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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53644 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53644)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Historical Characters in the Reign of Queen
-Anne, by Mrs. M. O. W. Oliphant
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: Historical Characters in the Reign of Queen Anne
-
-Author: Mrs. M. O. W. Oliphant
-
-Release Date: December 1, 2016 [EBook #53644]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORICAL CHARACTERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: PRINCESS ANNE OF DENMARK.
-
- ENGRAVED BY H. DAVIDSON, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, AFTER THE
- PAINTING BY W. WISSING AND I. VANDERVAART.]
-
-
-
-
- HISTORICAL CHARACTERS
- OF THE REIGN OF
- QUEEN ANNE
-
- BY
- MRS. M. O. W. OLIPHANT
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- THE CENTURY CO.
- 1894
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1893, 1894,
- BY THE CENTURY CO.
-
- THE DE VINNE PRESS.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
- PAGE
-
-THE PRINCESS ANNE 1
-
-CHAPTER II
-THE QUEEN AND THE DUCHESS 43
-
-CHAPTER III
-THE AUTHOR OF “GULLIVER” 83
-
-CHAPTER IV
-THE AUTHOR OF “ROBINSON CRUSOE” 129
-
-CHAPTER V
-ADDISON, THE HUMORIST 167
-
-
-
-
-INDEX OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-PRINCESS ANNE OF DENMARK FRONTISPIECE
-
-Engraved by H. DAVIDSON, from mezzotint by JOHN SMITH, after the
-painting by W. WISSING and I. VANDERVAART.
-
-
- FACING PAGE
-
-
-ANNE HYDE, DUCHESS OF YORK 4
-
-Engraved by T. JOHNSON, after the painting by Sir PETER LELY, in possession
-of Earl Spencer.
-
-
-JOHN EVELYN 8
-
-Engraved by E. HEINEMANN, after copperplate by F. BARTOLOZZI in the
-British Museum.
-
-
-PRINCE GEORGE OF DENMARK 12
-
-Engraved by R. A. MULLER, from mezzotint in the British Museum by
-JOHN SMITH, after the painting by Sir GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-CHARLES II. 16
-
-Engraved by T. JOHNSON, after original painting by SAMUEL COOPER, in
-the gallery of the Duke of Richmond and Gordon.
-
-
-HENRY COMPTON, BISHOP OF LONDON 20
-
-Engraved from life by DAVID LOGGAN, from print in the British Museum.
-Engraved by E. HEINEMANN.
-
-
-JAMES II. IN HIS CORONATION ROBES 24
-
-Engraved by T. JOHNSON, after the painting by Sir PETER LELY, in possession
-of the Duke of Northumberland.
-
-
-MARY, PRINCESS OF ORANGE 28
-
-Engraved by C. A. POWELL, after the painting by Sir PETER LELY, in possession
-of the Earl of Crawford.
-
-
-QUEEN MARY OF MODENA 32
-
-Engraved by CHARLES STATE, after the painting by Sir PETER LELY, in
-possession of Earl Spencer.
-
-
-WILLIAM III. 40
-
-From copperplate engraving by CORNELIS VERMEULEN, after the Painting
-by ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF.
-
-
-THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER 44
-
-Engraved by R. G. TIETZE, From mezzotint by JOHN SMITH, after the painting
-by Sir GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-GARDEN FRONT, HAMPTON COURT 48
-
-Drawn by JOSEPH PENNELL. Engraved by J. F. JUNGLING.
-
-
-THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER 52
-
-Engraved by R. A. MULLER, from miniature by LEWIS CROSSE, in the collection
-at Windsor Castle; by special permission of Queen Victoria.
-
-
-QUEEN ANNE 56
-
-From copperplate engraving by PIETER VAN GUNST, after the painting by
-Sir GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-WINDSOR TERRACE, LOOKING WESTWARD 60
-
-Engraved by J. W. EVANS, after aquatint by P. SANDBY.
-
-
-THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH 64
-
-Engraved by J. H. E. WHITNEY, from an engraving by PIETER VAN GUNST,
-after painting by ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF.
-
-
-THE DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUGH 72
-
-Engraved by R. G. TIETZE, from mezzotint after painting by Sir GODFREY
-KNELLER.
-
-
-BISHOP GILBERT BURNET 80
-
-Engraved by R. A. MULLER, from mezzotint in the British Museum by
-JOHN SMITH, after the painting by JOHN RILEY.
-
-
-JONATHAN SWIFT 84
-
-From photograph of original Marble Bust of Swift by ROUBILLIAC
-(1695-1762), now in the Library of Trinity College, Dublin.
-
-
-MOOR PARK, RESIDENCE OF SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE AND OF
-SWIFT 88
-
-Drawn by CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY. Engraved by R. VARLEY.
-
-
-DEAN SWIFT 92
-
-From copperplate engraving by PIERRE FOURDRINIER, after a painting by
-CHARLES JERVAS.
-
-
-STELLA’S COTTAGE, ON THE BOUNDARY OF THE MOOR PARK
-ESTATE 96
-
-Drawn by CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY. Engraved by S. DAVIS.
-
-
-HESTER JOHNSON, SWIFT’S “STELLA,” PAINTED FROM LIFE BY
-MRS. DELANY, ON THE WALL OF THE TEMPLE AT DELVILLE, AND
-ACCIDENTALLY DESTROYED 100
-
-Engraved by M. HAIDER, from copy of the original by HENRY MACMANUS,
-R. H. A., now in possession of Professor Dowden.
-
-
-SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE 104
-
-Engraved by R. A. MULLER, from an engraving in the British Museum, after
-a painting by Sir PETER LELY.
-
-
-DELANY’S HOUSE AT DELVILLE, WHERE SWIFT STAYED 108
-
-Drawn by HARRY FENN. Engraved by C. A. POWELL.
-
-
-MARLEY ABBEY, THE RESIDENCE OF VANESSA, NOW CALLED
-SELBRIDGE ABBEY 112
-
-Drawn by HARRY FENN. Engraved by R. C. COLLINS.
-
-
-GEORGE, EARL OF BERKELEY 120
-
-From an unfinished engraving, in the British Museum, attributed to DAVID
-LOGGAN.
-
-
-ST. PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, DUBLIN 124
-
-Drawn by HARRY FENN. Engraved by C. A. POWELL.
-
-
-DANIEL DEFOE 136
-
-Engraved by C. A. POWELL, after copperplate by M. VAN DER GUCHT, in
-the British Museum.
-
-
-CHURCH OF ST. GILES, CRIPPLEGATE, WHERE DEFOE IS SUPPOSED
-TO HAVE BEEN BAPTIZED 144
-
-Drawn by HARRY FENN. Engraved by H. E. SYLVESTER.
-
-
-ROBERT HARLEY, EARL OF OXFORD 152
-
-Engraved by JOHN P. DAVIS, after the original painting by Sir GODFREY
-KNELLER, in the British Museum.
-
-
-JOSEPH ADDISON 176
-
-Engraved by T. JOHNSON, from mezzotint by JEAN SIMON, after painting by
-Sir GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-SIDNEY, EARL OF GODOLPHIN 192
-
-Engraved by PETER AITKEN, from mezzotint by JOHN SMITH, in British
-Museum. Painted by Sir GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-
-
-
-THE REIGN OF QUEEN ANNE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-THE PRINCESS ANNE
-
-
-The reign of Queen Anne is one of the most illustrious in English
-history. In literature it has been common to call it the Augustan age.
-In politics it has all the interest of a transition period, less
-agitating, but not less important, than the actual era of revolution. In
-war, it is, with the exception of the great European wars of the
-beginning of this century, the most glorious for the English arms of any
-that have elapsed since Henry V. set up his rights of conquest over
-France. Opinions change as to the advantage of such superiorities; and,
-still more, as to the glory which is purchased by bloodshed; yet,
-according to the received nomenclature, and in the language of all the
-ages, the time of Marlborough cannot be characterized as anything but
-glorious. A great general, statesmen of eminence, great poets, men of
-letters of the first distinction--these are points in which this period
-cannot easily be excelled. It pleases the fancy to step historically
-from queen to queen, and to find in each a center of national greatness
-knitting together the loose threads of the great web. “The spacious
-times of great Elizabeth” bulk larger and more magnificently in history
-than those of Anne, but the two eras bear a certain balance which is
-agreeable to the imagination. And we can scarcely help regretting that
-the great age of Wordsworth and Scott, Byron and Wellington, should not
-have been deferred long enough to make the reign of Victoria the third
-noblest period of modern English history. But time has here balked us.
-This age is not without its own greatness, but it is not the next in
-national sequence to that of Anne, as Anne’s was to that of Elizabeth.
-
-In the reigns of both these queens this country was trembling between
-two dynasties, scarcely yet removed from the convulsion of great
-political changes, and feeling that nothing but the life of the
-sovereign on the throne stood between it and unknown rulers and dangers
-to come. The deluge, in both cases, was ready to be let loose after the
-termination of the life of the central personage in the state. And thus
-the reign of Anne, like that of Elizabeth, was to her contemporaries the
-only piece of solid ground amid a sea of evil chances. What was to come
-after was clear to none.
-
-But in the midst of its agitations and all its exuberant life--the wars
-abroad, the intrigues at home, the secret correspondences, the plots,
-the breathless hopes and fears--it is half ludicrous, half pathetic, to
-turn to the harmless figure of Queen Anne in the center of the scene--a
-fat, placid, middle-aged woman full of infirmities, with little about
-her of the picturesque yet artificial brightness of her time, and no
-gleam of reflection to answer to the wit and genius which have made her
-age illustrious. A monarch has the strangest fate in this respect: as
-long as she or he lives, the conscious center of everything whose notice
-elates and elevates the greatest; but as soon as his day is over, a mere
-image of state visible among his courtiers only as some unthought-of
-lackey or faded gentleman usher throws from his little literary lantern
-a ray of passing illumination upon him. The good things of their lives
-are thus almost counterbalanced by the insignificance of their
-historical position. Anne was one of the sovereigns who may, without
-too great a strain of hyperbole, be allowed to have been beloved in her
-day. She did nothing to repel the popular devotion. She was the best of
-wives, the most sadly disappointed of childless mothers. She made
-pecuniary sacrifices to the weal of her kingdom such as few kings or
-queens have thought of making. And she was a Stuart, Protestant, and
-safe, combining all the rights of the family with those of orthodoxy and
-constitutionalism, without even so much offense as lay in a foreign
-accent. There was indeed nothing foreign about her, a circumstance in
-her favor which she shared with the other great English queen regnant,
-who, like her, was English on both sides of the lineage.
-
-All these points made her popular and, it might be permissible to say,
-beloved. If she had been indifferent to her father’s deprivation, she
-had not at least shocked popular feeling by any immediate triumph in
-succeeding him, as Mary had done; and her mild Englishism was delightful
-to the people after grim William with his Dutch accent and likings. But
-the historians have not been kind to Anne. They have lavished ill names
-upon her: a stupid woman,--“a very weak woman, always governed blindly
-by some female favorite,”--nobody has a civil word to say for her. Yet
-there is a mixture of the amusing and the tragic in the appearance of
-this passive figure seated on high, presiding over all the great events
-of the epoch, with her humble feminine history, her long anguish of
-motherhood, her hopes so often raised and so often shattered, her
-stifled family feeling, her profound and helpless sense of misfortune.
-
-There is one high light in the picture, however, though but one, and it
-comes from one of the rarest and highest sentiments of humanity: the
-passion of friendship, of which women are popularly supposed to be
-incapable, but which never existed in more complete and disinterested
-exhibition than in the bosom of this poor queen. It is sad that it
-should have ended in disloyalty and estrangement; but, curiously enough,
-it is not the breach of this close union, but the union itself, which
-has exposed Anne to the censure and contempt of all her biographers and
-historians. To an impartial mind we think few things can be more
-interesting than the position of these two female figures in the
-foreground of English life. Their friendship brought with it no harm to
-England; no scandal, such as lurks about the antechamber of kings, and
-which has made the name of a favorite one of the most odious titles of
-reproach, could attach in any way to such a relationship. And nothing
-could be better adapted to enhance the dramatic features of the scene
-than the contrast between the two friends whose union for many years was
-so intimate and so complete.
-
-Yet her friend was as like to call forth such devotion as ever woman
-was. Seldom has there been a more brilliant figure in history than that
-of the great duchess, a woman beloved and hated as few have ever been;
-holding on one side in absolute devotion to her the greatest hero of the
-time, and on the other rousing to the height of adoration the mild and
-obtuse nature of her mistress; keeping her place on no ground but that
-of her own sense and spirit, amid all intrigues and opposition, for many
-of the most remarkable years of English history, and defending herself
-with such fire and eloquence when attacked, that her plea is as
-interesting and vivid as any controversy of to-day, and it is impossible
-to read it without taking a side, with more or less vehemence, in the
-exciting quarrel. Such a woman, standing like a beautiful Ishmael with
-every man’s hand against her, yet fearing no man, and ready to meet
-every assailant, makes a welcome variety amid the historical scenes
-which so seldom exhibit anything so living, so imperious, so bold and
-free. That she has got little mercy and no
-
-[Illustration: ANNE HYDE, DUCHESS OF YORK.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF EARL SPENCER.]
-
-indulgence, that all chivalrous sentiment has been mute in respect to
-her, and an angry ill-temper takes possession of every historian who
-names her name, rather adds to the interest than takes from it. Women in
-history, strangely enough, seem always to import into the chronicle a
-certain heat of personal feeling unusual and undesirable in that region
-of calm. Whether it is that the historian is impatient at finding
-himself arrested by the troublesome personalities of a woman, and that a
-certain resentment of her intrusion colors his appreciation of her, or
-that her appearance naturally possesses an individuality which breaks
-the line, it is difficult to tell; but the calmest chronicler becomes a
-partizan when he treats of Mary and Elizabeth, and no man can name Sarah
-of Marlborough without a heat of indignation or scorn, almost
-ridiculous, as being so long after date.
-
-To us the unfailing vivacity and spirit of the woman, the dauntless
-stand she makes, her determination not to be overcome, make her
-appearance always enlivening; and art could not have designed a more
-complete contrast than that of the homely figure by her side, with
-appealing eyes fixed upon her, a little bewildered, not always quick to
-understand--a woman born for other uses, but exposed all her harmless
-life to the fierce light that beats upon a throne. For her part, she has
-no defense to make, no word to say; let them spend all their jibes upon
-her, Anne knows no reply. Her slow understanding and want of perception
-give her a certain composure which in a queen answers very well for
-dignity; yet there is something whimsically pathetic, pitiful,
-incongruous in the fate which has placed her there, which can scarcely
-fail to soften the heart of the spectators.
-
-The tragedy of Anne’s life, unlike that of her friend, had no utterance,
-and there was nothing romantic in her appearance or surroundings to
-attract the lovers of the picturesque. Yet in the blank of her humble
-intellect she discharged not amiss the duties that were so much too
-great for her; and if she was disloyal to her friend in the end, that
-betrayal only adds another touch of pathos to the spectacle of
-helplessness and human weakness. It is only the favored few of mankind
-who are wiser and better, not feebler and less noble, as life draws
-toward its end.
-
-Anne was, like Elizabeth, the daughter of a subject. Her mother, Anne
-Hyde, the daughter of the great Clarendon, though naturally subjected to
-the hot criticism of the moment on account of that virtue which refused
-anything less from her prince than the position of wife, was not a woman
-of much individual character, nor did she live long enough to influence
-much the training of her daughters. Historians have not hesitated to
-sneer at the prudence with which this young lady secured herself by
-marriage, when so many fairer than she were less scrupulous--a reproach
-which is somewhat unfair, considering what would certainly have been
-said of her had she not done so. Curiously enough, her own father,
-whether in sincerity or pretense, seems at the moment to have been her
-most severe critic, exculpating himself with unnecessary energy from all
-participation in the matter, and declaring that if it were true “the
-king should immediately cause the woman to be sent to the Tower” till
-Parliament should have time to pass an act cutting off her head. It
-would appear, however, from the contemporary narratives of Pepys and
-Evelyn that he was not so bad as his words, for he seems to have
-supported and shielded his daughter during the period of uncertainty
-which preceded the acknowledgment of her marriage, and to have shared in
-the general satisfaction afterward. But this great marriage was not of
-much advantage to her family. It did not hinder Clarendon’s disgrace and
-banishment, nor were his sons after him anything advantaged by their
-close relationship to two queens.
-
-The Duchess of York does not seem to have been remarkable in any way.
-She is said to have governed her husband; and she died a Roman
-Catholic,--the first of the royal family to lead the way in that fatal
-particular: but did not live long enough to affect the belief or
-training of her children.
-
-There was an interval of three years in age between Mary and Anne. The
-eldest, Mary, was like the Stuarts, with something of their natural
-grace of manner; the younger was a fair English child, rosy and plump
-and blooming; in later life they became more like each other. But the
-chief thing they inherited from their mother was what is called in fine
-language, “a tendency to embonpoint,” with, it is said, a love of good
-eating, which helped to produce the other peculiarity.
-
-The religious training of the princesses is the first thing we hear of
-them. They were put under the charge of a most orthodox tutor, Compton,
-Bishop of London, with much haste and ostentation--their uncle, Charles
-II., probably feeling with his usual cynicism that the sop of two
-extra-Protestant princesses would please the people, and that the souls
-of a couple of girls could not be of much importance one way or another.
-How they fared in respect to the other features of education is not
-recorded. Lord Dartmouth, in his notes on Bishop Burnet’s history,
-informs us that King Charles II., struck by the melodious voice of the
-little Lady Anne, had her trained in elocution by Mrs. Barry, an
-actress; while Colley Cibber adds that she and her sister were
-instructed by the well-known Mrs. Betterton to take their parts in a
-little court performance when Anne was but ten and Mary thirteen; but
-whether these are two accounts of the same incident, or refer to
-distinct events, seems doubtful.
-
-The residence of the girls was chiefly at Richmond, where they were
-under the charge of Lady Frances Villiers, who had a number of daughters
-of her own, one of whom, Elizabeth, went with Mary to Holland, and was,
-in some respects, her evil genius. We have, unfortunately, no court
-chronicle to throw any light upon the lively scene at Richmond, where
-this little bevy of girls grew up together, conning their divinity,
-whatever other lessons might be neglected; taking the air upon the river
-in their barges; following the hounds in the colder season, for this
-robust exercise seems to have been part of their training. When their
-youthful seclusion was broken by such a great event as the court mask,
-in which they played their little parts,--Mrs. Blogge, the saintly
-beauty, John Evelyn’s friend, Godolphin’s wife, acting the chief
-character, in a blaze of diamonds,--or that state visit to the city when
-King Charles in all his glory took the girls, his heirs, with him, no
-doubt the old withdrawing-rooms and galleries of Richmond rang with the
-story for weeks after. Princess Mary, her mind perhaps beginning to own
-a little agitation as to royal suitors, would have other distractions;
-but as to the Lady Anne, it soon came to be her chief holiday when the
-young Duchess of York, her stepmother, came from town in her chariot, or
-by water, in a great gilded barge breasting up the stream, to pay the
-young ladies a visit. For in the train of that princess was the young
-maid of honor, a delightful, brilliant _espiègle_, full of spirit and
-wilfulness, who bore the undistinguished name of Sarah Jennings, and
-brought with her such life and stir and movement as dispersed the
-dullness wherever she went.
-
-There is no such love as a young girl’s adoration for a beautiful young
-woman, a little older than herself, whom she can admire and imitate and
-cling to, and dream of with visionary passion. This was the kind of
-sentiment with which the little princess regarded the bright and
-animated creature in her young stepmother’s train. Mary of Modena was
-herself only a few years older than her stepchildren. They were all
-young together, accustomed to the perpetual gaiety of the court of
-Charles II., though, let us hope, kept apart from its license, and
-
-[Illustration: JOHN EVELYN.
-
-ENGRAVED BY E. HEINEMANN, AFTER COPPERPLATE BY F. BARTOLOZZI IN THE
-BRITISH MUSEUM.]
-
-no shadow of fate seems to have fallen upon the group of girls in their
-early peaceful days. Anne in particular would seem to have been left to
-hang upon the arm and bask in the smiles of her stepmother’s young lady
-in waiting at her pleasure--with many a laugh at premature favoritism.
-“We had used to play together when she was a child,” said the great
-duchess long after. “She even then expressed a particular fondness for
-me; this inclination increased with our years. I was often at court, and
-the princess always distinguished me by the pleasure she took to honor
-me preferably to others with her conversation and confidence. In all her
-parties for amusement, I was sure by her choice to be one.”
-
-Mistress Sarah was one of the actors in the mask above referred to; she
-was in the most intimate circle of the Duke of York’s household, closely
-linked to all its members, in that relationship, almost as close as
-kindred, which binds a court together.
-
-And no doubt it added greatly to the attractions which the bright and
-animated girl exercised over her playmates and companions, that she had
-already a romantic love-story, and, at a period when matches were
-everywhere arranged, as at present in continental countries, by the
-parents, made a secret marriage, under the most romantic circumstances,
-with a young hero already a soldier of distinction. He was not an
-irreproachable hero. Court scandal had not spared him. He was said to
-have founded his fortune upon the bounty of one of the shameless women
-of Charles’s court. But the imagination of the period was not
-over-delicate, and probably had he not become so great a man, and
-acquired so many enemies, we should have heard little of John
-Churchill’s early vices. About his sister, Arabella Churchill,
-unfortunately there could not be any doubt; and it is a curious instance
-of the sudden efflorescence now and then of a race which neither before
-nor after is of particular note, that Marlborough’s sister should have
-been the mother of that one illustrious Stuart who might, had he been
-legitimate, have changed the fortunes of the house--the Duke of Berwick.
-Had she, instead of Anne Hyde, been James’s duchess, what a difference
-might have been made in history! Nobody had heard of the Churchills
-before--they have not been a distinguished race since. It is curious
-that they should have produced, all unawares, without preparation or
-warning, the two greatest soldiers of the age.
-
-Young Churchill was attached to the Duke of York’s service, as Sarah
-Jennings was to that of the duchess. He had served abroad with
-distinction. In 1672, when France and England for once, in a way, were
-allies against Holland, he had served under the great Turenne, who
-called him “my handsome Englishman,” and vaunted his gallantry. He was
-but twenty-two when he thus gave proofs of his future greatness. When he
-returned, after various other exploits, and resumed his court service,
-the brilliant maid of honor, whom the little princess adored, attained a
-complete dominion over the spirit of the young soldier. There were
-difficulties about the marriage, for he had no fortune, and his
-provident parents had secured an heiress for him. But it was at length
-accomplished so secretly that even the bride was never quite certain of
-the date, in the presence and with the favor of Mary of Modena herself.
-Sarah, if the dates are correct, must have been eighteen at this period,
-and her little princess fourteen. What a delightful interruption to the
-dullness of Richmond to hear all about it when the Duchess of York came
-with her train and the two girls could wander away together in some
-green avenue till Lady Frances sent a page or an usher after them!
-
-Mary of Modena must have been a lover of romances, and true love also,
-though her youth had fallen to such a gruesome bridegroom as James
-Stuart; for not only Sarah Jennings and her great general, who were to
-have so great a hand in keeping that poor lady’s son from his kingdom,
-but Mary Blogge and her statesman, who was to rule England so wisely in
-the interest of the opposing side, were both secretly married under the
-young duchess’s wing, she helping, planning, and sanctioning the secret.
-How many additional bitternesses must this have put into her cup when
-she was sitting, a shadow queen, at St.-Germain, and all those people
-whom she had loved and caressed were swaying the fortunes of England!
-And who can tell what tender recollections of his secret wedding and the
-sweet and saintly prude whom King James’s young wife gave him, may have
-touched the soul of Godolphin in those hankerings after his old
-master--if it were not, as scandal said, to his old mistress--which
-moved him from time to time, great minister as he was, almost to the
-verge of treachery! The Churchills, it must be owned, showed little
-gratitude to their royal patrons.
-
-When the Princess Mary married and went to Holland with her husband, the
-position of her sister at home became a more important one. Anne was not
-without some experience of travel and those educational advantages which
-the sight of foreign countries are said to bring. She went to The Hague
-to visit her sister. She accompanied her father, sturdy little
-Protestant as she was, when he was in disgrace for his religious views,
-and spent some time in Brussels, from which place she wrote to one of
-the ladies about the court a letter which has been preserved,--with just
-as much and as little reason as any other letter of a fifteen-year-old
-girl with her eyes about her, at a distance of two hundred years,--in
-which the young lady describes a ball she had seen, herself _incognita_,
-at which some gentlemen “danced extremely well--as well if not better
-than the Duke of Monmouth or Sir E. Villiers, which I think is very
-extraordinary,” says the girl, no doubt sincerely believing that the
-best of all things was to be found at home. She had little difficulties
-about her spelling, but that was common enough. “As for the town,” says
-the Princess Anne, “methinks tho’ the streets are not so clean as in
-Holland, yet they are not so dirty as ours; they are very well paved and
-very easy--they only have od smells.” This is a peculiarity which has
-outlived her day, and it would seem to imply that England, even before
-the invention of sanitary science, was superior in this respect at least
-to the towns of the Continent.
-
-After these unusual dissipations Anne remained in the shade until she
-married, in 1683, George, Prince of Denmark, a perfectly inoffensive and
-insignificant person, to whom she gave, during the rest of her life, a
-faithful, humdrum, but unbroken attachment, such as shows to little
-advantage in print, but makes the happiness of many a home. This
-marriage was another sacrifice to the Protestantism of England, and in
-that point of view pleased the people much. King Charles, glad to
-satisfy the country by any act which cost him nothing, thought it “very
-convenient and suitable.” James, unwilling, but powerless, grumbled to
-himself that “he had little encouragement in the conduct of the Prince
-of Orange to marry another daughter in the same interest,” but made no
-effort against it. The prince himself produced no very great impression,
-one way or another, as indeed he was little fitted to do. “He has the
-Danish countenance, blonde,” says Evelyn, in his diary; “of few words;
-spoke French but ill; seemed somewhat heavy, but is reported to be
-valiant.” He had never any occasion to show his valor during his long
-residence in England, but many to prove the former quality,--the
-heaviness,--which was only too evident; but Anne herself was not
-brilliant, and she was made for friendship, not for passion in the
-ordinary sense of the word. She never seems to have been in the smallest
-way dissatisfied with her heavy, honest goodman. He was fond of eating
-and
-
-[Illustration: PRINCE GEORGE OF DENMARK.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MEZZOTINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM BY JOHN
-SMITH, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.]
-
-drinking, but of no more dangerous pleasures. Her peace of mind was
-fluttered by no rival, nor her feminine pride touched. Her attendants
-might be as seductive as they pleased, this steady, stolid husband was
-immovable, and there is no doubt that the princess appreciated the
-advantages of this immunity from one of the thorns which were planted in
-every other royal pillow.
-
-Her marriage had another advantage of giving her a household and court
-of her own, and enabled her at once to secure for herself the
-companionship of her always beloved friend. “So desirous was she,” says
-Duchess Sarah, “of having me always near her, that upon her marriage
-with the Prince of Denmark, in 1683, it was at her own earnest request
-to her father I was made one of the ladies of her bedchamber. What
-conduced to make me the more agreeable to her in this station was,
-doubtless,” she adds with candor, “the dislike she conceived to most of
-the other persons about her, and particularly for her first lady of the
-bedchamber--the Countess of Clarendon, a lady whose discourse and manner
-could not possibly recommend her to so young a mistress; for she looked
-like a mad-woman and talked like a scholar. Indeed, her highness’s court
-was so oddly composed that I think it would be making myself no great
-compliment if I should say her choosing to spend more of her time with
-me than with any of her other servants did no discredit to her taste.”
-
-Lady Clarendon was the wife of the great chancellor’s son, and was thus
-the aunt, by marriage, of the princess--not always a very endearing
-relationship. She was not a great lady by birth, and though a friend of
-Evelyn’s and a highly educated woman, might easily be supposed to be a
-little oppressive in a young household where her relationship gave her a
-certain authority.
-
-The prince was dull, the princess had not many resources. They settled
-down in homely virtue, close to the court with all its scandals and
-gaieties, but not quite of it; and nothing could be more natural than
-that Anne should eagerly avail herself of the always amusing, always
-lively companion who had been the friend of her youth. The Cockpit,
-which was Anne’s residence, had been built as a royal playhouse, first
-for the sport indicated by its name, then for the more refined
-amusements of the theater, but had been afterward turned into a private
-residence, and bought by Charles II. for his niece on her marriage. It
-formed part of the old palace of Whitehall, and must have been within
-sight and sound of the constant gaieties going on in that lawless
-household, in the best of which the princess and her attendant would
-have their natural share. No doubt to hear Lady Churchill’s lively
-satirical remarks upon all this, and the flow of her brilliant malice,
-must have kept the household lively, and brightened the dull days and
-tedious waitings of maternity, into which Anne was immediately plunged,
-drawing a laugh even from stupid George in the chimney-corner. And there
-was this peculiarity to make the whole more piquant; that it was virtue,
-irreproachable, and no doubt pleasantly self-conscious of its
-superiority, which thus got its fun out of vice. The two young couples
-on the other side of the way were immaculate, devoted exclusively to
-each other, thinking of neither man nor woman save their lawful mates.
-Probably neither the princess nor her lady in waiting were disgusted by
-gossip about the Portsmouths and Castlemaines, but took these ladies to
-pieces with indignant zest and spared no jibe. And though the remarks
-might be too broad for modern liking, and the fun somewhat unsavory, we
-cannot but think that amidst the noisy and picturesque life of that wild
-Restoration era, full of corruption, yet so gay and sparkling to the
-spectator, this little household of the Cockpit is not without its
-claims upon our attention. There was not in all Charles’s court so
-splendid a couple as the young Churchills: he already one of the most
-distinguished soldiers of the age, she a beautiful young woman
-overflowing with wit and energy. And Princess Anne was very young; in
-full possession of that _beauté de diable_ which, so long as it lasts,
-has its own charm, the beauty of color and freshness and youthful
-contour. She had a beautiful voice, the prettiest hands, and the most
-affectionate heart. If she were not clever, that matters but little to a
-girl of twenty, taught by love to be receptive, and called upon for no
-effort of genius. Honest George behind backs was not much more than a
-piece of still life, but an inoffensive and amiable one, taking nothing
-upon him. If there was calculation in the steadfastness with which the
-abler pair possessed themselves of the confidence, and held fast to the
-service of their royal friends, it would be hard to assert that there
-was not some affection too, at least on the part of Sarah, who had known
-every thought of her little princess’s heart since she was a child, and
-could not but be flattered and pleased by the love showered upon her. At
-all events, in Anne there was no unworthy sentiment; everything about
-her appeals to our tenderness. When she attained what seems to have been
-the summit of her desires and secured her type of excellence, the
-admired and adored paragon of her childhood, for her daily companion,
-the formal titles and addresses which her rank made necessary became
-irksome beyond measure to the simple-hearted young woman whose hard fate
-it was to have been born a princess. The impetuosity of her affection,
-her rush, so to speak, into the arms of her friend, her pretty youthful
-sentiment, so fresh and natural, her humility and simplicity, are all
-pleasant to contemplate. Little more than a year after her marriage,
-after the closer union had begun, she writes thus:
-
- If you will let me have the satisfaction of hearing from you again
- before I see you, let me beg of you not to call me “your highness”
- at every word, but to be as free with me as one friend ought to be
- with another. And you can never give me any greater proof of your
- friendship than in telling me your mind freely in all things, which
- I do beg of you to do: and if it ever were in my power to serve
- you, nobody would be more ready than myself. I am all impatience
- for Wednesday. Till then farewell.
-
-Upon this there ensued a little sentimental bargain between the two
-young women. It was not according to the manners of the time that they
-should call each other Anne and Sarah, and the fashion of the Aramintas
-and Dorindas had not yet arrived from Paris. They managed the
-transformation necessary in a curiously matter-of-fact and English way:
-
- She grew uneasy to be treated by me with the form and ceremony due
- to her rank; nor could she bear from me the sound of words which
- implied in them distance and superiority. It was this turn of mind
- which made her one day propose to me that whenever I should happen
- to be absent from her we might in all our letters write ourselves
- by feigned names, such as would import nothing of distinction of
- rank between us. Morley and Freeman were the names her fancy hit
- upon, and she left me to choose by which of them I should be
- called. My frank open temper led me naturally to pitch upon
- Freeman, and so the princess took the other; and from this time
- Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman began to converse as equals, made so
- by affection and friendship.
-
-Very likely these were the names in some young lady’s book which had
-been in the princess’s childish library,--something a generation before
-the “Spectator,”--in which rural virtues and the claims of friendship
-were the chief subjects. Morley is one of the typical names of
-sentimental literature in the eighteenth century, and might be
-originally introduced by some precursor of those proper little romances
-which have in all ages been considered the proper reading for “the
-fair.”
-
-Mrs. Morley could be no other than the gentle _ingénue_, the type of
-modest virtue, and Freeman was of all others the title most suitable for
-Sarah, the bright and brave. Historians have not been able to contain
-themselves for angry ridicule of this
-
-[Illustration: CHARLES II.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER ORIGINAL PAINTING BY SAMUEL COOPER, IN THE
-GALLERY OF THE DUKE OF RICHMOND AND GORDON.]
-
-little friendly treaty. To us it seems a pretty incident. The princess
-was twenty, the bedchamber woman twenty-four. Their friendly traffic had
-not to their own consciousness attained the importance of a historical
-fact.
-
-The locality in which the royal houses in London stood was very
-different then from its appearance now. Whitehall at present is a great
-thoroughfare, full of life and movement, with but one remnant of the old
-palace,--once the banqueting-hall, now the chapel royal, where the
-window out of which Charles I. is supposed to have passed to the
-scaffold is pointed out to strangers,--and still presenting a bit of
-gloomy, stately front to the street.
-
-St. James’s Park opposite is screened off and separated now by the Horse
-Guards and other public buildings, a long and heavy line which forms one
-side of the way. But in those days there were neither public buildings
-nor busy street. The palace, straggling and irregular, with walls and
-roofs on many different levels, stood like a sort of royal village
-between the river and the park, with the turrets of St. James twinkling
-in the distance, in the sunshine, over the trees of the Mall, where King
-Charles with all his dogs and gentlemen would stream forth daily for his
-saunter or his game. The Cockpit was one of the outlying portions of
-Whitehall upon the edge of the park.
-
-Anne had been but two years married when King Charles died. And then the
-aspect of affairs changed. The mass in the private chapel, and the
-presence here and there of somebody who looked like a priest, at once
-started into prominence and began to alarm the gazers more than the
-dissolute amusements of the court had ever done. James was not virtuous
-any more than his brother. One of the first acts which the excellent
-Evelyn, one of the best of men, had to do as commissioner of the privy
-seal, was to affix that imperial stamp to a patent by which one of the
-new king’s favorites was made Countess of Dorchester; but James’s
-immoralities were not his chief characteristics. He was a more dangerous
-king than Charles, who was merely selfish, dissolute, and
-pleasure-loving. James was more; he was a bigoted Roman Catholic, eager
-to raise his faith to its old supremacy, and the mere thought that the
-door which had been so bolted and barred against popery was now set open
-filled all England with the wildest panic. The nation felt itself caught
-by the torrent which must carry it to destruction. Men saw the dungeons
-of the Inquisition, the fires of Smithfield, before them as soon as the
-proscribed priest was readmitted and mass once more openly said at an
-unconcealed altar. Never was there a more universal or all-influential
-sentiment. The terror, the unanimity, are things to wonder at. Sancroft
-and his bishops were not constitutionalists. The personal rule of the
-king had nothing in it that alarmed them; but the idea of the
-reintroduction of popery awoke such a panic in their bosoms as drove
-them, in spite of their own tenets, into resistance; and, for the first
-time absolutely unanimous, England was at their back. When we take
-history piecemeal, and read it through the individual lives of the chief
-actors, we perceive with the strangest sensations of surprise that at
-these great crises not one of the leaders of the nation was sure what he
-wanted or what he feared, or was even entirely sincere in his adherence
-to one party against another. They were the courtiers of James, and
-invited William; they were William’s ministers, and kept up a
-correspondence with James. The best of them was not without a
-treacherous side. They were never certain which was safest, which would
-last; always liable to lend an ear to temptations from the other party,
-never sure that they might not to-morrow morning find themselves in open
-rebellion against the master of to-day. Yet, while almost every
-individual of note was subject to this strange uncertainty, this
-confused and troubled vacillation, there was such a sweep of national
-conviction, so strong a current of the general will, that the supposed
-leaders of opinion were carried away by it, and compelled to assume and
-act upon a conviction which was England’s, but which individually they
-did not possess. Nothing can be made more remarkable, more unexplainable
-under any other interpretations, than the way in which his entire court,
-statesmen, soldiers, all who were worth counting, and so many who were
-not, abandoned King James--some with a sort of consternation, not
-knowing why they did it, driven by a force they could not resist. No
-example of this can be more remarkable than that of Clarendon, who
-received the news of his son’s defection to the Prince of Orange with
-what seems to be a heartbroken cry: “O God! that my son should be a
-rebel!” yet, presently, ten days afterward, is drawn away himself in a
-kind of extraordinary confusion, like a man in a dream, like a subject
-of mesmeric influence, although in all the following negotiations he
-maintained James’s cause as far as a man could who did not accept ruin
-as a consequence. Scarcely one of these men was whole-hearted or had any
-determined principle in the matter. But in the mass of the nation behind
-them was a force of conviction, of panic, of determination, that carried
-them off their feet. The chief names of England appear little more than
-straws upon the current, indicating its course, but forced along by its
-fierce sweep and impetus, and not by any impulse of their own.
-
-The Princess Anne occupied a very different position from that of these
-bewildered statesmen. She had been brought up in the strictest sect of
-her religion, Protestant almost more than Christian, a churchwoman above
-all. To those who are capable of thinking about their faith it is always
-possible to believe in the thoughts of other people, and conceive the
-likelihood, at least, that they, in their own esteem, if not in any one
-else’s, may be right--which is the only true foundation of toleration.
-But it is the people who believe without thinking, who receive what they
-are taught without exercising any judgment of their own upon the
-subject, and cling to it in exactly the same form in which they received
-it, with a conviction that its least important detail is as necessary as
-its first principle, who furnish that _sancta simplicitas_ which makes
-the cruelest persecution possible without turning the persecutors into
-fiends and barbarians. Though her mother had been a Roman Catholic, and
-her father was one, and though many of her relations belonged to the old
-church, Anne was a Protestant of the most unyielding kind. She was in
-herself as good a type of the England of her time as could have been
-found, far better than her abler and larger-minded advisers. The
-narrowness of her mind and the rigidity of her faith were above all
-reassurances of reason, all guarantees of possibility. She was as much
-dismayed by her father’s determination to liberate and tolerate popery
-as the least enlightened of his subjects. “Methinks it has a very dismal
-prospect,” she wrote as early as 1686, only the year after James’s
-accession. “Attempts,” Lady Marlborough tells us, “were made to draw his
-daughter into his designs. The king, indeed, used no harshness with her;
-he only discovered his wishes by putting into her hands some books and
-papers which he hoped might induce her to a change of religion, and had
-she had any inclination that way the chaplains about were such divines
-as could have said but little in defense of their own religion or to
-secure her against the pretenses of Popery recommended to her by a
-father and a king.” This low estimate of the princess’s spiritual
-advisers is whimsically supported by Evelyn’s opinion of Anne’s first
-religious preceptor,--Bishop Compton,--of whom the courtly philosopher
-declared after hearing a sermon from him that “this worthy person’s
-talent is not preaching.”
-
-[Illustration: HENRY COMPTON, BISHOP OF LONDON.
-
-ENGRAVED FROM LIFE BY DAVID LOGGAN, FROM PRINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
-ENGRAVED BY E. HEINEMANN.]
-
-But Anne required no persuading to stimulate her in the fear of popery
-and narrow devotion to the church, outside of which she knew of no
-salvation. No doubt her father’s popish tracts, things which in that age
-were held to possess many of the properties of the dynamite of to-day,
-scared the inflexible and unimaginative churchwoman as much as if they
-had been capable of exploding and doing her actual damage. Her training,
-so wisely adapted to please the Protestant party, had probably been
-thought by her father and uncle to be a matter of complete indifference
-on any other ground; but in this way they reckoned altogether without
-their princess. With both James’s daughters the process was too
-successful. They feared popery more than they loved their father. There
-seems not the slightest reason to suppose that Anne was insincere in her
-anxiety for the church, or that the panic which she shared with the
-whole country was affected or unreal. It is impossible that she could
-expect her own position to be improved by the substitution of her sister
-and her sister’s husband for the father who had always been kind to her.
-The Churchills, whose church principles were not perhaps so undeniable,
-and whose regard for their own interest was great, are more difficult to
-divine; and yet it appears an unnecessary thing to refer their action to
-unworthy motives. It is asserted by some that they had some visionary
-plan after they had overturned the existing economy by the help of
-William, of bringing in their princess by a side wind and reigning
-through her over the startled and subjugated nation. But granting that
-such an imagination might have been conceived in the fertile and
-restless brain of a young and sanguine woman, it seems impossible to
-imagine that Churchill--a man of some experience in the world, and some
-knowledge of William--could even for a moment have believed that the
-grave and ambitious prince, who was so near the throne, could have been
-persuaded or forced to waive his wife’s claims, and those still more
-imperative ones which his position of Deliverer gave him, in order to
-advance the fortunes of any one else, least of all of the sister-in-law
-whom he despised.
-
-It is half ludicrous, half pathetic, in the midst of all the tumult and
-confusion of the time, to note the constant allusions to the princess’s
-condition, which recurs whenever she is mentioned. There were always
-reasons why it should be especially cruel to disturb her, and her state
-had constantly to be taken into account. It was very natural in such
-circumstances that she should more and more cling to her stronger
-friend, and find no comfort out of her presence. “Whatever changes there
-are in the world, I hope you will never forsake me, and I shall be
-happy,” she writes during this period of excitement and distress. She
-herself was weak and not very wise. In a sudden emergency neither she
-nor her husband were good for much. They could carry on the routine of
-life well enough, but when unforeseen necessities came they stood
-helpless and bewildered; but Lady Churchill was quick of wit and full of
-inexhaustible resource. To her it was always given to know what to do.
-
-It is unnecessary here to enter into the history of what is called the
-Great Revolution. It is the great modern turning-point of English
-history, and no doubt it is one of the reasons why we have been exempted
-in later days from the agitations of desperate and bloody revolutions
-which have shaken all neighboring nations. Glorious and happy, however,
-scarcely seem to be fit words to describe this extraordinary event. A
-more painful era does not exist in history. There is scarcely an
-individual in the front of affairs who was not guilty of treachery at
-one time or another. They betrayed one another on every hand; they were
-perplexed, uncertain, full of continual alarms. The king who went away
-was a gloomy bigot; the king who came was a cold and melancholy alien.
-Enthusiasm there was none, nor even conviction, except of the necessity
-of doing something of a wide-reaching and undeniable change. The part
-which the ladies at the Cockpit played brings the hurry and excitement
-of the movement to its crisis. Both in their way were anxious for their
-respective husbands, absent in the suite of James, and still in his
-power. When the report came that Lord Feversham had begged of James “on
-his knees two hours” to order the arrest of Churchill, Mrs. Freeman must
-have needed all her courage; while the faithful Morley wept, yet tried
-to emulate the braver woman, wondering in her excitement what her own
-heavy prince was doing, and eager for William’s advance, which, somehow
-or other, was to bring peace and quiet. That heavy prince meanwhile was
-mooning about with the perplexed and unhappy king, uttering out of his
-blond mustache with an atrocious accent his dull wonder, “Est il
-possible?” as every new desertion was announced, till mounting heavily
-one evening after dinner, warmed and encouraged by a good deal of King
-James’s wine, and riding through the cold and dark, in his turn he
-deserted too. When this event happened, the excitement at the Cockpit
-was overwhelming. The princess was “in a great fright.” “She sent for
-me,” says Lady Churchill, “told me her distress, and declared that
-rather than see her father, she would jump out of window.” King James
-was coming back to London, sad and wroth, and perhaps the rumor that he
-would have her arrested lent additional terrors to the idea of
-encountering his angry countenance. Lady Churchill went immediately to
-Bishop Compton, the princess’s early tutor and confidential adviser, and
-instant means were taken to secure her flight. That very night, after
-her attendants were in bed, Anne rose in the dark, and with her beloved
-Sarah’s arm and support stole down the back stairs to where the bishop,
-in a hackney coach, was waiting for her. Other princesses in similar
-situations have owned to a thrill of pleasure in such an adventure. No
-doubt at least she breathed the freer when she was out of the palace
-where King James with his dark countenance might have come any day to
-demand from her an account of her husband’s behavior, or to upbraid her
-with her own want of affection. Anyhow, the sweep of the current had now
-reached her tremulous feet, and she had no power any more than stronger
-persons of resisting it.
