulls of the Scottish
+noblemen who were beheaded for their loyalty to the son and
+representative of their ancient kings!
+
+The object of the visit to Joannina was to see Ali Pasha, in those
+days the most celebrated Vizier in all the western provinces of the
+Ottoman empire; but he was then at Tepellene. The luxury of resting,
+however, in a capital, was not to be resisted, and they accordingly
+suspended their journey until they had satisfied their curiosity with
+an inspection of every object which merited attention. Of Joannina,
+it may be said, they were almost the discoverers, so little was known
+of it in England--I may say in Western Europe--previous to their
+visit.
+
+The palace and establishment of Ali Pasha were of regal splendour,
+combining with Oriental pomp the elegance of the Occident, and the
+travellers were treated by the Vizier's officers with all the
+courtesy due to the rank of Lord Byron, and every facility was
+afforded them to prosecute their journey. The weather, however--the
+season being far advanced--was wet and unsettled, and they suffered
+more fatigue and annoyance than travellers for information or
+pleasure should have had to encounter.
+
+The journey from Joannina to Zitza is among the happiest sketches in
+the Pilgrimage of Childe Harold.
+
+
+ He pass'd bleak Pindus, Acherusia's lake,
+ And left the primal city of the land,
+ And onwards did his farther journey take
+ To greet Albania's chief, whose dread command
+ Is lawless law; for with a bloody hand
+ He sways a nation, turbulent and bold:
+ Yet here and there some daring mountain-band
+ Disdain his power, and from their rocky hold
+Hurl their defiance far, nor yield unless to gold.
+
+ Monastic Zitza! from thy shady brow,
+ Thou small, but favour'd spot of holy ground!
+ Where'er we gaze, above, around, below,
+ What rainbow tints, what magic charms are found;
+ Rock, river, forest, mountain, all abound;
+ And bluest skies that harmonize the whole.
+ Beneath, the distant torrent's rushing sound
+ Tells where the volumed cataract doth roll
+Between those hanging rocks that shock yet please the soul.
+
+
+In the course of this journey the poet happened to be alone with his
+guides, when they lost their way during a tremendous thunderstorm,
+and he has commemorated the circumstance in the spirited stanzas
+beginning--
+
+
+Chill and mink is the nightly blast.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+
+Halt at Zitza--The River Acheron--Greek Wine--A Greek Chariot--
+Arrival at Tepellene--The Vizier's Palace
+
+The travellers, on their arrival at Zitza, went to the monastery to
+solicit accommodation; and after some parley with one of the monks,
+through a small grating in a door plated with iron, on which marks of
+violence were visible, and which, before the country had been
+tranquillised under the vigorous dominion of Ali Pasha, had been
+frequently battered in vain by the robbers who then infested the
+neighbourhood. The prior, a meek and lowly man, entertained them in
+a warm chamber with grapes and a pleasant white wine, not trodden out
+by the feet, as he informed them, but expressed by the hand. To this
+gentle and kind host Byron alludes in his description of "Monastic
+Zitza."
+
+
+ Amid the grove that crowns yon tufted hill,
+ Which, were it not for many a mountain nigh
+ Rising in lofty ranks, and loftier still,
+ Might well itself be deem'd of dignity;
+ The convent's white walls glisten fair on high:
+ Here dwells the caloyer, nor rude is he,
+ Nor niggard of his cheer; the passer-by
+ Is welcome still; nor heedless will he flee
+From hence, if he delight kind Nature's sheen to see.
+
+
+Having halted a night at Zitza, the travellers proceeded on their
+journey next morning, by a road which led through the vineyards
+around the villages, and the view from a barren hill, which they were
+obliged to cross, is described with some of the most forcible touches
+of the poet's pencil.
+
+
+ Dusky and huge, enlarging on the sight,
+ Nature's volcanic amphitheatre,
+ Chimera's Alps, extend from left to right;
+ Beneath, a living valley seems to stir.
+ Flocks play, trees wave, streams flow, the mountain fir
+ Nodding above; behold Black Acheron!
+ Once consecrated to the sepulchre.
+ Pluto! if this be hell I look upon,
+Close shamed Elysium's gates; my shade shall seek for none!
+
+
+The Acheron, which they crossed in this route, is now called the
+Kalamas, a considerable stream, as large as the Avon at Bath but
+towards the evening they had some cause to think the Acheron had not
+lost all its original horror; for a dreadful thunderstorm came on,
+accompanied with deluges of rain, which more than once nearly carried
+away their luggage and horses. Byron himself does not notice this
+incident in Childe Harold, nor even the adventure more terrific which
+he met with alone in similar circumstances on the night before their
+arrival at Zitza, when his guides lost their way in the defiles of
+the mountains--adventures sufficiently disagreeable in the advent,
+but full of poesy in the remembrance.
+
+The first halt, after leaving Zitza, was at the little village of
+Mosure, where they were lodged in a miserable cabin, the residence of
+a poor priest, who treated them with all the kindness his humble
+means afforded. From this place they proceeded next morning through
+a wild and savage country, interspersed with vineyards, to Delvinaki,
+where it would seem they first met with genuine Greek wine, that is,
+wine mixed with resin and lime--a more odious draught at the first
+taste than any drug the apothecary mixes. Considering how much of
+allegory entered into the composition of the Greek mythology, it is
+probable that in representing the infant Bacchus holding a pine, the
+ancient sculptors intended an impersonation of the circumstance of
+resin being employed to preserve new wine.
+
+The travellers were now in Albania, the native region of Ali Pasha,
+whom they expected to find at Libokavo; but on entering the town,
+they were informed that he was further up the country at Tepellene,
+or Tepalen, his native place. In their route from Libokavo to
+Tepalen they met with no adventure, nor did they visit Argyro-castro,
+which they saw some nine or ten miles off--a large city, supposed to
+contain about twenty thousand inhabitants, chiefly Turks. When they
+reached Cezarades, a distance of not more than nine miles, which had
+taken them five hours to travel, they were agreeably accommodated for
+the night in a neat cottage; and the Albanian landlord, in whose
+demeanour they could discern none of that cringing, downcast,
+sinister look which marked the degraded Greek, received them with a
+hearty welcome.
+
+Next morning they resumed their journey, and halted one night more
+before they reached Tepellene, in approaching which they met a
+carriage, not inelegantly constructed after the German fashion, with
+a man on the box driving four-in-hand, and two Albanian soldiers
+standing on the footboard behind. They were floundering on at a trot
+through mud and mire, boldly regardless of danger; but it seemed to
+the English eyes of the travellers impossible that such a vehicle
+should ever be able to reach Libokavo, to which it was bound. In due
+time they crossed the river Laos, or Voioutza, which was then full,
+and appeared both to Byron and his friend as broad as the Thames at
+Westminster; after crossing it on a stone bridge, they came in sight
+of Tepellene, when
+
+
+ The sun had sunk behind vast Tomerit,
+ And Laos, wide and fierce, came roaring by;
+ The shades of wonted night were gathering yet,
+ When down the steep banks, winding warily,
+ Childe Harold saw, like meteors in the sky,
+ The glittering minarets of Tepalen,
+ Whose walls o'erlook the stream; and drawing nigh,
+ He heard the busy hum of warrior-men
+Swelling the breeze that sigh'd along the lengthening glen.
+
+
+On their arrival, they proceeded at once to the residence of Ali
+Pasha, an extensive rude pile, where they witnessed a scene, not
+dissimilar to that which they might, perhaps, have beheld some
+hundred years ago, in the castle-yard of a great feudal baron.
+Soldiers, with their arms piled against the wall, were assembled in
+different parts of the court, several horses, completely caparisoned,
+were led about, others were neighing under the hands of the grooms;
+and for the feast of the night, armed cooks were busy dressing kids
+and sheep. The scene is described with the poet's liveliest pencil.
+
+
+ Richly caparison'd a ready row
+ Of armed horse, and many a warlike store,
+ Circled the wide extending court below;
+ Above, strange groups adorn'd the corridor,
+ And ofttimes through the area's echoing door,
+ Some high-capp'd Tartar spurr'd his steed away.
+ The Turk, the Greek, the Albanian, and the Moor
+ Here mingled in their many-hued array,
+While the deep war-drum's sound announced the close of day.
+
+ Some recline in groups,
+ Scanning the motley scene that varies round.
+ There some grave Moslem to devotion stoops,
+ And some that smoke, and some that play, are found.
+ Here the Albanian proudly treads the ground
+ Half-whispering, there the Greek is heard to prate.
+ Hark! from the mosque the nightly solemn sound;
+ The Muezzin's call doth shake the minaret.
+"There is no god but God!--to prayer--lo, God is great!"
+
+
+The peculiar quietness and ease with which the Mahommedans say their
+prayers, struck the travellers as one of the most peculiar
+characteristics which they had yet witnessed of that people. Some of
+the graver sort began their devotions in the places where they were
+sitting, undisturbed and unnoticed by those around them who were
+otherwise engaged. The prayers last about ten minutes they are not
+uttered aloud, but generally in a low voice, sometimes with only a
+motion of the lips; and, whether performed in the public street or in
+a room, attract no attention from the bystanders. Of more than a
+hundred of the guards in the gallery of the Vizier's mansion at
+Tepellene, not more than five or six were seen at prayers. The
+Albanians are not reckoned strict Mahommedans; but no Turk, however
+irreligious himself, ever disturbs the devotion of others.
+
+It was then the fast of Ramazan, and the travellers, during the
+night, were annoyed with the perpetual noise of the carousal kept up
+in the gallery, and by the drum, and the occasional voice of the
+Muezzin.
+
+
+ Just at this season, Ramazani's fast
+ Through the long day its penance did maintain:
+ But when the lingering twilight hour was past,
+ Revel and feast assumed the rule again.
+ Now all was bustle, and the menial train
+ Prepared and spread the plenteous board within;
+ The vacant gallery now seem'd made in vain,
+ But from the chambers came the mingling din,
+And page and slave, anon, were passing out and in.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+
+Audience appointed with Ali Pasha--Description of the Vizier's
+Person--An Audience of the Vizier of the Morea
+
+The progress of no other poet's mind can be to clearly traced to
+personal experience as that of Byron's. The minute details in the
+Pilgrimage of Childe Harold are the observations of an actual
+traveller. Had they been given in prose, they could not have been
+less imbued with fiction. From this fidelity they possess a value
+equal to the excellence of the poetry, and ensure for themselves an
+interest as lasting as it is intense. When the manners and customs
+of the inhabitants shall have been changed by time and the
+vicissitudes of society, the scenery and the mountains will bear
+testimony to the accuracy of Lord Byron's descriptions.
+
+The day after the travellers' arrival at Tepellene was fixed by the
+Vizier for their first audience; and about noon, the time appointed,
+an officer of the palace with a white wand announced to them that his
+highness was ready to receive them, and accordingly they proceeded
+from their own apartment, accompanied by the secretary of the Vizier,
+and attended by their own dragoman. The usher of the white rod led
+the way, and conducted them through a suite of meanly-furnished
+apartments to the presence chamber. Ali when they entered was
+standing, a courtesy of marked distinction from a Turk. As they
+advanced towards him, he seated himself, and requested them to sit
+near him. The room was spacious and handsomely fitted up, surrounded
+by that species of continued sofa which the upholsterers call a
+divan, covered with richly-embroidered velvet; in the middle of the
+floor was a large marble basin, in which a fountain was playing.
+
+ In marble-paved pavilion, where a spring
+ Of living water from the centre rose,
+ Whose bubbling did a genial freshness fling,
+ And soft voluptuous couches breathed repose,
+ ALI reclined; a man of war and woes.
+ Yet in his lineaments ye cannot trace,
+ While Gentleness her milder radiance throws
+ Along that aged, venerable face,
+The deeds that lurk beneath and stain him with disgrace.
+
+ It is not that yon hoary, lengthening beard,
+ Ill suits the passions that belong to youth;
+ Love conquers age--so Hafiz hath averr'd:
+ So sings the Teian, and he sings in sooth--
+ But crimes that scorn the tender voice of Ruth,
+ Beseeming all men ill, but most the man
+ In years, have mark'd him with a tiger's tooth;
+ Blood follows blood, and through their mortal span,
+In bloodier acts conclude those who with blood began.
+
+
+When this was written Ali Pasha was still living; but the prediction
+which it implies was soon after verified, and he closed his stern and
+energetic life with a catastrophe worthy of its guilt and bravery.
+He voluntarily perished by firing a powder-magazine, when surrounded,
+beyond all chance of escape, by the troops of the Sultan his master,
+whose authority he had long contemned.
+
+Mr Hobhouse describes him at this audience as a short fat man, about
+five feet five inches in height; with a very pleasing face, fair and
+round; and blue fair eyes, not settled into a Turkish gravity. His
+beard was long and hoary, and such a one as any other Turk would have
+been proud of; nevertheless, he, who was more occupied in attending
+to his guests than himself, neither gazed at it, smelt it, nor
+stroked it, according to the custom of his countrymen, when they seek
+to fill up the pauses in conversation. He was not dressed with the
+usual magnificence of dignitaries of his degree, except that his high
+turban, composed of many small rolls, was of golden muslin, and his
+yataghan studded with diamonds.
+
+He was civil and urbane in the entertainment of his guests, and
+requested them to consider themselves as his children. It was on
+this occasion he told Lord Byron, that he discovered his noble blood
+by the smallness of his hands and ears: a remark which has become
+proverbial, and is acknowledged not to be without truth in the
+evidence of pedigree.
+
+The ceremonies on such visits are similar all over Turkey, among
+personages of the same rank; and as Lord Byron has not described in
+verse the details of what took place with him, it will not be
+altogether obtrusive here to recapitulate what happened to myself
+during a visit to Velhi Pasha, the son of Ali: he was then Vizier of
+the Morea, and residing at Tripolizza.
+
+In the afternoon, about four o'clock, I set out for the seraglio with
+Dr Teriano, the Vizier's physician, and the Vizier's Italian
+secretary. The gate of the palace was not unlike the entrance to
+some of the closes in Edinburgh, and the court within reminded me of
+Smithfield, in London; but it was not surrounded by such lofty
+buildings, nor in any degree of comparison so well constructed. We
+ascended a ruinous staircase, which led to an open gallery, where
+three or four hundred of the Vizier's Albanian guards were lounging.
+In an antechamber, which opened from the gallery, a number of
+officers were smoking, and in the middle, on the floor, two old Turks
+were seriously engaged at chess.
+
+My name being sent in to the Vizier, a guard of ceremony was called,
+and after they had arranged themselves in the presence chamber, I was
+admitted. The doctor and the secretary having, in the meantime,
+taken off their shoes, accompanied me in to act as interpreters.
+
+The presence chamber was about forty feet square, showy and handsome:
+round the walls were placed sofas, which, from being covered with
+scarlet, reminded me of the woolsacks in the House of Lords. In the
+farthest corner of the room, elevated on a crimson velvet cushion,
+sat the Vizier, wrapped in a superb pelisse: on his head was a vast
+turban, in his belt a dagger, incrusted with jewels, and on the
+little finger of his right hand he wore a solitaire as large as the
+knob on the stopper of a vinegar-cruet, and which was said to have
+cost two thousand five hundred pounds sterling. In his left hand he
+held a string of small coral beads, a comboloio which he twisted
+backwards and forwards during the greater part of the visit. On the
+sofa beside him lay a pair of richly-ornamented London-made pistols.
+At some distance, on the same sofa, but not on a cushion, sat Memet,
+the Pasha of Napoli Romania, whose son was contracted in marriage to
+the Vizier's daughter. On the floor, at the foot of this pasha, and
+opposite to the Vizier, a secretary was writing despatches. These
+were the only persons in the room who had the honour of being seated;
+for, according to the etiquette of this viceregal court, those who
+received the Vizier's pay were not allowed to sit down in his
+presence.
+
+On my entrance, his highness motioned to me to sit beside him, and
+through the medium of the interpreters began with some commonplace
+courtly insignificancies, as a prelude to more interesting
+conversation. In his manners I found him free and affable, with a
+considerable tincture of humour and drollery. Among other questions,
+he inquired if I had a wife: and being answered in the negative, he
+replied to me himself in Italian, that I was a happy man, for he
+found his very troublesome: considering their probable number, this
+was not unlikely. Pipes and coffee were in the mean-time served.
+The pipe presented to the Vizier was at least twelve feet long; the
+mouth-piece was formed of a single block of amber, about the size of
+an ordinary cucumber, and fastened to the shaft by a broad hoop of
+gold, decorated with jewels. While the pipes and coffee were
+distributing, a musical clock, which stood in a niche, began to play,
+and continued doing so until this ceremony was over. The coffee was
+literally a drop of dregs in a very small china cup, placed in a
+golden socket. His highness was served with his coffee by Pasha Bey,
+his generalissimo, a giant, with the tall crown of a dun-coloured
+beaver-hat on his head. In returning the cup to him, the Vizier
+elegantly eructed in his face. After the regale of the pipes and
+coffee, the attendants withdrew, and his highness began a kind of
+political discussion, in which, though making use of an interpreter,
+he managed to convey his questions with delicacy and address.
+
+On my rising to retire, his highness informed me, with more polite
+condescension than a Christian of a thousandth part of his authority
+would have done, that during my stay at Tripolizza horses were at my
+command, and guards who would accompany me to any part of the country
+I might choose to visit.
+
+Next morning, he sent a complimentary message, importing, that he had
+ordered dinner to be prepared at the doctor's for me and two of his
+officers. The two officers were lively fellows; one of them in
+particular seemed to have acquired, by instinct, a large share of the
+ease and politeness of Christendom. The dinner surpassed all count
+and reckoning, dish followed dish, till I began to fancy that the
+cook either expected I would honour his highness's entertainment as
+Caesar did the supper of Cicero, or supposed that the party were not
+finite beings. During the course of this amazing service, the
+principal singers and musicians of the seraglio arrived, and sung and
+played several pieces of very sweet Turkish music. Among others was
+a song composed by the late unfortunate Sultan Selim, the air of
+which was pleasingly simple and pathetic. I had heard of the
+Sultan's poetry before, a small collection of which has been printed.
+It is said to be interesting and tender, consisting chiefly of little
+sonnets, written after he was deposed; in which he contrasts the
+tranquillity of his retirement with the perils and anxieties of his
+former grandeur. After the songs, the servants of the officers, who
+were Albanians, danced a Macedonian reel, in which they exhibited
+several furious specimens of Highland agility. The officers then
+took their leave, and I went to bed, equally gratified by the
+hospitality of the Vizier and the incidents of the entertainment.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+
+The Effect of Ali Pasha's Character on Lord Byron--Sketch of the
+Career of Ali, and the Perseverance with which he pursued the Objects
+of his Ambition
+
+Although many traits and lineaments of Lord Byron's own character may
+be traced in the portraits of his heroes, I have yet often thought
+that Ali Pasha was the model from which he drew several of their most
+remarkable features; and on this account it may be expedient to give
+a sketch of that bold and stern personage--if I am correct in my
+conjecture--and the reader can judge for himself when the picture is
+before him--it would be a great defect, according to the plan of this
+work, not to do so.
+
+Ali Pasha was born at Tepellene, about the year 1750. His father was
+a pasha of two tails, but possessed of little influence. At his
+death Ali succeeded to no inheritance but the house in which he was
+born; and it was his boast, in the plenitude of his power, that he
+began his fortune with sixty paras, about eighteen pence sterling,
+and a musket. At that time the country was much infested with
+cattle-stealers, and the flocks and herds of the neighbouring
+villages were often plundered.
+
+Ali collected a few followers from among the retainers of his father,
+made himself master, first of one village, then of another, amassed
+money, increased his power, and at last found himself at the head of
+a considerable body of Albanians, whom he paid by plunder; for he was
+then only a great robber--the Rob Roy of Albania: in a word, one of
+those independent freebooters who divide among themselves so much of
+the riches and revenues of the Ottoman dominions.
+
+In following up this career, he met with many adventures and
+reverses, but his course was still onwards, and uniformly
+distinguished by enterprise and cruelty. His enemies expected no
+mercy when vanquished in the field; and when accidentally seized in
+private, they were treated with equal rigour. It is reported that he
+even roasted alive on spits some of his most distinguished
+adversaries.
+
+When he had collected money enough, he bought a pashalic; and being
+invested with that dignity, he became still more eager to enlarge his
+possessions. He continued in constant war with the neighbouring
+pashas; and cultivating, by adroit agents, the most influential
+interest at Constantinople, he finally obtained possession of
+Joannina, and was confirmed pasha of the territory attached to it, by
+an imperial firman. He then went to war with the pashas of Arta, of
+Delvino, and of Ocrida, whom he subdued, together with that of
+Triccala, and established a predominant influence over the agas of
+Thessaly. The pasha of Vallona he poisoned in a bath at Sophia; and
+strengthened his power by marrying his two sons, Mouctar and Velhi,
+to the daughters of the successor and brother of the man whom he had
+murdered. In The Bride of Abydos, Lord Byron describes the
+assassination, but applies it to another party.
+
+
+Reclined and feverish in the bath,
+He, when the hunter's sport was up,
+But little deem'd a brother's wrath
+To quench his thirst had such a cup:
+The bowl a bribed attendant bore--
+He drank one draught, nor needed more.
+
+
+During this progression of his fortunes, he had been more than once
+called upon to furnish his quota of troops to the imperial armies,
+and had served at their head with distinction against the Russians.
+He knew his countrymen, however, too well ever to trust himself at
+Constantinople. It was reported that he had frequently been offered
+some of the highest offices in the empire, but he always declined
+them and sought for power only among the fastnesses of his native
+region. Stories of the skill and courage with which he counteracted
+several machinations to procure his head were current and popular
+throughout the country, and among the Greeks in general he was
+certainly regarded as inferior only to the Grand Vizier himself. But
+though distrusting and distrusted, he always in the field fought for
+the Sultan with great bravery, particularly against the famous rebel
+Paswan Oglou. On his return from that war in 1798, he was, in
+consequence, made a pasha of three tails, or vizier, and was more
+than once offered the ultimate dignity of Grand Vizier, but he still
+declined all the honours of the metropolis. The object of his
+ambition was not temporary power, but to found a kingdom.
+
+He procured, however, pashalics for his two sons, the younger of
+whom, Velhi, saved sufficient money in his first government to buy
+the pashalic of the Morea, with the dignity of vizier, for which he
+paid seventy-five thousand pounds sterling. His eldest son, Mouctar,
+was of a more warlike turn, with less ambition than his brother. At
+the epoch of which I am speaking, he supplied his father's place at
+the head of the Albanians in the armies of the Sultan, in which he
+greatly distinguished himself in the campaign of 1809 against the
+Russians.
+
+The difficulties which Ali Pasha had to encounter in establishing his
+ascendancy, did not arise so much from the opposition he met with
+from the neighbouring pashas as from the nature of the people, and of
+the country of which he was determined to make himself master. Many
+of the plains and valleys which composed his dominions were occupied
+by inhabitants who had been always in rebellion, and were never
+entirely conquered by the Turks, such as the Chimeriotes, the
+Sulliotes, and the nations living among the mountains adjacent to the
+coast of the Ionian Sea. Besides this, the woods and hills of every
+part of his dominions were in a great degree possessed by formidable
+bands of robbers, who, recruited and protected by the villages, and
+commanded by chiefs as brave and as enterprising as himself, laid
+extensive tracts under contribution, burning and plundering
+regardless of his jurisdiction. Against these he proceeded with the
+most iron severity; they were burned, hanged, beheaded, and impaled,
+in all parts of the country, until they were either exterminated or
+expelled.
+
+A short time before the arrival of Lord Byron at Joannina, a large
+body of insurgents who infested the mountains between that city and
+Triccala, were defeated and dispersed by Mouctar Pasha, who cut to
+pieces a hundred of them on the spot. These robbers had been headed
+by a Greek priest, who, after the defeat, went to Constantinople and
+procured a firman of protection, with which he ventured to return to
+Joannina, where the Vizier invited him to a conference, and made him
+a prisoner. In deference to the firman, Ali confined him in prison,
+but used him well until a messenger could bring from Constantinople a
+permission from the Porte to authorise him to do what he pleased with
+the rebel. It was the arm of this man which Byron beheld suspended
+from the bough on entering Joannina.
+
+By these vigorous measures, Ali Pasha rendered the greater part of
+Albania and the contiguous districts safely accessible, which were
+before overrun by bandits and freebooters; and consequently, by
+opening the country to merchants, and securing their persons and
+goods, not only increased his own revenues, but improved the
+condition of his subjects. He built bridges over the rivers, raised
+causeways over the marshes, opened roads, adorned the country and the
+towns with new buildings, and by many salutary regulations, acted the
+part of a just, though a merciless, prince.
+
+In private life he was no less distinguished for the same unmitigated
+cruelty, but he afforded many examples of strong affection. The wife
+of his son Mouctar was a great favourite with the old man. Upon
+paying her a visit one morning, he found her in tears. He questioned
+her several times as to the cause of her grief; she at last
+reluctantly acknowledged that it arose from the diminution of her
+husband's regard. He inquired if she thought he paid attention to
+other women; the reply was in the affirmative; and she related that a
+lady of the name of Phrosyne, the wife of a rich Jew, had beguiled
+her of her husband's love; for she had seen at the bath, upon the
+finger of Phrosyne, a rich ring, which had belonged to Mouctar, and
+which she had often in vain entreated him to give to her. Ali
+immediately ordered the lady to be seized, and to be tied up in a
+sack, and cast into the lake. Various versions of this tragical tale
+are met with in all parts of the country, and the fate of Phrosyne is
+embodied in a ballad of touching pathos and melody.
+
+That the character of this intrepid and ruthless warrior made a deep
+impression on the mind of Byron cannot be questioned. The scenes in
+which he acted were, as the poet traversed the country, everywhere
+around him; and his achievements, bloody, dark, and brave, had become
+themes of song and admiration.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+
+Leave Joannina for Prevesa--Land at Fanari--Albania--Byron's
+Character of the Inhabitants
+
+Having gratified their curiosity with an inspection of every object
+of interest at Tepellene, the travellers returned Joannina, where
+they again resided several days, partaking of the hospitality of the
+principal inhabitants. On the 3rd of November they bade it adieu,
+and returned to Salona, on the Golf of Arta; where, in consequence of
+hearing that the inhabitants of Carnia were up in arms, that numerous
+bands of robbers had descended from the mountains of Ziccola and
+Agrapha, and had made their appearance on the other side of the gulf,
+they resolved to proceed by water to Prevesa, and having presented an
+order which they had received from Ali Pasha, for the use of his
+galliot, she was immediately fitted out to convey them. In the
+course of the voyage they suffered a great deal of alarm, ran some
+risk, and were obliged to land on the mainland of Albania, in a bay
+called Fanari, contiguous to the mountainous district of Sulli.
+There they procured horses, and rode to Volondorako, a town belonging
+to the Vizier, by the primate of which and his highness's garrison
+they were received with all imaginable civility. Having passed the
+night there, they departed in the morning, which, proving bright and
+beautiful, afforded them interesting views of the steep romantic
+environs of Sulli.
+
+
+ Land of Albania, where Iskander rose,
+ Theme of the young, and beacon of the wise,
+ And he his namesake whose oft-baffled foes
+ Shrunk from his deeds of chivalrous emprise;
+ Land of Albania! let me bend mine eyes
+ On thee, thou rugged nurse of savage men!
+ The Cross descends, thy minarets arise,
+ And the pale crescent sparkles in the glen,
+Through many a cypress grove within each city's ken.
+
+
+Of the inhabitants of Albania--the Arnaouts or Albanese--Lord Byron
+says they reminded him strongly of the Highlanders of Scotland, whom
+they undoubtedly resemble in dress, figure, and manner of living.
+"The very mountains seemed Caledonian with a kinder climate. The
+kilt, though white, the spare active form, their dialect, Celtic in
+its sound, and their hardy habits, all carried me back to Morven. No
+nation are so detested and dreaded by their neighbours as the
+Albanese; the Greeks hardly regard them as Christians, or the Turks
+as Moslems, and in fact they are a mixture of both, and sometimes
+neither. Their habits are predatory: all are armed, and the red-
+shawled Arnaouts, the Montenegrins, Chimeriotes, and Gedges, are
+treacherous; the others differ somewhat in garb, and essentially in
+character. As far as my own experience goes, I can speak favourably.
+I was attended by two, an infidel and a Mussulman, to Constantinople
+and every other part of Turkey which came within my observations, and
+men more faithful in peril and indefatigable in service are nowhere
+to be found. The infidel was named Basilius, the Moslem Dervish
+Tahiri; the former a man of middle age, and the latter about my own.
+Basili was strictly charged by Ali Pasha in person to attend us, and
+Dervish was one of fifty who accompanied us through the forests of
+Acarnania, to the banks of the Achelous, and onward to Missolonghi.
+There I took him into my own service, and never had occasion to
+repent it until the moment of my departure.
+
+"When in 1810, after my friend, Mr Hobhouse, left me for England, I
+was seized with a severe fever in the Morea, these men saved my life
+by frightening away my physician, whose throat they threatened to cut
+if I was not cured within a given time. To this consolatory
+assurance of posthumous retribution, and a resolute refusal of Dr
+Romanelli's prescriptions, I attributed my recovery. I had left my
+last remaining English servant at Athens; my dragoman was as ill as
+myself; and my poor Arnaouts nursed me with an attention which would
+have done honour to civilization.
+
+"They had a variety of adventures, for the Moslem, Dervish, being a
+remarkably handsome man, was always squabbling with the husbands of
+Athens; insomuch that four of the principal Turks paid me a visit of
+remonstrance at the convent, on the subject of his having taken a
+woman to the bath--whom he had lawfully bought, however--a thing
+quite contrary to etiquette.
+
+"Basili also was extremely gallant among his own persuasion, and had
+the greatest veneration for the Church, mixed with the highest
+contempt of Churchmen, whom he cuffed upon occasion in a most
+heterodox manner. Yet he never passed a church without crossing
+himself; and I remember the risk he ran on entering St Sophia, in
+Stamboul, because it had once been a place of his worship. On
+remonstrating with him on his inconsistent proceedings, he invariably
+answered, 'Our church is holy, our priests are thieves'; and then he
+crossed himself as usual, and boxed the ears of the first papas who
+refused to assist in any required operation, as was always found to
+be necessary where a priest had any influence with the Cogia Bashi of
+his village. Indeed, a more abandoned race of miscreants cannot
+exist than the lower orders of the Greek clergy.
+
+"When preparations were made for my return, my Albanians were
+summoned to receive their pay. Basili took his with an awkward show
+of regret at my intended departure, and marched away to his quarters
+with his bag of piastres. I sent for Dervish, but for some time he
+was not to be found; at last he entered just as Signor Logotheti,
+father to the ci-devant Anglo-consul of Athens, and some other of my
+Greek acquaintances, paid me a visit. Dervish took the money, but on
+a sudden dashed it on the ground; and clasping his hands, which he
+raised to his forehead, rushed out of the room weeping bitterly.
+From that moment to the hour of my embarkation, he continued his
+lamentations, and all our efforts to console him only produced this
+answer, 'He leaves me.' Signor Logotheti, who never wept before for
+anything less than the loss of a paras, melted; the padre of the
+convent, my attendants, my visitors, and I verily believe that even
+Sterne's foolish fat scullion would have left her fish-kettle to
+sympathise with the unaffected and unexpected sorrow of this
+barbarian.
+
+"For my part, when I remembered that a short time before my departure
+from England, a noble and most intimate associate had excused himself
+from taking leave of me, because he had to attend a relation 'to a
+milliner's,' I felt no less surprised than humiliated by the present
+occurrence and the past recollection.
+
+"The Albanians in general (I do not mean the cultivators of the earth
+in the provinces, who have also that appellation, but the
+mountaineers) have a fine cast of countenance; and the most beautiful
+women I have ever beheld, in stature and in features, we saw
+levelling the road broken down by the torrents between Delvinaki and
+Libokavo. Their manner of walking is truly theatrical, but this
+strut is probably the effect of the capote or cloak depending from
+one shoulder. Their long hair reminds you of the Spartans, and their
+courage in desultory warfare is unquestionable. Though they have
+some cavalry among the Gedges, I never saw a good Arnaout horseman,
+but on foot they are never to be subdued."
+
+The travellers having left Volondorako proceeded southward until they
+came near to the seaside, and passing along the shore, under a castle
+belonging to Ali Pasha, on the lofty summit of a steep rock, they at
+last reached Nicopolis again, the ruins of which they revisited.
+
+On their arrival at Prevesa, they had no choice left but that of
+crossing Carnia, and the country being, as already mentioned, overrun
+with robbers, they provided themselves with a guard of thirty-seven
+soldiers, and procured another galliot to take them down the Gulf of
+Arta, to the place whence they were to commence their land journey.
+
+Having embarked, they continued sailing with very little wind until
+they reached the fortress of Vonitza, where they waited all night for
+the freshening of the morning breeze, with which they again set sail,
+and about four o'clock in the afternoon arrived at Utraikee.
+
+At this place there was only a custom house and a barrack for troops
+close to each other, and surrounded, except towards the water, by a
+high wall. In the evening the gates were secured, and preparations
+made for feeding their Albanian guards; a goat was killed and roasted
+whole, and four fires were kindled in the yard, around which the
+soldiers seated themselves in parties. After eating and drinking,
+the greater part of them assembled at the largest of the fires, and,
+while the travellers were themselves with the elders of the party
+seated on the ground, danced round the blaze to their own songs, with
+astonishing Highland energy.
+
+
+ Childe Harold at a little distance stood,
+ And view'd, but not displeased, the revelry,
+ Nor hated harmless mirth, however rude;
+ In sooth, it was no vulgar sight to see
+ Their barbarous, yet their not indecent glee;
+ And as the flames along their faces gleam'd,
+ Their gestures nimble, dark eyes flashing free,
+ The long wild locks that to their girdles stream'd,
+While thus in concert they this lay half sang, half scream'd.
+
+
+ "I talk not of mercy, I talk not of fear;
+ He neither must know who would serve the vizier;
+ Since the days of our prophet, the crescent ne'er saw
+ A chief ever glorious like Ali Pashaw.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+
+Leave Utraikee--Dangerous Pass in the Woods--Catoona--Quarrel between
+the Guard and Primate of the Village--Makala--Gouri--Missolonghi--
+Parnassus
+
+Having spent the night at Utraikee, Byron and his friend continued
+their journey southward. The reports of the state of the country
+induced them to take ten additional soldiers with them, as their road
+for the first two hours lay through dangerous passes in the forest.
+On approaching these places fifteen or twenty of the party walked
+briskly on before, and when they had gone through the pass halted
+until the travellers came up. In the woods two or three green spots
+were discovered on the road-side, and on them Turkish tombstones,
+generally under a clump of trees, and near a well or fountain.
+
+When they had passed the forest they reached an open country, whence
+they sent back the ten men whom they had brought from Utraikee. They
+then passed on to a village called Catoona, where they arrived by
+noon. It was their intention to have proceeded farther that day, but
+their progress was interrupted by an affair between their Albanian
+guard and the primate of the village. As they were looking about,
+while horses were collecting to carry their luggage, one of the
+soldiers drew his sword at the primate, the Greek head magistrate;
+guns were cocked, and in an instant, before either Lord Byron or Mr
+Hobhouse could stop the affray, the primate, throwing off his shoes
+and cloak, fled so precipitately that he rolled down the hill and
+dislocated his shoulder. It was a long time before they could
+persuade him to return to his house, where they lodged, and when he
+did return he remarked that he cared comparatively little about his
+shoulder to the loss of a purse with fifteen sequins, which had
+dropped out of his pocket during the tumble. The hint was
+understood.
+
+Catoona is inhabited by Greeks only, and is a rural, well-built
+village. The primate's house was neatly fitted up with sofas. Upon
+a knoll, in the middle of the village, stood a schoolhouse, and from
+that spot the view was very extensive. To the west are lofty
+mountains, ranging from north to south, near the coast; to the east a
+grand romantic prospect in the distance, and in the foreground a
+green valley, with a considerable river winding through a long line
+of country.
+
+They had some difficulty in procuring horses at Catoona, and in
+consequence were detained until past eleven o'clock the next morning,
+and only travelled four hours that day to Makala, a well-built stone
+village, containing about forty houses distinct from each other, and
+inhabited by Greeks, who were a little above the condition of
+peasants, being engaged in pasturage and a small wool-trade.
+
+The travellers were now in Carnia, where they found the inhabitants
+much better lodged than in the Albanian villages. The house in which
+they slept at this place resembled those old mansions which are to be
+met with in the bottoms of the Wiltshire Downs. Two green courts,
+one before and the other behind, were attached to it, and the whole
+was surrounded by a high and thick wall, which shut out the prospect,
+but was necessary in a country so frequently overrun by strong bands
+of freebooters.
+
+From Makala they proceeded through the woods, and in the course of
+their journey passed three new-made graves, which the Albanians
+pointing at as they rode by, said they were "robbers." In the course
+of the journey they had a distant view of the large town of Vraikore,
+on the left bank of the Aspro, but they did not approach it, crossing
+the river by a ferry to the village of Gouria, where they passed the
+night.
+
+Leaving that place in the morning, they took an easterly direction,
+and continued to ride across a plain of cornfields, near the banks of
+the river, in a rich country; sometimes over stone causeways, and
+between the hedges of gardens and olive-groves, until they were
+stopped by the sea. This was that fruitful region formerly called
+Paracheloitis, which, according to classic allegory, was drained or
+torn from the river Achelous, by the perseverance of Hercules and
+presented by him for a nuptial present to the daughter of Oeneus.
+
+The water at which they had now arrived was rather a salt marsh than
+the sea, a shallow bay stretching from the mouth of the Gulf of
+Lepanto into the land for several miles. Having dismissed their
+horses, they passed over in boats to Natolico, a town which stood in
+the water. Here they fell in with a hospitable Jew, who made himself
+remembered by saying that he was honoured in their having partaken of
+his little misery.
+
+Natolico, where they stayed for the night, was a well-built town; the
+houses of timber, chiefly of two stories, and about six hundred in
+number. Having sent on their baggage in boats, they themselves
+proceeded to the town of Missolonghi, so celebrated since as having
+suffered greatly during the recent rebellion of the Greeks, but more
+particularly as the place where Lord Byron died.
+
+Missolonghi is situated on the south side of the salt marsh or
+shallow, along the north coast of the Gulf of Corinth, nearly
+opposite to Patras. It is a dull, and I should think an unwholesome
+place. The marsh, for miles on each side, has only from a foot to
+two feet of water on it, but there is a channel for boats marked out
+by perches. When I was there the weather was extremely wet, and I
+had no other opportunity of seeing the character of the adjacent
+country than during the intervals of the showers. It was green and
+pastoral, with a short skirt of cultivation along the bottom of the
+hills.
+
+Abrupt and rapid as the foregoing sketch of the journey through
+Albania has been, it is evident from the novelty of its circumstances
+that it could not be performed without leaving deep impressions on
+the susceptible mind of the poet. It is impossible, I think, not to
+allow that far more of the wildness and romantic gloom of his
+imagination was derived from the incidents of this tour, than from
+all the previous experience of his life. The scenes he visited, the
+characters with whom he became familiar, and above all, the chartered
+feelings, passions, and principles of the inhabitants, were greatly
+calculated to supply his mind with rare and valuable poetical
+materials. It is only in this respect that the details of his
+travels are interesting.--Considered as constituting a portion of the
+education of his genius, they are highly curious, and serve to show
+how little, after all, of great invention is requisite to make
+interesting and magnificent poetry.
+
+From Missolonghi the travellers passed over the Gulf of Corinth to
+Patras, then a rude, half-ruined, open town with a fortress on the
+top of a hill; and on the 4th of December, in the afternoon, they
+proceeded towards Corinth, but halted at Vostizza, the ancient
+AEgium, where they obtained their first view of Parnassus, on the
+opposite side of the gulf; rising high above the other peaks of that
+hilly region, and capped with snow. It probably was during this
+first visit to Vostizza that the Address to Parnassus was suggested.
+
+
+ Oh, thou Parnassus! whom I now survey
+ Not in the frensy of a dreamer's eye,
+ Not in the fabled landscape of a lay,
+ But soaring snow-clad through thy native sky,
+ In the wild pomp of mountain majesty!
+ What marvel if I thus essay to sing?
+ The humblest of thy pilgrims passing by
+ Would gladly woo thine echoes with his string,
+Though from thy heights no more one muse will wave her wing.
+
+ Oft have I dream'd of thee! whose glorious name
+ Who knows not, knows not man's divinest lore;
+ And now I view thee, 'tis, alas! with shame
+ That I in feeblest accents must adore.
+ When I recount thy worshippers of yore
+ I tremble, and can only bend the knee;
+ Nor raise my voice, nor vainly dare to soar,
+ But gaze beneath thy cloudy canopy
+In silent joy, to think at last I look on thee.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+
+Vostizza--Battle of Lepanto--Parnassus--Livadia--Cave at Trophonius--
+The Fountains of Oblivion and Memory--Chaeronea--Thebes--Athens
+
+Vostizza was then a considerable town, containing between three and
+four thousand inhabitants, chiefly Greeks. It stands on a rising
+ground on the Peloponnesian side of the Gulf of Corinth. I say
+stands, but I know not if it has survived the war. The scenery
+around it will always make it delightful, while the associations
+connected with the Achaian League, and the important events which
+have happened in the vicinity, will ever render the site interesting.
+The battle of Lepanto, in which Cervantes lost his hand, was fought
+within sight of it.
+
+What a strange thing is glory! Three hundred years ago all
+Christendom rang with the battle of Lepanto, and yet it is already
+probable that it will only be interesting to posterity as an incident
+in the life of one of the private soldiers engaged in it. This is
+certainly no very mournful reflection to one who is of opinion that
+there is no permanent fame, but that which is obtained by adding to
+the comforts and pleasures of mankind. Military transactions, after
+their immediate effects cease to be felt, are little productive of
+such a result. Not that I value military virtues the less by being
+of this opinion; on the contrary, I am the more convinced of their
+excellence. Burke has unguardedly said, 'that vice loses half its
+malignity by losing its grossness'; but public virtue ceases to be
+useful when it sickens at the calamities of necessary war. The
+moment that nations become confident of security, they give way to
+corruption. The evils and dangers of war seem as requisite for the
+preservation of public morals as the laws themselves; at least it is
+the melancholy moral of history, that when nations resolve to be
+peaceful with respect to their neighbours, they begin to be vicious
+with respect to themselves. But to return to the travellers.
+
+On the 14th of December they hired a boat with fourteen men and ten
+oars, and sailed to Salona; thence they proceeded to Crisso, and rode
+on to Delphi, ascending the mountain on horseback, by a steep, craggy
+path towards the north-east. After scaling the side of Parnassus for
+about an hour, they saw vast masses of rock, and fragments of stone,
+piled in a perilous manner above them, with niches and sepulchres,
+and relics, and remains on all sides.
+
+They visited and drank of Castalia, and the prophetic font, Cassotis;
+but still, like every other traveller, they were disappointed.
+Parnassus is an emblem of the fortune that attends the votaries of
+the Muses, harsh, rugged, and barren. The woods that once waved on
+Delphi's steep have all passed away, and may now be sought in vain.
+
+A few traces of terraces may yet be discovered--here and there the
+stump of a column, while niches for receiving votive offerings are
+numerous among the cliffs, but it is a lone and dismal place;
+Desolation sits with Silence, and Ruin there is so decayed as to be
+almost Oblivion.
+
+Parnassus is not so much a single mountain as the loftiest of a
+range; the cloven summit appears most conspicuous when seen from the
+south. The northern view is, however, more remarkable, for the cleft
+is less distinguishable, and seven lower peaks suggest, in
+contemplation with the summits, the fancy of so many seats of the
+Muses. These peaks, nine in all, are the first of the hills which
+receive the rising sun, and the last that in the evening part with
+his light.
+
+From Delphi the travellers proceeded towards Livadia, passing in the
+course of the journey the confluence of the three roads where OEdipus
+slew his father, an event with its hideous train of fatalities which
+could not be recollected by Byron on the spot, even after the tales
+of guilt he had gathered in his Albanian journeys, without agitating
+associations.
+
+At Livadia they remained the greater part of three days, during which
+they examined with more than ordinary minuteness the cave of
+Trophonius, and the streams of the Hercyna, composed of the mingled
+waters of the two fountains of Oblivion and Memory.
+
+From Livadia, after visiting the battlefield of Chaeronea (the
+birthplace of Plutarch), and also many of the almost innumerable
+storied and consecrated spots in the neighbourhood, the travellers
+proceeded to Thebes--a poor town, containing about five hundred
+wooden houses, with two shabby mosques and four humble churches. The
+only thing worthy of notice in it is a public clock, to which the
+inhabitants direct the attention of strangers as proudly as if it
+were indeed one of the wonders of the world. There they still affect
+to show the fountain of Dirce and the ruins of the house of Pindar.
+But it is unnecessary to describe the numberless relics of the famous
+things of Greece, which every hour, as they approached towards
+Athens, lay more and more in their way. Not that many remarkable
+objects met their view; yet fragments of antiquity were often seen,
+though many of them were probably brought far from the edifices to
+which they had originally belonged; not for their beauty, or on
+account of the veneration which the sight of them inspired, but
+because they would burn into better lime than the coarser rock of the
+hills. Nevertheless, abased and returned into rudeness as all things
+were, the presence of Greece was felt, and Byron could not resist the
+inspirations of her genius.
+
+
+ Fair Greece! sad relic of departed worth!
+ Immortal! though no more; though fallen, great;
+ Who now shall lead thy scatter'd children forth
+ And long-accustom'd bondage uncreate?
+ Not such thy Sons who whilom did await,
+ The hopeless warriors of a willing doom,
+ In bleak Thermopylae's sepulchral strait:
+ Oh! who that gallant spirit shall resume,
+Leap from Eurotas' banks, and call thee from the tomb!
+
+
+In the course of the afternoon of the day after they had left Thebes,
+in attaining the summit of a mountain over which their road lay, the
+travellers beheld Athens at a distance, rising loftily, crowned with
+the Acropolis in the midst of the plain, the sea beyond, and the
+misty hills of Egina blue in the distance.
+
+On a rugged rock rising abruptly on the right, near to the spot where
+this interesting vista first opened, they beheld the remains of the
+ancient walls of Phyle, a fortress which commanded one of the passes
+from Baeotia into Attica, and famous as the retreat of the chief
+patriots concerned in destroying the thirty tyrants of Athens.
+
+
+ Spirit of freedom! when on Phyle's brow
+ Thou sat'st with Thrasybulus and his train,
+ Couldst thou forebode the dismal hour which now
+ Dims the green beauties of thine Attic plain?
+ Not thirty tyrants now enforce the chain,
+ But every carle can lord it o'er thy land;
+ Nor rise thy sons, but idly rail in vain,
+ Trembling beneath the scourge of Turkish hand,
+From birth till death enslaved; in word, in deed unmann'd.
+
+
+Such was the condition in which the poet found the country as he
+approached Athens; and although the spirit he invoked has reanimated
+the dejected race he then beheld around him, the traveller who even
+now revisits the country will still look in vain for that lofty mien
+which characterises the children of liberty. The fetters of the
+Greeks have been struck off, but the blains and excoriated marks of
+slavery are still conspicuous upon them; the sinister eye, the
+fawning voice, the skulking, crouching, base demeanour, time and many
+conflicts only can efface.
+
+The first view of the city was fleeting and unsatisfactory; as the
+travellers descended from the mountains the windings of the road
+among the hills shut it out. Having passed the village of Casha,
+they at last entered upon the slope, and thence into the plain of
+Attica but the intervening heights and the trees kept the town
+concealed, till a turn of the path brought it full again before them;
+the Acropolis crowned with the ruins of the Parthenon--the Museum
+hill--and the Monument of Philopappus--
+
+
+ Ancient of Days--august Athena! where,
+ Where are thy men of might? thy grand in soul?
+ Gone--glimmering through the dreams of things that were:
+ First in the race that led to glory's goal,
+ They won, and pass'd away:--is this the whole?
+ A schoolboy's tale, the wonder of an hour!
+ The warrior's weapon, and the sophist's stole
+ Are sought in vain, and o'er each mouldering tower,
+Dim with the mist of years, gray flits the shade of power.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+
+Athens--Byron's Character of the modern Athenians--Visit to Eleusis--
+Visit to the Caverns at Vary and Keratea--Lost in the Labyrinths of
+the latter
+
+It has been justly remarked, that were there no other vestiges of the
+ancient world in existence than those to be seen at Athens, they are
+still sufficient of themselves to justify the admiration entertained
+for the genius of Greece. It is not, however, so much on account of
+their magnificence as of their exquisite beauty, that the fragments
+obtain such idolatrous homage from the pilgrims to the shattered
+shrines of antiquity. But Lord Byron had no feeling for art, perhaps
+it would be more correct to say he affected none: still, Athens was
+to him a text, a theme; and when the first rush of curiosity has been
+satisfied, where else can the palled fancy find such a topic.
+
+To the mere antiquary, this celebrated city cannot but long continue
+interesting, and to the classic enthusiast, just liberated from the
+cloisters of his college, the scenery and the ruins may for a season
+inspire delight. Philosophy may there point her moral apophthegms
+with stronger emphasis, virtue receive new incitements to
+perseverance, by reflecting on the honour which still attends the
+memory of the ancient great, and patriotism there more pathetically
+deplore the inevitable effects of individual corruption on public
+glory; but to the man who seeks a solace from misfortune, or is "a-
+weary of the sun"; how wretched, how solitary, how empty is Athens!
+
+
+ Yet to the remnants of thy splendour past
+ Shall pilgrims, pensive, but unwearied throng;
+ Long shall the voyager, with th' Ionian blast,
+ Hail the bright clime of battle and of song;
+ Long shall thy annals and immortal tongue
+ Fill with thy fame the youth of many a shore;
+ Boast of the aged! lesson of the young!
+ Which sages venerate and bards adore,
+As Pallas and the Muse unveil their awful lore!
+
+
+Of the existing race of Athenians Byron has observed, that they are
+remarkable for their cunning: "Among the various foreigners resident
+in Athens there was never a difference of opinion in their estimate
+of the Greek character, though on all other topics they disputed with
+great acrimony. M. Fauvel, the French consul, who has passed thirty
+years at Athens, frequently declared in my hearing, that the Greeks
+do not deserve to be emancipated, reasoning on the ground of their
+national and individual depravity--while he forgot that such
+depravity is to be attributed to causes which can only be removed by
+the measures he reprobates.
+
+"M. Roque, a French merchant of respectability long settled in
+Athens, asserted with the most amusing gravity, 'Sir, they are the
+same canaille that existed in the days of Themistocles.' The
+ancients banished Themistocles; the moderns cheat Monsieur Roque:
+thus great men have ever been treated.
+
+"In short, all the Franks who are fixtures, and most of the
+Englishmen, Germans, Danes, etc., of passage, came over by degrees to
+their opinion, on much the same grounds that a Turk in England would
+condemn the nation by wholesale, because he was wronged by his lackey
+and overcharged by his washerwoman. Certainly, it was not a little
+staggering when the Sieurs Fauvel and Lusieri, the two greatest
+demagogues of the day, who divide between them the power of Pericles
+and the popularity of Cleon, and puzzle the poor Waywode with
+perpetual differences, agreed in the utter condemnation of the Greeks
+in general, and of the Athenians in particular."
+
+I have quoted his Lordship thus particularly because after his
+arrival at Athens he laid down his pen. Childe Harold there
+disappears. Whether he had written the pilgrimage up to that point
+at Athens I have not been able to ascertain; while I am inclined to
+think it was so, as I recollect he told me there that he had then
+described or was describing the reception he had met with at
+Tepellene from Ali Pasha.
+
+After having halted some time at Athens, where they established their
+headquarters, the travellers, when they had inspected the principal
+antiquities of the city (those things which all travellers must
+visit), made several excursions into the environs, and among other
+places went to Eleusis.
+
+On the 13th of January they mounted earlier than usual, and set out
+on that road which has the site of the Academy and the Colonos, the
+retreat of OEdipus during his banishment, a little to the right; they
+then entered the Olive Groves, crossed the Cephessus, and came to an
+open, well-cultivated plain, extending on the left to the Piraeus and
+the sea. Having ascended by a gentle acclivity through a pass, at
+the distance of eight or ten miles from Athens, the ancient
+Corydallus, now called Daphnerouni, they came, at the bottom of a
+piney mountain, to the little monastery of Daphne, the appearance and
+situation of which are in agreeable unison. The monastery was then
+fast verging into that state of the uninhabitable picturesque so much
+admired by young damsels and artists of a romantic vein. The pines
+on the adjacent mountains hiss as they ever wave their boughs, and
+somehow, such is the lonely aspect of the place, that their hissing
+may be imagined to breathe satire against the pretensions of human
+vanity.
+
+After passing through the hollow valley in which this monastic
+habitation is situated, the road sharply turns round an elbow of the
+mountain, and the Eleusinian plain opens immediately in front. It
+is, however, for a plain, but of small dimensions. On the left is
+the Island of Salamis, and the straits where the battle was fought;
+but neither of it nor of the mysteries for which the Temple of Ceres
+was for so many ages celebrated, has the poet given us description or
+suggestion; and yet few topics among all his wild and wonderful
+subjects were so likely to have furnished such "ample room, and verge
+enough" to his fancy.
+
+The next excursion in any degree interesting, if a qualification of
+that kind can be applied to excursions, in Attica, was to Cape
+Colonna. Crossing the bed of the Ilissus and keeping nearer to Mount
+Hymettus, the travellers arrived at Vary, a farm belonging to the
+monastery of Agios Asomatos, and under the charge of a caloyer. Here
+they stopped for the night, and being furnished with lights, and
+attended by the caloyer's servant as a guide, they proceeded to
+inspect the Paneum, or sculptured cavern in that neighbourhood, into
+which they descended. Having satisfied their curiosity there, they
+proceeded, in the morning, to Keratea, a small town containing about
+two hundred and fifty houses, chiefly inhabited by rural Albanians.
+
+The wetness of the weather obliged them to remain several days at
+Keratea, during which they took the opportunity of a few hours of
+sunshine to ascend the mountain of Parne in quest of a cave of which
+many wonderful things were reported in the country. Having found the
+entrance, kindled their pine torches, and taken a supply of strips of
+the same wood, they let themselves down through a narrow aperture;
+creeping still farther down, they came into what seemed a large
+subterranean hall, arched as it were with high cupolas of crystal,
+and divided into long aisles by columns of glittering spar, in some
+parts spread into wide horizontal chambers, in others terminated by
+the dark mouths of deep and steep abysses receding into the interior
+of the mountain.
+
+The travellers wandered from one grotto to another until they came to
+a fountain of pure water, by the side of which they lingered some
+time, till, observing that their torches were wasting, they resolved
+to return; but after exploring the labyrinth for a few minutes, they
+found themselves again close beside this mysterious spring. It was
+not without reason they then became alarmed, for the guide confessed
+with trepidation that he had forgotten the intricacies of the cave,
+and knew not how to recover the outlet.
+
+Byron often described this adventure with spirit and humour,
+magnifying both his own and his friend's terrors; and though, of
+course, there was caricature in both, yet the distinction was
+characteristic. Mr Hobhouse, being of a more solid disposition
+naturally, could discern nothing but a grave cause for dread in being
+thus lost in the bowels of the earth; Byron, however, described his
+own anxiety as a species of excitement and titillation which moved
+him to laughter. Their escape from starvation and being buried alive
+was truly providential.
+
+While roaming in a state of despair from cave to cell; climbing up
+narrow apertures; their last pine-torch fast consuming; totally
+ignorant of their position, and all around darkness, they discovered,
+as it were by accident, a ray of light gleaming towards them; they
+hastened towards it, and arrived at the mouth of the cave.
+
+Although the poet has not made any use of this incident in
+description, the actual experience which it gave him of what despair
+is, could not but enrich his metaphysical store, and increase his
+knowledge of terrible feelings; of the workings of the darkest and
+dreadest anticipations--slow famishing death--cannibalism and the
+rage of self-devouring hunger.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+
+Proceed from Keratea to Cape Colonna--Associations connected with the
+Spot--Second-hearing of the Albanians--Journey to Marathon--Effect of
+his Adventures on the Mind of the Poet--Return to Athens--I join the
+Travellers there--Maid of Athens
+
+From Keratea the travellers proceeded to Cape Colonna, by the way of
+Katapheke. The road was wild and rude, but the distant view of the
+ruins of the temple of Minerva, standing on the loneliness of the
+promontory, would have repaid them for the trouble, had the road been
+even rougher.
+
+This once elegant edifice was of the Doric order, a hexastyle, the
+columns twenty-seven feet in height. It was built entirely of white
+marble, and esteemed one of the finest specimens of architecture.
+The rocks on which the remains stand are celebrated alike by the
+English and the Grecian muses; for it was amid them that Falconer
+laid the scene of his Shipwreck; and the unequalled description of
+the climate of Greece, in The Giaour, was probably inspired there,
+although the poem was written in London. It was also here, but not
+on this occasion, that the poet first became acquainted with the
+Albanian belief in second-hearing, to which he alludes in the same
+poem:
+
+
+ Deep in whose darkly-boding ear
+ The death-shot peal'd of murder near.
+
+
+"This superstition of a second-hearing," says Lord Byron, "fell once
+under my own observation. On my third journey to Cape Colonna, as we
+passed through the defile that leads from the hamlet between Keratea
+and Colonna, I observed Dervish Tahiri (one of his Albanian servants)
+riding rather out of the path, and leaning his head upon his hand as
+if in pain. I rode up and inquired. 'We are in peril!' he answered.
+'What peril? we are not now in Albania, nor in the passes to Ephesus,
+Missolonghi, or Lepanto; there are plenty of us well armed, and the
+Choriotes have not courage to be thieves.'--'True, Affendi; but,
+nevertheless, the shot is ringing in my ears.'--'The shot! not a
+tophaike has been fired this morning.'--'I hear it, notwithstanding--
+bom--bom--as plainly as I hear your voice.'--'Bah.'--'As you please,
+Affendi; if it is written, so will it be.'
+
+"I left this quick-eared predestinarian, and rode up to Basili, his
+Christian compatriot, whose ears, though not at all prophetic, by no
+means relished the intelligence. We all arrived at Colonna, remained
+some hours, and returned leisurely, saying a variety of brilliant
+things, in more languages than spoiled the building of Babel, upon
+the mistaken seer; Romaic, Arnaout, Turkish, Italian, and English
+were all exercised, in various conceits, upon the unfortunate
+Mussulman. While we were contemplating the beautiful prospect,
+Dervish was occupied about the columns. I thought he was deranged
+into an antiquarian, and asked him if he had become a palaocastro
+man. 'No,' said he, 'but these pillars will be useful in making a
+stand' and added some remarks, which at least evinced his own belief
+in his troublesome faculty of fore-hearing.
+
+"On our return to Athens we heard from Leone (a prisoner set on shore
+some days after) of the intended attack of the Mainotes, with the
+cause of its not taking place. I was at some pains to question the
+man, and he described the dresses, arms, and marks of the horses of
+our party so accurately, that, with other circumstances, we could not
+doubt of his having been in 'villainous company,' and ourselves in a
+bad neighbourhood. Dervish became a soothsayer for life, and I dare
+say is now hearing more musketry than ever will be fired, to the
+great refreshment of the Arnaouts of Berat and his native mountains.
+
+"In all Attica, if we except Athens itself, and Marathon," Byron
+remarks, "there is no scene more interesting than Cape Colonna. To
+the antiquary and artist, sixteen columns are an inexhaustible source
+of observation and design; to the philosopher the supposed scene of
+some of Plato's conversations will not be unwelcome; and the
+traveller will be struck with the prospect over 'Isles that crown the
+AEgean deep.' But, for an Englishman, Colonna has yet an additional
+interest in being the actual spot of Falconer's Shipwreck. Pallas
+and Plato are forgotten in the recollection of Falconer and Campbell.
+
+
+"There, in the dead of night, by Donna's steep,
+The seamen's cry was heard along the deep."
+
+
+From the ruins of the temple the travellers returned to Keratea, by
+the eastern coast of Attica, passing through that district of country
+where the silver mines are situated; which, according to Sir George
+Wheler, were worked with some success about a hundred and fifty years
+ago. They then set out for Marathon, taking Rapthi in their way;
+where, in the lesser port, on a steep rocky island, they beheld, from
+a distance, the remains of a colossal statue. They did not, however,
+actually inspect it, but it has been visited by other travellers, who
+have described it to be of white marble, sedent on a pedestal. The
+head and arms are broken off; but when entire, it is conjectured to
+have been twelve feet in height. As they were passing round the
+shore they heard the barking of dogs, and a shout from a shepherd,
+and on looking round saw a large dun-coloured wolf, galloping slowly
+through the bushes.
+
+Such incidents and circumstances, in the midst of the most romantic
+scenery of the world, with wild and lawless companions, and a
+constant sense of danger, were full of poetry, and undoubtedly
+contributed to the formation of the peculiar taste of Byron's genius.
+As it has been said of Salvator Rosa, the painter, that he derived
+the characteristic savage force of his pencil from his youthful
+adventures with banditti; it may be added of Byron, that much of his
+most distinguished power was the result of his adventures as a
+traveller in Greece. His mind and memory were filled with stores of
+the fittest imagery, to supply becoming backgrounds and appendages,
+to the characters and enterprises which he afterward depicted with
+such truth of nature and poetical effect.
+
+After leaving Rapthi, keeping Mount Pentilicus on the left, the
+travellers came in sight of the ever-celebrated Plain of Marathon.
+The evening being advanced, they passed the barrow of the Athenian
+slain unnoticed, but next morning they examined minutely the field of
+battle, and fancied they had made antiquarian discoveries. In their
+return to Athens they inspected the different objects of research and
+fragments of antiquity, which still attract travellers, and with the
+help of Chandler and Pausanias, endeavoured to determine the local
+habitation and the name of many things, of which the traditions have
+perished and the forms have relapsed into rock.
+
+Soon after their arrival at Athens, Mr Hobhouse left Lord Byron to
+visit the Negropont, where he was absent some few days. I think he
+had only been back three or four when I arrived from Zante. My visit
+to Athens at that period was accidental. I had left Malta with the
+intention of proceeding to Candia, by Specia, and Idra; but a
+dreadful storm drove us up the Adriatic, as far as Valona; and in
+returning, being becalmed off the Island of Zante, I landed there,
+and allowed the ship, with my luggage, to proceed to her destination,
+having been advised to go on by the Gulf of Corinth to Athens; from
+which place, I was informed, there would be no difficulty in
+recovering my trunks.
+
+In carrying this arrangement into effect, I was induced to go aside
+from the direct route, and to visit Velhi Pasha, at Tripolizza, to
+whom I had letters. Returning by Argos and Corinth, I crossed the
+isthmus, and taking the road by Megara, reached Athens on the 20th of
+February. In the course of this journey, I heard of two English
+travellers being in the city; and on reaching the convent of the
+Propaganda, where I had been advised to take up my lodgings, the
+friar in charge of the house informed me of their names. Next
+morning, Mr Hobhouse, having heard of my arrival, kindly called on
+me, and I accompanied him to Lord Byron, who then lodged with the
+widow of a Greek, who had been British Consul. She was, I believe, a
+respectable person, with several daughters; one of whom has been
+rendered more famous by his Lordship's verses than her degree of
+beauty deserved. She was a pale and pensive-looking girl, with
+regular Grecian features. Whether he really cherished any sincere
+attachment to her I much doubt. I believe his passion was equally
+innocent and poetical, though he spoke of buying her from her mother.
+It was to this damsel that he addressed the stanzas beginning,
+
+ Maid of Athens, ere we part,
+ Give, oh! give me back my heart.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+
+Occupation at Athens--Mount Pentilicus--We descend into the Caverns--
+Return to Athens--A Greek Contract of Marriage--Various Athenian and
+Albanian Superstitions--Effect of their Impression on the Genius of
+the Poet
+
+During his residence at Athens, Lord Byron made almost daily
+excursions on horseback, chiefly for exercise and to see the
+localities of celebrated spots. He affected to have no taste for the
+arts, and he certainly took but little pleasure in the examination of
+the ruins.
+
+The marble quarry of Mount Pentilicus, from which the materials for
+the temples and principal edifices of Athens are supposed to have
+been brought, was, in those days, one of the regular staple
+curiosities of Greece. This quarry is a vast excavation in the side
+of the hill; a drapery of woodbine hangs like the festoons of a
+curtain over the entrance; the effect of which, seen from the
+outside, is really worth looking at, but not worth the trouble of
+riding three hours over a road of rude and rough fragments to see:
+the interior is like that of any other cavern. To this place I one
+day was induced to accompany the two travellers.
+
+We halted at a monastery close by the foot of the mountain, where we
+procured a guide, and ate a repast of olives and fried eggs. Dr
+Chandler says that the monks, or caloyers, of this convent are
+summoned to prayers by a tune which is played on a piece of an iron
+hoop; and, on the outside of the church, we certainly saw a piece of
+crooked iron suspended. When struck, it uttered a bell-like sound,
+by which the hour of prayer was announced. What sort of tune could
+be played on such an instrument the doctor has judiciously left his
+readers to imagine.
+
+When we reached the mouth of the grotto, by that "very bad track"
+which the learned personage above mentioned clambered up, we saw the
+ruins of the building which the doctor at first thought had been
+possibly a hermit's cell; but which, upon more deliberate reflection,
+he became of opinion "was designed, perhaps, for a sentinel to look
+out, and regulate, by signals, the approach of the men and teams
+employed in carrying marble to the city." This, we agreed, was a
+very sagacious conjecture. It was, indeed, highly probable that
+sentinels were appointed to regulate, by signals, the manoeuvres of
+carts coming to fetch away stones.
+
+Having looked at the outside of the quarry, and the guide having
+lighted candles, we entered into the interior, and beheld on all
+sides what Dr Chandler saw, "chippings of marble." We then
+descended, consecutively, into a hole, just wide enough to let a man
+pass; and when we had descended far enough, we found ourselves in a
+cell, or cave; it might be some ten or twelve feet square. Here we
+stopped, and, like many others who had been there before us,
+attempted to engrave our names. Mine was without success; Lord
+Byron's was not much better; but Mr Hobhouse was making some progress
+to immortality, when the blade of his knife snapped, or shutting
+suddenly, cut his finger. These attempts having failed, we inscribed
+our initials on the ceiling with the smoke of our candles. After
+accomplishing this notable feat, we got as well out of the scrape as
+we could, and returned to Athens by the village of Callandris. In
+the evening, after dinner, as there happened to be a contract of
+marriage performing in the neighbourhood, we went to see the
+ceremony.
+
+Between the contract and espousal two years are generally permitted
+to elapse among the Greeks in the course of which the bride,
+according to the circumstances of her relations, prepares domestic
+chattels for her future family. The affections are rarely consulted
+on either side, for the mother of the bridegroom commonly arranges
+the match for her son. In this case, the choice had been evidently
+made according to the principle on which Mrs Primrose chose her
+wedding gown; viz. for the qualities that would wear well. For the
+bride was a stout household quean; her face painted with vermilion,
+and her person arrayed in uncouth embroidered garments.
+Unfortunately, we were disappointed of seeing the ceremony, as it was
+over before we arrived.
+
+This incident led me to inquire particularly into the existing usages
+and customs of the Athenians; and I find in the notes of my journal
+of the evening of that day's adventures, a memorandum of a curious
+practice among the Athenian maidens when they become anxious to get
+husbands. On the first evening of the new moon, they put a little
+honey, a little salt, and a piece of bread on a plate, which they
+leave at a particular spot on the east bank of the Ilissus, near the
+Stadium, and muttering some ancient words, to the effect that Fate
+may send them a handsome young man, return home, and long for the
+fulfilment of the charm. On mentioning this circumstance to the
+travellers, one of them informed me, that above the spot where these
+offerings are made, a statue of Venus, according to Pausanias,
+formerly stood. It is, therefore, highly probable that what is now a
+superstitious, was anciently a religious rite.
+
+At this period my fellow-passengers were full of their adventures in
+Albania. The country was new, and the inhabitants had appeared to
+them a bold and singular race. In addition to the characteristic
+descriptions which I have extracted from Lord Byron's notes, as well
+as Mr Hobhouse's travels, I am indebted to them, as well as to
+others, for a number of memoranda obtained in conversation, which
+they have themselves neglected to record, but which probably became
+unconsciously mingled with the recollections of both; at least, I can
+discern traces of them in different parts of the poet's works.
+
+The Albanians are a race of mountaineers, and it has been often
+remarked that mountaineers, more than any other people, are attached
+to their native land, while no other have so strong a thirst of
+adventure. The affection which they cherish for the scenes of their
+youth tends, perhaps, to excite their migratory spirit. For the
+motive of their adventures is to procure the means of subsisting in
+ease at home.
+
+This migratory humour is not, however, universal to the Albanians,
+but applies only to those who go in quest of rural employment, and
+who are found in a state of servitude among even the Greeks. It
+deserves, however, to be noticed, that with the Greeks they rarely
+ever mix or intermarry, and that they retain both their own national
+dress and manners unchanged among them. Several of their customs are
+singular. It is, for example, in vain to ask a light or any fire
+from the houses of the Albanians after sunset, if the husband or head
+of the family be still afield; a custom in which there is more of
+police regulation than of superstition, as it interdicts a plausible
+pretext for entering the cottages in the obscurity of twilight, when
+the women are defenceless by the absence of the men.
+
+Some of their usages, with respect to births, baptisms, and burials,
+are also curious. When the mother feels the fulness of time at hand,
+the priestess of Lucina, the midwife, is duly summoned, and she comes
+bearing in her hand a tripod, better known as a three-legged stool,
+the uses of which are only revealed to the initiated. She is
+received by the matronly friends of the mother, and begins the
+mysteries by opening every lock and lid in the house. During this
+ceremony the maiden females are excluded.
+
+The rites which succeed the baptism of a child are still more
+recondite. Four or five days after the christening, the midwife
+prepares, with her own mystical hands, certain savoury messes,
+spreads a table, and places them on it. She then departs, and all
+the family, leaving the door open, in silence retire to sleep. This
+table is covered for the Miri of the child, an occult being, that is
+supposed to have the care of its destiny. In the course of the
+night, if the child is to be fortunate, the Miri comes and partakes
+of the feast, generally in the shape of a cat; but if the Miri do not
+come, nor taste of the food, the child is considered to have been
+doomed to misfortune and misery; and no doubt the treatment it
+afterwards receives is consonant to its evil predestination.
+
+The Albanians have, like the vulgar of all countries, a species of
+hearth or household superstitions, distinct from their wild and
+imperfect religion. They imagine that mankind, after death, become
+voorthoolakases, and often pay visits to their friends and foes for
+the same reasons, and in the same way, that our own country ghosts
+walk abroad; and their visiting hour is, also, midnight. But the
+collyvillory is another sort of personage. He delights in mischief
+and pranks, and is, besides, a lewd and foul spirit; and, therefore,
+very properly detested. He is let loose on the night of the
+nativity, with licence for twelve nights to plague men's wives; at
+which time some one of the family must keep wakeful vigil all the
+livelong night, beside a clear and cheerful fire, otherwise this
+naughty imp would pour such an aqueous stream on the hearth, that
+fire could never be kindled there again.
+
+The Albanians are also pestered with another species of malignant
+creatures; men and women whose gifts are followed by misfortunes,
+whose eyes glimpse evil, and by whose touch the most prosperous
+affairs are blasted. They work their malicious sorceries in the
+dark, collect herbs of baleful influence; by the help of which, they
+strike their enemies with palsy, and cattle with distemper. The
+males are called maissi, and the females maissa--witches and
+warlocks.
+
+Besides these curious superstitious peculiarities, they have among
+them persons who pretend to know the character of approaching events
+by hearing sounds which resemble those that shall accompany the
+actual occurrence. Having, however, given Lord Byron's account of
+the adventure of his servant Dervish, at Cape Colonna, it is
+unnecessary to be more particular with the subject here. Indeed, but
+for the great impression which everything about the Albanians made on
+the mind of the poet, the insertion of these memoranda would be
+irrelevant. They will, however, serve to elucidate several
+allusions, not otherwise very clear, in those poems of which the
+scenes are laid in Greece; and tend, in some measure, to confirm the
+correctness of the opinion, that his genius is much more indebted to
+facts and actual adventures, than to the force of his imagination.
+Many things regarded in his most original productions, as fancies and
+invention, may be traced to transactions in which he was himself a
+spectator or an actor. The impress of experience is vivid upon them
+all.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+
+Local Pleasures--Byron's Grecian Poems--His Departure from Athens--
+Description of Evening in "The Corsair"--The Opening of "The Giaour"-
+-State of Patriotic Feeling then in Greece--Smyrna--Change in Lord
+Byron's Manners
+
+The genii that preside over famous places have less influence on the
+imagination than on the memory. The pleasures enjoyed on the spot
+spring from the reminiscences of reading; and the subsequent
+enjoyment derived from having visited celebrated scenes, comes again
+from the remembrance of objects seen there, and the associations
+connected with them.
+
+A residence at Athens, day after day, is but little more interesting
+than in a common country town: but afterwards, in reading either of
+the ancient or of the modern inhabitants, it is surprising to find
+how much local knowledge the memory had unconsciously acquired on the
+spot, arising from the variety of objects to which the attention had
+been directed.
+
+The best of all Byron's works, the most racy and original, are
+undoubtedly those which relate to Greece; but it is only travellers
+who have visited the scenes that can appreciate them properly. In
+them his peculiar style and faculty are most eminent; in all his
+other productions, imitation, even mere translation may be often
+traced, and though, without question, everything he touched became
+transmuted into something more beautiful and precious, yet he was
+never so masterly as in describing the scenery of Greece, and
+Albanian manners. In a general estimate of his works, it may be
+found that he has produced as fine or finer passages than any in his
+Grecian poems; but their excellence, either as respects his own, or
+the productions of others, is comparative. In the Grecian poems he
+is only truly original; in them the excellence is all his own, and
+they possess the rare and distinguished quality of being as true to
+fact and nature, as they are brilliant in poetical expression.
+Childe Harold's Pilgrimage is the most faithful descriptive poem
+which has been written since the Odyssey; and the occasional scenes
+introduced into the other poems, when the action is laid in Greece,
+are equally vivid and glowing.
+
+When I saw him at Athens, the spring was still shrinking in the bud.
+It was not until he returned from Constantinople in the following
+autumn, that he saw the climate and country with those delightful
+aspects which he has delineated with so much felicity in The Giaour
+and The Corsair. It may, however, be mentioned, that the fine
+description of a calm sunset, with which the third canto of The
+Corsair opens, has always reminded me of the evening before his
+departure from Athens, owing to the circumstance of my having, in the
+course of the day, visited the spot which probably suggested the
+scene described.
+
+It was the 4th of March, 1810; the Pylades sloop of war came that
+morning into the Piraeus, and landed Dr Darwin, a son of the poet,
+with his friend, Mr Galton, who had come out in her for a cruise.
+Captain Ferguson, her commander, was so kind as to offer the English
+then in Athens, viz., Lord Byron, Mr Hobhouse, and myself, a passage
+to Smyrna. As I had not received my luggage from Specia, I could not
+avail myself of the offer, but the other two did: I accompanied
+Captain Ferguson, however, and Dr Darwin, in a walk to the Straits of
+Salamis; the ship, in the meantime, after landing them, having been
+moored there.
+
+It was one of those serene and cloudless days of the early spring,
+when the first indications of leaf and blossom may just be discerned.
+The islands slept, as it were, on their glassy couch, and a slight
+dun haze hung upon the mountains, as if they too were drowsy. After
+an easy walk of about two hours, passing through the olive groves,
+and along the bottom of the hill on which Xerxes sat to view the
+battle, we came opposite to a little cove near the ferry, and made a
+signal to the ship for a boat. Having gone on board and partaken of
+some refreshment, the boat then carried us back to the Piraeus, where
+we landed, about an hour before sundown--all the wide landscape
+presenting at the time the calm and genial tranquillity which is
+almost experienced anew in reading these delicious lines:
+
+
+Slow sinks more lovely e'er his race be run,
+Along Morea's hills, the setting sun
+Not, as in northern climes, obscurely bright,
+But one unclouded blaze of living light.
+O'er the hush'd deep the yellow beam he throws,
+Gilds the green wave that trembles as it flows.
+On old Egina's rock, and Idra's isle,
+The god of gladness sheds his parting smile;
+O'er his own regions lingering, loves to shine,
+Though there his altars are no more divine;--
+Descending fast, the mountain shadows kiss
+Thy glorious gulf, unconquer'd Salamis!
+
+Their azure arches, through the long expanse,
+More deeply purpled meet his mellowing glance,
+And tenderest tints, along their summits driven,
+Mark his gay course, and own the hues of heaven;
+Till darkly shaded from the land and deep,
+Behind his Delphian cliff he sinks to sleep.
+
+
+The opening of The Giaour is a more general description, but the
+locality is distinctly marked by reference to the tomb above the
+rocks of the promontory, commonly said to be that of Themistocles;
+and yet the scene included in it certainly is rather the view from
+Cape Colonna, than from the heights of Munychia.
+
+
+No breath of air to break the wave
+That rolls below the Athenian's grave,
+That tomb, which, gleaming o'er the cliff,
+First greets the homeward-veering skiff,
+High o'er the land he saved in vain--
+When shall such hero live again!
+
+
+The environs of the Piraeus were indeed, at that time, well
+calculated to inspire those mournful reflections with which the poet
+introduces the Infidel's impassioned tale. The solitude, the relics,
+the decay, and sad uses to which the pirate and the slave-dealer had
+put the shores and waters so honoured by freedom, rendered a visit to
+the Piraeus something near in feeling to a pilgrimage.
+
+
+ Such is the aspect of this shore,
+ 'Tis Greece, but living Greece no more!
+ So coldly sweet, so deadly fair,
+ We start, for soul is wanting there.
+ Hers is the loveliness in death,
+ That parts not quite with parting breath;
+ But beauty with that fearful bloom,
+ That hue which haunts it to the tomb,
+ Expression's last receding ray,
+ A gilded halo hov'ring round decay,
+ The farewell beam of feeling past away.
+Spark of that flame, perchance of heavenly birth,
+Which gleams, but warms no more its cherish'd earth.
+
+
+At that time Lord Byron, if he did pity the condition of the Greeks,
+evinced very little confidence in the resurrection of the nation,
+even although symptoms of change and reanimation were here and there
+perceptible, and could not have escaped his observation. Greece had
+indeed been so long ruined, that even her desolation was then in a
+state of decay. The new cycle in her fortunes had certainly not
+commenced, but it was manifest, by many a sign, that the course of
+the old was concluding, and that the whole country felt the assuring
+auguries of undivulged renovation. The influence of that period did
+not, however, penetrate the bosom of the poet; and when he first
+quitted Athens, assuredly he cared as little about the destinies of
+the Greeks, as he did for those of the Portuguese and Spaniards, when
+he arrived at Gibraltar.
+
+About three weeks or a month after he had left Athens, I went by a
+circuitous route to Smyrna, where I found him waiting with Mr
+Hobhouse, to proceed with the Salsette frigate, then ordered to
+Constantinople, to bring away Mr Adair, the ambassador. He had, in
+the meantime, visited Ephesus, and acquired some knowledge of the
+environs of Smyrna; but he appeared to have been less interested by
+what he had seen there than by the adventures of his Albanian tour.
+Perhaps I did him injustice, but I thought he was also, in that short
+space, something changed, and not with improvement. Towards Mr
+Hobhouse, he seemed less cordial, and was altogether, I should say,
+having no better phrase to express what I would describe, more of a
+Captain Grand than improved in his manners, and more disposed to hold
+his own opinion than I had ever before observed in him. I was
+particularly struck with this at dinner, on the day after my arrival.
+We dined together with a large party at the consul's, and he seemed
+inclined to exact a deference to his dogmas, that was more lordly
+than philosophical. One of the naval officers present, I think the
+captain of the Salsette, felt, as well as others, this overweening,
+and announced a contrary opinion on some question connected with the
+politics of the late Mr Pitt with so much firm good sense, that Lord
+Byron was perceptibly rebuked by it, and became reserved, as if he
+deemed that sullenness enhanced dignity. I never in the whole course
+of my acquaintance saw him kithe so unfavourably as he did on that
+occasion. In the course of the evening, however, he condescended to
+thaw, and before the party broke up, his austerity began to leaf, and
+hide its thorns under the influence of a relenting temperament. It
+was, however, too evident--at least it was so to me--that without
+intending wrong, or any offence, the unchecked humour of his temper
+was, by its caprices, calculated to prevent him from ever gaining
+that regard to which his talents and freer moods, independently of
+his rank, ought to have entitled him. Such men become objects of
+solicitude, but never of esteem.
+
+I was also on this occasion struck with another new phase in his
+character; he seemed to be actuated by no purpose--he spoke no more
+of passing "beyond Aurora and the Ganges," but seemed disposed to let
+the current of chances carry him as it might. If he had any specific
+object in view, it was something that made him hesitate between going
+home and returning to Athens when he should have reached
+Constantinople, now become the ultimate goal of his intended travels.
+To what cause this sudden and singular change, both in demeanour and
+design, was owing, I was on the point of saying, it would be
+fruitless to conjecture; but a letter to his mother, written a few
+days before my arrival at Smyrna, throws some light on the sources of
+his unsatisfied state. He appears by it to have been disappointed of
+letters and remittances from his agent, and says:
+
+"When I arrive at Constantinople, I shall determine whether to
+proceed into Persia, or return--which latter I do not wish if I can
+avoid it. But I have no intelligence from Mr H., and but one letter
+from yourself. I shall stand in need of remittances, whether I
+proceed or return. I have written to him repeatedly, that he may not
+plead ignorance of my situation for neglect."
+
+Here is sufficient evidence that the cause of the undetermined state
+of his mind, which struck me so forcibly, was owing to the
+incertitude of his affairs at home; and it is easy to conceive that
+the false dignity he assumed, and which seemed so like arrogance, was
+the natural effect of the anxiety and embarrassment he suffered, and
+of the apprehension of a person of his rank being, on account of his
+remittances, exposed to require assistance among strangers. But as
+the scope of my task relates more to the history of his mind, than of
+his private affairs, I shall resume the narrative of his travels, in
+which the curiosity of the reader ought to be more legitimately
+interested.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+
+Smyrna--The Sport of the Djerid--Journey to Ephesus--The dead City--
+The desolate Country--The Ruins and Obliteration of the Temple--The
+slight Impression of all on Byron
+
+The passage in the Pylades from Athens to Smyrna was performed
+without accident or adventure.
+
+At Smyrna Lord Byron remained several days, and saw for the first
+time the Turkish pastime of the Djerid, a species of tournament to
+which he more than once alludes. I shall therefore describe the
+amusement.
+
+The Musselim or Governor, with the chief agas of the city, mounted on
+horses superbly caparisoned, and attended by slaves, meet, commonly
+on Sunday morning, on their playground. Each of the riders is
+furnished with one or two djerids, straight white sticks, a little
+thinner than an umbrella-stick, less at one end than at the other and
+about an ell in length, together with a thin cane crooked at the
+head. The horsemen, perhaps a hundred in number, gallop about in as
+narrow a space as possible, throwing the djerids at each other and
+shouting. Each man then selects an opponent who has darted his
+djerid or is for the moment without a weapon, and rushes furiously
+towards him, screaming "Olloh! Olloh!" The other flies, looking
+behind him, and the instant the dart is launched stoops downwards as
+low as possible, or wields his horse with inconceivable rapidity, and
+picking up a djerid with his cane, or taking one from a running
+slave, pursues in his turn the enemy, who wheels on the instant he
+darts his weapon. The greatest dexterity is requisite in these mimic
+battles to avoid the concurrence of the "javelin-darting crowd," and
+to escape the random blows of the flying djerids.
+
+Byron, having satisfied his curiosity with Smyrna, which is so like
+every other Turkish town as to excite but little interest, set out
+with Mr Hobhouse on the 13th of March, for Ephesus. As I soon after
+passed along the same road, I shall here describe what I met with
+myself in the course of the journey, it being probable that the
+incidents were in few respects different from those which they
+encountered.
+
+On ascending the heights after leaving Smyrna, the road was
+remarkable in being formed of the broken relics of ancient edifices
+partly macadamised. On the brow of the hill I met a numerous caravan
+of camels coming from the interior of Asia. These ships of the
+desert, variously loaded, were moving slowly to their port, and it
+seemed to me as I rode past them, that the composed docile look of
+the animals possessed a sort of domesticated grace which lessened the
+effect of their deformity.
+
+A caravan, owing to the oriental dresses of the passengers and
+attendants, with the numerous grotesque circumstances which it
+presents to the stranger, affords an amusing spectacle. On the back
+of one camel three or four children were squabbling in a basket; in
+another cooking utensils were clattering; and from a crib on a third
+a young camel looked forth inquiringly on the world: a long
+desultory train of foot-passengers and cattle brought up the rear.
+
+On reaching the summit of the hills behind Smyrna the road lies
+through fields and cotton-grounds, well cultivated and interspersed
+with country houses. After an easy ride of three or four hours I
+passed through the ruins of a considerable Turkish town, containing
+four or five mosques, one of them, a handsome building, still entire;
+about twenty houses or so might be described as tenantable, but only
+a place of sepulchres could be more awful: it had been depopulated
+by the plague--all was silent, and the streets were matted with thick
+grass. In passing through an open space, which reminded me of a
+market-place, I heard the cuckoo with an indescribable sensation of
+pleasure mingled with solemnity. The sudden presence of a raven at a
+bridal banquet could scarcely have been a greater phantasma.
+
+Proceeding briskly from this forsaken and dead city, I arrived in the
+course of about half an hour at a coffee-house on the banks of a
+small stream, where I partook of some refreshment in the shade of
+three or four trees, on which several storks were conjugally building
+their nests. While resting there, I became interested in their work,
+and observed, that when any of their acquaintances happened to fly
+past with a stick, they chattered a sort of How-d'ye-do to one
+another. This civility was so uniformly and reciprocally performed,
+that the politeness of the stork may be regarded as even less
+disputable than its piety.
+
+The road from that coffee-house lies for a mile or two along the side
+of a marshy lake, the environs of which are equally dreary and
+barren; an extensive plain succeeds, on which I noticed several
+broken columns of marble, and the evident traces of an ancient
+causeway, which apparently led through the water. Near the extremity
+of the lake was another small coffee-house, with a burial-ground and
+a mosque near it; and about four or five miles beyond I passed a
+spot, to which several Turks brought a coffinless corpse, and laid it
+on the grass while they silently dug a grave to receive it.
+
+The road then ascended the hills on the south side of the plain, of
+which the marshy lake was the centre, and passed through a tract of
+country calculated to inspire only apprehension and melancholy. Not
+a habitation nor vestige of living man was in sight, but several
+cemeteries, with their dull funereal cypresses and tombstones served
+to show that the country had once been inhabited.
+
+Just as the earliest stars began to twinkle I arrived at a third
+coffee-house on the roadside, with a little mosque before it, a
+spreading beech tree for travellers to recline under in the spring,
+and a rude shed for them in showers or the more intense sunshine of
+summer. Here I rested for the night, and in the morning at daybreak
+resumed my journey.
+
+After a short ride I reached the borders of the plain of Ephesus,
+across which I passed along a road rudely constructed, and raised
+above the marsh, consisting of broken pillars, entablatures, and
+inscriptions, at the end of which two other paths diverge; one
+strikes off to the left, and leads over the Cayster by a bridge above
+the castle of Aiasaluk--the other, leading to the right, or west,
+goes directly to Scala Nuova, the ancient Neapolis. By the latter
+Byron and his friend proceeded towards the ferry, which they crossed,
+and where they found the river about the size of the Cam at
+Cambridge, but more rapid and deeper. They then rode up the south
+bank, and about three o'clock in the afternoon arrived at Aiasaluk,
+the miserable village which now represents the city of Ephesus.
+
+Having put up their beds in a mean khan, the only one in the town,
+they partook of some cold provisions which they had brought with them
+on a stone seat by the side of a fountain, on an open green near to a
+mosque, shaded with tall cypresses. During their repast a young Turk
+approached the fountain, and after washing his feet and hands,
+mounted a flat stone, placed evidently for the purpose on the top of
+the wall surrounding the mosque, and devoutly said his prayers,
+totally regardless of their appearance and operations.
+
+The remainder of the afternoon was spent in exploring the ruins of
+Aiasaluk, and next morning they proceeded to examine those of the
+castle, and the mouldering magnificence of Ephesus. The remains of
+the celebrated temple of Diana, one of the wonders of the ancient
+world, could not be satisfactorily traced; fragments of walls and
+arches, which had been plated with marble, were all they could
+discover, with many broken columns that had once been mighty in their
+altitude and strength: several fragments were fifteen feet long, and
+of enormous circumference. Such is the condition of that superb
+edifice, which was, in its glory, four hundred and twenty feet long
+by two hundred and twenty feet broad, and adorned with more than a
+hundred and twenty columns sixty feet high.
+
+When the travellers had satisfied their curiosity, if that can be
+called satisfaction which found no entire form, but saw only the
+rubbish of desolation and the fragments of destruction, they returned
+to Smyrna.
+
+The investigation of the ruins of Ephesus was doubtless interesting
+at the time, but the visit produced no such impression on the mind of
+Byron as might have been expected. He never directly refers to it in
+his works: indeed, after Athens, the relics of Ephesus are things
+but of small import, especially to an imagination which, like that of
+the poet, required the action of living characters to awaken its
+dormant sympathies.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+
+Embarks for Constantinople--Touches at Tenedos--Visits Alexandria--
+Trees--The Trojan Plain--Swims the Hellespont--Arrival at
+Constantinople
+
+On the 11th of April Lord Byron embarked at Smyrna, in the Salsette
+frigate for Constantinople. The wind was fair during the night, and
+at half past six next morning, the ship was off the Sygean
+promontory, the north end of the ancient Lesbos or Mitylene. Having
+passed the headland, north of the little town of Baba, she came in
+sight of Tenedos, where she anchored, and the poet went on shore to
+view the island.
+
+The port was full of small craft, which in their voyage to the
+Archipelago had put in to wait for a change of wind, and a crowd of
+Turks belonging to these vessels were lounging about on the shore.
+The town was then in ruins, having been burned to the ground by a
+Russian squadron in the year 1807.
+
+Next morning, Byron, with a party of officers, left the ship to visit
+the ruins of Alexandria Troas, and landed at an open port, about six
+or seven miles to the south of where the Salsette was at anchor. The
+spot near to where they disembarked was marked by several large
+cannon-balls of granite; for the ruins of Alexandria have long
+supplied the fortresses of the Dardanelles with these gigantic
+missiles.
+
+They rambled some time through the shaggy woods, with which the
+country is covered, and the first vestiges of antiquity which
+attracted their attention were two large granite sarcophagi; a little
+beyond they found two or three fragments of granite pillars, one of
+them about twenty-five feet in length, and at least five in diameter.