-
-Anne’s position was very much changed by the Revolution. If any
-ambitious hopes had been entertained or plans formed by her household,
-they were speedily and very completely brought to an end. The dull royal
-pair with their two brilliant guides and counselors now found themselves
-confronted by another couple of very different mark: the serious,
-somewhat gloomy, determined, and self-concentrated Dutchman, and the new
-queen, Mary, a person far more attractive and imposing than Anne; two
-people full of character and power. We have no space here, however, to
-appropriate to these remarkable persons. William, in particular, belongs
-to larger annals and a history more important than these sketches. Mary
-has left an epitome of herself in her letters which is among the most
-wonderful of individual revelations; but this cannot now be our theme,
-though the subject is a most attractive one.
-
-Two persons so remarkable threw into the shade even Churchill and Sarah,
-much more good Anne and George. We have no reason to suppose that Mary
-entertained any particular sentiment whatever toward her sister, from
-whom she had been entirely separated for the greater part of her life,
-and the history of their relations is a painful one from beginning to
-end. No doubt the queen regarded the household of the princess with the
-contempt which a woman with so entirely different a code would naturally
-entertain for a family in which the heads were so lax and secondary, the
-counselors so prominent. There was nothing in Mary which would help her
-to understand the feeling with which Anne regarded her friend
-
-[Illustration: JAMES II. IN HIS CORONATION ROBES.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND.]
-
-Mary. She had herself made use of their influence in the time when it
-was all important to secure every power in England for William’s
-service, but a proud distaste for the woman whom the princess trusted as
-her equal soon awoke in the bosom of the queen. The Churchills, however,
-served the new sovereigns signally by persuading the princess to yield
-her own rights, and consent to the conjoint reign, and to William’s life
-sovereignty--no small concession on the part of the next heir, and one
-which only the passive character of Anne could have made to appear
-insignificant.
-
-Had she been a stronger and more intellectual woman, this act would have
-borne the aspect of a magnanimous and noble sacrifice to the good of the
-country, of her own interests, and that of her children. As it was, her
-self-renunciation has got her very little credit, either then or now,
-and it has been considered rather an evidence of the discretion of the
-Churchills than of the generosity and patriotism of the princess. These,
-perhaps, are rather large words to use in speaking of Anne, but it must
-be remembered that a narrow mind is usually not less, but more,
-tenacious of personal honor and advantage than a great one, and that the
-dimmer an understanding may be, the less it is accessible to high reason
-and noble motive. This sacrifice accomplished, however, there commenced
-a petty war between Whitehall and the Cockpit, in which perhaps Mary and
-Lady Churchill (now Marlborough) were the chief combatants, but which
-from henceforward until her sister’s death became the principal feature
-in Anne’s life. Continued squabbling is never lovely even when it is
-between queens and princesses, but in this case the injured person has
-had no little injustice, and the offender so many partizans that it may
-not be amiss to make Anne’s side of the question a little more apparent.
-
-If her friend was to blame for embroiling Anne with the queen, it can
-scarcely be believed that the princess’s case would have been more
-satisfactory had she been left in her helplessness to the tender mercies
-of William, and entirely dependent upon his kindness, which must have
-happened had there been no bold and strong adviser in the matter. There
-was no generosity in the treatment which Anne received from the royal
-pair. She had made a sacrifice to the security of their throne which
-deserved some grace in return. But her innocent fancy for the palace at
-Richmond, where the sisters had been brought up together, was not
-indulged, nor would there be much excuse even if she were in the wrong
-for the squabblings about her lodging at Whitehall. But she cannot be
-said to have been in the wrong in the next question which occurred,
-which was the settlement of her own income. This she had previously
-drawn from her father, according to the existing custom in the royal
-family, and James had been always liberal and kind to her. But it was a
-different thing to depend upon the somewhat grudging hand of an
-economical brother-in-law, who had a number of foreign dependents to
-provide for, and a great deal to do with the money granted to him. He
-alarmed her friends on this point at once by a remark made to Clarendon
-as to what the princess could want with so large an income as thirty
-thousand a year; and he does not seem at any time or in any particular
-to have shown consideration for her. Perhaps the Churchills were afraid
-that their mistress would be less able than usual to help and further
-their own fortunes, as is universally alleged against them; but, had
-they been the most disinterested couple in the world, it would still
-have been their duty to do what they could to secure her against any
-caprice of the new king, who had no right to be the arbiter of her fate.
-Lady Marlborough’s strenuous action to bring the question to the
-decision of Parliament was nothing less than her mistress’s interests
-demanded. And the sense of the country was so far with them that the
-princess’s income was settled with very little difficulty upon a more
-liberal basis than her father’s allowance; which, considering that she,
-and the children of whom she was every year becoming the mother, were
-the only acknowledged heirs of the throne, was a perfectly natural and
-just arrangement.
-
-But the king and queen did not see it in this light. “Friends! what
-friends have you but the king and me?” Queen Mary asked with
-indignation. It is not to be supposed that she meant any harm to her
-sister, but with also a sufficiently natural sentiment could not see
-what Anne’s objection was to dependence upon herself.
-
-The position on both sides is so clearly comprehensible that the
-strength of party feeling which makes Lord Macaulay defend the somewhat
-petty attitude of his favorite monarch on the occasion is very
-extraordinary. It requires no very subtle penetration to see the
-difference between an allowance that comes from a father and that which
-depends upon the doubtful friendship of a brother-in-law. Anne had fully
-proved her capacity to consider the public weal above her own, and it
-was unworthy of William even to wish to keep in the position of a
-hanger-on a woman who had so greatly promoted the harmony of his own
-settlement.
-
-Parliament finally voted her a revenue of fifty thousand pounds a year,
-as a sort of compromise between the thirty thousand pounds which King
-William grudged her and the unreasonably large sum which some of her
-supporters hoped to obtain; but the king and queen never forgave her,
-and still less her advisers, for what they chose to consider a want of
-confidence in themselves.
-
-But William was always impatient of the incapable, and the permission
-was absolutely denied to him. In all these claims and refusals the
-position of Lady Marlborough as the princess’s right hand had been
-completely acknowledged by Queen Mary and her husband, who indeed
-attempted secret negotiations with her on more than one occasion to
-induce her to moderate Anne’s claims and to persuade her into compliance
-with their wishes. “She [the queen] sent a great lord to me to desire I
-would persuade the Princess to keep the Prince from going to sea; and
-this I was to compass without letting the Princess know it was the
-Queen’s desire ... after this the Queen sent Lord Rochester to me to
-desire much the same thing. The Prince was not to go to sea, and this
-not going was to appear his own choice.”
-
-Similar attempts were made in the matter of the allowance. And it is
-scarcely possible to believe that Mary, a queen who was not without some
-of the absolutism of the Stuart mind, should have failed to feel a
-certain exasperation with the bold woman who thus upheld her sister’s
-little separate court and interest, and was neither to be flattered nor
-frightened into subservience. And very likely this little separate court
-was a thorn in the side of the royal pair, keeping constant watch upon
-all their actions, maintaining a perpetual criticism, no doubt leveling
-many a jibe at the Dutch retainers, and still more at the Dutch master.
-Good-natured friends, even in the capacity of courtiers, were no doubt
-found to whisper in the presence-chamber the witticisms with which Sarah
-of Marlborough would entertain her mistress--utterances not very
-brilliant, perhaps, but sharp enough. It would not sweeten the temper of
-the queen if she found out, for instance, that her great William was
-known as Caliban in the correspondence of Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman.
-A hundred petty irritations always come in in such circumstances to
-increase a breach. What the precise occurrence was which brought about
-the final explosion is not known, but one day after a stormy scene, in
-which the queen had in vain demanded from her sister the dismissal of
-Lady Marlborough, an event occurred which took away everybody’s breath.
-
-[Illustration: MARY, PRINCESS OF ORANGE.
-
-ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF THE EARL OF CRAWFORD.]
-
-This was the sudden dismissal, without reason assigned, at least so far
-as the public knew, of Lord Marlborough from all his offices. He was
-lieutenant-general of the army, and he was a gentleman of the king’s
-bedchamber. Up to this time there had been nothing to find fault with in
-his conduct. William was too good a soldier himself not to appreciate
-Marlborough’s military talents, and he had behaved, if not with any
-enthusiasm for the new order of affairs, with good taste at least in
-very difficult circumstances. His desertion of James and his powerful
-presence and influence on the opposite side had contributed much to the
-bloodless victory of the Prince of Orange; but except so far as this
-went, Marlborough had shown no hostility to his old master. In the
-convention he had voted for a regency, and when it became evident that
-William’s terms must be accepted unconditionally or not at all, he had
-refrained from voting altogether; so that his support might be
-considered lukewarm. But, on the other hand, he had served with great
-distinction abroad, acting with perfect loyalty to his new chief while
-in command of the English forces. In short, his public aspect up to this
-time would seem on the face of it to have been irreproachable.
-
-This being the case, his sudden dismissal from court filled his friends
-with astonishment and dismay. Nobody understood its why or wherefore.
-“An incident happened which I unwillingly mention,” says Bishop Burnet,
-“because it cannot be told without some reflection on the memory of the
-queen, whom I always honored beyond all the persons whom I have ever
-known.” This regretful preface affords an excellent guarantee of the
-bishop’s sincerity; but Lord Macaulay omits his statement of the case
-altogether while quoting passages from the then unpublished manuscript
-which seemed to support his own views. “The Earl of Nottingham,” Burnet
-continues, “came to the Earl of Marlborough with a message from the King
-telling him that he had no more use for his services, and therefore he
-demanded all his commissions. What drew so sudden and hard a message was
-not known, for he had been with the King that morning and had parted
-with him in the ordinary manner. It seemed some letter was intercepted
-that gave suspicions: it is certain that he thought he was too little
-considered, and that he had upon many occasions censured the King’s
-conduct and reflected on the Dutch.” Lord Macaulay, on the other hand,
-ignoring this statement, assures his readers that the real ground of the
-dismissal had been communicated to Anne on the previous night
-(notwithstanding that the great general had been privileged to put on
-the king’s shirt next morning as if nothing had happened), and that it
-was in reality the discovery of a plot for James’s restoration,
-conceived by Marlborough, and in which the princess herself was
-implicated. It was reported to be Marlborough’s intention to move in the
-House of Lords an address to William, requesting him to dismiss the
-foreign servants who surrounded him, and of whom the English were
-bitterly jealous. Such a scheme of reprisals would have had a certain
-humor in its summary reversal of the position, and no doubt must Sarah
-herself have had some hand in its construction, if it ever existed.
-William was as little likely to give up Bentinck and Keppel as Anne was
-to sacrifice the friends whom she loved, and a breach between the
-Parliament and the king would have been, it was hoped, the natural
-result--to be followed by a _coup d’état_, in which James might be
-replaced under stringent conditions upon the throne. The sole evidence
-for this plot is King James himself, who describes it in his diary. Lord
-Macaulay adds that it is strongly confirmed by Burnet, but this, we take
-leave to think, is not the case. At the same time there seems no reason
-to doubt King James, who adds that the plan was defeated by the
-indiscreet zeal of some of his own _fidèles_, who feared that
-Marlborough, were he once master of the situation, would put Anne on
-the throne instead of her father.
-
-Whether, however, this supposed proposal was, or was not, the reason of
-Marlborough’s dismissal, it is clear enough that he had resumed a secret
-correspondence with the banished king at St.-Germain, whom, not very
-long before, he had deserted. But so had most of the statesmen who
-surrounded William, even the admiral in whose hands the English
-reputation at sea was soon to be placed. The sins of the others were
-winked at while Maryborough was thus made an example of: perhaps because
-he was the most dangerous; perhaps because he had involved the princess
-in his treachery, persuading her to send a letter and make affectionate
-overtures to her father. Is it possible that it was this very letter
-which Burnet says was intercepted, inclosed most likely in one from
-Marlborough more distinct in its offers? Here is Anne’s simple
-performance, a thing not calculated to do either harm or good:
-
- I have been very desirous of some safe opportunity to make you a
- sincere and humble offer of my duty and submission, and to beg you
- will be assured that I am both truly concerned for the misfortunes
- of your condition, and sensible as I ought to be of my own
- unhappiness: as to what you may think I have contributed to it, if
- wishes could recall what is past, I had long since redeemed my
- fault. I am sensible that it would have been a great relief to me
- if I could have found means to have acquainted you earlier with my
- repentant thoughts, but I hope they may find the advantage of
- coming late--of being less suspected of insincerity than perhaps
- they would have been at any time before. It will be a great
- addition to the ease I propose to my own mind by this plain
- confession, if I am so happy as to find that it brings any real
- satisfaction to yours, and that you are as indulgent and easy to
- receive my humble submissions as I am to make them in a free
- disinterested acknowledgment of my fault, for no other end but to
- deserve and receive your pardon.
-
-These involved and halting sentences by themselves could afford but
-little satisfaction to the anxious banished court at St.-Germain. To
-say so much, yet to say so little, though easy to a confused
-intelligence, not knowing very well what it meant, is a thing which
-would have taxed the powers of the most astute conspirators. But there
-could be little doubt that a penitent princess thus ready to implore her
-father’s pardon, would be a powerful auxiliary, with the country just
-then in the stage of natural disappointment which is prone to follow a
-great crisis, and that Marlborough was doubly dangerous with such a card
-in his hands to play.
-
-A little pause occurred after his dismissal. The court by this time had
-gone to Kensington, out of sight and hearing of the Cockpit, Whitehall
-having been burned in the previous year. The princess continued, no
-doubt in no very friendly mood, to take her way to the suburban palace
-in the evenings and make one at her sister’s game of basset, showing by
-her abstraction, and the traces of tears about her eyes, her state of
-depression yet revolt. But about three weeks after that great event,
-something suggested to Lady Marlborough the idea of accompanying her
-princess to the royal presence. It was strictly within her right to do
-so, in attendance on her mistress, and perhaps it was considered in the
-family council at the Cockpit that the existing state of affairs could
-not go on, and that it was best to end it one way or another. One can
-imagine the stir in the ante-chambers, the suppressed excitement in the
-drawing-room, when the princess, less subdued than for some weeks past,
-her eyes no longer red, nor the corners of her mouth drooping, came
-suddenly in out of the night, with the well-known buoyant figure after
-her, proud head erect and eyes aflame, her mistress’s train upon her
-arm, but the air of a triumphant queen on her countenance. There would
-be a pause of consternation--and for a moment it would seem as if Mary,
-thus defied, must burst forth in wrath upon the culprit. What glances
-must have passed between the court ladies behind their fans! What
-whispers in the
-
-[Illustration: QUEEN MARY OF MODENA.
-
-ENGRAVED BY CHARLES STATE, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF EARL SPENCER.]
-
-corners! The queen, in the midst, pale with anger, restraining herself
-with difficulty; the princess, perhaps beginning to quake; but Sarah,
-undaunted, knowing no reason why she should not be there--“since to
-attend the princess was only paying her duty where it was owing.”
-
-But next morning brought, as they must have foreseen it would bring, a
-royal missive, meant to carry dismay and terror, in which Mary commanded
-her sister to dismiss her friend and make instant submission. “I tell
-you plainly Lady Marlborough must not continue with you in the
-circumstances in which her lord is,” the queen wrote; “never anybody was
-suffered to live at court in my Lord Marlborough’s circumstances.” There
-is nothing undignified in Mary’s letter. She was in all respects more
-capable of expressing herself than her sister, and she had so far right
-on her side that Lady Marlborough’s appearance at court was little less
-than a deliberate insult to her. “I have all the reason imaginable to
-look upon you bringing her here as the strangest thing that ever was
-done, nor could all my kindness for you have hindered me showing you
-that moment, but I considered your condition, and that made me master of
-myself so far as not to take notice of it there,” the queen said. The
-princess’s condition had often to be taken into consideration, and
-perhaps she was not unwilling that her superiority in this respect to
-her childless sister should be fully evident. She was then within a few
-weeks of her confinement--not a moment when an affectionate and very
-dependent woman could lightly be parted from her bosom friend.
-
-Thus the situation was brought to a climax. It was not to be expected,
-however, that Anne could have submitted to a mandate which in reality
-would have taken from her all power to choose her own friends; and her
-affections were so firmly fixed upon her beloved companion that it is
-evident life without Sarah would have been a blank to her. She answered
-in a letter studiously compiled in defense both of herself and her
-retainer. “I am satisfied she cannot have been guilty of any fault to
-you, and it would be extremely to her advantage if I could here repeat
-every word that ever she had said to me of you in her whole life,” says
-the princess; and she ends entreating her sister to “recall your severe
-command,” and declaring that there is no misery “that I cannot readily
-resolve to suffer rather than the thought of parting with her.” But
-things had gone too far to be stopped by any such appeal. The letter was
-answered by the lord chamberlain in person with a message forbidding
-Lady Marlborough to continue at the Cockpit. This was arbitrary in the
-highest degree, for the house was Anne’s private property, bought for
-and settled upon her by Charles III.; and it was unreasonable, for
-Whitehall was lying in ruins, and Queen Mary’s sight at Kensington could
-not be offended by the spectacle of the couple who had so annoyed her.
-The princess’s spirit was roused. She wrote to her sister that she
-herself would be “obliged to retire,” since such were the terms of her
-continuance, and sent immediately to the Duke of Somerset to ask for a
-lease of Sion House. It is said that William so far interfered in the
-squabble--in which indeed he had been influential all along--as to ask
-the duke to refuse this trifling favor. But of all English noble houses
-the proud Somersets were the last to be dictated to; and Anne
-established herself triumphantly in her banishment on the banks of the
-Thames with her favorite at her side.
-
-A child was born a little later, and the queen paid Anne an angry visit
-of ceremony a day or two after the event, saying nothing to her but on
-the vexed subject. “I have made the first step by coming to you,” Mary
-said, approaching the bed where the poor princess lay, sad and
-suffering, for her baby had died soon after its birth, “and I now expect
-you should make the next by removing Lady Marlborough.” The princess,
-“trembling, and as white as her sheet,” stammered forth her plaintive
-protest that this was the only thing in which she had disobliged her
-sister, and that “it was unreasonable to ask it of her,” whereupon Mary,
-without another word, left the room and the house. It was the last time
-they ever met, unlikely as such a thing seemed. Anne made various
-overtures of reconciliation, but as unconditional obedience was promised
-in none, Mary’s heart was not softened.
-
-The only justification that can be offered for the queen’s behavior was
-that they had been long separated and had little but the formal tie of
-relationship to bind them to each other. Anne had been but a child when
-Mary left England. They were both married and surrounded by other
-affections when they met again. They had so much resemblance of nature
-that each seems to have been capable of but one passion. It was Mary’s
-good fortune to love her husband with all her heart--but to all
-appearance no one else. She had not a friend among all the ladies who
-had shared her life for years--no intimate or companion who could give
-her any solace when he was absent. Natural affection was not strong in
-their family. They had no mother, nor bond of common relationship except
-the father whom they both superseded. All this explains to a certain
-extent her coldness to Anne, and it is very likely she thought she was
-doing the best thing possible for her sister in endeavoring to separate
-her from an evil influence, an inferior who was her mistress. But this
-does not excuse the paltry and cruel persecution to which the younger
-sister was henceforward exposed. Every honor that belonged to her rank
-was taken from her, from the sentry at her door to the text upon her
-cushion at church. She was allowed no guard; when she went into the
-country the rural mayors were forbidden to present addresses to her and
-pay the usual honors which mayors delight to pay. The great court ladies
-were given to understand that whoever visited her would not be received
-by the queen. A more irritating and miserable persecution could not be,
-nor one more lowering to the character of the chief performer in it.
-
-Anne was but recovering from the illness that followed her confinement,
-and with which her sister’s angry visit was supposed to have something
-to do, when another blow fell upon the band of friends. Marlborough was
-suddenly arrested and sent to the Tower. There was reason enough perhaps
-for his previous disgrace in the secret relations with St.-Germain which
-he was known to have resumed; but the charge afterward made was a purely
-fictitious one, and he and the other great personages involved had
-little difficulty in proving this innocence. The correspondence which
-took place while Lady Marlborough was in town with her husband on this
-occasion reveals Anne very clearly in her affectionate simplicity.
-
- I hear Lord Marlborough is sent to the Tower; and though I am
- certain they have nothing against him, and expected by your letter
- it would be so, yet I was struck when I was told it; for methinks
- it is a dismal thing to have one’s friends sent to that place. I
- have a thousand melancholy thoughts, and cannot help fearing they
- hinder you from coming to me; though how they can do that without
- making you a prisoner, I cannot imagine. I am just told by pretty
- good hands that as soon as the wind turns westerly there will be a
- guard set upon the prince and me. If you hear there is any such
- thing designed and that ’tis easy to you, pray let me see you
- before the wind changes: for afterward one does not know whether
- they will let one have opportunities of speaking to one another.
- But let them do what they please, nothing shall ever vex me, so I
- can have the satisfaction of seeing dear Mrs. Freeman; and I swear
- I would live on bread and water between four walls with her without
- repining; for so long as you continue kind, nothing can ever be a
- real mortification to your faithful Mrs. Morley, who wishes she may
- never enjoy a moment’s happiness in this world or the next if ever
- she proves false to you.
-
-Whether the wind proving “westerly” was a phrase understood between the
-correspondents, or if it had anything to do with the event of the
-impending battle on which the fate of England was hanging, it is
-difficult to tell. If it was used in the latter sense, the victorious
-battle of La Hogue, by which all recent discomfitures were redeemed,
-soon restored the government to calm and the consciousness of triumph,
-and made conspiracy comparatively insignificant. Before this great
-deliverance was known, Anne had written a submissive letter to her
-sister, informing her that she had now recovered her strength “well
-enough to go abroad,” and asking leave to pay her respects to the queen.
-To which Mary returned a stern answer declaring that such civilities
-were unnecessary as long as her sister declined to do the thing required
-of her. Anne sent a copy of this letter to Lady Marlborough, announcing,
-as she was now “at liberty to go where I please by the queen refusing to
-see me,” her intention of coming to London to see her friend, but this
-intention does not seem to have been carried out. “I am very sensibly
-touched with the misfortune that my dear Mrs. Freeman has had in losing
-her son, knowing very well what it is to lose a child,” the princess
-writes, “but she, knowing my heart so well and how great a share I have
-in all her concerns, I will not say any more on this subject for fear of
-renewing her passion too much.” Throughout this separation these little
-billets were continually coming and going, and we cannot do better than
-transcribe for the reader some of those innocent letters, so natural and
-full of the writer’s heart.
-
- Though I have nothing to say to my dear Mrs. Freeman I cannot help
- inquiring how she and her Lord does. If it be not convenient for
- you to write when you receive this, either keep the bearer till it
- is, or let me have a word from you by the next opportunity when it
- is easy to you, for I would not be a constraint to you at any time,
- much less now when you have so many things to do and think of. All
- I desire to hear from you at such a time is that you and yours are
- well, which next to having my Lord Marlborough out of his enemies’
- power, is the best news that can come to her, who to the last
- moment of her life will be dear to Mrs. Freeman’s....
-
- I give dear Mrs. Freeman a thousand thanks for her letter which
- gives me an account of her concerns; and that is what I desire more
- to know than other news. I shall reckon the days and hours and
- think it very long till the time is out, both for your sake and my
- Lord Marlborough’s, and that he may be at liberty and your mind at
- ease. And, dear Mrs. Freeman, don’t say when I can see you if I
- come to town, therefore I ask which day will be most convenient for
- you. I confess I long to see you, but am not so unreasonable to
- desire that satisfaction till it is easy to you. I wish with all my
- soul that you may not be a true prophetess, and that it may soon be
- in our power to enjoy one another’s company more than it has been
- of late, which is all I covet in this world....
-
- I am sorry with all my heart Mrs. Freeman meets with so many
- delays, but it is a comfort they cannot keep my Lord Marlborough in
- the Tower longer than the end of the term, and I hope when the
- Parliament sits care will be taken that people may not be clapt up
- for nothing, or else there will be no living in quiet for anybody
- but insolent Dutch and sneaking mercenary Englishmen. Dear Mrs.
- Freeman, farewell--be assured your faithful Mrs. Morley can never
- change, and I hope you do not in the least doubt of her kindness,
- which, if it be possible, increases every day, and that can never
- have an end but with her life. Mrs. Morley hopes her dear Mrs.
- Freeman will let her have the satisfaction of hearing again from
- her to-morrow....
-
- Dear Mrs. Freeman may easily imagine I cannot have much to say
- since I saw her. However, I must write two words, for though I
- believe she does not doubt of my constancy, feeling how base and
- false all the world is, I am of that temper I think I can never say
- enough to assure you of it. Therefore give me leave to assure you
- they can never change me. And there is no misery I cannot readily
- resolve to suffer rather than the thoughts of parting from you. And
- I do swear I would sooner be torn in pieces than alter this my
- resolution. My dear Mrs. Freeman, I long to hear from you.
-
-This pretty correspondence changed a little, but only to grow more
-impassioned, when the princess had gone to Bath and the friends were
-less near each other.
-
-Anne was, however, pursued by the royal displeasure even in her invalid
-journey to Bath, and no less a person than Lord Nottingham, the lord
-chamberlain, was employed to warn the mayor of that city that his
-civilities to the princess were ill-timed. Such a disclosure of the
-family quarrel evinced a determination and bitterness which perhaps
-frightened even Lady Marlborough, courageous as she was; and she seems
-to have offered and even pressed her resignation as a means of making
-peace. But nothing altered the devotion of her faithful princess.
-
- I really long to know how my dear Mrs. Freeman got home, and now I
- have this opportunity of writing she must give me leave to tell her
- if she should ever be so cruel as to leave her faithful Mrs. Morley
- she will rob her of all the joy and quiet of her life; for if that
- day should come, I could never enjoy a happy minute, and I swear to
- you I would shut myself up and never see a creature. If you do but
- remember what the queen said to me the night before your lord was
- turned out of all; then she began to pick quarrels; and if they
- should take off twenty or thirty thousand pounds, have I not lived
- upon as little before? When I was first married we had but twenty
- (it is true indeed the king was so kind to pay my debts) and if it
- should come to that again what retrenchment is there in my family I
- would not willingly make and be glad of that pretence to do it?
- Never fancy, my dear Mrs. Freeman, if what you fear should happen,
- that you are the occasion; no, I am very well satisfied, and so is
- the prince, too, that it would have been so however, for Caliban is
- capable of doing nothing but injustice; therefore rest satisfied
- you are noways the cause, and let me beg once more for God’s sake
- that you would not mention parting more, no, not so much as think
- of it, and if you should ever leave me, be assured it would break
- your faithful Mrs. Morley’s heart.
-
-A still stronger expression of the same sentiment, with a little gleam
-of self-assertion and sense of injured dignity, follows, after the
-princess had, as would seem, taken counsel with her George. That heavy
-prince fully acquiesced at least, if nothing more, in his wife’s
-devotion.
-
- In obedience to dear Mrs. Freeman I have told the prince all she
- desired me, and he is so far from being of another opinion, if
- there had been occasion, he would have strengthened me in my
- resolutions, and we both beg you would never mention so cruel a
- thing again. Can you think either of us so wretched that for the
- sake of twenty thousand pounds, and to be tormented from morning to
- night with flattering knaves and fools, we should forsake those we
- have such obligations to, and that we are so certain we are the
- occasion of all their misfortunes? Besides, will you believe we
- will truckle to Caliban, who from the first moment of his coming
- has used us at that rate as we are sensible he has done, and that
- all the world can witness that will not let their interest weigh
- more with them than their reason? But suppose I did submit, and
- that the king could change his nature so much as to use me with
- humanity, how would all reasonable people despise me? How would
- that Dutch monster laugh at me, and please himself with having got
- the better! and which is much more, how would my conscience
- reproach me for having sacrificed it--my honor, reputation, and all
- the substantial comforts of this life--for transitory interest,
- which even to those who make it their idol, can never afford any
- real satisfaction, much less to a virtuous mind? No, my dear Mrs.
- Freeman, never believe that your faithful Mrs. Morley will ever
- submit. She can wait with patience for a sunshine day, and if she
- does not live to see it, yet she hopes England will flourish again.
- Once more give me leave to beg you would be so kind never to speak
- of parting more, for, let what will happen, that is the only thing
- that can make me miserable.
-
-Such are the letters which Lord Macaulay describes as expressing “the
-sentiments of a fury in the style of a fish-woman.” It was not indeed
-pretty to call great William Caliban, but Anne was fond of nicknames,
-and the king’s personal appearance was not his strong point. To us the
-above outburst of indignation seems both natural and allowable. She had
-been subject to an inveterate and petty persecution--her little
-magnanimities had been answered by exactions. We are all so ready to
-believe that when a woman is involved she must be the offender, that
-most readers will have set down the insults to which Anne was subject to
-the account of Mary. But it is curious to note that in these letters all
-the blame is thrown upon the harsh brother-in-law, the Dutch monster,
-the alien, who had made so many strangers into English noblemen, and who
-identified Marlborough, among all the other courtiers who had been as
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM III.
-
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY CORNELIS VERMEULEN, AFTER THE PAINTING BY
-ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF.]
-
-little steadfast to him, as the object of a pertinacious persecution.
-The princess says nothing of her sister. It is Caliban who is capable of
-nothing but injustice. It is he who will laugh if he gets the better of
-her. Anne’s style is perhaps not quite worthy of the Augustan age, but
-it is at least very intelligible and full of little individual turns
-which are more characteristic than the smoother graces. That she loved
-her friend with her whole heart, that she had a generous contempt for
-interested motives, and, humble as she was, a just sense of her own
-dignity, are all abundantly and very simply manifest in them. They will
-give to the impartial reader the impression of a natural and artless
-character, with much generous feeling and much tender affectionateness:
-tenacious of her rank and its observances, yet willing to throw all
-these trifles down at the feet of her friend. Poor young lady! When we
-recollect how constantly the princess’s “condition” had to be thought
-of, how her long patience and many pains ended constantly in the little
-waxen image of a dead baby and nothing more, who can wonder that the
-world seemed falling to pieces about her when she was threatened with
-the loss of the one strong sustaining prop upon which she had hung from
-her childhood--the friend who had helped her through all the first
-experiences of life, the companion who had amused so many weary days and
-made the time pass as no one else could do!
-
-All these miserable disputes, however, were ended in a moment when
-brought into the cold twilight of a death-chamber, where even kings and
-queens are constrained to see things at their true value. Of all the
-royal personages in the kingdom, Mary’s would have seemed to any outside
-spectator the soundest and safest life. William had never been healthy,
-and was consumed by the responsibilities and troubles into which he had
-plunged. Anne had these ever-succeeding maternities to keep her at a low
-level; but Mary was young, vigorous, and happy--happy at least in her
-devotion to her husband and his love for her. It was she, however, who,
-to the awe and consternation of the world, was cut down in her prime
-after a few days’ illness, in the midst of her greatness. Such a
-catastrophe no one could behold without the profoundest impulse of pity.
-Whatever she had done a week before, there she lay now helpless, all her
-splendors gone from her, the promise of a long career ended, and her
-partner left heartbroken upon the solitary throne to which she had given
-him the first right.
-
-The sight of so forlorn a man,--so powerful, yet as impotent when his
-happiness was concerned as the meanest,--left thus heartbroken without
-courage or strength, his sole companion gone, and nothing but strangers,
-alien minds, and doubtful counselors round, is enough to touch any
-heart. Anne, like the rest of the world, was shocked and startled by the
-sudden calamity. She sent anxious messages asking to be admitted to her
-sister’s bedside; and, when all was over, partly no doubt from policy,
-but we may be at least permitted to believe partly from good feeling,
-presented herself at Kensington Palace to show at least that rancor was
-not in her heart. Unfortunately, there was no reconciliation between the
-sisters: the breach continued to the end of the queen’s life, Burnet
-informs us. But when the forlorn and solitary king was roused in his
-misery to receive his sister-in-law’s message, a sort of peace was
-patched up between them over that unthought-of grave. There was no
-longer any public quarrel or manifestation of animosity--and with this
-melancholy event the first half of Anne’s history may be brought to an
-end.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE QUEEN AND THE DUCHESS
-
-
-A year after the accession of William and Mary, and before any of the
-bitternesses and conflicts above recorded had openly begun, the only
-child of Anne on whose life any hopes could be built was born. Her many
-babies had died at birth or immediately after, and their quick and
-constant succession, as has been said, was the distinguishing feature of
-her personal life. But after the Revolution, when everything was
-settling out of the confusion of the crisis, and when as yet no further
-family troubles had disclosed the family rancors and disagreements, in
-the country air of Hampton Court, where the new king and queen were
-living, a little prince was born. Though he was sickly at first, like
-all the rest, he survived the dangers of infancy, and, called William
-after the king, and bearing from the first day of his life the title of
-Duke of Gloucester, was received joyfully by the nation at large and
-everybody concerned as the authentic heir to the crown. This child kept,
-it would seem, a little hold on the affections of the childless Mary
-during the whole course of the quarrel with his mother, bitter as it
-was, and continued an object of interest and kindness to William as long
-as he lived. The interposition of the quaint and precocious boy, with
-his big head, his premature enlightenment as to what it was and was not
-prudent to say, his sparkle of childish ambition, and all his
-old-fashioned ways, made a curious and welcome diversion in the troubled
-scene where nothing was happy, not even the child. He was the chief
-occupation of Anne’s life when comparative peace followed the warlike
-interval above related, and a cold and forced civility replaced the
-active hostilities which for years had been raging between the court and
-the household of the princess.
-
-Anne has never got much credit for her forbearance and self-effacement
-at the critical moments of her career. But it is certain that she might
-have given William a great deal of trouble had she asserted her rights
-as Mary’s successor, as she might also have done at the time of the
-first settlement. No doubt he would on both occasions have carried the
-day, and with this certainty the historians have been satisfied, without
-considering that a woman who was not of a lofty character, and who was a
-Stuart, must have felt it doubly bitter to find herself the subject of a
-gloomy brother-in-law who slighted her, and who, her rasher partizans
-did not hesitate to say, ought to have been her subject so long as he
-remained in England after her sister’s death, and not she his. The
-absence of any attempt on her part to disturb or molest, nay, her little
-advances, her letters of condolence, and of congratulation the first
-time that a victory gave occasion for it, showed no inconsiderable
-magnanimity on the part of the prosaic princess--all the more that she
-had not been in the habit, as is usual among women, of putting the
-scorns she had suffered to another woman’s account, and holding Mary
-responsible, but had uniformly attributed to the “Dutch monster,” the
-Caliban of her correspondence, all the slights that were put on her--all
-the more that William did very little to encourage any overtures of
-friendship. He received her after his wife’s death, and they are said by
-one of her attendants to have wept together when the unwieldy princess,
-then unable to walk, was carried in her chair into the very
-presence-chamber. But if a common emotion drew them together at this
-moment, it did not last; and in the diminished
-
-[Illustration: THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. G. TIETZE, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, AFTER THE
-PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.]
-
-ceremonial of the bereaved court, Anne had but scant respect and no
-welcome. But she made no further complaint, and did what she could to
-keep on terms of civility at least with her brother-in-law, writing to
-him little letters of politeness, notwithstanding the disapproval of
-Lady Marlborough, who was of no such gentle temper, and the absence of
-all response from William. He, with all his foreign wars and home
-troubles, solitary, sad, broken in health and in life, had little heart,
-we may suppose, for those commonplace advances from a woman he had never
-been able to tolerate. But though Anne’s relations with the king were
-scarcely improved, her position in respect to the courtiers who had
-abandoned her in her sister’s lifetime was different indeed. Lady
-Marlborough describes this with her usual force.
-
- And now it being quickly known that the quarrel was made up,
- nothing was to be seen but crowds of people of all sorts flocking
- to Berkeley House to pay their respects to the prince and princess;
- a sudden alteration which I remember occasioned the half-witted
- Lord Carnarvon to say one night to the princess as he stood close
- by her in the circle, “I hope your highness will remember that I
- came to wait upon you when none of this company did,” which caused
- a great deal of mirth.
-
-Meanwhile, the little boy, the heir of England, interposes his quaint
-little figure with that touch of nature which always belongs to a child,
-in the midst of all the excitement and dullness, awakening a certain
-interest even in the solitary and bereaved life of William, and filling
-his mother’s house with tender anxieties and pleasures. He was sickly
-and feeble from his childhood, but early learned the royal lesson of
-self-concealment, and was cuffed and hustled by the anxious cruelty of
-love into the use of his poor little legs years after his contemporaries
-had been in full enjoyment of their liberty. It is characteristic of the
-self-absorbed and belligerent chronicler of the princess’s household,
-whose narrative of all the quarrels and struggles of royal personages
-is so vivid, that she has very little to say about either the living or
-dying of the only child who was of such importance both to her mistress
-and to the country. His little existence is pushed aside in Lady
-Marlborough’s record, and but for a little squabble over the appointment
-of the duke’s “family,” which she gives with great detail, we should
-scarcely have known from her that Anne had tasted that happiness of
-maternity which is so largely weighted with pains and cares. But the
-story of little Gloucester’s life, as found in the more familiar record
-of his waiting-gentleman, Lewis Jenkins, is both attractive and
-entertaining. The little fellow seems to have been full of lively spirit
-and observation, active and restless in spite of his feebleness, full of
-a child’s interest in everything about him, and of precocious judgment
-and criticism. Some of the stories that are told of him put these gifts
-in a startling light. “Who has taught you to say such words?” his mother
-asks him when the child has been betrayed into innocent repetition of
-the oaths he had heard from his attendants. The boy pauses before he
-replies. “If I say Dick Dewey,” he whispers to a favorite lady, “he will
-be sent down-stairs. Mama, I invented them myself,” he adds aloud. The
-little being moving among worlds not realized, learning to play his
-little part, taking his cue from the countenances round him, forming his
-little policy in the twinkling of an eye, could not have had a better
-representative. His careless indifference to his chaplain’s religious
-services, but happy learning of little prayers and verses with the old
-lady to whom he takes a fancy, his weariness of lessons, yet eager
-interest in the diagrams that drop from Lewis Jenkins’s pocket-book, and
-in all the bits of history he can induce his Welsh usher to tell him,
-and all the rest of his innocent childlike perversities, awaken in us an
-amused yet pathetic interest. A troublesome, lovable, perverse,
-delightful child, not always easy to manage, constantly asking the most
-awkward questions, full of ambition and energy and spirit and
-foolishness, the dull prince’s somewhat tedious house brightens into
-hope and sweetness so long as he is there.
-
-In every respect this was the brightest moment of Anne’s life. There was
-no longer any possibility of treating the next heir to the crown, the
-mother of the only prince in whom the imagination of England could take
-pleasure, with slighting or contumely. She was permitted to have her
-share of the honors and comforts of English royalty. St. James’s old
-red-brick palace was given over to her as became her position; and, what
-was more wonderful, Windsor Castle, one of the noblest of royal
-dwellings, became the country-house of Anne and her boy. King William
-preferred Hampton Court, with its Dutch gardens, in which he could
-imagine himself at home: the great feudal castle, erecting its massive
-towers from the crest of the gentle hill which has the value of a much
-greater eminence in the midst of the broad plain that sweeps forth in
-every direction round, was not, apparently, to his taste. And few
-prettier or more innocent scenes have been associated with its long
-history than those in which little Gloucester was the chief actor. He
-had a little regiment of boys of his own age whom it was his delight to
-drill and lead through a hundred mock battles and rapid skirmishings,
-mischievous little urchins who called themselves the Duke of
-Gloucester’s men, and played their little pranks like their elders, as
-favorites will. When he went to Windsor, four Eton boys were sent for to
-be his playmates, one of them being young Churchill, the son of Lady
-Marlborough. The little prince chose St. George’s Hall for the scene of
-his mimic battles, and there the little army stormed and besieged one
-another to their hearts’ content. When his mother’s marriage-day was
-celebrated, he received his parents with salvos of his small artillery,
-and, stepping forth in his little birthday-suit, paid them his
-compliment: “Papa, I wish you and Mama unity, peace, and concord, not
-for a time, but forever,” said the serious little hero. One can fancy
-Anne, smiling and triumphant in her joy of motherhood, with her
-beautiful chestnut curls and sweet complexion and placid roundness,
-leaning on good George’s arm,--her peaceful companion, with whom she had
-never a quarrel,--and admiring her son’s infant wisdom. It was their
-happy time: no cares of state upon their heads, no quarrels on hand,
-Sarah of Marlborough, let us hope, smiling too, and at peace with
-everybody, her own boy taking part in the ceremonial.
-
-The little smoke and whiff of gunpowder, the little gunners at their toy
-artillery, the great hall still slightly athrill with the mimic salute,
-add something still to the boundless hopefulness of the scene; for why
-should not this little English William grow up as great a soldier and
-more fortunate than his grim godfather, and subdue France under the feet
-of England, and be the conqueror of the world? All this was possible in
-those pleasant days.
-
-On another occasion there was a great chapter of Knights of the Garter
-to witness the installation of little Gloucester in knightly state as
-one of the order. The little figure, seven years old, seated under the
-noble canopywork in St. George’s beautiful chapel, scarcely visible over
-the desk upon which his prayer-book was spread out, gazing with blue
-eyes intent, in all the gravity of a child, upon the great English
-nobles in their stalls around him, listening to the voices of the
-choristers pealing high into space, makes another touching picture. King
-William himself had buckled the garter round the child’s knee and hung
-the jewel about his neck,--St. George slaying his dragon, that
-immemorial emblem of the victory over evil; and no doubt in the vague
-grandeur of childish anticipation, the boy felt himself ready to emulate
-the feat of the patron saint. He was a little patriot too, eager to lend
-the aid of his small squadron to his uncle when William went away to the
-wars, and bringing a
-
-[Illustration: GARDEN FRONT, HAMPTON COURT.
-
-DRAWN BY JOSEPH PENNELL, ENGRAVED BY J. F. JUNGLING.]
-
-smile even upon that worn and melancholy face as he manœuvered his
-little company and showed how they would fight in Flanders when the
-moment came. When William was threatened with assassination and the
-country woke up to feel that though she did not love him it would be
-much amiss to lose him, little Gloucester, at eight, was one of the most
-loyal. Taking counsel with his little regiment, he drew up a memorial,
-written out, no doubt, by the best master of the pen among them, with
-much shedding of ink, if not of more precious fluid. “We, your Majesty’s
-subjects, will stand by you while we have a drop of blood,” was the
-address to which the Duke of Gloucester’s men set all their tiny fists.
-The little duke himself, not content with this, added to it another
-address of his own:
-
- I, your Majesty’s most dutiful subject, had rather lose my life in
- your Majesty’s cause than in any man’s else; and I hope it will not
- be long ere you conquer France.
-
-GLOUCESTER.
-
-Heroic little prince!--a Protestant William, yet a gallant and gentle
-Stuart. With this heart of enthusiasm and generous valor in him, what
-might he not have done had he ever lived to be king? These marred
-possibilities, which are so common in life, are almost the saddest
-things in it, and that must be a heart very strong in faith that is not
-struck dumb by the withdrawal from earth’s extreme need of so much
-faculty that seemed created for her help and succor. It certainly awoke
-a smile, and might have drawn an iron tear down William’s cheek, to see
-this faithful little warrior ready to “lose his life” in his defense.
-And the good pair behind, George and Anne, who had evidently suffered no
-treacherous suggestion to get to the ear of the boy,--no hint that
-William was a usurper, and little Gloucester had more right than he to
-be uppermost,--how radiant they stand in the light of their happiness
-and hope! The spectator is reluctant to turn the page to the coming
-gloom.
-
-“When the Duke of Gloucester was arrived at an age to be put into men’s
-hands,” William’s relenting and change of mind was proved by the fact
-that Marlborough, who had been in disgrace all these years, and whom
-only the constant favor of Anne had kept out of entire obscurity, was
-recalled into the front of affairs in order to be made “governor” of the
-young prince. It is true that this gracious act was partially
-neutralized by the appointment of Bishop Burnet as little Gloucester’s
-tutor, a choice which was supposed to be as disagreeable to Anne as the
-other was happy. No distinct reason appears for this sudden and
-extraordinary change. Marlborough’s connection with the family of the
-princess made him indeed peculiarly suitable to have the charge of her
-son, but William had not hitherto shown any desire to honor her likings;
-and this was not reason enough for all the other marks of favor bestowed
-upon him, bringing him back at once from private life and political
-disgrace to a position as high as any in the kingdom. Burnet himself did
-by no means relish the honor thus thrust upon him. He was almost
-disposed, he tells us, “to retire from the court and town,” much as that
-would have cost him, rather than take upon him such a charge. But the
-pleasure of believing that “the king would trust that care only to me,”
-and also an unexpected “encouragement” received from the princess,
-decided him to make the experiment. The little pupil was about nine when
-he came into the bishop’s hands, and he gives the following account of
-his charge:
-
- I had been trusted with his education now for two years, and he had
- made amazing progress. I had read over the Psalms, Proverbs, and
- Gospels with him, and had explained things that fell in my way very
- copiously; and was often surprised with the questions that he put
- to me, and the reflections that he made. He came to understand
- things relating to religion beyond imagination. I went through
- geography so often with him that he knew all the maps very
- particularly. I explained to him the forms of government in every
- country, with the interests and trades of that country, and what
- was both bad and good in it. I acquainted him with all the great
- revolutions that had been in the world, and gave him a copious
- account of the Greek and Roman histories of Plutarch’s lives; the
- last thing I explained to him was the Gothic constitution and the
- beneficiary and feudal laws: I talked of these things at different
- times more than three hours a day; this was both easy and
- delighting to him. The king ordered five of his chief ministers to
- come once a quarter and examine the progress he made; they seemed
- amazed both at his knowledge and the good understanding that
- appeared in him; he had a wonderful memory and a very good
- judgment.
-
-Poor little Gloucester! The genial bishop breaking down all this
-knowledge into pleasant talks so that it should be “both easy and
-delighting,” and his lessons in fortification, which were more
-delightful still, and his own little private princelike observation of
-men’s faces and minds, were all to come to naught. On his eleventh
-birthday, amid the feastings and joy, a sudden illness seized him, and,
-a few days after, the promising boy had ended his bright little career.
-As a matter of course, blame was attached to the doctor who attended
-him, and who had bled him in the beginning of a fever; but this was
-almost universally the case in the then state of medical science. “He
-was the only remaining child,” the bishop says, “of seventeen the
-princess had borne, some to the full time and the rest before it. She
-attended on him during his sickness with great tenderness, but with a
-grave composedness that amazed all who saw it. She bore his death with a
-resignation and piety that were indeed very singular.” It would be small
-wonder indeed if Anne had been altogether crushed by such a calamity. It
-is said by some historians of the Jacobite party that her mind was
-overwhelmed by a sense of her guilt toward her own father, and of just
-judgment executed upon her in the loss of her child, and that she
-immediately wrote to James, pouring out her whole heart in penitence,
-and pledging herself to support the claims of her brother should she
-ever come to the throne. This letter, however, was never found, and
-does not seem to be vouched for by witnesses beyond suspicion. But for
-the fact that Anne was stricken to the dust, no parent will need any
-further evidence. Her good days and hopes were over; henceforward, when
-she wrote to her dearest friend in the old confidential strain, it was
-as “your poor unfortunate Morley” that the bereaved mother signed
-herself. Nothing altered these sad adjectives. She felt herself as poor
-and unfortunate in her unutterable loss when she was queen as if she had
-been the humblest woman that ever lost an only child.
-
-Marlborough was absent when his little pupil fell ill, but hurried back
-to Windsor in time to see him die. It was etiquette in those days that
-in case of a death the survivors should instantly leave the place in
-which it had happened, leaving the dead in possession, to lie in state
-there and receive the homage of curious or interested spectators. But
-Anne would not be persuaded to leave the place where her child was, and,
-four or five days after, the little prince was carried solemnly by
-torchlight through the summer woods, through Windsor Park, and by the
-river, and under the trees of Richmond, to Westminster: a silent
-procession pouring slowly through the odorous August night. His little
-body lay in state in Westminster Hall--a noble chamber for such a tiny
-sleeper--for five days more, when it was laid with the kings in the
-great abbey which holds all the greatest of England. A more heartrending
-episode is not in history.
-
-William did not take any notice of the announcement of the death for a
-considerable time, which embarrassed the ambassador at Paris greatly on
-the subject of mourning, and has given occasion for much denunciation of
-his hardness and heartlessness. When he answered at last,
-however--though this was not till more than two months after, in a
-letter to Marlborough--it was with much subdued feeling. “I do not think
-it
-
-[Illustration: THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MINIATURE BY LEWIS CROSSE IN THE
-COLLECTION AT WINDSOR CASTLE; BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF QUEEN
-VICTORIA.]
-
-necessary to employ many words,” he writes, “in expressing my surprise
-and grief at the death of the Duke of Gloucester. It is so great a loss
-to me as well as to all England, that it pierces my heart with
-affliction.” It seems impossible that the loss of a child who had shown
-so touching an allegiance to himself should not have moved him; but
-perhaps there was in him, too, a touch of satisfaction that the rival
-pair who had been thorns in his flesh since ever he came to England,
-were not to have the satisfaction of founding a new line. At St.-Germain
-the satisfaction was more marked still, and it was supposed that the
-most dangerous obstacle in the way of the young James Stuart was removed
-by the death of his sister’s heir. We know now how futile that
-anticipation was; but at the time this was not so clear, and the anxiety
-of the English parliament to secure before William’s death a formal
-abjuration of the so-called Prince of Wales shows that the hope was not
-without foundation.
-
-This and the new and exciting combination of European affairs produced
-by what is called the “Spanish Succession,” occupied all minds during
-the two years that remained of William’s suffering life. It was a moment
-of great excitement and uncertainty. Louis XIV., into whose hands, as
-seemed likely, a sort of universal power must fall if his grandson were
-permitted to succeed to the throne of Spain, had just vowed at the
-death-bed of James his determination to support the claims of the
-exile’s son, and, on James’s death, had proclaimed the boy King of
-England. Thus England had every reason of personal irritation and even
-alarm for joining in the alliance against the threatening supremacy of
-France, whose power--had she been allowed to place one of her princes
-peaceably on the Spanish throne, to which the rich Netherlands still
-belonged--would have been paramount in Europe. It was on the eve of the
-great struggle that William died. With a determination equal to that
-with which he had made head against failing fortune in many a
-battle-field, he fought for his life, which, at such a crisis, was
-doubly important to the countries of his birth and of his crown, and to
-the cause of the Protestant religion and all that we have been taught to
-consider as freedom throughout Europe. There is something pathetic in
-the struggle, in the statement of his case, under one name or another as
-a private individual, that there might be no doubt as to the frankness
-of the opinions which he caused to be made among the great physicians of
-Europe. His life in itself could not have been a very happy or desirable
-one. He had no longer his popular and beloved Mary to leave behind him
-in England as his representative when he set out for the wars, and there
-were few in England whom he trusted fully, or who trusted him. To die at
-the beginning of a great European struggle, leaving the dull people whom
-he disliked to take his place in England, and the soldier whom he had
-crushed and subdued and sternly held in the shade as long as he was
-able, to assume his baton, and win the victories it had never been
-William’s fortune to gain, must have been bitter indeed. It would appear
-even that he had entertained some idea of disturbing the natural order
-of events to prevent this, and that it had been suggested to the
-Electress Sophia, after poor little Gloucester’s death, that her family
-should at once be nominated as his immediate successors, to the
-exclusion of Anne, a proposal which the prudent electress evaded with
-great skill and ingenuity by representing that the Prince of Wales--who
-must surely have learned, he and his counselors, wisdom from the failure
-of his father--was the natural heir, and would, no doubt, do well enough
-on a trial. Bishop Burnet denies that such a design was ever
-entertained, but Lord Dartmouth, in his notes upon Burnet, gives the
-following very distinct evidence on the subject:
-
- I do not know how far the Whig party would trust a secret of that
- consequence to such a blab as the bishop was known to be: but the
- Dukes of Bolton and Newcastle both proposed it to me, and used the
- strongest arguments to induce me to come into it; which was that it
- would be making Lord Marlborough King at least for the time if the
- Princess succeeded; and that I had reason to expect nothing but
- ill-usage during such a reign. Lord Marlborough asked me afterward
- in the House of Lords if I had ever heard of such a design. I told
- him Yes, but did not think it very likely. He said it was very
- true: but by God if ever they attempted it we would walk over their
- bellies.
-
-Thus until the last moment Anne’s position would seem to have been
-menaced; but a more impossible scheme was never suggested, for even the
-idea of Marlborough’s triumph was unable to raise the smallest party
-against the princess, and to the country in general she was the object
-of a kind of enthusiasm. The people loved everything in her, even the
-fact that she was not clever, which of itself is often highly
-ingratiating with the masses. William, it is said, with a magnanimity
-which was infinitely to his credit, named Marlborough as his most fit
-successor in the command of the allied armies before he died. The formal
-abjuration of the Prince of Wales was made by Parliament only just in
-time to have his assent, and then all obstacles were removed out of the
-princess’s way. It was thought by the populace that everything
-brightened for the new reign. There had been an unexampled continuance
-of gloomy weather, bad harvests, and clouds and storms. But to great
-Queen Anne the sun burst forth, the gloom dispelled, the country broke
-out into gaiety and rejoicing. A new reign full of new possibilities has
-always something exhilarating in it. William’s greatness was marred by
-externals and never heartily acknowledged by the mass of the people, but
-Anne had many claims upon the popular favor. She was a woman, and a kind
-and simple one. That desertion of her father which some historical
-writers have condemned so bitterly, had no great effect upon the
-contemporary imagination, nor, so far as can be judged, upon her own;
-and it was the only offense that could be alleged against her. She had
-been unkindly treated and threatened with wrong, which naturally made
-the multitude strenuous in her cause; and everything conspired to make
-her accession happy. She was only thirty-seven, and though somewhat
-unwieldy in person, still preserved her English comeliness, her
-abundant, beautiful hair, and, above all, the melodious voice by which
-even statesmen and politicians were impressed. “She pronounced this,”
-says Bishop Burnet, describing her address to the Privy Council when
-they first presented themselves before her, “as she did all her other
-speeches, with great weight and authority, and with a softness of voice
-and sweetness in the pronunciation that added much life to all she
-spoke.” The commentators who criticize so sorely the bishop’s chronicles
-are in entire agreement with him on this subject. “It was a real
-pleasure to hear her,” says Lord Dartmouth, “though she had a
-bashfulness that made it very uneasy to herself to say much in public.”
-Speaker Onslow unites in the same testimony: “I have heard the queen
-speak from the throne, and she had all the author says here. I never saw
-an audience more affected; it was a sort of charm. She received all that
-came to her in so gracious a manner that they went from her highly
-satisfied with her goodness and her obliging deportment; for she
-hearkened with attention to everything that was said to her.” Thus all
-smiled upon Anne in the morning of her reign. Her coronation was marked
-with unusual splendor and enthusiasm, and though the queen herself had
-to be carried in a chair to the Abbey, her state of health being such
-that she could not walk, this did not affect the splendid ceremonial in
-which even to the Jacobites themselves there was little to complain of,
-since their hopes that Anne’s influence might advance her father’s young
-son to the succession after her were still high, notwithstanding that
-the settlement of the crown upon Sophia of Brunswick and her heirs had
-already been made.
-
-[Illustration: QUEEN ANNE.
-
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY PIETER VAN GUNST, AFTER THE PAINTING BY
-SIR GODFREY KNELLER.]
-
-It is needless for us to attempt a history of the great war which was
-one of the most important features in Anne’s reign. No student of
-history can be ignorant of its general course, nor of the completeness
-with which Marlborough’s victories crushed the exorbitant power of
-France and raised the prestige of England. There is no lack of histories
-of the great general and his career of victory: how he out-fought,
-out-marched, and out-generaled all his rivals, and scarcely in his ten
-years of active warfare encountered one check; how, though he did not
-accomplish the direct object for which all the bloodshed and toil were
-undertaken, he yet secured such respect for the English name and valor
-as renewed our old reputation and made all interference with our natural
-settlement or intrusion into our private economy impossible forever.
-“What good came of it at last?” says the poet. But the inquiry, though
-so plausible, appealing at once to humanity and common sense, is not
-perhaps so hard to answer as it seems. Up to this time it has been
-impossible to procure in the intercourse of nations any other effectual
-arbiter but the sword: a terrible one, indeed, but apparently as yet the
-only means of keeping a check upon the rapacity of some, and protecting
-the weakness of others. At all events, whatever individual opinion may
-be on the point now, there was a unanimous conviction then, and no one
-doubted at the opening of the war that it was most necessary and just.
-And of its conduct there has been but one opinion. Contemporaries
-accused Marlborough of every conceivable wickedness,--of peculation,
-treachery, even personal cowardice; but no one ventured to say that he
-was not a great general. And as we have got further and further from the
-infuriated politics of his time, his gifts and graces, his wisdom and
-moderation, as well as his wonderful military genius, have been done
-more and more justice to. Coxe, his special biographer, may be supposed
-to look with partiality upon his hero; but this cannot be said of more
-recent writers,--of Lord Stanhope in his tolerant and sensible history,
-or of Dr. Hill Burton in his sagacious volumes on the reign of Queen
-Anne.
-
-It is, however, with Marlborough’s wife and not with himself that we are
-chiefly concerned, and with the stormy course of Anne’s future
-intercourse with her friend rather than the battles that were fought in
-her name. It is said that by the time she came to the throne her
-faithful affection to her lifelong companion had begun to be impaired,
-but the date of the first beginning of their severance will probably
-never be determined, nor its immediate cause. Miss Strickland professes
-to have ascertained that certain impatient words used by Sarah of
-Marlborough, which were overheard by the queen, were the occasion of the
-breach; but as there is no very satisfactory foundation for the story,
-and it is added that Anne kept her feelings undisclosed for long after,
-we may dismiss the legend as possible enough, but no more.
-
-All the great hopes which the pair must have formed seemed likely to be
-fulfilled in the early part of Queen Anne’s reign. A very short time
-after her accession, Marlborough, who had at once entered upon the
-conduct of foreign affairs and the preparations for war, according to
-William’s appointment, received the garter which Anne and her husband
-had vainly asked for him in the previous reign; and when he returned
-from his first campaign, a dukedom was bestowed upon him, with many
-pretty expressions on Anne’s part.
-
-Indeed, the queen’s gift of “writing pretty, affectionate letters,”
-which was the only thing, according to the duchess’s opinion of her
-expressed in later days, that she could do well, is still abundantly
-proved by the correspondence. Anne was as anxious as ever to serve and
-please her friend and favorite. She prays God, in her little note of
-congratulation after the siege of Bonn in 1703, to send Marlborough
-“safe home to his and my dear adored Mrs. Freeman,” with all the grace
-of perfect sympathy; for the great duke was as abject in his adoration
-of that imperious, bewitching, and triumphant Sarah as the queen
-herself. With the tenderest recollection of her friend’s whims, the
-queen gave her the rangership of Windsor Park (strange office for a
-woman to hold!), in which was included “a lodge in the great park,”
-which the duchess describes as “a very agreeable place to live in,” ...
-“remembering that when we used in former days to ride by it, I had often
-wished for such a place,” although it was necessary to turn out
-Portland, King William’s friend and favorite, in order to replace him by
-Lady Marlborough; no doubt, however, this summary displacement of the
-Dutchman added to the pleasure both of giving and receiving. Lady
-Marlborough had a multiplicity of other offices in addition to
-this,--such as those of mistress of the robes, groom of the stole, and
-keeper of the privy purse,--offices, however, which she had virtually
-held for years in the household of the princess. All these brought in a
-great deal of money, a matter to which she was never indifferent; and
-along with the dukedom, the queen bestowed upon Marlborough a pension of
-£5000 a year; so that the resources of the new ducal house were
-abundant. They would seem by their posts and perquisites alone to have
-had an income between them not far short of £60,000 a year, an enormous
-sum for those times, not to speak of less legitimate profits--presents
-from contractors, and percentages on the pay of the troops, which
-Marlborough took, as everybody did, as a matter of course, though it was
-afterward charged against him as if he had invented the custom. The
-queen also promised a little fortune to each of their daughters as they
-married--a promise certainly fulfilled in the case of Henrietta, who
-married the son of Godolphin, thus uniting the colleagues in the closest
-family bonds. Anne also offered a pension of £2000 a year to the
-duchess from the privy purse, a bounty declined at first, but of which
-afterward, in the final breaking up of their relations, Sarah was mean
-enough to demand the arrears, amounting to no less a sum than £18,000.
-Thus every kind of gift and favor was pressed upon the royal favorite in
-the early days of Anne’s reign.
-
-Before this the means of the pair had been but small. Marlborough had
-been long deprived of all preferment, and the duchess informs us that
-she had discharged in the princess’s household all the offices for which
-afterward she was so highly paid on an allowance of £400 a year. It was
-for this reason that the dukedom was unwelcome to her. “I do agree with
-you,” her husband writes to her, “that we ought not to wish for a
-greater title till we have a better estate,” and he assures her that “I
-shall have a mind to nothing but as it may be easy to you.” It was in
-this strain that the great conqueror always addressed his wife, and it
-would be difficult to say which of her two adorers, her husband or her
-queen, showed the deepest devotion. When Marlborough set out for his
-first campaign in the war which was to cover him with glory, and in
-which for the first time he had full scope, this is how he writes to the
-companion of his life (she had gone with him to Margate to see him
-embark):
-
- It is impossible to express with what a heavy heart I parted from
- you when I was by the water’s side. I could have given my life to
- have come back though I knew my own weakness so much that I durst
- not, for I know I should have exposed myself to the company. I did
- for a great while with a perspective glass look out upon the cliffs
- in hopes I might have had one sight of you. We are now out of sight
- of Margate and I have neither soul nor spirits, but I do at this
- time suffer so much that nothing but being with you can recompense
- it.
-
-These lover-like words were written by a man of fifty-two to his wife of
-forty-two, to whom he had been married for nearly a quarter of a
-century. In all the pauses of these wars, amid the
-
-[Illustration: WINDSOR TERRACE, LOOKING WESTWARD.
-
-ENGRAVED BY J. W. EVANS AFTER AQUATINT BY P. SANDBY]
-
-plans and combinations of armies, and all the hard thinking and hard
-fighting, the perpetual activity and movement of his life for the next
-ten years, the same voice of passionate attachment, love, and longing
-penetrates for us the tumults of the time. She was flattered to the top
-of her bent both by husband and mistress; and it is not much to be
-wondered at if she came to think herself indispensable and above all
-law.
-
-In the midst, however, of this prosperity and quickly growing greatness,
-the same crushing calamity which had previously fallen upon Anne,
-overwhelmed these companions of her life. Their only son, a promising
-boy of seventeen, died at Cambridge, and both father and mother were
-bowed to the dust. The queen’s letter on this occasion expresses her
-sense of yet another melancholy bond between them. It is evident that
-she had offered to go to her friend in her affliction. “It would be a
-great satisfaction to your poor unfortunate faithful Morley if you would
-have given me leave to come to St. Alban’s,” she writes, “for the
-unfortunate ought to come to the unfortunate.” With a heavy heart
-Marlborough changed his will, leaving the succession of the titles and
-honors, so suddenly deprived of all value to him, to the family of his
-eldest daughter, and betook himself sadly to his fighting, deriving a
-gleam of satisfaction from the thought that other children might yet be
-granted to him, yet adjuring his wife to bear their joint calamity with
-patience, whatever might befall. She herself says nothing on this
-melancholy subject. Perhaps in her old age, as she sat surveying her
-life, that great but innocent sorrow no longer seemed to her of the
-first importance in a record crossed by so many tempests--or perhaps it
-was of so much importance that she would not trust herself to speak of
-it at all. The partizans of the exiled Stuarts were eager to point out
-how both she and her mistress had suffered the penalty of their sin
-against King James and his son, by being thus deprived of their
-respective heirs. It was a “judgment”--a thing dear to the popular
-imagination and most easily concluded upon at all times.
-
-It would not seem, however, that this natural drawing of “the
-unfortunate to the unfortunate” had the effect it might have had in
-further cementing the union of the queen and the duchess. The
-
- little rift within the lute
- That by and by will make the music mute
-
-began to be apparent shortly after, though not at first showing itself
-by any lessening of warmth or tenderness. The existence of a division of
-opinion is the first thing visible. “I cannot help being extremely
-concerned that you are so partial to the Whigs, because I would not have
-you and your poor unfortunate faithful Morley differ in the least thing.
-And, upon my word, my dear Mrs. Freeman,” adds Queen Anne, “you are
-mightily mistaken in your notion of a true Whig. For the character you
-give of them does not in the least belong to them.”
-
-We need not discuss here the difference between the meaning of the names
-Tory and Whig as understood then and now. Lord Mahon and Lord Macaulay
-both consider a complete transposition of terms to be the easiest way of
-making the matter clear, but in one particular at least this seems
-scarcely necessary; for the Tories, then as now, were emphatically the
-church party, which was to Anne the only party in which safety could be
-found. The queen had little understanding of history or politics in the
-wider sense of the words, but she was an excellent churchwoman, and in
-the sentiments of the Tory leaders she found, when brought into close
-contact with them, something more in accord with her own, the one
-sympathy in which her bosom friend had been lacking.
-
-“These were men who had all a wonderful zeal for the Church, a sort of
-public merit that eclipsed all others in the eye of the Queen.... For
-my own part,” the duchess adds, “I had not the same prepossessions. The
-word _Church_ had never any charm for me in the mouths of those who made
-the most noise with it, for I could not perceive that they gave any
-other proof of their regard for the thing than a frequent use of the
-word, like a spell to enchant weak minds, and a persecuting zeal against
-dissenters and against the real friends of the Church who would not
-admit that persecution was agreeable to its doctrine.”
-
-This difference had not told for very much so long as neither the queen
-nor her friend had any share in public affairs, but it became strongly
-operative now. How much the queen had actually to do with the business
-of the nation, and how entirely it depended upon the influence brought
-to bear upon her limited mind who should be the guide of England at this
-critical moment, is abundantly evident from every detail of history.
-Queen Victoria, great as her experience is, and notwithstanding the
-respectful attention which all classes of politicians naturally give to
-her opinion, changes her ministry only when the majority in Parliament
-requires it, and has only the very limited choice which the known and
-acknowledged heads of the two parties permit when she transfers office
-and power from one side to the other. But Queen Anne had no compact body
-of statesmen, one replacing the other as occasion required, to deal
-with; but put in here one high official and there another, according as
-intrigue or impulse gained the upper hand.
-
-There is something about a quarrel of women which excites the scorn of
-every chronicler, an insidious contempt for the weaker half of the
-creation which probably no one would own to, lying dormant in the minds
-of the race generally, even of women themselves. Had Anne been a king of
-moderate abilities, and Marlborough the friend and guide to whom he owed
-his prosperity and fame, the relationship would have been noble and
-honorable to both; and when the struggle began, the strenuous efforts
-of the great general to secure the coöperation of ministers with whom he
-could work, and whose support would have helped toward the carrying out
-of his great plans for the glory of his country and the destruction of
-her enemies, would, whether the historical critic approved of them or
-not, have at least secured his respect and a dignified treatment. But
-when it is Sarah of Marlborough, with all the defects of temper that we
-know in her, who, while her lord fights abroad, has to fight for him at
-home, to scheme his enemies out of, and his friends into, power, to keep
-her hold upon her mistress by every means that her imagination can
-devise, the idea that some nobler motive than mere self-aggrandizement
-may be in the effort occurs to no one, and the hatred of political
-enmity is mingled with all the ridicule that spiteful wit can discharge
-upon a feminine squabble. Lady Marlborough was far from being a perfect
-woman. She had a fiery temper and a stinging tongue. When she was
-thwarted at the very moment of apparent victory, and found herself
-impotent where she had been all-powerful, her fury was like a torrent
-against which there was no standing. But with these patent defects it
-ought to be allowed her that the object for which she struggled was not
-only a perfectly legitimate, but a noble one. What the great William had
-spent his life and innumerable campaigns in endeavoring to do, against
-all the discouragements of frequent failure, Marlborough was doing, with
-a matchless and almost unbroken success. It was no shame to either the
-general or the general’s wife to believe, as William did, that this was
-the greatest work of the time, and could alone secure the safety of
-England as well as of her allies. And the gallant stand of Lady
-Marlborough for the party and the statesmen who were likely to carry out
-this object, deserved some better interpretation from history than it
-has ever received.
-
-And it cannot be said that there was anything petty in Anne’s
-
-[Illustration: THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH.
-
-ENGRAVED BY J. H. E. WHITNEY, FROM AN ENGRAVING BY PIETER VAN GUNST,
-AFTER PAINTING BY ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF.]
-
-public acts while she remained under the influence of her first friend.
-The beginning of her reign showed no ignoble spirit. One of the first
-things the queen did was to abolish the old and obstinate practice of
-selling places, which had hitherto been accepted as the course of
-nature; so much so that when Marlborough fell into disgrace under King
-William, he had been bidden to “sell or dispose of” the places he held,
-and the princess had herself informed Sarah at least on one occasion of
-vacancies, in order that her friend should have the profit of filling
-them up. “Afterwards, I began to consider in my own mind this practice,”
-the lady says; but whether she took the initiative in so honorable a
-measure, it would be rash to pronounce upon the authority of her own
-word alone. It certainly, however, was one of the first acts of the
-queen, and the credit of such a departure from the use and wont of
-courts should at least be allowed to the new reign. Anne did various
-other things for which there was no precedent. As soon as her civil list
-was settled, she gave up voluntarily £100,000 a year to aid the public
-expenses, then greatly increased by the war, and, shortly after, she
-made a still more important and permanent sacrifice by giving up the
-ecclesiastical tribute of first-fruits and tithes; namely, the first
-year’s stipend of each cure to which a new incumbent was appointed, and
-the tenth of all livings--to which the crown, as succeeding the Pope in
-the headship of the church, had become entitled. Her object was the
-augmentation of small livings, and better provision for the necessities
-of the church, and there can be little doubt that this act at least was
-exclusively her own. The fund thus formed continues to this day under
-the name of Queen Anne’s Bounty, but unfortunately remained quite
-inefficacious during her reign, in consequence of various practical
-difficulties; and it has never been by any means the important agency
-she intended it to be. But the intention was munificent and the desire
-sincere. Throughout her life the church was the word which most moved
-Anne. She was willing to do anything to strengthen it, and to sacrifice
-any one, even as turned out her dear friend, in its cause.
-
-The first subject which quickened a vague and suspicious disagreement
-into opposition was the bill against what was called occasional
-conformity, a bill which was aimed at the dissenters and abolished the
-expedient formerly taken advantage of in order to admit nonconformists
-to some share in public life--of periodical compliance with the
-ceremonies of the church. The new law not only did away with this
-important “easement,” but was weighted with penal enactments against
-those who, holding office under government, should be present at any
-conventicle or assembly for worship in any form but that of the Church
-of England. Upon this subject the queen writes as follows:
-
- I must own to you that I never cared to mention anything on this
- subject to you because I knew you would not be of my mind, but
- since you have given me the occasion, I can’t forbear saying that I
- see nothing like persecution in the bill. You may think it is a
- notion Lord Nottingham has just put into my head, but upon my word
- it is my own thought. I promise my dear Mrs. Freeman faithfully I
- will read the book she sent me, and beg she will never let
- differences of opinion hinder us from living together as we used to
- do. Nothing shall ever alter your poor unfortunate faithful Morley,
- who will live and die with all truth and tenderness yours.
-
-As the differences go on increasing, however, Queen Anne gradually
-changes her ground. At first she “hopes her not agreeing with anything
-you say will not be imputed to want of value, esteem, or tender
-kindness, for my dear, dear Mrs. Freeman”; but at last, as the argument
-goes on, plucks up a spirit and finds courage enough to declare roundly
-that whenever public affairs are in the hands of the Whigs, “I shall
-think the Church beginning to be in danger.” Thus the political
-situation became more and more difficult, and gradually embittered even
-the personal relations between the friends, and the duchess had not even
-the support of her husband in her political preferences. He had himself
-belonged to the moderate Tory party, and, even though they thwarted and
-discouraged him, showed no desire to throw himself into the arms of the
-Whigs, whither his wife would so fain have led him. He was almost as
-little encouraging to her in this point as the queen was. “I know,” he
-says, “they would be as unreasonable as the others in their expectations
-if I should seek their friendship,--for all parties are alike.” It was
-thus a hard part she had to play between the queen’s determination that
-the Whigs were the enemies of the church, and her husband’s conviction
-that all parties were alike. He, perhaps, was the more hard to manage of
-the two. He voted for the occasional conformity bill, against which she
-was so hot, and trusted in Harley, who indeed owed his first beginning
-to Marlborough’s favor, but whom the duchess saw through. In young St.
-John, too, the great general had perfect faith; “I am very confident he
-will never deceive you,” he wrote to Godolphin. Thus the husband warmed
-in his bosom the vipers that were to sting him and bring a hasty end to
-his career. He, too, remained obstinately indifferent, while she stormed
-and entreated and wrote a hundred letters and used every art both of war
-and peace in vain. It is easy to see how this perpetual letter-writing,
-her determination to prove that her correspondent was in error and she
-right, and her continual reiteration of the same charges and reproaches,
-must have exasperated the queen and troubled Marlborough, in the midst
-of the practical difficulties of his career. But yet there are many
-points on which Sarah has a just claim to our sympathy. For she foresaw
-what actually did happen, and perceived whither the current was tending,
-but was refused any credit for her prognostications or help in subduing
-the dangerous forces she dreaded. How irritating this position must have
-been to a fiery temper it is needless to point out, and the duchess
-would not permit herself to be silenced by either husband or queen. Lord
-Macaulay’s description of the astonishing state of affairs which
-compelled two of the ablest statesmen in Europe to have recourse for the
-conduct of the imperial business to the influence of one woman over
-another, was thus far less true even than it seems on the surface; for
-Sarah of Marlborough suspected the real state of the case when no one
-else did, fighting violently against her husband’s enemies before they
-had disclosed themselves, and her final overthrow was as much the result
-of a new tide in political affairs as of the straining of the personal
-relations between her and her queen.
-
-Meanwhile, Marlborough was going on in his career of conquest. It was a
-very costly luxury; but the pride of England had never been so fed with
-triumphs. Queen Anne was in her closet one day at Windsor, a little
-turret-chamber with windows on every side looking over the green and
-fertile valley of the Thames, with all the trees in full summer foliage
-and the harvest beginning to be gathered in from the fields, when there
-was brought to her a scrap of crumpled paper bearing upon it the few
-hurried lines which told of the “glorious victory” of the battle of
-Blenheim. It had been torn off in haste from a memorandum book on the
-field, and was scribbled over with an inn-reckoning on the other side.
-The commotion it caused was not one of unmixed joy; for though the queen
-wrote her thanks and congratulations, and there was a great thanksgiving
-service at St. Paul’s, which she attended in state, the party in power
-did all that in them lay to depreciate the importance of the victory.
-When, however, Marlborough appeared in England with his prisoners and
-trophies,--a marshal of France among the former,--and many standards
-taken in the field, the popular sentiment burst all bounds, and his
-reception was enthusiastic. The crown lands of Woodstock were bestowed
-upon him as a further reward, and the queen herself commanded that a
-palace should be built upon the estate at the expense of the crown, to
-be called Blenheim in commemoration of the extraordinary victory. A
-curious relic of ancient custom religiously carried out to the present
-day was involved in this noble gift. The quit-rent which every holder of
-a royal fief has to pay, was appointed to be a banner embroidered with
-three _fleurs-de-lis_, the arms then borne by France, to be presented on
-every anniversary of the battle. Not very long ago the present writer
-accompanied a French lady of distinction through some part of Windsor
-Castle under the guidance of an important member of the queen’s
-household. When the party came into the armory, on each side of which, a
-vivid spot of color, hung a little standard fresh in embroidery of gold,
-the kind cicerone smiled, and whispered aside, “We need not point out
-these to her.” One of them was the Blenheim, the other the Waterloo
-banner, both yearly acknowledgments, after the old feudal fashion, for
-fiefs held of the crown.
-
-Among the honors done to Marlborough at this triumphant moment, when, an
-English duke, a prince of the Holy Roman Empire, and, still more
-splendid title, the greatest soldier of his time, he came home in glory
-to England, were the verses with which Addison saluted him. There were
-plenty of odes piping to all the winds in his honor, but this alone
-worthy of record. Every reader will recollect the simile of the great
-angel who “drives the furious blast;”
-
- And, pleased the Almighty’s orders to perform,
- Rides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.
-
-The compliment might be supposed to be somewhat magnificent even for the
-greatest of commanders. And yet whatever Marlborough’s faults may have
-been, his attitude during this wonderful war is scarcely too splendidly
-described by the image of a calm and superior spirit beholding
-contemporary events from a higher altitude than that of common humanity,
-executing vengeance and causing destruction without either rage or fear,
-in serene fulfilment of a great command and in pursuance of a mighty
-purpose. His unbroken temper, his patience and courtesy in the midst of
-all contentions, the firm composure with which he supports all the
-burdens thrown upon him, appeals from home as well as necessities
-abroad, might well suggest a spirit apart, independent, not moved like
-lesser men. No man ever bore so many conflicting claims more calmly.
-Even the adjurations, the commands, the special pleadings of his
-“dearest soul” do not lead him a step farther than he thinks wise. “When
-I differ from you,” he says, “it is not that I think those are in the
-right whom you say are always in the wrong, but it is that I would be
-glad not to enter into the unreasonable reasoning of either party; for I
-have trouble enough for my little head in the business which of
-necessity I must do here.” There could not be a greater contrast than
-between the commotion and whirlwind that surrounds Duchess Sarah and the
-great general’s calm.
-
-It is not necessary for our purpose to enter into those changes of
-ministry which first temporarily consolidated the Marlborough interest
-and afterward wrought its destruction, nor into the intrigues by which
-Harley and St. John gradually secured the reins of state. It is not to
-be supposed that these fluctuations were wholly owing to the influences
-brought to bear upon the queen; but that her prevailing disposition to
-uphold the party which to her represented the church kept the
-continuance of the war and the foreign policy of the country in constant
-danger, there can be no doubt. It is only in 1707, however, that we are
-made aware of the entry of a new actor upon the scene, in the person of
-a smooth and noiseless woman, always civil, always soft-spoken,
-apologetic, and plausible, whose sudden appearance in the vivid
-narrative of her great rival is in the highest degree dramatic and
-effective. This was the famous Abigail who has given her name, somewhat
-injuriously to her own position, to the class of waiting-women ever
-since. She was in reality bedchamber-woman to the queen--a post now very
-far removed from that of a waiting-maid, and even then by no means on a
-level, notwithstanding the duchess’s scornful phrases, with that of the
-class which ever since has been distinguished by Mrs. Hill’s remarkable
-name. Her introduction altogether, and the vigorous _mise en scène_ of
-this new episode in history, are fine examples of the graphic power of
-Duchess Sarah. Her suspicions, she informs us, were roused by the
-information that Abigail Hill, a relation of her own, and placed by
-herself in the royal household, had been married without her knowledge
-to Mr. Masham, who was one of the queen’s pages; but there are allusions
-before this in her letters to the queen to “flatterers,” which point at
-least to some suspected influence undermining her own. She tells us
-first in a few succinct pages who this was whose private marriage
-excited so much wonder and indignation in her mind. Abigail and all her
-family owed their establishment in life to the active exertions of the
-duchess, who had taken them in their poverty upon her shoulders--or
-rather had succeeded in passing them on to the broader shoulders of the
-public, which was still more satisfactory. Thus she had been the making
-of the whole band, henceforward through other members besides Abigail to
-prove thorns in her flesh. Harley, who was at this time secretary of
-state, and aiming at higher place, was related in the same degree on the
-father’s side to Mrs. Abigail; so that, first cousin to the great
-duchess on one hand and to the leader of the House of Commons on the
-other, though it suits the narrator’s purpose to humble her, Mrs. Hill
-was no child of the people. It is curious to remark here that Harley too
-came to his first advancement by Marlborough’s patronage.
-
-From the moment of this discovery, and of the further facts that the
-marriage had taken place under Anne’s auspices, and that Abigail had
-already taken advantage of her favor to bring Harley into close
-relations with the queen, the duchess gave her mistress little peace.
-Fiery letters were showered daily upon the queen. She let nothing pass
-without a hasty visit, or a long epistle. If it were not for the
-pertinacity with which she returns again and again to one subject, these
-letters have so much force of character in them that it would be
-impossible not to enter with sympathetic excitement into the fray. The
-reader is carried along by the passionate absorption of the writer’s
-mind as she pours forth page upon page, flying to her desk at every new
-incident, transmitting copies of every epistle to Godolphin to secure
-his coöperation, and to Marlborough, though so much farther off, to show
-him how she had confuted all his adversaries. And then there follows a
-record of stormy scenes, remonstrances, and appeals that lose their
-effect by repetition. The duchess would never accept defeat. Every new
-affront, every symptom of failure in the policy which she supported with
-so much zeal, made her rush, if possible, to the presence of the queen,
-with a storm of reproaches and invectives, with tears of fury and
-outcries of wrath,--or to the pen, with which she reiterated the same
-burning story of her wrongs. Anne is represented to us throughout in an
-attitude of stolid and passive resistance, which increases our sympathy
-with the weeping, raging, passionate woman, whose eloquence, whose
-arguments, whose appeals and entreaties all dash unheeded against the
-rock of tranquil obstinacy which is no more moved by them than the cliff
-is moved by the petulance of the rising tide; although, on the other
-hand, a similar sympathy is not
-
-[Illustration: THE DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUGH.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. G. TIETZE, FROM MEZZOTINT AFTER PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY
-KNELLER.]
-
-wanting for the dull and placid soul which could get no peace, and which
-longed above all things for tranquillity, for gentle attentions and soft
-voices, and the privilege of nominating bishops and playing basset in
-peace. Poor lady! on the whole it is Queen Anne who is most to be
-pitied. She was often ill, always unwieldly and uncomfortable. She had
-nobody but a soft, gliding, smooth-tongued Abigail to fall back upon,
-while the duchess had half the great men of the time fawning upon her,
-putting themselves at her feet: her husband prizing a word of kindness
-from her more than anything in the world; her daughters describing
-her as the dearest mother that ever was; money--which she
-loved--accumulating in her coffers; and great Blenheim still a-building,
-and all kinds of noble hangings, cut velvets and satins, pictures, and
-every fine thing that could be conceived, getting collected for the
-adornment of that great house.
-
-Nevertheless, there can be little doubt that Duchess Sarah represented a
-nobler idea and grander national policy than that into which her
-mistress was betrayed. Her later intercourse with Anne was little more
-than a persecution; and yet what she aimed at was better than the
-dishonoring and selfish policy by which she was finally conquered. The
-Marlboroughs were not of those who pressed the German heir upon the
-queen, or would have compelled her to receive his visit, which she
-passionately declared she could not bear; but they were determined, all
-treasonable correspondence notwithstanding, upon the maintenance of the
-Protestant succession, upon the firm establishment of English
-independence and greatness,--those objects which alone had justified the
-Revolution and made the stern chapter of William’s life and reign
-anything better than an incidental episode. Though he had been false to
-William, as everybody was false in those days, and had lain so long in
-the cold shade of his displeasure, Marlborough had, in his whole
-magnificent career, been little more than the executor of William’s
-plans, the fulfiller of his policy. The duchess, on her side, with much
-love of power and of gain, with all the drawbacks of her temper and
-pertinacity, still bent every faculty to the work of backing up that
-policy, as embodied in her husband, keeping his friends in power,
-neutralizing the efforts of his enemies, and bringing the war to an
-entirely successful conclusion. A certain enlightenment was in all her
-passionate interferences with the course of public affairs. The men whom
-she labored to thrust into office were the best men of the time; the
-ascendency she endeavored so violently to retain was one under which
-England had been elevated in the scale of nations and all her liberties
-confirmed. Such persecuting and intolerant acts as the bill against
-occasional conformity, which was a test of exceptional severity, had her
-strenuous opposition. In short, had there been no Marlborough to carry
-on the half-begun war at William’s death, and no Sarah at Anne’s ear to
-inspire the queen’s sluggish nature with spirit and to keep her up to
-the mark of the large plans of her predecessor, England might have
-fallen into another driveling period of foreign subserviency, into a new
-and meaner Restoration.
-
-That the reader may see, however, to what an extraordinary pass the
-friendship had come which had been so intimate and close, we add the
-duchess’s account of the concluding interview. Every kind of
-exasperating circumstance had accumulated in the mean time between the
-former friends. There had been violent meetings, violent letters by the
-score; even in the midst of a thanksgiving service Sarah had taken her
-mistress to task and imperiously bidden her not to answer. Indeed, the
-poor queen was more or less hunted down, pursued to her last corner of
-defense, when the mistress of the robes made her sudden appearance at
-Kensington one April afternoon in the year 1710, when everything was
-tending toward her downfall.
-
- As I was entering, the Queen said she was just going to write to
- me, and when I began to speak she interrupted me four or five times
- with these repeated words, “Whatever you have to say you may put it
- in writing.” I said her Majesty never did so hard a thing to any as
- to refuse to hear them speak, and assured her that I was not going
- to trouble her upon the subject which I knew to be so ungrateful to
- her, but that I could not possibly rest until I had cleared myself
- from some particular calumnies with which I had been loaded. I then
- went on to speak (though the Queen turned away her face from me)
- and to represent my hard case, that there were those about her
- Majesty that had made her believe that I said things of her which I
- was no more capable of saying than of killing my own children. The
- Queen said without doubt there were many lies told. I then begged,
- in order to make this trouble the shorter and my own innocence the
- plainer, that I might know the particulars of which I had been
- accused, because if I were guilty that would quickly appear, and if
- I were innocent this method alone would clear me. The Queen replied
- that she would give me no answer, laying hold on a word in my
- letter that what I had to say in my own vindication _need have no
- consequence in obliging her Majesty to answer_, etc., which surely
- did not at all imply that I did not desire to know the particular
- things laid to my charge, without which it was impossible for me to
- clear myself. This I assured her Majesty was all I desired, and
- that I did not ask the names of the authors or relaters of these
- calumnies, saying all that I could think reasonably to enforce my
- just request. I protested to her Majesty that I had no design in
- giving her this trouble, to solicit the return of her favor, but
- that my sole view was to clear myself: which was too just a design
- to be wholly disappointed by her Majesty. Upon this the Queen
- offered to go out of the room, I following her, and begging leave
- to clear myself, and the Queen repeating over and over again, “You
- desired no answer and shall have none.” When she came to the door I
- fell into great disorder; streams of tears flow’d down against my
- will and prevented my speaking for some time. At length I recovered
- myself and appealed to the Queen in the vehemence of my concern
- whether I might not still have been happy in her Majesty’s favour
- if I could have contradicted or dissembled my real opinion of men
- or things? whether I had ever, during our long friendship, told her
- one lie, or play’d the hypocrite once? whether I had offended in
- anything, unless in a very zealous pressing upon her that which I
- thought necessary for her service and security? I then said I was
- informed by a very reasonable and credible person about the court
- that things were laid to my charge of which I was wholly incapable;
- that this person knew that such stories were perpetually told to
- her Majesty to incense her, and had beg’d of me to come and
- vindicate myself: that the same person had thought me of late
- guilty of some omissions towards her Majesty, being entirely
- ignorant how uneasy to her my frequent attendance must be after
- what had happened between us. I explained some things which I had
- heard her Majesty had taken amiss of me, and then, with a fresh
- flood of tears and a concern sufficient to move compassion, even
- where all love was absent, I beg’d to know what other particulars
- she had heard of me, that I might not be denied all power of
- justifying myself. But the only return was, “You desired no answer
- and you shall have none.” I then beg’d to know if her Majesty would
- tell me some other time? “You desired no answer and you shall have
- none.” I then appealed to her Majesty again, if she did not herself
- know that I had often despised interest in comparison of serving
- her faithfully and doing right? And whether she did not know me to
- be of a temper incapable of disowning anything which I knew to be
- true? “You desired no answer and you shall have none.” This usage
- was so severe, and these words, so often repeated, were so shocking
- (being an utter denial of common justice to one who had been a most
- faithful servant, and now asked nothing more) that I could not
- conquer myself, but said the most disrespectful thing I ever spoke
- to the Queen in my life, and yet what such an occasion and such
- circumstances might well excuse if not justify, and that was, that
- “I was confident her Majesty would suffer for such an instance of
- inhumanity.” The Queen answered, “That will be to myself.” Thus
- ended this remarkable conversation, the last I ever had with her
- Majesty [the duchess adds].
-
-After this there was no more possibility of reconciliation. Attempts of
-all kinds were made, and there is even a record of a somewhat pitiful
-scene in which great Marlborough himself, on his return from the wars,
-appears on his knees pleading with Queen Anne to take back her old
-companion into favor, but without effect. Unfortunately for himself, he
-did not resign at this turning-point, being persuaded both by friends
-and foes not to do so; and with the evident risk before his eyes of
-hazarding all the combinations of the war and giving a distinct
-advantage to the enemy against whom he had hitherto operated so
-forcibly. He kept his command, therefore, for the public interest rather
-than his own, and returned, when the season of warfare recommenced, to
-the post which all these events made uneasy for him, and where his
-credit was shaken and his prestige diminished by the disfavor of the
-court and the opposition of the ministry. The responsibility was
-therefore left upon Anne and her ministers of dismissing him, which they
-did in the end of 1711, to the consternation of their allies, the
-delight of the French, and the bewilderment of the nation. The party
-plots by which this came about are far too long and involved to be
-capable of explanation here--neither can we enter into the semi-secret
-negotiations for the humiliating and disgraceful peace secured by the
-treaty of Utrecht, which were carried on unknown to Marlborough, to the
-destruction of the alliance and confusion of all his plans. Never,
-perhaps, was so great a man treated with such contumely. His associate
-in his work, the Lord Treasurer Godolphin, the great financier of his
-time, had already fallen, leaving office so poor a man that he would
-have been wholly dependent on his relations but for the unexpected death
-of a brother who left him a small fortune. He has left an account of his
-dismissal by the queen herself and on the ground apparently of personal
-offense, which is extraordinary indeed.
-
-Anne herself was no doubt little more than a puppet in the hands of
-successive politicians; but yet the struggle that took place around her
-at this unfortunate period--the maintenance by every wile of somebody
-who could influence her, the conflict for her ear and favor--shows her
-immense importance in the economy of public life. Queen Victoria is the
-object of universal veneration and respect, but not the smallest
-official in her government need fear the displeasure of the queen as the
-highest minister had to fear that of Anne, for whom no one entertained
-any particular respect. Yet there was little real power in the
-possession of the unfortunate woman who, badgered on all sides, and
-refused both peace and rest, sank slowly into disease and decay during
-the two years which followed the disgrace of the friend of her youth.