+Near these they saw arches of brick-work, and on the east of them
+those magnificent remains, to which early travellers have given the
+name of the palace of Priam, but which are, in fact, the ruins of
+ancient baths. An earthquake in the course of the preceding winter
+had thrown down large portions of them, and the internal divisions of
+the edifice were, in consequence, choked with huge masses of mural
+wrecks and marbles.
+
+The visitors entered the interior through a gap, and found themselves
+in the midst of enormous ruins, enclosed on two sides by walls,
+raised on arches, and by piles of ponderous fragments. The fallen
+blocks were of vast dimensions, and showed that no cement had been
+used in the construction--an evidence of their great antiquity. In
+the midst of this crushed magnificence stood several lofty portals
+and arches, pedestals of gigantic columns and broken steps and marble
+cornices, heaped in desolate confusion.
+
+From these baths the distance to the sea is between two and three
+miles--a gentle declivity covered with low woods, and partially
+interspersed with spots of cultivated ground. On this slope the
+ancient city of Alexandria Troas was built. On the north-west, part
+of the walls, to the extent of a mile, may yet be traced; the remains
+of a theatre are also still to be seen on the side of the hill
+fronting the sea, commanding a view of Tenedos, Lemnos, and the whole
+expanse of the AEgean.
+
+Having been conducted by the guide, whom they had brought with them
+from Tenedos, to the principal antiquities of Alexandria Troas, the
+visitors returned to the frigate, which immediately after got under
+way. On the 14th of April she came to anchor about a mile and a half
+from Cape Janissary, the Sygean promontory, where she remained about
+a fortnight; during which ample opportunity was afforded to inspect
+the plain of Troy, that scene of heroism, which, for three thousand
+years, has attracted the attention and interested the feelings and
+fancy of the civilized world.
+
+Whether Lord Byron entertained any doubt of Homer's Troy ever having
+existed, is not very clear. It is probable, from the little he says
+on the subject, that he took no interest in the question. For
+although no traveller could enter with more sensibility into the
+local associations of celebrated places, he yet never seemed to care
+much about the visible features of antiquity, and was always more
+inclined to indulge in reflections than to puzzle his learning with
+dates or dimensions. His ruminations on the Troad, in Don Juan,
+afford an instance of this, and are conceived in the very spirit of
+Childe Harold.
+
+
+And so great names are nothing more than nominal,
+ And love of glory's but an airy lust,
+Too often in its fury overcoming all
+ Who would, as 'twere, identify their dust
+From out the wide destruction which, entombing all,
+ Leaves nothing till the coming of the just,
+Save change. I've stood upon Achilles' tomb,
+And heard Troy doubted--time will doubt of Rome.
+
+The very generations of the dead
+ Are swept away, and tomb inherits tomb,
+Until the memory of an age is fled,
+ And buried, sinks beneath its offspring's doom.
+Where are the epitaphs our fathers read,
+ Save a few glean'd from the sepulchral gloom,
+Which once named myriads, nameless, lie beneath,
+And lose their own in universal death?
+
+
+No task of curiosity can indeed be less satisfactory that the
+examination of the sites of ancient cities; for the guides, not
+content with leading the traveller to the spot, often attempt to
+mislead his imagination, by directing his attention to circumstances
+which they suppose to be evidence that verifies their traditions.
+Thus, on the Trojan plain, several objects are still shown which are
+described as the self-same mentioned in the Iliad. The wild fig-
+trees, and the tomb of Ilus, are yet there--if the guides may be
+credited. But they were seen with incredulous eyes by the poet; even
+the tomb of Achilles appears to have been regarded by him with equal
+scepticism; still his description of the scene around is striking,
+and tinted with some of his happiest touches.
+
+
+There on the green and village-cotted hill is
+ Flanked by the Hellespont, and by the sea,
+Entomb'd the bravest of the brave, Achilles--
+ They say so. Bryant says the contrary.
+And farther downward tall and towering still is
+ The tumulus, of whom Heaven knows it may be,
+Patroclus, Ajax, or Protesilaus,--
+All heroes, who, if living still, would slay us.
+
+High barrows without marble or a name,
+ A vast untill'd and mountain-skirted plain,
+And Ida in the distance still the same,
+ And old Scamander, if 'tis he, remain;
+The situation seems still form'd for fame,
+ A hundred thousand men might fight again
+With ease. But where I sought for Ilion's walls
+The quiet sheep feeds, and the tortoise crawls.
+
+Troops of untended horses; here and there
+ Some little hamlets, with new names uncouth,
+Some shepherds unlike Paris, led to stare
+ A moment at the European youth,
+Whom to the spot their schoolboy feelings bear;
+ A Turk with beads in hand and pipe in mouth,
+Extremely taken with his own religion,
+Are what I found there, but the devil a Phrygian.
+
+
+It was during the time that the Salsette lay off Cape Janissary that
+Lord Byron first undertook to swim across the Hellespont. Having
+crossed from the castle of Chanak-Kalessi, in a boat manned by four
+Turks, he landed at five o'clock in the evening half a mile above the
+castle of Chelit-Bauri, where, with an officer of the frigate who
+accompanied him, they began their enterprise, emulous of the renown
+of Leander. At first they swam obliquely upwards, rather towards
+Nagara Point than the Dardanelles, but notwithstanding their skill
+and efforts they made little progress. Finding it useless to
+struggle with {156} the current, they then turned and went with the
+stream, still however endeavouring to cross. It was not until they
+had been half an hour in the water, and found themselves in the
+middle of the strait, about a mile and a half below the castles, that
+they consented to be taken into the boat, which had followed them.
+By that time the coldness of the water had so benumbed their limbs
+that they were unable to stand, and were otherwise much exhausted.
+The second attempt was made on the 3rd of May, when the weather was
+warmer. They entered the water at the distance of a mile and a-half
+above Chelit-Bauri, near a point of land on the western bank of the
+Bay of Maito, and swam against the stream as before, but not for so
+long a time. In less than half an hour they came floating down the
+current close to the ship, which was then anchored at the
+Dardanelles, and in passing her steered for the bay behind the
+castle, which they soon succeeded in reaching, and landed about a
+mile and a-half below the ship. Lord Byron has recorded that he
+found the current very strong and the water cold; that some large
+fish passed him in the middle of the channel, and though a little
+chilled he was not fatigued, and performed the feat without much
+difficulty, but not with impunity, for by the verses in which he
+commemorated the exploit it appears he incurred the ague.
+
+
+WRITTEN AFTER SWIMMING FROM SESTOS TO ABYDOS
+
+
+If in the month of dark December
+ Leander who was nightly wont
+(What maid will not the tale remember)
+ To cross thy stream, broad Hellespont,
+
+If when the wintry tempest roar'd
+ He sped to Hero nothing loath,
+And thus of old thy current pour'd,
+ Fair Venus! how I pity both.
+
+For me, degenerate modern wretch,
+ Though in the genial month of May,
+My dripping limbs I faintly stretch,
+ And think I've done a feat to-day.
+
+But since he crossed the rapid tide,
+ According to the doubtful story,
+To woo, and--Lord knows what beside,
+ And swam for love as I for glory,
+
+'Twere hard to say who fared the best;
+ Sad mortals thus the gods still plague you;
+He lost his labour, I my jest--
+ For he was drown'd, and I've the ague.
+
+
+"The whole distance," says his Lordship, "from the place whence we
+started to our landing on the other side, including the length we
+were carried by the current, was computed by those on board the
+frigate at upwards of four English miles, though the actual breadth
+is barely one. The rapidity of the current is such that no boat can
+row directly across, and it may in some measure be estimated from the
+circumstance of the whole distance being accomplished by one of the
+parties in an hour and five, and by the other (Byron) in an hour and
+ten minutes. The water was extremely cold from the melting of the
+mountain snows. About three weeks before, in April, we had made an
+attempt; but having ridden all the way from the Troad the same
+morning, and the water being of an icy chilliness, we found it
+necessary to postpone the completion till the frigate anchored below
+the castles, when we swam the straits as just stated, entering a
+considerable way above the European, and landing below the Asiatic
+fort. Chevallier says that a young Jew swam the same distance for
+his mistress; and Oliver mentions it having been done by a
+Neapolitan; but our consul (at the Dardanelles), Tarragona,
+remembered neither of these circumstances, and tried to dissuade us
+from the attempt. A number of the Salsette's crew were known to have
+accomplished a greater distance and the only thing that surprised me
+was, that as doubts had been entertained of the truth of Leander's
+story, no traveller had ever endeavoured to ascertain its
+practicability."
+
+While the Salsette lay off the Dardanelles, Lord Byron saw the body
+of a man who had been executed by being cast into the sea, floating
+on the stream, moving to and fro with the tumbling of the water,
+which gave to his arms the effect of scaring away several sea-fowl
+that were hovering to devour. This incident he has strikingly
+depicted in The Bride of Abydos.
+
+
+The sea-birds shriek above the prey
+O'er which their hungry beaks delay,
+As shaken on his restless pillow,
+His head heaves with the heaving billow;
+That hand whose motion is not life,
+Yet feebly seems to menace strife,
+Flung by the tossing tide on high,
+ Then levell'd with the wave--
+What reeks it tho' that corse shall lie
+ Within a living grave.
+The bird that tears that prostrate form
+Hath only robb'd the meaner worm.
+The only heart, the only eye,
+That bled or wept to see him die,
+Had seen those scatter'd limbs composed,
+ And mourned above his turban stone;
+That heart hath burst--that eye was closed--
+ Yea--closed before his own.
+
+
+Between the Dardanelles and Constantinople no other adventure was
+undertaken or befel the poet. On the 13th of May, the frigate came
+to anchor at sunset, near the headland to the west of the Seraglio
+Point; and when the night closed in, the silence and the darkness
+were so complete "that we might have believed ourselves," says Mr
+Hobhouse, "moored in the lonely cove of some desert island, and not
+at the foot of a city which, from its vast extent and countless
+population, is fondly imagined by its present masters to be worthy to
+be called 'The Refuge of the World.'"
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+
+Constantinople--Description--The Dogs and the Dead--Landed at
+Tophana--The Masterless Dogs--The Slave Market--The Seraglio--The
+Defects in the Description
+
+The spot where the frigate came to anchor affords but an imperfect
+view of the Ottoman capital. A few tall white minarets, and the
+domes of the great mosques only are in sight, interspersed with trees
+and mean masses of domestic buildings. In the distance, inland on
+the left, the redoubted Castle of the Seven Towers is seen rising
+above the gloomy walls; and, unlike every other European city, a
+profound silence prevails over all. This remarkable characteristic
+of Constantinople is owing to the very few wheel-carriages employed
+in the city. In other respects the view around is lively, and in
+fine weather quickened with innumerable objects in motion. In the
+calmest days the rippling in the flow of the Bosphorus is like the
+running of a river. In the fifth canto of Don Juan, Lord Byron has
+seized the principal features, and delineated them with sparkling
+effect.
+
+
+ The European with the Asian shore,
+ Sprinkled with palaces, the ocean stream
+ Here and there studded with a seventy-four,
+ Sophia's cupola with golden gleam;
+ The cypress groves; Olympus high and hoar;
+ The twelve isles, and the more than I could dream,
+Far less describe, present the very view
+Which charm'd the charming Mary Montague.
+
+
+In the morning, when his Lordship left the ship, the wind blew
+strongly from the north-east, and the rushing current of the
+Bosphorus dashed with great violence against the rocky projections of
+the shore, as the captain's boat was rowed against the stream.
+
+
+The wind swept down the Euxine, and the wave
+Broke foaming o'er the blue Symplegades.
+'Tis a grand sight, from off the giant's grave,
+To watch the progress of those rolling seas
+Between the Bosphorus, as they lash and lave
+Europe and Asia, you being quite at ease.
+
+
+"The sensations produced by the state of the weather, and leaving a
+comfortable cabin, were," says Mr Hobhouse, "in unison with the
+impressions which we felt, when, passing under the palace of the
+sultans, and gazing at the gloomy cypresses, which rise above the
+walls, we saw two dogs gnawing a dead body." The description in The
+Siege of Corinth of the dogs devouring the dead, owes its origin to
+this incident of the dogs and the body under the walls of the
+seraglio.
+
+
+And he saw the lean dogs beneath the wall,
+Hold o'er the dead their carnival.
+Gorging and growling o'er carcase and limb,
+They were too busy to bark at him.
+From a Tartar's scull they had stripp'd the flesh,
+As ye peel the fig when its fruit is fresh,
+And their white tusks crunched on the whiter scull,
+As it slipp'd through their jaws when their edge grew dull.
+As they lazily mumbled the bones of the dead,
+When they scarce could rise from the spot where they fed.
+So well had they broken a lingering fast,
+With those who had fallen for that night's repast.
+And Alp knew by the turbans that rolled on the sand,
+The foremost of these were the best of his band.
+Crimson and green were the shawls of their wear,
+And each scalp had a single long tuft of hair,
+All the rest was shaven and bare.
+The scalps were in the wild dogs' maw,
+The hair was tangled round his jaw.
+But close by the shore on the edge of the gulf,
+There sat a vulture flapping a wolf,
+Who had stolen from the hills but kept away,
+Scared by the dogs from the human prey;
+But he seized on his share of a steed that lay,
+Pick'd by the birds on the sands of the bay.
+
+
+This hideous picture is a striking instance of the uses to which
+imaginative power may turn the slightest hint, and of horror
+augmented till it reach that extreme point at which the ridiculous
+commences. The whole compass of English poetry affords no parallel
+to this passage. It even exceeds the celebrated catalogue of
+dreadful things on the sacramental table in Tam O' Shanter. It is
+true, that the revolting circumstances described by Byron are less
+sublime in their associations than those of Burns, being mere visible
+images, unconnected with ideas of guilt, and unlike
+
+
+The knife a father's throat had mangled,
+Which his ain son of life bereft:
+The gray hairs yet stuck to the heft.
+
+
+Nor is there in the vivid group of the vulture flapping the wolf, any
+accessory to rouse stronger emotions, than those which are associated
+with the sight of energy and courage, while the covert insinuation,
+that the bird is actuated by some instigation of retribution in
+pursuing the wolf for having run away with the bone, approaches the
+very point and line where the horrible merges in the ludicrous. The
+whole passage is fearfully distinct, and though in its circumstances,
+as the poet himself says, "sickening," is yet an amazing display of
+poetical power and high invention.
+
+The frigate sent the travellers on shore at Tophana, from which the
+road ascends to Pera. Near this landing-place is a large fountain,
+and around it a public stand of horses ready saddled, attended by
+boys. On some of these Lord Byron and his friend, with the officers
+who had accompanied them, mounted and rode up the steep hill, to the
+principal Frank Hotel, in Pera, where they intended to lodge. In the
+course of the ride their attention was attracted to the prodigious
+number of masterless dogs which lounge and lurk about the corners of
+the streets; a nuisance both dangerous and disagreeable, but which
+the Turks not only tolerate but protect. It is no uncommon thing to
+see a litter of puppies with their mother nestled in a mat placed on
+purpose for them in a nook by some charitable Mussulman of the
+neighbourhood; for notwithstanding their merciless military
+practices, the Turks are pitiful-hearted Titans to dumb animals and
+slaves. Constantinople has, however, been so often and so well
+described, that it is unnecessary to notice its different objects of
+curiosity here, except in so far as they have been contributory to
+the stores of the poet.
+
+The slave market was of course not unvisited, but the description in
+Don Juan is more indebted to the author's fancy, than any of those
+other bright reflections of realities to which I have hitherto
+directed the attention of the reader. The market now-a-days is in
+truth very uninteresting; few slaves are ever to be seen in it, and
+the place itself has an odious resemblance to Smithfield. I imagine,
+therefore, that the trade in slaves is chiefly managed by private
+bargaining. When there, I saw only two men for sale, whites, who
+appeared very little concerned about their destination, certainly not
+more than English rustics offering themselves for hire to the farmers
+at a fair or market. Doubtless, there was a time when the slave
+market of Constantinople presented a different spectacle, but the
+trade itself has undergone a change--the Christians are now
+interdicted from purchasing slaves. The luxury of the guilt is
+reserved for the exclusive enjoyment of the Turks. Still, as a
+description of things which may have been, Byron's market is probable
+and curious.
+
+
+ A crowd of shivering slaves of every nation
+ And age and sex were in the market ranged,
+ Each busy with the merchant in his station.
+ Poor creatures, their good looks were sadly changed.
+
+ All save the blacks seem'd jaded with vexation,
+ From friends, and home, and freedom far estranged.
+The negroes more philosophy displayed,
+Used to it no doubt, as eels are to be flayed.
+
+ Like a backgammon board, the place was dotted
+ With whites and blacks in groups, on show for sale,
+ Though rather more irregularly spotted;
+ Some bought the jet, while others chose the pale.
+
+ No lady e'er is ogled by a lover,
+ Horse by a black-leg, broadcloth by a tailor,
+ Fee by a counsel, felon by a jailer,
+
+ As is a slave by his intended bidder.
+ 'Tis pleasant purchasing our fellow-creatures,
+ And all are to be sold, if you consider
+ Their passions, and are dext'rous, some by features
+ Are bought up, others by a warlike leader;
+ Some by a place, as tend their years or natures;
+The most by ready cash, but all have prices,
+From crowns to kicks, according to their vices.
+
+
+The account of the interior of the seraglio in Don Juan is also only
+probably correct, and may have been drawn in several particulars from
+an inspection of some of the palaces, but the descriptions of the
+imperial harem are entirely fanciful. I am persuaded, by different
+circumstances, that Byron could not have been in those sacred
+chambers of any of the seraglios. At the time I was in
+Constantinople, only one of the imperial residences was accessible to
+strangers, and it was unfurnished. The great seraglio was not
+accessible beyond the courts, except in those apartments where the
+Sultan receives his officers and visitors of state. Indeed, the
+whole account of the customs and usages of the interior of the
+seraglio, as described in Don Juan, can only be regarded as
+inventions; and though the descriptions abound in picturesque beauty,
+they have not that air of truth and fact about them which render the
+pictures of Byron so generally valuable, independent of their
+poetical excellence. In those he has given of the apartments of the
+men, the liveliness and fidelity of his pencil cannot be denied; but
+the Arabian tales and Vathek seem to have had more influence on his
+fancy in describing the imperial harem, than a knowledge of actual
+things and appearances. Not that the latter are inferior to the
+former in beauty, or are without images and lineaments of graphic
+distinctness, but they want that air of reality which constitutes the
+singular excellence of his scenes drawn from nature; and there is a
+vagueness in them which has the effect of making them obscure, and
+even fantastical. Indeed, except when he paints from actual models,
+from living persons and existing things, his superiority, at least
+his originality, is not so obvious; and thus it happens, that his
+gorgeous description of the sultan's seraglio is like a versified
+passage of an Arabian tale, while the imagery of Childe Harold's
+visit to Ali Pasha has all the freshness and life of an actual scene.
+The following is, indeed, more like an imitation of Vathek, than
+anything that has been seen, or is in existence. I quote it for the
+contrast it affords to the visit referred to, and in illustration of
+the distinction which should be made between beauties derived from
+actual scenes and adventures, and compilations from memory and
+imagination, which are supposed to display so much more of creative
+invention.
+
+
+ And thus they parted, each by separate doors,
+ Raba led Juan onward, room by room,
+ Through glittering galleries and o'er marble floors,
+ Till a gigantic portal through the gloom
+ Haughty and huge along the distance towers,
+ And wafted far arose a rich perfume,
+It seem'd as though they came upon a shrine,
+For all was vast, still, fragrant, and divine.
+
+ The giant door was broad and bright and high,
+ Of gilded bronze, and carved in curious guise;
+ Warriors thereon were battling furiously;
+ Here stalks the victor, there the vanquish'd lies;
+ There captives led in triumph droop the eye,
+ And in perspective many a squadron flies.
+It seems the work of times before the line
+Of Rome transplanted fell with Constantine.
+
+ This massy portal stood at the wide close
+ Of a huge hall, and on its either side
+ Two little dwarfs, the least you could suppose,
+ Were sate, like ugly imps, as if allied
+ In mockery to the enormous gate which rose
+ O'er them in almost pyramidic pride.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+
+Dispute with the Ambassador--Reflections on Byron's Pride of Rank--
+Abandons his Oriental Travels--Re-embarks in the "Salsette"--The
+Dagger Scene--Zea--Returns to Athens--Tour in the Morea--Dangerous
+Illness--Return to Athens--The Adventure on which "The Giaour" is
+founded
+
+Although Lord Byron remained two months in Constantinople, and
+visited every object of interest and curiosity within and around it,
+he yet brought away with him fewer poetical impressions than from any
+other part of the Ottoman dominions; at least he has made less use in
+his works of what he saw and learned there, than of the materials he
+collected in other places.
+
+From whatever cause it arose, the self-abstraction which I had
+noticed at Smyrna, was remarked about him while he was in the
+capital, and the same jealousy of his rank was so nervously awake,
+that it led him to attempt an obtrusion on the ambassadorial
+etiquettes--which he probably regretted.
+
+It has grown into a custom, at Constantinople, when the foreign
+ministers are admitted to audiences of ceremony with the Sultan, to
+allow the subjects and travellers of their respective nations to
+accompany them, both to swell the pomp of the spectacle, and to
+gratify their curiosity. Mr Adair, our ambassador, for whom the
+Salsette had been sent, had his audience of leave appointed soon
+after Lord Byron's arrival, and his Lordship was particularly anxious
+to occupy a station of distinction in the procession. The pretension
+was ridiculous in itself, and showed less acquaintance with courtly
+ceremonies than might have been expected in a person of his rank and
+intelligence. Mr Adair assured him that he could obtain no
+particular place; that in the arrangements for the ceremonial, only
+the persons connected with the embassy could be considered, and that
+the Turks neither acknowledged the precedence, nor could be requested
+to consider the distinctions of our nobility. Byron, however, still
+persisted, and the minister was obliged to refer him on the subject
+to the Austrian Internuncio, a high authority in questions of
+etiquette, whose opinion was decidedly against the pretension.
+
+The pride of rank was indeed one of the greatest weaknesses of Lord
+Byron, and everything, even of the most accidental kind, which seemed
+to come between the wind and his nobility, was repelled on the spot.
+I recollect having some debate with him once respecting a pique of
+etiquette, which happened between him and Sir William Drummond,
+somewhere in Portugal or Spain. Sir William was at the time an
+ambassador (not, however, I believe, in the country where the
+incident occurred), and was on the point of taking precedence in
+passing from one room to another, when Byron stepped in before him.
+The action was undoubtedly rude on the part of his Lordship, even
+though Sir William had presumed too far on his riband: to me it
+seemed also wrong; for, by the custom of all nations from time
+immemorial, ambassadors have been allowed their official rank in
+passing through foreign countries, while peers in the same
+circumstances claim no rank at all; even in our own colonies it has
+been doubted if they may take precedence of the legislative
+counsellors. But the rights of rank are best determined by the
+heralds, and I have only to remark, that it is almost inconceivable
+that such things should have so morbidly affected the sensibility of
+Lord Byron; yet they certainly did so, and even to a ridiculous
+degree. On one occasion, when he lodged in St James's Street, I
+recollect him rating the footman for using a double knock in
+accidental thoughtlessness.
+
+These little infirmities are, however, at most only calculated to
+excite a smile; there is no turpitude in them, and they merit notice
+but as indications of the humour of character. It was his Lordship's
+foible to overrate his rank, to grudge his deformity beyond reason,
+and to exaggerate the condition of his family and circumstances. But
+the alloy of such small vanities, his caprice and feline temper, were
+as vapour compared with the mass of rich and rare ore which
+constituted the orb and nucleus of his brilliancy.
+
+He had not been long in Constantinople, when a change came over his
+intentions; the journey to Persia was abandoned, and the dreams of
+India were dissolved. The particular causes which produced this
+change are not very apparent--but Mr Hobhouse was at the same time
+directed to return home, and perhaps that circumstance had some
+influence on his decision, which he communicated to his mother,
+informing her, that he should probably return to Greece. As in that
+letter he alludes to his embarrassment on account of remittances, it
+is probable that the neglect of his agent, with respect to them, was
+the main cause which induced him to determine on going no farther.
+
+Accordingly, on the 14th of July, he embarked with Mr Hobhouse and
+the ambassador on board the Salsette. It was in the course of the
+passage to the island of Zea, where he was put on shore, that one of
+the most emphatic incidents of his life occurred; an incident which
+throws a remarkable gleam into the springs and intricacies of his
+character--more, perhaps, than anything which has yet been mentioned.
+
+One day, as he was walking the quarter-deck, he lifted an ataghan (it
+might be one of the midshipmen's weapons), and unsheathing it, said,
+contemplating the blade, "I should like to know how a person feels
+after committing murder." By those who have inquiringly noticed the
+extraordinary cast of his metaphysical associations, this dagger-
+scene must be regarded as both impressive and solemn; although the
+wish to know how a man felt after committing murder does not imply
+any desire to perpetrate the crime. The feeling might be appreciated
+by experiencing any actual degree of guilt; for it is not the deed--
+the sentiment which follows it makes the horror. But it is doing
+injustice to suppose the expression of such a wish dictated by
+desire. Lord Byron has been heard to express, in the eccentricity of
+conversation, wishes for a more intense knowledge of remorse than
+murder itself could give. There is, however, a wide and wild
+difference between the curiosity that prompts the wish to know the
+exactitude of any feeling or idea, and the direful passions that
+instigate to guilty gratifications.
+
+Being landed, according to his request, with his valet, two
+Albanians, and a Tartar, on the shore of Zea, it may be easily
+conceived that he saw the ship depart with a feeling before unfelt.
+It was the first time he was left companionless, and the scene around
+was calculated to nourish stern fancies, even though there was not
+much of suffering to be withstood.
+
+The landing-place in the port of Zea, I recollect distinctly. The
+port itself is a small land-locked gulf, or, as the Scottish
+Highlander would call it, a loch. The banks are rocky and
+forbidding; the hills, which rise to the altitude of mountains, have,
+in a long course of ages, been always inhabited by a civilized
+people. Their precipitous sides are formed into innumerable
+artificial terraces, the aspect of which, austere, ruinous, and
+ancient, produces on the mind of the stranger a sense of the presence
+of a greater antiquity than the sight of monuments of mere labour and
+art. The town stands high upon the mountain, I counted on the lower
+side of the road which leads to it forty-nine of those terraces at
+one place under me, and on the opposite hills, in several places,
+upwards of sixty. Whether Lord Byron ascended to the town is
+doubtful. I have never heard him mention that he had; and I am
+inclined to think that he proceeded at once to Athens by one of the
+boats which frequent the harbour.
+
+At Athens he met an old fellow-collegian, the Marquis of Sligo, with
+whom he soon after travelled as far as Corinth; the Marquis turning
+off there for Tripolizza, while Byron went forward to Patras, where
+he had some needful business to transact with the consul. He then
+made the tour of the Morea, in the course of which he visited the
+Vizier Velhi Pasha, by whom he was treated, as every other English
+traveller of the time was, with great distinction and hospitality.
+
+Having occasion to go back to Patras, he was seized by the local
+fever there, and reduced to death's door. On his recovery he
+returned to Athens, where he found the Marquis, with Lady Hester
+Stanhope, and Mr Bruce, afterward so celebrated for his adventures in
+assisting the escape of the French General Lavalette. He took
+possession of the apartments which I had occupied in the monastery,
+and made them his home during the remainder of his residence in
+Greece; but when I returned to Athens, in October, he was not there
+himself. I found, however, his valet, Fletcher, in possession.
+
+There is no very clear account of the manner in which Lord Byron
+employed himself after his return to Athens; but various intimations
+in his correspondence show that during the winter his pen was not
+idle. It would, however, be to neglect an important occurrence, not
+to notice that during the time when he was at Athens alone, the
+incident which he afterwards embodied in the impassioned fragments of
+The Giaour came to pass; and to apprise the reader that the story is
+founded on an adventure which happened to himself--he was, in fact,
+the cause of the girl being condemned, and ordered to be sewn up in a
+sack and thrown into the sea.
+
+One day, as he was returning from bathing in the Piraeus, he met the
+procession going down to the shore to execute the sentence which the
+Waywode had pronounced on the girl; and learning the object of the
+ceremony, and who was the victim, he immediately interfered with
+great resolution; for, on observing some hesitation on the part of
+the leader of the escort to return with him to the Governor's house,
+he drew a pistol and threatened to shoot him on the spot. The man
+then turned about, and accompanied him back, when, partly by bribery
+and entreaty, he succeeded in obtaining a pardon for her, on
+condition that she was sent immediately out of the city. Byron
+conveyed her to the monastery, and on the same night sent her off to
+Thebes, where she found a safe asylum.
+
+With this affair, I may close his adventures in Greece; for, although
+he remained several months subsequent at Athens, he was in a great
+measure stationary. His health, which was never robust, was impaired
+by the effects of the fever, which lingered about him; perhaps, too,
+by the humiliating anxiety he suffered on account of the uncertainty
+in his remittances. But however this may have been, it was fortunate
+for his fame that he returned to England at the period he did, for
+the climate of the Mediterranean was detrimental to his constitution.
+The heat oppressed him so much as to be positive suffering, and
+scarcely had he reached Malta on his way home, when he was visited
+again with a tertian ague.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+
+Arrival in London--Mr Dallas's Patronage--Arranges for the
+Publication of "Childe Harold"--The Death of Mrs Byron--His Sorrow--
+His Affair with Mr Moore--Their Meeting at Mr Rogers's House, and
+Friendship
+
+Lord Byron arrived in London about the middle of July, 1811, having
+been absent a few days more than two years. The embarrassed
+condition in which he found his affairs sufficiently explains the
+dejection and uneasiness with which he was afflicted during the
+latter part of his residence in Greece; and yet it was not such as
+ought to have affected him so deeply, nor have I ever been able to
+comprehend wherefore so much stress has been laid on his supposed
+friendlessness. In respect both to it and to his ravelled fortune, a
+great deal too much has been too often said; and the manliness of his
+character has suffered by the puling.
+
+His correspondence shows that he had several friends to whom he was
+much attached, and his disposition justifies the belief that, had he
+not been well persuaded the attachment was reciprocal, he would not
+have remained on terms of intimacy with them. And though for his
+rank not rich, he was still able to maintain all its suitable
+exhibition. The world could never regard as an object of compassion
+or of sympathy an English noble, whose income was enough to support
+his dignity among his peers, and whose poverty, however grievous to
+his pride, caused only the privation of extravagance. But it cannot
+be controverted, that there was an innate predilection in the mind of
+Lord Byron to mystify everything about himself: he was actuated by a
+passion to excite attention, and, like every other passion, it was
+often indulged at the expense of propriety. He had the infirmity of
+speaking, though vaguely, and in obscure hints and allusions, more of
+his personal concerns than is commonly deemed consistent with a
+correct estimate of the interest which mankind take in the cares of
+one another. But he lived to feel and to rue the consequences: to
+repent he could not, for the cause was in the very element of his
+nature. It was a blemish as incurable as the deformity of his foot.
+
+On his arrival in London, his relation, Mr Dallas, called on him, and
+in the course of their first brief conversation his Lordship
+mentioned that he had written a paraphrase of Horace's Art of Poetry,
+but said nothing then of Childe Harold, a circumstance which leads me
+to suspect that he offered him the slighter work first, to enjoy his
+surprise afterward at the greater. If so, the result answered the
+intent. Mr Dallas carried home with him the paraphrase of Horace,
+with which he was grievously disappointed; so much so, that on
+meeting his Lordship again in the morning, and being reluctant to
+speak of it as he really thought, he only expressed some surprise
+that his noble friend should have produced nothing else during his
+long absence.
+
+I can easily conceive the emphatic indifference, if my conjecture be
+well founded, with which Lord Byron must have said to him, "I have
+occasionally written short poems, besides a great many stanzas in
+Spenser's measure, relative to the countries I have visited: they
+are not worth troubling you with, but you shall have them all with
+you, if you like."
+
+Childe Harold's Pilgrimage was accordingly placed in his hands; Mr
+Dallas took it home, and was not slow in discovering its beauties,
+for in the course of the same evening he despatched a note to his
+Lordship, as fair a specimen of the style of an elderly patronising
+gentleman as can well be imagined: "You have written," said he, "one
+of the most delightful poems I ever read. If I wrote this in
+flattery, I should deserve your contempt rather than your friendship.
+I have been so fascinated with Childe Harold, that I have not been
+able to lay it down; I would almost pledge my life on its advancing
+the reputation of your poetical powers, and on its gaining you great
+honour and regard, if you will do me the credit and favour of
+attending to my suggestions."
+
+For some reason or another, Lord Byron, however, felt or feigned
+great reluctance to publish Childe Harold. Possibly his repugnance
+was dictated by diffidence, not with respect to its merits, but from
+a consciousness that the hero of the poem exhibited traits and
+resemblances of himself. It would indeed be injustice to his
+judgment and taste, to suppose he was not sensible of the superiority
+of the terse and energetic poetry which brightens and burns in every
+stanza of the Pilgrimage, compared with the loose and sprawling
+lines, and dull rhythm, of the paraphrase. It is true that he
+alleged it had been condemned by a good critic--the only one who had
+previously seen it--probably Mr Hobhouse, who was with him during the
+time he was writing it; but still I cannot conceive he was so blind
+to excellence, as to prefer in sincerity the other composition, which
+was only an imitation. But the arguments of Mr Dallas prevailed and
+in due season Childe Harold was prepared for the press.
+
+In the meantime, while busily engaged in his literary projects with
+Mr Dallas, and in law affairs with his agent, he was suddenly
+summoned to Newstead by the state of his mother's health: before he
+had reached the Abbey she had breathed her last. The event deeply
+affected him; he had not seen her since his return, and a
+presentiment possessed her when they parted, that she was never to
+see him again.
+
+Notwithstanding her violent temper and other unseemly conduct, her
+affection for him had been so fond and dear, that he undoubtedly
+returned it with unaffected sincerity; and from many casual and
+incidental expressions which I have heard him employ concerning her,
+I am persuaded that his filial love was not at any time even of an
+ordinary kind. During her life he might feel uneasy respecting her,
+apprehensive on account of her ungovernable passions and
+indiscretions, but the manner in which he lamented her death, clearly
+proves that the integrity of his affection had never been impaired.
+
+On the night after his arrival at the Abbey, the waiting-woman of Mrs
+Byron, in passing the door of the room where the corpse lay, heard
+the sound of some one sighing heavily within, and on entering found
+his Lordship sitting in the dark beside the bed. She remonstrated
+with him for so giving way to grief, when he burst into tears, and
+exclaimed, "I had but one friend in the world, and she is gone." Of
+the fervency of his sorrow I do therefore think there can be no
+doubt; the very endeavour which he made to conceal it by
+indifference, was a proof of its depth and anguish, though he
+hazarded the strictures of the world by the indecorum of his conduct
+on the occasion of the funeral. Having declined to follow the
+remains himself, he stood looking from the hall door at the
+procession, till the whole had moved away; and then, turning to one
+of the servants, the only person left, he desired him to fetch the
+sparring-gloves, and proceeded with him to his usual exercise. But
+the scene was impressive, and spoke eloquently of a grieved heart; he
+sparred in silence all the time, and the servant thought that he hit
+harder than was his habit: at last he suddenly flung away the gloves
+and retired to his own room.
+
+As soon as the funeral was over the publication of Childe Harold was
+resumed, but it went slowly through the press. In the meantime, an
+incident occurred to him which deserves to be noted--because it is
+one of the most remarkable in his life, and has given rise to
+consequences affecting his fame--with advantage.
+
+In English Bards and Scotch Reviewers, he had alluded, with provoking
+pleasantry, to a meeting which had taken place at Chalk Farm some
+years before, between Mr Jeffrey, the Edinburgh reviewer, and Mr
+Moore, without recollecting, indeed without having heard, that Mr
+Moore had explained, through the newspapers, what was alleged to have
+been ridiculous in the affair. This revival of the subject,
+especially as it called in question the truth of Mr Moore's
+statement, obliged that gentleman to demand an explanation; but Lord
+Byron, being abroad, did not receive this letter, and of course knew
+not of its contents, so that, on his return, Mr Moore was induced to
+address his Lordship again. The correspondence which ensued is
+honourable to the spirit and feelings of both.
+
+Mr Moore, after referring to his first letter, restated the nature of
+the insult which the passage in the note to the poem was calculated
+to convey, adding, "It is now useless to speak of the steps with
+which it was my intention to follow up that letter, the time which
+has elapsed since then, though it has done away neither the injury
+nor the feeling of it, has, in many respects, materially altered my
+situation, and the only object I have now in writing to your
+Lordship, is to preserve some consistency with that former letter,
+and to prove to you that the injured feeling still exists, however
+circumstances may compel me to be deaf to its dictates at present.
+When I say 'injured feeling,' let me assure your Lordship that there
+is not a single vindictive sentiment in my mind towards you; I mean
+but to express that uneasiness under what I consider to be a charge
+of falsehood, which must haunt a man of any feeling to his grave,
+unless the insult be retracted, or atoned for, and which, if I did
+not feel, I should indeed deserve far worse than your Lordship's
+satire could inflict upon me." And he concluded by saying, that so
+far from being influenced by any angry or resentful feeling, it would
+give him sincere pleasure if, by any satisfactory explanation, his
+Lordship would enable him to seek the honour of being ranked among
+his acquaintance.
+
+The answer of Lord Byron was diplomatic but manly. He declared that
+he never received Mr Moore's letter, and assured him that in whatever
+part of the world it had reached him, he would have deemed it his
+duty to return and answer it in person; that he knew nothing of the
+advertisement to which Mr Moore had alluded, and consequently could
+not have had the slightest idea of "giving the lie" to an address
+which he had never seen. "When I put my name to the production,"
+said his Lordship, "which has occasioned this correspondence, I
+became responsible to all whom it might concern, to explain where it
+requires explanation, and where insufficiently or too sufficiently
+explicit, at all events to satisfy; my situation leaves me no choice;
+it rests with the injured and the angry to obtain reparation in their
+own way. With regard to the passage in question, YOU were certainly
+NOT the person towards whom I felt personally hostile: on the
+contrary, my whole thoughts were engrossed by one whom I had reason
+to consider as my worst literary enemy, nor could I foresee that his
+former antagonist was about to become his champion. You do not
+specify what you would wish to have done. I can neither retract nor
+apologize for a charge of falsehood which I never advanced."
+
+In reply, Mr Moore commenced by acknowledging that his Lordship's
+letter was upon the whole as satisfactory as he could expect; and
+after alluding to specific circumstances in the case, concluded thus:
+"As your Lordship does not show any wish to proceed beyond the rigid
+formulary of explanation, it is not for me to make any farther
+advances. We Irishmen, in business of this kind, seldom know any
+medium between decided hostility and decided friendship. But as any
+approaches towards the latter alternative must now depend entirely on
+your Lordship, I have only to repeat that I am satisfied with your
+letter." Here the correspondence would probably, with most people,
+have been closed, but Lord Byron's sensibility was interested, and
+would not let it rest. Accordingly, on the following day, he
+rejoined: "Soon after my return to England, my friend Mr Hodgson
+apprised me that a letter for me was in his possession; but a
+domestic event hurrying me from London immediately after, the letter,
+which may most probably be your own, is still unopened in his
+keeping. If, on examination of the address, the similarity of the
+handwriting should lead to such a conclusion, it shall be opened in
+your presence, for the satisfaction of all parties. Mr H. is at
+present out of town; on Friday I shall see him, and request him to
+forward it to my address. With regard to the latter part of both
+your letters, until the principal point was discussed between us, I
+felt myself at a loss in what manner to reply. Was I to anticipate
+friendship from one who conceived me to have charged him with
+falsehood? were not advances under such circumstances to be
+misconstrued, not perhaps by the person to whom they were addressed,
+but by others? In my case such a step was impracticable. If you,
+who conceived yourself to be the offended person, are satisfied that
+you had no cause for offence, it will not be difficult to convince me
+of it. My situation, as I have before stated, leaves me no choice.
+I should have felt proud of your acquaintance had it commenced under
+other circumstances, but it must rest with you to determine how far
+it may proceed after so AUSPICIOUS a beginning."
+
+Mr Moore acknowledges that he was somewhat piqued at the manner in
+which his efforts towards a more friendly understanding were
+received, and hastened to close the correspondence by a short note,
+saying that his Lordship had made him feel the imprudence he was
+guilty of in wandering from the point immediately in discussion
+between them. This drew immediately from Lord Byron the following
+frank and openhearted reply:
+
+"You must excuse my troubling you once more upon this very unpleasant
+subject. It would be a satisfaction to me, and I should think to
+yourself, that the unopened letter in Mr Hodgson's possession
+(supposing it to prove your own) should be returned in statu quo to
+the writer, particularly as you expressed yourself 'not quite easy
+under the manner in which I had dwelt on its miscarriage.'
+
+"A few words more and I shall not trouble you further. I felt, and
+still feel, very much flattered by those parts of your correspondence
+which held out the prospect of our becoming acquainted. If I did not
+meet them, in the first instance, as perhaps I ought, let the
+situation in which I was placed be my defence. You have NOW declared
+yourself SATISFIED, and on that point we are no longer at issue. If,
+therefore, you still retain any wish to do me the honour you hinted
+at, I shall be most happy to meet you when, where, and how you
+please, and I presume you will not attribute my saying thus much to
+any unworthy motive."
+
+The result was a dinner at the house of Mr Rogers, the amiable and
+celebrated author of The Pleasures of Memory, and the only guest
+besides the two adversaries was Mr Campbell, author of The Pleasures
+of Hope: a poetical group of four not easily to be matched, among
+contemporaries in any age or country.
+
+The meeting could not but be interesting, and Mr Moore has described
+the effect it had on himself with a felicitous warmth, which showed
+how much he enjoyed the party, and was pleased with the friendship
+that ensued.
+
+"Among the impressions," says he, "which this meeting left on me,
+what I chiefly remember to have remarked was, the nobleness of his
+air, his beauty, the gentleness of his voice and manners, and--what
+was naturally not the least attraction--his marked kindness for
+myself. Being in mourning for his mother, the colour as well of his
+dress as of his glossy, curling, and picturesque hair, gave more
+effect to the pure spiritual paleness of his features, in the
+expression of which, when he spoke, there was a perpetual play of
+lively thought, though melancholy was their habitual character when
+in repose."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+
+The Libel in "The Scourge"--The general Impression of his Character--
+Improvement in his Manners, as his Merit was acknowledgement by the
+Public--His Address in Management--His first Speech in Parliament--
+The Publication of "Childe Harold"--Its Reception and Effect
+
+During the first winter after Lord Byron had returned to England, I
+was frequently with him. Childe Harold was not then published; and
+although the impression of his satire, English Bards and Scotch
+Reviewers, was still strong upon the public, he could not well be
+said to have been then a celebrated character. At that time the
+strongest feeling by which he appeared to be actuated was indignation
+against a writer in a scurrilous publication, called The Scourge; in
+which he was not only treated with unjustifiable malignity, but
+charged with being, as he told me himself, the illegitimate son of a
+murderer. I had not read the work; but the writer who could make
+such an absurd accusation, must have been strangely ignorant of the
+very circumstances from which he derived the materials of his own
+libel. When Lord Byron mentioned the subject to me, and that he was
+consulting Sir Vickery Gibbs, with the intention of prosecuting the
+publisher and the author, I advised him, as well as I could, to
+desist, simply because the allegation referred to well-known
+occurrences. His grand-uncle's duel with Mr. Chaworth, and the order
+of the House of Peers to produce evidence of his grandfather's
+marriage with Miss Trevannion; the facts of which being matter of
+history and public record, superseded the necessity of any
+proceeding.
+
+Knowing how deeply this affair agitated him at that time, I was not
+surprised at the sequestration in which he held himself--and which
+made those who were not acquainted with his shy and mystical nature,
+apply to him the description of his own Lara:
+
+
+The chief of Lara is return'd again,
+
+And why had Lara cross'd the bounding main?--
+Left by his sire too young such loss to know,
+Lord of himself; that heritage of woe.
+In him, inexplicably mix'd, appear'd
+Much to be loved and hated, sought and fear'd,
+Opinion varying o'er his hidden lot,
+In praise or railing ne'er his name forgot.
+His silence form'd a theme for others' prate;
+They guess'd, they gazed, they fain would know his fate,
+What had he been? what was he, thus unknown,
+Who walk'd their world, his lineage only known?
+A hater of his kind? yet some would say,
+With them he could seem gay amid the gay;
+But own'd that smile, if oft observed and near
+Waned in its mirth and wither'd to a sneer;
+That smile might reach his lip, but pass'd not by;
+None e'er could trace its laughter to his eye:
+Yet there was softness, too, in his regard,
+At times a heart is not by nature hard.
+But once perceived, his spirit seem'd to hide
+Such weakness as unworthy of its pride,
+And stretch'd itself as scorning to redeem
+One doubt from others' half-withheld esteem;
+In self-inflicted penance of a breast
+Which tenderness might once have wrung from rest,
+In vigilance of grief that would compel
+The soul to hate for having loved too well.
+There was in him a vital scorn of all,
+As if the worst had fall'n which could befall.
+He stood a stranger in this breathing world,
+An erring spirit from another hurl'd;
+A thing of dark imaginings, that shaped
+By choice the perils he by chance escaped.