-
-She had no longer an audacious Freeman to tell her unwelcome truths and
-tease her with appeals and reproaches; but it is probable that she soon
-found her soft-voiced Abigail, her caressing duchess (of Somerset)
-little more satisfactory; never was a head that wore a crown more
-uneasy. She held fast to the power which she had been persuaded she was
-to get into her own hands when she was delivered from the sway of the
-Marlboroughs, and for a little while believed it possible that she could
-reign unaided. But this was a delusion that could not last long; and her
-death was hastened, it is said, by a violent altercation between Harley
-and St. John, when the inevitable struggle between the two who had
-pushed all competitors out of place occurred at last. They wrangled over
-the staff of office in Anne’s very presence, overwhelming her with
-agitation and excitement. Apart from politics, the royal existence was
-dull enough. When Dean Swift was at Windsor, following Harley and
-waiting for the decision of his Irish business, we have occasional
-glimpses through his eyes which show the tedium of the court. “There was
-a drawing-room to-day,” he says, “but so few company that the Queen sent
-for us into her bedchamber, where we made our bows, and stood, about
-twenty of us round the room, while she looked round with her fan in her
-mouth, and once a minute said about three words to some that were
-nearest her, and then she was told dinner was ready, and went out.” The
-same authority mentions her way of taking exercise, which was a strange
-one. “The Queen was hunting the stag till four this afternoon,” he says;
-“she drove in her chaise about forty miles, and it was five before we
-went to dinner.... She hunts in a chaise with one horse, which she
-drives herself, and drives furiously like Jehu, and is a mighty hunter
-like Nimrod.” Windsor’s great park and forest must have afforded room
-and space for some part at least of this course, and a hunt in August
-would need to have been confined to ground less cultivated than that of
-the smiling plain which skirts the castle hill on the other side. Queen
-Anne’s Ride and Queen Anne’s Drive are still well-known names in the
-locality where the strange apparition of the queen, solitary in her high
-chaise, and “driving furiously” after the hunt, must once have been a
-familiar sight.
-
-The end of this poor queen’s life was disturbed by a new and terrible
-struggle, in which natural sentiment and public duty, and all the
-prepossessions and prejudices of her nature, were set in conflict one
-against the other. This was upon the question of the succession. The
-family of Hanover, the Electress Sophia and her son and grandson, had
-been chosen solemnly by Parliament as the nearest members of the royal
-race who were Protestants, and were recognized as the heirs to the
-throne in all public acts and in the prayers of the church. But to Anne
-the house of Hanover was of no special interest. She did not love the
-idea of successor at all. She had declared to Marlborough passionately
-that the proposed visit of the Hanoverian prince was a thing which she
-could not bear, and there was no friendship, nor even acquaintance,
-between her and relatives so far removed. But apart from all public
-knowledge, in the secret chambers and by the back-stairs came whispers
-now of another name, that of James Stuart, more familiar and kindly--the
-baby-brother about whom Anne had believed the prevailing fable, that he
-was a supposititious child, for whom she had invented the name of the
-Pretender, but who now in her childless decay began to be presented
-before her as the victim of a great wrong. Poor queen! she was torn
-asunder by all these contradictions; and if her heart was melting
-toward her father’s son, all the dull experience which she had acquired
-in spite of herself must have convinced her that this solution of the
-difficulty was impossible. Her life of late had been one long conflict;
-imperious Sarah first, then Harley and St. John quarrelling in her very
-presence-chamber; and when the door was shut and the curtains drawn and
-all the world departed save Abigail lying on a mattress on the floor to
-be near her mistress, here was the most momentous question of all. She
-who desired nothing so much as quiet and to be left in peace, was once
-again compelled to face a problem of the utmost importance to England,
-and on which she alone had the power to say a decisive word. Little
-wonder if Anne was harassed beyond all endurance. But those who pressed
-this question upon her waning senses were the instruments of their own
-overthrow. The powers of life worn out before their time could bear no
-more. The hopes of the Jacobite party were rising higher every day as
-the end drew near; but at the last she escaped them, having uttered no
-word of support to their cause; and in the confusion which ensued,
-George I. was peacefully proclaimed as soon as the queen out of her
-lethargy had slipped beyond the boundaries of any earthly kingdom.
-
-The Marlboroughs, who had been living on the Continent since their
-disgrace, came back after this new change. The duke’s entry into London
-“in great state, attended by hundreds of gentlemen on horseback and some
-of the nobility in their coaches” a few days after, is reported by one
-of the chroniclers of the time. The duchess followed him soon after, and
-whether her temper and disposition had so far mended as to allow him to
-enjoy the peace he had so often longed for by the side of her he loved,
-he had at least a tranquil evening-time among his friends and
-dependents, and the grandchildren who were to be his heirs--for only one
-of his own children survived at his death. Duchess Sarah lived long
-after him.
-
-[Illustration: BISHOP GILBERT BURNET.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MEZZOTINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM BY JOHN
-SMITH, AFTER THE PAINTING BY JOHN RILEY.]
-
-She was sixty-two when he died, but, nevertheless, in spite of temper
-and every other failing, was still charming enough to be sought in
-marriage by two distinguished suitors--one of them that proud Duke of
-Somerset whose first wife had supplanted her at court. She answered this
-potentate in the only way consistent with the dignity of a woman of her
-age and circumstances; but added, with a noble pride which sat well upon
-her, that had she been but half her age, not the emperor of the world
-should ever have filled the place sacred to great Marlborough. It is a
-pity we could not leave her here in the glow of this proud tenderness
-and constancy. She was capable of that and many other noble things, but
-not of holding her tongue, of withdrawing into the background, or
-accepting in other ways the natural change from maturity to age. Her
-restless energies, however, had some legitimate outlet. She finished
-Blenheim, and she wrote innumerable explanations and memoranda, which
-finally shaped themselves into that “Account of the Conduct of the
-Duchess of Marlborough from her first Coming to Court,” which is one of
-the most interesting of all _mémoires pour servir_. This was published
-in her eighty-second year, and it is curious to think of the vivacious
-and unsubdued spirit which could throw itself back so completely out of
-the calm of age into the conflicts and the very atmosphere of what had
-passed thirty years before. And she did her best to prepare for a great
-life of Marlborough which should set him right with the world. But her
-time was not always so innocently employed, and it is to be feared that
-she wrangled to the end of her life. The “Characters” of her
-contemporaries which she left behind are full of spite and malice. There
-was no peace in her soul. A characteristic little story is told of her
-in an illness. “Last year she had lain a great while ill without
-speaking; her physicians said she must be blistered or she would die.
-She called out, ‘I won’t be blistered and I won’t die!’ and apparently
-for the moment kept her word.” She lived long enough to be impaled by
-Pope in verses which an involuntary admiration for this daring,
-dauntless, impassioned woman makes us reluctant to quote. She survived
-almost her entire generation, and was capable of living a hundred years
-more had nature permitted. She was eighty-four when she succumbed at
-last, in the year 1744, thirty years after the death of the queen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-THE AUTHOR OF “GULLIVER”
-
-
-There are few figures in history, and still fewer in literature, which
-have occupied so great a place in the world’s attention, or which retain
-so strong a hold upon its interest, as that of Jonathan Swift, dean of
-St. Patrick’s. It is considerably more than a century since he died, old
-and mad and miserable: a man who had never been satisfied with life, or
-felt his fate equal to his deserts; who disowned and hated (even when he
-served it) the country of his birth, and with fierce and bitter passion
-denounced human nature itself, and left a sting in almost every
-individual whom he loved; a man whose preferment and home were far from
-the center of public affairs, and who had no hereditary claim on the
-attention of England. Yet when the English reader, or he who in the
-farthest corner of the New World has the same right to English
-literature as that which the subjects of Queen Victoria hold,--as the
-American does--from the subjects of Queen Anne,--reads the title at the
-head of this page, neither the one nor the other will have any
-difficulty in distinguishing among all the ecclesiastical dignitaries of
-that age who it is that stands conspicuous as the dean. Not in royal
-Westminster or Windsor is this man to be found; not the ruler of any
-great cathedral in the rich English midlands where tradition and wealth
-and an almost Catholic supremacy united to make the great official of
-the church as important as any official of the state--but far from
-those influences, half as far as America is now from the center of
-English society and the sources of power, one of a nation which the most
-obstinate conservative of to-day will not hesitate to allow was then
-deeply wronged and cruelly misgoverned by England, many and anxious as
-have been her efforts since to make amends. Yet among the many strange
-examples of that far more than republican power (not always most evident
-in republics) by which a man of native force and genius, however humble,
-finds his way to the head of affairs and impresses his individuality
-upon his age, when thousands born to better fortunes are swept away as
-nobodies, Swift is one of the most remarkable. His origin, though noted
-by himself, not without a certain pride, as from a family of gentry not
-unknown in their district, was in his own person almost as lowly and
-poor as it was possible to be. The posthumous son of a poor official in
-the Dublin law-courts, owing his education to the kindness, or perhaps
-less the kindness than the family pride, of an uncle, Swift entered the
-world as a hanger-on, waiting what fortune and a patron might do for
-him, a position scarcely comprehensible to young Englishmen nowadays,
-though then the natural method of advancement. Such a young man in the
-present day would betake himself to his books, with the practical aim of
-an examination before him, and the hope of immediate admission through
-that gate to the public service and all its chances. It is amusing to
-speculate what the difference might have been had Jonathan Swift, coming
-raw with his degree from Trinity College, Dublin, shouldered his robust
-way to the head of an examination list, and thus making himself at a
-stroke independent of patronage, gone out to reign and rule and
-distribute justice in India, or pushed himself upward among the
-gentlemanly mediocrities of a public office. One asks would he have
-found that method more successful, and endured the desk and the routine
-of his office, and
-
-[Illustration: JONATHAN SWIFT.
-
-FROM PHOTOGRAPH OF ORIGINAL MARBLE BUST OF SWIFT BY ROUBILLIAC
-(1695-1762), NOW IN THE LIBRARY OF TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN.]
-
-“got on” with the head of his department, better than he endured the
-monotony and subjection, the possible slights and spurns of Sir William
-Temple’s household, which he entered, half servant, half equal, the poor
-relation, the secretary and companion of that fastidious philosopher?
-The question may be cut short by the almost certainty that Swift could
-not have gained his promotion in any such way; but his age had not
-learned the habit of utilizing education, and he was one of the idle
-youths of fame. “He was stopped of his degree,” he himself writes in his
-autobiographical notes, “for dullness and insufficiency, and at last
-hardly admitted in a manner little to his credit, which is called in
-that college _speciali gratia_.” Recent biographers have striven to
-prove that this really meant nothing to Swift’s discredit, but it is to
-be supposed that in such a matter he is himself the best authority.
-
-The life of the household of dependents at Moor Park, where young Swift
-attended Sir William’s pleasure in the library, while the Johnsons and
-Dingleys, the waiting-gentlewomen of a system which now lingers only in
-courts, hung about my lady, her relatives, gossips, servants, is to us
-extremely difficult to realize, and still more to understand. This
-little cluster of secondary personages, scarcely at all elevated above
-the servants, with whom they sometimes sat at table, and whose offices
-they were always liable to be called on to perform, yet who were all
-conscious of gentle blood in their veins, and a relationship more or
-less distinct with the heads of the house, is indeed one of the most
-curious lingerings of the past in the eighteenth century. When we read
-in one of Macaulay’s brilliant sketches, or in Swift’s own words, or in
-the indications given by both history and fiction, that the
-parson,--perhaps at the great house,--humble priest of the parish, found
-his natural mate in the waiting-maid, it is generally forgotten that the
-waiting-maid was then in most cases quite as good as the parson: a
-gently bred and well-descended woman, like her whom an unkind but not
-ignoble fate made into the Stella we all know, the mild and modest star
-of Swift’s existence. It was no doubt a step in the transition from the
-great medieval household, where the squire waited on the knight with a
-lowliness justified by his certainty of believing himself knight in his
-turn, and where my lady’s service was a noble education, the only school
-accessible to the young gentlewomen of her connection--down to our own
-less picturesque and more independent days, in which personal service
-has ceased to be compatible with the pretensions of any who can assume,
-by the most distant claim, to be “gentle” folk. The institution is very
-apparent in Shakspere’s day, the waiting-gentlewomen who surround his
-heroines being of entirely different mettle from the soubrettes of
-modern comedy. At a later period such a fine gentleman as John Evelyn,
-in no need of patronage, was content and proud that his daughter should
-enter a great household to learn how to comport herself in the world. In
-the end of the seventeenth century the dependents were perhaps more
-absolutely dependent. But even this, like most things, had its better
-and worst side.
-
-That a poor widow with her child, like Stella’s mother, should find
-refuge in the house of her wealthy kinswoman at no heavier cost than
-that of attending to Lady Temple’s linen and laces, and secure thus such
-a training for her little girl as might indeed have ended in the rude
-household of a Parson Trulliber, but at the same time might fit her to
-take her place in a witty and brilliant society, and enter into all the
-thoughts of the most brilliant genius of his time, was no ill fate; nor
-is there anything that is less than noble and befitting (in theory) in
-the association of that young man of genius, whatsoever exercises of
-patience he might be put to, with the highly cultured man of the world,
-the ex-ambassador and councilor of kings, under whose auspices he could
-learn to understand both books and men, see the best company of his
-time, and acquire at second hand all the fruits of a ripe experience. So
-that, perhaps, there is something to be said after all for the curious
-little community at Moor Park, where Sir William, like a god, made the
-day good or evil for his people according as he smiled or frowned; where
-the young Irish secretary, looking but uneasily upon a world in which
-his future fate was so unassured, had yet the wonderful chance once, if
-no more, of explaining English institutions to King William, and in his
-leisure the amusement of teaching little Hester how to write, and
-learning from her baby prattle--which must have been the delight of the
-house, kept up and encouraged by her elders--that “little language”
-which had become a sort of synonym for the most intimate and endearing
-utterances of tenderness. No doubt Sir William himself (who left her a
-modest little fortune when he died) must have loved to hear the child
-talk, and even Lady Giffard and the rest, having no responsibility for
-her parts of speech, kept her a baby as long as possible, and delighted
-in the pretty jargon to which foolish child-lovers cling in all ages
-after the little ones themselves are grown too wise to use it more.
-
-Jonathan Swift left Ireland, along with many more, in the commotion that
-succeeded the revolution of 1688--a very poor and homely lad, with
-nothing but the learning, such as it was, picked up in a somewhat
-disorderly university career. Through his mother, then living at
-Leicester, and on the score of humble relationship between Mrs. Swift
-and Lady Temple, of whom the reader may perhaps remember the romance and
-tender history,--a pleasant association,--he was introduced to Sir
-William Temple’s household, but scarcely, it would appear, at first to
-any permanent position there. He was engaged, an unfriendly writer says,
-“at the rate of £20 a year” as amanuensis and reader, but “Sir William
-never favoured him with his conversation nor allowed him to sit at table
-with him.” Temple’s own account of the position, however, contains
-nothing at all derogatory to the young man, for whom, about a year
-after, he endeavored, no doubt in accordance with Swift’s own wishes, to
-find a situation with Sir Robert Southwell, then going to Ireland as
-secretary of state. Sir William describes Swift as “of good family in
-Herefordshire.... He has lived in my house, read to me, writ for me, and
-kept all my accounts as far as my small occasions required. He has Latin
-and Greek, some French, writes a very good current hand, is very honest
-and diligent, and has good friends, though they have for the present
-lost their fortunes,” the great man says; and he recommends the youth
-“either as a gentleman to wait on you, or a clerk to write under you, or
-upon any establishment of the College to recommend him to a fellowship
-there, which he has a just pretence to.” This shows how little there was
-in the position of “a gentleman to wait on you,” of which the young
-suitor need have been ashamed. Swift’s own account of this speedy return
-to Ireland is that it was by advice of the physicians, “who weakly
-imagined that his native air might be of some use to recover his
-health,” which he was young enough to have endangered by the temptations
-of Sir William’s fine gardens; a “surfeit of fruit” being the innocent
-cause to which he attributes the disease which haunted him for all the
-rest of his life.
-
-His absence, however, from the Temple household was of very short
-duration, Sir Robert Southwell having apparently had no use for his
-services, or means of preferring him to a fellowship, and he returned to
-Moor Park in 1690, where he remained for four years. It was quite clear,
-whatever his vicissitudes of feeling might have been, that he identified
-himself entirely with his patron’s opinions and even prejudices, and
-was
-
-[Illustration: MOOR PARK, RESIDENCE OF SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE, AND OF SWIFT.
-
-DRAWN BY CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY, ENGRAVED BY R. VARLEY.]
-
-a loyal and devoted retainer both now and afterward. When Sir William
-became involved in a literary quarrel with the great scholar Bentley,
-young Swift rushed into the field with a _jeu d’esprit_ which has
-outlived all other records of the controversy. The “Battle of the Books”
-could hardly have been written in aid of a hard or contemptuous master.
-Years after, when he had a house of his own and had entered upon his
-independent career, he turned his little rectory garden into a humble
-imitation of the Dutch paradise which Temple had made to bloom in the
-wilds of Surrey, with a canal and a willow walk like those which were so
-dear to King William and his courtiers. And when Temple died, it was to
-Swift, and not to any of his nephews, that Sir William committed the
-charge of his papers and literary remains. This does not look like a
-hard bondage on one side, or any tyrannical sway on the other,
-notwithstanding a few often-quoted phrases which are taken as implying
-complaint. “Don’t you remember,” Swift asks long after, “how I used to
-be in pain when Sir William Temple would look cold and out of temper for
-three or four days, and I used to suspect a hundred reasons?” But these
-words need not represent anything more than that sensitiveness to the
-aspect of the person on whom his prospects and comfort depend which is
-inevitable to every individual in a similar position, however
-considerate and friendly the patron may be. The hard-headed and
-unbending Scotch philosopher, James Mill, was just as sensitive to the
-looks of his kind friend and helper in the early struggles of life,
-Jeremy Bentham, in whose sunny countenance Mill discovered unspoken
-offense with an ingenuity worthy of a self-tormenting woman. It was
-natural indeed that Swift, a high-spirited young man, should fret and
-struggle as the years went on and nothing happened to enlarge his
-horizon beyond the trees of Moor Park. He was sent to King William, as
-has been said, when Temple was unable to wait upon his Majesty, to
-explain to him the expediency of certain parliamentary measures, and
-this was no doubt intended by his patron as a means of bringing him
-under the king’s notice. William would seem to have taken a kind of
-vague interest in the secretary, which he expressed in an odd way by
-offering him a captain’s commission in a cavalry regiment,--a proposal
-which did not tempt Swift,--and by teaching him how to cut asparagus “in
-the Dutch way,” and to eat up all the stalks, as the dean afterward, in
-humorous revenge, made an unlucky visitor of his own do. But William,
-notwithstanding these whimsical evidences of favor, neither listened to
-the young secretary’s argument nor gave him a prebend as had been hoped.
-
-Four years, however, is a long time for an ambitious young man to spend
-in dependence, watching one hope die out after another; and Swift’s
-impatience began to be irrestrainable and to trouble the peace of his
-patron’s learned leisure. Although destined from the first to the
-church, and for some time waiting in tremulous expectation of
-ecclesiastical preferment, Swift had not yet taken orders. The
-explanation he gives of how and why he finally determined on doing so is
-characteristic. His dissatisfaction and restlessness, probably his
-complaints, moved Sir William,--though evidently deeply offended that
-his secretary should wish to leave him,--to offer him an employ of about
-£120 a year in the Rolls Office in Ireland, of which Temple held the
-sinecure office of master. “Whereupon [says Swift’s own narrative] Mr.
-Swift told him that since he had now an opportunity of living without
-being driven into the Church for a maintenance, he was resolved to go to
-Ireland and take Holy Orders.” This arbitrary decision to balk his
-patron’s tardy bounty, and take his own way in spite of him, was
-probably as much owing to a characteristic blaze of temper as to the
-somewhat fantastic disinterestedness here put forward, though Swift was
-never a man greedy of money or disposed to sacrifice his pride to the
-acquisition of gain, notwithstanding certain habits of miserliness
-afterward developed in his character. Sir William was “extremely
-angry”--hurt, no doubt, as many a patron has been, by the ingratitude of
-the dependent who would not trust everything to him, but claimed some
-free will in the disposition of his own life. Had they been uncle and
-nephew, or even father and son, the same thing might easily have
-happened. Swift set out for Dublin full of indignation and excitement,
-“everybody judging I did best to leave him,”--but alas! in this, as in
-so many cases, pride was doomed to speedy downfall.
-
-On reaching Dublin, and taking the necessary steps for his ordination,
-Swift found that it was needful for him to have a recommendation and
-certificate from the patron in whose house so many years of his life had
-been spent. No doubt it must have been a somewhat bitter necessity to
-bow his head before the protector whom he had left in anger and ask for
-this. Macaulay describes him as addressing his patron in the language
-“of a lacquey, or even of a beggar,” but we doubt greatly if apart from
-prejudice or the tingle of these unforgettable words, any impartial
-reader would form such an impression. “The particulars expected of me,”
-Swift writes, “are what relates to morals and learning and the reasons
-of quitting your honour’s family, that is whether the last was
-occasioned by any ill action.” “Your honour” has a somewhat servile tone
-in our days, but in Swift’s the formality was natural. Lady Giffard,
-Temple’s sister-in-law, in the further quarrels which followed Sir
-William’s death, spoke of this as a penitential letter, and perhaps it
-was not wonderful that she should look on the whole matter with an
-unfavorable eye. No doubt the ladies of the house thought young Swift an
-unnatural monster for wishing to go away and thinking himself able to
-set up for himself without their condescending notice and the godlike
-philosopher’s society and instruction, and were pleased to find his
-pride so quickly brought down. Sir William, however, it would seem,
-behaved as a philosopher and a gentleman should, and gave the required
-recommendation with magnanimity and kindness. Thus the young man had his
-way.
-
-Swift got a small benefice in the north of Ireland, the little country
-parish of Kilroot, in which doubtless he expected that the sense of
-independence would make up to him for other deprivations. It was near
-Belfast, among those hard-headed Scotch colonists whom he could never
-endure; and probably this had something to do with the speedy revulsion
-of his mind. He remained there only a year; and it is perhaps the best
-proof we could have of his sense of isolation and banishment that this
-was the only time in his life in which he thought of marriage. There is
-in existence a fervent and impassioned letter addressed to the object of
-his affections, a Miss Waring, whom, after the fashion of the time, he
-called Varina. He does not seem in this case to have had the usual good
-fortune that attended his relationships with women. Miss Waring did not
-respond with the same warmth; indeed, she was discouraging and coldly
-prudent. And he was still pleading for a favorable answer when there
-arrived a letter from Moor Park inviting his return--Sir William’s
-pride, too, having apparently broken down under the blank made by
-Swift’s departure. He made instant use of this invitation--which must
-have soothed his injured feelings and restored his self-satisfaction--to
-shake the resolution of the ungrateful Varina. “I am once more offered,”
-he says, “the advantage to have the same acquaintance with greatness
-which I formerly enjoyed, and with better prospects of interest”; and
-though he offers magnanimously “to forego it all for your sake,” yet it
-is evident that the proposal had set the blood stirring in his veins,
-and that the dependence from which he had broken loose with a kind of
-desperation, once more seemed to
-
-[Illustration: DEAN SWIFT.
-
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY PIERRE FOURDRINIER, AFTER A PAINTING BY
-CHARLES JERVAS.]
-
-him, unless Varina had been melted by the sacrifice he would have made
-for her, to be the most desirable thing in the world.
-
-Macaulay, and after him Thackeray and many less distinguished writers,
-still persistently represent this part of Swift’s life as one of
-unmitigated hardship and suffering. The brilliant historian so much
-scorns the guidance of facts as to say that the humble student “made
-love to a pretty waiting-maid who was the chief ornament of the
-servant’s hall,” by way of explaining the strange yet tender story which
-has been more deeply discussed than any great national event, and which
-has made the name of Stella known to every reader.
-
-Hester Johnson was a child of seven when young Swift, “the humble
-student,” went first to Moor Park. She was only fifteen when he
-returned, no longer as a sort of educated man of all work, but on the
-entreaty of the patron who had felt the want of his company so much as
-to forget all grievances. He was not now a humble student, Temple’s
-satellite and servant, but his friend and coadjutor, fully versed in all
-his secrets, and most likely already chosen as the guardian of his fame
-and the executor of his purposes and wishes; therefore it is not
-possible that Macaulay’s reckless picturesque description could apply to
-either time. Such an easy picture, however, has more effect upon the
-general imagination than the outcries of all the biographers, and the
-many researches made to show that Swift was not a sort of literary
-lackey, nor Stella an Abigail, but that he had learned to prize the
-advantages of his home there during his absence from it, and that during
-the latter part of his life at Moor Park at least his position was as
-good as that of a dependent can ever be.
-
-Sir William Temple died, as Swift records affectionately, on the morning
-of January 27, 1699, “and with him all that was good and amiable among
-men.” He died, however, leaving the young man who had spent so many
-years of his life under his wing, scarcely better for that long
-subjection. Swift had a legacy of £100 for his trouble in editing his
-patron’s memoirs, and he got the profits of those memoirs, amounting,
-Mr. Forster calculates, to no less than £600--no inconsiderable present;
-but no one of the many appointments which were then open to the
-retainers of the great, and especially to a young man of letters, had
-come in Swift’s way. He himself, it is said, “still believed in the
-royal pledge for the first prebend that should fall vacant in
-Westminster or Canterbury,” but this was a hope which had accompanied
-him ever since he explained constitutional law to King William six years
-before, and could not be very lively after this long interval.
-
-Thus Swift’s life came to a sudden and complete break. The great
-household, with its easy and uneasy jumble of patrons and dependents,
-fell asunder and ceased to be. The younger members of the family were
-jealous of the last bequest, which put the fame of their distinguished
-relative into the hands of a stranger, and did their best to set Swift
-down in his proper place, and to proclaim how much he was the creature
-of their uncle’s bounty. In the breaking up which followed, there were
-many curious partings and conjunctions. Why Hester Johnson, to whom Sir
-William had bequeathed a little independence, should have left her
-mother’s care and joined her fortunes to those of Mrs. Dingley instead,
-remains unexplained, unless indeed it was Mrs. Johnson’s second marriage
-which was the cause, or perhaps some vexation on the part of Lady
-Giffard--with whom the girl’s mother remained, notwithstanding her
-marriage--at the liberality of her brother to the child brought up in
-his house. Mrs. Johnson had other daughters, one of whom Swift saw, and
-describes favorably, years after. Perhaps Mrs. Dingley and the girl whom
-he had taught and petted from her childhood had taken Swift’s side in
-the Giffard-Temple difference, and so got on uneasy terms with the rest
-of the household, always faithful to my lady. At all events, at the
-breaking up Hester with her little fortune separated herself from the
-connection generally, and with her elder friend made an independent new
-beginning, as Swift also had to do. The fact seems of no particular
-importance, except that it afforded a reason for Swift’s interference in
-her affairs, and threw them into a combination which lasted all their
-lives.
-
-Swift was thirty-one, too old to be beginning his career, yet young
-enough to turn with eager zest to the unknown, when this catastrophe
-occurred. Sir William Temple’s secretary and literary executor must have
-known, one would suppose, many people who could have helped him to
-promotion, but it would seem as if a kind of irresistible fate impelled
-him back to his native country, though he did not love it, and forced
-him to be an Irishman in spite of himself. The only post that came in
-his way was a chaplaincy, conjoined with a secretaryship, in the suite
-of the Earl of Berkeley, newly appointed one of the lords justices in
-Ireland, and just then entering upon his duties. Swift accepted the
-position in hopes that he should be continued as Lord Berkeley’s
-secretary, and possibly go with him afterward to more stirring scenes
-and a larger life, but this expectation was not carried out. Neither was
-his application--which seems at the moment a somewhat bold one--for the
-deanery of Derry successful, and all the preferment he succeeded in
-getting was another Irish living, with a better stipend and in a more
-favorable position than Kilroot: the parish of Laracor, within twenty
-miles of Dublin, which, conjoined with a prebend in St. Patrick’s and
-other small additions, brought him in £200 a year; a small promotion,
-indeed, yet not a bad income for the place and time. And he was
-naturally, as Lord Berkeley’s chaplain, in the midst of the finest
-company that Ireland could boast, one of a court more extended than Sir
-William Temple’s, yet of a similar description, and affording greater
-scope for his hitherto undeveloped social qualities. Satire more
-sportive than mere scorn, yet sometimes savage enough; an elephantine
-fun, which pleased the age; the puns and quibs in which the men emulated
-one another; the merry rhymes that pleased the ladies,--seem suddenly to
-have burst forth in him, throwing an unexpected gleam upon his new
-sphere.
-
-Swift was always popular with women. He treated them roughly on many
-occasions, with an arrogance that grew with age, but evidently possessed
-that charm--a quality by itself and not dependent upon any laws of
-amiability--which attracts one sex to the other. Lady Berkeley, whom he
-describes as a woman of “the most easy conversation joined with the
-truest piety,” and her young daughters were charming and lively
-companions with whom the chaplain soon found himself at home. And
-notwithstanding his disappointment with respect to the preferment which
-Lord Berkeley might have procured for him and did not, it would seem
-that this period of hanging on at the little Irish court was amusing at
-least. The lively little picture of the inferior members of a great
-household which Swift made for the entertainment of the drawing-rooms on
-the occasion when Mrs. Frances Harris lost her purse, is one of the most
-vivid and amusing possible.
-
-His stay in Ireland at this period lasted about two years, during which
-he paid repeated visits to his living at Laracor, and made trial of
-existence there also. The parsonage was in a ruinous condition; the
-church a miserable barn; the congregation numbered about twenty persons.
-Many are the tales of the new parson’s arrival there like a
-thunder-storm, frightening the humble curate and his wife with the
-arrogant roughness of manner which they, like many others, found
-afterward covered a great deal of genuine practical kindness. His mode
-of traveling, his sarcastic rhymes about the places at which he paused
-on the journey, the careless swing of imperious good and ill
-
-[Illustration: STELLA’S COTTAGE, ON THE BOUNDARY OF THE MOOR PARK
-ESTATE.
-
-DRAWN BY CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY, ENGRAVED BY S. DAVIS.]
-
-humor in which he indulged, contemptuous of everybody’s opinion, have
-furnished many amusing incidents. One well-known anecdote, which
-describes him as finding his congregation to consist only of his clerk
-and beginning the service gravely with, “Dearly beloved Roger,” has
-found a permanent place among ecclesiastical pleasantries. In all
-probability it is true; but if not so, it is at least so _ben trovato_
-as to be as good as true. There were few claims upon the energies of
-such a man in such a sphere, and when Lord Berkeley was recalled to
-England his chaplain went with him. But neither did he find any
-promotion in London. Up to this time his only literary work had been
-that wonderful “Battle of the Books,” which had burst like a bombshell
-into the midst of the squabble of the _literati_, but which had only as
-yet been handed about in manuscript, and was therefore known to few. No
-doubt it was known to various wits and scholars that Sir William
-Temple’s late secretary and literary executor was a young man of no
-common promise; but statesmen in general, and the king in particular,
-sick and worn out with many preoccupations, had no leisure for the
-claims of the Irish parson. He hung about the Berkeley household, and
-gravely read out of the book of moral essays which the countess loved
-those Reflections on a Broomstick which her ladyship found so edifying,
-and launched upon the world an anonymous pamphlet or two, which he had
-the pleasure of hearing talked about and attributed to names greater
-than his own, but made no step toward the advancement for which he
-longed.
-
-The interest of this visit to England was however as great and told for
-as much in his life as if it had brought him a bishopric. It determined
-that long connection and close intercourse in which Swift’s inner
-history is involved. After he had paid in vain his court to the king,
-and made various ineffectual attempts to recommend himself in high
-quarters, he went on a visit to Farnham, where Hester Johnson and Mrs.
-Dingley had settled after Sir William’s death. Swift found the two women
-quite undetermined what to do, in an uncomfortable lodging, harassed for
-money, and without any object in their lives. Most probably he was
-called to advise as to their future plans, where they should settle and
-how they were to live, both being entirely inexperienced in the art of
-independent existence. They had lived together for years, and knew
-everything about each other: Hester had grown up from childhood under
-Swift’s eye, his pupil, his favorite and playfellow. She had now, it is
-true, arrived at an age when other sentiments are supposed to come in.
-She must have been about twenty, while he was thirty-four. There was no
-reason in the world why they should not have married then and there, had
-they so wished. But there seems no appearance or thought of any such
-desire, and the question was what should the ladies do for the
-arrangement of their affairs and pleasant occupation of their lives.
-Farnham being untenable, where should they go? Why not to Ireland, where
-Hester’s property was--where they would be near their friend, who could
-help them into society and give them his own companionship as often as
-he happened to be there? Here is his own account of the decision:
-
-“I prevailed with her and her dear friend and companion, the other
-lady,” he says, “to draw what money they had into Ireland, a great part
-of their fortunes being in annuities upon funds. Money was then ten per
-cent. in Ireland, besides the advantage of returning it, and all the
-necessaries of life at half the price. They complied with my advice, and
-soon after came over; but I happening to continue some time longer in
-England, they were much discouraged to live in Dublin, where they were
-wholly strangers. But this adventure looked so like a frolic, the
-censure held for some time as if there were a secret history in such a
-removal; which however soon blew off by her excellent conduct. She came
-over with her friend in the year 1700, and they both lived together
-until the day [of her death, 1728].”
-
-This was then the time which decided that which is called the “sad and
-mysterious history” of Swift and Stella--a story so strangely told, so
-obstinately insisted upon as miserable, unnatural, and tragical, that
-the reader or writer of to-day has scarcely the power of forming an
-impartial judgment upon it. We have not a word from the woman’s side of
-the question, who is supposed to have passed a melancholy existence of
-unsatisfied longings and disappointed love by Swift’s side, the victim
-of his capricious affections, neglect, cruelty, and fondness. That she
-should have wished to marry him, that the love was impassioned on her
-side, and her whole life blighted and overcast by his fantastic
-repugnance to the common ties of humanity, is taken for granted by every
-historian. These writers differ as to Swift’s motives, as to the
-character of his feelings, and even as to the facts of the case; but no
-one has the slightest doubt of what the woman’s sentiments must have
-been. But, as a matter of fact, we have no evidence at all what Stella’s
-sentiments were. By so much written testimony as remains we are fully
-entitled to form such conclusions as we please on Swift’s side of the
-question; but there is actually no testimony at all upon Stella’s side.
-Appearances of blighted life or unhappiness there are none in anything
-we know of her. As the ladies appear reflected in that “Journal to
-Stella”--which is the dean’s only claim upon our affections, but a
-strong one--they seem to have lived’ a most cheerful, lively life. They
-had a number of friends, they had their little tea-parties, their circle
-of witty society, to which the letters of the absent were a continual
-amusement and delight. And it is the man, not the woman, who complains
-of not receiving letters; it is he, not she, who exhausts every playful
-wile, every tender art, to keep himself in vivid recollection. Is it
-perhaps a certain mixture of masculine vanity and compassion for the
-gentle feminine creature who never succeeded in getting the man she
-loved to marry her, and thus failed to attain the highest end of woman,
-which has moved every biographer of Swift, each man more compassionate
-than his predecessor, thus to exhaust himself in pity for Stella?
-Johnson, Scott, Macaulay, Thackeray, not to mention many lesser names,
-have all taken her injured innocence to heart. And nobody notes the
-curious fact that Stella herself never utters any complaint, nor indeed
-seems to feel the necessity of being unhappy at all, but takes her dean
-most cheerfully,--laughing, scolding, giving her opinion with all the
-delightful freedom of a relationship which was at once nature and
-choice, the familiar trust and tenderness of old use and wont with the
-charm of voluntary association. We see her only as reflected in his
-letters, in the references he makes to hers, and all his tender,
-sportive allusions to her habits and ways of thinking. This reflection
-and image is not in rigid lines of black and white, but an airy and
-radiant vision, the representation of anything in the world rather than
-a downcast and disappointed woman. It is not that either of a wife or a
-lover; it is more like the wilful, delightful image of a favorite child,
-a creature confident that everything she says or does will be received
-with admiration from the mere fact that it is she who says or does it,
-and who tyrannizes, scoffs, and proffers a thousand comments and
-criticisms with all the elastic brightness of unforced and unimpassioned
-affection. It is through this medium alone that Stella is ever visible.
-And he, too, laughs, teases, fondles, and advises with the same doting,
-delightful ease of affection. By what process this attractive
-conjunction should have furnished the idea of a victim in Stella, and in
-Swift of a tyrannous secret lover crushing her heart, it is difficult to
-understand. The external circumstances of their intimacy were, no doubt,
-very
-
-[Illustration: HESTER JOHNSON, SWIFT’S “STELLA,” PAINTED FROM LIFE BY
-MRS. DELANY, ON THE WALL OF THE TEMPLE AT DELVILLE, AND ACCIDENTALLY
-DESTROYED.
-
-ENGRAVED BY M. HAIDER FROM COPY OF THE ORIGINAL BY HENRY MACMANUS, R. H.
-A., NOW IN POSSESSION OF PROFESSOR DOWDEN.]
-
-unusual, and might have lent occasion to much evil speaking. But they do
-not seem to have done so, after the first moment at least. Nobody
-ventured to assail the good fame of Stella, and Swift took every means
-to make the perfect innocence of their friendship apparent. She cannot
-be made out to have suffered in the vulgar way, and it seems to us one
-of the most curious examples of an obstinately maintained theory to
-represent her as Swift’s victim in what is supposed to be a long
-martyrdom of the heart.
-
-One can well imagine, however, when the two ladies arrived in Dublin,
-where their friend had no doubt represented to them his power to gain
-them access into the best society, and found that he did not come and
-that they were stranded in a strange place, knowing nobody, how some
-annoyance and disappointment, and perhaps anger, must have been in their
-thoughts, and that P. D. F. R., as he is called in the little language,
-faithless rogue! had his share of abuse. And no doubt it might be
-believed by good-natured friends that their object in coming was to
-secure the vicar of Laracor either for the young and lovely girl or the
-elder woman, who was scarcely older than Swift--if not indeed that some
-“secret history” more damaging still was at the bottom of the adventure.
-Insensibly, however, Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Dingley found a place and
-position for themselves. Swift was often away in the following years,
-spending about half his time in London, and when he was absent they took
-possession of his newly repaired and renovated house, or occupied his
-lodging in Dublin, and gathered friends about them, and went out to
-their card-parties, and played a little, and talked, and lived a
-pleasant life. When he returned, they removed to their own rooms. Thus
-there could be no doubt about the close association between them, which,
-when it was quite apparent that it meant nothing closer to come, no
-doubt made everybody wonder. But we have no contemporary evidence that
-Stella was an object of pity, and her aspect as we see it in all Swift
-says of her is exactly the reverse, and gives us the impression of a
-charming and easy-minded woman, a queen of society in her little circle,
-enjoying everything that came her way.
-
-As Swift’s relations with Stella are the great interests of his life,
-the subject which occupies every new writer who so much as touches upon
-him, it is needless to make any excuse for entering into the question
-with an amount of detail which our limited space would otherwise
-scarcely justify. The mystery about it lends it an endless attraction,
-and as, whatever it was, it is the one great love of his life, and
-represents all the private satisfaction and comfort he got by means of
-his affections, it has a permanent interest which most readers will not
-find in the “Tale of a Tub,” or any other of the productions which made
-this period of his life remarkable. Swift was continually going and
-coming to London through these years. Though he had begun at once to
-make Laracor a sort of earthly paradise with a Dutch flavor, such as he
-had learnt from his early master, and though it was “very much for his
-own satisfaction” that he had invited Stella to come to Ireland, yet
-neither of these reasons was enough to keep him in the rural quiet among
-his willows, though he loved them. He hankered after society, after fame
-and power. He liked to meet with great men, to hear the news, to ride
-over weaker reasoners in society, to put forth his own vigorous views,
-and whip, with sharp satire, the men who displeased him. Tradition and
-habit had made him a Whig, but political names were of easy interchange
-in those days, and Swift’s objects were much more definite than his
-politics. From the moment of Queen Anne’s ascension, when she gratified
-the Church of England by the remission of certain dues hitherto paid to
-the crown, Swift’s energies were directed to obtaining a similar
-remission for the Irish Church, and this was the ostensible object of
-his repeated journeys to London. He had also a purpose still nearer to
-his heart, which was the advancement of Jonathan Swift to a post more
-fitted to his genius. For these great objects he haunted the anterooms
-of Halifax and Somers and Godolphin, and did what he could to show them
-what they were not wise enough to perceive, that he was himself an
-auxiliary well worth securing. The Whig lords played with, flattered,
-and neglected the brilliant but importunate envoy of the Irish Church,
-holding him upon tenterhooks of expectation, going so far as to make him
-believe that his cause for the church was won, and that his bishopric
-was certain, till disgust and disappointment overcame Swift’s patience.
-Nine years had passed in these vain negotiations. It was in 1701 that he
-paid that visit to Farnham which decided Stella’s fate, but his own was
-still hanging in the balance when, after almost yearly expeditions in
-the interval, he set out for London in the autumn of the year 1710 with
-a threat upon his lips. “I will apply to Mr. Harley, who formerly made
-some advances toward me, and, unless he be altered, will I believe think
-himself in the right to use me well.” The change was sudden, but it had
-little in it that could be called political apostasy. Every man was more
-or less for his own hand, and the balance of popular feeling fluctuated
-between war and peace: between pride and the glory of England on the one
-hand, and horror of the sacrifices and misery involved in the
-long-continued, never-ending campaigns of Marlborough on the
-other--almost as much as Queen Anne wavered between the influence of the
-imperious duchess and the obsequious Abigail. There was no shame to
-Swift at such a moment in the sudden revolution he made.
-
-The man who felt himself of sufficient importance to make this threat
-seems to have possessed already, notwithstanding the neglect of the Whig
-lords, the rank of his intellect rather than of his external position,
-and this not entirely because of the anonymous productions which were
-more or less known to be his. The “Tale of a Tub,” written while he was
-still an inmate of Moor Park, had by this time been before the world six
-years. It was published along with the “Battle of the Books” in 1704,
-and caused great excitement and sensation among politicians, wits, and
-critics. But the careless contempt of fame which mingled in him with so
-fierce a hunger for it kept it long a matter of doubt whether the
-immense reputation of these works belonged to him or not; and it would
-appear that his own personality, the size and rude splendor of his
-individual character, had at least as much to do with his position as
-the doubtful glory of an anonymous publication. The vicar of Laracor was
-not sufficiently important to be chosen as the representative of the
-Irish Church--but Jonathan Swift was; and though the bishops schemed
-against him in his absence when he seemed to have failed, no one seems
-to have ventured to suggest that he was too humble a person to hold that
-representative post. The book which dazzled English society and set all
-the wits talking was by no means the kind of book to support
-ecclesiastical dignity. It was indeed by way of being a vindication of
-the superiority of the Anglican Church over Rome on the one hand, and
-the dissenters on the other; but the tremendous raid against false
-pretenses, hypocrisy, and falsehood which is its real scope, was
-executed with such a riot and madness of laughter, and unscrupulous
-derision of everything that came in the satirist’s way, as had scarcely
-been known in English speech before. The mockery was at once brilliant
-and careless, dashed about hither and thither in a sort of giant’s play,
-full of the coarsest metaphors, the finest wit, indignation, ridicule,
-fun, almost too wild and reckless to be called cynical, though
-penetrated with the profoundest cynicism and disbelief of any good. The
-power which still lives and asserts itself in those strange and often
-detestable pages, must strike even the
-
-[Illustration: SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM AN ENGRAVING IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM, AFTER
-A PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY.]
-
-reader to whom they are most abhorrent. And the standard of taste was
-different in the reign of Anne, and critics were not easily alarmed. To
-some readers the most desperate satire that was ever written appeared a
-delightful piece of wit.
-
-William Penn sent to the author from America a gammon of bacon on the
-score of having been “often greatly amused by thy _Tale_,” and a hundred
-years later it “delighted beyond description” at the robust mind of
-William Cobbett, so that he forgot that he had not supped, and preferred
-the book to a bed. The effect upon the general mind of his
-contemporaries was equally great; and notwithstanding the immense
-difference of taste and public feeling it has never lost its place among
-English classics. Many indeed were horrified by its audacious treatment
-of the most sacred things, and the objection of Queen Anne to give its
-author a bishopric would probably have been shared by nine tenths of her
-subjects. The “Tale of a Tub” is one of those books which furnish a test
-of literary character. Like the man who was bound to hear the Ancient
-Mariner, and whom that mystic personage knew whenever he saw him, the
-reader of Swift’s great work must be born with the faculty necessary for
-due appreciation and understanding. It is not a power communicable, any
-more than it is possible to explain the story of the albatross, and the
-curse that fell upon its slayer. The greater part of the public take
-both for granted, and remain in a respectful ignorance. To such Swift’s
-work is little better than a dust-heap of genius, in which there are
-diamonds and precious things imbedded, which flash at every turning
-over; but the broken bits of treasure are mixed up with choking dust and
-dreary rubbish, as well as the offensive garbage which revolts the
-searcher. The dedication of the work to Prince Posterity is thus wholly
-justified, and at the same time a failure. It stands in the highest rank
-of classic satire, and yet to the mass of readers it is nothing but a
-name.