+
+
+Such was Byron to common observance on his return. I recollect one
+night meeting him at the Opera. Seeing me with a gentleman whom he
+did not know, and to whom he was unknown, he addressed me in Italian,
+and we continued to converse for some time in that language. My
+friend, who in the meanwhile had been observing him with curiosity,
+conceiving him to be a foreigner, inquired in the course of the
+evening who he was, remarking that he had never seen a man with such
+a Cain-like mark on the forehead before, alluding to that singular
+scowl which struck me so forcibly when I first saw him, and which
+appears to have made a stronger impression upon me than it did upon
+many others. I never, in fact, could overcome entirely the prejudice
+of the first impression, although I ought to have been gratified by
+the friendship and confidence with which he always appeared disposed
+to treat me. When Childe Harold was printed, he sent me a quarto
+copy before the publication; a favour and distinction I have always
+prized; and the copy which he gave me of The Bride of Abydos was one
+he had prepared for a new edition, and which contains, in his own
+writing, these six lines in no other copy:
+
+
+Bless'd--as the Muezzin's strain from Mecca's wall
+To pilgrims pure and prostrate at his call,
+Soft--as the melody of youthful days
+That steals the trembling tear of speechless praise,
+Sweet--as his native song to exile's ears
+Shall sound each tone thy long-loved voice endears.
+
+
+He had not, it is true, at the period of which I am speaking,
+gathered much of his fame; but the gale was rising--and though the
+vessel was evidently yielding to the breeze, she was neither crank
+nor unsteady. On the contrary, the more he became an object of
+public interest, the less did he indulge his capricious humour.
+About the time when The Bride of Abydos was published, he appeared
+disposed to settle into a consistent character--especially after the
+first sale of Newstead. Before that particular event, he was often
+so disturbed in his mind, that he could not conceal his unhappiness,
+and frequently spoke of leaving England for ever.
+
+Although few men were more under the impulses of passion than Lord
+Byron, there was yet a curious kind of management about him which
+showed that he was well aware how much of the world's favour was to
+be won by it. Long before Childe Harold appeared, it was generally
+known that he had a poem in the press, and various surmises to
+stimulate curiosity were circulated concerning it: I do not say that
+these were by his orders, or under his directions, but on one
+occasion I did fancy that I could discern a touch of his own hand in
+a paragraph in the Morning Post, in which he was mentioned as having
+returned from an excursion into the interior of Africa; and when I
+alluded to it, my suspicion was confirmed by his embarrassment.
+
+I mention this incident not in the spirit of detraction; for in the
+paragraph there was nothing of puff, though certainly something of
+oddity--but as a tint of character, indicative of the appetite for
+distinction by which, about this period, he became so powerfully
+incited, that at last it grew into a diseased crave, and to such a
+degree, that were the figure allowable, it might be said, the mouth
+being incapable of supplying adequate means to appease it--every pore
+became another mouth greedy of nourishment. I am, however, hastening
+on too fast. Lord Byron was, at that time, far indeed from being
+ruled by any such inordinate passion; the fears, the timidity, and
+bashfulness of young desire still clung to him, and he was throbbing
+with doubt if he should be found worthy of the high prize for which
+he was about to offer himself a candidate. The course he adopted on
+the occasion, whether dictated by management, or the effect of
+accident, was, however, well calculated to attract attention to his
+debut as a public man.
+
+When Childe Harold was ready for publication, he determined to make
+his first appearance as an orator in the House of Lords: the
+occasion was judiciously chosen, being a debate on the Nottingham
+frame-breaking bill; a subject on which it was natural to suppose he
+possessed some local knowledge that might bear upon a question
+directed so exclusively against transactions in his own county. He
+prepared himself as the best orators do in their first essays, not
+only by composing, but writing down, the whole of his speech
+beforehand. The reception he met with was flattering; he was
+complimented warmly by some of the speakers on his own side; but it
+must be confessed that his debut was more showy than promising. It
+lacked weight in metal, as was observed at the time, and the mode of
+delivery was more like a schoolboy's recital than a masculine grapple
+with an argument. It was, moreover, full of rhetorical
+exaggerations, and disfigured with conceits. Still it scintillated
+with talent, and justified the opinion that he was an extraordinary
+young man, probably destined to distinction, though he might not be a
+statesman.
+
+Mr Dallas gives a lively account of his elation on the occasion.
+"When he left the great chamber," says that gentleman, "I went and
+met him in the passage; he was glowing with success, and much
+agitated. I had an umbrella in my right hand, not expecting that he
+would put out his hand to me; in my haste to take it when offered, I
+had advanced my left hand: 'What!' said he, 'give your friend your
+left hand upon such an occasion?' I showed the cause, and
+immediately changing the umbrella to the other, I gave him my right
+hand, which he shook and pressed warmly. He was greatly elated, and
+repeated some of the compliments which had been paid him, and
+mentioned one or two of the peers who had desired to be introduced to
+him. He concluded by saying, that he had, by his speech, given me
+the best advertisement for Childe Harold's Pilgrimage."
+
+It is upon this latter circumstance, that I have ventured to state my
+suspicion, that there was a degree of worldly management in making
+his first appearance in the House of Lords, so immediately preceding
+the publication of his poem. The speech was, indeed, a splendid
+advertisement, but the greater and brighter merits of the poem soon
+proved that it was not requisite, for the speech made no impression,
+but the poem was at once hailed with delight and admiration. It
+filled a vacancy in the public mind, which the excitement and
+inflation arising from the mighty events of the age, had created.
+The world, in its condition and circumstances, was prepared to
+receive a work, so original, vigorous, and beautiful; and the
+reception was such that there was no undue extravagance in the noble
+author saying in his memorandum, "I awoke one morning and found
+myself famous."
+
+But he was not to be allowed to revel in such triumphant success with
+impunity. If the great spirits of the time were smitten with
+astonishment at the splendour of the rising fire, the imps and elves
+of malignity and malice fluttered their bat-wings in all directions.
+Those whom the poet had afflicted in his satire, and who had remained
+quietly crouching with lacerated shoulders in the hope that their
+flagellation would be forgotten, and that the avenging demon who had
+so punished their imbecility would pass away, were terrified from
+their obscurity. They came like moths to the candle, and sarcasms in
+the satire which had long been unheeded, in the belief that they
+would soon be forgotten, were felt to have been barbed with
+irremediable venom, when they beheld the avenger
+
+
+Towering in his pride of place.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+
+Sketches of Character--His Friendly Dispositions--Introduce Prince K-
+-to him--Our last Interview--His continued Kindness towards me--
+Instance of it to one of my Friends.
+
+For some time after the publication of Childe Harold, the noble
+author appeared to more advantage than I ever afterwards saw him. He
+was soothed by success; and the universal applause which attended his
+poem seemed to make him think more kindly of the world, of which he
+has too often complained, while it would be difficult to discover, in
+his career and fortunes, that he had ever received any cause from it
+to justify his complaint.
+
+At no time, I imagine, could it be said that Lord Byron was one of
+those men who interest themselves in the concerns of others. He had
+always too much to do with his own thoughts about himself, to afford
+time for the consideration of aught that was lower in his affections.
+But still he had many amiable fits, and at the particular period to
+which I allude, he evinced a constancy in the disposition to oblige,
+which proved how little self-control was wanting to have made him as
+pleasant as he was uniformly interesting. I felt this towards myself
+in a matter which had certainly the grace of condescension in it, at
+the expense of some trouble to him. I then lived at the corner of
+Bridge Street, Westminster, and in going to the House of Lords he
+frequently stopped to inquire if I wanted a frank. His conversation,
+at the same time, was of a milder vein, and with the single exception
+of one day, while dining together at the St Alban's, it was light and
+playful, as if gaiety had become its habitude.
+
+Perhaps I regarded him too curiously, and more than once it struck me
+that he thought so. For at times, when he was in his comfortless
+moods, he has talked of his affairs and perplexities as if I had been
+much more acquainted with them than I had any opportunity of being.
+But he was a subject for study, such as is rarely met with--at least,
+he was so to me; for his weaknesses were as interesting as his
+talents, and he often indulged in expressions which would have been
+blemishes in the reflections of other men, but which in him often
+proved the germs of philosophical imaginings. He was the least
+qualified for any sort of business of all men I have ever known; so
+skinless in sensibility as respected himself, and so distrustful in
+his universal apprehensions of human nature, as respected others. It
+was, indeed, a wild, though a beautiful, error of nature, to endow a
+spirit with such discerning faculties, and yet render it unfit to
+deal with mankind. But these reflections belong more properly to a
+general estimate of his character, than to the immediate purpose
+before me, which was principally to describe the happy effects which
+the splendid reception of Childe Harold had on his feelings; effects
+which, however, did not last long. He was gratified to the fullness
+of his hopes; but the adulation was enjoyed to excess, and his
+infirmities were aggravated by the surfeit. I did not, however, see
+the progress of the change, as in the course of the summer I went to
+Scotland, and soon after again abroad. But on my return, in the
+following spring, it was very obvious.
+
+I found him, in one respect, greatly improved; there was more of a
+formed character about him; he was evidently, at the first glance,
+more mannered, or endeavouring to be so, and easier with the
+proprieties of his rank; but he had risen in his own estimation above
+the honours so willingly paid to his genius, and was again longing
+for additional renown. Not content with being acknowledged as the
+first poet of the age, and a respectable orator in the House of
+Lords, he was aspiring to the eclat of a man of gallantry; so that
+many of the most ungracious peculiarities of his temper, though
+brought under better discipline, were again in full activity.
+
+Considering how much he was then caressed, I ought to have been proud
+of the warmth with which he received me. I did not, however, so
+often see him as in the previous year; for I was then on the eve of
+my marriage, and I should not so soon, after my return to London,
+have probably renewed my visits, but a foreign nobleman of the
+highest rank, who had done me the honour to treat me as a friend,
+came at that juncture to this country, and knowing I had been
+acquainted with Lord Byron, he requested me to introduce him to his
+Lordship. This rendered a visit preliminary to the introduction
+necessary; and so long as my distinguished friend remained in town,
+we again often met. But after he left the country my visits became
+few and far between; owing to nothing but that change in a man's
+pursuits and associates which is one among some of the evils of
+matrimony. It is somewhat remarkable, that of the last visit I ever
+paid him, he has made rather a particular memorandum. I remember
+well, that it was in many respects an occasion not to be at once
+forgotten; for, among other things, after lighter topics, he
+explained to me a variety of tribulations in his affairs, and I urged
+him, in consequence, to marry, with the frankness which his
+confidence encouraged; subjoining certain items of other good advice
+concerning a liaison which he was supposed to have formed, and which
+Mr Moore does not appear to have known, though it was much talked of
+at the time.
+
+During that visit the youthful peculiarities of his temper and
+character showed all their original blemish. But, as usual, when
+such was the case, he was often more interesting than when in his
+discreeter moods. He gave me the copy of The Bride of Abydos, with a
+very kind inscription on it, which I have already mentioned; but
+still there was an impression on my mind that led me to believe he
+could not have been very well pleased with some parts of my
+counselling. This, however, appears not to have been the case; on
+the contrary, the tone of his record breathes something of kindness;
+and long after I received different reasons to believe his
+recollection of me was warm and friendly.
+
+When he had retired to Genoa, I gave a gentleman a letter to him,
+partly that I might hear something of his real way of life, and
+partly in the hope of gratifying my friend by the sight of one of
+whom he had heard so much. The reception from his Lordship was
+flattering to me; and, as the account of it contains what I think a
+characteristic picture, the reader will, I doubt not, be pleased to
+see so much of it as may be made public without violating the decorum
+which should always be observed in describing the incidents of
+private intercourse, when the consent of all parties cannot be
+obtained to the publication.
+
+
+Edinburgh, June 3, 1830.
+
+"DEAR GALT,--Though I shall always retain a lively general
+recollection of my agreeable interview with Lord Byron, at Genoa, in
+May, 1823, so long a time has since elapsed that much of the aroma of
+the pleasure has evaporated, and I can but recall generalities. At
+that time there was an impression in Genoa that he was averse to
+receive visits from Englishmen, and I was indeed advised not to think
+of calling on him, as I might run the risk of meeting with a savage
+reception. However, I resolved to send your note, and to the
+surprise of every one the messenger brought a most polite answer, in
+which, after expressing the satisfaction of hearing of his old friend
+and fellow-traveller, he added that he would do himself the honour of
+calling on me the next day, which he accordingly did; but owing to
+the officious blundering of an Italian waiter, who mentioned I was at
+dinner, his Lordship sent up his card with his compliments that he
+would not deranger the party. I was determined, however, that he
+should not escape me in this way, and drove out to his residence next
+morning, when, upon his English valet taking up my name, I was
+immediately admitted.
+
+"As every one forms a picture to himself of remarkable characters, I
+had depicted his Lordship in my mind as a tall, sombre, Childe Harold
+personage, tinctured somewhat with aristocratic hauteur. You may
+therefore guess my surprise when the door opened, and I saw leaning
+upon the lock, a light animated figure, rather petite than otherwise,
+dressed in a nankeen hussar-braided jacket, trousers of the same
+material, with a white waistcoat; his countenance pale but the
+complexion clear and healthful, with the hair coming down in little
+curls on each side of his fine forehead.
+
+"He came towards me with an easy cheerfulness of manner, and after
+some preliminary inquiries concerning yourself, we entered into a
+conversation which lasted two hours, in the course of which I felt
+myself perfectly at ease, from his Lordship's natural and simple
+manners; indeed, so much so, that, forgetting all my anticipations, I
+found myself conversing with him with as fluent an intercourse of
+mind as I ever experienced, even with yourself.
+
+"It is impossible for me at present to overtake a detail of what
+passed, but as it produced a kind of scene, I may mention one
+incident.
+
+"Having remarked that in a long course of desultory reading, I had
+read most of what had been said by English travellers concerning
+Italy; yet, on coming to it I found there was no country of which I
+had less accurate notions: that among other things I was much struck
+with the harshness of the language. He seemed to jerk at this, and
+immediately observed, that perhaps in going rapidly through the
+country, I might not have had many opportunities of hearing it
+politely spoken. 'Now,' said he, 'there are supposed to be nineteen
+dialects of the Italian language, and I shall let you hear a lady
+speak the principal of them, who is considered to do it very well.'
+I pricked up my ears at hearing this, as I considered it would afford
+me an opportunity of seeing the far-famed Countess Guiccioli. His
+Lordship immediately rose and left the apartment, returning in the
+course of a minute or two leading in the lady, and while arranging
+chairs for the trio, he said to me, 'I shall make her speak each of
+the principal dialects, but you are not to mind how I pronounce, for
+I do not speak Italian well.' After the scene had been performed he
+resumed to me, 'Now what do you think?' To which I answered, that my
+opinion still remained unaltered. He seemed at this to fall into a
+little revery, and then said, abruptly, 'Why 'tis very odd, Moore
+thought the same.' 'Does your Lordship mean Tom Moore?' 'Yes.'
+'Ah, then, my Lord, I shall adhere with more pertinacity to my
+opinion, when I hear that a man of his exquisite taste in poetry and
+harmony was also of that opinion.'
+
+"You will be asking what I thought of the lady; I had certainly heard
+much of her high personal attractions, but all I can say is, that in
+my eyes her graces did not rank above mediocrity. They were youth,
+plumpness, and good-nature."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+
+A Miff with Lord Byron--Remarkable Coincidences--Plagiarisms of his
+Lordship
+
+There is a curious note in the memoranda which Lord Byron kept in the
+year 1813, that I should not pass unnoticed, because it refers to
+myself, and moreover is characteristic of the excoriated sensibility
+with which his Lordship felt everything that touched or affected him
+or his.
+
+When I had read The Bride of Abydos, I wrote to him my opinion of it,
+and mentioned that there was a remarkable coincidence in the story,
+with a matter in which I had been interested. I have no copy of the
+letter, and I forget the expressions employed, but Lord Byron seemed
+to think they implied that he had taken the story from something of
+mine.
+
+The note is:
+
+"Galt says there is a coincidence between the first part of The Bride
+and some story of his, whether published or not, I know not, never
+having seen it. He is almost the last person on whom any one would
+commit literary larceny, and I am not conscious of any witting thefts
+on any of the genus. As to originality, all pretensions are
+ludicrous; there is nothing new under the sun."
+
+It is sufficiently clear that he was offended with what I had said,
+and was somewhat excited. I have not been able at present to find
+his answer to my letter, but it would appear by the subjoined that he
+had written to me something which led me to imagine he was offended
+at my observations, and that I had in consequence deprecated his
+wrath.
+
+"Dec. 11, 1813.
+
+"MY DEAR GALT,--There was no offence--there COULD be none. I thought
+it by no means impossible that we might have hit on something
+similar, particularly as you are a dramatist, and was anxious to
+assure you of the truth, viz. that I had not wittingly seized upon
+plot, sentiment, or incident; and I am very glad that I have not in
+any respect trenched upon your subjects. Something still more
+singular is, that the FIRST part, where you have found a coincidence
+in some events within your observations on LIFE, was DRAWN from
+OBSERVATION of mine also, and I meant to have gone on with the story,
+but on SECOND thoughts, I thought myself TWO CENTURIES at least too
+late for the subject; which, though admitting of very powerful
+feeling and description, yet is not adapted for this age, at least
+this country. Though the finest works of the Greeks, one of
+Schiller's and Alfieri's, in modern times, besides several of our OLD
+(and best) dramatists, have been grounded on incidents of a similar
+cast, I therefore altered it as you perceive, and in so doing have
+weakened the whole, by interrupting the train of thought; and in
+composition I do not think SECOND thoughts are the best, though
+SECOND expressions may improve the first ideas.
+
+"I do not know how other men feel towards those they have met abroad,
+but to me there seems a kind of tie established between all who have
+met together in a foreign country, as if we had met in a state of
+pre-existence, and were talking over a life that has ceased; but I
+always look forward to renewing my travels; and though YOU, I think,
+are now stationary, if I can at all forward your pursuits THERE as
+well as here, I shall be truly glad in the opportunity. Ever yours
+very sincerely,
+
+"B.
+
+"P.S. I believe I leave town for a day or two on Monday, but after
+that I am always at home, and happy to see you till half-past two."
+
+
+This letter was dated on Saturday, the 11th of December, 1813. On
+Sunday, the 12th, he made the following other note in his memorandum
+book:
+
+"By Galt's answer, I find it is some story in REAL life, and not any
+work with which my late composition coincides. It is still more
+singular, for mine is drawn from EXISTENCE also."
+
+The most amusing part of this little fracas is the denial of his
+Lordship, as to pilfering the thoughts and fancies of others; for it
+so happens, that the first passage of The Bride of Abydos, the poem
+in question, is almost a literal and unacknowledged translation from
+Goethe, which was pointed out in some of the periodicals soon after
+the work was published.
+
+Then, as to his not thieving from me or mine, I believe the fact to
+be as he has stated; but there are singular circumstances connected
+with some of his other productions, of which the account is at least
+curious.
+
+On leaving England I began to write a poem in the Spenserian measure.
+It was called The Unknown, and was intended to describe, in narrating
+the voyages and adventures of a pilgrim, who had embarked for the
+Holy Land, the scenes I expected to visit. I was occasionally
+engaged in this composition during the passage with Lord Byron from
+Gibraltar to Malta, and he knew what I was about. In stating this, I
+beg to be distinctly understood, as in no way whatever intending to
+insinuate that this work had any influence on the composition of
+Childe Harold's Pilgrimage, which Lord Byron began to write in
+Albania; but it must be considered as something extraordinary, that
+the two works should have been so similar in plan, and in the
+structure of the verse. His Lordship never saw my attempt that I
+know of, nor did I his poem until it was printed. It is needless to
+add, that beyond the plan and verse there was no other similarity
+between the two works; I wish there had been.
+
+His Lordship has published a poem, called The Curse of Minerva, the
+subject of which is the vengeance of the goddess on Lord Elgin for
+the rape of the Parthenon. It has so happened that I wrote at Athens
+a burlesque poem on nearly the same subject (mine relates to the
+vengeance of all the gods) which I called The Atheniad; the
+manuscript was sent to his Lordship in Asia Minor, and returned to me
+through Mr Hobhouse. His Curse of Minerva, I saw for the first time
+in 1828, in Galignani's edition of his works.
+
+In The Giaour, which he published a short time before The Bride of
+Abydos, he has this passage, descriptive of the anxiety with which
+the mother of Hassan looks out for the arrival of her son:
+
+
+The browsing camels' bells are tinkling--
+ His mother look'd from her lattice high;
+She saw the dews of eve besprinkling
+ The parterre green beneath her eye:
+She saw the planets faintly twinkling--
+ 'Tis twilight--sure his train is nigh.
+She could not rest in the garden bower,
+But gazed through the grate of his steepest tower:
+Why comes he not--and his steeds are fleet--
+Nor shrink they from the summer heat?
+Why sends not the bridegroom his promised gift;
+Is his heart more cold or his barb less swift?
+
+
+His Lordship was well read in the Bible, and the book of Judges,
+chap. 5, and verse 28, has the following passage:--
+
+"The mother of Sisera looked out at a window, and cried through the
+lattice, Why is his chariot so long in coming; why tarry the wheels
+of his chariot?"
+
+It was, indeed, an early trick of his Lordship to filch good things.
+In the lamentation for Kirke White, in which he compares him to an
+eagle wounded by an arrow feathered from his own wing, he says,
+
+
+So the struck eagle, stretch'd upon the plain,
+No more through rolling clouds to soar again,
+View'd his own feather on the fatal dart
+And winged the shaft that quivered in his heart.
+
+
+The ancients have certainly stolen the best ideas of the moderns;
+this very thought may be found in the works of that ancient-modern,
+Waller:
+
+
+That eagle's fate and mine are one,
+ Which on the shaft that made him die,
+Espied a feather of his own
+ Wherewith he wont to soar on high.
+
+
+His Lordship disdained to commit any larceny on me; and no doubt the
+following passage from The Giaour is perfectly original:
+
+
+It is as if the dead could feel
+The icy worm around them steal;
+And shudder as the reptiles creep
+To revel o'er their rotting sleep,
+Without the power to scare away
+The cold consumers of their clay.
+
+
+I do not claim any paternity in these lines: but not the most
+judicious action of all my youth was to publish certain dramatic
+sketches, and his Lordship had the printed book in his possession
+long before The Giaour was published, and may have read the following
+passage in a dream, which was intended to be very hideous:
+
+
+ Then did I hear around
+The churme and chirruping of busy reptiles
+At hideous banquet on the royal dead:--
+Full soon methought the loathsome epicures
+Came thick on me, and underneath my shroud
+I felt the many-foot and beetle creep,
+And on my breast the cold worm coil and crawl.
+
+
+However, I have said quite enough on this subject, both as respects
+myself and his seeming plagiarisms, which might be multiplied to
+legions. Such occasional accidental imitations are not things of
+much importance. All poets, and authors in general, avail themselves
+of their reading and knowledge to enhance the interest of their
+works. It can only be considered as one of Lord Byron's spurts of
+spleen, that he felt so much about a "coincidence," which ought not
+to have disturbed him; but it may be thought by the notice taken of
+it, that it disturbs myself more than it really does; and that it
+would have been enough to have merely said--Perhaps, when some friend
+is hereafter doing as indulgently for me, the same kind of task that
+I have undertaken for Byron, there may be found among my memoranda
+notes as little flattering to his Lordship, as those in his
+concerning me. I hope, however, that friend will have more respect
+for my memory than to imitate the taste of Mr Moore.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+
+Lord Byron in 1813--The Lady's Tragedy--Miss Milbanke--Growing
+Uneasiness of Lord Byron's Mind--The Friar's Ghost--The Marriage--A
+Member of the Drury Lane Committee--Embarrassed Affairs--The
+Separation
+
+The year 1813 was perhaps the period of all Lord Byron's life in
+which he was seen to most advantage. The fame of Childe Harold was
+then in its brightest noon; and in that year he produced The Giaour
+and The Bride of Abydos--compositions not only of equal power, but
+even tinted with superior beauties. He was himself soothed by the
+full enjoyment of his political rank and station; and though his
+manners and character had not exactly answered to the stern and
+stately imaginations which had been formed of his dispositions and
+appearance, still he was acknowledged to be no common man, and his
+company in consequence was eagerly courted.
+
+It forms no part of the plan of this work to repeat the gossip and
+tattle of private society, but occurrences happened to Lord Byron
+which engaged both, and some of them cannot well be passed over
+unnoticed. One of these took place during the spring of this year,
+and having been a subject of newspaper remark, it may with less
+impropriety be mentioned than others which were more indecorously
+made the topics of general discussion. The incident alluded to was
+an extravagant scene enacted by a lady of high rank, at a rout given
+by Lady Heathcote; in which, in revenge, as it was reported, for
+having been rejected by Lord Byron, she made a suicidal attempt with
+an instrument, which scarcely penetrated, if it could even inflict
+any permanent mark on, the skin.
+
+The insane attachment of this eccentric lady to his Lordship was well
+known; insane is the only epithet that can be applied to the actions
+of a married woman, who, in the disguise of her page, flung herself
+to a man, who, as she told a friend of mine, was ashamed to be in
+love with her because she was not beautiful--an expression at once
+curious and just, evincing a shrewd perception of the springs of his
+Lordship's conduct, and the acuteness blended with frenzy and talent
+which distinguished herself. Lord Byron unquestionably at that time
+cared little for her. In showing me her picture, some two or three
+days after the affair, and laughing at the absurdity of it, he
+bestowed on her the endearing diminutive of vixen, with a hard-
+hearted adjective that I judiciously omit.
+
+The immediate cause of this tragical flourish was never very well
+understood; but in the course of the evening she had made several
+attempts to fasten on his Lordship, and was shunned: certain it is,
+she had not, like Burke in the House of Commons, premeditatedly
+brought a dagger in her reticule, on purpose for the scene; but,
+seeing herself an object of scorn, she seized the first weapon she
+could find--some said a pair of scissors--others, more scandalously,
+broken jelly-glass, and attempted an incision of the jugular, to the
+consternation of all the dowagers, and the pathetic admiration of
+every Miss who witnessed or heard of the rapture.
+
+Lord Byron at the time was in another room, talking with Prince K--,
+when Lord P-- came, with a face full of consternation, and told them
+what had happened. The cruel poet, instead of being agitated by the
+tidings, or standing in the smallest degree in need of a smelling-
+bottle, knitted his scowl, and said, with a contemptuous
+indifference, "It is only a trick." All things considered, he was
+perhaps not uncharitable; and a man of less vanity would have felt
+pretty much as his Lordship appeared to do on the occasion. The
+whole affair was eminently ridiculous; and what increased the
+absurdity was a letter she addressed to a friend of mine on the
+subject, and which he thought too good to be reserved only for his
+own particular study.
+
+It was in this year that Lord Byron first proposed for Miss Milbanke;
+having been urged by several of his friends to marry, that lady was
+specially recommended to him for a wife. It has been alleged, that
+he deeply resented her rejection of his proposal; and I doubt not, in
+the first instance, his vanity may have been a little piqued; but as
+he cherished no very animated attachment to her, and moreover, as she
+enjoyed no celebrity in public opinion to make the rejection
+important, the resentment was not, I am persuaded, either of an
+intense or vindictive kind. On the contrary, he has borne testimony
+to the respect in which he held her character and accomplishments;
+and an incidental remark in his journal, "I shall be in love with her
+again, if I don't take care," is proof enough that his anger was not
+of a very fierce or long-lived kind.
+
+The account ascribed to him of his introduction to Miss Milbanke, and
+the history of their attachment, ought not to be omitted, because it
+serves to illustrate, in some degree, the state of his feelings
+towards her, and is so probable, that I doubt not it is in the main
+correct:--
+
+"The first time of my seeing Miss Milbanke was at Lady ***'s. It was
+a fatal day; and I remember, that in going upstairs I stumbled, and
+remarked to Moore, who accompanied me, that it was a bad omen. I
+ought to have taken the warning. On entering the room, I observed a
+young lady more simply dressed than the rest of the assembly sitting
+alone upon a sofa. I took her for a female companion, and asked if I
+was right in my conjecture. 'She is a great heiress,' said he, in a
+whisper, that became lower as he proceeded, 'you had better marry
+her, and repair the old place, Newstead.'
+
+"There was something piquant, and what we term pretty, in Miss
+Milbanke. Her features were small and feminine, though not regular.
+She had the fairest skin imaginable. Her figure was perfect for her
+height, and there was a simplicity, a retired modesty about her,
+which was very characteristic, and formed a happy contrast to the
+cold artificial formality and studied stiffness which is called
+fashion. She interested me exceedingly. I became daily more
+attached to her, and it ended in my making her a proposal, that was
+rejected. Her refusal was couched in terms which could not offend
+me. I was, besides, persuaded, that in declining my offer, she was
+governed by the influence of her mother; and was the more confirmed
+in my opinion, by her reviving our correspondence herself twelve
+months after. The tenour of her letter was, that, although she could
+not love me, she desired my friendship. Friendship is a dangerous
+word for young ladies; it is love full-fledged, and waiting for a
+fine day to fly."
+
+But Lord Byron possessed this sort of irrepressible predilections--
+was so much the agent of impulses, that he could not keep long in
+unison with the world, or in harmony with his friends. Without
+malice, or the instigation of any ill spirit, he was continually
+provoking malignity and revenge. His verses on the Princess
+Charlotte weeping, and his other merciless satire on her father,
+begot him no friends, and armed the hatred of his enemies. There
+was, indeed, something like ingratitude in the attack on the Regent,
+for his Royal Highness had been particularly civil; had intimated a
+wish to have him introduced to him; and Byron, fond of the
+distinction, spoke of it with a sense of gratification. These
+instances, as well as others, of gratuitous spleen, only justified
+the misrepresentations which had been insinuated against himself, and
+what was humour in his nature, was ascribed to vice in his
+principles.
+
+Before the year was at an end, his popularity was evidently beginning
+to wane: of this he was conscious himself, and braved the frequent
+attacks on his character and genius with an affectation of
+indifference, under which those who had at all observed the singular
+associations of his recollections and ideas, must have discerned the
+symptoms of a strange disease. He was tainted with a Herodian malady
+of the mind: his thoughts were often hateful to himself; but there
+was an ecstasy in the conception, as if delight could be mingled with
+horror. I think, however, he struggled to master the fatality, and
+that his resolution to marry was dictated by an honourable desire to
+give hostages to society, against the wild wilfulness of his
+imagination.
+
+It is a curious and a mystical fact, that at the period to which I am
+alluding, and a very short time, only a little month, before he
+successfully solicited the hand of Miss Milbanke, being at Newstead,
+he fancied that he saw the ghost of the monk which is supposed to
+haunt the abbey, and to make its ominous appearance when misfortune
+or death impends over the master of the mansion.--The story of the
+apparition in the sixteenth canto of Don Juan is derived from this
+family legend, and Norman Abbey, in the thirteenth of the same poem,
+is a rich and elaborate description of Newstead.
+
+After his proposal to Miss Milbanke had been accepted, a considerable
+time, nearly three months, elapsed before the marriage was completed,
+in consequence of the embarrassed condition in which, when the
+necessary settlements were to be made, he found his affairs. This
+state of things, with the previous unhappy controversy with himself,
+and anger at the world, was ill-calculated to gladden his nuptials:
+but, besides these real evils, his mind was awed with gloomy
+presentiments, a shadow of some advancing misfortune darkened his
+spirit, and the ceremony was performed with sacrificial feelings, and
+those dark and chilling circumstances, which he has so touchingly
+described in The Dream:--
+
+
+ I saw him stand
+Before an altar with a gentle bride;
+Her face was fair, but was not that which made
+The starlight of his boyhood:--as he stood
+Even at the altar, o'er his brow there came
+The self-same aspect, and the quivering shock
+That in the antique oratory shook
+His bosom in its solitude; and then--
+As in that hour--a moment o'er his face
+The tablet of unutterable thoughts
+Was traced--and then it faded as it came,
+And he stood calm and quiet, and he spoke
+The faltering vows, but heard not his own words,
+And all things reeled around him: he could see
+Not that which was, nor that which should have been--
+But the old mansion and the accustom'd hall,
+And the remembered chambers, and the place,
+The day, the hour, the sunshine and the shade,
+All things pertaining to that place and hour.
+And her, who was his destiny, came back,
+And thrust themselves between him and the light.
+
+
+This is very affectingly described; and his prose description bears
+testimony to its correctness. "It had been predicted by Mrs Williams
+that twenty-seven was to be a dangerous age for me. The fortune-
+telling witch was right; it was destined to prove so. I shall never
+forget the 2nd of January, 1815, Lady Byron was the only unconcerned
+person present; Lady Noel, her mother, cried; I trembled like a leaf,
+made the wrong responses, and after the ceremony called her Miss
+Milbanke.
+
+"There is a singular history attached to the ring. The very day the
+match was concluded a ring of my mother's, that had been lost, was
+dug up by the gardener at Newstead. I thought it was sent on purpose
+for the wedding; but my mother's marriage had not been a fortunate
+one, and this ring was doomed to be the seal of an unhappier union
+still.
+
+"After the ordeal was over, we set off for a country-scat of Sir
+Ralph's (Lady B.'s father), and I was surprised at the arrangements
+for the journey, and somewhat out of humour, to find the lady's maid
+stuck between me and my bride. It was rather too early to assume the
+husband; so I was forced to submit, but it was not with a very good
+grace. I have been accused of saying, on getting into the carriage,
+that I had married Lady Byron out of spite, and because she had
+refused me twice. Though I was for a moment vexed at her prudery, or
+whatever you may choose to call it, if I had made so uncavalier, not
+to say brutal, a speech, I am convinced Lady Byron would instantly
+have left the carriage to me and the maid. She had spirit enough to
+have done so, and would properly have resented the affront. Our
+honeymoon was not all sunshine; it had its clouds.
+
+"I was not so young when my father died, but that I perfectly
+remember him, and had a very early horror of matrimony from the sight
+of domestic broils: this feeling came over me very strongly at my
+wedding. Something whispered me that I was sealing my own death-
+warrant. I am a great believer in presentiments: Socrates's demon
+was not a fiction; Monk Lewis had his monitor, and Napoleon many
+warnings. At the last moment I would have retreated, could I have
+done so; I called to mind a friend of mine, who had married a young,
+beautiful, and rich girl, and yet was miserable; he had strongly
+urged me against putting my neck in the same yoke."
+
+For some time after the marriage things went on in the usual
+matrimonial routine, until he was chosen into the managing committee
+of Drury Lane; an office in which, had he possessed the slightest
+degree of talent for business, he might have done much good. It was
+justly expected that the illiterate presumption which had so long
+deterred poetical genius from approaching the stage, would have
+shrunk abashed from before him; but he either felt not the importance
+of the duty he had been called to perform, or, what is more probable,
+yielding to the allurements of the moment, forgot that duty, in the
+amusement which he derived from the talents and peculiarities of the
+players. No situation could be more unfit for a man of his
+temperament, than one which exposed him to form intimacies with
+persons whose profession, almost necessarily, leads them to
+undervalue the domestic virtues.
+
+It is said, that the course of life into which he was drawn after he
+joined the managing committee of Drury Lane was not in unison with
+the methodical habits of Lady Byron. But independently of outdoor
+causes of connubial discontent and incompatibility of temper, their
+domestic affairs were falling into confusion.
+
+"My income at this period," says Lord Byron, "was small, and somewhat
+bespoken. We had a house in town, gave dinner-parties, had separate
+carriages, and launched into every sort of extravagance. This could
+not last long; my wife's ten thousand pounds soon melted away. I was
+beset by duns, and at length an execution was levied, and the
+bailiffs put in possession of the very beds we had to sleep on. This
+was no very agreeable state of affairs, no very pleasant scene for
+Lady Byron to witness; and it was agreed she should pay her father a
+visit till the storm had blown over, and some arrangement had been
+made with my creditors." From this visit her Ladyship never
+returned; a separation took place; but too much has been said to the
+world respecting it, and I have no taste for the subject. Whatever
+was the immediate cause, the event itself was not of so rare a kind
+as to deserve that the attention of the public should be indelicately
+courted to it.
+
+Beyond all question, however, Lord Byron's notions of connubial
+obligations were rather philosophical. "There are," said he to
+Captain Parry, "so many undefinable and nameless, and not to be
+named, causes of dislike, aversion, and disgust in the matrimonial
+state, that it is always impossible for the public, or the friends of
+the parties, to judge between man and wife. Theirs is a relation
+about which nobody but themselves can form a correct idea, or have
+any right to speak. As long as neither party commits gross injustice
+towards the other; as long as neither the woman nor the man is guilty
+of any offence which is injurious to the community; as long as the
+husband provides for his offspring, and secures the public against
+the dangers arising from their neglected education, or from the
+charge of supporting them; by what right does it censure him for
+ceasing to dwell under the same roof with a woman, who is to him,
+because he knows her, while others do not, an object of loathing?
+Can anything be more monstrous, than for the public voice to compel
+individuals who dislike each other to continue their cohabitation?
+This is at least the effect of its interfering with a relationship,
+of which it has no possible means of judging. It does not indeed
+drag a man to a woman's bed by physical force, but it does exert a
+moral force continually and effectively to accomplish the same
+purpose. Nobody can escape this force, but those who are too high or
+those who are too low for public opinion to reach; or those
+hypocrites who are, before others, the loudest in their approbation
+of the empty and unmeaning forms of society, that they may securely
+indulge all their propensities in secret."
+
+In the course of the conversation, in which he is represented to have
+stated these opinions, he added what I have pleasure in quoting,
+because the sentiments are generous in respect to his wife, and
+strikingly characteristic of himself:--
+
+"Lady Byron has a liberal mind, particularly as to religious
+opinions: and I wish when I married her that I had possessed the
+same command over myself that I now do. Had I possessed a little
+more wisdom and more forbearance, we might have been happy. I
+wished, when I was just married to have remained in the country,
+particularly till my pecuniary embarrassments were over. I knew the
+society of London; I knew the characters of many who are called
+ladies, with whom Lady Byron would necessarily have to associate, and
+I dreaded her contact with them. But I have too much of my mother
+about me to be dictated to; I like freedom from constraint; I hate
+artificial regulations: my conduct has always been dictated by my
+own feelings, and Lady Byron was quite the creature of rules. She
+was not permitted either to ride, or run, or walk, but as the
+physician prescribed. She was not suffered to go out when I wished
+to go: and then the old house was a mere ghost-house, I dreamed of
+ghosts and thought of them waking. It was an existence I could not
+support." Here Lord Byron broke off abruptly, saying, "I hate to
+speak of my family affairs, though I have been compelled to talk
+nonsense concerning them to some of my butterfly visitors, glad on
+any terms to get rid of their importunities. I long to be again on
+the mountains. I am fond of solitude, and should never talk
+nonsense, if I always found plain men to talk to."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+
+Reflections on his domestic Verses--Consideration of his Works--"The
+Corsair"--Probabilities of the Character and Incidents of the Story--
+On the Difference between poetical Invention and moral Experience:
+illustrated by the Difference between the Genius of Shakespeare and
+that of Byron
+
+The task just concluded may disappoint the expectations of some of my
+readers, but I would rather have said less than so much, could so
+little have been allowed; for I have never been able to reconcile to
+my notions of propriety, the exposure of domestic concerns which the
+world has no right claim to know, and can only urge the plea of
+curiosity for desiring to see explained. The scope of my undertaking
+comprehends only the public and intellectual character of Lord Byron;
+every word that I have found it necessary to say respecting his
+private affairs has been set down with reluctance; nor should I have
+touched so freely on his failings, but that the consequences have
+deeply influenced his poetical conceptions.
+
+There is, however, one point connected with his conjugal differences
+which cannot be overlooked, nor noticed without animadversion. He
+was too active himself in bespeaking the public sympathy against his
+lady. It is true that but for that error the world might never have
+seen the verses written by him on the occasion; and perhaps it was
+the friends who were about him at the time who ought chiefly to be
+blamed for having given them circulation: but in saying this, I am
+departing from the rule I had prescribed to myself, while I ought
+only to have remarked that the compositions alluded to, both the
+Fare-thee-well and the Anathema on Mrs Charlemont, are splendid
+corroborations of the metaphysical fact which it is the main object
+of this work to illustrate, namely, that Byron was only original and
+truly great when he wrote from the dictates of his own breast, and
+described from the suggestions of things he had seen. When his
+imagination found not in his subject uses for the materials of his
+experience, and opportunities to embody them, it seemed to be no
+longer the same high and mysterious faculty that so ruled the tides
+of the feelings of others. He then appeared a more ordinary poet----
+a skilful verse-maker. The necromancy which held the reader
+spellbound became ineffectual; and the charm and the glory which
+interested so intensely, and shone so radiantly on his configurations
+from realities, all failed and faded; for his genius dealt not with
+airy fancies, but had its power and dominion amid the living and the
+local of the actual world.
+
+I shall now return to the consideration of his works, and the first
+in order is The Corsair, published in 1814. He seems to have been
+perfectly sensible that this beautiful composition was in his best
+peculiar manner. It is indeed a pirate's isle, peopled with his own
+creatures.
+
+It has been alleged that Lord Byron was indebted to Sir Walter
+Scott's poem of Rokeby for the leading incidents of The Corsair, but
+the resemblance is not to me very obvious: besides, the whole style
+of the poem is so strikingly in his own manner, that even had he
+borrowed the plan, it was only as a thread to string his own original
+conceptions upon; the beauty and brilliancy of them could not be
+borrowed, and are not imitations.
+
+There were two islands in the Archipelago, when Lord Byron was in
+Greece, considered as the chief haunts of the pirates, Stampalia, and
+a long narrow island between Cape Colonna and Zea. Jura also was a
+little tainted in its reputation. I think, however, from the
+description, that the pirate's isle of The Corsair is the island off
+Cape Colonna. It is a rude, rocky mass. I know not to what
+particular Coron, if there be more than one, the poet alludes; for
+the Coron of the Morea is neighbour to, if not in, the Mainote
+territory, a tract of country which never submitted to the Turks, and
+was exempted from the jurisdiction of Mussulman officers by the
+payment of an annual tribute. The Mainotes themselves are all
+pirates and robbers. If it be in that Coron that Byron has placed
+Seyd the pasha, it must be attributed to inadvertency. His Lordship
+was never there, nor in any part of Maina; nor does he describe the
+place, a circumstance which of itself goes far to prove the
+inadvertency. It is, however, only in making it the seat of a
+Turkish pasha that any error has been committed. In working out the
+incidents of the poem where descriptions of scenery are given, they
+relate chiefly to Athens and its neighbourhood. In themselves these
+descriptions are executed with an exquisite felicity; but they are
+brought in without any obvious reason wherefore. In fact, they
+appear to have been written independently of the poem, and are
+patched on "shreds of purple" which could have been spared.
+
+The character of Conrad the Corsair may be described as a combination
+of the warrior of Albania and a naval officer--Childe Harold mingled
+with the hero of The Giaour.
+
+
+ A man of loneliness and mystery,
+Scarce seen to smile, and seldom heard to sigh;
+Robust, but not Herculean, to the sight,
+No giant frame sets forth his common height;
+Yet in the whole, who paused to look again
+Saw more than marks the crowd of vulgar men:
+They gaze and marvel how, and still confess
+That thus it is, but why they cannot guess.
+Sun-burnt his cheek, his forehead high and pale,
+The sable curls in wild profusion veil.
+And oft perforce his rising lip reveals
+The haughtier thought it curbs, but scarce conceals:
+Though smooth his voice, and calm his general mien,
+Still seems there something he would not have seen.
+His features' deepening lines and varying hue
+At times attracted, yet perplex'd the view,
+As if within that murkiness of mind
+Work'd feelings fearful, and yet undefined:
+Such might he be that none could truly tell,
+Too close inquiry his stern glance could quell.
+There breathed but few whose aspect could defy
+The full encounter of his searching eye;
+He had the skill, when cunning gaze to seek
+To probe his heart and watch his changing cheek,
+At once the observer's purpose to espy,
+And on himself roll back his scrutiny,
+Lest he to Conrad rather should betray
+Some secret thought, than drag that chief's to day.
+
+There was a laughing devil in his sneer
+That raised emotions both of rage and fear;
+And where his frown of hatred darkly fell
+Hope withering fled, and mercy sigh'd, farewell.
+
+
+It will be allowed that, in this portrait, some of the darker
+features and harsher lineaments of Byron himself are very evident,
+but with a more fixed sternness than belonged to him; for it was only
+by fits that he could put on such severity. Conrad is, however, a
+higher creation than any which he had previously described. Instead
+of the listlessness of Childe Harold, he is active and enterprising;
+such as the noble pilgrim would have been, but for the satiety which
+had relaxed his energies. There is also about him a solemnity
+different from the animation of the Giaour--a penitential despair
+arising from a cause undisclosed. The Giaour, though wounded and
+fettered, and laid in a dungeon, would not have felt as Conrad is
+supposed to feel in that situation. The following bold and terrific
+verses, descriptive of the maelstrom agitations of remorse, could not
+have been appropriately applied to the despair of grief, the
+predominant source of emotion in The Giaour.
+
+
+There is a war, a chaos of the mind
+When all its elements convulsed combined,
+Lie dark and jarring with perturbed force,
+And gnashing with impenitent remorse.
+That juggling fiend who never spake before,
+But cries, "I warn'd thee," when the deed is o'er;
+Vain voice, the spirit burning, but unbent,
+May writhe, rebel--the weak alone repent.