-
-It is characteristic, however, of the man that he should have tossed
-into the world without a name a book which made a greater impression
-than any contemporary publication, enjoying no doubt the wonders and
-queries, yet scorning to make himself dependent upon so small a thing as
-a book for his reputation and influence. He was no more disposed than
-the most sensitive of authors to let another man claim the credit of it,
-yet proud enough in native arrogance to hold himself independent of such
-aids to advancement, and thus to prove his scorn of the world’s opinion,
-even when he sought its applauses most. Whether this work had anything
-to do with his introduction to the society of the coffee-houses, and the
-wits of London, we are not told. He was addressed by Addison as “the
-most Agreeable Companion, the Truest Friend, and the Greatest Genius of
-his age,” very shortly after the publication of his great satire; so
-that it is probable he already enjoyed the advantage of its fame,
-without seeming to do so. The friendship of Addison was a better thing
-than the admiration of the crowd, and notwithstanding Swift’s imperious
-temper and arrogant ways, it is just to add that he always numbered
-among his friends the best and greatest of his time.
-
-On a first accost, it would not seem that his manners were ingratiating.
-This story, which is told of Swift’s appearance at the St. James
-coffee-house is amusing, and may be true.
-
- They had for several successive days observed a strange clergyman
- come into the house who seemed entirely unacquainted with any of
- those who frequented it, and whose custom was to lay down his hat
- on a table and walk backward and forward at a good pace, for half
- an hour or an hour, without speaking to any mortal, or seeming in
- the least to attend to anything that was going forward there. He
- then used to take up his hat, pay his money at the bar, and walk
- away without opening his lips. On one particular evening, as Mr.
- Addison and the rest were observing him, they saw him cast his eyes
- several times on a gentleman in boots who seemed to be just come
- out of the country, and at last advance, as if intending to address
- him. Eager to hear what this dumb, mad parson had to say, they all
- quitted their seats to get near him. Swift went up to the country
- gentleman, and in a very abrupt manner, without any previous
- salute, asked him, “Pray, sir, do you remember any good weather in
- the world?” The country gentleman, after staring a little at the
- peculiarity of his manner, answered, “Yes, sir, I remember a great
- deal of good weather in my time.” “That is more,” rejoined Swift,
- “than I can say. I never remember any weather that was not too hot
- or too cold, or too wet or too dry; but however God Almighty
- contrives at the end of the year it is all very well.” With which
- remark he took up his hat, and without uttering a syllable more, or
- taking the least notice of any one, walked out of the coffee-house.
-
-His whimsical humor, and love of making the spectators stare, remained a
-characteristic of Swift all his life.
-
-These beginnings of social life were, however, past, and no one was
-better known or more warmly welcomed, when he appeared with his wig new
-curled, and his azure eyes aglow, than the Irish parson, waiting upon
-Providence and the Whigs, whose political pamphlets, and papers in the
-“Tatler,” and malicious practical joking with poor Partridge, the
-astrologer, made him, at each appearance, a more notable figure to all
-the lookers-on. His eyes must have been on fire under those expressive
-brows when he came to London in 1710, resolved this time to be put off
-by Whig blandishments no longer, but to try what the other side would
-do. The other side received him with open arms, and the most instant
-appreciation of what he was worth to them and what he could do. Harley
-was not great in any sense of the word, but if he had shown as much
-insight in the conduct of public affairs as he did in his perception of
-the workmen best adapted to his purpose, in the struggle upon which he
-had entered, he would have been the most successful of ministers. He
-told Swift that his colleagues and himself had been afraid of none but
-him in the ranks of their enemies, and that they had resolved to have
-him. And in proof that they were ready to do anything to secure his
-services, they pushed on and decided as soon as might be his suit for
-the church, which had hung in the balance so long, was as good as
-granted, now as far off as ever. It was settled at once, to Swift’s
-great triumph. And to crown all, the new minister, the greatest man in
-England, called him Jonathan!--of all wonderful things, what could be
-more wonderful than that this great wit, this powerful and pitiless
-satirist, this ambitious man, should be altogether overcome with
-pleasure when Harley called him by his Christian name! Was it mere
-servility, vanity, the flattered weakness of a hanger-on in a great
-man’s familiarity, as everybody says? It is hard to believe this, though
-it is taken for granted on all sides. Swift seems, at all events, to
-have had a real affection for the shifty minister, who received him in
-so different a fashion from that of his former masters. He flung himself
-into all the backstair intrigues, and collogued with Abigail Masham, and
-took his share in every plot. When Harley was stabbed, Swift felt for
-him all the anxiety of a brother. He threw himself into the “Examiner,”
-the new Tory organ, with fervor and enthusiasm, and expounded the
-principles of his party and set their plans before the public with a
-force and clearness which nobody but he, his patrons declared,
-possessed. The two statesmen, Harley and Bolingbroke, who were so little
-like each other, so ill calculated to draw together, were alike in this:
-that neither could be flattering enough or kind enough to the great
-vassal whom they had secured. He seems to have thought of himself that
-he was a sort of third consul, an unofficial sharer of their power.
-
-This extraordinary episode in the life of a man of Swift’s profession,
-and so little likely to come to such promotion, lasted three years; and
-the history of it is not less remarkable than the fact. It was a period
-of the greatest intellectual
-
-[Illustration: DELANY’S HOUSE AT DELVILLE, WHERE SWIFT STAYED.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL.]
-
-activity and brilliancy in Swift’s career, and besides his hard
-political work in the “Examiner” and elsewhere, he flung from him, amid
-the exhilarating appreciation of the great world and his patrons, a
-number of the best of his lighter productions. But nothing that he ever
-wrote can be compared to the letters in which the story of this period
-is told, since nowhere else do we find the charm of humanity, which is
-more great and attractive even than genius. As if the rule of paradox
-was to prevail in his life as well as in his wit, this cynic,
-misanthrope, and satirist, ignoring love and every softer thought,
-exhibits himself once to us in an abandon and melting of the heart such
-as common men are as little capable of as they are of his fierce
-laughter and bitter jests. If it is the true man whom we see in these
-unpremeditated and careless pages, written before he got up of a
-morning, or in the evening when he came home from his entertainments,
-with the chairmen still wrangling over their sixpences outside, how
-different is that man from the other who storms and laughs and mocks
-humanity, and sees through all its miserable pretenses without a thought
-of pardon or excuse! The “Journal” letters addressed to the ladies in
-Dublin, Madam P. P. T. and Madam Elderby, the two women who shared his
-every thought, now so well known as the “Journal to Stella,” are, of all
-Swift’s works, the only productions that touch the heart. They are not
-to be numbered among his “works” at all: publication of any kind never
-seems to have occurred to him, while writing: they are as frank as
-Pepy’s[spelling per original], and far more simple and true. They are
-English history and London life, and the eighteenth century, with its
-mannerisms and quaintness, all in one; and beyond and above every
-circumstance, they are Swift as he was in his deepest soul,--not as he
-appeared to men,--a human being full of tenderness, full of fun and
-innocent humor, full of genius and individual nature, but, above all,
-of true affection, the warmest domestic love. Passion is not in those
-delightful pages; but the endearing playfulness, the absolute freedom of
-self-revelation, the tender intimacy and confidence of members of the
-same family, whose interests and subjects of thought and talk and merry
-jests and delusions are one. They describe every day--nay, hour--of his
-life, every little expedition, all the ups and downs of his occupations
-and progress, with the boundless freedom and sportive extravagance, the
-unimpassioned, unabashed adoration of something warmer than a father,
-more indulgent, more admiring than a brother, yet brother, father,
-lover, and friend all in one.
-
-Only to a woman could such letters have been addressed, and few women
-reading them will be disposed to pity Stella or think her life one of
-blight or injury. Without these the life of the dean would not have
-touched our human sympathies at all, but now that time has let us thus
-fully into his confidence, and opened to our sight what was never
-intended for any but hers and those of her shadow, her guardian, the
-humble third in this profound and perfect union, it is with moistened
-eyes that we read the ever living record. There is nothing in the coarse
-and struggling potency of those books which critics applaud, that comes
-within a hundred miles of the delightful life and ease of these
-outpourings of Swift’s innermost soul. The “Tale of a Tub,” the “Battle
-of the Books,” retain a sort of galvanic existence, but are for the
-greater part insupportable to the honest readers who have no tradition
-of superior acumen and perception to maintain. But when we turn to the
-“Journal,” the clean and wholesome pages smile with a cordial life and
-reality. If there is here and there a phrase too broad for modern ears,
-it is nothing more than the language of the time, and has not a ghost of
-evil meaning in it. The big arrogant wit--not unused to bluster and
-brag, to act like a tyrant and speak like a bully--meets us there
-defenseless, with the tenderest light upon his face, in his nightcap and
-without his wig, smiling over little M. D.’s letter in the wintry
-mornings, snatching a moment at bedtime when he is already “seepy,” and
-can do nothing but bid “nite deelest dea M. D. nite deelest loques,”
-making his mouth, he says, as if he were saying the broken, childish
-words, retiring into the sanctuary of the little language with an
-infinite sense of consolation and repose. Outside it may be he swaggered
-and defied all men, even his patrons; but here an exquisite softness
-comes over him. However he may be judged or mistaken in the world, he is
-always understood by the women in that secret world where they make
-their comments on whatever happens, and merrily answer back again with
-their criticisms, their strictures, no more afraid of that impetuous,
-angry genius than if he had been the meekest of rural priests. It is
-this that has got Swift his hold upon many a reader, who, beginning by
-hating him, the coarse and bitter wit, the scorner of men and crusher of
-women’s hearts, has suddenly found his own heart melt in his breast to
-see the giant lay by his thunders and prattle like an old gossip, like a
-tender mother, father, all in one, in the baby-talk that first had
-opened to him the knowledge of all that is sweetest in life. We do not
-understand the man, much less the woman, who can read without forgiving
-to Swift all his brutalities, as indeed most women who encountered him
-seem to have done without that argument. He would treat the fine ladies
-with the most imperious rudeness, giving forth his rule that it was they
-who should make advances to him, not he to them, yet captivating even
-those who resisted in the end.
-
-The little language which this fierce satirist and cynic dared to put in
-writing, the only man ever so bold as to pay such homage to affection,
-puzzled beyond measure his first editors and expositors, who, with a
-horrified prudery, seem to have done their best to interpret and
-restore it to decorum and dignity; but it has now become the point in
-his story which is most tenderly recollected, his sacred reconciliation
-with mankind. A homeless boy, with none of the traditions of a family,
-finding his unlovely life not less but more unpromising in his first
-experiences of Temple’s luxurious English home, what a sudden fountain
-of sweetness must have opened to him in the prattle of the delightful
-child, which was a new revelation to his heart--revelation of all that
-kindred meant, and delightful intimacy and familiar love. His little
-star of life never waned to Swift: Stella grew old, but never outgrew
-the little language, and every young woman had something in her of the
-sprightly creature that loved to do his bidding, the P. P. T. who held
-her own, and put him upon his best behavior often, yet never was other
-than the “deelest little loque” whom he bantered and laughed at with
-soft tears of tenderness in his eyes. “Better, thank God, and M. D.’s
-prayers,” he says among the private scribbles of his daily diary, which
-neither she nor any one was ever meant to see. Nevertheless, even while
-he was writing this “Journal,” which is the record of a tender intimacy
-so remarkable, Swift was meddling with the education of another girl,
-incautiously, foolishly, who was not of the uninflammable nature of
-Stella, but a hot-headed, passionate creature who did not at all imagine
-that the mere
-
-... delight he took
- To see the virgin mind her book
-
-was all Dr. Swift meant by his talk and attention. Swift says nothing of
-this pupil in the “Journal.” He mentions his dinners at Mrs.
-Vanhomrigh’s, and her handsome daughter, but he does not tell Madam P.
-P. T. that he had given one of his usual caressing names to this girl,
-whose early beauty and frank devotion had pleased him. There is, indeed,
-no shadow
-
-[Illustration: MARLEY ABBEY, THE RESIDENCE OF VANESSA, NOW CALLED
-SELBRIDGE ABBEY.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY R. C. COLLINS.]
-
-of Vanessa anywhere visible, though the brief mention of her name shows
-that the second story, which was to be so fatally and painfully mingled
-with the first, had already begun.
-
-The three years of Swift’s stay in England were the climax of his life.
-They raised him higher than ever a simple parson had been raised before,
-and made of him (or so, at least, he believed) a power in the state. It
-has been doubted whether he was really so highly trusted, so much built
-upon, as he thought. The great lords who delighted in Swift’s talk, and
-called him Jonathan, did not, perhaps, follow his advice and accept his
-guidance, as he supposed. He says, jestingly,--yet half, perhaps, with
-an uneasy meaning,--that everything that was said between himself and
-Harley as they traveled sociably in my Lord Treasurer’s coach to
-Windsor, might have been told at Charing Cross; but this was a rare
-admission, and generally he was very full of the schemes of the
-ministers and their consultations, and his own important share in them.
-He seems to have constituted himself the patron of everybody he knew,
-really providing for a considerable number, and largely undertaking for
-others, though it was long before he got anything for himself. The
-following anecdote gives an unpleasant view from outside of his demeanor
-and habits. It is from Bishop Kennett’s diary during the year 1713, the
-last of Swift’s importance:
-
- Swift came into the coffee-room, and had a bow from everybody save
- me. When I came to the antechamber to wait before prayers, Dr.
- Swift was the principal man of talk and business, and acted as
- minister of requests. He was soliciting the Earl of Arran to speak
- to his brother the Duke of Ormond to get a chaplain’s place
- established in the garrison of Hull for Mr. Fiddes, a clergyman in
- that neighborhood, who had lately been in jail and published
- sermons to pay fees. He was promising Mr. Thorold to undertake with
- my Lord Treasurer that according to his position he should obtain a
- salary of £200 per annum as minister of the English Church in
- Rotterdam. He stopped F. Gwynne, Esq., going in with the red bag
- to the Queen, and told him aloud he had something to say to him
- from my Lord Treasurer. He talked with the son of Dr. Davenant, to
- be sent abroad, and took out his pocket-book, and wrote down
- several things as _memoranda_ to do for him. He turned to the fire,
- and took out his gold watch, and, telling them the time of day,
- complained it was very late. A gentleman said, “It goes too fast.”
- “How can I help it,” says the Doctor, “if the courtiers give me a
- watch that won’t go right?” Then he instructed a young nobleman
- that the best poet in England was Mr. Pope (a papist), who had
- begun a translation of Homer into English verse, for which, he
- said, he must have them all subscribe. “For,” says he, “the author
- shall not begin to print it till I have a thousand guineas for
- him.” Lord Treasurer, after leaving the Queen, came through the
- room, beckoning Dr. Swift to follow him; both went off just before
- prayers.
-
-But the account of the patronage which he exercised, and the brag and
-general “swagger” of his demeanor, though it is by no means invisible in
-the “Journal,” has a different aspect there, where he tells all about
-his favor and power, to please his correspondents, with a good excuse in
-this tender reason for magnifying all that happens to him. It was,
-indeed, a position to turn even the soundest head, and Swift had
-thirsted all his life for power, for notability, for that buoyant sense
-of being on the top of the wave which was so contrary to all his
-previous experience. His own satirical account of himself, as desiring
-literary eminence only to make up for the mistake of not being born a
-lord, is a self-contemptuous way of stating the thirst he had to be
-foremost, to be doing, to be capable of moving the world. And he may
-very well be excused for thinking now that he had done so.
-
-Amid the many disappointments of his life he had these three years of
-triumph, which are much for a man to have. If there was a certain
-vulgarity in his enjoyment of them, there was at the same time a great
-deal of active kindness, and though he might brag of the services he
-did, he yet did service and remembered his friends, and helped as he
-could those hangers-on and waiters upon Providence who, in those days,
-were always about a minister’s antechamber. It is unnecessary to attempt
-to go over again the story of the politics of the time, in which he was
-so powerful an agent. To see Swift moving about in his gown and wig,
-with his eyes, “azure as the heavens,” glowing keen from underneath his
-deep brows, sometimes full of sport and laughter and tender kindness,
-sometimes with something “awful” in their look, sometimes dazzling with
-humorous tyranny and command, is more interesting than to fathom over
-again for the hundredth time the confusing intrigues of the age. One
-thing is evident, that while he served others he got nothing for
-himself: the bishopric so long longed for did not come, nor even a fat
-English deanery, which would have been worth the having and kept him
-near the center of affairs. Was Harley, too, disposed to flatter rather
-than promote his Jonathan? or was it the queen’s determined prejudice,
-and conviction that the “Tale of a Tub” was no fit foundation for a
-miter? The latter would have been little wonderful, for Swift had taken
-pains to embroil himself with the court, by a coarse and ineffective
-satire called the “Windsor Prophecy,” which no doubt amused the hostile
-coteries, yet could not but do the rash writer harm.
-
-At last, just before the fall of Harley, preferment was found for the
-champion who had served him so well. It was the last that Swift would
-have chosen for himself--a kind of dignified banishment and exile from
-all he loved best. There was a question between the deanery of St.
-Patrick’s and that of Windsor, he himself says. Had he gone to the royal
-borough, what a curious change might have come to all his after life!
-Would Stella, one wonders, have found a red-roofed house under the
-cloister walls? and the dean lived, perhaps, to get the confidence of
-Queen Caroline, a queen worth pleasing? and looked upon the world with
-azure eyes softened by prosperity from the storied slopes, and worn his
-ribbon of the Garter with a proud inflation of the bosom which had
-always sighed for greatness? How many differences, how much softening,
-expanding, almost elevation, might not the kind hand of Fortune work in
-such great but troubled natures were it allowed to smooth and caress the
-roughness away!
-
-When the issue of the conflict between Harley and Bolingbroke became too
-evident to be doubted, Swift showed the softer side of his character in
-a very unexpected way. He ran away from the catastrophe like a nervous
-woman, hiding himself in a country parsonage till the blow should be
-struck and the calamity be overpast, a very curious piece of moral
-timidity or nervous over-sensitiveness, for which we are entirely
-unprepared. It was less extraordinary that he should write to offer
-himself to Harley as a companion in his solitude when the minister was
-fairly ousted, although even then Bolingbroke was bidding eagerly for
-his services. But whether Swift would have accepted these offers, or
-would have carried his evidently genuine attachment to Harley so far as
-permanently to withdraw with him from public life, was never known. For
-the victory of St. John was short indeed. “The Earl of Oxford was
-removed on Tuesday, the Queen died on Sunday. What a world is this, and
-how does Fortune banter us!” writes Bolingbroke. It was such a stroke of
-the irony of fate as Swift himself might have invented, and St. John
-applauded with the laughter of the philosopher. There was an end of
-political power for both, and the triumph and greatness of Swift’s
-reflected glory was over without hope of renewal.
-
-He had now nothing to do but to return to Ireland, so long neglected,
-the country of his disappointments, which did not love him, and which he
-did not love, where his big genius (he thought) had not room enough to
-breathe, where society was small and provincial, and life flat and bare,
-and only a few familiar friends appreciated him or knew what he was.
-How he was to make himself the idol of that country, a kind of king in
-it, and gain power of a different kind from any he had yet wielded, was
-as yet a secret hidden in the mists of the future to Swift and everybody
-around. His account of himself when he got home to his dull deanery, “a
-vast unfurnished house,” with a few servants in it, “all on board
-wages,” is melancholy enough. “I live a country life in town, see
-nobody, and go every day once to prayers, and hope in a few months to
-grow as stupid as the present situation of affairs will require,” but he
-consoles himself: “after all, parsons are not such bad company,
-especially when they are _under subjection; and I let none but such come
-near me_,” a curious statement, in which the great satirist, as often
-before, gives a stroke of his idle sword at himself.
-
-But Swift was not long left in this stagnation. Extreme quiet is in many
-cases but a cover for brewing mischief, and the dean had not long
-returned to Ireland when that handsome daughter of Mrs. Vanhomrigh, of
-whom he had said so little in his letters, found herself, on her
-mother’s death, drawn to Ireland, and the neighborhood of her tutor and
-correspondent. It is curious to find so many links to Ireland in this
-little company. Stella had a farm in Meath left to her by Sir William
-Temple, Vanessa, “a small property at Celbridge,” to which it suited her
-to retire. And thus there were gathered together within a short distance
-the dean himself in his dull house, the assured and quiet possessor of
-his tenderest affections in Dublin near him, and the impassioned girl
-who had declared for him love of a very different kind, at Marley Abbey,
-within the reach of a ride. That Swift had a heart large enough to admit
-on his own terms many women is very evident, and that he had a fondness
-for Vanessa among the rest; but how far he was to blame for her fatal
-passion, it is scarcely possible to decide. The story of their
-connection, as told from his side of the question in the poem of
-“Cadenus and Vanessa,” shows an unconsciousness and innocence of purpose
-which takes all the responsibility of her infatuation from the dean, and
-shows him in a light all too artless.
-
- The innocent delight he took,
- To see the virgin mind her book,
- Was but the master’s secret joy
- In school to hear the finest boy.
-
-But this was not the light in which the headstrong young woman, who made
-no secret of her love, and filled him with “shame, disappointment,
-guilt, remorse,” by the revelation, regarded his attentions. Their
-correspondence went on for nearly ten years. It is a painful
-correspondence, as the outpouring of a woman’s passion for a man who
-does not respond to it must always be; but Swift never seems to have
-fostered that passion, nor to have done anything but discourage and
-subdue a love so embarrassing and troublesome.
-
-And now comes in the mystery which everybody has discussed, but which
-none have brought to any certain conclusion. In 1716, two years after
-Swift’s return to Ireland, it is said that he married Stella, thus
-putting himself at once out of all possibility of marrying Miss
-Vanhomrigh (which might have been a motive) and satisfying Stella, as
-the notion goes. Scott receives the statement as proved; so does Mr.
-Craik, Swift’s last, and a most conscientious and careful biographer.
-The evidence for it is that Lord Orrery and Dr. Delany, the earliest
-writers on the subject, both assert it (“if my informations are right,”
-as the former says) as a supposition universally believed in society;
-and that the fact was told by the Bishop of Clogher, who performed the
-ceremony, to Bishop Berkeley, who told it to his wife, who told it after
-her husband’s death, and long after the event, to George Monck Berkeley,
-who tells the story. But Bishop Berkeley was in Italy at the time and
-could not have been told, though he might have heard it at second-hand
-from his pupil, the Bishop of Clogher’s son. We wonder if an inheritance
-or the legitimacy of a child would be considered proved by such
-evidence, or whether the prevailing sense of society that such a thing
-ought to have taken place has not a large share in the common belief. At
-all times, as at the present moment, wherever a close friendship between
-man and woman exists (and the very fact of such rumors makes it
-extremely rare), suggestions of the same description float in the air.
-Nobody supposes, if the marriage took place at all, that it was anything
-more than a mere form. It was performed, if performed at all, in the
-garden without any formal or legal preliminaries. Supposing such a
-fictitious rite to have any justification in Irish law, we wonder what
-the authorities of the church would have had to say to two high
-dignitaries who united to perform an act so disorderly and contrary to
-ecclesiastical decorum, if to nothing else. It is totally unlike Swift,
-whose feeling for the church was strong, to have used her ordinances so
-disrespectfully, and most unlike all we know of Stella that she should
-have consented to so utterly false a relationship. However, the question
-is one which the reader will decide according to his own judgment, and
-upon which no one can speak with authority. Mr. Forster, of all Swift’s
-biographers the most elaborate and anxious, did not get so far in his
-work as to examine the evidence, yet intimates his disbelief of the
-story. We do not need, however, to have recourse to the expedient of a
-marriage to explain how the story of Vanessa might have been a pain and
-offense to Stella. Swift had not in this particular been frank with his
-friends, and the discovery, so near them, of a woman making so
-passionate a claim upon his affections must have conveyed the shock at
-once of a deception and an unpardonable intrusion to one who was proudly
-conscious of being his most trusted confidant and closest companion.
-Whatever were the rights of the case, however, nobody can now know.
-Whether Vanessa had heard the rumor of the private marriage, whether she
-conceived that a desperate appeal to his dearest friend might help her
-own claim, or whether mere suspicion and misery, boiling over, found
-expression in the hasty letter to Stella which she wrote at the crisis
-of her career, is equally unessential. She did write, and Stella,
-surprised and offended, showed the letter to Swift. Nothing can be more
-tragic than the events that follow. Swift, in one of those wild bursts
-of passion which were beyond the control of reason, rode out at once to
-the unfortunate young woman’s house. He burst in without a word, threw
-her own letter on the table before her, and rode off again like a
-whirlwind. Vanessa came of a short-lived race, and was then, at
-thirty-four, the last of her family. She never recovered the blow, but,
-dying soon after, directed her letters and the poem which contained the
-story of her love and his coldness to be published. This was not done
-for nearly a century; and now more than half of another has gone, but
-the story is as full of passion and misery, as unexplained, as ever.
-This was one of the occupations of Swift’s stagnant time. He fled, as he
-had done at the moment of Harley’s fall, that, at least, he might not
-see what was going to happen.
-
-But a little while longer was the other, the love of his life, spared to
-him. Five years after the tragical end of Vanessa, Stella too died,
-after long suffering. There is a second story, of equally doubtful
-authenticity and confused and extraordinary details, about a proposed
-tardy acknowledgment of the apocryphal marriage; but whether it was he
-or she who suggested this, whether it was he or she who found it “too
-late,” whether there was any reality in it at all, no one has ever
-determined. Stella’s illness grew serious while Swift
-
-[Illustration: GEORGE, EARL OF BERKELEY.
-
-FROM AN UNFINISHED ENGRAVING, IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM, ATTRIBUTED TO DAVID
-LOGGAN.]
-
-was absent, and his anguish at the news was curiously mingled with an
-overwhelming dread lest she should die at the deanery, and thus
-compromise her reputation and his own; perhaps, too, lest the house to
-which he must return should be made intolerable to him by the shadow of
-such an event. That he should have kept away, with his usual terror of
-everything painful, was entirely in keeping with his character. But the
-first alarm passed away, and Swift was in the deanery when this great
-sorrow overtook him. He who had kept a letter for an hour without daring
-to open it, in which he trembled to find the news of her death, now shut
-himself up heartbroken in his solitary house, and, somewhat calmed by
-the irrevocable,--as grief, however desperate, always must
-be,--proceeded to give himself what consolation was possible by writing
-a “Character,” as was the fashion of the time, of “the truest, most
-virtuous, and valuable friend I, or perhaps any other person, was ever
-blessed with.” The calm after the storm, but a calm of sober despair and
-dread, unreal composure, is in this strange document. He wrote till “my
-head aches, and I can write no more,” and on the third day resumed and
-completed the strange and melancholy narrative.
-
- This is the night of her funeral, which my sickness will not suffer
- me to attend. It is now nine at night, and I am removed into
- another apartment, that I may not see the light in the Church,
- which is just over against the window of my bedchamber.
-
-She was buried in his own cathedral by torchlight, as the custom was;
-but he would no more bear the glimpses of that awful light through the
-window, than he could witness the putting away of all that remained of
-Stella in the double gloom of the vault and the night. In that other
-apartment he concluded his sad panegyric, the story of all she was and
-did, showing with intense but subdued eloquence that there was no fault
-in her. “There is none like her, none.” This is the burden of the old
-man’s self-restrained anguish, the tragedy of his age, as it is the
-young lover’s pæan of triumph. The truest, most valuable friend that
-ever man had--and now her beautiful life was ended, to be his
-consolation no more. He had a lock of her hair in his possession
-somewhere, either given him then or at some brighter moment, which was
-found after his death, as all the world knows, with these words written
-upon the paper that contained it: “Only a woman’s hair.” Only all the
-softness, the brightness, the love and blessing of a life; only all that
-the heart had to rest upon of human solace; only that--no more. He who
-had thanked God and M. D.’s prayers for his better health, had now no
-one to pray for him, or to receive his confidences. It was over, all
-that best of life--as if it had never been.
-
-It is easy to expand such a text, and many have done it. In the mean
-time, before these terrible events had occurred, while Vanessa’s letters
-were still disturbing his peace, and death had as yet touched none of
-his surroundings, he had accomplished the greatest literary work of his
-life, that by which every child knows Swift’s name--the travels of the
-famous Gulliver. The children have made their selection with an unerring
-judgment which is above criticism, and have taken Lilliput and
-Brobdingnag into their hearts, rejecting all the rest. That Swift had a
-meaning, bitter and sharp, even in the most innocent part of that
-immortal fable, and meant to strike a blow at politicians and generals,
-and the human race, with its puny wars, and glories, and endless
-vanities and foolishness, is evident enough; and it was for this that
-the people of his time seized upon the book with breathless interest,
-and old Duchess Sarah in her old age chuckled and forgave the dean. But
-the vast majority of his readers have not so much as known that he meant
-anything except the most amusing and witty fancy, the keenest comic
-delineation of impossible circumstances. That delightful Irish bishop,
-if ever he was, who declared that “the book was full of improbable lies,
-and for his part he hardly believed a word of it,” is the only critic we
-want. “‘Gulliver’s Travels’ is almost the most delightful children’s
-book ever written,” says Mr. Leslie Stephen, no small authority. It had
-no doubt been talked over and read to the ladies, who, it would
-incidentally appear, had not liked the “Tale of a Tub.” But Swift was at
-home when he wrote “Gulliver,” and had no need of a journal to
-communicate his proceedings.
-
-Between 1714 and 1726, for a dozen years, he remained in Ireland without
-intermission, altogether apart from public life. At the latter date he
-went to London, probably needing, after the shock of Miss Vanhomrigh’s
-death, and the grievous sense he must have had that it was he who had
-killed her, a change of scene; and it was then that “Gulliver” was
-published. The latter portions of it which the children have rejected we
-are glad to have no space to dwell upon. The bitterness, passion, and
-misery of them are beyond parallel. One would like to have any ground
-for believing that the Houyhnhms and the rest came into being after
-Stella’s death; but this was not the case. She was only a woman, and was
-not, after all, of such vital importance in the man’s existence.
-Withdrawal from the life he loved, confinement in a narrow sphere, the
-disappointment of a soul which felt itself born for greatness, and had
-tasted the high excitements of power, but now had nothing to do but
-fight over the choir with his archbishop, and give occasion for a
-hundred anecdotes in the Dublin coteries, had matured the angry passion
-in him and soured the sweetness of nature. Few people now when they take
-up their “Gulliver” go beyond Brobdingnag. The rest is like a succession
-of bad dreams, the confused miseries of a fever. To think that in a
-deanery, that calm seat of ecclesiastical luxury, within sound of the
-cathedral bells and the choristers’ chants, a brain so dark and
-distracted, and dreams so terrible, should have found shelter! They are
-all the more bitter and appalling from their contrast with the
-surroundings among which they had their disastrous birth.
-
-The later part of Swift’s life, however, had occupation of a very
-different and nobler kind. The Ireland he knew was so different from the
-Ireland with which we are acquainted, that to contemplate the two is apt
-to give a sort of moral vertigo, a giddiness of the intellect, to the
-observer. Swift’s Ireland was the country of the English-Irish,
-ultra-Protestant, like the real Ireland only in the keenness of its
-politics and the sharpness of its opposition to imperial measures. It
-was Ireland with a parliament of her own, and many of the privileges
-which are now her highest aspirations, yet she was not content. Swift,
-in speaking of the people, the true Irish, the Catholic masses, who at
-that moment bore their misery with a patience inconceivable, said of
-them that they were no more considerable than the women and children, a
-race so utterly trodden down and subdued that there was no need for the
-politician to take them into account. The position of the predominant
-class was almost like that of white men among the natives of a savage
-country, or at least like that of the English in India, the confident
-and assured rulers of a subject race. Nevertheless, these men were full
-of a sort of national feeling, and ready to rise up in hot and not
-ineffectual opposition when need was, and reckon themselves Irish,
-whereas no sahib has ever reckoned himself Indian. The real people of
-Ireland were held under the severest yoke, but those gentlemen who
-represented the nation can scarcely be said to have been oppressed.
-Their complaint was that Englishmen were put into vacant posts, that
-their wishes were disregarded, and their affairs neglected, complaints
-which even prosperous Scotland has been known to make. They were
-affected, however, as well as the race which
-
-[Illustration: ST. PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, DUBLIN.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL.]
-
-they kept under their feet, by the intolerable law which suppressed
-woolen manufactures in Ireland, and it was on this subject that Swift
-first broke silence, and appeared as the national champion, recommending
-to his countrymen such reprisals as the small can employ against the
-great, in the form of a proposal that Irishmen should use Irish
-manufactures only, a proposal by no means unlikely to be carried out
-should an Irish parliament ever exist again.
-
-The commotion produced by this real and terrible oppression was nothing,
-however, to that called forth by an innocent attempt to give a copper
-coinage--the most convenient of circulating mediums--to Ireland. Nothing
-could have been more harmless, more useful and necessary in reality, and
-there is no reason to suppose that dishonesty of any kind was involved.
-But the public mind was embittered by the fact that the patent had been
-granted to one of King George’s German favorites, and by her sold to
-Wood, an Englishman, who was supposed to be about to make an enormous
-profit out of the country by half-pence not worth their nominal value.
-Such an idea stirred the prejudices and fears of the very lowest, and
-would even now rouse the ignorant into rage and panic. Whether Swift
-shared that natural and national, if unreasonable, outburst of
-indignation and alarm to the full extent, or if he threw himself into it
-with the instinct of an agitator foreseeing the capabilities of the
-subject, it is difficult to tell. But the “Drapier’s Letters” gave to
-the public outcry so powerful a force of resistance, and excited the
-entire country into such unanimity and opposition, that the English
-Government was forced to withdraw from this attempt, and the position of
-the Irish nation, as an oppressed yet not unpowerful entity, still able
-to face its tyrants and protest against their careless sway, became
-distinctly apparent. It is strange that a man who hated Ireland, and
-considered himself an exile in her, should have been the one to claim
-for her an independence, a freedom she had never yet possessed, and
-should have been able to inspire at once the subject and the ruling race
-with the sense that they had found a champion capable of all things, and
-through whom for the first time their voice might be heard in the world.
-The immediate result was to Swift a popularity beyond bounds. The people
-he despised were seized with an adoration for him which was shared by
-the class to which he himself belonged--perhaps the first subject on
-which they had agreed. “When he returned from England in 1726 bells were
-rung, bonfires lighted, and a guard of honor escorted him to the
-deanery. Towns voted him their freedom and received him as a prince.
-When Walpole spoke of arresting him a prudent friend told the minister
-that the messenger would require a guard of 10,000 soldiers.” When the
-crowd which had gathered to see an eclipse disturbed him by the hum they
-made, Swift sent out to tell them that the event was put off by order of
-the dean, and the simple-minded people dispersed obediently! Had he been
-so minded, and had he fully understood and loved the race over which his
-great and troubled spirit had gained such power, much might perhaps have
-been ameliorated in that unfortunate country, so cursed in her friends
-as in her foes, and much in the soul consuming itself in angry
-inactivity with no fit work in hand. But it would have taken a miracle
-indeed to have turned this Englishman born in Ireland, this political
-churchman and hater of papists and dissenters, into the savior of the
-subject race. That he was, however, deeply struck with an impression of
-their misery, and that his soul, always so ready to break forth upon the
-cruelty, the falsehood, the barbarous misconception of men by men, found
-in their wrongs a subject upon which he could scarcely exaggerate, is
-apparent enough. His “Modest Proposal for Preventing the Children of the
-Poor in Ireland from Being a Burden to their Parents or Country” is one
-of those pieces of terrible satire which lacerate the heart. Tears as of
-blood are in it, a passion of indignant pity, and fury, and despair.
-“Eat them, then, since there’s nothing else to be done with them,” he
-says, detailing with elaborate composure the way to do it and the
-desirableness of such a supply of delicate food. The reader, unwarned
-and simple-minded, might almost, with a gasp of horror, take the
-proposal for genuine. But Swift’s meaning was really more terrible than
-cannibalism. It was the sense that these children, the noblest fruit of
-nature, were in truth the embarrassment, the fatal glut of a miserable
-race, that forced this dreadful irony upon him. And what picture could
-be more terrible than that of the childless old man with his bleeding
-heart, himself deserted of all that made life sweet, thus facing the
-world with scorn so infinite that it transcends all symbols of passion,
-bidding it consume what it has brought forth?
-
-But Swift, unfortunately for himself and her, loved Ireland as little
-when he thus made himself her champion as he had done throughout his
-life. At all times his longing eyes were turned toward the country in
-which life was, and power, and friends, and fame. Though he was aware he
-was growing old and ought to be “done with this world,” he yet cries
-aloud his desire “to get into a better before I was called into the
-best, and not die here in a rage like a poisoned rat in a hole,”--a
-terrific image, and one of those phrases that burn and glow with a pale
-light of despair. But he never got into that better world he longed for.
-The slow years crept over him, and he lived on, making existence
-tolerable by such expedients as he could, a wonderful proof how the body
-will resist all the frettings of the soul, yet growing more angry, more
-desperate, more subject to the bitter passions which had broken forth
-even in his best days, as he grew older and had fewer reasons for
-restraining himself. At last the great dean, the greatest genius of his
-age, the man of war and battle, of quip and jest, he who had thirsted to
-be doing through all his life, fell into imbecility and stupor, with
-occasional wild awakenings into consciousness which were still more
-terrible. He died, denuded of all things, in 1745, having lived till
-seventy-eight in spite of himself.
-
- Ubi saeva indignatio
- Cor ulterius lacerare nequit
-
-is written on his tomb. No more can fiery wrath and indignation reach
-him where he lies by Stella’s side in the aisle over against his chamber
-window. The touch of her quiet dust must have soothed, one would think,
-the last fever that lingered still in him even after death had done its
-worst.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-THE AUTHOR OF “ROBINSON CRUSOE”
-
-
-The age of Queen Anne was one which abounded in paradoxes, and loved
-them. It was an age when England was full of patriotic policy, yet every
-statesman was a traitor; when tradition was dear, yet revolution
-practicable; when speech was gross and manners unrefined, yet the laws
-of literary composition rigid, and correctness the test of poetry. It
-was full of high ecclesiasticism and strict Puritanism, sometimes united
-in one person. In it ignorance was most profound, yet learning most
-considered and prominent. An age when Parson Trulliber was not an unfit
-representative of the rural clergy, yet the public could be interested
-in such a recondite pleasantry as the “Battle of the Books,” seems the
-strangest self-contradiction; yet so it was in this paradoxical age. No
-man lived who was a more complete paradox than Defoe. His fame is
-world-wide, yet all that is known of him is one or two of his least
-productions, and his busy life is ignored in the permanent place in
-literary history which he has secured. His characteristics, as apart
-from his conduct, are all those of an honest man, but when that most
-important part of him is taken into the question it is difficult to
-pronounce him anything but a knave. His distinguishing literary quality
-is a minute truthfulness to fact which makes it almost impossible not to
-take what he says for gospel. But his constant inspiration is fiction,
-not to say, in some circumstances, falsehood. He spent his life in the
-highest endeavors that a man can engage in: in the work of persuading
-and influencing his country, chiefly for her good; and he is remembered
-by a boy’s book, which is indeed the first of boy’s books, yet not much
-more. Through these contradictions we must push our way before we can
-reach to any clear idea of Defoe, the London tradesman who by times
-composed almost all the newspapers in London, wrote all the pamphlets,
-had his finger in every pie, and a share in all that was done, yet
-brought nothing out of it but a damaged reputation and an unhonored end.
-
-It is curious that something of a similar fate should have happened to
-the other and greater figure, his contemporary, his enemy, in some
-respects his fellow-laborer, another and more brilliant slave of the
-government, which in itself had so little that was brilliant,--the great
-dean whose name has already appeared so often in these sketches. Swift,
-too, of all his books, is remembered chiefly by the book of the travels
-of “Gulliver,” which, though full of a satirical purpose unknown to
-Defoe, has come to rank along with “Robinson Crusoe.” We may say indeed
-that these two books form a class by themselves, of perennial
-enchantment for the young, and full of a curious and enthralling
-illusion which even in age we rarely shake off. Swift rises into bitter
-and terrible tragedy, while Defoe sinks into matter of fact and
-commonplace; but the shipwrecked sailor on his desolate island, and the
-exile at the courts of Lilliput and Brobdingnag, both in the beginnings
-of their careers hold our imaginations captive, and are as fresh and as
-powerful to-day as when, the one in keen satire, the other in the
-legitimate way of business, they first made their appearance in the
-world. It is a singular link between the men who both did Harley’s dirty
-work for him, and were subject to a leader so much smaller than
-themselves.
-
-Daniel Defoe was born in London in 1661, of what would seem to have
-been a respectable burgher family, only one generation out of the
-country, which probably was why his father, with yeomen and grazier
-relations in Northamptonshire, was a butcher in town. The butcher’s
-name, however, was Foe; and whether the Defoe of his son was a mere
-pleasantry upon his signature of D. Foe, or whether it embodied an
-intention of setting up for something better than the tradesman’s
-monosyllable, is a quite futile question upon which nobody can throw any
-light. The boy was well educated, according to the capabilities of his
-kindred, in a school at Newington, probably intended for the sons of
-comfortable dissenting tradesmen, who were to be devoted to the
-ministry, with the assistance in some cases of a fund raised for that
-purpose. The master was good, and if Defoe attained there even the
-rudiments of the information he afterward showed, and laid claim to, the
-education must have been excellent indeed. He claims to have known
-Latin, Spanish, Italian, French, “and could read the Greek,”--which
-latter is as much as could have been expected had he been the most
-advanced of scholars,--besides an acquaintance with science, geography,
-and history not to be surpassed, apparently, by any man of his time. “If
-I am a blockhead,” he says, “it was nobody’s fault but my own,” his
-father having “spared nothing” on his education. Much of this
-information, however, was no doubt picked up in the travels and much
-knocking about of his early years, of which there is little record. He
-would seem to have changed his mind about becoming a dissenting minister
-at an early age, and was probably a youth of somewhat wandering
-tendencies, as he claims to have been “out” with Monmouth, and does not
-appear in any recognized occupation till after that unfortunate attempt.
-He must have been twenty-four when he first becomes visible as a hosier
-in Cornhill, which seems a very natural and indeed rather superior
-beginning in life for the son of the butcher in Cripplegate. He laid
-claim afterward to having been a trader,--not a shopkeeper,--a claim
-supported more or less from a source not favorable to Defoe, by
-Oldmixon, who says that his only connection with the trade was that of
-“peddling to Portugal,” whatever that may mean. We may take it for
-granted that he had occasions of visiting the Continent in connection,
-one way or other, with his trade. The volume of advice to shopkeepers
-which is entitled the “Complete English Tradesman,” written and
-published in the latter part of his life, though it does not seem to be
-taken by his biographers in general as any certain indication that he
-himself made his beginning in a shop, is nevertheless full of curious
-details of the life of the London shopkeeper of his time, to which class
-he assuredly belonged. We learn from this curious production that vanity
-was even more foolish in the eighteenth century than it is now. We are
-acquainted with sporting shopkeepers who ride to hounds, and with
-foolish young men who fondly hope to be mistaken for “swells”; but a
-shopkeeper in a wig and a sword passes the power of imagination. It is a
-droll example of the fallacy of all our fond retrospections and
-preference of the good old times to find that in Defoe’s day this was by
-no means an extraordinary circumstance. “The playhouses and balls,” he
-says, “are more filled with citizens and young tradesmen than with
-gentlemen and families of distinction; the shopkeepers wear different
-garbs than what they were wont to do, are decked out with long wigs and
-swords, and all the frugal badges of trade are quite disdained and cast
-aside.”
-
-We may take from this book as an illustration of the habits of the age
-the following description of a young firm which is clearly on the way to
-ruin:
-
- They say there are two partners of them, but there had as good be
- none, for they are never at home or in the shop. One wears a long
- peruke and a sword, I hear, and you see him often at the ball and
- at court, but very seldom in his shop, or waiting on his
- customers; and the other, they say, lies abed till eleven o’clock
- every day, just comes into the shop and shows himself, then stalks
- about to the tavern to take a whet, then to the coffee-house to
- hear the news, comes home to dinner at one, takes a long sleep in
- his chair after it, and about four o’clock comes into the shop for
- half an hour or thereabouts, then to the tavern, where he stays
- till two in the morning, gets drunk, and is led home by the watch,
- and so lies till eleven again; and thus he walks round like the
- hand of a dial. And what will it all come to? They’ll certainly
- break. They can’t hold long.
-
-The account of the shop kept by these two idle masters is equally
-characteristic.
-
- There is a good stock of goods in it, but there is nobody to serve
- but a prentice boy or two and an idle journeyman. One finds them
- all at play together rather than looking out for customers; and
- when you come to buy, they look as if they did not care whether
- they showed you anything or no. Then it is a shop always exposed;
- it is perfectly haunted with thieves and shoplifters. They are
- nobody but raw boys in it that mind nothing, so that there are more
- outcries of stop thief! at their door, and more constables fetched
- to that shop than to all the shops in the street.