+
+
+The character of Conrad is undoubtedly finely imagined; as the
+painters would say, it is in the highest style of art, and brought
+out with sublime effect; but still it is only another phase of the
+same portentous meteor, that was nebulous in Childe Harold, and fiery
+in The Giaour. To the safe and shop-resorting inhabitants of
+Christendom, The Corsair seems to present many improbabilities;
+nevertheless, it is true to nature, and in every part of the Levant
+the traveller meets with individuals whose air and physiognomy remind
+him of Conrad. The incidents of the story, also, so wild and
+extravagant to the snug and legal notions of England, are not more in
+keeping with the character, than they are in accordance with fact and
+reality. The poet suffers immeasurable injustice, when it is
+attempted to determine the probability of the wild scenes and wilder
+adventurers of his tales, by the circumstances and characters of the
+law-regulated system of our diurnal affairs. Probability is a
+standard formed by experience, and it is not surprising that the
+anchorets of libraries should object to the improbability of The
+Corsair, and yet acknowledge the poetical power displayed in the
+composition; for it is a work which could only have been written by
+one who had himself seen or heard on the spot of transactions similar
+to those he has described. No course of reading could have supplied
+materials for a narration so faithfully descriptive of the accidents
+to which an AEgean pirate is exposed as The Corsair. Had Lord Byron
+never been out of England, the production of a work so appropriate in
+reflection, so wild in spirit, and so bold in invention, as in that
+case it would have been, would have entitled him to the highest
+honours of original conception, or been rejected as extravagant;
+considered as the result of things seen, and of probabilities
+suggested, by transactions not uncommon in the region where his
+genius gathered the ingredients of its sorceries, more than the half
+of its merits disappear, while the other half brighten with the
+lustre of truth.
+
+The manners, the actions, and the incidents were new to the English
+mind; but to the inhabitant of the Levant they have long been
+familiar, and the traveller who visits that region will hesitate to
+admit that Lord Byron possessed those creative powers, and that
+discernment of dark bosoms for which he is so much celebrated;
+because he will see there how little of invention was necessary to
+form such heroes as Conrad, and how much the actual traffic of life
+and trade is constantly stimulating enterprise and bravery. But let
+it not, therefore, be supposed, that I would undervalue either the
+genius of the poet, or the merits of the poem, in saying so, for I do
+think a higher faculty has been exerted in The Corsair than in Childe
+Harold. In the latter, only actual things are described, freshly and
+vigorously as they were seen, and feelings expressed eloquently as
+they were felt; but in the former, the talent of combination has been
+splendidly employed. The one is a view from nature, the other is a
+composition both from nature and from history.
+
+Lara, which appeared soon after The Corsair, is an evident supplement
+to it; the description of the hero corresponds in person and
+character with Conrad; so that the remarks made on The Corsair apply,
+in all respects, to Lara. The poem itself is perhaps, in elegance,
+superior; but the descriptions are not so vivid, simply because they
+are more indebted to imagination. There is one of them, however, in
+which the lake and abbey of Newstead are dimly shadowed, equal in
+sweetness and solemnity to anything the poet has ever written.
+
+
+It was the night, and Lara's glassy stream
+The stars are studding each with imaged beam:
+So calm, the waters scarcely seem to stray,
+And yet they glide, like happiness, away;
+Reflecting far and fairy-like from high
+The immortal lights that live along the sky;
+Its banks are fringed with many a goodly tree,
+And flowers the fairest that may feast the bee:
+Such in her chaplet infant Dian wove,
+And innocence would offer to her love;
+These deck the shore, the waves their channel make
+In windings bright and mazy, like the snake.
+All was so still, so soft in earth and air,
+You scarce would start to meet a spirit there,
+Secure that naught of evil could delight
+To walk in such a scene, in such a night!
+It was a moment only for the good:
+So Lara deemed: nor longer there he stood;
+But turn'd in silence to his castle-gate:
+Such scene his soul no more could contemplate:
+Such scene reminded him of other days,
+Of skies more cloudless, moons of purer blaze;
+Of nights more soft and frequent, hearts that now--
+No, no! the storm may beat upon his brow
+Unfelt, unsparing; but a night like this,
+A night of beauty, mock'd such breast as his.
+
+He turn'd within his solitary hall,
+And his high shadow shot along the wall:
+There were the painted forms of other times--
+'Twas all they left of virtues or of crimes,
+Save vague tradition; and the gloomy vaults
+That hid their dust, their foibles, and their faults,
+And half a column of the pompous page,
+That speeds the spacious tale from age to age;
+Where history's pen its praise or blame supplies
+And lies like truth, and still most truly lies;
+He wand'ring mused, and as the moonbeam shone
+Through the dim lattice o'er the floor of stone,
+And the high-fretted roof and saints that there
+O'er Gothic windows knelt in pictured prayer;
+Reflected in fantastic figures grew
+Like life, but not like mortal life to view;
+His bristling locks of sable, brow of gloom,
+And the wide waving of his shaken plume
+Glanced like a spectre's attributes, and gave
+His aspect all that terror gives the grave.
+
+
+That Byron wrote best when he wrote of himself and of his own, has
+probably been already made sufficiently apparent. In this respect he
+stands alone and apart from all other poets, and there will be
+occasion to show, that this peculiarity extended much farther over
+all his works, than merely to those which may be said to have
+required him to be thus personal. The great distinction, indeed, of
+his merit consists in that singularity. Shakspeare, in drawing the
+materials of his dramas from tales and history has, with wonderful
+art, given from his own invention and imagination the fittest and
+most appropriate sentiments and language; and admiration at the
+perfection with which he has accomplished this, can never be
+exhausted. The difference between Byron and Shakspeare consists in
+the curious accident, if it may be so called, by which the former was
+placed in circumstances which taught him to feel in himself the very
+sentiments that he has ascribed to his characters. Shakspeare
+created the feelings of his, and with such excellence, that they are
+not only probable to the situations, but give to the personifications
+the individuality of living persons. Byron's are scarcely less so;
+but with him there was no invention, only experience, and when he
+attempts to express more than he has himself known, he is always
+comparatively feeble.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+
+Byron determines to reside abroad--Visits the Plain of Waterloo--
+State of his Feelings
+
+From different incidental expressions in his correspondence it is
+sufficiently evident that Byron, before his marriage, intended to
+reside abroad. In his letter to me of the 11th December, 1813, he
+distinctly states this intention, and intimates that he then thought
+of establishing his home in Greece. It is not therefore surprising
+that, after his separation from Lady Byron, he should have determined
+to carry this intention into effect; for at that period, besides the
+calumny heaped upon him from all quarters, the embarrassment of his
+affairs, and the retaliatory satire, all tended to force him into
+exile; he had no longer any particular tie to bind him to England.
+
+On the 25th of April, 1816, he sailed for Ostend, and resumed the
+composition of Childe Harold, it may be said, from the moment of his
+embarkation. In it, however, there is no longer the fiction of an
+imaginary character stalking like a shadow amid his descriptions and
+reflections----he comes more decidedly forwards as the hero in his
+own person.
+
+In passing to Brussels he visited the field of Waterloo, and the
+slight sketch which he has given in the poem of that eventful
+conflict is still the finest which has yet been written on the
+subject.
+
+But the note of his visit to the field is of more importance to my
+present purpose, inasmuch as it tends to illustrate the querulous
+state of his own mind at the time.
+
+"I went on horseback twice over the field, comparing it with my
+recollection of similar scenes. As a plain, Waterloo seems marked
+out for the scene of some great action, though this may be mere
+imagination. I have viewed with attention those of Platea, Troy,
+Mantinea, Leuctra, Chaevronae, and Marathon, and the field round Mont
+St Jean and Hugoumont appears to want little but a better cause and
+that indefinable but impressive halo which the lapse of ages throws
+around a celebrated spot, to vie in interest with any or all of
+these, except perhaps the last-mentioned."
+
+The expression "a better cause," could only have been engendered in
+mere waywardness; but throughout his reflections at this period a
+peevish ill-will towards England is often manifested, as if he sought
+to attract attention by exasperating the national pride; that pride
+which he secretly flattered himself was to be augmented by his own
+fame.
+
+I cannot, in tracing his travels through the third canto, test the
+accuracy of his descriptions as in the former two; but as they are
+all drawn from actual views they have the same vivid individuality
+impressed upon them. Nothing can be more simple and affecting than
+the following picture, nor less likely to be an imaginary scene:
+
+
+ By Coblentz, on a rise of gentle ground,
+ There is a small and simple pyramid,
+ Crowning the summit of the verdant mound;
+ Beneath its base are heroes' ashes hid,
+ Our enemies. And let not that forbid
+ Honour to Marceau, o'er whose early tomb
+ Tears, big tears, rush'd from the rough soldier's lid,
+ Lamenting and yet envying such a doom,
+Falling for France, whose rights he battled to resume.
+
+
+Perhaps few passages of descriptive poetry excel that in which
+reference is made to the column of Avenches, the ancient Aventicum.
+It combines with an image distinct and picturesque, poetical
+associations full of the grave and moral breathings of olden forms
+and hoary antiquity.
+
+
+ By a lone wall, a lonelier column rears
+ A gray and grief-worn aspect of old days:
+ 'Tis the last remnant of the wreck of years,
+ And looks as with the wild-bewilder'd gaze
+ Of one to stone converted by amaze,
+ Yet still with consciousness; and there it stands,
+ Making a marvel that it not decays,
+ When the coeval pride of human hands,
+Levell'd Aventicum, hath strew'd her subject lands.
+
+
+But the most remarkable quality in the third canto is the deep, low
+bass of thought which runs through several passages, and which gives
+to it, when considered with reference to the circumstances under
+which it was written, the serious character of documentary evidence
+as to the remorseful condition of the poet's mind. It would be,
+after what has already been pointed out in brighter incidents,
+affectation not to say, that these sad bursts of feeling and wild
+paroxysms, bear strong indications of having been suggested by the
+wreck of his domestic happiness, and dictated by contrition for the
+part he had himself taken in the ruin. The following reflections on
+the unguarded hour, are full of pathos and solemnity, amounting
+almost to the deep and dreadful harmony of Manfred:
+
+
+ To fly from, need not be to hate, mankind;
+ All are not fit with them to stir and toil,
+ Nor is it discontent to keep the mind
+ Deep in its fountain, lest it overboil
+ In the hot throng, where we become the spoil
+ Of our infection, till too late and long
+ We may deplore and struggle with the coil,
+ In wretched interchange of wrong for wrong
+'Midst a contentious world, striving where none are strong.
+
+ There, in a moment, we may plunge our years
+ In fatal penitence, and in the blight
+ Of our own soul, turn all our blood to tears,
+ And colour things to come with hues of night;
+ The race of life becomes a hopeless flight
+ To those who walk in darkness: on the sea,
+ The boldest steer but where their ports invite;
+ But there are wanderers o'er eternity,
+Whose bark drives on and on, and anchor'd ne'er shall be.
+
+
+These sentiments are conceived in the mood of an awed spirit; they
+breathe of sorrow and penitence. Of the weariness of satiety the
+pilgrim no more complains; he is no longer despondent from
+exhaustion, and the lost appetite of passion, but from the weight of
+a burden which he cannot lay down; and he clings to visible objects,
+as if from their nature he could extract a moral strength.
+
+
+ I live not in myself, but I become
+ Portion of that around me; and to me,
+ High mountains are a feeling, but the hum
+ Of human cities tortures: I can see
+ Nothing to loathe in nature, save to be
+ A link reluctant in a fleshly chain,
+ Class'd among creatures, where the soul can flee,
+ And with the sky, the peak, the heaving plain
+Of ocean, or the stars, mingle, and not in vain.
+
+
+These dim revelations of black and lowering thought are overshadowed
+with a darker hue than sorrow alone could have cast. A consciousness
+of sinful blame is evident amid them; and though the fantasies that
+loom through the mystery, are not so hideous as the guilty reveries
+in the weird caldron of Manfred's conscience, still they have an
+awful resemblance to them. They are phantoms of the same murky
+element, and, being more akin to fortitude than despair, prophesy not
+of hereafter, but oracularly confess suffering.
+
+Manfred himself hath given vent to no finer horror than the oracle
+that speaks in this magnificent stanza:
+
+
+ I have not loved the world, nor the world me;
+ I have not flatter'd its rank breath, nor bow'd
+ To its idolatries a patient knee--
+ Nor coin'd my cheek to smiles--nor cried aloud
+ In worship of an echo;--in the crowd
+ They could not deem me one of such; I stood
+ Among them, but not of them; in a shroud
+ Of thoughts which were not of their thoughts, and still could,
+Had I not filed my mind, which thus itself subdued.
+
+
+There are times in life when all men feel their sympathies extinct,
+and Lord Byron was evidently in that condition, when he penned these
+remarkable lines; but independently of their striking beauty, the
+scenery in which they were conceived deserves to be considered with
+reference to the sentiment that pervades them. For it was amid the
+same obscure ravines, pine-tufted precipices and falling waters of
+the Alps, that he afterward placed the outcast Manfred--an additional
+corroboration of the justness of the remarks which I ventured to
+offer, in adverting to his ruminations in contemplating, while yet a
+boy, the Malvern hills, as if they were the scenes of his impassioned
+childhood. In "the palaces of nature," he first felt the
+consciousness of having done some wrong, and when he would infuse
+into another, albeit in a wilder degree, the feelings he had himself
+felt, he recalled the images which had ministered to the cogitations
+of his own contrition. But I shall have occasion to speak more of
+this, when I come to consider the nature of the guilt and misery of
+Manfred.
+
+That Manfred is the greatest of Byron's works will probably not be
+disputed. It has more than the fatal mysticism of Macbeth, with the
+satanic grandeur of the Paradise Lost, and the hero is placed in
+circumstances, and amid scenes, which accord with the stupendous
+features of his preternatural character. How then, it may be asked,
+does this moral phantom, that has never been, bear any resemblance to
+the poet himself? Must not, in this instance, the hypothesis which
+assigns to Byron's heroes his own sentiments and feelings be
+abandoned? I think not. In noticing the deep and solemn reflections
+with which he was affected in ascending the Rhine, and which he has
+embodied in the third canto of Childe Harold, I have already pointed
+out a similarity in the tenour of the thoughts to those of Manfred,
+as well as the striking acknowledgment of the "filed" mind. There
+is, moreover, in the drama, the same distaste of the world which
+Byron himself expressed when cogitating on the desolation of his
+hearth, and the same contempt of the insufficiency of his genius and
+renown to mitigate contrition--all in strange harmony with the same
+magnificent objects of sight. Is not the opening soliloquy of
+Manfred the very echo of the reflections on the Rhine?
+
+
+My slumbers--if I slumber--are not sleep,
+But a continuance of enduring thought,
+Which then I can resist not; in my heart
+There is a vigil, and these eyes but close
+To look within--and yet I live and bear
+The aspect and the form of breathing man.
+
+
+But the following is more impressive: it is the very phrase he would
+himself have employed to have spoken of the consequences of his fatal
+marriage:
+
+
+My in juries came down on those who lov'd me,
+On those whom I best lov'd; I never quell'd
+An enemy, save in my just defence--
+But my embrace was fatal.
+
+
+He had not, indeed, been engaged in any duel of which the issue was
+mortal; but he had been so far engaged with more than one, that he
+could easily conceive what it would have been to have quelled an
+enemy in just defence. But unless the reader can himself discern, by
+his sympathies, that there is the resemblance I contend for, it is of
+no use to multiply instances. I shall, therefore, give but one other
+extract, which breathes the predominant spirit of all Byron 's works-
+-that sad translation of the preacher's "vanity of vanities; all is
+vanity!"
+
+
+ Look on me! there is an order
+Of mortals on the earth, who do become
+Old in their youth and die ere middle age,
+Without the violence of warlike death;
+Some perishing of pleasure--some of study--
+Some worn with toil--some of mere weariness--
+Some of disease--and some insanity--
+And some of wither'd or of broken hearts;
+For this last is a malady which slays
+More than are number'd in the lists of Fate;
+Taking all shapes, and bearing many names.
+Look upon me! for even of all these things
+Have I partaken--and of all these things
+One were enough; then wonder not that I
+Am what I am, but that I ever was,
+Or, having been, that I am still on earth.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+
+Byron's Residence in Switzerland--Excursion to the Glaciers--
+"Manfred" founded on a magical Sacrifice, not on Guilt--Similarity
+between Sentiments given to Manfred and those expressed by Lord Byron
+in his own Person
+
+The account given by Captain Medwin of the manner in which Lord Byron
+spent his time in Switzerland, has the raciness of his Lordship's own
+quaintness, somewhat diluted. The reality of the conversations I
+have heard questioned, but they relate in some instances to matters
+not generally known, to the truth of several of which I can myself
+bear witness; moreover they have much of the poet's peculiar modes of
+thinking about them, though weakened in effect by the reporter. No
+man can give a just representation of another who is not capable of
+putting himself into the character of his original, and of thinking
+with his power and intelligence. Still there are occasional touches
+of merit in the feeble outlines of Captain Medwin, and with this
+conviction it would be negligence not to avail myself of them.
+
+"Switzerland," said his Lordship, "is a country I have been satisfied
+with seeing once; Turkey I could live in for ever. I never forget my
+predilections: I was in a wretched state of health and worse spirits
+when I was at Geneva; but quiet and the lake, better physicians than
+Polidori, soon set me up. I never led so moral a life as during my
+residence in that country; but I gained no credit by it. Where there
+is mortification there ought to be reward. On the contrary, there is
+no story so absurd that they did not invent at my cost. I was
+watched by glasses on the opposite side of the lake, and by glasses,
+too, that must have had very distorted optics; I was waylaid in my
+evening drives. I believe they looked upon me as a man-monster.
+
+"I knew very few of the Genevese. Hentsh was very civil to me, and I
+have a great respect for Sismondi. I was forced to return the
+civilities of one of their professors by asking him and an old
+gentleman, a friend of Gray's, to dine with me I had gone out to sail
+early in the morning, and the wind prevented me from returning in
+time for dinner. I understand that I offended them mortally.
+
+"Among our countrymen I made no new acquaintances; Shelley, Monk
+Lewis, and Hobhouse were almost the only English people I saw. No
+wonder; I showed a distaste for society at that time, and went little
+among the Genevese; besides, I could not speak French. When I went
+the tour of the lake with Shelley and Hobhouse, the boat was nearly
+wrecked near the very spot where St Preux and Julia were in danger of
+being drowned. It would have been classical to have been lost there,
+but not agreeable."
+
+The third canto of Childe Harold, Manfred, and The Prisoner of
+Chillon are the fruits of his travels up the Rhine and of his sojourn
+in Switzerland. Of the first it is unnecessary to say more; but the
+following extract from the poet's travelling memorandum-book, has
+been supposed to contain the germ of the tragedy
+
+"September 22, 18 16.--Left Thun in a boat, which carried us the
+length of the lake in three hours. The lake small, but the banks
+fine; rocks down to the water's edge: landed at Newhouse; passed
+Interlachen; entered upon a range of scenes beyond all description or
+previous conception; passed a rock bearing an inscription; two
+brothers, one murdered the other; just the place for it. After a
+variety of windings, came to an enormous rock; arrived at the foot of
+the mountain (the Jungfrau) glaciers; torrents, one of these nine
+hundred feet, visible descent; lodge at the curate's; set out to see
+the valley; heard an avalanche fall like thunder; glaciers; enormous
+storm comes on thunder and lightning and hail, all in perfection and
+beautiful. The torrent is in shape, curving over the rock, like the
+tail of the white horse streaming in the wind, just as might be
+conceived would be that of the pale horse on which Death is mounted
+in the Apocalypse: it is neither mist nor water, but a something
+between both; its immense height gives a wave, a curve, a spreading
+here, a condensation there, wonderful, indescribable
+
+"September 23.--Ascent of the Wingren, the dent d'argent shining like
+truth on one side, on the other the clouds rose from the opposite
+valley, curling up perpendicular precipices like the foam of the
+ocean of hell during a spring-tide. It was white and sulphury, and
+immeasurably deep in appearance; the side we ascended was of course
+not of so precipitous a nature; but on arriving at the summit, we
+looked down on the other side upon a boiling sea of cloud dashing
+against the crag on which we stood. Arrived at the Greenderwold,
+mounted and rode to the higher glacier, twilight, but distinct, very
+fine; glacier like a frozen hurricane; starlight beautiful; the whole
+of the day was fine, and, in point of weather, as the day in which
+Paradise was made. Passed whole woods of withered pines, all
+withered, trunks stripped and lifeless, done by a single winter."
+
+Undoubtedly in these brief and abrupt but masterly touches, hints for
+the scenery of Manfred may be discerned, but I can perceive nothing
+in them which bears the least likelihood to their having influenced
+the conception of that sublime work.
+
+There has always been from the first publication of Manfred, a
+strange misapprehension with respect to it in the public mind. The
+whole poem has been misunderstood, and the odious supposition that
+ascribes the fearful mystery and remorse of a hero to a foul passion
+for his sister, is probably one of those coarse imaginations which
+have grown out of the calumnies and accusations heaped upon the
+author. How can it have happened that none of the critics have
+noticed that the story is derived from the human sacrifices supposed
+to have been in use among the students of the black art?
+
+Manfred is represented as being actuated by an insatiable curiosity--
+a passion to know the forbidden secrets of the world. The scene
+opens with him at his midnight studies--his lamp is almost burned
+out--and he has been searching for knowledge and has not found it,
+but only that
+
+
+Sorrow is knowledge: they who know the most
+Must mourn the deepest o'er the fatal truth,
+The tree of knowledge is not that of life.
+Philosophy and science and the springs
+Of wonder, and the wisdom of the world
+I have essayed, and in my mind there is,
+A power to make these subject to itself.
+
+
+He is engaged in calling spirits; and, as the incantation proceeds,
+they obey his bidding, and ask him what he wants; he replies,
+"forgetfulness."
+
+
+FIRST SPIRIT
+
+Of what--of whom--and why?
+
+MANFRED
+
+Of that which is within me; read it there----
+Ye know it, and I cannot utter it.
+
+SPIRIT
+
+We can but give thee that which we possess;--
+Ask of us subjects, sovereignty, the power
+O'er earth, the whole or portion, or a sign
+Which shall control the elements, whereof
+We are the dominators. Each and all--
+These shall be thine.
+
+MANFRED
+
+ Oblivion, self oblivion--
+Can ye not wring from out the hidden realms
+Ye offer so profusely, what I ask?
+
+SPIRIT
+
+It is not in our essence, in our skill,
+But--thou may'st die.
+
+MANFRED
+
+ Will death bestow it on me?
+
+SPIRIT
+
+We are immortal, and do not forget;
+We are eternal, and to us the past
+Is as the future, present. Art thou answer'd?
+
+MANFRED
+
+Ye mock me, but the power which brought ye here
+Hath made you mine. Slaves! scoff not at my will;
+The mind, the spirit, the Promethean spark,
+The lightning of my being is as bright,
+Pervading and far darting as your own,
+And shall not yield to yours though coop'd in clay.
+Answer, or I will teach you what I am.
+
+SPIRIT
+
+We answer as we answer'd. Our reply
+Is even in thine own words.
+
+MANFRED
+
+Why say ye so?
+
+SPIRIT
+
+If, as thou say'st, thine essence be as ours,
+We have replied in telling thee the thing
+Mortals call death hath naught to do with us.
+
+MANFRED
+
+I then have call'd you from your realms in vain.
+
+
+This impressive and original scene prepares the reader to wonder why
+it is that Manfred is so desirous to drink of Lethe. He has acquired
+dominion over spirits, and he finds, in the possession of the power,
+that knowledge has only brought him sorrow. They tell him he is
+immortal, and what he suffers is as inextinguishable as his own
+being: why should he desire forgetfulness?--Has he not committed a
+great secret sin? What is it?--He alludes to his sister, and in his
+subsequent interview with the witch we gather a dreadful meaning
+concerning her fate. Her blood has been shed, not by his hand nor in
+punishment, but in the shadow and occultations of some unutterable
+crime and mystery.
+
+
+She was like me in lineaments; her eyes,
+Her hair, her features, all to the very tone
+Even of her voice, they said were like to mine,
+But soften'd all and temper'd into beauty.
+She had the same lone thoughts and wanderings,
+The quest of hidden knowledge, and a mind
+To comprehend the universe; nor these
+Alone, but with them gentler powers than mine,
+Pity, and smiles, and tears, which I had not;
+And tenderness--but that I had for her;
+Humility, and that I never had:
+Her faults were mine--her virtues were her own;
+I lov'd her and--destroy'd her--
+
+WITCH
+
+With thy hand?
+
+MANFRED
+
+Not with my hand, but heart, which broke her heart.
+It gaz'd on mine, and withered. I have shed
+Blood, but not hers, and yet her blood was shed;--
+I saw, and could not stanch it.
+
+
+There is in this little scene, perhaps, the deepest pathos ever
+expressed; but it is not of its beauty that I am treating; my object
+in noticing it here is, that it may be considered in connection with
+that where Manfred appears with his insatiate thirst of knowledge,
+and manacled with guilt. It indicates that his sister, Astarte, had
+been self-sacrificed in the pursuit of their magical knowledge.
+Human sacrifices were supposed to be among the initiate propitiations
+of the demons that have their purposes in magic--as well as compacts
+signed with the blood of the self-sold. There was also a dark
+Egyptian art, of which the knowledge and the efficacy could only be
+obtained by the novitiate's procuring a voluntary victim--the dearest
+object to himself and to whom he also was the dearest; {241} and the
+primary spring of Byron's tragedy lies, I conceive, in a sacrifice of
+that kind having been performed, without obtaining that happiness
+which the votary expected would be found in the knowledge and power
+purchased at such a price. His sister was sacrificed in vain. The
+manner of the sacrifice is not divulged, but it is darkly intimated
+to have been done amid the perturbations of something horrible.
+
+
+ Night after night for years
+He hath pursued long vigils in this tower
+Without a witness.--I have been within it--
+So have we all been ofttimes; but from it,
+Or its contents, it were impossible
+To draw conclusions absolute of aught
+His studies tend to.--To be sure there is
+One chamber where none enter--. . .
+Count Manfred was, as now, within his tower:
+How occupied--we know not--but with him,
+The sole companion of his wanderings
+And watchings--her--whom of all earthly things
+That liv'd, the only thing he seem'd to love.
+
+
+With admirable taste, and its thrilling augmentation of the horror,
+the poet leaves the deed which was done in that unapproachable
+chamber undivulged, while we are darkly taught, that within it lie
+the relics or the ashes of the "one without a tomb."
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+
+State of Byron in Switzerland--He goes to Venice--The fourth Canto of
+"Childe Harold"--Rumination on his own Condition--Beppo--Lament of
+Tasso--Curious Example of Byron's metaphysical Love
+
+The situation of Lord Byron in Switzerland was comfortless. He found
+that "the montain palaces of Nature" afforded no asylum to a haunted
+heart; he was ill at ease with himself, even dissatisfied that the
+world had not done him enough of wrong to justify his misanthropy.
+
+Some expectation that his lady would repent of her part in the
+separation probably induced him to linger in the vicinity of Geneva,
+the thoroughfare of the travelling English, whom he affected to shun.
+If it were so, he was disappointed, and, his hopes being frustrated,
+he broke up the establishment he had formed there and crossed the
+Alps. After visiting some of the celebrated scenes and places in the
+north of Italy he passed on to Venice, where he domiciled himself for
+a time.
+
+During his residence at Venice Lord Byron avoided as much as possible
+any intercourse with his countrymen. This was perhaps in some degree
+necessary, and it was natural in the state of his mind. He had
+become an object of great public interest by his talents; the stories
+connected with his domestic troubles had also increased his
+notoriety, and in such circumstances he could not but shrink from the
+inquisition of mere curiosity. But there was an insolence in the
+tone with which he declares his "utter abhorrence of any contact with
+the travelling English," that can neither be commended for its
+spirit, nor palliated by any treatment he had suffered. Like
+Coriolanus he may have banished his country, but he had not, like the
+Roman, received provocation: on the contrary, he had been the
+aggressor in the feuds with his literary adversaries; and there was a
+serious accusation against his morals, or at least his manners, in
+the circumstances under which Lady Byron withdrew from his house. It
+was, however, his misfortune throughout life to form a wrong estimate
+of himself in everything save in his poetical powers.
+
+A life in Venice is more monotonous than in any other great city; but
+a man of genius carries with him everywhere a charm, which secures to
+him both variety and enjoyment. Lord Byron had scarcely taken up his
+abode in Venice, when he began the fourth canto of Childe Harold,
+which he published early in the following year, and dedicated to his
+indefatigable friend Mr Hobhouse by an epistle dated on the
+anniversary of his marriage, "the most unfortunate day," as he says,
+"of his past existence."
+
+In this canto he has indulged his excursive moralizing beyond even
+the wide licence he took in the three preceding parts; but it bears
+the impression of more reading and observation. Though not superior
+in poetical energy, it is yet a higher work than any of them, and
+something of a more resolved and masculine spirit pervades the
+reflections, and endows, as it were, with thought and enthusiasm the
+aspect of the things described. Of the merits of the descriptions,
+as of real things, I am not qualified to judge: the transcripts from
+the tablets of the author's bosom he has himself assured us are
+faithful.
+
+"With regard to the conduct of the last canto, there will be found
+less of the pilgrim than in any of the preceding, and that little
+slightly, if at all, separated from the author speaking in his own
+person. The fact is, that I had become weary of drawing a line,
+which every one seemed determined not to perceive: like the Chinese,
+in Goldsmith's Citizen of the World, whom nobody would believe to be
+a Chinese, it was in vain that I asserted and imagined that I had
+drawn a distinction between the author and the pilgrim; and the very
+anxiety to preserve this difference, and the disappointment at
+finding it unavailing, so far crushed my efforts in the composition,
+that I determined to abandon it altogether--and have done so."
+
+This confession, though it may not have been wanted, gives a pathetic
+emphasis to those passages in which the poet speaks of his own
+feelings. That his mind was jarred, and out of joint, there is too
+much reason to believe; but he had in some measure overcome the
+misery that clung to him during the dismal time of his sojourn in
+Switzerland, and the following passage, though breathing the sweet
+and melancholy spirit of dejection, possesses a more generous vein of
+nationality than is often met with in his works, even when the same
+proud sentiment might have been more fitly expressed:
+
+
+ I've taught me other tongues--and in strange eyes
+ Have made me not a stranger; to the mind
+ Which is itself, no changes bring surprise,
+ Nor is it harsh to make or hard to find
+ A country with--aye, or without mankind.
+ Yet was I born where men are proud to be,
+ Not without cause; and should I leave behind
+ Th' inviolate island of the sage and free,
+And seek me out a home by a remoter sea?
+
+ Perhaps I lov'd it well, and should I lay
+ My ashes in a soil which is not mine,
+ My spirit shall resume it--if we may,
+ Unbodied, choose a sanctuary. I twine
+ My hopes of being remember'd in my line,
+ With my land's language; if too fond and far
+ These aspirations in their hope incline--
+ If my fame should be as my fortunes are,
+Of hasty growth and blight, and dull oblivion bar
+
+ My name from out the temple where the dead
+ Are honour'd by the nations--let it be,
+ And light the laurels on a loftier head,
+ And be the Spartan's epitaph on me:
+ "Sparta had many a worthier son than he";
+ Meantime I seek no sympathies, nor need;
+ The thorns which I have reap'd are of the tree
+ I planted--they have torn me--and I bleed:
+I should have known what fruit would spring from such a seed.
+
+
+It will strike the reader as remarkable, that although the poet, in
+the course of this canto, takes occasion to allude to Dante and
+Tasso, in whose destinies there was a shadowy likeness of his own,
+the rumination is mingled with less of himself than might have been
+expected, especially when it is considered how much it was a habit
+with him, to make his own feelings the basis and substratum of the
+sentiments he ascribed to others. It has also more than once
+surprised me that he has so seldom alluded to Alfieri, whom of all
+poets, both in character and conduct, he most resembled; with this
+difference, however, that Alfieri was possessed of affections equally
+intense and durable, whereas the caprice of Byron made him uncertain
+in his partialities, or what was the same in effect, made his friends
+set less value on them than perhaps they were entitled to.
+
+Before Childe Harold was finished, an incident occurred which
+suggested to Byron a poem of a very different kind to any he had yet
+attempted:--without vouching for the exact truth of the anecdote, I
+have been told, that he one day received by the mail a copy of
+Whistlecraft's prospectus and specimen of an intended national work;
+and, moved by its playfulness, immediately after reading it, began
+Beppo, which he finished at a sitting. The facility with which he
+composed renders the story not improbable; but, singular as it may
+seem, the poem itself has the facetious flavour in it of his gaiety,
+stronger than even his grave works have of his frowardness, commonly
+believed to have been--I think, unjustly--the predominant mood of his
+character.
+
+The Ode to Venice is also to be numbered among his compositions in
+that city; a spirited and indignant effusion, full of his peculiar
+lurid fire, and rich in a variety of impressive and original images.
+But there is a still finer poem which belongs to this period of his
+history, though written, I believe, before he reached Venice--The
+Lament of Tasso: and I am led to notice it the more particularly, as
+one of its noblest passages affords an illustration of the opinion
+which I have early maintained--that Lord Byron's extraordinary
+pretensions to the influence of love was but a metaphysical
+conception of the passion.
+
+
+It is no marvel--from my very birth
+My soul was drunk with love, which did pervade
+And mingle with whate'er I saw on earth;
+Of objects all inanimate I made
+Idols, and out of wild and lovely flowers,
+And rocks whereby they grew, a paradise,
+Where I did lay me down within the shade
+Of waving trees, and dream'd uncounted hours.
+
+
+It has been remarked by an anonymous author of Memoirs of Lord Byron,
+a work written with considerable talent and acumen, that "this is so
+far from being in character, that it is the very reverse; for whether
+Tasso was in his senses or not, if his love was sincere, he would
+have made the object of his affection the sole theme of his
+meditation, instead of generalising his passion, and talking about
+the original sympathies of his nature." In truth, no poet has better
+described love than Byron has his own peculiar passion.
+
+
+ His love was passion's essence--as a tree
+ On fire by lightning; with ethereal flame
+ Kindled he was, and blasted; for to be
+ Thus enamour'd were in him the same.
+ But his was not the love of living dame,
+ Nor of the dead who rise upon our dreams,
+ But of ideal beauty, which became
+ In him existence, and o'erflowing teems
+Along his burning page, distemper'd though it seems.
+
+
+In tracing the course of Lord Byron's career, I have not deemed it at
+all necessary to advert to the instances of his generosity, or to
+conduct less pleasant to record. Enough has appeared to show that he
+was neither deficient in warmth of heart nor in less amiable
+feelings; but, upon the whole, it is not probable that either in his
+charities or his pleasures he was greatly different from other young
+men, though he undoubtedly had a wayward delight in magnifying his
+excesses, not in what was to his credit, like most men, but in what
+was calculated to do him no honour. More notoriety has been given to
+an instance of lavish liberality at Venice, than the case deserved,
+though it was unquestionably prompted by a charitable impulse. The
+house of a shoemaker, near his Lordship's residence, in St Samuel,
+was burned to the ground, with all it contained, by which the
+proprietor was reduced to indigence. Byron not only caused a new but
+a superior house to be erected, and also presented the sufferer with
+a sum of money equal in value to the whole of his stock in trade and
+furniture. I should endanger my reputation for impartiality if I did
+not, as a fair set-off to this, also mention that it is said he
+bought for five hundred crowns a baker's wife. There might be
+charity in this, too.
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+
+Removes to Ravenna--The Countess Guiccioli
+
+Although Lord Byron resided between two and three years at Venice, he
+was never much attached to it. "To see a city die daily, as she
+does," said he, "is a sad contemplation. I sought to distract my
+mind from a sense of her desolation and my own solitude, by plunging
+into a vortex that was anything but pleasure. When one gets into a
+mill-stream, it is difficult to swim against it, and keep out of the
+wheels." He became tired and disgusted with the life he led at
+Venice, and was glad to turn his back on it. About the close of the
+year 1819 he accordingly removed to Ravenna; but before I proceed to
+speak of the works which he composed at Ravenna, it is necessary to
+explain some particulars respecting a personal affair, the influence
+of which on at least one of his productions is as striking as any of
+the many instances already described upon others. I allude to the
+intimacy which he formed with the young Countess Guiccioli.
+
+This lady, at the age of sixteen, was married to the Count, one of
+the richest noblemen in Romagna, but far advanced in life. "From the
+first," said Lord Byron, in his account of her, "they had separate
+apartments, and she always called him, Sir! What could be expected
+from such a preposterous connection. For some time she was an
+Angiolina and he a Marino Faliero, a good old man; but young Italian
+women are not satisfied with good old men, and the venerable Count
+did not object to her availing herself of the privileges of her
+country in selecting a cicisbeo; an Italian would have made it quite
+agreeable: indeed, for some time he winked at our intimacy, but at
+length made an exception against me, as a foreigner, a heretic, an
+Englishman, and, what was worse than all, a Liberal.
+
+"He insisted--Teresa was as obstinate--her family took her part.
+Catholics cannot get divorces; but to the scandal of all Romagna, the
+matter was at last referred to the Pope, who ordered her a separate
+maintenance on condition that she should reside under her father's
+roof. All this was not agreeable, and at length I was forced to
+smuggle her out of Ravenna, having discovered a plot laid with the
+sanction of the legate, for shutting her up in a convent for life."
+
+The Countess Guiccioli was at this time about twenty, but she
+appeared younger; her complexion was fair, with large, dark,
+languishing eyes; and her auburn hair fell in great profusion of
+natural ringlets over her shapely shoulders. Her features were not
+so regular as in their expression pleasing, and there was an amiable
+gentleness in her voice which was peculiarly interesting. Leigh
+Hunt's account of her is not essentially dissimilar from any other
+that I have either heard of or met with. He differs, however, in one
+respect, from every other, in saying that her hair was YELLOW; but
+considering the curiosity which this young lady has excited, perhaps
+it may be as well to transcribe his description at length, especially
+as he appears to have taken some pains on it, and more particularly
+as her destiny seems at present to promise that the interest for her
+is likely to be revived by another unhappy English connection.
+
+"Her appearance," says Mr Hunt, "might have reminded an English
+spectator of Chaucer's heroine:
+
+
+Yclothed was she, fresh for to devise,
+Her yellow hair was braided in a tress
+Behind her back, a yarde long I guess,
+And in the garden (as the same uprist)
+She walketh up and down, where as her list.
+
+
+And then, as Dryden has it:
+
+
+At every turn she made a little stand,
+And thrust among the thorns her lily hand.
+
+
+Madame Guiccioli, who was at that time about twenty, was handsome and
+lady-like, with an agreeable manner, and a voice not partaking too
+much of the Italian fervour to be gentle. She had just enough of it
+to give her speaking a grace--none of her graces appeared entirely
+free from art; nor, on the other hand, did they betray enough of it
+to give you an ill opinion of her sincerity and good-humour . . . Her
+hair was what the poet has described, or rather BLOND, with an
+inclination to yellow; a very fair and delicate yellow, at all
+events, and within the limits of the poetical. She had regular
+features of the order properly called handsome, in distinction to
+prettiness or piquancy; being well proportioned to one another,
+large, rather than otherwise, but without coarseness, and more
+harmonious than interesting. Her nose was the handsomest of the kind
+I ever saw; and I have known her both smile very sweetly, and look
+intelligently, when Lord Byron has said something kind to her. I
+should not say, however, that she was a very intelligent person.
+Both her wisdom and her want of wisdom were on the side of her
+feelings, in which there was doubtless mingled a good deal of the
+self-love natural to a flattered beauty. . . . In a word, Madame
+Guiccioli was a kind of buxom parlour-boarder, compressing herself
+artificially into dignity and elegance, and fancying she walked, in
+the eyes of the whole world, a heroine by the side of a poet. When I
+saw her at Monte Nero, near Leghorn, she was in a state of excitement
+and exultation, and had really something of this look. At that time,
+also, she looked no older than she was; in which respect, a rapid and
+very singular change took place, to the surprise of everybody. In
+the course of a few months she seemed to have lived as many years."
+
+This is not very perspicuous portraiture, nor does it show that Mr
+Hunt was a very discerning observer of character. Lord Byron himself
+is represented to have said, that extraordinary pains were taken with
+her education: "Her conversation is lively without being frivolous;
+without being learned, she has read all the best authors of her own
+and the French language. She often conceals what she knows, from the
+fear of being thought to know too much; possibly because she knows I
+am not fond of blues. To use an expression of Jeffrey's, 'If she has
+blue stockings, she contrives that her petticoats shall hide them.'"
+
+Lord Byron was at one time much attached to her; nor could it be
+doubted that their affection was reciprocal; but in both, their union
+outlived their affection, for before his departure to Greece his
+attachment had perished, and he left her, as it is said,
+notwithstanding the rank and opulence she had forsaken on his
+account, without any provision. He had promised, it was reported, to
+settle two thousand pounds on her, but he forgot the intention, or
+died before it was carried into effect. {255} On her part, the
+estrangement was of a different and curious kind--she had not come to
+hate him, but she told a lady, the friend of a mutual acquaintance of
+Lord Byron and mine, that she feared more than loved him.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+
+Residence in Ravenna--The Carbonari--Byron's Part in their Plot--The
+Murder of the military Commandant--The poetical Use of the Incident--
+"Marino Faliero"--Reflections--"The Prophecy of Dante"
+
+Lord Byron has said himself, that except Greece, he was never so
+attached to any place in his life as to Ravenna. The peasantry he
+thought the best people in the world, and their women the most
+beautiful. "Those at Tivoli and Frescati," said he, "are mere
+Sabines, coarse creatures, compared to the Romagnese. You may talk
+of your English women; and it is true, that out of one hundred
+Italian and English you will find thirty of the latter handsome; but
+then there will be one Italian on the other side of the scale, who
+will more than balance the deficit in numbers--one who, like the
+Florence Venus, has no rival, and can have none in the North. I
+found also at Ravenna much education and liberality of thinking among
+the higher classes. The climate is delightful. I was not broken in
+upon by society. Ravenna lies out of the way of travellers. I was
+never tired of my rides in the pine forest: it breathes of the
+Decameron; it is poetical ground. Francesca lived and Dante was
+exiled and died at Ravenna. There is something inspiring in such an
+air.
+
+"The people liked me as much as they hated the government. It is not
+a little to say, I was popular with all the leaders of the
+constitutional party. They knew that I came from a land of liberty,
+and wished well to their cause. I would have espoused it, too, and
+assisted them to shake off their fetters. They knew my character,
+for I had been living two years at Venice, where many of the
+Ravennese have houses. I did not, however, take part in their
+intrigues, nor join in their political coteries; but I had a magazine
+of one hundred stand of arms in the house, when everything was ripe
+for revolt----a curse on Carignan's imbecility! I could have
+pardoned him that, too, if he had not impeached his partisans.
+
+"The proscription was immense in Romagna, and embraced many of the
+first nobles: almost all my friends, among the rest the Gambas (the
+father and brother of the Countess Guiccioli), who took no part in
+the affair, were included in it. They were exiled, and their
+possessions confiscated. They knew that this must eventually drive
+me out of the country. I did not follow them immediately: I was not
+to be bullied--I had myself fallen under the eye of the government.
+If they could have got sufficient proof they would have arrested me."
+
+The latter part of this declaration bears, in my opinion, indubitable
+marks of being genuine. It has that magnifying mysticism about it
+which more than any other quality characterized Lord Byron's
+intimations concerning himself and his own affairs; but it is a
+little clearer than I should have expected in the acknowledgment of
+the part he was preparing to take in the insurrection. He does not
+seem HERE to be sensible, that in confessing so much, he has
+justified the jealousy with which he was regarded.
+
+"Shortly after the plot was discovered," he proceeds to say, "I
+received several anonymous letters, advising me to discontinue my
+forest rides; but I entertained no apprehensions of treachery, and
+was more on horseback than ever. I never stir out without being well
+armed, nor sleep without pistols. They knew that I never missed my
+aim; perhaps this saved me."
+
+An event occurred at this time at Ravenna that made a deep impression
+on Lord Byron. The commandant of the place, who, though suspected of
+being secretly a Carbonaro, was too powerful a man to be arrested,
+was assassinated opposite to his residence. The measures adopted to
+screen the murderer proved, in the opinion of his Lordship, that the
+assassination had taken place by order of the police, and that the
+spot where it was perpetrated had been selected by choice. Byron at
+the moment had his foot in the stirrup, and his horse started at the
+report of the shot. On looking round he saw a man throw down a
+carbine and run away, and another stretched on the pavement near him.
+On hastening to the spot, he found it was the commandant; a crowd
+collected, but no one offered any assistance. His Lordship directed
+his servant to lift the bleeding body into the palace--he assisted
+himself in the act, though it was represented to him that he might
+incur the displeasure of the government--and the gentleman was
+already dead. His adjutant followed the body into the house. "I
+remember," says his Lordship, "his lamentation over him--'Poor devil
+he would not have harmed a dog.'"
+
+It was from the murder of this commandant that the poet sketched the
+scene of the assassination in the fifth canto of Don Juan.
+
+
+ The other evening ('twas on Friday last),
+ This is a fact, and no poetic fable--
+ Just as my great coat was about me cast,
+ My hat and gloves still lying on the table,
+ I heard a shot--'twas eight o'clock scarce past,
+ And running out as fast as I was able,
+I found the military commandant
+Stretch'd in the street, and able scarce to pant.
+
+ Poor fellow! for some reason, surely bad,
+ They had him slain with five slugs, and left him there
+ To perish on the pavement: so I had
+ Him borne into the house, and up the stair;
+The man was gone: in some Italian quarrel
+Kill'd by five bullets from an old gun-barrel.
+
+ The scars of his old wounds were near his new,
+ Those honourable scars which bought him fame,
+ And horrid was the contrast to the view--
+ But let me quit the theme, as such things claim
+ Perhaps ev'n more attention than is due
+ From me: I gazed (as oft I've gazed the same)
+To try if I could wrench aught out of death
+Which should confirm, or shake, or make a faith.
+
+
+Whether Marino Faliero was written at Ravenna or completed there, I
+have not ascertained, but it was planned at Venice, and as far back
+as 1817. I believe this is considered about the most ordinary
+performance of all Lord Byron's works; but if it is considered with
+reference to the time in which it was written, it will probably be
+found to contain many great and impressive passages. Has not the
+latter part of the second scene in the first act reference to the
+condition of Venice when his Lordship was there? And is not the
+description which Israel Bertuccio gives of the conspirators
+applicable to, as it was probably derived from, the Carbonari, with
+whom there is reason to say Byron was himself disposed to take a
+part?
+
+
+Know, then, that there are met and sworn in secret
+A band of brethren, valiant hearts and true;
+Men who have proved all fortunes, and have long
+Grieved over that of Venice, and have right
+To do so; having served her in all climes,
+And having rescued her from foreign foes,
+Would do the same for those within her walls.
+They are not numerous, nor yet too few
+For their great purpose; they have arms, and means,
+And hearts, and hopes, and faith, and patient courage.
+
+
+This drama, to be properly appreciated, both in its taste and feeling
+should be considered as addressed to the Italians of the epoch at
+which it was written. Had it been written in the Italian instead of
+the English language, and could have come out in any city of Italy,
+the effect would have been prodigious. It is, indeed, a work not to
+be estimated by the delineations of character nor the force of
+passion expressed in it, but altogether by the apt and searching
+sarcasm of the political allusions. Viewed with reference to the
+time and place in which it was composed, it would probably deserve to
+be ranked as a high and bold effort: simply as a drama, it may not
+be entitled to rank above tragedies of the second or third class.
+But I mean not to set my opinion of this work against that of the
+public, the English public; all I contend for is, that it possesses
+many passages of uncommon beauty, and that its chief tragic merit
+consists in its political indignation; but above all, that is another
+and a strong proof too, of what I have been endeavouring to show,
+that the power of the poet consisted in giving vent to his own
+feelings, and not, like his great brethren, or even his less, in the
+invention of situations or of appropriate sentiments. It is,
+perhaps, as it stands, not fit to succeed in representation; but it
+is so rich in matter that it would not be a difficult task to make
+out of little more than the third part a tragedy which would not
+dishonour the English stage.
+
+I have never been able to understand why it has been so often
+supposed that Lord Byron was actuated in the composition of his
+different works by any other motive than enjoyment: perhaps no poet
+had ever less of an ulterior purpose in his mind during the fits of
+inspiration (for the epithet may be applied correctly to him and to
+the moods in which he was accustomed to write) than this singular and
+impassioned man. Those who imagine that he had any intention to
+impair the reverence due to religion, or to weaken the hinges of
+moral action, give him credit for far more design and prospective
+purpose than he possessed. They could have known nothing of the man,
+the main defect of whose character, in relation to everything, was in
+having too little of the element or principle of purpose. He was a
+thing of impulses, and to judge of what he either said or did, as the
+results of predetermination, was not only to do the harshest
+injustice, but to show a total ignorance of his character. His whole
+fault, the darkest course of those flights and deviations from
+propriety which have drawn upon him the severest animadversion, lay
+in the unbridled state of his impulses. He felt, but never reasoned.
+I am led to make these observations by noticing the ungracious, or,
+more justly, the illiberal spirit in which The Prophecy of Dante,
+which was published with the Marino Faliero, has been treated by the
+anonymous author of Memoirs of the Life and Writings of Lord Byron.
+
+Of The Prophecy of Dante I am no particular admirer. It contains,
+unquestionably, stanzas of resounding energy, but the general verse
+of the poem is as harsh and abrupt as the clink and clang of the
+cymbal; moreover, even for a prophecy, it is too obscure, and though
+it possesses abstractedly too many fine thoughts, and too much of the
+combustion of heroic passion to be regarded as a failure, yet it will
+never be popular. It is a quarry, however, of very precious poetical
+expression.
+
+It was written at Ravenna, and at the suggestion of the Guiccioli, to
+whom it is dedicated in a sonnet, prettily but inharmoniously turned.
+Like all his other best performances, this rugged but masterly
+composition draws its highest interest from himself and his own
+feelings, and can only be rightly appreciated by observing how fitly
+many of the bitter breathings of Dante apply to his own exiled and
+outcast condition. For, however much he was himself the author of
+his own banishment, he felt when he wrote these haughty verses that
+he had been sometimes shunned.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+
+The Tragedy of "Sardanapalus" considered, with Reference to Lord
+Byron's own Circumstances--"Cain"
+
+Among the mental enjoyments which endeared Ravenna to Lord Byron, the
+composition of Sardanapalus may be reckoned the chief. It seems to
+have been conceived in a happier mood than any of all his other
+works; for, even while it inculcates the dangers of voluptuous
+indulgence, it breathes the very essence of benevolence and
+philosophy. Pleasure takes so much of the character of virtue in it,
+that but for the moral taught by the consequences, enjoyment might be
+mistaken for duty. I have never been able to satisfy myself in what
+the resemblance consists, but from the first reading it has always
+appeared to me that there was some elegant similarity between the
+characters of Sardanapalus and Hamlet, and my inclination has
+sometimes led me to imagine that the former was the nobler conception
+of the two.
+
+The Assyrian monarch, like the Prince of Denmark, is highly endowed,
+capable of the greatest undertakings; he is yet softened by a
+philosophic indolence of nature that makes him undervalue the
+enterprises of ambition, and all those objects in the attainment of
+which so much of glory is supposed to consist. They are both alike
+incapable of rousing themselves from the fond reveries of moral
+theory, even when the strongest motives are presented to them.
+Hamlet hesitates to act, though his father's spirit hath come from
+death to incite him; and Sardanapalus derides the achievements that
+had raised his ancestors to an equality with the gods.
+
+
+ Thou wouldst have me go
+Forth as a conqueror.--By all the stars
+Which the Chaldeans read! the restless slaves
+Deserve that I should curse them with their wishes
+And lead them forth to glory.
+
+
+Again:
+
+
+The ungrateful and ungracious slaves! they murmur
+Because I have not shed their blood, nor led them
+To dry into the deserts' dust by myriads,
+Or whiten with their bones the banks of Ganges,
+Nor decimated them with savage laws,
+Nor sweated them to build up pyramids
+Or Babylonian walls.
+
+
+The nothingness of kingly greatness and national pride were never
+before so finely contemned as by the voluptuous Assyrian, and were
+the scorn not mitigated by the skilful intermixture of mercifulness
+and philanthropy, the character would not be endurable. But when the
+same voice which pronounced contempt on the toils of honour says,
+
+
+ Enough
+For me if I can make my subjects feel
+The weight of human misery less,
+
+
+it is impossible to repress the liking which the humane spirit of
+that thought is calculated to inspire. Nor is there any want of
+dignity in Sardanapalus, even when lolling softest in his luxury.
+
+
+Must I consume my life--this little life--
+In guarding against all may make it less!
+It is not worth so much--It were to die
+Before my hour to live in dread of death. . . .
+Till now no drop of an Assyrian vein
+Hath flow'd for me, nor hath the smallest coin
+Of Nineveh's vast treasure e'er been lavish'd
+On objects which could cost her sons a tear.
+If then they hate me 'tis because I hate not,
+If they rebel 'tis because I oppress not.
+
+
+This is imagined in the true tone of Epicurean virtue, and it rises
+to magnanimity when he adds in compassionate scorn,
+
+
+Oh, men! ye must be ruled with scythes, not sceptres,
+And mow'd down like the grass, else all we reap
+Is rank abundance and a rotten harvest
+Of discontents infecting the fair soil,
+Making a desert of fertility.
+
+
+But the graciousness in the conception of the character of
+Sardanapalus, is not to be found only in these sentiments of his
+meditations, but in all and every situation in which the character is
+placed. When Salamenes bids him not sheath his sword--
+
+
+'Tis the sole sceptre left you now with safety,
+
+
+the king replies--
+
+"A heavy one;" and subjoins, as if to conceal his distaste for war,
+by ascribing a dislike to the sword itself,
+
+
+The hilt, too, hurts my hand.
+
+
+It may be asked why I dwell so particularly on the character of
+Sardanapalus. It is admitted that he is the most heroic of
+voluptuaries, the most philosophical of the licentious. The first he
+is undoubtedly, but he is not licentious; and in omitting to make him
+so, the poet has prevented his readers from disliking his character
+upon principle. It was a skilful stroke of art to do this; had it
+been otherwise, and had there been no affection shown for the Ionian
+slave, Sardanapalus would have engaged no sympathy. It is not,
+however, with respect to the ability with which the character has
+been imagined, nor to the poetry with which it is invested, that I
+have so particularly made it a subject of criticism; it was to point
+out how much in it Lord Byron has interwoven of his own best nature.
+
+At the time when he was occupied with this great work, he was
+confessedly in the enjoyment of the happiest portion of his life.
+The Guiccioli was to him a Myrrha, but the Carbonari were around, and
+in the controversy, in which Sardanapalus is engaged, between the
+obligations of his royalty and his inclinations for pleasure, we have
+a vivid insight of the cogitation of the poet, whether to take a part
+in the hazardous activity which they were preparing, or to remain in
+the seclusion and festal repose of which he was then in possession.
+The Assyrian is as much Lord Byron as Childe Harold was, and bears
+his lineaments in as clear a likeness, as a voluptuary unsated could
+do those of the emaciated victim of satiety. Over the whole drama,
+and especially in some of the speeches of Sardanapalus, a great deal
+of fine but irrelevant poetry and moral reflection has been profusely
+spread; but were the piece adapted to the stage, these portions would
+of course be omitted, and the character denuded of them would then
+more fully justify the idea which I have formed of it, than it may
+perhaps to many readers do at present, hidden as it is, both in shape
+and contour, under an excess of ornament.
+
+That the character of Myrrha was also drawn from life, and that the
+Guiccioli was the model, I have no doubt. She had, when most
+enchanted by her passion for Byron--at the very time when the drama
+was written--many sources of regret; and he was too keen an observer,
+and of too jealous a nature, not to have marked every shade of change
+in her appearance, and her every moment of melancholy reminiscence;
+so that, even though she might never have given expression to her
+sentiments, still such was her situation, that it could not but
+furnish him with fit suggestions from which to fill up the moral
+being of the Ionian slave. Were the character of Myrrha scanned with
+this reference, while nothing could be discovered to detract from the
+value of the composition, a great deal would be found to lessen the
+merit of the poet's invention. He had with him the very being in
+person whom he has depicted in the drama, of dispositions and
+endowments greatly similar, and in circumstances in which she could
+not but feel as Myrrha is supposed to have felt--and it must be
+admitted, that he has applied the good fortune of that incident to a
+beautiful purpose.
+
+This, however, is not all that the tragedy possesses of the author.
+The character of Zarina is, perhaps, even still more strikingly drawn
+from life. There are many touches in the scene with her which he
+could not have imagined, without thinking of his own domestic
+disasters. The first sentiment she utters is truly conceived in the
+very frame and temper in which Byron must have wished his lady to
+think of himself, and he could not embody it without feeling THAT--
+
+
+ How many a year has pass'd,
+Though we are still so young, since we have met
+Which I have borne in widowhood of heart.
+
+
+The following delicate expression has reference to his having left
+his daughter with her mother, and unfolds more of his secret feelings
+on the subject than anything he has expressed more ostentatiously
+elsewhere:
+
+
+I wish'd to thank you, that you have not divided
+My heart from all that's left it now to love.
+
+
+And what Sardanapalus says of his children is not less applicable to
+Byron, and is true:
+
+
+ Deem not
+I have not done you justice: rather make them
+Resemble your own line, than their own sire;
+I trust them with you--to you.
+
+
+And when Zarina says,
+
+
+ They ne'er
+Shall know from me aught but what may honour
+Their father's memory,
+
+
+he puts in her mouth only a sentiment which he knew, if his wife
+never expressed to him, she profoundly acknowledged in resolution to
+herself. The whole of this scene is full of the most penetrating
+pathos; and did the drama not contain, in every page, indubitable
+evidence to me, that he has shadowed out in it himself his wife, and
+his mistress, this little interview would prove a vast deal in
+confirmation of the opinion so often expressed, that where his genius
+was most in its element, it was when it dealt with his own
+sensibilities and circumstances. It is impossible to read the
+following speech, without a conviction that it was written at Lady
+Byron:
+
+
+ My gentle, wrong'd Zarina!
+I am the very slave of circumstance
+And impulse--borne away with every breath!
+Misplaced upon the throne--misplaced in life.
+I know not what I could have been, but feel
+I am not what I should be--let it end.
+But take this with thee: if I was not form'd
+To prize a love like thine--a mind like thine--
+Nor dote even on thy beauty--as I've doted
+On lesser charms, for no cause save that such
+Devotion was a duty, and I hated
+All that look'd like a chain for me or others
+(This even rebellion must avouch); yet hear
+These words, perhaps among my last--that none
+E'er valued more thy virtues, though he knew not
+To profit by them.
+
+
+At Ravenna Cain was also written; a dramatic poem, in some degree,
+chiefly in its boldness, resembling the ancient mysteries of the
+monasteries before the secular stage was established. This
+performance, in point of conception, is of a sublime order. The
+object of the poem is to illustrate the energy and the art of Lucifer
+in accomplishing the ruin of the first-born. By an unfair
+misconception, the arguments of Lucifer have been represented as the
+sentiments of the author upon some imaginary warranty derived from
+the exaggerated freedom of his life; and yet the moral tendency of
+the reflections are framed in a mood of reverence as awful towards
+Omnipotence as the austere divinity of Milton. It would be
+presumption in me, however, to undertake the defence of any question
+in theology; but I have not been sensible to the imputed impiety,
+while I have felt in many passages influences that have their being
+amid the shadows and twilights of "old religion";
+
+
+ "Stupendous spirits
+That mock the pride of man, and people space
+With life and mystical predominance."
+
+
+The morning hymns and worship with which the mystery opens are grave,
+solemn, and scriptural, and the dialogue which follows with Cain is
+no less so: his opinion of the tree of life is, I believe, orthodox;
+but it is daringly expressed: indeed, all the sentiments ascribed to
+Cain are but the questions of the sceptics. His description of the
+approach of Lucifer would have shone in the Paradise Lost.
+
+
+ A shape like to the angels,
+Yet of a sterner and a sadder aspect,
+Of spiritual essence. Why do I quake?
+Why should I fear him more than other spirits
+Whom I see daily wave their fiery swords
+Before the gates round which I linger oft
+In twilight's hour, to catch a glimpse of those
+Gardens which are my just inheritance,
+Ere the night closes o'er the inhibited walls,
+And the immortal trees which overtop
+The cherubim-defended battlements?
+I shrink not from these, the fire-arm'd angels;
+Why should I quail from him who now approaches?
+Yet he seems mightier far than them, nor less
+Beauteous; and yet not all as beautiful
+As he hath been, or might be: sorrow seems
+Half of his immortality.
+
+
+There is something spiritually fine in this conception of the terror
+or presentiment of coming evil. The poet rises to the sublime in
+making Lucifer first inspire Cain with the knowledge of his
+immortality--a portion of truth which hath the efficacy of falsehood
+upon the victim; for Cain, feeling himself already unhappy, knowing
+that his being cannot be abridged, has the less scruple to desire to
+be as Lucifer, "mighty." The whole speech of Lucifer, beginning,
+
+
+Souls who dare use their immortality,
+
+
+is truly satanic; a daring and dreadful description given by
+everlasting despair of the Deity.
+
+But, notwithstanding its manifold immeasurable imaginations, Cain is
+only a polemical controversy, the doctrines of which might have been
+better discussed in the pulpit of a college chapel. As a poem it is
+greatly unequal; many passages consist of mere metaphysical
+disquisition, but there are others of wonderful scope and energy. It
+is a thing of doubts and dreams and reveries--dim and beautiful, yet
+withal full of terrors. The understanding finds nothing tangible;
+but amid dread and solemnity, sees only a shapen darkness with
+eloquent gestures. It is an argument invested with the language of
+oracles and omens, conceived in some religious trance, and addressed
+to spirits.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+
+
+Removal to Pisa--The Lanfranchi Palace--Affair with the Guard at
+Pisa--Removal to Monte Nero--Junction with Mr Hunt--Mr Shelley's
+Letter
+
+The unhappy distrusts and political jealousies of the times obliged
+Lord Byron, with the Gambas, the family of the Guiccioli, to remove
+from Ravenna to Pisa. In this compulsion he had no cause to
+complain; a foreigner meddling with the politics of the country in
+which he was only accidentally resident, could expect no deferential
+consideration from the government. It has nothing to do with the
+question whether his Lordship was right or wrong in his principles.
+The government was in the possession of the power, and in self-
+defence he could expect no other course towards him than what he did
+experience. He was admonished to retreat: he did so. Could he have
+done otherwise, he would not. He would have used the Austrian
+authority as ill as he was made to feel it did him.
+
+In the autumn of 1821, Lord Byron removed from Ravenna to Pisa, where
+he hired the Lanfranchi palace for a year--one of those massy marble
+piles which appear
+
+
+"So old, as if they had for ever stood--
+So strong, as if they would for ever stand!"
+
+
+Both in aspect and character it was interesting to the boding fancies
+of the noble tenant. It is said to have been constructed from a
+design of Michael Angelo; and in the grandeur of its features
+exhibits a bold and colossal style not unworthy of his genius.
+
+The Lanfranchi family, in the time of Dante, were distinguished in
+the factions of those days, and one of them has received his meed of
+immortality from the poet, as the persecutor of Ugolino. They are
+now extinct, and their traditionary reputation is illustrated by the
+popular belief in the neighbourhood, that their ghosts are restless,
+and still haunt their former gloomy and gigantic habitation.
+
+The building was too vast for the establishment of Lord Byron, and he
+occupied only the first floor.
+
+The life he led at this period was dull and unvaried. Billiards,
+conversations, reading, and occasionally writing, constituted the
+regular business of the day. In the cool of the afternoon, he
+sometimes went out in his carriage, oftener on horseback, and
+generally amused himself with pistol practice at a five-paul piece.
+He dined at half an hour after sunset, and then drove to Count
+Gamba's, where he passed several hours with the Countess Guiccioli,
+who at that time still resided with her father. On his return he
+read or wrote till the night was far spent, or rather till the
+morning was come again, sipping at intervals spirits diluted with
+water, as medicine to counteract some nephritic disorder to which he
+considered himself liable.
+
+Notwithstanding the tranquillity of this course of life, he was
+accidentally engaged in a transaction which threatened unpleasant
+consequences, and had a material effect on his comfort. On the 21st
+of March, 1822, as he was returning from his usual ride, in company
+with several of his friends, a hussar officer, at full speed, dashed
+through the party, and violently jostled one of them. Lord Byron,
+with his characteristic impetuosity, instantly pushed forwards, and
+the rest followed, and overtook the hussar. His Lordship inquired
+what he meant by the insult; but for answer, received the grossest
+abuse: on which he and one of his companions gave their cards, and
+passed on. The officer followed, hallooing, and threatening with his
+hand on his sabre. They were now near the Paggia gate. During this
+altercation, a common artilleryman interfered, and called out to the
+hussar, "Why don't you arrest them?--command us to arrest them."
+Upon which the officer gave the word to the guard at the gate. His
+Lordship, hearing the order, spurred his horse, and one of his party
+doing the same, they succeeded in forcing their way through the
+soldiers, while the gate was closed on the rest of the party, with
+whom an outrageous scuffle ensued.
+
+Lord Byron, on reaching his palace, gave directions to inform the
+police, and, not seeing his companions coming up, rode back towards
+the gate. On his way the hussar met him, and said, "Are you
+satisfied?"--"No: tell me your name!"--"Serjeant-major Masi." One
+of his Lordship's servants, who at this moment joined them, seized
+the hussar's horse by the bridle, but his master commanded him to let
+it go. The hussar then spurred his horse through the crowd, which by
+this time had collected in front of the Lanfranchi palace, and in the
+attempt was wounded by a pitchfork. Several of the servants were
+arrested, and imprisoned: and, during the investigation of the
+affair before the police, Lord Byron's house was surrounded by the
+dragoons belonging to Serjeant-major Masi's troop, who threatened to
+force the doors. The result upon these particulars was not just; all
+Lord Byron's Italian servants were banished from Pisa; and with them
+the father and brother of the Guiccioli, who had no concern whatever
+in the affair. Lord Byron himself was also advised to quit the town,
+and, as the Countess accompanied her father, he soon after joined
+them at Leghorn, and passed six weeks at Monte Nero, a country house
+in the vicinity of that city.
+
+It was during his Lordship's residence at Monte Nero, that an event
+took place--his junction with Mr Leigh Hunt--which had some effect
+both on his literary and his moral reputation. Previous to his
+departure from England, there had been some intercourse between them-
+-Byron had been introduced by Moore to Hunt, when the latter was
+suffering imprisonment for the indiscretion of his pen, and by his
+civility had encouraged him, perhaps, into some degree of
+forgetfulness as to their respective situations in society.--Mr Hunt
+at no period of their acquaintance appears to have been sufficiently
+sensible that a man of positive rank has it always in his power,
+without giving anything like such a degree of offence as may be
+resented otherwise than by estrangement, to inflict mortification,
+and, in consequence, presumed too much to an equality with his
+Lordship--at least this is the impression his conduct made upon me,
+from the familiarity of his dedicatory epistle prefixed to Rimini to
+their riding out at Pisa together dressed alike--"We had blue frock-
+coats, white waistcoats and trousers, and velvet caps, a la Raphael,
+and cut a gallant figure." I do not discover on the part of Lord
+Byron, that his Lordship ever forgot his rank; nor was he a personage
+likely to do so; in saying, therefore, that Mr Hunt presumed upon his
+condescension, I judge entirely by his own statement of facts. I am
+not undertaking a defence of his lordship, for the manner in which he
+acted towards Mr Hunt, because it appears to me to have been, in many
+respects, mean; but I do think there was an original error, a
+misconception of himself on the part of Mr Hunt, that drew down about
+him a degree of humiliation that he might, by more self-respect, have
+avoided. However, I shall endeavour to give as correct a summary of
+the whole affair as the materials before me will justify.
+
+The occasion of Hunt's removal to Italy will be best explained by
+quoting the letter from his friend Shelley, by which he was induced
+to take that obviously imprudent step.
+
+
+"Pisa, Aug. 26, 1821.
+
+"MY DEAREST FRIEND,--Since I last wrote to you, I have been on a
+visit to Lord Byron at Ravenna. The result of this visit was a
+determination on his part to come and live at Pisa, and I have taken
+the finest palace on the Lung' Arno for him. But the material part
+of my visit consists in a message which he desires me to give you,
+and which I think ought to add to your determination--for such a one
+I hope you have formed--of restoring your shattered health and
+spirits by a migration to these 'regions mild, of calm and serene
+air.'
+
+"He proposes that you should come, and go shares with him and me in a
+periodical work to be conducted here, in which each of the
+contracting parties should publish all their original compositions,
+and share the profits. He proposed it to Moore, but for some reason
+it was never brought to bear. There can be no doubt that the profits
+of any scheme in which you and Lord Byron engage must, for various
+yet co-operating reasons, be very great. As to myself, I am, for the
+present, only a sort of link between you and him, until you can know
+each other, and effectuate the arrangement; since (to intrust you
+with a secret, which for your sake I withhold from Lord Byron)
+nothing would induce me to share in the profits, and still less in
+the borrowed splendour of such a partnership. You and he, in
+different manners, would be equal, and would bring in a different
+manner, but in the same proportion, equal stocks of reputation and
+success. Do not let my frankness with you, nor my belief that you
+deserve it more than Lord Byron, have the effect of deterring you
+from assuming a station in modern literature, which the universal
+voice of my contemporaries forbids me either to stoop or aspire to.
+I am, and I desire to be, nothing.
+
+"I did not ask Lord Byron to assist me in sending a remittance for
+your journey; because there are men, however excellent, from whom we
+would never receive an obligation in the worldly sense of the word;
+and I am as jealous for my friend as for myself. I, as you know,
+have it not; but I suppose that at last I shall make up an impudent
+face, and ask Horace Smith to add to the many obligations he has
+conferred on me. I know I need only ask." . . .
+
+
+Now, before proceeding farther, it seems from this epistle, and there
+is no reason to question Shelley's veracity, that Lord Byron was the
+projector of The Liberal; that Hunt's political notoriety was
+mistaken for literary reputation, and that there was a sad lack of
+common sense in the whole scheme.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+
+
+Mr Hunt arrives in Italy--Meeting with Lord Byron--Tumults in the
+House--Arrangements for Mr Hunt's Family---Extent of his Obligations
+to Lord Byron--Their Copartnery--Meanness of the whole Business
+
+On receiving Mr Shelley's letter, Mr Hunt prepared to avail himself
+of the invitation which he was the more easily enabled to do, as his
+friend, notwithstanding what he had intimated, borrowed two hundred
+pounds from Lord Byron, and remitted to him. He reached Leghorn soon
+after his Lordship had taken up his temporary residence at Monte
+Nero.
+
+The meeting with his Lordship was in so many respects remarkable,
+that the details of it cannot well be omitted. The day was very hot;
+and when Hunt reached the house he found the hottest-looking
+habitation he had ever seen. Not content with having a red wash over
+it, the red was the most unseasonable of all reds--a salmon-colour;
+but the greatest of all heats was within.
+
+Lord Byron was grown so fat that he scarcely knew him; and was
+dressed in a loose nankeen jacket and white trousers, his neckcloth
+open, and his hair in thin ringlets about his throat; altogether
+presenting a very different aspect from the compact, energetic, and
+curly-headed person whom Hunt had known in England.
+
+His Lordship took the stranger into an inner room, and introduced him
+to a young lady who was in a state of great agitation. This was the
+Guiccioli; presently her brother also, in great agitation, entered,
+having his arm in a sling. This scene and confusion had arisen from
+a quarrel among the servants, in which the young Count, having
+interfered, had been stabbed. He was very angry, the Countess was
+more so, and would not listen to the comments of Lord Byron, who was
+for making light of the matter. Indeed, it looked somewhat serious,
+for though the stab was not much, the inflicter threatened more, and
+was at that time revengefully keeping watch, with knotted brows,
+under the portico, with the avowed intention of assaulting the first
+person who issued forth. He was a sinister-looking, meager caitiff,
+with a red cap--gaunt, ugly, and unshaven; his appearance altogether
+more squalid and miserable than Englishmen would conceive it possible
+to find in such an establishment. An end, however, was put to the
+tragedy by the fellow throwing himself on a bench, and bursting into
+tears--wailing and asking pardon for his offence, and perfecting his
+penitence by requesting Lord Byron to kiss him in token of
+forgiveness. In the end, however, he was dismissed; and it being
+arranged that Mr Hunt should move his family to apartments in the
+Lanfranchi palace at Pisa, that gentleman returned to Leghorn.
+
+The account which Mr Hunt has given, in his memoir of Lord Byron, is
+evidently written under offended feeling; and, in consequence, though
+he does not appear to have been much indebted to the munificence of
+his Lordship, the tendency is to make his readers sensible that he
+was, if not ill used, disappointed. The Casa Lanfranchi was a huge
+and gaunt building, capable, without inconvenience or intermixture,
+of accommodating several families. It was, therefore, not a great
+favour in his Lordship, considering that he had invited Mr Hunt from
+England, to become a partner with him in a speculation purely
+commercial, to permit him to occupy the ground-floor or flat, as it
+would be called in Scotland. The apartments being empty, furniture
+was necessary, and the plainest was provided; good of its kind and
+respectable, it yet could not have cost a great deal. It was chosen
+by Mr Shelley, who intended to make a present of it to Mr Hunt; but
+when the apartments were fitted up, Lord Byron insisted upon paying
+the account, and to that extent Mr Hunt incurred a pecuniary
+obligation to his Lordship. The two hundred pounds already mentioned
+was a debt to Mr Shelley, who borrowed the money from Lord Byron.
+
+Soon after Mr Hunt's family were settled in their new lodgings,
+Shelley returned to Leghorn, with the intention of taking a sea
+excursion--in the course of which he was lost: Lord Byron knowing
+how much Hunt was dependent on that gentleman, immediately offered
+him the command of his purse, and requested to be considered as
+standing in the place of Shelley, his particular friend. This was
+both gentlemanly and generous, and the offer was accepted, but with
+feelings neither just nor gracious: "Stern necessity and a large
+family compelled me," says Mr Hunt, "and during our residence at Pisa
+I had from him, or rather from his steward, to whom he always sent me
+for the money, and who doled it out to me as if my disgraces were
+being counted, the sum of seventy pounds."
+
+"This sum," he adds, "together with the payment of our expenses when
+we accompanied him from Pisa to Genoa, and thirty pounds with which
+he enabled us subsequently to go from Genoa to Florence, was all the
+money I ever received from Lord Byron, exclusive of the two hundred
+pounds, which, in the first instance, he made a debt of Mr Shelley,
+by taking his bond."--The whole extent of the pecuniary obligation
+appears certainly not to have exceeded five hundred pounds; no great
+sum--but little or great, the manner in which it was recollected
+reflects no credit either on the head or heart of the debtor.
+
+Mr Hunt, in extenuation of the bitterness with which he has spoken on
+the subject, says, that "Lord Byron made no scruple of talking very
+freely of me and mine." It may, therefore, be possible, that Mr Hunt
+had cause for his resentment, and to feel the humiliation of being
+under obligations to a mean man; at the same time Lord Byron, on his
+side, may upon experience have found equal reason to repent of his
+connection with Mr Hunt. And it is certain that each has sought to
+justify, both to himself and to the world, the rupture of a
+copartnery which ought never to have been formed. But his Lordship's
+conduct is the least justifiable. He had allured Hunt to Italy with
+flattering hopes; he had a perfect knowledge of his hampered
+circumstances, and he was thoroughly aware that, until their
+speculation became productive, he must support him. To the extent of
+about five hundred pounds he did so: a trifle, considering the
+glittering anticipations of their scheme.
+
+Viewing their copartnery, however, as a mere commercial speculation,
+his Lordship's advance could not be regarded as liberal, and no
+modification of the term munificence or patronage could be applied to
+it. But, unless he had harassed Hunt for the repayment of the money,
+which does not appear to have been the case, nor could he morally,
+perhaps even legally, have done so, that gentleman had no cause to
+complain. The joint adventure was a failure, and except a little
+repining on the part of the one for the loss of his advance, and of
+grudging on that of the other for the waste of his time, no sharper
+feeling ought to have arisen between them. But vanity was mingled
+with their golden dreams. Lord Byron mistook Hunt's political
+notoriety for literary reputation, and Mr Hunt thought it was a fine
+thing to be chum and partner with so renowned a lord. After all,
+however, the worst which can be said of it is, that formed in
+weakness it could produce only vexation.
+
+But the dissolution of the vapour with which both parties were so
+intoxicated, and which led to their quarrel, might have occasioned
+only amusement to the world, had it not left an ignoble stigma on the
+character of Lord Byron, and given cause to every admirer of his
+genius to deplore, that he should have so forgotten his dignity and
+fame.
+
+There is no disputing the fact, that his Lordship, in conceiving the
+plan of The Liberal, was actuated by sordid motives, and of the
+basest kind, inasmuch as it was intended that the popularity of the
+work should rest upon satire; or, in other words, on the ability to
+be displayed by it in the art of detraction. Being disappointed in
+his hopes of profit, he shuffled out of the concern as meanly as any
+higgler could have done who had found himself in a profitless
+business with a disreputable partner. There is no disguising this
+unvarnished truth; and though his friends did well in getting the
+connection ended as quickly as possible, they could not eradicate the
+original sin of the transaction, nor extinguish the consequences
+which it of necessity entailed. Let me not, however, be
+misunderstood: my objection to the conduct of Byron does not lie
+against the wish to turn his extraordinary talents to profitable
+account, but to the mode in which he proposed to, and did, employ
+them. Whether Mr Hunt was or was not a fit copartner for one of his
+Lordship's rank and celebrity, I do not undertake to judge; but any
+individual was good enough for that vile prostitution of his genius,
+to which, in an unguarded hour, he submitted for money. Indeed, it
+would be doing injustice to compare the motives of Mr Hunt in the
+business with those by which Lord Byron was infatuated. He put
+nothing to hazard; happen what might, he could not be otherwise than
+a gainer; for if profit failed, it could not be denied that the
+"foremost" poet of all the age had discerned in him either the
+promise or the existence of merit, which he was desirous of
+associating with his own. This advantage Mr Hunt did gain by the
+connection; and it is his own fault that he cannot be recollected as
+the associate of Byron, but only as having attempted to deface his
+monument.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+
+
+Mr Shelley--Sketch of his Life--His Death--The Burning of his Body,
+and the Return of the Mourners
+
+It has been my study in writing these sketches to introduce as few
+names as the nature of the work would admit of; but Lord Byron
+connected himself with persons who had claims to public consideration
+on account of their talents; and, without affectation, it is not easy
+to avoid taking notice of his intimacy with some of them, especially,
+if in the course of it any circumstance came to pass which was in
+itself remarkable, or likely to have produced an impression on his
+Lordship's mind. His friendship with Mr Shelley, mentioned in the
+preceding chapter, was an instance of this kind.
+
+That unfortunate gentleman was undoubtedly a man of genius--full of
+ideal beauty and enthusiasm. And yet there was some defect in his
+understanding by which he subjected himself to the accusation of
+atheism. In his dispositions he is represented to have been ever
+calm and amiable; and but for his metaphysical errors and reveries,
+and a singular incapability of conceiving the existing state of
+things as it practically affects the nature and condition of man, to
+have possessed many of the gentlest qualities of humanity. He highly
+admired the endowments of Lord Byron, and in return was esteemed by
+his Lordship; but even had there been neither sympathy nor friendship
+between them, his premature fate could not but have saddened Byron
+with no common sorrow.
+
+Mr Shelley was some years younger than his noble friend; he was the
+eldest son of Sir Timothy Shelley, Bart., of Castle Goring, Sussex.
+At the age of thirteen he was sent to Eton, where he rarely mixed in
+the common amusements of the other boys; but was of a shy, reserved
+disposition, fond of solitude, and made few friends. He was not
+distinguished for his proficiency in the regular studies of the
+school; on the contrary, he neglected them for German and chemistry.
+His abilities were superior, but deteriorated by eccentricity. At
+the age of sixteen he was sent to the University of Oxford, where he
+soon distinguished himself by publishing a pamphlet, under the absurd
+and world-defying title of The Necessity of Atheism; for which he was
+expelled from the University.
+
+The event proved fatal to his prospects in life; and the treatment he
+received from his family was too harsh to win him from error. His
+father, however, in a short time relented, and he was received home;
+but he took so little trouble to conciliate the esteem of his
+friends, that he found the house uncomfortable, and left it. He then
+went to London; where he eloped with a young lady to Gretna Green.
+Their united ages amounted to thirty-two; and the match being deemed
+unsuitable to his rank and prospects, it so exasperated his father,
+that he broke off all communication with him.
+
+After their marriage the young couple resided some time in Edinburgh.
+They then passed over to Ireland, which being in a state of
+disturbance, Shelley took a part in politics, more reasonable than
+might have been expected. He inculcated moderation.
+
+About this tune he became devoted to the cultivation of his poetical
+talents; but his works were sullied with the erroneous inductions of
+an understanding which, inasmuch as he regarded all the existing
+world in the wrong, must be considered as having been either
+shattered or defective.
+
+His rash marriage proved, of course, an unhappy one. After the birth
+of two children, a separation, by mutual consent, took place, and Mrs
+Shelley committed suicide.
+
+He then married a daughter of Mr Godwin, the author of Caleb
+Williams, and they resided for some time at Great Marlow, in
+Buckinghamshire, much respected for their charity. In the meantime,
+his irreligious opinions had attracted public notice, and, in
+consequence of his unsatisfactory notions of the Deity, his children,
+probably at the instance of his father, were taken from him by a
+decree of the Lord Chancellor: an event which, with increasing
+pecuniary embarrassments, induced him to quit England, with the
+intention of never returning.
+
+Being in Switzerland when Lord Byron, after his domestic
+tribulations, arrived at Geneva, they became acquainted. He then
+crossed the Alps, and again at Venice renewed his friendship with his
+Lordship; he thence passed to Rome, where he resided some time; and
+after visiting Naples, fixed his permanent residence in Tuscany. His
+acquirements were constantly augmenting, and he was without question
+an accomplished person. He was, however, more of a metaphysician
+than a poet, though there are splendid specimens of poetical thought
+in his works. As a man, he was objected to only on account of his
+speculative opinions; for he possessed many amiable qualities, was
+just in his intentions, and generous to excess.
+
+When he had seen Mr Hunt established in the Casa Lanfranchi with Lord
+Byron at Pisa, Mr Shelley returned to Leghorn, for the purpose of
+taking a sea excursion; an amusement to which he was much attached.
+During a violent storm the boat was swamped, and the party on board
+were all drowned. Their bodies were, however, afterwards cast on
+shore; Mr Shelley's was found near Via Reggio, and, being greatly
+decomposed, and unfit to be removed, it was determined to reduce the
+remains to ashes, that they might be carried to a place of sepulture.
+Accordingly preparations were made for the burning.
+
+Wood in abundance was found on the shore, consisting of old trees and
+the wreck of vessels: the spot itself was well suited for the
+ceremony. The magnificent bay of Spezzia was on the right, and
+Leghorn on the left, at equal distances of about two-and-twenty
+miles. The headlands project boldly far into the sea; in front lie
+several islands, and behind dark forests and the cliffy Apennines.
+Nothing was omitted that could exalt and dignify the mournful rites
+with the associations of classic antiquity; frankincense and wine
+were not forgotten. The weather was serene and beautiful, and the
+pacified ocean was silent, as the flame rose with extraordinary
+brightness. Lord Byron was present; but he should himself have
+described the scene and what he felt.
+
+These antique obsequies were undoubtedly affecting; but the return of
+the mourners from the burning is the most appalling orgia, without
+the horror of crime, of which I have ever heard. When the duty was
+done, and the ashes collected, they dined and drank much together,
+and bursting from the calm mastery with which they had repressed
+their feelings during the solemnity, gave way to frantic exultation.
+They were all drunk; they sang, they shouted, and their barouche was
+driven like a whirlwind through the forest. I can conceive nothing
+descriptive of the demoniac revelry of that flight, but scraps of the
+dead man's own song of Faust, Mephistophiles, and Ignis Fatuus, in
+alternate chorus.
+
+
+The limits of the sphere of dream,
+ The bounds of true and false are past;
+Lead us on, thou wand'ring Gleam;
+ Lead us onwards, far and fast,
+To the wide, the desert waste.
+
+But see how swift, advance and shift,
+ Trees behind trees--row by row,
+Now clift by clift, rocks bend and lift,
+ Their frowning foreheads as we go;
+The giant-snouted crags, ho! ho!
+ How they snort, and how they blow.
+Honour her to whom honour is due,
+Old mother Baubo, honour to you.
+An able sow with old Baubo upon her
+Is worthy of glory and worthy of honour.
+
+The way is wide, the way is long,
+But what is that for a Bedlam throng?
+Some on a ram, and some on a prong,
+On poles and on broomsticks we flutter along.
+
+Every trough will be boat enough,
+With a rag for a sail, we can sweep through the sky.
+Who flies not to-night, when means he to fly?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL
+
+
+
+"The Two Foscari"--"Werner"--"The Deformed Transformed"--"Don Juan"--
+"The Liberal"--Removes from Pisa to Genoa
+
+I have never heard exactly where the tragedy of The Two Foscari was
+written: that it was imagined in Venice is probable. The subject
+is, perhaps, not very fit for a drama, for it has no action; but it
+is rich in tragic materials, revenge and affection, and the
+composition is full of the peculiar stuff of the poet's own mind.
+The exulting sadness with which Jacopo Foscari looks in the first
+scene from the window, on the Adriatic, is Byron himself recalling
+his enjoyment of the sea.
+
+
+ How many a time have I
+Cloven with arm still lustier, heart more daring,
+The wave all roughen'd: with a swimmer's stroke
+Flinging the billows back from my drench'd hair,
+And laughing from my lip th' audacious brine
+Which kiss'd it like a wine-cup.
+
+
+The whole passage, both prelude and remainder, glows with the
+delicious recollections of laying and revelling in the summer waves.
+But the exile's feeling is no less beautifully given and appropriate
+to the author's condition, far more so, indeed, than to that of
+Jacopo Foscari.
+
+
+ Had I gone forth
+From my own land, like the old patriarchs, seeking
+Another region with their flocks and herds;
+Had I been cast out like the Jews from Zion,
+Or like our fathers driven by Attila
+From fertile Italy to barren islets,
+I would have given some tears to my late country,
+And many thoughts; but afterward address'd
+Myself to those about me, to create
+A new home and first state.
+
+
+What follows is still more pathetic:
+
+
+ Ay--we but hear
+Of the survivors' toil in their new lands,
+Their numbers and success; but who can number
+The hearts which broke in silence of that parting,
+Or after their departure; of that malady {291a}
+Which calls up green and native fields to view
+From the rough deep with such identity
+To the poor exile's fever'd eye, that he
+Can scarcely be restrained from treading them?
+That melody {291b} which out of tones and tunes
+Collects such pastime for the ling'ring sorrow
+Of the sad mountaineer, when far away
+From his snow-canopy of cliffs and clouds,
+That he feeds on the sweet but poisonous thought
+And dies.--You call this weakness! It is strength,
+I say--the parent of all honest feeling:
+He who loves not his country can love nothing.
+
+MARINA
+
+Obey her then, 'tis she that puts thee forth.
+
+JACOPO FOSCARI
+
+Ay, there it is. 'Tis like a mother's curse
+Upon my soul--the mark is set upon me.
+The exiles you speak of went forth by nations;
+Their hands upheld each other by the way;
+Their tents were pitch'd together--I'm alone--
+ Ah, you never yet
+Were far away from Venice--never saw
+Her beautiful towers in the receding distance,
+While every furrow of the vessel's track
+Seem'd ploughing deep into your heart; you never
+Saw day go down upon your native spires
+So calmly with its gold and crimson glory,
+And after dreaming a disturbed vision
+Of them and theirs, awoke and found them not.
+
+
+All this speaks of the voluntary exile's own regrets, and awakens
+sympathy for the anguish which pride concealed, but unable to
+repress, gave vent to in the imagined sufferings of one that was to
+him as Hecuba.
+
+It was at Pisa that Werner, or The Inheritance, a tragedy, was
+written, or at least completed. It is taken entirely from the
+German's tale, Kruitzner, published many years before, by one of the
+Miss Lees, in their Canterbury Tales. So far back as 1815, Byron
+began a drama upon the same subject, and nearly completed an act when
+he was interrupted. "I have adopted," he says himself, "the
+characters, plan, and even the language of many parts of this story";
+an acknowledgment which exempts it from that kind of criticism to
+which his principal works are herein subjected.
+
+But The Deformed Transformed, which was also written at Pisa, is,
+though confessedly an imitation of Goethe's Faust, substantially an
+original work. In the opinion of Mr Moore, it probably owes
+something to the author's painful sensibility to the defect in his
+own foot; an accident which must, from the acuteness with which he
+felt it, have essentially contributed to enable him to comprehend and
+to express the envy of those afflicted with irremediable exceptions
+to the ordinary course of fortune, or who have been amerced by nature
+of their fair proportions. But save only a part of the first scene,
+the sketch will not rank among the felicitous works of the poet. It
+was intended to be a satire--probably, at least--but it is only a
+fragment--a failure.
+
+Hitherto I have not noticed Don Juan otherwise than incidentally. It
+was commenced in Venice, and afterward continued at intervals to the
+end of the sixteenth canto, until the author left Pisa, when it was
+not resumed, at least no more has been published. Strong objections
+have been made to its moral tendency; but, in the opinion of many, it
+is the poet's masterpiece, and undoubtedly it displays all the
+variety of his powers, combined with a quaint playfulness not found
+to an equal degree in any other of his works. The serious and
+pathetic portions are exquisitely beautiful; the descriptive have all
+the distinctness of the best pictures in Childe Harold, and are,
+moreover, generally drawn from nature, while the satire is for the
+most part curiously associated and sparklingly witty. The characters
+are sketched with amazing firmness and freedom, and though sometimes
+grotesque, are yet not often overcharged. It is professedly an epic
+poem, but it may be more properly described as a poetical novel. Nor
+can it be said to inculcate any particular moral, or to do more than
+unmantle the decorum of society. Bold and buoyant throughout, it
+exhibits a free irreverent knowledge of the world, laughing or
+mocking as the thought serves, in the most unexpected antitheses to
+the proprieties of time, place, and circumstance.
+
+The object of the poem is to describe the progress of a libertine
+through life, not an unprincipled prodigal, whose profligacy, growing
+with his growth, and strengthening with his strength, passes from
+voluptuous indulgence into the sordid sensuality of systematic
+debauchery, but a young gentleman, who, whirled by the vigour and
+vivacity of his animal spirits into a world of adventures, in which
+his stars are chiefly in fault for his liaisons, settles at last into
+an honourable lawgiver, a moral speaker on divorce bills, and
+possibly a subscriber to the Society for the Suppression of Vice.
+The author has not completed his design, but such appears to have
+been the drift of it, affording ample opportunities to unveil the
+foibles and follies of all sorts of men--and women too. It is
+generally supposed to contain much of the author's own experience,
+but still, with all its riant knowledge of bowers and boudoirs, it is
+deficient as a true limning of the world, by showing man as if he
+were always ruled by one predominant appetite.