-
-The households of the soberer and more sensible members of the craft are
-also open to grave animadversion. The ladies are too fine; they treat
-their friends with wine or punch or fine ale, and have their parlors set
-off with the tea-table and the chocolate-pot, and the silver coffee-pot,
-and oftentimes an ostentation of plate into the bargain, and they keep
-“three or four maid servants, nay, sometimes five,” and some a footman
-besides, “for ’tis an ordinary thing to see the tradesmen and
-shopkeepers of London keep footmen, as well as the gentlemen. Witness
-the infinite number of blue liveries which are so common now that they
-are called the tradesmens’ liveries, and few gentlemen care to give blue
-to their servants for that very reason.” Of the maids themselves, who
-ask “six, seven, nay eight pounds per annum” for their services, a
-terrible account is given in a pamphlet published about 1725, where
-there is a humorous description in the first person of a young woman who
-comes to apply for the place of housemaid, evidently maid of all work to
-the speaker, who lives with his sister, with a man and maid for their
-household. She is so fine that Defoe himself shows her into the parlor
-and keeps her company till his sister is ready, thinking her a
-gentlewoman come to pay a visit. Perhaps it is not Defoe, but, with his
-usual skill, he makes us think so. All these details bring before us the
-London of his time. The mercers had their shops in Paternoster Row,
-“where the spacious shops, back warehouses, skylights, and other
-conveniences, made on purpose for their trade, are still to be seen,”
-where “they all grew rich and very seldom any failed or miscarried,” and
-also in Cornhill, where Defoe’s own establishment was, though there,
-apparently, business was carried on wholesale. It appears to him that
-trade is going downhill fast when this order is changed, when Paul’s
-Churchyard is filled with cane-chair makers, and Cornhill with the
-meanest of trades, even Cheapside itself, “how is it now filled up with
-shoemakers, toy shops, and pastry cooks?” Everything is going to
-destruction, the old trader thinks, shaking his head as he goes through
-the well-known streets, where once the fine ladies came in their fine
-coaches standing in two rows; he cannot think but that trade itself is
-coming to an end when such changes can come to pass. Trade, he says,
-like vice, has come to a height, and as things decline when they are at
-their extremes, so trade not only must decline, but does already
-sensibly decline. It ought to be a comfort to the many timid persons who
-have lived and prophesied evil since then to hear that Defoe a hundred
-and fifty years ago had come to this sad conclusion.
-
-He was born into a world he thus describes, into the atmosphere of
-shops and counting-houses, where the good tradesman lived in the parlor
-above or behind his shop, and was called with a bell when need was, and
-was constant at business “from seven in the morning till twelve, and
-from two to nine at night,” the interval being occupied with dinner;
-where the appearance of the long, flowing periwig and the sword and the
-man in blue livery were the danger-signals, and showed that he must
-break, he could not hold; where the cry of “Stop, thief!” might suddenly
-get up in the midst of the traffic, and the constable be called to some
-fainting fine lady who had got a piece of taffeta or a lace in her muff
-or under her hoop; and where, perhaps the greatest risk of all, a young
-man of genius, who was but a hosier, might betray himself in a
-coffee-house and be visited afterward by great personages veiling their
-lace and embroidery under their cloaks, who wanted a seasonable pamphlet
-or a newspaper put into the right way. A strange old London, more
-difficult to put on record in its manners and features than it is to
-record in pasteboard its outward aspect; where town could be convulsed
-by a chance broadsheet, and the Government propped or wounded to death
-by an anonymous essayist; when men of letters were secretaries of state,
-and other men of letters starved in Grub street, and the masses thanked
-God they could not read; when a revolution was made for liberty of
-conscience, yet every office and privilege was barred by a test, and
-intolerance was the habit of the time. The author of “Robinson Crusoe”
-must have got all his ideas in the narrow, bustling streets, full of
-rumors, of wars and commotions, and talk about the scandals of the
-court, and sight of the finery and license which revolted, yet exercised
-some strange fascinations upon the sober dissenting tradesmen who had
-found the sway of Oliver a hard one. He was born the year after the
-Restoration, and was no doubt carried out of London post-haste with the
-rest of his family in the early summer when the roads were crowded with
-wagons and carts full of women, children, and servants, all flying from
-the plague. The butcher’s little son was but four, but very likely
-retained a recollection of the crowded ways and strange spectacles of
-the time; and no doubt he saw, with eyes starting out of their little
-sockets with excitement and terror, the glare of the great fire which
-burned down all the haunts of the pestilence and cured London by
-destroying it. Then, both at school, at Newington, and in the parlor
-behind the shop, there would be many a grave talk over what was to come
-of all the wickedness in high places; and when the papist king came to
-the throne, many discussions as to how much his new-born liberality was
-good for, and whether there was any safety in trusting to his
-indulgences and declarations of liberty of conscience. Defoe by this
-time was old enough to speak his own mind. He had left school at
-nineteen, and till he was twenty-four there is no appearance that he was
-doing anything, save, perhaps, picking up notions on trade in general,
-and as much as a young dissenter could, among his own class, or in the
-coffee-houses where it was safe, delivering his sentiments upon
-questions so vital to the welfare of the country. According to his own
-statement, he had written a pamphlet in 1683 to prove that a Christian
-power, though popish, was better than the Turk. He was now so bold as to
-tell the dissenters “he had rather the Church of England should pull our
-clothes off by fines and forfeitures than the papists should fall both
-upon the church and the dissenters, and pull our skins off by fire and
-faggot.” No doubt he was then about in London noticing everything,
-discoursing largely with a wonderful, long-winded, sober enthusiasm,
-making every statement that occurred to him look like the most certain
-truth; talking everywhere, in the coffee-house, at the street corners,
-down in Cripplegate in the paternal parlor, never silent; a swarthy
-youth, with quick gray eyes and keen, eager features,
-
-[Illustration: DANIEL DEFOE.
-
-ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL, AFTER COPPERPLATE BY M. VAN DER GUCHT, IN
-THE BRITISH MUSEUM.]
-
-and large, loquacious mouth. Better be fined and silenced than let in
-popery to burn you into the bargain. Better stand fast in all those
-deprivations and hold your faith in corners, than accept suspicious
-favor from such a source, and help to bring in again the Jesuit and the
-Pope. While Penn, with his plausible speech and amiable temper, drew his
-Quaker brethren into a strange harmony with the courtier’s arts, and
-presented addresses to James, and accepted his grace, the young
-tradesman would be pressing his very different argument upon the
-suspicious somber groups far from St. James’s, where there was no
-finery, but a great deal of determination. And when in the disturbed and
-confused wretchedness of the time, no man knowing what was about to
-happen, but sure that some change must come, young Monmouth set up his
-hapless standard, could it be Defoe’s own impulse, or the catch of some
-eddy of feeling into which he had been swept, which carried him off into
-the ranks of the adventurer? It is said that three of his
-fellow-students at Newington figure among the victims of the Bloody
-Assize. Defoe would always be more disposed to talk than fight. He must,
-we cannot help thinking, have thought it a feeble proceeding to put
-yourself in the way of getting your head cut off, when you could use it
-so much more effectually in convincing your fellow-creatures. His mind,
-ever so ready to slip through every loophole, carried his body off
-safely out of the clutches of Jeffreys. Probably when he turned up at
-home against all hope after this unlucky escapade, his friends were too
-thankful to thrust him into the hosier’s warehouse, where no doubt he
-would give himself the air of having sold and bought hose all his life.
-
-There is, however, nothing to build any account of his life upon in
-these earlier years. The revolution filled him with enthusiasm, and King
-William gained his full and honest support--a support both bold and
-serviceable, and with nothing in it which was not to his credit. But
-apparently a man cannot be so good a talker, so active a politician, and
-follow the rules which he himself laid down for a successful tradesman
-at the same time. Most likely his mind was never in his hose, and the
-world was full of so many more exciting matters. Seven years after he
-had been set up in business he “broke,” and had to fly, though no
-further than Bristol, apparently, where he made an arrangement with his
-creditors. He would seem to have failed for the large sum at that time
-of seventeen thousand pounds, which he honestly exerted himself to pay,
-and so far succeeded in doing so that he reduced in a few years his
-debts to five thousand pounds in all; and, what was still more, finding
-certain of the creditors with whom he had compounded to be poor, after
-he had paid his composition fully, he made up to them the entire amount
-of his debt--an unlooked-for and exceptional example of honorable
-sentiment. Some years later, when Defoe had got into notoriety, and was
-the object of a great deal of violent criticism, a contemporary gives
-this fact, on the authority indeed of an anonymous gentleman in a
-coffee-house only, but it seems to have been generally received as true.
-The writer was in a company “where I and everybody else were railing at
-him,” when “the gentleman took us up with this short speech:
-
-“‘Gentlemen,’ said he, ‘I know this Defoe as well as any of you, for I
-was one of his creditors, compounded with him and discharged him fully.
-Several years afterward he sent for me, and, though he was clearly
-discharged, he paid me all the remainder of his debt, voluntarily and of
-his own accord, and he told me that, as far as God should enable him, he
-intended to do so with everybody. When he had done he desired me to set
-my hand to a paper to acknowledge it, which I readily did, and found a
-great many names to the paper before me, and I think myself bound to own
-it.’”
-
-This has a suspicious resemblance to Defoe’s own style, but the fact
-seems to be generally received as true.
-
-Neither his business nor his failure, however, kept him from the active
-exercise of his literary powers, which he used in the service of King
-William with what seems to have been a most genuine and hearty sympathy.
-Pamphlet after pamphlet came from his pen with an influence upon public
-opinion which it is difficult to estimate nowadays, but which was
-certainly much greater than any fugitive political publications could
-have now. He wrote in defense of a standing army, the curious insular
-prejudice against which was naturally astonishing as well as annoying to
-the continental prince who had become king of Great Britain. He wrote in
-support of the war, which to William was a vital necessity, but which
-England was somewhat slow to see in the same light. And, most
-effectively of all, he answered the always ready national grumble
-against foreigners, which was especially angry and thunderous against
-the Dutchmen, by the triumphant doggerel of “The True-born Englishman,”
-the first of Defoe’s works which takes a conspicuous place. In this
-strange and not very refined production he held up to public admiration
-the pedigree of the race which complained so warmly of every new
-invasion, and held so high an opinion of itself. “A true-born Englishman
-’s a contradiction,” he cries, and sets forth, step by step, the
-admixtures of new blood which have gone to the formation of the English
-people--Roman, Saxon, Dane, Norman.
-
- From this amphibious, ill-born mob began
- That vain, ill-natured thing, an Englishman.
-
-It is not a very delicate hand which traces these, and many another wave
-of strange ancestors. “Still the ladies loved the conquerors.” But
-Defoe’s rude lines went straight to the mark. The public had no
-objection to a coarse touch when it was effective, and Englishmen are
-rarely offended by ridicule; never, we may say, when it is home-born.
-The stroke was so true that the native sense of humor was hit. Perhaps
-England did not, on account of Defoe’s verses, like the Dutchmen any
-better, but she acknowledged Tutchin’s seditious assault upon the
-foreigners to be fully answered, and the universal laugh cleared the
-air. Eighty thousand copies of this publication were sold, it is said,
-in the streets, where everybody bought the “lampoon,” which, assailing
-everybody, gave no individual sting. It also procured for Defoe a
-personal introduction to the king. Whether it was to this or to his
-former services that he owed a small appointment he held for some years,
-it is difficult to say, but evidently he did not serve King William for
-nothing. In the mean time Defoe resumed his business occupations, and
-set up a manufactory of pantiles at Tilbury, where he employed a hundred
-poor laborers, and throve, or seems to have thriven, in his new
-industry, living in something like luxury, and paying off, as described,
-his previous debts. His head was full of the projects upon which one of
-his most successful pamphlets was written, and he recommended many
-sweeping schemes and made many bold suggestions on all subjects, from
-the institution of an income tax to that of an academy like the French.
-It was a period when the air was swarming with schemes, and Defoe was
-not necessarily original in his suggestions; but his brain was teeming
-with life and energy, and there is no saying which was absolutely his
-own thought, and which the thought of others. He was a man to whom ideas
-came as he was writing, and were flung off into the air, to fly or fall
-as they might. One thought, one fancy, suggested another. For instance,
-after arguing long and well in favor of the war with France, which was
-the object of King William’s life, and the only thing that could
-save--according to the ideas of his party on the Continent, and
-eventually of most sound Protestants in England--the Protestant faith,
-Defoe, with a sudden whimsical perception of certain possibilities on
-the other side, came out with a pamphlet entitled, “Reasons Against a
-War with France,” which was founded on the suggestion that a war with
-Spain instead would be very profitable, and that the Spanish Indies were
-a booty well worth having: a sudden dash into new fields which must have
-brought up the public which he had persuaded to fight France with a
-certain gasp of breathless inability to follow this rapid reasoner in
-the instantaneous change of front, which meant no real change of
-opinion, but only the flash of a sudden happy thought.
-
-When William died, however, and the times changed, the High Church came
-back with Anne into a potency which had been impossible in the
-unsympathetic reign of that Dutchman. Defoe had written some time before
-against the practice of occasional conformity; that is, the device by
-which dissenters managed to hold public offices in despite of existing
-tests, by kneeling now and then at the altars of the established church,
-and receiving the communion there. Defoe took the highest view of
-principle in this respect, and denounced the nonconformists who thus
-secured office to themselves by the sacrifice of their consciences,
-“bowing in the House of Rimmon.” There seems no reason, in fact, why a
-moderate dissenter should not do this, except that any religious duty
-specially performed for the sake of a secular benefit is always suspect
-and odious. Yet the obvious argument that a man who could reconcile it
-with his conscience to attend the worship of the church should not be a
-dissenter, was unquestionably sound and unassailable in point of logic.
-Defoe had deeply offended the dissenters, to whom he himself belonged,
-by his protest; but this did not prevent him from rushing into print in
-defense of the expedient of occasional conformity as soon as it was
-threatened from the other side. There is little difficulty in following
-the action of his mind in such a question. It was wrong and a deflection
-from the highest point of duty to sacrifice one’s conscience, even
-occasionally, for the sake of office; but, on the other hand, it was
-equally wrong to abolish an expedient which broke the severity of the
-test, and made life possible to the nonconforming classes. The views
-were contradictory, yet both were true, and it was his nature to see
-both sides with most impartial good sense, while he felt it to be, if a
-breach of external consistency, no wrong to defend or assail one side or
-the other, as might seem most necessary. He allowed himself so complete
-a license on this point that it is curious he should be found the public
-champion of the higher duty. No doubt his utterance to his dissenting
-brethren on that question was to himself no reason why he should not
-defend their right to use the expedient if they had a mind. But this is
-too fine a distinction for the general intelligence.
-
-The discussions on this subject were the occasion of one of the most
-striking episodes in his life. When the bill against occasional
-conformity was introduced, to the delight of the High Church party, from
-the queen downward, and when the air began to buzz around him with the
-bluster, hitherto subdued by circumstances, of the reviving party, who
-would have made short work with the dissenters had their power been
-equal to their will, a grimly humorous perception of the capabilities of
-the occasion seems to have seized Defoe. Notwithstanding that he had
-angered all the sects by his plain speaking, he was a dissenter born,
-and there is no such way of reconverting a stray Israelite as to hear
-the Philistines blaspheme. He seized upon the extremest views of the
-high-fliers with characteristic insight, and, with a keen consciousness
-of the power of his weapon, used it remorselessly. The “Shortest Way to
-Deal with Dissenters” is a grave and elaborate statement of the wild
-threats and violent talk in which, in the intoxication of newly
-acquired power, the partizans of the church indulged, with noise and
-exaggeration proportioned to the self-suppression which had been forced
-upon them by the panic of a papal restoration under James, and by the
-domination of the more moderate party during William’s unsympathetic
-reign. They were now at the top of the wave, and could brandish their
-swords in the eyes of their adversaries. Their talk in some of their
-public utterances was as bloodthirsty as if they intended a St.
-Bartholomew. Defoe took up this frenzied babble, and put it into the
-form of a grave and practical proposal. As serious as was Swift when he
-proposed to utilize the superabundant babies of the poor by eating them,
-Defoe propounded the easy way to get rid of the dissenters and the
-necessity of settling this question forever. “Shall any law be given to
-such wild creatures? Some beasts are for sport, and the huntsman gives
-them advantages of ground, but some are knocked on the head by all
-possible ways of violence and surprise.” He says:
-
- ’T is vain to trifle in this matter. The light, foolish handling of
- them by mulcts, fines, etc., ’t is their glory and their advantage.
- If the gallows instead of the counter, and the galleys instead of
- the fines, were the reward of going to a conventicle to preach or
- to hear, there would not be so many sufferers. The spirit of
- martyrdom is over. They that will go to church to be chosen
- sheriffs and mayors would go to forty churches rather than be
- hanged. If one severe law were made and punctually executed, that
- whoever was found at a conventicle should be banished, the nation
- and the preacher be hanged, we should see an end of the tale. They
- would all come to church, and one age would make us all one again.
-
- To talk of 5s. a month for not coming to this sacrament, and 1s.
- per week for not coming to church, this is such a way of converting
- people as never was known. This is selling them a liberty to
- transgress for so much money. If it be not a crime, why don’t we
- give them full license? And if it be, no price ought to compound
- for committing it, for that is selling a liberty to people to sin
- against God and the government.
-
- If it be a crime of the highest consequence, both against the peace
- and welfare of the nation, the glory of God, the good of the
- church, and the happiness of the soul, let us rank it among
- capital offences, and let it receive a punishment in proportion to
- it.
-
- We hang men for trifles and banish them for things not worth
- naming. But an offence against God and the church, against the
- welfare of the world, and the dignity of religion shall be bought
- off for 5s.--this is such a shame to a Christian Government that
- ’tis with regret I transmit it to posterity.
-
- If men sin against God, affront his ordinances, rebel against his
- church, and disobey the precepts of their superiors, let them
- suffer as such capital crimes deserve: so will religion flourish,
- and this divided nation be once again united.... I am not supposing
- that all the dissenters in England should be hanged or banished,
- but as in cases of rebellions and insurrections, if a few of the
- ringleaders suffer, the multitude are dismissed; so a few obstinate
- people being bad examples, there’s no doubt but the severity of the
- law would find a stop in the compliance of the multitude.
-
-The reader will perceive by what a serious argument the hot-headed
-fanatic was betrayed and the wiser public put upon their guard. The
-mirror thus held up to nature, with a grotesque twist in it which made
-the likeness bewildering, gave London such a sensation as she had not
-felt for many a day. The wildest excitement arose. At first all parties
-in the shock of surprise took it for genuine. “The wisest churchmen in
-the nation were deceived by it,” and while some were even so foolish as
-to receive it with unthinking applause, which was the case, according to
-Oldmixon, “in our two famous Universities,” the more sensible reader of
-the church party was first indignant with the high-flyers for expressing
-such opinions, and then furious with the satirist who had insulted the
-church by putting them into her mouth. Nobody indeed saw the joke. The
-fellow of Cambridge who thanked his bookseller for packing up “so
-excellent a treatise” along with the books he had ordered, and
-considered it “next to the Sacred Bible and Holy Comments the best book
-he ever saw”; the “soberer churchman” who “openly exclaimed against the
-proposal, condemned the
-
-[Illustration: CHURCH OF ST. GILES, CRIPPLEGATE,
-
-WHERE DEFOE IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN BAPTIZED.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY H. E. SYLVESTER.]
-
-warmth that appeared in the clergy, and openly professed that such a man
-as Sacheverell and his brethren would blow up the foundations of the
-church”; the dissenters who were at once insulted and alarmed by the
-extraordinary threats thus set forth against them--all alike turned upon
-the perpetrator of the hoax when he was discovered. Some “blushed when
-they reflected how far they had applauded,” some labored to prove that
-it was “a horrible slander against the church.” The government, sharing
-the general commotion, placed Defoe in the position of a revolutionary
-leader who, “by the villainous insinuations of that pamphlet, would have
-frightened the dissenters into another rebellion.” Defoe himself seems
-to have had a moment of panic, and fled. He was proclaimed in the
-“Gazette,” and a reward offered for his discovery. His biographers in
-general assert that he gave himself up with some generosity to save the
-printer and publisher, who had been arrested, but there are public
-documents which seem to prove a different procedure, showing how “My
-Lord Nottingham hunted him out,” and how “the person who discovered
-Daniel Foe” claimed and was paid the reward of fifty pounds offered for
-the offender, described as a “middle-aged, spare man, about forty years
-old, of a brown complexion and dark brown colored hair (but wears a
-wig), a hooked nose, a sharp chin, gray eyes, and a large mole near his
-mouth.” However that might be, he was arrested and committed to Newgate
-in the spring of 1703, and the obnoxious publication--“this little book,
-a contemptible pamphlet of but three sheets of paper,” as he describes
-it--was burned by the common hangman. It was not, however, till the
-summer, three or four months after his arrest, that he was tried, and
-that period he seems to have spent in Newgate in perfect freedom, at
-least for literary productions, since he filled the air with a mist of
-pamphlets explaining that he meant nothing but a harmless satire at one
-moment, at another exhorting the dissenters to be content with
-spiritual freedom, and again bursting into the rude but potent strains
-of the “Hymn to the Pillory.” He was sentenced to fine and imprisonment,
-as well as to that grotesque but sometimes terrible instrument of
-torture; but the pillory was no torture to Defoe. On the last three days
-of July--once before the Royal Exchange in Cornhill, where his shop had
-been, and where no doubt everybody knew him, once in Cheapside, and
-again at Temple Bar--he stood aloft with the crowd surging round and
-performed his penance. The crowd in those days was not a soft or civil
-one when it indorsed the sentence pronounced by law. Its howls and
-cries, its missiles and its curses, made the punishment horrible. But
-the crowd had by this time found time to take in the joke,--banter, when
-it is broad enough to be intelligible, always pleases the general,--and
-there must have been some bonhomie about the sufferer, some good repute
-as a merry fellow and one who loved a jest, which conciliated the
-populace. Instead of dead cats, they flung him nosegays; they gathered
-about his platform under the low deep arch which once made a mock gate
-to the city, and behind the bustling ’Change, and between the shops of
-Cheapside, holding a series of impromptu festivals, drinking his health,
-shouting out his new verses, which were sold by thousands in the
-streets:
-
- Hail, hieroglyphic state machine,
- Contriv’d to punish fancy in;
- Men that are men, in thee can feel no pain,
- And all thy insignificants disdain;
- Exalted on thy stool of state,
- What prospect do I see of sovereign fate.
-
-The bold satirist, looking through those “lofty loops,” recalls all the
-good men that have stood there, reminding himself that even the learned
-Selden had the pillory in prospect, and that, had he “triumphed on thy
-stage,” no man could have shunned it more. Contempt, “that false new
-word for shame,” has no power where there is no crime, he declares. The
-lines are rough, but the sentiments are manly and full of honest scorn,
-which here and there reaches a high tone. From his platform where he
-stood in all the emancipation of feeling that the worst had happened, he
-throws a bold glance upon the disorders of the time, political and
-social, and summons to this post of scorn the firebrands, the cowards,
-the failures of the age. One can imagine those keen gray eyes inspecting
-through the loops the hoarse and roaming groups, not sure perhaps what
-his reception was to be, gathering courage as the shouts became
-intelligible and turned into hurrahs for Defoe. No doubt he marked the
-fluctuating crowd as keenly as if he had been a careless spectator at a
-window, and saw Colonel Jack and his brother pickpockets threading
-devious ways among the multitude, with here and there a gallant from St.
-James in his long curled periwig fluttering on the edge, and the
-tradesmen, half curious, half unwilling to join in the riot, looking on
-from their doors. A pillory is a coign of vantage when the man upon it
-has eyes like Defoe’s. “Tell ’em,” he says, apostrophizing his platform
-contemptuously--
-
- Tell ’em the men that placed him here
- Are friends unto the times,
- But at a loss to find his guilt,
- They can’t commit his crimes.
-
-Mr. Burton, in his “Reign of Queen Anne,” quotes from manuscript
-authority a statement that Penn had been commissioned by Defoe to offer
-“an account of all his accomplices in whatsoever he has been concerned,”
-on condition that he should be freed from the pillory, which is a very
-confusing statement, since it seems impossible to understand what
-accomplices he could have had. This, according to the same authority,
-was considered important enough to call for a special meeting of the
-cabinet council; but “the Queen seems to think that his confession
-amounts to nothing.” Another account is that Nottingham visited him in
-prison and offered him his liberty if he would say who set him on to do
-it. Thus this _jeu d’esprit_--the first exercise of Defoe’s special and
-most characteristic gift, that of endowing a fictitious production with
-every appearance of reality--set the world aflame. It is almost a more
-astonishing feat than the narratives which look so like literal
-transcripts of experience; for the subtle power which, by a cunning
-fitting together of actual utterances, could thus indicate the alarming
-tendency and danger of a great party, is more wonderful than to create
-an imaginary man and trace his every action as if he were a real one.
-The art may be less noble, but it is more difficult. Indeed, the
-“Shortest Way” is about the only example of such an extraordinary
-achievement. Swift’s tremendous satire was more bitter, more scathing,
-and treated not so much the exaggerated opinions of a class as the cruel
-and callous indifference of human nature to the sufferings of its slaves
-and victims.
-
-This curious episode once more ruined Defoe. It is to be supposed that
-when he went into hiding his business had to be abandoned, and all his
-affairs got into confusion. The official document already quoted
-describes him as “living at Newington Green with his father-in-law, who
-is a lay elder of a conventicle there.” This description, however, is
-evidently drawn up by an enemy, since his previous bankruptcy is spoken
-of as fraudulent, an assertion made nowhere else. His biographer,
-Wilson, informs us that though he had “kept his coach” before this
-period, the pantile works had now to be broken up, and his business was
-ruined. He had, though there is no information about her, a wife and six
-children--perhaps supported by the elder at Newington, who very likely
-thought, like his brethren, but badly of Defoe.
-
-He lay in Newgate for nearly a year, without, however, to all
-appearance, losing any opportunity for a pamphlet during the whole time,
-and laying in grist for his mill amid the strange and terrible
-surroundings of an eighteenth-century prison. Mr. Minto, in the
-admirable sketch of Defoe which he has contributed to the “English Men
-of Letters” series, seems to think that his hero must have enjoyed
-himself in this teeming world of new experiences, and that “he spent
-many pleasant hours” listening to the tales of his fellow-prisoners. No
-doubt there must have been some compensation to such a man in making
-acquaintance with a new aspect of life, but it is, perhaps, going too
-far to attribute a possibility of enjoyment to any undegraded man in the
-pandemonium described in so many contemporary narratives. Defoe did,
-however, what, so far as we are aware, no other man before or after him
-has ever done (except, perhaps, Leigh Hunt, in whose case we have a
-vague recollection of similar activity): he originated, wrote, and
-published a newspaper in his prison. “The Review,” so called, “of the
-Affairs of France”--that is, of the affairs of Europe and the
-world--that is, of any political subject that might be uppermost--was
-published twice a week, and appeared during the whole time of his
-imprisonment. A brilliant, familiar, graphic commentary upon all that
-was happening, a dialogue between the imprisoned spectator of life and
-the busy world outside, in which he was both questioner and answerer,
-pouring out upon the country with the keenest understanding of other
-people’s views, and the most complete mastery of his own, his remarks
-and criticisms, his judgment and advice. A newspaper in those days was
-not, of course, the huge broadsheet which it has now become. The
-“Review” was a sheet of eight, but afterward of only four small quarto
-pages. It was no assemblage of paragraphs, trivial or important, the
-work of many anonymous persons whose profession it is to manufacture a
-newspaper, but one man’s eager and lively conversation with his
-countrymen, full of the vigor of personal opinion and the unity of an
-individual view. A keener intelligence was never brought to the
-treatment of public affairs, nor a mind more thoughtful, reasonable, and
-practical. His prejudices were few--too few, perhaps. Granted that the
-aim was good, Defoe was disdainful of punctilio in the way of carrying
-it out. He was not above doing evil that good might come, but he had a
-far higher refinement of meaning than could be embraced by any such
-vulgar statement in his subtle faculty of discovering, and all but
-proving, that what might have seemed evil to a common intelligence was
-in reality a good, if not the best, way of carrying his excellent
-purpose out. Up to the moment of his leaving Newgate, however, there was
-nothing equivocal in the use he made of his extraordinary faculties. He
-was a free man discussing boldly on his own responsibility, and without
-any _arrière pensée_, the affairs of England. If he had first keenly
-assailed the dissenters, who were his own people, in respect of the
-compliances by which they made themselves capable of bearing office, and
-then exposed to grimmest ridicule the adversaries who aimed at rendering
-them altogether incapable, there was in this no real inconsistency. His
-championship of King William had been honest and thorough. If he loved
-to have a finger in every pie, and let loose his opinion at every
-crisis, there was no contemporary opinion which was better worth having.
-But now this unwearying critic, this keen observer, this restless,
-brilliant casuist, this practical man of business, had come to the
-turning-point of his life.
-
-His liberation from Newgate followed closely upon the advent of Harley
-to power. When this event happened, it is said that one of the first
-things the new minister did was to send a message to Defoe in prison:
-“Pray ask that gentleman what I can do for him.” Whether it was in
-direct sequence to this question, or whether the Queen had formed an
-independent intention of freeing the prisoner, we need not inquire; but
-he was set free, Queen Anne furnishing the means of paying his fine. She
-is said also to have taken an interest in his family, and contributed to
-their support during his confinement. He declared himself to be
-liberated on the condition of writing nothing (further modified as
-nothing “which some people might not like”) for some years; a condition
-which he immediately fulfilled by publishing an “Elegy on the Author of
-the True-born Englishman,” to tell the world so, and took no further
-notice of the prohibition, so far as appears. The real meaning of this
-curious statement would seem by all evidence to have been that Defoe
-there and then accepted the position of a secret servant of the
-government, a writer pledged to support their measures and carry out
-their views. At the moment, and perhaps in reality during the greater
-part of his career, their measures were those which he approved; and
-certainly at this period of his history he has never been accused of
-writing against his conscience. Even when, after eager championship of
-peace, he was obliged by political changes to veer into what looked like
-support of war, he was never without the strong defense to fall back
-upon, that he demanded peace only after securing certain indispensable
-conditions, and that war might be, and was, the only means of gaining
-them--an argument most simple and evident to his mind.
-
-Harley has never appeared in history as a great man, but when we
-consider that he was able thus to subjugate and secure to his own
-service two of the greatest intelligences of his time, it is impossible
-not to respect his influence and judgment. The great and somber genius
-of Swift, the daring, brilliant, and ever-ready intellect of Defoe,
-became instruments in the hands of this ordinary and scheming statesman.
-Once more, with a curious parallelism, these two men stand before us--no
-friends to each other. “An illiterate fellow, whose name I forget,”
-says Swift, with the almost brutal scorn which was part of his
-character; while Defoe replies to the taunt with angry virulence,
-setting forth his own acquirements, “though he wrote no bill at his
-door, nor set Latin on the front of his productions,” a piece of
-pretension, habitual to the time, of which the other was guilty. But
-Harley, who was not worthy, so far as intellect went, to clean the shoes
-of either, had them both at his command, serving his purposes, doing his
-bidding. Which of them suffered most by the connection it is not easy to
-say. It turned Swift’s head, and brought into humiliating demonstration
-the braggart and the bully in his nature. Defoe had not the demoralizing
-chance of being the lord treasurer’s boon companion; but Harley made a
-dishonest partizan, a paid and slippery special pleader and secret
-agent, out of the free-lance of politics. From this moment the defenders
-and champions of Defoe have to turn into casuists, as he himself did.
-They have to give specious explanations to suppress and account for his
-shifts and changes, though at first they were sufficiently innocent. The
-evil grew, however, so that toward the end of his career even the
-apologist must keep silence; but this is the nature of all evil.
-
-If excuses are to be sought for Defoe’s conduct in this first beginning
-of his slavery, it will not be difficult to find them. The age, for one
-thing, was corrupt through and through. There was not a statesman but
-had two strings to his bow, nor a politician of any description who did
-not attempt to serve two masters. To hold the balance between Hanover
-and St.-Germain, ready to perform a demi-volt in the air at any moment
-as the scale should turn, was the science of the day. On the other hand,
-Defoe was now a ruined man, with a family to support, and nothing but
-his busy and inexhaustible pen to do it with. The material inducement of
-a certain income to fall back upon, whatever
-
-[Illustration: ROBERT HARLEY, EARL OF OXFORD.
-
-ENGRAVED BY JOHN P. DAVIS, AFTER THE ORIGINAL PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY
-KNELLER, IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.]
-
-might be the chances of journalism, must have been very strong. And what
-was stronger still was the delight of his own vivacious, restless, ready
-mind, with its sense of boundless power and infinite resource, to which
-difficulty was a delight and the exercise of walking over hot coals or
-dancing on a sword-point the most exhilarating possibility, in making
-its triumphant way over obstacles which would have baffled almost all
-his contemporaries. “The danger’s self was lure alone” to this skilled
-and cunning fencer, this master of all the arts. In a very different
-sense from that of Tennyson’s noble hero, “Faith Unfaithful” was
-inspiration and strength to him, and to be falsely true the most
-delightful situation. He loved to support his principles by a hundred
-dodges, and plead them from the other side, and make of himself the
-devil’s advocate in the interest of heaven. All this was life to his
-mind. He must have had a positive pleasure in proving to himself first,
-and then to all England, that the happiest thing a Whig could do was to
-find the Tory measures exactly those which he would have recommended,
-and that his allegiance to the queen required a change of policy on his
-part whenever circumstances compelled her to change her ministry. It was
-all devotion--not time-serving, as the vulgar thought. Defoe took
-infinite pleasure in proving that it was so, in making everything clear.
-The commonplace and humdrum expedient of following your party would have
-been dull to him--a proceeding without interest as without danger. He
-wanted excitement, obstacles to get over; a position which would make
-sudden claims upon his ingenuity to account for and fortify it. Such a
-mind is rare, and still more rarely is it accompanied by genius. But
-when such a combination does occur it is a very curious spectacle.
-
-In the mean time, however, all that Defoe had to do was simple enough.
-He had to support peace and the union--two things which in his free
-estate he had already advocated with all his powers. He did it with the
-utmost skill, fervor, and success, and to all appearance contributed
-much to the great public act which was the subject of so many struggles
-and resistances on the part of the smaller nation--the union. This great
-expedient, of which from the first he had seen the advantage, Defoe
-worked for with unwearying zeal. He praised and caressed Caledonia--upon
-which subject he wrote one of those vigorous essays in verse which he
-called poetry--and the tolerance of the Presbyterian Church, and the
-good sense of the nation generally, which was not always perceptible to
-English politicians; and even risked a visit to Edinburgh in performance
-of the orders of the government, though at the risk of rude handling to
-himself. In all this there cannot be the slightest doubt that he was
-entirely honest and patriotic, and acted from an enlightened personal
-view of the necessities of the case. When the curious incident of the
-Sacheverell prosecution occurred, he had once more a subject entirely to
-his own mind, and expressed his own feelings in supporting with all his
-might the measures of the government against that High Church firebrand,
-one of the chief of those whom he had held up to public ridicule in the
-“Shortest Way.” So far he was fortunate, being employed upon subjects
-entirely congenial to his mind, and on which he had already strong
-convictions. The equivocal part of the matter is that he never ceased to
-assert and insist upon his independence. “Contemn,” he says, “as not
-worth mentioning, the suggestions of some people of my being employed to
-carry on the interests of a party. I have never loved any party, but
-with my utmost zeal have sincerely espoused the great and original
-interest of this nation and of all nations--I mean truth and
-liberty”--which was the truth, yet not all the truth. Again, with still
-more violent protestations, he refers to his private circumstances, of
-which nothing is known, to prove how little he was protected by power.
-It would seem from this statement that he was still being pursued for
-the remnant of old debts, or those new ones with which the failure of
-his tile factory and his long imprisonment had saddled him.
-
- If paid, gentlemen, for writing [he cries], if hired, if employed,
- why still harassed with merciless and malicious men; why pursued to
- all extremities of law for old accounts which you clear other men
- of every day? Why oppressed, distressed, and driven from his
- family, and from all his prospects of delivering them and himself?
- Is this the fate of men employed and hired? Is this the figure the
- agents of courts and princes make?
-
-The argument is a feeble one for such a practised reasoner as Defoe,
-without considering the trifling detail that it was untrue, for debts
-are by no means unknown to favorites of the crown. Nor could he have
-been saved by Harley’s pay, which probably was never very great, from
-the consequences of previous misfortunes. The reader will think that a
-judicious silence would have been more appropriate, but that was not
-Defoe’s way. The only wonder is that he did not adduce such detailed
-evidence of his own freedom as would have deceived any man, and shown to
-demonstration that it was he who subsidized the ministry, and not they
-him. The wonderful thing is that he was free through all, maintaining
-his own favorite opinions, working as an independent power. Servile
-journalists have existed in plenty, but seldom one who took the pay of
-his masters and served their interests, yet fought under his own flag
-with honesty and a good conscience all the while.
-
-This happy state, however, did not last. Harley fell, but with his last
-breath (as a minister) adjured his champion not to sacrifice himself,
-but to come to an understanding with his successor, Godolphin. This
-necessitated a certain revolution in respect to peace, which Defoe
-managed cleverly with the excellent device above mentioned. And there
-was still higher ground which he felt himself entitled to take. The
-public safety was involved in the stability of the new ministry such as
-it was. And he faces the dilemma with boundless pluck and assurance.
-“Though I don’t like the crew, I won’t sink the ship; I’ll pump and
-heave and haul and do everything I can, though he that pulls with me
-were my enemy. The reason is plain. We are all in the ship and must sink
-or swim together.” These admirable reasonings brought him at last to the
-calm rectitude of the following conclusion:
-
- It occurred to me instantly as a principle for my conduct that it
- was not material to me what ministers her Majesty was pleased to
- employ. My duty was to go along with every ministry so far as they
- did not break in upon the constitution and the laws and liberties
- of my country, my part being only the duty of a subject, viz: to
- submit to all lawful commands, and to enter into no service that
- was not justifiable by the laws, to all of which I have exactly
- obliged myself.
-
-When Harley returned to power, another modification became necessary,
-but Defoe piously felt it was providential that he should thus be thrown
-back upon his original protector; and had the matter ended here, as was
-long supposed, it is difficult to see what indictment could be brought
-against him. It is not expedient certainly that a director of public
-opinion should have state pay, and does not look well when the secret is
-betrayed. But so long as the scope of all his productions is good,
-honest, and patriotic, with only as much submission in trifles as is
-inevitable, the bargain is a personal meanness rather than a public
-crime, and this was long supposed to have been the case. It was believed
-that after the death of Queen Anne and Harley’s final fall, Defoe’s
-eloquent mouth was closed, and he disappeared into the calm of private
-life to earn a better hire and a more lasting influence through the two
-immortal works of fiction by which alone, but for the painful labors of
-biographers, his name would have been known. Had the matter been left
-so, how much happier would it have been for the hero of this romance of
-literary life, how much more edifying for posterity! We could have
-imagined the tired warrior retiring from that hot and painful field in
-which even the laurels were not worth the plucking, where defeat was
-miserable and success mean, and scarcely any combatant could keep his
-honor intact, to the quietness of some suburban house in which his three
-pretty daughters could care for him and idolize him, and where his
-wonderful imagination, no longer a slave to the exigencies of political
-warfare, could weave its dreams into a sober certainty of life awake. We
-should then have said of the author of “Robinson Crusoe” and the
-“Journal of the Plague,” that in his poverty and anxiety and overhaste
-he had been beguiled into a bargain which might have been a shameful one
-had not his marvelous power of seeing every side of a subject, and that
-insight of genius which divines the real unity of honest souls through
-all the external diversities which fill the limited vision of common
-men, carried him triumphantly through. And upon what real fault there
-was we should have thrown a veil. The age would have borne the blame--an
-age which was corrupt to the core, and in which men changed their
-principles every day. In the garden at Newington, where the young ladies
-entertained their lovers, we could have pictured him benevolent and
-friendly in the flowing peruke under which his keen eyes sparkled,
-looking on at the love-making with prudent, tradesmanlike thoughts of
-Sophia’s portion, and how much the young people would have to set up
-housekeeping upon, coming in not inappropriately between the pages of
-Crusoe--perhaps taking a suggestion about Robinson’s larder from some
-passing talk about the storeroom, or modifying for the use of Friday
-some rustical remark of the young serving-man from the country, or in
-the renewing of old recollections produced by some old friend’s visit
-finding an anecdote, a detail, to incorporate into the “Journal of the
-Plague.” And we should have asked ourselves by what strange play of
-genius the unenchanted island, where all the sober elaborations of fact
-clothed so completely the vivid realizations of imagination, should have
-risen out of the mists amid those trim, old-fashioned alleys, and green
-plots, and stiff parterres of flowers.
-
-Alas! That demon of research which in its poking and prying sometimes
-puts old bones together, and sometimes scatters to the winds the ashes
-of the dead, has spoiled this pleasant picture. Impelled by its
-influence, an unwary or else too painstaking student, some twenty years
-ago, was seized with the idea of roaming the earth in search of relics
-of Defoe. And the diabolical powers which put this fatal pursuit into
-his mind directed him to a bundle of yellow papers in the State Paper
-Office which has, alas! for ever and ever made an end of our man of
-genius. These treacherous papers give us to wit under his own hand that
-he was in reality in full action in the most traitorous of employments
-during the period of his supposed retirement. The following, which is
-the first of these fatally self-elucidatory letters, will reveal at once
-the inconceivable occupation to which Defoe in his downfall lent
-himself. He had perhaps compromised himself too much, and been too
-completely identified with Harley at the end to be considered capable of
-more honorable and evident employment. The letter is addressed to the
-secretary of the minister who had given him his disgraceful office:
-
- It was proposed by my Lord Townsend that I should appear as if I
- were as before under the displeasure of the government, and
- separated from the Whigs, and that I might be more serviceable in a
- kind of disguise than if I appeared openly. In the interval of
- this, Dyer, the “News-Letter” writer, being dead, and Dormer, his
- successor, being unable by his troubles to carry on that work, I
- had an offer of a share in the property as well as in the
- management of that work.
-
- I immediately acquainted my Lord Townsend of it, who, by Mr.
- Buckley, let me know it would be a very acceptable piece of
- service, for that letter was really very prejudicial to the
- public, and the most difficult to come at in a judicial way in case
- of offense given. My Lord was pleased to add, by Mr. Buckley, that
- he would consider my service in that case, as he afterwards did.
-
- Upon this I engaged in it, and that so far, that though the
- property was not wholly my own, yet the conduct and government of
- the style of news was so entirely in me, that I ventured to assure
- His Lordship the sting of that mischievous paper should be entirely
- taken out, though it was granted that the style should continue
- Tory, as it was, that the party might be amused and not set up
- another, which would have destroyed the design, and this part I
- therefore take entirely on myself still.
-
- This went on for a year before my Lord Townsend went out of the
- office, and His Lordship, in consideration of the service, made me
- the appointment which Mr. Buckley knows of, with promise of a
- further allowance as service presented.
-
- My Lord Sunderland, to whose goodness I had many years ago been
- obliged, when I was in a secret commission sent to Scotland, was
- pleased to approve and continue this service, and the appointment
- annexed, and, with His Lordship’s approbation I introduced myself,
- in the disguise of a translator of the foreign news, to be so far
- concerned in this weekly paper of Mist’s as to be able to keep it
- within the circle of a secret management, also prevent the
- mischievous part of it, and yet neither Mist, or any of those
- concerned with him, have the least guess or suspicion by whose
- direction I do it.
-
-There is nothing, it seems to us, for any apologist to say in
-explanation of this extraordinary statement. The emissary of a Whig and
-Hanoverian government acting as editor of a Tory and Jacobite
-newspaper,--nay, of three newspapers,--in order to take the harm out of
-them, to amuse the Tory party with a pretense of style and subjects
-suitable to their views, while balking all their purposes, is at once
-the most ingenious and the most shameless of all devices. It continued
-for a long period, and was very successful. But when the deceit was
-discovered at last, Mist, the deluded publisher, made a murderous
-assault upon the deceiver, and the journalists of the period seem to
-have risen unanimously against him. That Defoe must have fallen sadly
-before he came to this is very evident; but how he fell, except by the
-natural vengeance of deterioration, which makes a man who has long
-paltered with the truth unable at last to distinguish the gradations
-which separate the doubtful from the criminal, no one can say. He must,
-however, have fallen indeed in position and importance before he could
-be put to such miserable work; and he must have fallen more fatally,
-like that other son of the morning, deep down into hades, where he
-became the father of lies and the betrayer of mankind, before he could
-have been capable of this infamous mission.
-
-We turn with relief to the work which, of all these manifold labors, is
-the only portion which has really survived the effects of time. Defoe’s
-political writings, with all their lucidity, their brilliant good sense,
-daring satire, and astonishing readiness and variety, are for the
-student, and retain a place among the materials of history, studied no
-longer for their own sake, but for the elucidations they may give. But
-“Robinson Crusoe” lives by his own right, and will, we may confidently
-affirm, after the long trial he has had, never die. We need not discuss
-the other works of fiction which are all as characteristic as distinct
-narratives of apparent fact, as carefully elaborated in every detail.