+
+In the character of Donna Inez and Don Jose, it has been imagined
+that Lord Byron has sketched himself and his lady. It may be so; and
+if it were, he had by that time got pretty well over the lachrymation
+of their parting. It is no longer doubtful that the twenty-seventh
+stanza records a biographical fact, and the thirty-sixth his own
+feelings, when,
+
+
+Poor fellow! he had many things to wound him,
+Let's own, since it can do no good on earth;
+It was a trying moment that which found him
+Standing alone beside his desolate hearth,
+Where all his household gods lay shiver'd round him:
+No choice was left his feelings or his pride,
+Save death or Doctors' Commons.
+
+
+It has been already mentioned, that while the poet was at Dr
+Glennie's academy at Dulwich, he read an account of a shipwreck,
+which has been supposed to have furnished some of the most striking
+incidents in the description of the disastrous voyage in the second
+canto in Don Juan. I have not seen that work; but whatever Lord
+Byron may have found in it suitable to his purpose, he has
+undoubtedly made good use of his grandfather's adventures. The
+incident of the spaniel is related by the admiral.
+
+In the licence of Don Juan, the author seems to have considered that
+his wonted accuracy might be dispensed with.
+
+The description of Haidee applies to an Albanian, not a Greek girl.
+The splendour of her father's house is altogether preposterous; and
+the island has no resemblance to those of the Cyclades. With the
+exception of Zea, his Lordship, however, did not visit them. Some
+degree of error and unlike description, runs indeed through the whole
+of the still life around the portrait of Haidee. The fete which
+Lambro discovers on his return, is, however, prettily described; and
+the dance is as perfect as true.
+
+
+And farther on a group of Grecian girls,
+The first and tallest her white kerchief waving,
+Were strung together like a row of pearls,
+Link'd hand in hand and dancing; each too having
+Down her white neck long floating auburn curls.
+Their leader sang, and bounded to her song,
+With choral step and voice, the virgin throng.
+
+
+The account of Lambro proceeding to the house is poetically imagined;
+and, in his character, may be traced a vivid likeness of Ali Pasha,
+and happy illustrative allusions to the adventures of that chief.
+
+The fourth canto was written at Ravenna; it is so said within itself;
+and the description of Dante's sepulchre there may be quoted for its
+truth, and the sweet modulation of the moral reflection interwoven
+with it.
+
+
+I pass each day where Dante's bones are laid;
+A little cupola, more neat than solemn,
+Protects his dust; but reverence here is paid
+To the bard's tomb and not the warrior's column.
+The time must come when both alike decay'd,
+The chieftain's trophy and the poet's volume
+Will sink where lie the songs and wars of earth,
+Before Pelides' death or Homer's birth.
+
+
+The fifth canto was also written in Ravenna. But it is not my
+intention to analyze this eccentric and meandering poem; a
+composition which cannot be well estimated by extracts. Without,
+therefore, dwelling at greater length on its variety and merits. I
+would only observe that the general accuracy of the poet's
+descriptions is verified by that of the scenes in which Juan is
+placed in England, a point the reader may determine for himself;
+while the vagueness of the parts derived from books, or sketched from
+fancy, as contrasted with them, justifies the opinion, that invention
+was not the most eminent faculty of Byron, either in scenes or in
+characters. Of the demerits of the poem it is only necessary to
+remark, that it has been proscribed on account of its immorality;
+perhaps, however, there was more of prudery than of equity in the
+decision, at least it is liable to be so considered, so long as
+reprints are permitted of the older dramatists, with all their
+unpruned licentiousness.
+
+But the wheels of Byron's destiny were now hurrying. Both in the
+conception and composition of Don Juan he evinced an increasing
+disregard of the world's opinion; and the project of The Liberal was
+still more fatal to his reputation. Not only were the invidious eyes
+of bigotry now eagerly fixed upon his conduct, but those of
+admiration were saddened and turned away from him. His principles,
+which would have been more correctly designated as paradoxes, were
+objects of jealousy to the Tuscan Government; and it has been already
+seen that there was a disorderliness about the Casa Lanfranchi which
+attracted the attention of the police. His situation in Pisa became,
+in consequence, irksome; and he resolved to remove to Genoa, an
+intention which he carried into effect about the end of September,
+1822, at which period his thoughts began to gravitate towards Greece.
+Having attained to the summit of his literary eminence, he grew
+ambitious of trying fortune in another field of adventure.
+
+In all the migrations of Lord Byron there was ever something
+grotesque and desultory. In moving from Ravenna to Pisa, his caravan
+consisted of seven servants, five carriages, nine horses, a monkey, a
+bulldog, and a mastiff, two cats, three peafowl, a harem of hens,
+books, saddles, and firearms, with a chaos of furniture nor was the
+exodus less fantastical; for in addition to all his own clanjamphry,
+he had Mr Hunt's miscellaneous assemblage of chattels and chattery
+and little ones.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI
+
+
+
+Genoa--Change in the Manners of Lord Byron--Residence at the Casa
+Saluzzi--"The Liberal"--Remarks on the Poet's Works in general and on
+Hunt's Strictures on his Character
+
+Previously to their arrival at Genoa, a house had been taken for Lord
+Byron and the Guiccioli in Albaro, a pleasant village on a hill, in
+the vicinity of the city; it was the Casa Saluzzi, and I have been
+told, that during the time he resided there, he seemed to enjoy a
+more uniform and temperate gaiety than in any former period of his
+life. There might have been less of sentiment in his felicity, than
+when he lived at Ravenna, as he seldom wrote poetry, but he appeared
+to some of his occasional visitors, who knew him in London, to have
+become more agreeable and manly. I may add, at the risk of sarcasm
+for the vanity, that in proof of his mellowed temper towards me,
+besides the kind frankness with which he received my friend, as
+already mentioned, he sent me word, by the Earl of Blesinton, that he
+had read my novel of The Entail three times, and thought the old
+Leddy Grippy one of the most living-like heroines he had ever met
+with. This was the more agreeable, as I had heard within the same
+week, that Sir Walter Scott had done and said nearly the same thing.
+Half the compliment from two such men would be something to be proud
+of.
+
+Lord Byron's residence at Albaro was separate from that of Mr Hunt,
+and, in consequence, they were more rarely together than when
+domiciled under the same roof as at Pisa. Indeed, by this time, if
+one may take Mr Hunt's own account of the matter, they appear to have
+become pretty well tired of each other. He had found out that a peer
+is, as a friend, but as a plebeian, and a great poet not always a
+high-minded man. His Lordship had, on his part, discovered that
+something more than smartness or ingenuity is necessary to protect
+patronage from familiarity. Perhaps intimate acquaintance had also
+tended to enable him to appreciate, with greater accuracy, the
+meretricious genius and artificial tastes of his copartner in The
+Liberal. It is certain that he laughed at his affected admiration of
+landscapes, and considered his descriptions of scenery as drawn from
+pictures.
+
+One day, as a friend of mine was conversing with his Lordship at the
+Casa Saluzzi, on the moral impressions of magnificent scenery, he
+happened to remark that he thought the view of the Alps in the
+evening, from Turin, the sublimest scene he had ever beheld. "It is
+impossible," said he, "at such a time, when all the west is golden
+and glowing behind them, to contemplate such vast masses of the Deity
+without being awed into rest, and forgetting such things as man and
+his follies."--"Hunt," said his Lordship, smiling, "has no perception
+of the sublimity of Alpine scenery; he calls a mountain a great
+impostor."
+
+In the mean time the materials for the first number of The Liberal
+had been transmitted to London, where the manuscript of The Vision of
+Judgment was already, and something of its quality known. All his
+Lordship's friends were disturbed at the idea of the publication.
+They did not like the connection he had formed with Mr Shelley--they
+liked still less the copartnery with Mr Hunt. With the justice or
+injustice of these dislikes I have nothing to do. It is an
+historical fact that they existed, and became motives with those who
+deemed themselves the custodiers of his Lordship's fame, to seek a
+dissolution of the association.
+
+The first number of The Liberal, containing The Vision of Judgment,
+was received soon after the copartnery had established themselves at
+Genoa, accompanied with hopes and fears. Much good could not be
+anticipated from a work which outraged the loyal and decorous
+sentiments of the nation towards the memory of George III. To the
+second number Lord Byron contributed the Heaven and Earth, a sacred
+drama, which has been much misrepresented in consequence of its
+fraternity with Don Juan and The Vision of Judgment; for it contains
+no expression to which religion can object, nor breathes a thought at
+variance with the Genesis. The history of literature affords no
+instance of a condemnation less justifiable, on the plea of
+profanity, than that of this Mystery. That it abounds in literary
+blemishes, both of plan and language, and that there are harsh
+jangles and discords in the verse, is not disputed; but still it
+abounds in a grave patriarchal spirit, and is echo to the oracles of
+Adam and Melchisedek. It may not be worthy of Lord Byron's genius,
+but it does him no dishonour, and contains passages which accord with
+the solemn diapasons of ancient devotion. The disgust which The
+Vision of Judgment had produced, rendered it easy to persuade the
+world that there was impiety in the Heaven and Earth, although, in
+point of fact, it may be described as hallowed with the Scriptural
+theology of Milton. The objections to its literary defects were
+magnified into sins against worship and religion.
+
+The Liberal stopped with the fourth number, I believe. It
+disappointed not merely literary men in general, but even the most
+special admirers of the talents of the contributors. The main defect
+of the work was a lack of knowledge. Neither in style nor genius,
+nor even in general ability, was it wanting; but where it showed
+learning it was not of a kind in which the age took much interest.
+Moreover, the manner and cast of thinking of all the writers in it
+were familiar to the public, and they were too few in number to
+variegate their pages with sufficient novelty. But the main cause of
+the failure was the antipathy formed and fostered against it before
+it appeared. It was cried down, and it must be acknowledged that it
+did not much deserve a better fate.
+
+With The Liberal I shall close my observations on the works of Lord
+Byron. They are too voluminous to be examined even in the brief and
+sketchy manner in which I have considered those which are deemed the
+principal. Besides, they are not, like them, all characteristic of
+the author, though possessing great similarity in style and thought
+to one another. Nor would such general criticism accord with the
+plan of this work. Lord Byron was not always thinking of himself;
+like other authors, he sometimes wrote from imaginary circumstances;
+and often fancied both situations and feelings which had no reference
+to his own, nor to his experience. But were the matter deserving of
+the research, I am persuaded, that with Mr Moore's work, and the
+poet's original journals, notes, and letters, innumerable additions
+might be made to the list of passages which the incidents of his own
+life dictated.
+
+The abandonment of The Liberal closed his Lordship's connection with
+Mr Hunt; their friendship, if such ever really existed, was ended
+long before. It is to be regretted that Byron has not given some
+account of it himself; for the manner in which he is represented to
+have acted towards his unfortunate partner, renders another version
+of the tale desirable. At the same time--and I am not one of those
+who are disposed to magnify the faults and infirmities of Byron--I
+fear there is no excess of truth in Hunt's opinion of him. I judge
+by an account which Lord Byron gave himself to a mutual friend, who
+did not, however, see the treatment in exactly the same light as that
+in which it appeared to me. But, while I cannot regard his
+Lordship's conduct as otherwise than unworthy, still the pains which
+Mr Hunt has taken to elaborate his character and dispositions into
+every modification of weakness, almost justifies us in thinking that
+he was treated according to his deserts. Byron had at least the
+manners of a gentleman, and though not a judicious knowledge of the
+world, he yet possessed prudence enough not to be always unguarded.
+Mr Hunt informs us, that when he joined his Lordship at Leghorn, his
+own health was impaired, and that his disease rather increased than
+diminished during his residence at Pisa and Genoa; to say nothing of
+the effect which the loss of his friend had on him, and the
+disappointment he suffered in The Liberal; some excuse may,
+therefore, be made for him. In such a condition, misapprehensions
+were natural; jocularity might be mistaken for sarcasm, and caprice
+felt as insolence.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII
+
+
+
+Lord Byron resolves to join the Greeks--Arrives at Cephalonia--Greek
+Factions--Sends Emissaries to the Grecian Chiefs--Writes to London
+about the Loan--To Mavrocordato on the Dissensions--Embarks at lest
+for Missolonghi
+
+While The Liberal was halting onward to its natural doom, the
+attention of Lord Byron was attracted towards the struggles of
+Greece.
+
+In that country his genius was first effectually developed; his name
+was associated with many of its most romantic scenes, and the cause
+was popular with all the educated and refined of Europe. He had
+formed besides a personal attachment to the land, and perhaps many of
+his most agreeable local associations were fixed amid the ruins of
+Greece, and in her desolated valleys. The name is indeed alone
+calculated to awaken the noblest feelings of humanity. The spirit of
+her poets, the wisdom and the heroism of her worthies; whatever is
+splendid in genius, unparalleled in art, glorious in arms, and wise
+in philosophy, is associated in their highest excellence with that
+beautiful region.
+
+Had Lord Byron never been in Greece, he was, undoubtedly, one of
+those men whom the resurrection of her spirit was likeliest to
+interest; but he was not also one fitted to do her cause much
+service. His innate indolence, his sedentary habits, and that all-
+engrossing consideration for himself, which, in every situation,
+marred his best impulses, were shackles upon the practice of the
+stern bravery in himself which he has so well expressed in his works.
+
+It was expected when he sailed for Greece, nor was the expectation
+unreasonable with those who believe imagination and passion to be of
+the same element, that the enthusiasm which flamed so highly in his
+verse was the spirit of action, and would prompt him to undertake
+some great enterprise. But he was only an artist; he could describe
+bold adventures and represent high feeling, as other gifted
+individuals give eloquence to canvas and activity to marble; but he
+did not possess the wisdom necessary for the instruction of councils.
+I do, therefore, venture to say, that in embarking for Greece, he was
+not entirely influenced by such exoterical motives as the love of
+glory or the aspirations of heroism. His laurels had for some time
+ceased to flourish, the sear and yellow, the mildew and decay, had
+fallen upon them, and he was aware that the bright round of his fame
+was ovalling from the full and showing the dim rough edge of waning.
+
+He was, moreover, tired of the Guiccioli, and again afflicted with a
+desire for some new object with which to be in earnest. The Greek
+cause seemed to offer this, and a better chance for distinction than
+any other pursuit in which he could then engage. In the spring of
+1823 he accordingly made preparations for transferring himself from
+Genoa to Greece, and opened a correspondence with the leaders of the
+insurrection, that the importance of his adhesion might be duly
+appreciated.
+
+Greece, with a fair prospect of ultimate success, was at that time as
+distracted in her councils as ever. Her arms had been victorious,
+but the ancient jealousy of the Greek mind was unmitigated. The
+third campaign had commenced, and yet no regular government had been
+organized; the fiscal resources of the country were neglected: a
+wild energy against the Ottomans was all that the Greeks could depend
+on for continuing the war.
+
+Lord Byron arrived in Cephalonia about the middle of August, 1823,
+where he fixed his residence for some time. This was prudent, but it
+said nothing for that spirit of enterprise with which a man engaging
+in such a cause, in such a country, and with such a people, ought to
+have been actuated--especially after Marco Botzaris, one of the best
+and most distinguished of the chiefs, had earnestly urged him to join
+him at Missolonghi. I fear that I may not be able to do justice to
+Byron's part in the affairs of Greece; but I shall try. He did not
+disappoint me, for he only acted as might have been expected, from
+his unsteady energies. Many, however, of his other friends longed in
+vain to hear of that blaze of heroism, by which they anticipated that
+his appearance in the field would be distinguished.
+
+Among his earliest proceedings was the equipment of forty Suliotes,
+or Albanians, whom he sent to Marco Botzaris to assist in the defence
+of Missolonghi. An adventurer of more daring would have gone with
+them; and when the battle was over, in which Botzaris fell, he
+transmitted bandages and medicines, of which he had brought a large
+supply from Italy, and pecuniary succour, to the wounded.
+
+This was considerate, but there was too much consideration in all
+that he did at this time, neither in unison with the impulses of his
+natural character, nor consistent with the heroic enthusiasm with
+which the admirers of his poetry imagined he was kindled.
+
+In the mean time he had offered to advance one thousand dollars a
+month for the succour of Missolonghi and the troops with Marco
+Botzaris; but the government, instead of accepting the offer,
+intimated that they wished previously to confer with him, which he
+interpreted into a desire to direct the expenditure of the money to
+other purposes. In his opinion his Lordship was probably not
+mistaken; but his own account of his feeling in the business does not
+tend to exalt the magnanimity of his attachment to the cause: "I
+will take care," says he, "that it is for the public cause, otherwise
+I will not advance a para. The opposition say they want to cajole
+me, and the party in power say the others wish to seduce me; so,
+between the two, I have a difficult part to play; however, I will
+have nothing to do with the factions, unless to reconcile them, if
+possible."
+
+It is difficult to conceive that Lord Byron, "the searcher of dark
+bosoms," could have expressed himself so weakly and with such vanity;
+but the shadow of coming fate had already reached him, and his
+judgment was suffering in the blight that had fallen on his
+reputation. To think of the possibility of reconciling two Greek
+factions, or any factions, implies a degree of ignorance of mankind,
+which, unless it had been given in his Lordship's own writing, would
+not have been credible; and as to having nothing to do with the
+factions, for what purpose went he to Greece, unless it was to take a
+part with one of them? I abstain from saying what I think of his
+hesitation in going to the government instead of sending two of his
+associated adventurers, Mr Trelawney and Mr Hamilton Brown, whom he
+despatched to collect intelligence as to the real state of things,
+substituting their judgment for his own. When the Hercules, the ship
+he chartered to carry him to Greece, weighed anchor, he was committed
+with the Greeks, and everything short of unequivocal folly he was
+bound to have done with and for them.
+
+His two emissaries or envoys proceeded to Tripolizza, where they
+found Colocotroni seated in the palace of the late vizier, Velhi
+Pasha, in great power; the court-yard and galleries filled with armed
+men in garrison, while there was no enemy at that time in the Morea
+able to come against them! The Greek chieftains, like their classic
+predecessors, though embarked in the same adventure, were personal
+adversaries to each other. Colocotroni spoke of his compeer
+Mavrocordato in the very language of Agamemnon, when he said that he
+had declared to him, unless he desisted from his intrigues, he would
+mount him on an ass and whip him out of the Morea; and that he had
+only been restrained from doing so by the representation of his
+friends, who thought it would injure their common cause. Such was
+the spirit of the chiefs of the factions which Lord Byron thought it
+not impossible to reconcile!
+
+At this time Missolonghi was in a critical state, being blockaded
+both by land and sea; and the report of Trelawney to Lord Byron
+concerning it, was calculated to rouse his Lordship to activity.
+"There have been," says he, "thirty battles fought and won by the
+late Marco Botzaris, and his gallant tribe of Suliotes, who are shut
+up in Missolonghi. If it fall, Athens will be in danger, and
+thousands of throats cut: a few thousand dollars would provide ships
+to relieve it; a portion of this sum is raised, and I would coin my
+heart to save this key of Greece." Bravely said! but deserving of
+little attention. The fate of Missolonghi could have had no visible
+effect on that of Athens.
+
+The distance between these two places is more than a hundred miles,
+and Lord Byron was well acquainted with the local difficulties of the
+intervening country; still it was a point to which the eyes of the
+Greeks were all at that time directed; and Mavrocordato, then in
+correspondence with Lord Byron, and who was endeavouring to collect a
+fleet for the relief of the place, induced his Lordship to undertake
+to provide the money necessary for the equipment of the fleet, to the
+extent of twelve thousand pounds. It was on this occasion his
+Lordship addressed a letter to the Greek chiefs, that deserves to be
+quoted, for the sagacity with which it suggests what may be the
+conduct of the great powers of Christendom.
+
+"I must frankly confess," says he, "that unless union and order are
+confirmed, all hopes of a loan will be in vain, and all the
+assistance which the Greeks could expect from abroad, an assistance
+which might be neither trifling nor worthless, will be suspended or
+destroyed; and what is worse, the great powers of Europe, of whom no
+one was an enemy to Greece, but seemed inclined to favour her in
+consenting to the establishment of an independent power, will be
+persuaded that the Greeks are unable to govern themselves, and will,
+perhaps, undertake to arrange your disorders in such a way, as to
+blast the brightest hopes you indulge, and that are indulged by your
+friends."
+
+In the meantime, Lord Byron was still at the villa he had hired in
+Cephalonia, where his conduct was rather that of a spectator than an
+ally. Colonel Stanhope, in a letter of the 26th of November,
+describes him as having been there about three months, and spending
+his time exactly as every one acquainted with his habits must have
+expected. "The first six weeks he spent on board a merchant-vessel,
+and seldom went on shore, except on business. Since that period he
+has lived in a little villa in the country, in absolute retirement,
+Count Gamba (brother to the Guiccioli) being his only companion."--
+Such, surely, was not exactly playing that part in the Greek cause
+which he had taught the world to look for. It is true, that the
+accounts received there of the Greek affairs were not then
+favourable. Everybody concurred in representing the executive
+government as devoid of public virtue, and actuated by avarice or
+personal ambition. This intelligence was certainly not calculated to
+increase Lord Byron's ardour, and may partly excuse the causes of his
+personal inactivity. I say personal, because he had written to
+London to accelerate the attempt to raise a loan, and, at the
+suggestion of Colonel Stanhope, he addressed a letter to Mavrocordato
+respecting the inevitable consequences of their calamitous
+dissensions. The object of this letter was to induce a
+reconciliation between the rival factions, or to throw the odium, of
+having thwarted the loan, upon the Executive, and thereby to degrade
+the members of it in the opinion of the people. "I am very uneasy,"
+said his Lordship to the prince, "at hearing that the dissensions of
+Greece still continue; and at a moment when she might triumph over
+everything in general, as she has triumphed in part. Greece is at
+present placed between three measures; either to reconquer her
+liberty, or to become a dependence of the sovereigns of Europe, or to
+return to a Turkish province; she has already the choice only of
+these three alternatives. Civil war is but a road which leads to the
+two latter. If she is desirous of the fate of Wallachia and the
+Crimea, she may obtain it TO-MORROW; if that of Italy, THE DAY AFTER.
+But if she wishes to become TRULY GREECE, FREE AND INDEPENDENT, she
+must resolve TO-DAY, or she will never again have the opportunity,"
+etc., etc.
+
+Meanwhile, the Greek people became impatient for Lord Byron to come
+among them. They looked forward to his arrival as to the coming of a
+Messiah. Three boats were successively despatched for him and two of
+them returned, one after the other, without him. On the 29th of
+December, 1823, however, his Lordship did at last embark.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIII
+
+
+
+Lord Byron's Conversations on Religion with Dr Kennedy
+
+While Lord Byron was hesitating, in the Island of Cephalonia, about
+proceeding to Greece, an occurrence took place, of which much has
+been made. I allude to the acquaintance he formed with a Dr Kennedy,
+the publication of whose conversations with him on religion has
+attracted some degree of public attention.
+
+This gentleman was originally destined for the Scottish bar, but
+afterwards became a student of medicine, and entering the medical
+department of the army, happened to be stationed in Cephalonia when
+Lord Byron arrived. He appears to have been a man of kind
+dispositions, possessed of a better heart than judgment; in all
+places wherever his duty bore him he took a lively interest in the
+condition of the inhabitants, and was active, both in his official
+and private capacity, to improve it. He had a taste for circulating
+pious tracts, and zealously co-operated in distributing copies of the
+Scriptures.
+
+Firmly settled, himself, in a conviction of the truth of
+Christianity, he was eager to make converts to his views of the
+doctrines; but whether he was exactly the kind of apostle to achieve
+the conversion of Lord Byron may, perhaps, be doubted. His sincerity
+and the disinterestedness of his endeavours would secure to him from
+his Lordship an indulgent and even patient hearing. But I fear that
+without some more effectual calling, the arguments he appears to have
+employed were not likely to have made Lord Byron a proselyte. His
+Lordship was so constituted in his mind, and by his temperament, that
+nothing short of regeneration could have made him a Christian,
+according to the gospel of Dr Kennedy.
+
+Lord Byron had but loose feelings in religion--scarcely any. His
+sensibility and a slight constitutional leaning towards superstition
+and omens showed that the sense of devotion was, however, alive and
+awake within him; but with him religion was a sentiment, and the
+convictions of the understanding had nothing whatever to do with his
+creed. That he was deeply imbued with the essence of natural piety;
+that he often felt the power and being of a God thrilling in all his
+frame, and glowing in his bosom, I declare my thorough persuasion;
+and that he believed in some of the tenets and in the philosophy of
+Christianity, as they influence the spirit and conduct of men, I am
+as little disposed to doubt; especially if those portions of his
+works which only trend towards the subject, and which bear the
+impression of fervour and earnestness, may be admitted as evidence.
+But he was not a member of any particular church, and, without a
+reconstruction of his mind and temperament, I venture to say, he
+could not have become such; not in consequence, as too many have
+represented, of any predilection, either of feeling or principle,
+against Christianity, but entirely owing to an organic peculiarity of
+mind. He reasoned on every topic by instinct, rather than by
+induction or any process of logic; and could never be so convinced of
+the truth or falsehood of an abstract proposition, as to feel it
+affect the current of his actions. He may have assented to
+arguments, without being sensible of their truth; merely because they
+were not objectionable to his feelings at the time. And, in the same
+manner, he may have disputed even fair inferences, from admitted
+premises, if the state of his feelings happened to be indisposed to
+the subject. I am persuaded, nevertheless, that to class him among
+absolute infidels were to do injustice to his memory, and that he has
+suffered uncharitably in the opinion of "the rigidly righteous," who,
+because he had not attached himself to any particular sect or
+congregation, assumed that he was an adversary to religion. To claim
+for him any credit, as a pious man, would be absurd; but to suppose
+he had not as deep an interest as other men "in his soul's health"
+and welfare, was to impute to him a nature which cannot exist.
+Being, altogether, a creature of impulses, he certainly could not be
+ever employed in doxologies, or engaged in the logomachy of
+churchmen; but he had the sentiment which at a tamer age might have
+made him more ecclesiastical. There was as much truth as joke in the
+expression, when he wrote,
+
+
+I am myself a moderate Presbyterian.
+
+
+A mind constituted like that of Lord Byron, was little susceptible of
+impressions from the arguments of ordinary men. It was necessary
+that Truth, in visiting him, should come arrayed in her solemnities,
+and with Awe and Reverence for her precursors. Acknowledged
+superiority, yea, celebrated wisdom, were indispensable, to bespeak
+his sincere attention; and, without disparagement, it may be fairly
+said, these were not the attributes of Dr Kennedy. On the contrary,
+there was a taint of cant about him--perhaps he only acted like those
+who have it--but still he was not exactly the dignitary to command
+unaffected deference from the shrewd and irreverent author of Don
+Juan. The result verified what ought to have been the anticipation.
+The doctor's attempt to quicken Byron to a sense of grace failed; but
+his Lordship treated him with politeness. The history of the affair
+will, however, be more interesting than any reflections which it is
+in my humble power to offer.
+
+Some of Dr Kennedy's acquaintances wished to hear him explain, in "a
+logical and demonstrative manner, the evidences and doctrines of
+Christianity"; and Lord Byron, hearing of the intended meeting,
+desired to be present, and was accordingly invited. He attended; but
+was not present at several others which followed; he however
+intimated to the doctor, that he would be glad to converse with him,
+and the invitation was accepted. "On religion," says the doctor,
+"his Lordship was in general a hearer, proposing his difficulties and
+objections with more fairness than could have been expected from one
+under similar circumstances; and with so much candour, that they
+often seemed to be proposed more for the purpose of procuring
+information, or satisfactory answers, than from any other motive."
+
+At the first meeting, Dr Kennedy explained, becomingly, his views of
+the subject, and that he had read every work against Christianity
+which fell in his way. It was this consideration which had induced
+him with such confidence to enter upon the discussion, knowing, on
+the one hand, the strength of Christianity, and, on the other, the
+weakness of its assailants. "To show you, therefore," said the
+doctor, "the grounds on which I demand your attention to what I may
+say on the nature and evidence of Christianity, I shall mention the
+names of some of the authors whose works I have read or consulted."
+When he had mentioned all these names, Lord Byron asked if he had
+read Barrow's and Stillingfleet's works? The doctor replied, "I have
+seen them, but I have not read them."
+
+After a disquisition, chiefly relative to the history of
+Christianity, Dr Kennedy observed, "We must, on all occasions, but
+more particularly in fair and logical discussions with sceptics, or
+Deists, make a distinction between Christianity, as it is found in
+the Scriptures, and the errors, abuses, and imperfections of
+Christians themselves." To this his Lordship remarked, that he
+always had taken care to make that distinction, as he knew enough of
+Christianity to feel that it was both necessary and just. The doctor
+remarked that the contrary was almost universally the case with those
+who doubted or denied the truth of Christianity, and proceeded to
+illustrate the statement. He then read a summary of the fundamental
+doctrines of Christianity; but he had not proceeded far, when he
+observed signs of impatience in Lord Byron, who inquired if these
+sentiments accorded with the doctor's? and being answered they did,
+and with those of all sound Christians, except in one or two minor
+things, his Lordship rejoined, that he did not wish to hear the
+opinions of others, whose writings he could read at any time, but
+only his own. The doctor then read on till coming to the expression
+"grace of God." His Lordship inquired, "What do you mean by grace?"
+"The primary and fundamental meaning of the word," replied the
+doctor, somewhat surprised at his ignorance (I quote his own
+language), "is favour; though it varies according to the context to
+express that disposition of God which leads Him to grant a favour,
+the action of doing so, or the favour itself, or its effects on those
+who receive it." The arrogance of the use of the term ignorance
+here, requires no animadversion; but to suppose the greatest master,
+then in existence, of the English language, not acquainted with the
+meaning of the word, when he asked to be informed of the meaning
+attached to it by the individual making use of it, gives us some
+insight into the true character of the teacher. The doctor closed
+the book, as he perceived that Lord Byron, as he says, had no
+distinct conception of many of the words used; and his Lordship
+subjoined, "What we want is, to be convinced that the Bible is true;
+because if we can believe that, it will follow as a matter of course,
+that we must believe all the doctrines it contains."
+
+The reply to this was to the effect, that the observation was partly
+just; but though the strongest evidence were produced of the
+Scriptures being the revealed will of God, they (his Lordship and
+others present) would still remain unbelievers, unless they knew and
+comprehended the doctrines contained in the Scriptures. This was not
+conclusive, and Lord Byron replied, that they wished him to prove
+that the Scriptures were the Word of God, which the doctor, with more
+than apostolic simplicity, said that such was his object, but he
+should like to know what they deemed the clearest course to follow
+with that object in view. After some farther conversation--"No other
+plan was proposed by them," says the doctor; and he adds, "they had
+violated their engagement to hear me for twelve hours, for which I
+had stipulated." This may, perhaps, satisfy the reader as to the
+quality of the doctor's understanding; but as the subject, in its
+bearing, touches Lord Byron's character, I shall proceed a little
+farther into the marrow of the matter.
+
+The inculcation being finished for that evening, Lord Byron said,
+that when he was young his mother brought him up strictly; and that
+he had access to a great many theological works, and remembered that
+he was particularly pleased with Barrow's writings, and that he also
+went regularly to church. He declared that he was not an infidel,
+who denied the Scriptures and wished to remain in unbelief; on the
+contrary, he was desirous to believe, as he experienced no happiness
+in having his religious opinions so unsteady and unfixed. But he
+could not, he added, understand the Scriptures. "Those people who
+conscientiously believe, I always have respected, and was always
+disposed to trust in them more than in others." A desultory
+conversation then ensued, respecting the language and translations of
+the Scriptures; in the course of which his Lordship remarked, that
+Scott, in his Commentary on the Bible, did not say that it was the
+devil who tempted Eve, nor does the Bible say a word about the devil.
+It is only said that the serpent spoke, and that it was the subtlest
+of all the beasts of the field.--Will it be said that truth and
+reason were served by Dr Kennedy's {319} answer? "As beasts have not
+the faculty of speech, the just inference is, that the beast was only
+an instrument made use of by some invisible and superior being. The
+Scriptures accordingly tell us, that the devil is the father of lies-
+-the lie made by the serpent to Eve being the first we have on
+record; they call him also a murderer from the beginning, as he was
+the cause of the sentence of death which was pronounced against Adam
+and all his posterity; and still farther, to remove all doubt, and to
+identify him as the agent who used the serpent as an instrument, he
+is called the serpent--the devil."
+
+Lord Byron inquired what the doctor thought of the theory of
+Warburton, that the Jews had no distinct idea of a future state? The
+doctor acknowledged that he had often seen, but had never read The
+Divine Legation. And yet, he added, had Warburton read his Bible
+with more simplicity and attention, he would have enjoyed a more
+solid and honourable fame.
+
+His Lordship then said, that one of the greatest difficulties he had
+met with was the existence of so much pure and unmixed evil in the
+world, and which he could not reconcile to the idea of a benevolent
+Creator. The doctor set aside the question as to the origin of evil;
+but granted the extensive existence of evil in the universe; to
+remedy which, he said, the Gospel was proclaimed; and after some of
+the customary commonplaces, he ascribed much of the existing evil to
+the slackness of Christians in spreading the Gospel.
+
+"Is there not," said his Lordship, "some part of the New Testament
+where it appears that the disciples were struck with the state of
+physical evil, and made inquiries into the cause?"--"There are two
+passages," was the reply. The disciples inquired, when they saw a
+man who had been born blind, whether it was owing to his own or his
+parents' sin?--and, after quoting the other instance, he concludes,
+that moral and physical evil in individuals are not always a judgment
+or punishment, but are intended to answer certain ends in the
+government of the world.
+
+"Is there not," said his Lordship, "a prophecy in the New Testament
+which it is alleged has not been fulfilled, although it was declared
+that the end of the world would come before the generation then
+existing should pass away?"--"The prediction," said Dr Kennedy,
+"related to the destruction of Jerusalem, which certainly took place
+within the time assigned; though some of the expressions descriptive
+of the signs of that remarkable event are of such a nature as to
+appear to apply to Christ's coming to judge the world at the end of
+time."
+
+His Lordship then asked, if the doctor thought that there had been
+fewer wars and persecutions, and less slaughter and misery, in the
+world since the introduction of Christianity than before? The doctor
+answered this by observing, that since Christianity inculcates peace
+and good-will to all men, we must always separate pure religion from
+the abuses of which its professors are guilty.
+
+Two other opinions were expressed by his Lordship in the
+conversation. The doctor, in speaking of the sovereignty of God, had
+alluded to the similitude of the potter and his clay; for his
+Lordship said, if he were broken in pieces, he would say to the
+potter, "Why do you treat me thus?" The other was an absurdity. It
+was--if the whole world were going to hell, he would prefer going
+with them than go alone to heaven.
+
+Such was the result of the first council of Cephalonia, if one may
+venture the allusion. It is manifest, without saying much for Lord
+Byron's ingenuity, that he was fully a match for the doctor, and that
+he was not unacquainted with the subject under discussion.
+
+In the next conversation Lord Byron repeated, "I have no wish to
+reject Christianity without investigation; on the contrary, I am very
+desirous of believing. But I do not see very much the need of a
+Saviour, nor the utility of prayer. Devotion is the affection of the
+heart, and this I feel. When I view the wonders of creation, I bow
+to the Majesty of Heaven; and when I feel the enjoyments of life, I
+feel grateful to God for having bestowed them upon me." Upon this
+some discussion arose, turning chiefly on the passage in the third
+chapter of John, "Unless a man is converted, he cannot enter the
+kingdom of Heaven"; which naturally led to an explanatory
+interlocutor, concerning new birth, regeneration, etc.; and thence
+diverged into the topics which had been the subject of the former
+conversation.
+
+Among other things, Lord Byron inquired, "if the doctor really
+thought that the devil appeared before God, as is mentioned in the
+Book of Job, or is it only an allegorical or poetical mode of
+speaking?"--The reply was, "I believe it in the strict and literal
+meaning."
+
+"If it be received in a literal sense," said his Lordship, "it gives
+me a much higher idea of the majesty, power, and wisdom of God, to
+believe that the devils themselves are at His nod, and are subject to
+His control, with as much ease as the elements of nature follow the
+respective laws which His will has assigned them."
+
+This notion was characteristic, and the poetical feeling in which it
+originated, when the doctor attempted to explain the doctrine of the
+Manicheans, was still more distinctly developed; for his Lordship
+again expressed how much the belief of the real appearance of Satan,
+to hear and obey the commands of God, added to his views of the
+grandeur and majesty of the Creator.
+
+This second conversation was more desultory than the first; religion
+was brought in only incidentally, until his Lordship said, "I do not
+reject the doctrines of Christianity; I want only sufficient proofs
+of it, to take up the profession in earnest; and I do not believe
+myself to be so bad a Christian as many of them who preach against me
+with the greatest fury--many of whom I have never seen nor injured."
+
+"You have only to examine the causes which prevent you" (from being a
+true believer), said the doctor, "and you will find they are futile,
+and only tend to withhold you from the enjoyment of real happiness;
+which at present it is impossible you can find."
+
+"What, then, you think me in a very bad way?"
+
+"I certainly think you are," was the reply; "and this I say, not on
+my own authority, but on that of the Scriptures.--Your Lordship must
+be converted, and must be reformed, before anything can be said of
+you, except that you are bad, and in a bad way."
+
+"But," replied his Lordship, "I already believe in predestination,
+which I know you believe, and in the depravity of the human heart in
+general, and of my own in particular; thus you see there are two
+points in which we agree. I shall get at the others by-and-by. You
+cannot expect me to become a perfect Christian at once."
+
+And farther his Lordship subjoined:
+
+"Predestination appears to me just; from my own reflection and
+experience, I am influenced in a way which is incomprehensible, and
+am led to do things which I never intended; and if there is, as we
+all admit, a Supreme Ruler of the universe; and if, as you say, he
+has the actions of the devils, as well as of his own angels,
+completely at his command, then those influences, or those
+arrangements of circumstances, which lead us to do things against our
+will, or with ill-will, must be also under his directions. But I
+have never entered into the depths of the subject; I have contented
+myself with believing that there is a predestination of events, and
+that predestination depends on the will of God."
+
+Dr Kennedy, in speaking of this second conversation, bears testimony
+to the respectfulness of his Lordship's attention. "There was
+nothing in his manner which approached to levity, or anything that
+indicated a wish to mock at religion; though, on the other hand, an
+able dissembler would have done and said all that he did, with such
+feelings and intentions."
+
+Subsequent to the second conversation, Dr Kennedy asked a gentleman
+who was intimate with Lord Byron, if he really thought his Lordship
+serious in his desire to hear religion explained. "Has he exhibited
+any contempt or ridicule at what I have said?" This gentleman
+assured him that he had never heard Byron allude to the subject in
+any way which could induce him to suspect that he was merely amusing
+himself. "But, on the contrary, he always names you with respect. I
+do not, however, think you have made much impression on him: he is
+just the same fellow as before. He says, he does not know what
+religion you are of, for you neither adhere to creeds nor councils."
+
+It ought here to be noticed, as showing the general opinion
+entertained of his Lordship with respect to these polemical
+conversations, that the wits of the garrison made themselves merry
+with what was going on. Some of them affected to believe, or did so,
+that Lord Byron's wish to hear Dr Kennedy proceeded from a desire to
+have an accurate idea of the opinions and manners of the Methodists,
+in order that he might make Don Juan become one for a time, and so be
+enabled to paint their conduct with greater accuracy.
+
+The third conversation took place soon after this comment had been
+made on Lord Byron's conduct. The doctor inquired if his Lordship
+had read any of the religious books he had sent. "I have looked,"
+replied Byron, "into Boston's Fourfold State, but I have not had time
+to read it far: I am afraid it is too deep for me."
+
+Although there was no systematic design, on the part of Lord Byron,
+to make Dr Kennedy subservient to any scheme of ridicule; yet it is
+evident that he was not so serious as the doctor so meritoriously
+desired.
+
+"I have begun," said his Lordship, "very fairly; I have given some of
+your tracts to Fletcher (his valet), who is a good sort of man, but
+still wants, like myself, some reformation; and I hope he will spread
+them among the other servants, who require it still more. Bruno, the
+physician, and Gamba, are busy, reading some of the Italian tracts;
+and I hope it will have a good effect on them. The former is rather
+too decided against it at present; and too much engaged with a spirit
+of enthusiasm for his own profession, to attend to other subjects;
+but we must have patience, and we shall see what has been the result.
+I do not fail to read, from time to time, my Bible, though not,
+perhaps, so much as I should."
+
+"Have you begun to pray that you may understand it?"
+
+"Not yet. I have not arrived at that pitch of faith yet; but it may
+come by-and-by. You are in too great a hurry."
+
+His Lordship then went to a side-table, on which a great number of
+books were ranged; and, taking hold of an octavo, gave it to the
+doctor. It was Illustrations of the Moral Government of God, by E.
+Smith, M.D., London. "The author," said he, "proves that the
+punishment of hell is not eternal; it will have a termination."
+
+"The author," replied the doctor, "is, I suppose, one of the
+Socinians; who, in a short time, will try to get rid of every
+doctrine in the Bible. How did your Lordship get hold of this book?"
+
+"They sent it out to me from England, to make a convert of me, I
+suppose. The arguments are strong, drawn from the Bible itself; and
+by showing that a time will come when every intelligent creature
+shall be supremely happy, and eternally so, it expunges that shocking
+doctrine, that sin and misery will for ever exist under the
+government of God, Whose highest attribute is love and goodness. To
+my present apprehension, it would be a most desirable thing, could it
+be proved that, alternately, all created beings were to be happy.
+This would appear to be most consistent with the nature of God.--I
+cannot yield to your doctrine of the eternal duration of punishment.-
+-This author's opinion is more humane; and, I think, he supports it
+very strongly from Scripture."
+
+The fourth conversation was still more desultory, being carried on at
+table amid company; in the course of it Lord Byron, however, declared
+"that he was so much of a believer as to be of opinion that there is
+no contradiction in the Scriptures which cannot be reconciled by an
+attentive consideration and comparison of passages."
+
+It is needless to remark that Lord Byron, in the course of these
+conversations, was incapable of preserving a consistent seriousness.
+The volatility of his humour was constantly leading him into
+playfulness, and he never lost an opportunity of making a pun or
+saying a quaint thing. "Do you know," said he to the doctor, "I am
+nearly reconciled to St Paul; for he says there is no difference
+between the Jews and the Greeks, and I am exactly of the same
+opinion, for the character of both is equally vile."
+
+Upon the whole it must be conceded, that whatever was the degree of
+Lord Byron's dubiety as to points of faith and doctrine, he could not
+be accused of gross ignorance, nor described as animated by any
+hostile feeling against religion.
+
+In this sketch of these conversations, I have restricted myself
+chiefly to those points which related to his Lordship's own
+sentiments and belief. It would have been inconsistent with the
+concise limits of this work to have detailed the controversies. A
+fair summary of what Byron did not believe, what he was disposed to
+believe but had not satisfied himself with the evidence, and what he
+did believe, seemed to be the task I ought to undertake. The result
+confirmed the statement of his Lordship's religious condition, given
+in the preliminary remarks which, I ought to mention, were written
+before I looked into Dr Kennedy's book; and the statement is not
+different from the estimate which the conversations warrant. It is
+true that Lord Byron's part in the conversations is not very
+characteristic; but the integrity of Dr Kennedy is a sufficient
+assurance that they are substantially correct.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIV
+
+
+
+Voyage to Cephalonia--Letter--Count Gamba's Address--Grateful
+Feelings of the Turks--Endeavours of Lord Byron to mitigate the
+Horrors of the War
+
+Lord Byron, after leaving Argostoli, on the 29th December, 1823, the
+port of Cephalonia, sailed for Zante, where he took on board a
+quantity of specie. Although the distance from Zante to Missolonghi
+is but a few hours' sail, the voyage was yet not without adventures.
+Missolonghi, as I have already mentioned, was then blockaded by the
+Turks, and some address was necessary, on that account, to effect an
+entrance, independent of the difficulties, at all times, of
+navigating the canals which intersect the shallows. In the following
+letter to Colonel Stanhope, his Lordship gives an account of what
+took place. It is very characteristic; I shall therefore quote it.
+
+
+"Scrofer, or some such name, on board a
+Cephaloniate Mistice, Dec. 31, 1823.
+
+
+"MY DEAR STANHOPE,--We are just arrived here--that is, part of my
+people and I, with some things, etc., and which it may be as well not
+to specify in a letter (which has a risk of being intercepted,
+perhaps); but Gamba and my horses, negro, steward, and the press, and
+all the committee things, also some eight thousand dollars of mine
+(but never mind, we have more left--do you understand?) are taken by
+the Turkish frigates; and my party and myself in another boat, have
+had a narrow escape, last night (being close under their stern, and
+hailed, but we would not answer, and bore away) as well as this
+morning. Here we are, with sun and charming weather, within a pretty
+little port enough; but whether our Turkish friends may not send in
+their boats, and take us out (for we have no arms, except two
+carbines and some pistols, and, I suspect, not more than four
+fighting people on board), is another question; especially if we
+remain long here, since we are blocked out of Missolonghi by the
+direct entrance. You had better send my friend George Drake, and a
+body of Suliotes, to escort us by land or by the canals, with all
+convenient speed. Gamba and our Bombard are taken into Patras, I
+suppose, and we must take a turn at the Turks to get them out. But
+where the devil is the fleet gone? the Greek, I mean--leaving us to
+get in without the least intimation to take heed that the Moslems
+were out again. Make my respects to Mavrocordato, and say that I am
+here at his disposal. I am uneasy at being here. We are very well.-
+-Yours, etc.
+
+"N. B.
+
+"P.S. The Bombard was twelve miles out when taken; at least, so it
+appeared to us (if taken she actually be, for it is not certain), and
+we had to escape from another vessel that stood right in between us
+and the port."
+
+
+Colonel Stanhope on receiving this despatch, which was carried to him
+by two of Lord Byron's servants, sent two armed boats, and a company
+of Suliotes, to escort his Lordship to Missolonghi, where he arrived
+on the 5th of January, and was received with military honours, and
+the most enthusiastic demonstrations of popular joy. No mark of
+respect which the Greeks could think of was omitted. The ships fired
+a salute as he passed. Prince Mavrocordato, and all the authorities,
+with the troops and the population, met him on his landing, and
+accompanied him to the house which had been prepared for him, amid
+the shouts of the multitude and the discharge of cannon.
+
+In the meantime, Count Gamba and his companions being taken before
+Yusuff Pasha at Patras, expected to share the fate of certain
+unfortunate prisoners whom that stern chief had sacrificed the
+preceding year at Prevesa; and their fears would probably have been
+realised but for the intrepid presence of mind displayed by the
+Count, who, assuming a haughty style, accused the Ottoman captain of
+the frigate of a breach of neutrality, in detaining a vessel under
+English colours, and concluded by telling the Pasha that he might
+expect the vengeance of the British Government in thus interrupting a
+nobleman who was merely on his travels, and bound to Calamata.
+Perhaps, however, another circumstance had quite as much influence
+with the Pasha as this bravery. In the master of the vessel he
+recognised a person who had saved his life in the Black Sea fifteen
+years before, and in consequence not only consented to the vessel's
+release, but treated the whole of the passengers with the utmost
+attention, and even urged them to take a day's shooting in the
+neighbourhood.
+
+The first measure which his Lordship attempted after his arrival, was
+to mitigate the ferocity with which the war was carried on; one of
+the objects, as he explained to my friend who visited him at Genoa,
+which induced him to embark in the cause. And it happened that the
+very day he reached the town was signalised by his rescuing a Turk
+who had fallen into the hands of some Greek sailors. This man was
+clothed by his Lordship's orders, and sent over to Patras; and soon
+after Count Gamba's release, hearing that four other Turks were
+prisoners in Missolonghi, he requested that they might be placed in
+his hands, which was immediately granted. These he also sent to
+Patras, with a letter addressed to Yusuff, expressing his hope that
+the prisoners thence-forward taken on both sides would be treated
+with humanity. This act was followed by another equally
+praiseworthy. A Greek cruiser having captured a Turkish boat, in
+which there was a number of passengers, chiefly women and children,
+they were also placed at the disposal of his Lordship, at his
+particular request. Captain Parry has given a description of the
+scene between Lord Byron, and that multitude of mothers and children,
+too interesting to be omitted here. "I was summoned to attend him,
+and receive his orders that everything should be done which might
+contribute to their comfort. He was seated on a cushion at the upper
+end of the room, the women and children were standing before him with
+their eyes fixed steadily on him; and on his right hand was his
+interpreter, who was extracting from the women a narrative of their
+sufferings. One of them, apparently about thirty years of age,
+possessing great vivacity, and whose manners and dress, though she
+was then dirty and disfigured, indicated that she was superior in
+rank and condition to her companions, was spokeswoman for the whole.
+I admired the good order the others preserved, never interfering with
+the explanation, or interrupting the single speaker. I also admired
+the rapid manner in which the interpreter explained everything they
+said, so as to make it almost appear that there was but one speaker.
+After a short time it was evident that what Lord Byron was hearing
+affected his feelings; his countenance changed, his colour went and
+came, and I thought he was ready to weep. But he had, on all
+occasions, a ready and peculiar knack in turning conversation from
+any disagreeable or unpleasant subject; and he had recourse to this
+expedient. He rose up suddenly, and, turning round on his heel as
+was his wont, he said something to his interpreter, who immediately
+repeated it to the women. All eyes were immediately fixed on me; and
+one of the party, a young and beautiful woman, spoke very warmly.
+Lord Byron seemed satisfied, and said they might retire. The women
+all slipped off their shoes in an instant, and, going up to his
+Lordship, each in succession, accompanied by their children, kissed
+his hand fervently, invoked, in the Turkish manner, a blessing, both
+on his hand and heart, and then quitted the room. This was too much
+for Lord Byron, and he turned his face away to conceal his emotion"
+
+A vessel was then hired, and the whole of them, to the number of
+twenty-four, were sent to Prevesa, provided with every requisite for
+their comfort during the passage. These instances of humanity
+excited a sympathy among the Turks. The Governor of Prevesa thanked
+his Lordship, and assured him that he would take care that equal
+attention should be in future paid to the Greeks, who might fall into
+his hands.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLV
+
+
+
+Proceedings at Missolonghi--Byron's Suliote Brigade--Their
+Insubordination--Difference with Colonel Stanhope--Imbecility of the
+Plans for the Independence of Greece
+
+The arrival of Lord Byron at Missolonghi was not only hailed as a new
+era in the history of Greece, but as the beginning of a new cycle in
+his own extraordinary life. His natural indolence disappeared; the
+Sardanapalian sloth was thrown off, and he took a station in the van
+of her efforts that bespoke heroic achievement.
+
+After paying the fleet, which indeed had only come out in the
+expectation of receiving the arrears from the loan he had promised to
+Mavrocordato, he resolved to form a brigade of Suliotes. Five
+hundred of the remains of Marco Botzaris's gallant followers were
+accordingly taken into his pay. "He burns with military ardour and
+chivalry," says Colonel Stanhope, "and will proceed with the
+expedition to Lepanto." But the expedition was delayed by causes
+which ought to have been foreseen.
+
+The Suliotes, conceiving that in his Lordship they had found a patron
+whose wealth and generosity were equally boundless, refused to quit
+Missolonghi till their arrears were paid. Savage in the field, and
+untamable in the city, they became insubordinate and mercenary; nor
+was their conduct without excuse. They had long defended the town
+with untired bravery; their families had been driven into it in the
+most destitute condition; and all the hopes that had led them to take
+up arms were still distant and prospective. Besides, Mavrocordato,
+unlike the other Grecian captains, having no troops of his own,
+affected to regard these mercenaries as allies, and was indulgent to
+their excesses. The town was overawed by their turbulence, conflicts
+took place in the street; riot and controversy everywhere prevailed,
+and blood was shed.
+
+Lord Byron's undisciplined spirit could ill brook delay; he partook
+of the general vehemence, and lost the power of discerning the
+comparative importance both of measures and things. He was out of
+his element; confusion thickened around him; his irritability grew
+into passion; and there was the rush and haste, the oblivion and
+alarm of fatality in all he undertook and suggested.
+
+One day, a party of German adventurers reached the fortress so
+demoralized by hardships, that few of them were fit for service. It
+was intended to form a corps of artillery, and these men were
+destined for that branch of the service; but their condition was
+such, that Stanhope doubted the practicability of carrying the
+measure into effect at that time. He had promised to contribute a
+hundred pounds to their equipment. Byron attributed the Colonel's
+objections to reluctance to pay the money; and threatened him if it
+were refused, with a punishment, new in Grecian war----to libel him
+in the Greek Chronicle! a newspaper which Stanhope had recently
+established.
+
+It is, however, not easy to give a correct view of the state of
+affairs at that epoch in Missolonghi. All parties seem to have been
+deplorably incompetent to understand the circumstances in which they
+were placed;--the condition of the Greeks, and that their exigencies
+required only physical and military means. They talked of newspapers
+and types, and libels, as if the moral instruments of civil
+exhortation were adequate to wrench the independence of Greece from
+the bloody grasp of the Ottoman. No wonder that Byron, accustomed to
+the management only of his own fancies, was fluttered amid the
+conflicts of such riot and controversy.
+
+His situation at this period was indeed calculated to inspire pity.
+Had he survived, it might, instead of awakening the derision of
+history, have supplied to himself materials for another canto of Don
+Juan. I shall select one instance of his afflictions.
+
+The captain of a British gun-brig came to Missolonghi to demand an
+equivalent for an Ionian boat, which had been taken in the act of
+going out of the Gulf of Lepanto, with provisions and arms. The
+Greek fleet at that time blockading the port consisted of five brigs,
+and the Turks had fourteen vessels of war in the gulf. The captain
+maintained that the British Government recognised no blockade which
+was not efficient, and that the efficiency depended on the numerical
+superiority of cannon. On this principle he demanded restitution of
+the property. Mavrocordato offered to submit the case to the
+decision of the British Government, but the captain would only give
+him four hours to consider. The indemnification was granted.
+
+Lord Byron conducted the business in behalf of the captain. In the
+evening, conversing with Stanhope on the subject, the colonel said
+the affair was conducted in a bullying manner. His Lordship started
+into a passion and contended that law, justice, and equity had
+nothing to do with politics. "That may be," replied Stanhope, "but I
+will never lend myself to injustice."
+
+His Lordship then began to attack Jeremy Bentham. The colonel
+complained of such illiberality, as to make personal attacks on that
+gentleman before a friend who held him in high estimation.
+
+"I only attack his public principles," replied Byron, "which are mere
+theories, but dangerous,--injurious to Spain, and calculated to do
+great mischief in Greece."
+
+Stanhope vindicated Bentham, and said, "He possesses a truly British
+heart; but your Lordship, after professing liberal principles from
+boyhood, have, when called upon to act, proved yourself a Turk."
+
+"What proofs have you of this?
+
+"Your conduct in endeavouring to crush the press by declaiming
+against it to Mavrocordato, and your general abuse of liberal
+principles."
+
+"If I had held up my finger," retorted his Lordship, "I could have
+crushed the press."
+
+"With all this power," said Stanhope, "which by the way you never
+possessed, you went to the prince, and poisoned his ear."
+
+Lord Byron then disclaimed against the liberals. "What liberals?"
+cried Stanhope. "Did you borrow your notions of freemen from the
+Italians?"
+
+"No: from the Hunts, Cartwrights, and such."
+
+"And yet your Lordship presented Cartwright's Reform Bill, and aided
+Hunt by praising his poetry and giving him the sale of your works."
+
+"You are worse than Wilson," exclaimed Byron, "and should quit the
+army."
+
+"I am a mere soldier," replied Stanhope, "but never will I abandon my
+principles. Our principles are diametrically opposite, so let us
+avoid the subject. If Lord Byron acts up to his professions, he will
+be the greatest, if not, the meanest of mankind."
+
+"My character," said his Lordship, "I hope, does not depend on your
+assertions."
+
+"No: your genius has immortalized you. The worst will not deprive
+you of fame."
+
+Lord Byron then rejoined, "Well; you shall see: judge of me by my
+acts." And, bidding the colonel good night, who took up the light to
+conduct him to the passage, he added, "What! hold up a light to a
+Turk!"
+
+Such were the Franklins, the Washingtons, and the Hamiltons who
+undertook the regeneration of Greece.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVI
+
+
+
+Lord Byron appointed to the command of three thousand Men to besiege
+Lepanto--The Siege abandoned for a Blockade--Advanced Guard ordered
+to proceed--Lord Byron's first Illness--A Riot--He is urged to leave
+Greece--The Expedition against Lepanto abandoned--Byron dejected--A
+wild diplomatic Scheme
+
+Three days after the conversation related in the preceding chapter,
+Byron was officially placed in the command of about three thousand
+men, destined for the attack on Lepanto; but the Suliotes remained
+refractory, and refused to quit their quarters; his Lordship,
+however, employed an argument which proved effectual. He told them
+that if they did not obey his commands, he would discharge them from
+his service.
+
+But the impediments were not to be surmounted; in less than a week it
+was formally reported to Byron that Missolonghi could not furnish the
+means of undertaking the siege of Lepanto, upon which his Lordship
+proposed that Lepanto should be only blockaded by two thousand men.
+Before any actual step was, however, taken, two spies came in with a
+report that the Albanians in garrison at Lepanto had seized the
+citadel, and were determined to surrender it to his Lordship. Still
+the expedition lingered; at last, on the 14th of February, six weeks
+after Byron's arrival at Missolonghi, it was determined that an
+advanced guard of three hundred soldiers, under the command of Count
+Gamba, should march for Lepanto, and that Lord Byron, with the main
+body, should follow. The Suliotes were, however, still exorbitant,
+calling for fresh contributions for themselves and their families.
+His troubles were increasing, and every new rush of the angry tide
+rose nearer and nearer his heart; still his fortitude enabled him to
+preserve an outward show of equanimity. But, on the very day after
+the determination had been adopted, to send forward the advanced
+guard, his constitution gave way.
+
+He was sitting in Colonel Stanhope's room, talking jestingly,
+according to his wonted manner, with Captain Parry, when his eyes and
+forehead occasionally discovered that he was agitated by strong
+feelings. On a sudden he complained of a weakness in one of his
+legs; he rose, but finding himself unable to walk, called for
+assistance; he then fell into a violent nervous convulsion, and was
+placed upon a bed: while the fit lasted, his face was hideously
+distorted; but in the course of a few minutes the convulsion ceased,
+and he began to recover his senses: his speech returned, and he soon
+rose, apparently well. During the struggle his strength was
+preternaturally augmented, and when it was over, he behaved with his
+usual firmness. "I conceive," says Colonel Stanhope, "that this fit
+was occasioned by over-excitement. The mind of Byron is like a
+volcano; it is full of fire, wrath, and combustibles, and when this
+matter comes to be strongly agitated, the explosion is dreadful.
+With respect to the causes which produced the excess of feeling, they
+are beyond my reach, except one great cause, the provoking conduct of
+the Suliotes."
+
+A few days after this distressing incident, a new occurrence arose,
+which materially disturbed the tranquillity of Byron. A Suliote,
+accompanied by the son, a little boy, of Marco Botzaris, with another
+man, walked into the Seraglio, a kind of citadel, which had been used
+as a barrack for the Suliotes, and out of which they had been ejected
+with difficulty, when it was required for the reception of stores and
+the establishment of a laboratory. The sentinel ordered them back,
+but the Suliote advanced. The sergeant of the guard, a German,
+pushed him back. The Suliote struck the sergeant; they closed and
+struggled. The Suliote drew his pistol; the German wrenched it from
+him, and emptied the pan. At this moment a Swedish adventurer,
+Captain Sass, seeing the quarrel, ordered the Suliote to be taken to
+the guard-room. The Suliote would have departed, but the German
+still held him. The Swede drew his sabre; the Suliote his other
+pistol. The Swede struck him with the flat of his sword; the Suliote
+unsheathed his ataghan, and nearly cut off the left arm of his
+antagonist, and then shot him through the head. The other Suliotes
+would not deliver up their comrade, for he was celebrated among them
+for distinguished bravery. The workmen in the laboratory refused to
+work: they required to be sent home to England, declaring, they had
+come out to labour peaceably, and not to be exposed to assassination.
+These untoward occurrences deeply vexed Byron, and there was no mind
+of sufficient energy with him to control the increasing disorders.
+But, though convinced, as indeed he had been persuaded from the
+beginning in his own mind, that he could not render any assistance to
+the cause beyond mitigating the ferocious spirit in which the war was
+conducted, his pride and honour would not allow him to quit Greece.
+
+In a letter written soon after his first attack, he says, "I am a
+good deal better, though of course weakly. The leeches took too much
+blood from my temples the day after, and there was some difficulty in
+stopping it; but I have been up daily, and out in boats or on
+horseback. To-day I have taken a warm bath, and live as temperately
+as can well be, without any liquid but water, and without any animal
+food"; then adverting to the turbulences of the Suliotes, he adds,
+"but I still hope better things, and will stand by the cause as long
+as my health and circumstances will permit me to be supposed useful."
+Subsequently, when pressed to leave the marshy and deleterious air of
+Missolonghi, he replied, still more forcibly, "I cannot quit Greece
+while there is a chance of my being of (even supposed) utility.
+There is a stake worth millions such as I am, and while I can stand
+at all I must stand by the cause. While I say this, I am aware of
+the difficulties, and dissensions, and defects of the Greeks
+themselves; but allowance must be made for them by all reasonable
+people."
+
+After this attack of epilepsy Lord Byron because disinclined to
+pursue his scheme against Lepanto. Indeed, it may be said that in
+his circumstances it was impracticable; for although the Suliotes
+repented of their insubordination, they yet had an objection to the
+service, and said "they would not fight against stone walls." All
+thought of the expedition was in consequence abandoned, and the
+destinies of poor Byron were hastening to their consummation. He
+began to complain!
+
+In speaking to Parry one day of the Greek Committee in London, he
+said, "I have been grossly ill-treated by the Committee. In Italy Mr
+Blaquiere, their agent, informed me that every requisite supply would
+be forwarded with all despatch. I was disposed to come to Greece,
+but I hastened my departure in consequence of earnest solicitations.
+No time was to be lost, I was told, and Mr Blaquiere, instead of
+waiting on me at his return from Greece, left a paltry note, which
+gave me no information whatever. If ever I meet with him, I shall
+not fail to mention my surprise at his conduct; but it has been all
+of a piece. I wish the acting Committee had had some of the trouble
+which has fallen on me since my arrival here: they would have been
+more prompt in their proceedings, and would have known better what
+the country stood in need of. They would not have delayed the
+supplies a day nor have sent out German officers, poor fellows, to
+starve at Missolonghi, but for my assistance. I am a plain man, and
+cannot comprehend the use of printing-presses to a people who do not
+read. Here the Committee have sent supplies of maps. I suppose that
+I may teach the young mountaineers geography. Here are bugle-horns
+without bugle-men, and it is a chance if we can find anybody in
+Greece to blow them. Books are sent to people who want guns; they
+ask for swords, and the Committee give them the lever of a printing-
+press.
+
+"My future intentions," continued his Lordship, "as to Greece, may be
+explained in a few words. I will remain here until she is secure
+against the Turks, or till she has fallen under their power. All my
+income shall be spent in her service; but, unless driven by some
+great necessity, I will not touch a farthing of the sum intended for
+my sister's children. Whatever I can accomplish with my income, and
+my personal exertions, shall be cheerfully done. When Greece is
+secure against external enemies, I will leave the Greeks to settle
+their government as they like. One service more, and an eminent
+service it will be, I think I may perform for them. You, Parry,
+shall have a schooner built for me, or I will buy a vessel; the
+Greeks shall invest me with the character of their ambassador, or
+agent: I will go to the United States, and procure that free and
+enlightened government to set the example of recognising the
+federation of Greece as an independent state. This done, England
+must follow the example, and then the fate of Greece will be
+permanently fixed, and she will enter into all her rights as a member
+of the great commonwealth of Christian Europe."
+
+This intention will, to all who have ever looked at the effects of
+fortune on individuals, sufficiently show that Byron's part in the
+world was nearly done. Had he lived, and recovered health, it might
+have proved that he was then only in another lunation: his first was
+when he passed from poesy to heroism. But as it was, it has only
+served to show that his mind had suffered by the decadency of his
+circumstances, and how much the idea of self-exaltation weakly
+entered into all his plans. The business was secondary to the style
+in which it should be performed. Building a vessel! why think of the
+conveyance at all? as if the means of going to America were so scarce
+that there might be difficulty in finding them. But his mind was
+passing from him. The intention was unsound--a fantasy--a dream of
+bravery in old age--begotten of the erroneous supposition that the
+cabinets of Christendom would remain unconcerned spectators of the
+triumph of the Greeks, or even of any very long procrastination of
+their struggle.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVII
+
+
+
+The last Illness and Death of Lord Byron--His last Poem
+
+Although in common parlance it may be said, that after the attack of
+epilepsy Lord Byron's general health did not appear to have been
+essentially impaired, the appearance was fallacious; his constitution
+had received a vital shock, and the exciting causes, vexation and
+confusion, continued to exasperate his irritation.
+
+On the 1st of March he complained of frequent vertigoes, which made
+him feel as though he were intoxicated; but no effectual means were
+taken to remove these portentous symptoms; and he regularly enjoyed
+his daily exercise, sometimes in boats, but oftener on horseback.
+His physician thought him convalescent; his mind, however, was in
+constant excitement; it rested not even during sleep.
+
+On the 9th of April, while sailing, he was overtaken by the rain, and
+got very wet: on his return home, he changed the whole of his dress;
+but he had been too long in his wet clothes, and the stamina of his
+constitution being shaken could not withstand the effects. In little
+more than two hours he was seized with rigors, fever, and rheumatic
+pains. During the night, however, he slept in his accustomed manner,
+but in the morning he complained of pains and headache; still this
+did not prevent him from going out on horseback in the afternoon--it
+was for the last time.
+
+On returning home, he observed to one of the servants that the saddle
+was not perfectly dry, from having been so wet the day before, and
+that he thought it had made him worse. He soon after became affected
+with almost constant shivering; sudorific medicines were
+administered, and blood-letting proposed; but though he took the
+drugs, he objected to the bleeding. Another physician was in
+consequence called in to see if the rheumatic fever could be appeased
+without the loss of blood. This doctor approved of the medicines
+prescribed, and was not opposed to the opinion that bleeding was
+necessary, but said it might be deferred till the next day.
+
+On the 11th he seemed rather better, but the medicines had produced
+no effect.
+
+On the 12th he was confined to bed with fever, and his illness
+appeared to be increasing; he was very low, and complained of not
+having had any sleep during the night; but the medical gentlemen saw
+no cause for alarm. Dr Bruno, his own physician, again proposed
+bleeding; the stranger still, however, thought it might be deferred,
+and Byron himself was opposed to it. "You will die," said Dr Bruno,
+"if you do not allow yourself to be bled." "You wish to get the
+reputation of curing my disease," replied his Lordship, "that is why
+you tell me it is so serious; but I will not permit you to bleed me."
+
+On the 13th he sat up for some time, after a sleepless night, and
+still complained of pain in his bones and head.
+
+On the 14th he also left his bed. The fever was less, but the
+debility greater, and the pain in his head was undiminished. His
+valet became alarmed, and, doubtful of the skill of the doctors
+around him, entreated permission to send to Zante for an English
+physician of greater reputation. His Lordship desired him to consult
+the others, which he did, and they told him there was no occasion to
+call in any person, as they hoped all would be well in a few days.
+
+His Lordship now began to doubt if his disease was understood, and
+remarked repeatedly in the course of this day, that he was sure the
+doctors did not understand it. "Then, my Lord," said Fletcher, his
+valet, "have other advice." "They tell me," rejoined his Lordship,
+"that it is only a common cold, which you know I have had a thousand
+times."
+
+"I am sure you never had one of so serious a nature."
+
+"I think I never had."
+
+Fletcher then went again to the physicians, and repeated his
+solicitations that the doctor in Zante might be sent for; but was
+again assured that his master would be better in two or three days.
+
+At length, the doctor who had too easily consented to the
+postponement of the bleeding, seeing the prognostications of Dr Bruno
+more and more confirmed, urged the necessity of bleeding, and of no
+longer delay. This convinced Byron, who was himself greatly averse
+to the operation, that they did not understand his case.
+
+On the 15th his Lordship felt the pains abated, insomuch that he was
+able to transact some business.
+
+On the 16th he wrote a letter, but towards the evening he became
+worse, and a pound of blood was taken from him. Still the disease
+was making progress, but Dr Bruno did not yet seem much alarmed; on
+the contrary, he thought were more blood removed his recovery was
+certain. Fletcher immediately told his master, urging him to comply
+with the doctor's wishes. "I fear," said his Lordship, "they know
+nothing about my disorder, but"--and he stretched out his arm--"here,
+take my arm and do whatever you like."
+
+On the 17th his countenance was changed; during the night he had
+become weaker, and a slight degree of delirium, in which he raved of
+fighting, had come on. In the course of the day he was bled twice;
+in the morning, and at two in the afternoon. The bleeding, on both
+occasions, was followed by fainting fits. On this day he said to
+Fletcher, "I cannot sleep, and you well know I have not been able to
+sleep for more than a week. I know that a man can only be a certain
+time without sleep, and then he must go mad, without anyone being
+able to save him; and I would ten times sooner shoot myself than be
+mad, for I am not afraid of dying--I am more fit to die than people
+think."
+
+On the 18th his Lordship first began to dread that his fate was
+inevitable. "I fear," said he to Fletcher, "you and Tita will be ill
+by sitting up constantly, night and day"; and he appeared much
+dissatisfied with his medical treatment. Fletcher again entreated
+permission to send for Dr Thomas, at Zante: "Do so, but be quick,"
+said his Lordship, "I am sorry I did not let you do so before, as I
+am sure they have mistaken my disease; write yourself, for I know
+they would not like to see other doctors here."
+
+Not a moment was lost in executing the order, and on Fletcher
+informing the doctors what he had done, they said it was right, as
+they now began to be afraid themselves. "Have you sent?" said his
+Lordship, when Fletcher returned to him.--"I have, my Lord."
+
+"You have done well, for I should like to know what is the matter
+with me."
+
+From that time his Lordship grew every hour weaker and weaker; and he
+had occasional flights of delirium. In the intervals he was,
+however, quite self-possessed, and said to Fletcher, "I now begin to
+think I am seriously ill; and in case I should be taken off suddenly,
+I wish to give you several directions, which I hope you will be
+particular in seeing executed." Fletcher in reply expressed his hope
+that he would live many years, and execute them himself. "No, it is
+now nearly over; I must tell you all without losing a moment."
+
+"Shall I go, my Lord, and fetch pen, ink, and paper.
+
+"Oh, my God! no, you will lose too much time, and I have it not to
+spare, for my time is now short. Now pay attention--you will be
+provided for."
+
+"I beseech you, my Lord, to proceed with things of more consequence."
+
+His Lordship then added,
+
+"Oh, my poor dear child!--my dear Ada!--My God! could I have but seen
+her--give her my blessing--and my dear sister Augusta, and her
+children--and you will go to Lady Byron and say--tell her everything-
+-you are friends with her."
+
+He appeared to be greatly affected at this moment. His voice failed,
+and only words could be caught at intervals; but he kept muttering
+something very seriously for some time, and after raising his voice,
+said,
+
+"Fletcher, now if you do not execute every order which I have given
+you, I will torment you hereafter, if possible."
+
+This little speech is the last characteristic expression which
+escaped from the dying man. He knew Fletcher's superstitious
+tendency, and it cannot be questioned that the threat was the last
+feeble flash of his prankfulness. The faithful valet replied in
+consternation that he had not understood one word of what his
+Lordship had been saying.
+
+"Oh! my God!" was the reply, "then all is lost, for it is now too
+late! Can it be possible you have not understood me!"
+
+"No, my Lord; but I pray you to try and inform me once more."
+
+"How can I? it is now too late, and all is over."
+
+"Not our will, but God's be done," said Fletcher, and his Lordship
+made another effort, saying,
+
+"Yes, not mine be done--but I will try"--and he made several attempts
+to speak, but could only repeat two or three words at a time; such
+as,
+
+"My wife! my child--my sister--you know all--you must say all--you
+know my wishes"----The rest was unintelligible.
+
+A consultation with three other doctors, in addition to the two
+physicians in regular attendance, was now held; and they appeared to
+think the disease was changing from inflammatory diathesis to
+languid, and ordered stimulants to be administered. Dr Bruno opposed
+this with the greatest warmth; and pointed out that the symptoms were
+those, not of an alteration in the disease, but of a fever flying to
+the brain, which was violently attacked by it; and, that the
+stimulants they proposed would kill more speedily than the disease
+itself. While, on the other hand, by copious bleeding, and the
+medicines that had been taken before, he might still be saved. The
+other physicians, however, were of a different opinion; and then Dr
+Bruno declared he would risk no farther responsibility. Peruvian
+bark and wine were then administered. After taking these stimulants,
+his Lordship expressed a wish to sleep. His last words were, "I must
+sleep now"; and he composed himself accordingly, but never awoke
+again.
+
+For four-and-twenty hours he continued in a state of lethargy, with
+the rattles occasionally in his throat. At six o'clock in the
+morning of the 19th, Fletcher, who was watching by his bed-side, saw
+him open his eyes and then shut them, apparently without pain or
+moving hand or foot. "My God!" exclaimed the faithful valet, "I fear
+his Lordship is gone." The doctors felt his pulse--it was so.
+
+
+After life's fitful fever he sleeps well.
+
+
+But the fittest dirge is his own last lay, written on the day he
+completed his thirty-sixth year, soon after his arrival at
+Missolonghi, when his hopes of obtaining distinction in the Greek
+cause were, perhaps, brightest; and yet it breathes of dejection
+almost to boding.
+
+
+'Tis time this heart should be unmoved
+ Since others it has ceased to move,
+Yet though I cannot be beloved
+ Still let me love.
+
+My days are in the yellow leaf,
+ The flowers and fruits of love are gone,
+The worm, the canker, and the grief
+ Are mine alone.
+
+The fire that in my bosom preys
+ Is like to some volcanic isle,
+No torch is kindled at its blaze--
+ A funeral pile.
+
+The hope, the fears, the jealous care,
+ Th' exalted portion of the pain,
+And power of love I cannot share,
+ But wear the chain.
+
+But 'tis not here--it is not here--
+ Such thoughts should shake my soul; nor now
+Where glory seals the hero's bier,
+ Or binds his brow.
+
+The sword, the banner, and the field,
+ Glory and Greece around us see;
+The Spartan borne upon his shield
+ Was not more free.
+
+Awake! not Greece--she is awake--
+ Awake my spirit! think through whom
+My life-blood tastes its parent lake,
+ And then strike home!
+
+I tread reviving passions down,
+ Unworthy manhood! Unto thee
+Indifferent should the smile or frown
+ Of beauty be.
+
+If thou regrett'st thy youth, why live?
+ The land of honourable death
+Is here, up to the field and give
+ Away thy breath.
+
+Seek out--less often sought than found--
+ A soldier's grave--for thee the best
+Then look around, and choose thy ground,
+ And take thy rest.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLVIII
+
+
+
+The funeral Preparations and final Obsequies
+
+The death of Lord Byron was felt by all Greece as a national
+misfortune. From the moment it was known that fears were entertained
+for his life, the progress of the disease was watched with the
+deepest anxiety and sorrow. On Easter Sunday, the day on which he
+expired, thousands of the inhabitants of Missolonghi had assembled on
+the spacious plain on the outside of the city, according to an
+ancient custom, to exchange the salutations of the morning; but on
+this occasion it was remarked, that instead of the wonted
+congratulations, "Christ is risen," they inquired first, "How is Lord
+Byron?"
+
+On the event being made known, the Provisional Government assembled,
+and a proclamation, of which the following is a translation, was
+issued
+
+
+"Provisional Government of Western Greece.
+
+"The day of festivity and rejoicing is turned into one of sorrow and
+morning.
+
+"The Lord Noel Byron departed this life at eleven {354} o'clock last
+night, after an illness of ten days. His death was caused by an
+inflammatory fever. Such was the effect of his Lordship's illness on
+the public mind, that all classes had forgotten their usual
+recreations of Easter, even before the afflicting event was
+apprehended.
+
+"The loss of this illustrious individual is undoubtedly to be
+deplored by all Greece; but it must be more especially a subject of
+lamentation at Missolonghi, where his generosity has been so
+conspicuously displayed, and of which he had become a citizen, with
+the ulterior determination of participating in all the dangers of the
+war.
+
+"Everybody is acquainted with the beneficent acts of his Lordship,
+and none can cease to hail his name as that of a real benefactor.
+
+"Until, therefore, the final determination of the national Government
+be known, and by virtue of the powers with which it has been pleased
+to invest me, I hereby decree:
+
+"1st. To-morrow morning, at daylight, thirty-seven minute-guns shall
+be fired from the grand battery, being the number which corresponds
+with the age of the illustrious deceased.
+
+"2nd. All the public offices, even to the tribunals, are to remain
+closed for three successive days.
+
+"3rd. All the shops, except those in which provisions or medicines
+are sold, will also be shut; and it is strictly enjoined that every
+species of public amusement and other demonstrations of festivity at
+Easter may be suspended.
+
+"4th. A general mourning will be observed for twenty-one days.
+
+"5th. Prayers and a funeral service are to be offered up in all the
+churches.
+
+"A. MAVROCORDATOS.
+"GEORGIS PRAIDIS, Secretary.
+
+"Given at Missolonghi, this 19th of April, 1824."
+
+
+The funeral oration was written and delivered on the occasion, by
+Spiridion Tricoupi, and ordered by the government to be published.
+No token of respect that reverence could suggest, or custom and
+religion sanction, was omitted by the public authorities, nor by the
+people.
+
+Lord Byron having omitted to give directions for the disposal of his
+body, some difficulty arose about fixing the place of interment. But
+after being embalmed it was sent, on the 2nd of May, to Zante, where
+it was met by Lord Sidney Osborne, a relation of Lord Byron, by
+marriage--the secretary of the senate at Corfu.
+
+It was the wish of Lord Sidney Osborne, and others, that the
+interment should be in Zante; but the English opposed the proposition
+in the most decided manner. It was then suggested that it should be
+conveyed to Athens, and deposited in the temple of Theseus, or in the
+Parthenon--Ulysses Odysseus, the Governor of Athens, having sent an
+express to Missolonghi, to solicit the remains for that city; but,
+before it arrived, they were already in Zante, and a vessel engaged
+to carry them to London, in the expectation that they would be
+deposited in Westminster Abbey or St Paul's.
+
+On the 25th of May, the Florida left Zante with the body, which
+Colonel Stanhope accompanied; and on the 29th of June it reached the
+Downs. After the ship was cleared from quarantine, Mr Hobhouse, with
+his Lordship's solicitor, received it from Colonel Stanhope, and, by
+their directions it was removed to the house of Sir E. Knatchbull, in
+Westminster, where it lay in state several days.
+
+The dignitaries of the Abbey and of St Paul's having, as it was said,
+refused permission to deposit the remains in either of these great
+national receptacles of the illustrious dead, it was determined that
+they should be laid in the ancestral vault of the Byrons. The
+funeral, instead of being public, was in consequence private, and
+attended by only a few select friends to Hucknell, a small village
+about two miles from Newstead Abbey, in the church of which the vault
+is situated; there the coffin was deposited, in conformity to a wish
+early expressed by the poet, that his dust might be mingled with his
+mother's. Yet, unmeet and plain as the solemnity was in its
+circumstances, a remarkable incident gave it interest and
+distinction: as it passed along the streets of London, a sailor was
+observed walking uncovered near the hearse, and on being asked what
+he was doing there, replied that he had served Lord Byron in the
+Levant, and had come to pay his last respects to his remains; a
+simple but emphatic testimony to the sincerity of that regard which
+his Lordship often inspired, and which with more steadiness might
+always have commanded.
+
+The coffin bears the following inscription:
+
+
+LORD BYRON, OF ROCHDALE,
+BORN IN LONDON, JANUARY 22, 1788;
+DIED AT MISSOLONGHI,
+IN WESTERN GREECE,
+APRIL 19, 1824.
+
+
+Beside the coffin the urn is placed, the inscription on which is,
+
+
+Within this urn are deposited the heart, brains, etc. of the deceased
+Lord Byron.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLIX
+
+
+
+The Character of Lord Byron
+
+My endeavour, in the foregoing pages, has been to give a general view
+of the intellectual character of Lord Byron. It did not accord with
+the plan to enter minutely into the details of his private life,
+which I suspect was not greatly different from that of any other
+person of his rank, not distinguished for particular severity of
+manners. In some respects his Lordship was, no doubt, peculiar. He
+possessed a vivacity of sensibility not common, and talents of a very
+extraordinary kind. He was also distinguished for superior personal
+elegance, particularly in his bust. The style and character of his
+head were universally admired; but perhaps the beauty of his
+physiognomy has been more highly spoken of than it really merited.
+Its chief grace consisted, when he was in a gay humour, of a
+liveliness which gave a joyous meaning to every articulation of the
+muscles and features: when he was less agreeably disposed, the
+expression was morose to a very repulsive degree. It is, however,
+unnecessary to describe his personal character here. I have already
+said enough incidentally, to explain my full opinion of it. In the
+mass, I do not think it was calculated to attract much permanent
+affection or esteem. In the detail it was the reverse: few men
+possessed more companionable qualities than Lord Byron did
+occasionally; and seen at intervals in those felicitous moments, I
+imagine it would have been difficult to have said, that a more
+interesting companion had been previously met with. But he was not
+always in that fascinating state of pleasantry: he was as often
+otherwise; and no two individuals could be more distinct from each
+other than Byron in his gaiety and in his misanthropy. This
+antithesis was the great cause of that diversity of opinion
+concerning him, which has so much divided his friends and
+adversaries. Of his character as a poet there can be no difference
+of opinion, but only a difference in the degree of admiration.
+
+Excellence in talent, as in every other thing, is comparative; but
+the universal republic of letters will acknowledge, that in energy of
+expression and liveliness of imagery Byron had no equal in his own
+time. Doubts, indeed, may be entertained, if in these high qualities
+even Shakspeare himself was his superior.
+
+I am not disposed to think with many of those who rank the genius of
+Byron almost as supreme, that he has shown less skill in the
+construction of his plots, and the development of his tales, than
+might have been expected from one so splendidly endowed; for it has
+ever appeared to me that he has accomplished in them everything he
+proposed to attain, and that in this consists one of his great
+merits. His mind, fervid and impassioned, was in all his
+compositions, except Don Juan, eagerly fixed on the catastrophe. He
+ever held the goal full in view, and drove to it in the most
+immediate manner. By this straightforward simplicity all the
+interest which intricacy excites was of necessity disregarded. He is
+therefore not treated justly when it is supposed that he might have
+done better had he shown more art: the wonder is, that he should
+have produced such magnificent effects with so little. He could not
+have made the satiated and meditative Harold so darkling and
+excursive, so lone, "aweary," and misanthropical, had he treated him
+as the hero of a scholastic epic. The might of the poet in such
+creations lay in the riches of his diction and in the felicity with
+which he described feelings in relation to the aspect of scenes amid
+the reminiscences with which the scenes themselves were associated.
+
+If in language and plan he be so excellent, it may be asked why
+should he not be honoured with that pre-eminent niche in the temple
+which so many in the world have by suffrage assigned to him? Simply
+because, with all the life and beauty of his style, the vigour and
+truth of his descriptions, the boldness of his conceptions, and the
+reach of his vision in the dark abysses of passion, Lord Byron was
+but imperfectly acquainted with human nature. He looked but on the
+outside of man. No characteristic action distinguishes one of his
+heroes from another, nor is there much dissimilarity in their
+sentiments; they have no individuality; they stalk and pass in mist
+and gloom, grim, ghastly, and portentous, mysterious shadows,
+entities of the twilight, weird things like the sceptred effigies of
+the unborn issue of Banquo.
+
+Combined with vast power, Lord Byron possessed, beyond all question,
+the greatest degree of originality of any poet of this age. In this
+rare quality he has no parallel in any age. All other poets and
+inventive authors are measured in their excellence by the accuracy
+with which they fit sentiments appropriate not only to the characters
+they create, but to the situations in which they place them: the
+works of Lord Byron display the opposite to this, and with the most
+extraordinary splendour. He endows his creations with his own
+qualities; he finds in the situations in which he places them only
+opportunities to express what he has himself felt or suffered; and
+yet he mixes so much probability in the circumstances, that they are
+always eloquently proper. He does everything, as it were, the
+reverse of other poets; in the air and sea, which have been in all
+times the emblems of change and the similitudes of inconstancy, he
+has discovered the very principles of permanency. The ocean in his
+view, not by its vastness, its unfathomable depths, and its limitless
+extent, becomes an image of deity, by its unchangeable character!
+
+The variety of his productions present a prodigious display of power.
+In his short career he has entitled himself to be ranked in the first
+class of the British poets for quantity alone. By Childe Harold, and
+his other poems of the same mood, he has extended the scope of
+feeling, made us acquainted with new trains of association, awakened
+sympathies which few suspected themselves of possessing; and he has
+laid open darker recesses in the bosom than were previously supposed
+to exist. The deep and dreadful caverns of remorse had long been
+explored but he was the first to visit the bottomless pit of satiety.
+
+The delineation of that Promethean fortitude which defied conscience,
+as he has shown it in Manfred, is his greatest achievement. The
+terrific fables of Marlowe and of Goethe, in their respective
+versions of the legend of Faustus, had disclosed the utmost writhings
+which remorse in the fiercest of its torments can express; but what
+are those Laocoon agonies to the sublime serenity of Manfred. In the
+power, the originality, and the genius combined, of that unexampled
+performance, Lord Byron has placed himself on an equality with
+Milton. The Satan of the Paradise Lost is animated by motives, and
+dignified by an eternal enterprise. He hath purposes of infinite
+prospect to perform, and an immeasurable ambition to satisfy.
+Manfred hath neither purpose nor ambition, nor any desire that seeks
+gratification. He hath done a deed which severs him from hope, as
+everlastingly as the apostacy with the angels has done Satan. He
+acknowledges no contrition to bespeak commiseration, he complains of
+no wrong to justify revenge, for he feels none; he despises sympathy,
+and almost glories in his perdition.
+
+The creation of such a character is in the sublimest degree of
+originality; to give it appropriate thoughts and feelings required
+powers worthy of the conception; and to make it susceptible of being
+contemplated as within the scope and range of human sympathy, places
+Byron above all his contemporaries and antecedents. Milton has
+described in Satan the greatest of human passions, supernatural
+attributes, directed to immortal intents, and stung with
+inextinguishable revenge; but Satan is only a dilatation of man.
+Manfred is loftier, and worse than Satan; he has conquered
+punishment, having within himself a greater than hell can inflict.
+There is a fearful mystery in this conception; it is only by solemnly
+questioning the spirits that lurk within the dark metaphors in which
+Manfred expresses himself, that the hideous secrets of the character
+can be conjectured.
+
+But although in intellectual power, and in creative originality,
+Byron is entitled to stand on the highest peak of the mountain, his
+verse is often so harsh, and his language so obscure, that in the
+power of delighting he is only a poet of the second class. He had
+all the talent and the means requisite to embody his conceptions in a
+manner worthy of their might and majesty; his treasury was rich in
+everything rare and beautiful for illustration, but he possessed not
+the instinct requisite to guide him in the selection of the things
+necessary to the inspiration of delight:--he could give his statue
+life and beauty, and warmth, and motion, and eloquence, but not a
+tuneful voice.
+
+Some curious metaphysicians, in their subtle criticism, have said
+that Don Juan was but the bright side of Childe Harold, and that all
+its most brilliant imagery was similar to that of which the dark and
+the shadows were delineated in his other works. It may be so. And,
+without question, a great similarity runs through everything that has
+come from the poet's pen; but it is a family resemblance, the progeny
+are all like one another; but where are those who are like them? I
+know of no author in prose or rhyme, in the English language, with
+whom Byron can be compared. Imitators of his manner there will be
+often and many, but he will ever remain one of the few whom the world
+acknowledges are alike supreme, and yet unlike each other--epochal
+characters, who mark extraordinary periods in history.
+
+Raphael is the only man of pre-eminence whose career can be compared
+with that of Byron; at an age when the genius of most men is but in
+the dawning, they had both attained their meridian of glory, and they
+both died so early, that it may be said they were lent to the world
+only to show the height to which the mind may ascend when time shall
+be allowed to accomplish the full cultivations of such extraordinary
+endowments.
+
+
+
+Footnotes:
+
+{156} I.e., against.
+
+{241} The sacrifice of Antinous by the emperor Adrian is supposed to
+have been a sacrifice of that kind. Dion Cassius says, that Adrian,
+who had applied himself to the study of magic, being deceived by the
+principles of that black Egyptian art into a belief that he would be
+rendered immortal by a voluntary human sacrifice to the infernal
+gods, accepted the offer which Antinous made of himself.
+
+I have somewhere met with a commentary on this to the following
+effect:
+
+The Christian religion, in the time of Adrian, was rapidly spreading
+throughout the empire, and the doctrine of gaining eternal life by
+the expiatory offering was openly preached. The Egyptian priests,
+who pretended to be in possession of all knowledge, affected to be
+acquainted with this mystery also. The emperor was, by his taste and
+his vices, attached to the old religion; but he trembled at the
+truths disclosed by the revelation; and in this state of
+apprehension, his thirst of knowledge and his fears led him to
+consult the priests of Osiris and Isis; and they impressed him with a
+notion that the infernal deities would be appeased by the sacrifice
+of a human being dear to him, and who loved him so entirely as to lay
+down his life for him. Antinous, moved by the anxiety of his
+imperial master, when all others had refused, consented to sacrifice
+himself; and it was for this devotion that Adrian caused his memory
+to be hallowed with religious rites.
+
+{255} Mr Hobhouse has assured me that this information is not
+correct. "I happen," says he, "to know that Lord Byron offered to
+give the Guiccioli a sum of money outright, or to leave it to her by
+his will. I also happen to know that the lady would not hear of any
+such present or provision; for I have a letter in which Lord Byron
+extols her disinterestedness, and mentions that he has met with a
+similar refusal from another female. As to the being in destitute
+circumstances, I cannot believe it; for Count Gamba, her brother,
+whom I knew very well after Lord Byron's death, never made any
+complaint or mention of such a fact: add to which, I know a
+maintenance was provided for her by her husband, in consequence of a
+law process, before the death of Lord Byron."
+
+{291a} The calenture.
+
+{291b} The Swiss air.
+
+{319} The doctor evidently makes a mistake in confounding Sir
+William Hamilton with Sir William Drummond.
+
+{354} Fletcher's narrative implies at six that evening, the 19th
+April, 1824.
+
+
+
+
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