-They are almost all excellent in their beginning, but, a fault which is
-shared by Crusoe himself, run into such a prodigality of detail toward
-their close, that the absence of dramatic construction and of any real
-inspiration of art, becomes painfully (or rather tediously, which is
-worse) apparent. We do not, however, share the opinion of those critics
-who disparage Defoe’s marvelous power of narrative. “The little art he
-is truly master of, of forging a story and imposing it on the world for
-truth,” is an art which he possesses in common with but very few who
-have ever lived; and even among these few he has it in a very high
-degree. The gift is peculiar; we are not moved by it to pity or
-tenderness, and not much to admiration of the hero. The inner circle of
-our emotions is seldom, if ever, entered; but, on the other hand, there
-is nothing in that island where the shipwrecked mariner finds a shelter,
-and which he makes into a home, which we do not know and see, as well as
-if we had dwelt in it like Robinson. It is an island which is added to
-the geography of the world. Not only would no child ever doubt of its
-existence, but to the most experienced reader it is far more true and
-real than half of those of which we have authentic histories, which our
-relatives and countrymen have visited and colonized. Those South Sea
-Islands, about which we have so many flowery volumes, are not half so
-certain. And every detail of the life of its solitary inhabitant comes
-up before us like our own personal proceedings--more than visible,
-incontestable experiences. Not one of us but could draw the picture of
-the solitary in his furs, with all his odd implements about him; and,
-more wonderful still, not a child from four upward but could tell who it
-was. The tale does not move us as do imaginative histories on a more
-poetic level; but in its humbler range it is as living as the best. And
-there is something in this very absence of emotion which gives a still
-more wonderful force to the tale. Men in such desperate circumstances,
-driven to the use of all their faculties for the mere preservation of
-their lives, have presumably but little time for feeling. The absorption
-of every faculty in this one primitive need brings a certain serenity, a
-calm which is like the hush of the solitude--the silence of the seas.
-The atmosphere is full of this stillness. There is the repose of Nature,
-not filled with reflections of human sentiment, but imposing her
-patience, her calm repetition of endless endeavor upon the solitary
-flung into her bosom; and there is a sobriety in the story which adds
-immensely to the power. Other unknown islands have been in fiction, but
-none where the progress of events was so gradual, where there were so
-few miraculous accessories. One of the most able of English romancers,
-the late Charles Reade, is the last who has carried us to a desolate
-island. His story is full of charm, of humor, and sentiment far beyond
-the reach of Defoe. Nothing could be more tender, more delightful, than
-the idyl of the two lovers cut off from all mankind, lost in the silence
-of the seas. But in every way his isle is an enchanted isle. Not only is
-it peopled with love and all the graces, but it is running over with
-every convenience,--everything that is useful and beautiful. The
-inexhaustible ingenuity of the lover is not more remarkable than the
-wealth of necessary articles of every kind that turns up at every step.
-He builds his lady a bower lined with mother-of-pearl; he clothes her in
-a cloak of sealskin; he finds jewels for her; she has but to wish and to
-have, as if Regent street had been within reach. Very different is the
-sober sanity of the elder narrative. Defoe knows nothing about lovers;
-all his heroes marry with prodigality; but he has no love, any more than
-he has pearls or gutta-percha, on his island. Conveniences come very
-slowly to Robinson Crusoe; he has to grope his way, and find his living
-hardly, patiently. Day after day, and year after year, the story-teller
-goes on working out the order of events. It is as leisurely as nature,
-as little helped by accident, as sober even as matter of fact, and yet
-what a potent, clear, all-realizing fancy--a faculty which in its
-limited sphere saw and felt and acted in completest appropriation of the
-circumstances--this sober imagination was!
-
-He was fifty-eight at the time this book was written--a man worn with
-endless work and strife, but ever ready for more--a man who had fallen
-and failed, and made but little of his life. It is said that he was at
-his highest point of external prosperity when he published “Robinson
-Crusoe”; but when we remember that he was at that time engaged in the
-inconceivable muddle of “Mist’s Journal,” it seems almost impossible to
-believe this, or to understand how anything but poverty could drive him
-into such a disgraceful employment. No doubt, to a man who at heart had
-once been an honest man, and was so no more, it must have been a relief
-and blessed deliverance to escape away into the distant seas, to refresh
-his ever-active soul with the ingenious devices of the shipwrecked
-sailor, and bury himself in that life so different from his own, the
-savage necessities, the primitive cares. The goats and the parrot and
-poor Friday: what an ease and comfort to escape into their society after
-bamboozling Mist, and reporting to my lord at St. James’s! Was it a
-desperate expedient of nature to save him from utter self-contempt? Such
-a man, even if his conscience had grown callous, must have required some
-outlet from the dreadful slavery to which he had bound himself.
-
-“Robinson Crusoe” is the work by which Defoe is best known, which is,
-after all, the most effectual guarantee that it is his best work. But it
-is not, to our thinking, worthy of being placed in competition with the
-“Journal of the Plague”--a history so real, so solemn and impressive, so
-full of the atmosphere and sentiment of the time, that it reaches a far
-higher point of literary art than anything else Defoe has written. For
-this is not prose alone, nor that art of making fiction look like truth,
-which is supposed to be his greatest excellence: it is one of the most
-impressive pictures of a historical incident which has struck the poetic
-imagination everywhere, and of which we have perhaps more authentic
-records than of any other historical episode. Neither Boccaccio nor
-Manzoni have equaled Defoe in the story of the plague. To the old
-Italian it was a horror from which the life-loving fled with loathing as
-well as fear, and which they tried to forget and put out of their sight.
-Defoe’s minute description of the argument carried on within his own
-mind by the narrator is curiously characteristic of the tendency to
-elaborate and explain which enters so largely into all his works. The
-mental condition of the respectable citizen, divided between concern for
-his life and concern for his property, seeing with reasonable eyes that
-death was not certain, but that in case of flight ruin was,--moved by
-the divination which he uses in all good faith, yet perhaps not with
-sufficient devoutness to have allowed himself to be guided by it had it
-been contrary to his previous dispositions, and at bottom by a certain
-_vis inertiæ_ and disinclination to move, which is clearly indicated
-from the beginning,--is in his best manner, and so real that it is
-impossible to resist its air of absolute truthfulness. But the state of
-the shut-up streets, the dreadful sounds and sights, the brooding heat
-and stillness of the long and awful days, the cloud of fate that is
-about the doomed city, are beyond description impressive. This curious
-spectator of all things, this impartial yet eager looker-on, determined
-to see all that can be seen, prudent yet fearless, adopting every
-precaution, yet neglecting no means of investigation, inquiring
-everywhere, always with his eyes and ears open, at once a philosophical
-inquirer and an eager gossip, is without doubt Defoe himself. But he is
-also a marked figure of the time. He is like Pepys; he is almost, but
-for the unmistakable difference between the bourgeois and the fine
-gentleman, like Evelyn. He is one of the special kind of man born to
-illustrate that period. Pepys would have found means for some piece of
-junketing even in the midst of his alarm, whereas Defoe thinks of his
-property, when he has time to think of anything but the plague, which is
-a very natural modification consequent on the changes of the times. But
-they are at bottom the same. While, however, this central figure remains
-the characteristic but not elevated personage with whom we are already
-acquainted, the history which he records is done with a tragic force and
-completeness which it is impossible to surpass. In this there is nothing
-commonplace, no wearying monotony; the very statistics have a tragic
-solemnity in them; the awful unseen presence dominates everything. We
-scarcely breathe while we move about the streets emptied of all
-passers-by, or with a suspicious throng in the middle of the way keeping
-as far apart as possible from the houses. This is not mere prose: it is
-poetry in its most rare form; it is an ideal representation, in all its
-sober details, of one of the most tragical moments of human suffering
-and fate.
-
-Nothing else that Defoe has done is on the same level. It is pitched on
-too high a key perhaps for the multitude. His innocent thief, “Colonel
-Jack,” begins with a picture both amusing and touching of the curious
-moral denseness and confusion of a street boy; his “Cavalier” is a
-charming young man. But both these and all the rest of Defoe’s heroes
-and heroines grow heavy and tedious at the end. The “Journal of the
-Plague” is not like them in this respect. The conclusion--the sudden
-surprise and delicious sense of relief, the joy which makes the
-passers-by stop and shake hands with one another in the streets, and the
-women call out from windows with tears and outcries of gladness--is
-sudden and overwhelming as the reality. We are caught in the growing
-despair, and suddenly in a moment deliverance comes. Here alone Defoe is
-not too long; the unexpected is brought in with a skill and force not
-less remarkable than that which in the previous pages has portrayed the
-slow growth and inevitable development of the misery. Up to this
-anticlimax of unlooked-for joy the calamity has grown, every new touch
-intensifying the awful reality. But the recovery is sudden, and told
-without an unnecessary word. It is the only instance in which Defoe has
-followed the instinct of a great artist and shown that he knew how to
-avail himself of the unwritten code and infallible methods of art.
-
-We forget his shortcomings when we discuss this which is to our mind
-much his greatest work, and it is well that we should leave him in this
-disposition. He died mysteriously alone, after a period of wandering and
-hiding which nobody can explain. Whether he was in trouble with
-creditors, or with political enemies, or with the exasperated party
-which he had managed to outwit; whether he kept out of the way that his
-family might make better terms for themselves, or that he might keep the
-remains of his money out of the hands of an undutiful son, or a grasping
-son-in-law, nobody can tell. He died in remote lodgings, all alone, and
-his affairs were administered by a stranger, perhaps his landlady, no
-one knows. His domestic circumstances have been referred to during his
-life only in the vaguest way. He had a wife and a numerous family when
-he was put in the pillory; he had a wife, a son who was unkind, and
-three daughters at the end; but that is all we know. He died at
-seventy-two “of a lethargy,” no doubt fallen into the feebleness and
-hopelessness of lonely old age; and that is all. His life overflowed
-with activity and business. To be doing seems to have been a necessity
-of his being. But he never seems to have enjoyed the importance due to
-his powers, and in an age when men of letters filled the highest posts
-never would appear to have risen above his citizen circle, his
-shop-keeping ways. Something in the man must have accounted for this,
-but it is difficult to say what it was; for the age did not require a
-high standard of truthfulness, and the worst of his misdoings were kept
-secret from the public. Perhaps his manners were not such as society,
-though very easy in those days, could tolerate; perhaps--but this is
-simple guesswork. All we know of Defoe is that as a writer he was of the
-greatest influence and note, but as a man nothing. He died poor and
-alone; he had little reward for unexampled labor. When Addison was
-secretary of state, and Prior an ambassador, he was nobody--a sword in
-the hand of an unscrupulous statesman; a shopkeeper manufacturing his
-genius and selling it by the yard. A sadder conclusion never was told.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-ADDISON, THE HUMORIST
-
-
-There is not a name in the entire range of English literature to which
-so full and universal an appreciation has been given by posterity as
-that of Addison. He had his critics in his day. He had, indeed, more
-than critics, and from one quarter at least has received in his breast
-the finest and sharpest sting which a friend estranged could put into
-poetic vengeance. But the burden even of contemporary voices was always
-overwhelmingly in his favor, and nowadays there is no one in the world,
-we believe, that has other than gentle words for the gentle writer--the
-finest critic, the finest gentleman, the most tender humorist of his
-age. It is not only admiration, but a sort of personal affection with
-which we look back, detecting in all the bustling companies of that
-witty and depraved period his genial figure, with a delightful
-simplicity in the midst of all the formalism, and whole-heartedness
-among the conceits and pretensions, of the fops and wits, the intriguing
-statesmen and busy conspirators, of an age in which public faith can
-scarcely be said to have existed at all. He had his little defects,
-which were the defects of the time. And perhaps his age would not have
-loved him as it did had he been entirely without a share in its
-weaknesses. As it was, no one could call him a milksop then, as no one
-would venture to record any offensive name against him now. The smile of
-benevolent good nature, of indulgent humor, of observation always as
-sweet and merciful as it is acute and refined, is never absent from his
-countenance. He treats no man hardly; the ideal beings whom he creates
-are the friends of all: we could, indeed, more easily spare dozens of
-living acquaintances than we could part with Sir Roger de Coverley.
-Addison is the very embodiment of that delightful gift of humor on which
-we pride ourselves so much as a specially English quality; his soft
-laugh touches all the chords of sympathy and loving comprehension with a
-tender ridicule in which the applauses of admiration are conveyed with
-double effect. That his style is the perfection, in its way, of English
-style is less dear and delightful to us than that what it conveys is the
-perfection of feeling. His art is the antipodes of that satirical art
-which allows human excellence only to gird at it, and insinuate motives
-which diminish or destroy. Addison, on the other hand, allows
-imperfections which his interpretation turns into something more sweet
-than virtue, and throws a delightful gleam of love and laughter upon the
-eccentricities and characteristic follies of individual nature. That he
-sees everything is one of the conditions of his genial forgiveness of
-everything that is not mean or base or cruel. With these he makes no
-terms. They are not within the range of his treatment. _Non ragionam di
-lor._ He passes by to the genial rural circle where all is honest,
-simple, and true; or to town, where in the coffee-houses themselves a
-kind soul will find humors enough to keep him cheerful without harm to
-any of his fellow-creatures--even the post-writers whom he jocularly
-recommends to a supplementary Chelsea as having killed more men in the
-wars than any general ever did, or the “needy persons” hungry for news,
-whom he promises to keep supplied with good and wholesome sentiments. He
-was at the same time the first of his kind. Thackeray associates
-Congreve--one does not exactly know why--with this nobler name: but at
-once makes it clear that there could be no comparison between them,
-since the world of the comedy-writer was an entirely fictitious world,
-altogether unlike the human nature of the essayist. Of the humorists we
-may venture to say that Addison is the first, as well as the most
-refined and complete. Swift draws a heavier shaft, which lacerates and
-kills, and Pope sends his needle-pointed arrows, all touched with
-poisonous venom, to the most vulnerable points; but Addison has no heart
-to slay. He transfixes the veil of folly with light, shining,
-irresistible darts, and pins it aloft in triumph, but he lets the fool
-go free--perhaps lets you see even, by some reflection from his
-swift-flying polished spear, a gleam of human meaning in the poor
-wretch’s face which touches your heart. Even when he diverts himself
-with Tom Folio or Ned Softly, instead of plunging these bores into a
-bottomless gulf of contempt, he plays with them as one might with a
-child, a twinkle of soft fun in his eye, drawing out their simple
-absurdities. That habit of his which Swift describes to Stella, as one
-which she herself shared, of seeming to consent to follies which it is
-not worth while contradicting, and which Pope venomously characterizes
-as “assents with evil leer,” lures him, and us along with him, into
-byways of human nature which the impatient critic closes with a kick,
-and in which there is much amusement and little harm. Molière’s
-_Trissotin_ is a social conspirator meaning to build advancement upon
-his bad verses; but Addison’s poetaster is only an exposition of
-harmless vanity, humored by the gently malicious, but kind and patient,
-listener, who amid his laughter finds a certain pleasure in pleasing the
-victim too. There is sympathy even in the dissection, a conjunction of
-feelings which is of the very nature of the true humorist. These, no
-doubt, are of a very different caliber from that creation which still
-charms the reader--the delightful figure of Sir Roger, and all the
-simple folks full of follies and of virtues who surround him; but they
-are scarcely less remarkable. The lesser pictures, taken at a sitting in
-which the author has had no time to elaborate those features of human
-character which always draw forth his tenderness, are yet full of this
-instinctive sweetness, as well as of insight, keen, though always
-tempered, as the touch of Ithuriel’s spear. The angel, indeed, was far
-more severe, disclosing the demon under his innocent disguise; but
-Addison has nothing to do with demons, he has no deep-laid plan of
-mischief to unveil. The worst he does is to smile and banter the little
-absurdities out of us--those curious little delusions which deceive
-ourselves as well as the world.
-
-This most loved of English writers was the son of one of those English
-parsons who confuse our belief in the extremely unfavorable account,
-given by both the graver and the lighter historians of the time, of the
-condition of country clergymen. Neither Parson Adams in his virtue, nor
-Parson Trulliber in his grossness, nor Macaulay’s keen and clear
-picture, nor Thackeray’s fine disrespectful studies of the chaplain who
-marries the waiting-maid, seem to afford us any guidance to the nature
-of the household which the Rev. Launcelot Addison, after many wanderings
-and experiences, set up in the little parish of Milston in Wiltshire
-somewhere about the year 1670. Steele’s description of it has, no doubt,
-the artificial form affected by the age, and sets it forth as one of
-those models of perfection and examples to the world which nowadays we
-are more disposed to distrust and laugh at than to follow. “I remember
-among all my acquaintances,” he says, “but one man whom I have thought
-to live with his children with equanimity and a good grace”; and he goes
-on to describe the “three sons and one daughter whom he bred with all
-the care imaginable in a liberal and ingenious way--their thoughts
-turned into an emulation for the superiority in kind and generous
-affection toward each other,” the boys behaving themselves with a manly
-friendship, their sister treated by them with as much complaisance as
-any other young lady of their acquaintance. “It was an unspeakable
-pleasure to visit or sit at a meal in this family,” he adds. “I have
-often seen the old man’s heart flow at his eyes with joy upon occasions
-which would appear indifferent to such as were strangers to the turn of
-his mind; but a very slight accident wherein he saw his children’s good
-will to one another created in him the Godlike pleasure of loving them
-because they loved one another.” The family tenderness thus inculcated
-no doubt came from a mind full of the milk of human kindness, and
-happily transmitting that possession to the gentle soul of the eldest
-son, who probably was the one whom the father “had the weakness to love
-much better than the others”--a weakness which “he took as much pains to
-correct as any other criminal passion that could arise in his mind.”
-Such a paternity and training does something to account for the
-prevailing gentleness of Addison’s temper and judgments.
-
-Dr. Addison had seen the world not in a very brilliant or luxurious way.
-He had been chaplain at Dunkirk, and afterward at Tangier among the
-Moors, upon which latter strange experience he wrote a book: and he rose
-afterward to be Dean of Lichfield, a dignified clergyman. One of the
-brothers went to India, and attained to some eminence; the other was
-eventually, like Joseph, a fellow of Magdalen. They dispersed themselves
-in the world as the children of a clergyman might very well do at the
-present day, and it is evident belonged distinctly to the caste of
-gentlemen. The sons, or at least the son with whom we have specially to
-do, after sundry local schoolings went to Charterhouse, which he left at
-fifteen for Oxford, perhaps because of his unusual advancement, more
-probably because the custom of the time sent boys earlier to the
-university, as is still the practice in Scotland. Addison was much
-distinguished in that elegant branch of learning, the writing of Latin
-verse, a kind of distinction which remains dear to the finest minds, in
-spite of all the remarks concerning its inutility and the time wasted
-in acquiring the art, which the rest of the world has so largely
-indulged in. A copy of verses upon the accession of King William,
-written while he was still a very youthful scholar at Queen’s College,
-no more than seventeen, got him his first promotion. The boy’s verses
-came--perhaps from some proud tutor at Queen’s, boasting what could be
-done under the cupola in the High street, finer than anything attempted
-in more distinguished seats of learning--into the hands of the Provost
-of Magdalen, to the amazement and envy of that more learned corporation.
-There had been no election of scholars in the previous year, during the
-melancholy time when the college was embroiled with King James, and the
-courtly Quaker Penn had all the disturbed and troubled fellows under his
-heel; but now that freedom had returned with the revolution and the
-heaven-sent William, there was room for a double number of distinguished
-poor demies. Dr. Lancaster of Magdalen decided at once that to leave
-such Latinity as that of the young author of these verses to a college
-never very great in such gifts would be a sin against his own: and young
-Addison was accordingly elected to all the privileges of a Magdalen
-demyship. It is with this beautiful college that his name is connected
-in Oxford. There could be no more fit association. The noble trees and
-velvet lawns of Magdalen speckled with deer, shy yet friendly creatures
-that embellish the retired and silent glades--the long-winding walk by
-the Cherwell round the meadows where the fritillaries grow, the
-time-worn dignity of the place with its graceful old-world architecture
-and associations, are all in the finest keeping with the shy and silent
-student who talked so little and thought so much, living among his books
-in his college rooms, keeping his lamp alight half through the night, or
-musing under the elms, where the little stream joins the greater. It is
-dreadful to think that in all probability Addison thought the imposing
-classicism of Queen’s, at which the cultivated scholar of to-day
-shudders, much finer than Magdalen: for he had no opinion of Gothic, and
-lamented the weakness, if not wickedness, of those mistaken ages which
-wasted ornament upon such antiquated forms; but at least he loved his
-retired promenade under the trees, with all its sweetness of primrose
-and thrush in spring, and the wonderful yellow sunsets over the floods
-in winter, and the pleasant illusions of the winding way. There the
-stranger may realize still in the quiet of the cloistered shades how the
-shy young student wandered in Addison’s Walk and pondered his verses,
-and formed the delicate wealth of speech which was to distinguish him
-from all his fellows. He spent about ten years in his college, first as
-a student and then as a fellow, in the position which, perhaps, is more
-ideal for a scholar than any other in Christendom. But the young man was
-not much more enlightened than the other young men of his age,
-notwithstanding his genius at Latin verses, and that still finer genius
-which had not as yet come to utterance. He wrote an “Account of the
-Greatest English Poets,” not much wiser than the school-boy essays of
-our own day which set Lord Tennyson and Mr. Browning down in their right
-places. Addison went further. He leaves out all mention of Shakspere,
-and speaks of Cowley as a “mighty genius.” He describes “the spacious
-times of great Elizabeth” as “a barbarous age,” amused by “Old Spenser”
-with “long-spun allegories” and “dull morals,” which have lost all power
-to charm an age of understanding. The youth, indeed, ran amuck among all
-the greatest names till we shiver at his temerity. But he knew better
-afterward; and, if he still condescended a little to his elders and
-betters, learned to love and comprehend them too.
-
-It would seem that he wavered for a time whether he should not take
-orders, a step necessary to retain his fellowship, and dedicate himself
-to the church, as was the wish of his father. It would have been
-entirely suitable to him one cannot but think; to his meditative mood,
-and shy temper, and high moral tone. He would have missed the humors of
-town, the coffee-houses, and the wits, and the vagaries of the beaus and
-belles; but with still a tenderer and more genial humor might have made
-his villagers live before us, and found out all the amusing follies of
-the knights and squires, which even in London town did not escape his
-smiling observation. The manner in which the question was decided is
-curiously characteristic of the age. That he was not himself inclined
-that way seems probable, since he bids his muse farewell after the
-fashion of the time, when this ending seemed imminent, with something
-like regret, and it is said that he distrusted his own fitness for the
-sacred office. At all events, the matter came to the ears of Charles
-Montague, afterward Lord Halifax, himself an elegant scholar, and at
-that time in office. Young Addison had addressed to him, on the occasion
-of the Peace of Ryswick in 1697, one of those pieces of Latin verse for
-which the young man was known among the scholars of his time. He
-accompanied the gift with a letter couched in the hyperbole of the age,
-deprecating his patron’s possible disapproval of “the noble subject
-debased by my numbers,” and justifying himself by the poverty of the
-verses already published on the same theme. “For my part,” he says, “I
-never could prevail on myself to offer you a poem written in our native
-tongue, since you yourself deter all others by your own Compositions
-from such an Attempt, as much as you excite them by your Favour and
-Humanity.” Montague returned this compliment by interfering in the young
-poet’s concerns as soon as he heard of the danger that so promising a
-youth might fall into the gulf of the church, and be lost to the other
-kinds of work more useful to statesmen. He wrote to the authorities of
-Magdalen begging that Addison might not be urged into holy orders, and
-in the mean time took more active measures to secure him for the state.
-Lord Somers had also received the dedication of some of Addison’s
-verses, and was equally interested in the young man’s career. Between
-them the two statesmen secured for him a pension of three hundred a
-year, on no pretense of work to be done or duty fulfilled, but merely
-that he might be able to prepare himself the better for the public
-service, and be thus at hand and ready when his work was wanted. Public
-opinion has risen up nowadays against any such arrangement, and much
-slighter efforts at patronage would be denounced now over all England as
-a job. And yet one wonders whether it was so profitless a proceeding as
-we think it. Addison was worth more than the money to England. To be
-sure, without the money he would still have been Addison; yet something,
-no doubt, of the mellow sweetness of humanity in him was due to this
-fostering of his youth.
-
-He went abroad in 1699, and addressed himself in the first place to the
-learning of French, which he did slowly at Blois, without apparently
-gaining much enlightenment as to the state of France or the other
-countries which he visited in his prolonged tour. No doubt, with his
-pension and the income of his fellowship, Addison traveled like a young
-man of fortune and fashion in those times of leisure, with excellent
-introductions everywhere, seeing the best society, and the greatest men
-both in rank and letters. Boileau admired his Latin verses as much as
-the English statesmen did, and the young man went upon his way more and
-more convinced that Latin verses were the highroad to fame. From France
-he went to Italy, making a classical pilgrimage. “Throughout,” says Mr.
-Leslie Stephen, quaintly, “if we are to judge by his narrative, he seems
-to have considered the scenery as designed to illustrate his beloved
-poets.” The much-debated uses of travel receive a new question from the
-records of such a journey, pursued with the fullest leisure and under
-the best auspices; and one wonders whether the man who hurries across a
-continent in a few weeks, catching flying impressions, and forming crude
-judgments, is, after all, much less advantaged than he who, oblivious of
-all the human interests around him, discusses Rome, for instance, as if
-it had no interest later than Martial or Silius Italicus--as if neither
-Church, nor Pope, nor all the convulsions of the Middle Ages, nor
-Crusader, nor Jesuit, had ever been. This extraordinary impoverishment
-of the imagination was the fashion of the time, just as it has been the
-fashion in other days to fix upon the vile records of the Renaissance as
-the one thing interesting in the history of a noble country. According
-to that fashion, however, Addison did everything that a young man of the
-highest culture could be expected to do. He traced the footsteps of
-Æneas, and remembered every spot on which a classical battle had been
-fought, or an ode sung. He wrote an eloquent essay upon medals, and
-lingered among the sculptures of the museums; and he picked up a subject
-for a heroic tragedy from the suggestion of a foolish play which he saw
-at a Venetian theater. With his head full of such themes, he had gone
-out from Oxford, and with a deepened sense of their importance he came
-back again. Though in after days he touches lightly with his satiric
-dart the young man who can talk of nothing better on his return than how
-“he had like to have been drowned at such a place; how he fell out of a
-chaise at another”; yet in the hymn of praise with which he celebrates
-his own return from all the dangers of foreign travel something like the
-same record is made, though in a more imposing manner:
-
- In foreign Realms and Lands remote,
- Supported by thy care,
- Thro’ burning Climes I passed unhurt,
- And breath’d in Tainted Air.
- Thy mercy sweetened every Soil,
- Made every Region please,
- The hoary Alpine Hills it warmed,
- And smooth’d the Tyrrhene Seas.
-
-[Illustration: JOSEPH ADDISON.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JEAN SIMON, AFTER PAINTING
-BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.]
-
-It is only the vulgarity of our modern imagination that makes us think
-of hot water-pipes when the idea of warming the Alps is presented to our
-profane minds. The burrowing of the railway that climbs the St. Gothard
-may be taken as a large contribution to the carrying out of this
-suggestion.
-
-When Addison returned home after these four years of classical
-wanderings, it was to prospects sadly overcast. King William had died a
-year before, which had stopped his pension; Halifax was out of office,
-and all the hopes of public life, for which he had been training
-himself, seemed to drop as he came back. It is said that during the last
-year he had charge of a pupil; but there is no proof of the statement,
-nor has any pupil ever been identified by name. An offer was made to him
-to accompany upon his travels a son of the Duke of Somerset, his
-services to be paid by the present of a hundred guineas at the year’s
-end, which did not seem to Addison an advantageous offer: but this,
-which came to nothing, is the only authentic reference to any possible
-“bear-leading” such as Thackeray refers to in “Esmond”; and fine as is
-the sketch made by that kindred humorist, he seems to exaggerate at once
-the poverty and the neglect into which for the moment Addison fell.
-
-He returned to England in 1703, being then thirty-one, full of every
-accomplishment, but with only his fellowship to depend upon, and the
-uncertain chances of Jacob Tonson’s favor instead of the king’s. He is
-said to have sunk, or rather risen, to a poor lodging in London, in the
-Haymarket, up three pairs of stairs, which was indeed a sad change from
-the importance of his position as a rich young Englishman making the
-grand tour. But if he carried a disappointed or despondent heart to
-those elevated quarters, he never made any moan on the subject, and it
-is very likely enjoyed his freedom and the happy sense of being at home
-like other young men; and he seems to have been at once advanced to the
-membership of the Kit-Cat Club, which would supply him with the finest
-of company, and a center for the life which otherwise must have appeared
-as if it had come to a broken end. It was not long, however, that this
-period of neglect was suffered to last, and once more the transaction
-which elevated Addison to the sphere in which he passed the rest of his
-life is admirably characteristic of the period, and alas! profoundly
-unlike anything that could happen to a young man of genius now.
-
-We will not return again to any bewildering discussion of the Whigs and
-Tories of Queen Anne, but only say that Godolphin and Marlborough, those
-“great twin brethren” of the state, had come into possession of England
-at this great crisis, and that every means by which they could secure
-the suffrages of both parties were doubly necessary, considering the
-disappointment on one side that the policy of the country remained
-unchanged, and on the other that it had to be carried out by Whig, not
-Tory, hands. Nothing could be better adapted than the great victory of
-Blenheim to arouse an outburst of national feeling, and sweep, for a
-time at least, the punctilios of party away. The lord treasurer, who had
-everything in his hands at home, while his great partner fought and
-conquered abroad, was almost comically at a loss how to sound the
-trumpet of warlike success so as to excite the country, and, if
-possible, turn the head of the discontented. In one of Leopardi’s fables
-there is an account of the tremendous catastrophe with which the world
-was threatened when his illustrious excellency the Sun declined one
-morning to rise and tread his old-world course around the earth for the
-comfort of mankind. “Let her in her turn go round me if she wants my
-warmth and light,” says the potentate--with great reason, it must be
-allowed, since Copernicus was born, and everything in the celestial
-spheres was about to be set right. But how to persuade the earth that
-she must now undertake this circuit? Let a poet be found to do it is
-the first suggestion. “La via più spedita è la più sicura è di trovare
-un poeta ovvero un filosofo che persuada alla Terra di muoversi.”
-Godolphin found himself in the same position as that in which the
-luckless agencies of the Universe were left when the Sun struck work. A
-poet!--but where to find a poet he knew not, being himself addicted to
-other modes of exercise and entertainment. He went to Halifax to ask
-where he should find what was wanted--a poet. But that statesman was coy
-and held back. He could, indeed, produce the very man; but why should he
-interfere to betray neglected merit and induce a man of genius to labor
-for those who would leave him to perish in obscurity? Godolphin,
-however, was ready to promise anything in the great necessity of the
-case; and Halifax permitted himself to be persuaded to mention the name
-which no doubt was bursting from his lips. He would not, however,
-undertake to be the ambassador, but insisted that the real possessors of
-power should ask in their own persons, and with immediate and
-substantial proofs of their readiness to recompense the service they
-demanded. That day, all blazing in gold lace and splendor, the coach of
-the chancellor of the exchequer stopped before the little shop in the
-Haymarket over which the young scholar had his airy abode: and that
-great personage clambered up the long flights of stairs carrying with
-him, very possibly, the patent of the appointment which was an earnest
-of what the powers that were could do for Addison. This was how the
-great poem of the “Campaign,” that illustrious composition, was brought
-into being. Poems made to order seldom fulfil expectation, but in this
-case there was no disappointment. Godolphin and England alike were
-delighted, and Addison’s life and success were at once secured.
-
-No one now, save as an illustration of history, would think of reading
-the “Campaign,” though most readers are familiar with the famous simile
-which dazzled a whole generation:
-
- ’T was there great Marlborough’s mighty soul was proved,
- That in the shock of charging hosts unmoved,
- Amidst confusion, horror, and despair
- Examined all the dreadful scenes of war,
- In powerful thought the field of death surveyed,
- To fainting squadrons sent the timely aid,
- Inspired repulsed battalions to engage,
- And taught the doubtful battle where to rage.
- So when an angel by Divine command
- With rising tempest shakes a guilty land,
- Such as of late o’er pale Britannia past,
- Calm and serene he drives the furious blast;
- And, pleased the Almighty’s orders to perform,
- Rides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.
-
-Macaulay points out with much felicity how the fact of the Great
-Storm--so called in English history--which had passed over England in
-the previous year, and was yet full in the memory of all, gave strength
-and meaning to this famous simile, which at once opened to Addison the
-gates of fortune and of fame. Two years after he was promoted to be one
-of the undersecretaries of state, and from that time languished no more
-in the cold shade of obscurity where Halifax had upbraided the
-Government for leaving him. He was not a man born to linger there. Shy
-though he was, and little apt to put himself forward, this favorite of
-the muses--to use the phraseology of his time--was also the favorite of
-fortune. Everything that he touched throve with him. The gifts he
-possessed were all especially adapted to the requirements of his time.
-At no other period, perhaps, in history did the rulers of the country
-bethink themselves of a poet as the auxiliary most necessary: and his
-age was the only one that relished poetry of Addison’s kind.
-
-This event brought more than mere prosperity to the fortunate young man.
-If he had been already of note enough to belong to the Kit-Cat Club,
-with what a blaze of modest glory would he now appear--not swelling in
-self-conceit, like so many of the wits; not full of silent passion, like
-the strange big Irish clergyman who pushed into the chattering company
-in the coffee-house and astounded them with his masterful and arrogant
-ways: but always modest--never heard at all in a large company, opening
-out a little when the group dispersed, and an audience fit but few
-gathered around him--but with one companion _half_ divine. The one
-companion by and by became often that very same Irishman whose silent
-prowl about the room in which he knew nobody had amused all the luckier
-members. Swift found himself in a kind of coffee-house paradise when he
-got Addison alone, and the two took their wine together, spending their
-half-crowns according to the stranger’s thrifty record, and wishing for
-no third. They were as unlike as could be conceived in every particular,
-and yet what company they must have been, as they sat together, the wine
-going a little too freely--though Swift was always temperate, and
-Addison, notwithstanding that common peccadillo, the most irreproachable
-of men! It was then that the “Travels in Italy” were published, while
-still the fame of the “Campaign” was warm; and Addison gave his new
-friend a copy inscribed to “Jonathan Swift, the most Agreeable
-Companion, the Truest Friend, and the Greatest Genius of his Age.” What
-quick understanding, what recognition as of two who had been born to
-know each other! They were both in their prime--Swift thirty-eight,
-Addison five years younger, still young enough to hope for everything
-that can befall a man; the one fully entered upon the path of fortune,
-the other surely so much nearer it for being thus received and welcomed.
-Addison gave “his little senate laws” for many years in these convivial
-meetings, and all who surrounded him adored him. But Swift was never
-again so close a member of the little company. Politics, and the curious
-part which the Irish parson took in them, separated him from the
-consistent and moderate politician, who acted faithfully with his party,
-and who was always true whoever might be false. But Swift held fast to
-Addison so far at least as feeling was concerned. Over and over he
-repeated the sentiment, that “if he had a mind to be king he would
-hardly be refused.” Their meetings ceased, and all those outflowings of
-wit and wisdom, and the talk long into the night which was the most
-delightful thing in life; but for years after Swift still continued to
-say that there was nothing his friend might not be if he would: that his
-election was carried without a word of opposition when every other
-member had to fight for his life, and that he might be king in Ireland,
-or anywhere else, had he the mind. They were used to terms of large
-applause in those days, but to no one else did it take this particular
-form.
-
-In 1708 Addison lost his post as under-secretary by a change of the
-ministry, or rather of the minister, it being the habit in those days to
-form a government piecemeal, a Whig here, a Tory there, as favor or
-circumstances required, so that it was by no means needful that all
-should go out or come in together. In fact, no sooner was the
-under-secretary deprived of one place than he obtained another, that of
-secretary to the lord lieutenant of Ireland, the same office, we
-presume, as that which is now called chief secretary for Ireland, though
-its seriousness and power are now so much greater. In those days there
-was no Irish people to deal with, but only a very lively, contentious,
-pushing, and place-hunting community--the Protestant English-Irish,
-which, so far as literature and public knowledge go, has been accepted
-as the type of the much darker and less simple character of the Celt.
-The wild, mystic, morose, and often cruel nature of the native race,
-with its gleams of poetry and dreams of fortune, has turned out a very
-different thing to reckon with. No such problem was presented to the
-statesmen of that time. The admixture of Irish blood would seem to go to
-the head of the Saxon and endow him with a gaiety and sparkle which does
-not exist either in one race or the other unmixed; and it was with the
-society formed on this basis, the ascendant minority, contemptuous of
-every possible power of the people so-called, yet far less unsympathetic
-than the anxious politicians of to-day, that Addison had to deal. His
-post was “very lucrative,” we are told--in fees and pieces of patronage,
-no doubt, for the income was but £2000 a year--and he soon acquired an
-even greater popularity on the one side of the channel than on the
-other. Something amiable and conciliatory must have rayed out of the
-man: otherwise it is curious to understand the popularity in brilliant
-and talkative Dublin of a stranger whose chief efforts in conversation
-were only to be accomplished _tête-a-tête_. But he had the foil of a
-detestable and detested chief--Wharton, whose corrupt and brutal
-character gave double acceptance to the secretary’s charm and goodness,
-and the Tories contended with the Whigs, says Swift, which should speak
-best of this favorite of fortune. “How can you think so meanly of a
-kingdom,” he exclaims, “as not to be pleased that every creature in it
-who hath one grain of worth has a veneration for you?” It is not often
-that even in hyperbole such a thing can be said.
-
-It was while Addison was in Ireland thus gathering golden opinions that
-an event occurred which was of the utmost importance to his reputation,
-so far especially as posterity was concerned. Among the little band of
-friends over whom he held a kind of genial sway, and who acknowledged
-his superiority with boundless devotion, was one who was more nearly his
-equal than any other of the band; a friend of youth, one of those
-erratic but generous natures whose love of excellence is almost
-rapturous, though they are unable themselves to keep up to the high
-level they approve. Steele can never be forgotten where Addison is
-honored. He had been at Charterhouse and at Oxford along with his
-friend, and no doubt it was a wonder among the reading men in their
-earlier days how it was that the correct, the polished, the
-irreproachable scholar of Magdalen, with his quiet ways, could put up
-with that gay scapegrace who was perpetually in trouble. Such alliances,
-however, have not been rare. The cheerful, careless Dick, full of
-expedients, full of animal spirits, always amusing, friendly, generous
-in his impulses, if unintentionally selfish in the constant breaches of
-his better meaning, must have had a charm for the steadier and purer
-nature which was formed with pulses more orderly. No doubt Steele’s
-perpetual self-revelation, his unfolding of a hundred quips and cranks
-of human nature, and unsuspicious rendering up of all his natural
-anomalies and contradictions to the instinctive spectatorship of his
-amused companion, helped to endear him to the humorist, who must have
-laughed till he cried on many an occasion over poor Dick’s amazing
-wisdoms and follies, without any breach of that indulgent affection
-which between two men who have grown up together can rarely be said to
-be mingled with anything so keen as contempt. Steele, it is evident,
-must have known Addison “at home,” as school-boys say, or he could not
-have made that little sketch of the household where brothers and sisters
-were taught to be so loving to each other. While the young hero who had,
-as in the favorite allegories of the time, chosen the right path, and
-taken the steady hand of Minerva, instead of that more lovely one of
-fatal Venus to guide him, was reaching the heights of applause and good
-fortune, the unlucky youth who chose pleasure for his pursuit had gone
-disastrously the other way, and fallen into all sorts of adventures,
-extremely amusing for his friend to hear of, though he disapproved, and
-no doubt very amusing to the actual actor in them, though he suffered.
-But Addison was not a mere “spectator” so far as the friend of his youth
-was concerned. When he began to rise there seems little reason to doubt
-that he pulled Steele up with him, introducing him to the notice of the
-fine people, who in those days might make the fortune of a gentlemanly
-and clever adventurer, and that either by his own interest or that of
-one of his powerful friends he procured him a place and started him in
-public life. Steele had already floated into literature, and, whether it
-is true or not that Addison helped him in the concoction of one play at
-least, it is clear that he kept his purse and his heart well open to his
-friend, now a man about town ruffling at the coffee-houses with the
-best, and full of that energy and readiness which so often strike out
-new ways of working, though it may require steadier heads to carry them
-out.
-
-It was, however, while Addison was in Ireland that Steele was moved by
-the most important of these original impulses, an idea full, as it
-proved, of merit and practical use. Journalism was then in its infancy.
-A little “News Letter,” or “Flying Post”--a shabby broadsheet containing
-the bulletin of a battle, a formal and brief notice of parliamentary
-proceedings, an account of some monstrous birth, a child with two heads,
-or that perennial gooseberry which has survived into our own time--and
-an elaborate list of births, deaths, and marriages, was almost all that
-existed in the way of public record. The post to which Steele had been
-appointed was that of Gazetteer, which naturally led him to the
-consideration of such matters: and among the crowd of projects which
-worked together in his “barmy noddle,” there suddenly surged uppermost
-the idea of a paper which should come out on the post days, the
-Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays which were, up to that time, the only
-days of communication with the country; a paper written after the fancy
-of the time, in itself a letter from the wits and the knowing persons
-in town, revealing not only the existing state of public affairs, but
-all those exquisite particulars of society which have always been the
-delight of country circles, and which were doubly sure to please at a
-time when society was governed by talk, when all public criticism was
-verbal, and the echoes of the wits in the coffee-houses were blown about
-on all the breezes. Happy the Sir Harry who, sitting mum over his wine
-in a corner, could hear these gentlemen discussing what Sunderland or
-Somers had said, what my Lord Treasurer intended, or, more delightful,
-the newest incident in the tragedy-comedy of the great duchess--how the
-queen looked glumly at her over the card-table, or let her stand
-unnoticed at a drawing-room; and still more deeply blest the parson who
-had Mr. Addison pointed out to him, and heard the young Templars and
-scholars pressing him with questions as to when his “Cato” was coming
-out, or asking his opinion on a set of verses. Such worthies would go
-back to the country full of these reflections from the world, and tell
-how the gallants laughed at the mantua which was going out of fashion,
-and made fun of the red heels which, perhaps, were just then appearing
-at the Manor or the Moated Grange. Steele saw at once what a thing it
-would be to convey these impressions at first hand in a privileged
-“Tatler” direct to the houses of the gentry all over the country.
-Perhaps he did not perceive at first what a still finer thing to have
-them served up with the foaming chocolate or fragrant tea at every
-breakfast in Mayfair.
-
-It is an idea that has occurred to a great many heads since with less
-success. In these latter days there have been many literary adventurers,
-to whom the starting of a new paper has seemed an opening into El
-Dorado. But the opening in the majority of cases does not prove a
-practicable one--for, in fact, there is no longer any need of news; and
-the concise little essays and elegant banterings of those critics of the
-time have fallen out of date. News means in our day an elaborate
-system, and instantaneous reports from all the world; and one London
-newspaper--far more one of the gigantic journals proper to
-America--contains as much matter as half a hundred “Tatlers.” One
-wonders, if Addison’s genius, and the light hand of Steele, and Swift’s
-tremendous and scathing humor could be conjured up again, whether such a
-production, with its mingled thread of the finest sentiments and the
-pettiest subjects, metaphysics and morals, and the “Eneid” and “Paradise
-Lost,” and periwigs and petticoats, would find sufficient acceptance
-with “the fair” and the wise to keep it afloat, or would still go up to
-sages and fine ladies with their breakfast trays.
-
-It was on the immediate foundation of one of Swift’s savage _jeux
-d’esprits_ that the new undertaking was begun, a mystification which
-greatly amused the wits then, but which does not, perhaps, appear
-particularly delightful now. Swift had been seized by a freak of
-mischief in respect to a certain Partridge, an astrologer, who made an
-income out of the public by pretended revelations of the future, as is
-still done, we believe, among those masses, beneath the ascertained
-audience of literature, who spend their sixpences at Christmas upon
-almanacs and year-books containing predictions of what is to happen. It
-occurred to Swift in some merry moment to emulate and to doom the Merlin
-of the day: and with the prodigious gravity which characterizes his
-greatest jests he wrote “Predictions for the year 1708,” in which, among
-many other things, he announced that he had consulted the stars on
-behalf of Partridge, and had ascertained that the wizard would certainly
-die on March 29, at eleven o’clock at night, of a raging fever. The
-reader will probably remember that the jest was kept up, and that,
-notwithstanding Partridge’s protest that he was not dead at all, Isaac
-Bickerstaff insisted on asserting that his prophecy had been fulfilled,
-to the grave confusion of various serious affairs, and the
-inextinguishable laughter of the wits. It was not a pretty jest, but it
-brought into being a visionary critic of public matters, a new personage
-in the literary world, in whom other wits saw capabilities. Steele in
-particular perceived that Isaac Bickerstaff was just the personality he
-wanted, and therewith proceeded to make of that shadowy being the Mentor
-of the time. The design was excellent, the immediate execution cleverly
-adapted to seize the interest of the public, which had been already
-amused and mystified under that name. Mr. Isaac Bickerstaff presented
-his readers with the first number of his journal without charge. “I
-earnestly desire,” he says, “all persons, without distinction, to take
-it in for the present _gratis_, and hereafter at the price of one penny,
-forbidding all hawkers to take more for it at their peril.” The idea
-took the town. No doubt there would be many an allusion to this and that
-which the wits would guess at, and which would to them have a double
-meaning; but, to do the “Tatler” justice, the kind of gossip which fills
-the so-called society newspapers in our day was unknown to the witty
-gentlemen who sometimes satirize a ruffle or a shoe-tie, but never
-personally a woman. The types of fine ladies who flutter through his
-pages could never raise a pang in any individual bosom; and when he
-addressed himself to the reform of the theater, to the difficult duty of
-checking play and discouraging duels, he had all the well-thinking on
-his side.
-
-Steele had gone on for some numbers before his new venture attracted the
-attention of Addison. He recognized whose the hand was from a classical
-criticism in the sixth number which he had himself made to Steele; and
-he must have been pleased with the idea, since he soon after appears as
-a coadjutor, sending his contributions from the Secretary’s office in
-Dublin. There has been a great and prolonged controversy upon the
-respective merits of these two friends: some, and first among them
-Macaulay, will have it that Addison had all the merit of the
-publication. “Almost everything good in the ‘Tatler’ was his,” says the
-historian. But there are many who, despite Macaulay’s great authority,
-find a certain difficulty in distinguishing Addison from Steele and
-Steele from Addison, and are inclined to find the latter writer as
-entertaining and as gifted as the former. No question could be more
-difficult to settle. As we glance over the little gray volumes which
-bring back to us dimly the effect which the little broadsheet must have
-had when it appeared day by day, there is no doubt that the eye is
-oftenest caught by something which, when we look again, proves to be
-from Addison’s hand. We open, it is by chance, and yet not altogether by
-chance, upon Tom Folio and his humors; upon the poor poet and his
-verses; upon some group of shabby heroes, or stumbling procession of
-country gentlemen which there is no mistaking. But on the other hand it
-is Steele who gives us that family picture, which reads like the Vicar
-of Wakefield, yet with a more tender touch (for Mrs. Primrose was never
-her husband’s equal), showing us the good woman among her family, the
-husband half distracted with the fear of losing her, the wife for his
-sake smiling her paleness away. Indeed, we think, in these early essays
-at least, it would be a mistake for the critic to risk his reputation on
-the superiority of Addison. He set up no higher standard than that which
-his friend had raised, but fell into the same humor, adding his
-contribution of social pictures with less force of moral generally, and
-more delicacy of workmanship, but no remarkable preëminence. The
-character of the publication changed gradually as the great new pen came
-into it; but whether by Addison’s influence or by the mere action of
-time, and a sense of what suited the audience he had obtained--which a
-soul so sympathetic as Steele’s would naturally divine with
-readiness--no one can tell. Gradually the news which at first had
-regularly filled a column dropped away. It had been, no doubt, well
-authenticated news, the freshest and best, as it came from the
-authorized hand of the Gazetteer; but either Steele got tired of
-supplying it, or a sense of the inexpediency of publishing anything
-which might displease his patrons and the government, convinced him that
-it was unnecessary. It is scarcely possible, either, to tell why the
-“Tatler” came to an end. Mr. Austin Dobson, in his recent life of
-Steele, gives sundry reasons which do not seem, however, of any
-particular weight. Steele’s own account is that he had become known, and
-his warnings and lessons were thus made of no avail:
-
- I considered [he says] that severity of manners was absolutely
- necessary to him who would censure others, and for that reason and
- that only chose to talk in a mask. I shall not carry my humility so
- far as to call myself a vicious man, but at the same time confess
- my life is at best but pardonable. And with no greater character
- than this a man could make an indifferent progress in attacking
- prevailing and fashionable vices, which Mr. Bickerstaff has done
- with a freedom of spirit that would have lost both its beauty and
- efficacy had it been pretended to by Mr. Steele.
-
-This reason is, however,--though pretty and just enough had its writer
-renounced the trade,--a somewhat fantastic one when we reflect that
-though the “Tatler” ended in January, 1711, the “Spectator” began in
-March of the same year. The one died only to be replaced by the other.
-It is said that Addison did not know of his friend’s intention to cut
-the “Tatler” short, and it was he who was the chief agent in beginning
-the “Spectator.” Therefore it may have been that the breach was but an
-impatience of Steele’s, which his slow and less impulsive and more
-constant comrade could not permanently consent to. No doubt Addison had
-by this time learned the advantage of such a mode of utterance, and felt
-how entirely it suited his own manner of work and constitution of mind.
-The fictitious person of Isaac Bickerstaff was relinquished in the new
-series: it no longer assumed to give any news. Its contents were less
-varied, consisting generally of a single essay, and, notwithstanding the
-impression which the casual reader often has, and which some critics
-have largely dwelt upon, that the comments of this critic are upon the
-merest vanities of the time, the hoops, the gold-lace, the snuff-boxes,
-and patches of the period, it is astonishing how little space is
-actually taken up with these lighter details, and how many graver
-questions, how many fine sentiments and delicate situations, afford the
-moralist occasion for those remarks which he makes in the most beautiful
-and picturesque English to the edification of all the generations. There
-is, perhaps, no book which is so characteristic of an epoch in history,
-and none which gives so clear a conception of the English world of the
-time. We sit and look on, always amused, often instructed, while the
-delicate panorama unfolds before us--and see everything pass, the fine
-coaches, the gentlemen on foot, the parsons in their gowns, the young
-Templars jesting in the doorways: but always with the little monologue
-going on, which accompanies the movement, and runs off into a hundred
-byways of thought, sometimes serious, sometimes gay, often with no
-particular connection with the many-colored streams of passers-by, yet
-never obscuring our sight of them as they come and go. There is,
-perhaps, a noisy group at the door while Mr. Spectator talks, with their
-wigs in the last fashion, and their clouded canes hung to a button,
-while they discourse. In one corner there are some two or three grave
-gentlemen putting their heads together over the latest news; and in
-another the young fellows over their wine eager in discussion of Mrs.
-Oldfield and Mrs. Bracegirdle at the theater, or of Chloe and Clarissa,
-the reigning beauties of society; or perhaps it is a poet, poor Ned
-Softly, as the case may be, who is reading his last sonnet to his
-mistress’s eyebrow, amid the laughing commentaries or the ridicule of
-his companions. What is Mr. Spectator talking of all the while? His
-discourse does not prevent us hearing the impertinences of the others.
-Perhaps he is talking of honest love, a favorite theme of his, at which
-the wits do not dare to laugh in his presence,--or he is telling one of
-his fables, to which everybody in the midst of his levity or his
-business gives half an ear at least; or by a caprice he has turned aside
-to metaphysics, and is discussing the processes of the mind, and how “no
-thought can be beautiful that is not just”; how “’t is a property of
-the heart of man to be diffusive, its kind wishes spread abroad over the
-face of the creation,” and such like; not to speak of graver subjects
-still to which he will direct our minds on Saturdays, perhaps to prepare
-us for Sunday, when he is silent. Or he will read aloud a letter from
-some whimsical correspondent, which the wits will pause to hear, for
-gossip is ever sweet, but which before they know lands them in a case of
-hardship or trouble which touches their consciences and rouses their
-pity. Sometimes the hum of life will stop altogether and even Softly put
-his verses in his pocket to listen: and on the brink of tears the fine
-gentlemen, and we too along with them, incontinently burst out
-a-laughing at some touch that no one expected. But whether we laugh or
-cry, or are shamed in our levity, or diverted in our seriousness,
-outside the windows the crowd is always streaming on. There is no
-separating the “Spectator” from the lively, crowded, troublous, and
-perplexing scenes upon which all his reflections are made. The young
-lady looking out of her coach--at sight of whom all the young fellows
-doff their hats and make their comments, how much her fortune is, who is
-in pursuit of her, or if any mud has yet been flung upon her--shows to
-the philosopher a face disturbed with all the puzzles of an existence
-which nobody will allow her to take seriously. The poor wit who
-endeavors so wistfully to amuse my lord in
-
-[Illustration: SIDNEY, EARL OF GODOLPHIN.
-
-ENGRAVED BY PETER AITKEN, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, IN BRITISH
-MUSEUM. PAINTED BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.]
-
-his dullness betrays to that critic not so much the soul of a toady, as
-that of the anxious father with children that starve at home. His young
-fellows, though they look so careless, have their troubles too. Wherever
-that keen eye turns another group shows through the crowd, or a lonely
-whimsical figure as distinct as if there was no one but he. Save perhaps
-on those Saturdays when he plays his soft accompaniment to Milton’s
-grand, sonorous organ he is never abstracted or retired from men: on all
-other occasions, though he is thinking of a great deal else, and has his
-mind absorbed in other themes, this busy world of which he forms a part
-is always with him. Sometimes he permits us to see him over their heads
-only, seated on his familiar bench at his table, from whence he delivers
-his homilies, with all these figures moving and re-moving on the busy
-pavement in the foreground; sometimes we are admitted inside, and watch
-them through open door and window by his side: but he is never to be
-parted from the society in which he finds his models, his subjects, his
-audience. Like other men he takes it for granted that the fashion of his
-contemporaries is to go on forever. For posterity that smiling, keen
-observer takes no thought.
-
-But of all things else that Addison has done there remains one
-preëminent figure which is his chief claim to immortality. The
-“Campaign” has disappeared out of literature; “Cato” is known only by a
-few well-known lines; the “Spectator” itself, though a work which no
-gentleman’s library can be without, dwells generally in dignified
-retirement there, and is seldom seen on any table but the student’s,
-though we are all supposed to be familiar with it: but Sir Roger de
-Coverley is the familiar friend of most people who have read anything at
-all, and the acquaintance by sight, if we may so speak, of everybody.
-There is no form better known in all literature. His simple rustic
-state, his modest sense of his own importance, his kind and genial
-patronage of the younger world, which would laugh at him if it were not
-overawed by his modesty and goodness, and which still sniggers in its
-sleeve at all those kind, ridiculous ways of his as he walks about in
-London, taken in on all sides, with his hand always in his purse and his
-heart in its right place, are always familiar and delightful. We learn
-with a kind of shock that it was Steele who first introduced this
-perfect gentleman to the world, and can only hope that it was Addison’s
-idea from the first, and that he did not merely snatch out of his
-friend’s hands and appropriate a conception so entirely according to his
-own heart. To Steele, too, we are indebted for some pretty scenes in the
-brief history: for Will the Huntsman’s wooing, which is the most
-delicate little enamel, and for the knight’s own love-making, which,
-however, is pushed a little too near absurdity. But it is Addison who
-leads him forth among his country neighbors, and to the assizes, and
-meets the gipsies with him, and brings him up to town, carrying him to
-Westminster and to Spring Gardens, in the wherry with the one-legged
-waterman, and to the play. The delightful gentleman is never finer than
-in this latter scene. He has to be conveyed in his coach, attended by
-all his servants, armed with “good oaken plants,” and Captain Sentry in
-the sword he had worn at Steinkirk, for fear of the Mohocks, those
-brutal disturbers of the public peace whom Addison justly feels it would
-be unbecoming to bring within sight of his noble old knight.
-
- As soon as the house was full and the candles lighted my old friend
- stood up and looked about him with that pleasure which a mind
- seasoned with humanity naturally feels in itself at the sight of a
- multitude of people who seem pleased with one another, and partake
- of the same common entertainment. I could not but fancy to myself
- as the old man stood up in the middle of the pit that he made a
- very proper centre to a tragick Audience. Upon the entering of
- Pyrrhus the Knight told me that he did not believe the King of
- France had a better strut. I was indeed very attentive to my old
- friend’s remarks because I looked upon them as a piece of natural
- criticism and was well pleased to hear him, at the conclusion of
- almost every scene, telling me that he could not imagine how the
- play would end; one while he appeared much concerned for
- Andromache, and a little while after as much for Hermione; and was
- extremely puzzled to know what would become of Pyrrhus. When Sir
- Roger saw Andromache’s obstinate refusal to her lover’s
- importunities, he whispered me in the ear that he was sure she
- would never have him; to which he added with a more than ordinary
- vehemence, “You can’t imagine, sir, what ’t is to have to do with a
- widow.” Upon Pyrrhus, his threatening afterwards to leave her, the
- Knight shook his head and murmured, “Ay! do it if you can.” This
- part dwelt so much upon my friend’s imagination that at the close
- of the third act, as I was thinking of something else, he whispered
- in my ear, “These widows, sir, are the most perverse creatures in
- the world. But pray,” says he, “you that are a critick, is this
- play according to your dramatick rules, as you call them? Should
- your People in Tragedy always talk to be understood? Why, there is
- not a single sentence in this play that I do not know the meaning
- of!”
-
- The fourth act very luckily began before I had time to give the old
- gentleman an answer. “Well,” says the Knight, sitting down with
- great satisfaction, “I suppose we are now to see Hector’s Ghost?”
- He then renewed his attention, and from time to time fell
- a-praising the widow. He made, indeed, a little mistake as to one
- of her pages, whom, at his first entering, he took for Astyanax;
- but we quickly set him right in that particular, though at the same
- time he owned he should have been very glad to see the little boy,
- who, says he, must needs be a very fine child by the account that
- is given of him.
-
-Could anything be more delightful than this genial picture? We have all
-met in later years a certain Colonel Newcome, who is very like Sir
-Roger, one of his descendants, though he died a bachelor. But the
-Worcestershire knight was the first of his lineage, and few are the
-gifted hands who have succeeded in framing men after his model. Those
-little follies which are so dear to us, the good faith which makes the
-young men laugh, yet feel ashamed of themselves for laughing, and all
-the circumstances of that stately simple life which are so different
-from anything we know, yet so lifelike and genuine, have grown into the
-imagination of the after-generations. We seem to know Sir Roger from
-our cradle, though we may never even have read the few chapters of his
-history. This is the one infallible distinction of genius above all
-commoner endowments. Of all the actors in that stirring time Sir Roger
-remains the most living and real. The queen and her court are no more
-than shadows moving across the historic stage. Halifax, and Somers, and
-Harley, and even the great Bolingbroke, what are they to us? Figures
-confused and uncertain, that appear and disappear in one combination or
-another, so that our head aches in the effort to follow, to identify, to
-make sure what the intrigues and the complications mean. But we have no
-difficulty in recollecting all about Sir Roger. We would not have the
-old man mocked at any more than Mr. Addison would, but kiss his kind old
-hand as we smile at those little foibles which are all ingratiating and
-delightful. In that generation, with all its wars and successes, there
-was, perhaps, no such gain as Sir Roger. Marlborough’s victories made
-England feared and respected, but cost the country countless treasure,
-and gave her little advantage; the good knight cost nobody anything, and
-made all the world the richer. He is one of those inhabitants who never
-grow old or pass away, and he gives us proof undeniable that when we
-speak of a corrupt and depraved age, as we have reason to do, we have
-still nobler reason for believing--as the despairing prophet was taught
-by God himself in far older times: that however dark might be the
-prospect there were still seven thousand men in Israel who had never
-bowed the knee to Baal--what we learn over again, thank Heaven! from
-shining example everywhere, that there are always surviving the seed of
-the just, the salt of the earth, by whose silent agency, and pure love,
-and honest truth, life is made practicable and the world rolls on.
-
-Sir Roger is the great point of the “Spectator,” as the “Spectator” is
-the truest history of the time. It contains, however, beside, much that
-is admirable and entertaining, as well as a good deal that was
-temporary, and is now beyond the fashion of our understanding, or, at
-least, of our appreciation. Addison’s criticism, or rather exposition,
-of Milton, which no doubt taught his age a far more general regard for
-that great poet, is well enough known, but yet not nearly so well known
-as Sir Roger, and not necessary now as it was then. When these
-criticisms began it is evident that Addison, as well as his friend
-Steele, had made a great advance from the time when the young Oxford
-scholar left Shakspere out of his reckoning altogether, and considered
-“Old Spenser” only fit to amuse a barbarous age. Though the balance of
-things had not been redressed throughout the English world, yet these
-scholars had come to perceive that the greatness of their predecessors
-had been, perhaps, a little mixed up; that Cowley was not so mighty a
-genius as their boyhood believed, and that there were figures as of gods
-behind which it was shame to have misconceived. Throughout all, the
-meaning was wholesome, and tended toward the elevation of the time.
-Steele had it specially at heart to discourage gambling, and to put down
-the hateful tyranny of the duel. And both writers used all their powers
-to improve and raise the character of theatrical representations,
-keeping a watch not only over the plays that were performed, but also
-over the manners of the audience, who crowded the stage so that the
-players could scarcely be seen, and played cards in their boxes, and
-used the public entertainment for their own private quarrels and
-assignations. It is curious, too, to note how these authorities regarded
-the opera, the new form of amusement which had pushed its way, against
-all the prejudices of the English, into fashion. Addison himself,
-indeed, wrote an opera which was not successful; but he did not love
-that new-fangled entertainment. He devotes two or three numbers to the
-description of it, for, says he, “There is no question our grandchildren
-will be very anxious to know the reason why their forefathers used to
-sit together like an audience of foreigners in their own country, and to
-hear whole plays acted before them in a tongue which they did not
-understand.” It is evident by this that his age had not reached to the
-further sublimity of believing that when the utterance is musical there
-is no need of understanding at all. “One scarce knows how to be
-serious,” he adds, “in the confutation of an absurdity that shows itself
-at the first sight. It does not want any great measure of sense to see
-the ridicule of this monstrous practice. If the Italians have a genius
-for music above the English, the English have a genius for other
-performances of a much higher nature, and capable of giving the mind a
-much nobler entertainment.” We wonder if our “Spectator” would be less
-affronted now by the constant adaptation of equivocal French plays to
-the English stage, than by the anomaly of a representation given in
-language which nobody understood? He would, perhaps, feel it to be an
-advantage often not to understand, and doubt whether the English after
-all “have a genius for other performances of a much higher nature.”
-
-We are not informed that the “Tatler” and “Spectator,” the real
-foundation of his fame, gave Addison any help in his career. That was
-assured by the “Campaign.” He received his first post, that of “a
-commissionership with £200 a year,” at once, in the end of 1704: his
-pension having ceased at King William’s death in 1702: the interval is
-not a very long one, and during this time he had retained his college
-fellowship. In 1706 he became under-secretary. In 1708, his chief, Lord
-Sunderland, was dismissed, and Addison along with him; but the latter
-stepped immediately into the Irish secretaryship, which was worth £2000
-a year. Two years afterward occurred the political convulsions brought
-about by the trial of Sacheverell and the intrigues of the back stairs,
-which brought Harley into power, and Addison with his leaders was once
-more out of office; but in 1714 they came triumphantly back, and he rose
-to the height of political elevation as secretary of state with a seat
-in the Cabinet. Though he did not retain this position long on account
-of his failing health, he retired on a pension of £1500 a year. In 1711,
-at a period when he was supposed to be at a low ebb of fortune, in the
-cold shade of political opposition, he was able to buy the estate of
-Bilton, near Rugby, for which he paid £10,000--which is not bad for a
-moment of misfortune. Altogether Addison was provided for as the
-deserving and honorable hero--the wise youth of one of his own
-allegories, the good apprentice--should be, by poetic justice, but is
-not always in the experience of the world. The success of the
-“Spectator,” however, which was more his than Steele’s (as the “Tatler”
-had been much more Steele’s than Addison’s), was apparently very
-considerable; Addison himself says, in an early number, that it had
-reached the circulation of three thousand copies a day. On a special
-occasion fourteen thousand copies are spoken of; and the passing of the
-Stamp Act, which destroyed many of the weaker publications of the time,
-did comparatively little harm to the “Spectator,” which doubled its
-price without much diminishing its popularity. It had also what no other
-daily, and very few periodicals of any time, ever reach, the advantage
-of a permanent issue afterward, in a succession of volumes, of which the
-first edition seems to have reached an issue of ten thousand copies.
-Fortunate writers! pleasant public! The “Times,” and the rest of our
-great newspapers, boast a circulation beyond that which the eighteenth
-century could have dreamed of; and thirty years ago it was the fashion
-among public orators more indebted to genius than education--Mr. Cobden
-for one, and, we think, Mr. John Bright--to say that the leading
-articles of that day were more than equal to Thucydides and all the
-other writers of whom classical scholars made their boast. But we
-wonder how the “Times” leaders would read collected into a volume,
-against those little dingy books (tobacco paper, as a contemporary says)
-with all their wisdom and their wit. “I will not meddle with the
-‘Spectator,’” says Swift to Stella, “let him _fair sex_ it to the
-world’s end.” And so he has, at least so far as the world has yet
-advanced toward that undesirable conclusion.
-
-The “Spectator” ended with the year 1712, having existed less than two
-years. Whether the authors had found their audience beginning to fail,
-or their inspiration, or had considered it wise (as is most likely) to
-forestall the possibility of either catastrophe, we are not informed.
-Almost immediately after the conclusion of this greatest undertaking of
-his life, Addison plunged into what probably appeared to the weakness of
-contemporary vision a much greater undertaking, the production of his
-tragedy “Cato,” which made a commotion in town such as few plays did
-even at that period. It was partly as a political movement, to stir up
-the patriotism and love of liberty which were supposed to be failing
-under the dominion of the Tories, suspected of all manner of evil
-designs, that his Whig friends urged Addison to bring out the great play
-which had been simmering in his brain since his travels, and which had
-no doubt been read in detached acts and pieces of declamation to all his
-literary friends. These friends had received several additions in the
-mean time, especially in the person of Pope, who was still young enough
-to be proud of Addison’s notice, yet remarkable enough to be intrusted
-with the composition of a prologue to the great man’s work. Swift,
-notwithstanding the coldness which had ensued between them on his change
-of politics, was still sufficiently in Addison’s friendship to be
-present at a rehearsal, and the whole town on both sides was moved with
-excitement and expectation. On the first night, “our house,” says
-Cibber, “was in a manner invested and entrance demanded by twelve
-o’clock at noon; and before one it was not wide enough for many who came
-too late for their places.” The following account of its reception is
-given in a letter by Pope:
-
- The numerous and violent claps of the Whig party on the one side of
- the theatre were echoed back by the Tories on the other; while the
- author sweated behind the scenes with concern to find their
- applause proceeding more from the hand than the head. This was the
- case, too, with the Prologue-writer, who was clapped into a sound
- Whig at the end of every two lines. I believe you have heard that,
- after all the applause of the opposite faction, my lord Bolingbroke
- sent for Booth, who played _Cato_, into the box between one of the
- acts, and presented him with fifty guineas, in acknowledgment, as
- he expressed it, for defending the cause of liberty so well against
- a perpetual dictator. The Whigs are unwilling to be distanced this
- way, and therefore design a present to the same _Cato_ very
- speedily.
-
-Bolingbroke’s speech about a perpetual dictator was a gibe which
-everybody understood, directed against the devotion of the Whigs to
-Marlborough, and was quite honest warfare; but what, we wonder, would
-Mr. Irving think if Mr. Gladstone sent for him to his box, and
-“presented him with fifty guineas”? The actor who considers himself one
-of the most distinguished members of good society had not been thought
-of in those days. One wonders, too, in passing, where a fine gentleman
-kept his money, and whether the purse of the stage, which is always
-ready to be flung to a deserving object, was a reality in the days of
-Queen Anne? Fifty guineas is a somewhat heavy charge for the pocket;
-however, perhaps, Lord Bolingbroke had come specially provided, or he
-had a secretary handy who did not mind the bulging of his coat.
-
-Of this great tragedy, which turned the head of London, and which the
-two great political parties vied with each other in applauding, there
-are but a few lines virtually existing nowadays. To be sure, it is in
-print with the rest of Addison’s works, to be read by whosoever will;
-but very few avail themselves of that privilege.
-
- ’T is not in mortals to command success.
- But we ’ll do more, Sempronius; we ’ll deserve it
-
-is the chief relic, and that of a very prosaic common sense and familiar
-kind, which the great tragedy has left us. “Plato, thou reasonest well!”
-is another quotation, which is, perhaps, more frequently used in a
-jocular than serious sense. But for these scraps _Cato_ is as dead as
-most of his contemporaries; and we do not even remember the great
-tragedy when we hear the name of its author. We think, indeed, only of
-the “Spectator” if we have read a little in the literature of the
-period; but if we have no special tastes and studies that way, of Sir
-Roger de Coverley alone; for Sir Roger is Addison’s gift to his country
-and the world, the creation by which his name will always be known.
-
-The end of a man’s life is seldom so interesting as its beginning. After
-he has achieved all of which he is capable, our interest is more usually
-a sad than a cheerful one. Addison made in 1716 what seems to have been
-an ambitious marriage, though he was not the man, one would think, to
-care for the rank which gave his wife always a distinct personality and
-another name than his. The Countess of Warwick, however, was, it would
-appear, a beautiful woman. She had the charge of a troublesome boy, for
-whom, no doubt, she would be eager to have the advice of such a man as
-Mr. Addison, whom all the world respected and admired. The little house
-at Chelsea (the house was called Sandford Manor House, and was some
-years ago figured against its present doleful background of gasometers,
-in the _Century_) which that statesman had acquired, and where he
-delighted to withdraw from the noise and contention of town, was within
-reach through the fields of Holland House, the residence of Lady
-Warwick. They had known each other for years, and Addison had written
-exquisite little letters to the boy-earl--no doubt with intentions upon
-the heart of the mother, to which, as is well known, that method is a
-very successful way--long before. It was, Dr. Johnson says, a long and
-anxious courtship; and perhaps--who knows?--when Steele performed that
-picture of the beloved knight sitting silent before the two fine ladies
-and unable to articulate the desires of his honest heart, it was some
-similar performance of the shy man of genius who found utterance with
-such difficulty, which was in Dick’s mind. But perhaps Addison grew
-bolder when he was a secretary of state. The great Mr. Addison, the
-delightful “Spectator,” the author of “Cato,” the man whose praises were
-in everybody’s mouth, and whom Whig and Tory delighted to honor, was no
-insignificant fine gentleman for a lady of rank to stoop to; and finally
-those evening walks over the fields, and pleasant rural encounters--for
-Chelsea was the country in those days, and Holland House quite retired
-among all the songsters of the grove, and out of town--came to a
-legitimate conclusion. Addison was forty, and her ladyship had been a
-widow for fifteen years; but there is no reason for concluding that
-there was no romance in the wedding, which, however, is always a nervous
-sort of business under such circumstances. There was the boy, too, to be
-taken into account, who evidently was not a nice boy, but a tale-bearer,
-who did not love his mother’s faithful lover, and made mischief when he
-could. There seems no evidence, however, that the marriage was unhappy,
-beyond a malicious note of Pope’s, which all the commentators have
-enlarged. The poor women who have the misfortune to be married to men of
-genius, fare badly at the hands of the critics. There seems no warrant
-whatever for Thackeray’s picture of the vulgar vixen whom he calls Mrs.
-Steele. Steele’s letters exist, but not those of poor Prue, who was so
-sadly tried in her husband; and so that suffering woman had to suffer
-over again in her reputation after her life’s trouble is over. It is
-very unfair to the poor women who have left no champions behind.
-
-The end of our “Spectator’s” life was, however, clouded with more than
-one unfortunate quarrel, the greatest of which has left its sting behind
-to quiver in Addison’s name as long as Pope and he are known. It is
-neither necessary nor edifying to enter at length into the bitternesses
-of the past. Pope fancied himself aggrieved in various ways by the man
-who had warmly acknowledged his youthful merits, and received him
-(though so much his senior in years and fame) on a footing of equality,
-and who all through never spoke an ill-natured word of the waspish
-little poet. He believed, or persuaded himself to believe, in his
-malignant little soul that Addison was jealous of his greatness, and had
-set up Tickell to rival him in the translation of Homer; and he
-believed, or pretended to believe, on the supposed authority of young
-Warwick, that Addison had hired a vulgar critic to attack him. There
-seems not the slightest reason to believe that either of these
-grievances was real. Tickell had written simultaneously a translation,
-which Addison had read and corrected, on account of which he courteously
-declined to read Pope’s translation of the same, telling him the reason,
-but accepting the office of critic to the second part of Pope’s work. He
-had himself, according to the poet’s brag, accepted Pope’s corrections
-of “Cato,” leaving “not a word unchanged that I objected to”; and he was
-not moved to any retaliation by Pope’s attack upon him, but continued
-serenely to praise his envious little assailant with a magnanimity which
-is wonderful if he had seen the brilliant and pitiless picture so
-cunningly drawn within the lines of nature, with every feature
-travestied so near the real, that even Addison’s most faithful partizan
-has to pause with alarm lest the wicked thing so near the truth might
-perhaps be true. We hesitate to add to the serene and gentle story of
-our man of letters this embittered utterance of spite and malice and
-genius. The lines are sufficiently well known.
-
-Addison did not end his periodical work with the “Spectator.” He took up
-that familiar character once again for a short time, long enough to
-produce an additional volume,--the eighth,--in which he had no longer
-the help of his old vivacious companion. The series is full of fine
-things, but we are not sure, though Macaulay thinks otherwise, that we
-do not a little miss the light and shade which Steele helped to supply.
-And other publications followed. Steele himself set up the “Guardian,”
-in which Addison had little share; and various others after that in
-which he had no share at all. And Addison himself had a “Freeholder,” in
-which he said some notable things; but these are all dead and gone, like
-so much of the contemporary furnishings of the age. Students find and
-read them in the old, collected editions; but life and recollection have
-gone out of them. Perhaps his own time even had by then got as much as
-it could enjoy and digest out of Addison. We, at least, have done so
-after these hundred and fifty years, and are capable of no more.
-
-He died in 1719, at the early age of forty-seven. The story goes that he
-sent for young Warwick when he was on his death-bed, that he might see
-how a Christian could die: which we should say was unlike Addison, save
-for the reason that he had been drawing morals all his life, and might
-at that supreme moment be beyond seeing the ridicule of a last
-exhibition. Perhaps it was in reality a message of charity and
-forgiveness to the wayward boy, who, there seems reason to believe, was
-not fond of his stepfather. And thus the great writer glided gently out
-of a life in which he had more honor than falls to the lot of most men,
-and, let us hope, a great deal of mild satisfaction and pleasure.
-Thackeray has a little scoff at him as a man without passion. “I doubt
-until after his marriage whether he ever lost his night’s rest or his
-day’s tranquillity about any woman in his life.” Neither, perhaps, did
-Sir Roger, whose forty years’ love-making and unrequited affection was a
-sentimental luxury of the most delicate kind, as his maker intended it
-to be. But Addison’s fine and meditative genius had no need of passion.
-He is the “Spectator” of humankind. He had little temptation in his own
-calm nature to descend into the arena; the honors of the fight came to
-him somehow without any soil of the actual engagement. No smoke of
-gunpowder is about his laurels, no spot of blood upon his sword. He
-looks on at the others fighting, always with a nod of encouragement for
-the man of honor and virtue, of keen scorn for the selfish and
-evil-minded, of pity for the fallen. But it is not his part to fight. He
-makes no pretense of any inclination that way. He is the looker-on; and,
-as such, more valuable than a thousand men-at-arms.
-
-He died at Holland House, that fine historical mansion sacred to the
-wits of a later age, but which in Addison’s time contained no tyrannical
-tribunal of literary patronage, whatever else there might be there which
-was contrary to peace. His life and death there make an association more
-touching, and at the same time of sweeter meaning, than the
-after-struggles of the Whig men of letters for Lady Holland’s arbitrary
-favors. The great humorist died in the middle of summer, in June, 1719,
-and was carried from that leafy retirement to the Jerusalem Chamber,
-where he lay in state: why, it seems difficult to understand--but his
-position had in it a kind of gentle royalty unlike that of other men. He
-was buried at Westminster by night, the wonderful solemn arches over the
-funeral party, half seen by the wavering lights, going off into vistas
-of mysterious gloom, echoing with the hymns of the choir, who sang him
-to his rest. Did they sing, one wonders, one of those verses which had
-been the most intimate utterance of his life: that great hymn of
-creation, scarcely inferior to the angelic murmurings of medieval
-Francis in his cell at Assisi?--
-
- Soon as the evening shades prevail
- The moon takes up the wondrous tale,
- And nightly to the listening earth
- Repeats the story of her birth;
- Whilst all the stars that round her burn,
- And all the planets in their turn,
- Confirm the tidings as they roll,
- And spread the truth from pole to pole.
-
-Or one of those humble and more fervent human utterances of faith and
-humility and thanksgiving?--
-
- Through every period of my life,
- Thy goodness I’ll pursue,
- And after death, in distant worlds,
- The glorious theme renew.
-
- When nature fails, and day and night
- Divide thy works no more,
- My ever-grateful heart, O Lord,
- Thy mercy shall adore.
-
- Through all eternity to thee
- A joyful song I’ll raise,
- But, oh! eternity’s too short
- To utter all thy praise.
-
-With such a soft, yet rapturous, strain the lofty arches and half-seen
-aisles, perhaps with a summer moon looking in, taking up the wondrous
-tale, might have echoed over Addison--the gentlest soul of all those
-noble comrades who lie together awaiting the restitution of all
-things--when our great humorist, our mildest kind “Spectator,” all his
-comments over, was laid in the best resting-place England can give to
-those whom she loves.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Historical Characters in the Reign of Queen
-Anne, by Mrs. M. O. W. Oliphant
-
-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/license
-
-
-Title: Historical Characters in the Reign of Queen Anne
-
-Author: Mrs. M. O. W. Oliphant
-
-Release Date: December 1, 2016 [EBook #53644]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORICAL CHARACTERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images available at The Internet Archive)
-
-
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-
-</pre>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary=""
-style="border: 2px black solid;margin:auto auto;max-width:50%;
-padding:1%;">
-<tr><td>
-
-<p class="c"><a href="#CONTENTS">Contents.</a></p>
-
-<p class="c"><a href="#INDEX_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">Index of Illustrations</a><br /> <span class="nonvis">(In certain versions of this etext [in certain browsers]
-clicking on the image
-will bring up a larger version.)</span></p>
-
-<p class="c">(etext transcriber's note)</p></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="border:none;">
-<a href="images/cover_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="275" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: book's cover" /></a>
-</div>
-
-<p><a name="front" id="front"></a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 317px;">
-<a href="images/ill_001_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_001.jpg" width="317" height="500" alt="Image unavailable." /></a>
-<div class="caption"><p class="c">PRINCESS ANNE OF DENMARK.
-<br />
-<small>ENGRAVED BY H. DAVIDSON, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, AFTER THE
-PAINTING BY W. WISSING AND I. VANDERVAART.</small></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenternbdr" style="width: 312px;">
-<a href="images/ill_002_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_002.jpg" width="312" height="500" alt="Image unavailable." /></a>
-</div>
-
-<h1>
-<span class="smcap">Historical Characters<br />
-of the Reign of<br />
-Queen Anne</span></h1>
-<p class="c">
-BY<br />
-<span class="smcap">Mrs. M. O. W. OLIPHANT</span><br />
-<br />
-<img src="images/colophon.png" width="85px" alt="Image unavailable." />
-<br />
-<br />
-NEW YORK<br />
-THE CENTURY CO.<br />
-1894<br />
-<br /><br /><small>
-<span class="smcap">Copyright, 1893, 1894,<br />
-By The Century Co.</span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="smcap">The De Vinne Press.</span></small>
-</p>
-
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-
-<tr><th class="c" colspan="2"><a href="#Chapter_I">CHAPTER I</a></th></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="rt"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-<tr><td valign="top"><span class="smcap">The Princess Anne</span></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_001">1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th class="c" colspan="2"><a href="#Chapter_II">CHAPTER II</a></th></tr>
-<tr><td valign="top"><span class="smcap">The Queen and the Duchess</span></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_043">43</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th class="c" colspan="2"><a href="#Chapter_III">CHAPTER III</a></th></tr>
-<tr><td valign="top"><span class="smcap">The Author of “Gulliver”</span></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_083">83</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th class="c" colspan="2"><a href="#Chapter_IV">CHAPTER IV</a></th></tr>
-<tr><td valign="top"><span class="smcap">The Author of “Robinson Crusoe”</span>&nbsp; &nbsp; </td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_129">129</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><th class="c" colspan="2"><a href="#Chapter_V">CHAPTER V</a></th></tr>
-<tr><td valign="top"><span class="smcap">Addison, the Humorist</span></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_167">167</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<h2><a name="INDEX_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="INDEX_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS"></a>INDEX OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary=""
-style="margin:auto auto;max-width:75%;">
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#front"><span class="smcap">Princess Anne of Denmark</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#front">FRONTISPIECE</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">H. Davidson</span>, from mezzotint by <span class="smcap">John Smith</span>, after the painting by <span class="smcap">W. Wissing</span> and <span class="smcap">I. Vandervaart</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_004"><span class="smcap">Anne Hyde, Duchess of York</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_004">4</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">T. Johnson</span>, after the painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Peter Lely</span>, in possession of Earl Spencer.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_008"><span class="smcap">John Evelyn</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_008">8</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">E. Heinemann</span>, after copperplate by <span class="smcap">F. Bartolozzi</span> in the British Museum.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_012"><span class="smcap">Prince George of Denmark</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_012">12</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. A. Muller</span>, from mezzotint in the British Museum by <span class="smcap">John Smith</span>, after the painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Godfrey Kneller</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_016"><span class="smcap">Charles II.</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_016">16</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">T. Johnson</span>, after original painting by <span class="smcap">Samuel Cooper</span>, in the gallery of the Duke of Richmond and Gordon.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_020"><span class="smcap">Henry Compton, Bishop of London</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_020">20</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved from life by <span class="smcap">David Loggan</span>, from print in the British Museum. Engraved by <span class="smcap">E. Heinemann</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_024"><span class="smcap">James II. in his Coronation Robes</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_024">24</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">T. Johnson</span>, after the painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Peter Lely</span>, in possession of the Duke of Northumberland.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_028"><span class="smcap">Mary, Princess of Orange</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_028">28</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">C. A. Powell</span>, after the painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Peter Lely</span>, in possession of the Earl of Crawford.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_032"><span class="smcap">Queen Mary of Modena</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_032">32</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">Charles State</span>, after the painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Peter Lely</span>, in possession of Earl Spencer.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_040"><span class="smcap">William III.</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_040">40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">From copperplate engraving by <span class="smcap">Cornelis Vermeulen</span>, after the Painting by <span class="smcap">Adriaan Vander Werff</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_044"><span class="smcap">The Duke of Gloucester</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_044">44</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. G. Tietze</span>, From mezzotint by <span class="smcap">John Smith</span>, after the painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Godfrey Kneller</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_048"><span class="smcap">Garden Front, Hampton Court</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_048">48</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Drawn by <span class="smcap">Joseph Pennell</span>. Engraved by <span class="smcap">J. F. Jungling</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_052"><span class="smcap">The Duke of Gloucester</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_052">52</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. A. Muller</span>, from miniature by <span class="smcap">Lewis Crosse</span>, in the collection at Windsor Castle; by special permission of Queen Victoria.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_056"><span class="smcap">Queen Anne</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_056">56</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">From copperplate engraving by <span class="smcap">Pieter Van Gunst</span>, after the painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Godfrey Kneller</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_060"><span class="smcap">Windsor Terrace, Looking Westward</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_060">60</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">J. W. Evans</span>, after aquatint by <span class="smcap">P. Sandby</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_064"><span class="smcap">The Duke of Marlborough</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_064">64</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">J. H. E. Whitney</span>, from an engraving by <span class="smcap">Pieter Van Gunst</span>, after painting by <span class="smcap">Adriaan Vander Werff</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_072"><span class="smcap">The Duchess of Marlborough</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_072">72</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. G. Tietze</span>, from mezzotint after painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Godfrey Kneller</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_080"><span class="smcap">Bishop Gilbert Burnet</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_080">80</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. A. Muller</span>, from mezzotint in the British Museum by <span class="smcap">John Smith</span>, after the painting by <span class="smcap">John Riley</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_084"><span class="smcap">Jonathan Swift</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_084">84</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">From photograph of original Marble Bust of Swift by <span class="smcap">Roubilliac</span> (1695-1762), now in the Library of Trinity College, Dublin.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_088"><span class="smcap">Moor Park, Residence of Sir William Temple and of Swift</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_088">88</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Drawn by <span class="smcap">Charles Herbert Woodbury</span>. Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. Varley</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_092"><span class="smcap">Dean Swift</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_092">92</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">From copperplate engraving by <span class="smcap">Pierre Fourdrinier</span>, after a painting by <span class="smcap">Charles Jervas</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_096"><span class="smcap">Stella’s Cottage, on the Boundary of the Moor Park Estate</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_096">96</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Drawn by <span class="smcap">Charles Herbert Woodbury</span>. Engraved by <span class="smcap">S. Davis</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_100"><span class="smcap">Hester Johnson, Swift’s “Stella,” painted from Life by Mrs. Delany, on the Wall of the Temple at Delville, and accidentally destroyed</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_100">100</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">M. Haider</span>, from copy of the original by <span class="smcap">Henry MacManus, R. H. A.</span>, now in possession of Professor Dowden.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_104"><span class="smcap">Sir William Temple</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_104">104</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. A. Muller</span>, from an engraving in the British Museum, after a painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Peter Lely</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_108"><span class="smcap">Delany’s House at Delville, where Swift stayed</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_108">108</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Drawn by <span class="smcap">Harry Fenn</span>. Engraved by <span class="smcap">C. A. Powell</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_112"><span class="smcap">Marley Abbey, the Residence of Vanessa, now called Selbridge Abbey</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_112">112</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Drawn by <span class="smcap">Harry Fenn</span>. Engraved by <span class="smcap">R. C. Collins</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_120"><span class="smcap">George, Earl of Berkeley</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_120">120</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">From an unfinished engraving, in the British Museum, attributed to <span class="smcap">David Loggan</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_124"><span class="smcap">St. Patrick’s Cathedral, Dublin</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_124">124</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Drawn by <span class="smcap">Harry Fenn</span>. Engraved by <span class="smcap">C. A. Powell</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_136"><span class="smcap">Daniel Defoe</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_136">136</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">C. A. Powell</span>, after copperplate by <span class="smcap">M. Van der Gucht</span>, in the British Museum.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_144"><span class="smcap">Church of St. Giles, Cripplegate, where Defoe is supposed to have been Baptized</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_144">144</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Drawn by <span class="smcap">Harry Fenn</span>. Engraved by <span class="smcap">H. E. Sylvester</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_152"><span class="smcap">Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_152">152</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">John P. Davis</span>, after the original painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Godfrey Kneller</span>, in the British Museum.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_176"><span class="smcap">Joseph Addison</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_176">176</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">T. Johnson</span>, from mezzotint by <span class="smcap">Jean Simon</span>, after painting by Sir <span class="smcap">Godfrey Kneller</span>.</td></tr>
-
-<tr><td valign="top"><a href="#page_192"><span class="smcap">Sidney, Earl of Godolphin</span></a></td><td class="rt" valign="bottom"><a href="#page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="indd">Engraved by <span class="smcap">Peter Aitken</span>, from mezzotint by <span class="smcap">John Smith</span>, in British Museum. Painted by Sir <span class="smcap">Godfrey Kneller</span>.</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<h1>THE REIGN OF QUEEN ANNE</h1>
-
-<h2><a name="Chapter_I" id="Chapter_I"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter I</span><br /><br />
-THE PRINCESS ANNE</h2>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra">T</span>HE reign of Queen Anne is one of the most illustrious in English
-history. In literature it has been common to call it the Augustan age.
-In politics it has all the interest of a transition period, less
-agitating, but not less important, than the actual era of revolution. In
-war, it is, with the exception of the great European wars of the
-beginning of this century, the most glorious for the English arms of any
-that have elapsed since Henry V. set up his rights of conquest over
-France. Opinions change as to the advantage of such superiorities; and,
-still more, as to the glory which is purchased by bloodshed; yet,
-according to the received nomenclature, and in the language of all the
-ages, the time of Marlborough cannot be characterized as anything but
-glorious. A great general, statesmen of eminence, great poets, men of
-letters of the first distinction&mdash;these are points in which this period
-cannot easily be excelled. It pleases the fancy to step historically
-from queen to queen, and to find in each a center of national greatness
-knitting together the loose threads of the great web. “The spacious
-times of great Elizabeth” bulk larger and more magnificently in history
-than those of Anne, but the two eras bear a certain balance which is
-agreeable to the imagination.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_001" id="page_001"></a>{1}</span> And we can scarcely help regretting that
-the great age of Wordsworth and Scott, Byron and Wellington, should not
-have been deferred long enough to make the reign of Victoria the third
-noblest period of modern English history. But time has here balked us.
-This age is not without its own greatness, but it is not the next in
-national sequence to that of Anne, as Anne’s was to that of Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>In the reigns of both these queens this country was trembling between
-two dynasties, scarcely yet removed from the convulsion of great
-political changes, and feeling that nothing but the life of the
-sovereign on the throne stood between it and unknown rulers and dangers
-to come. The deluge, in both cases, was ready to be let loose after the
-termination of the life of the central personage in the state. And thus
-the reign of Anne, like that of Elizabeth, was to her contemporaries the
-only piece of solid ground amid a sea of evil chances. What was to come
-after was clear to none.</p>
-
-<p>But in the midst of its agitations and all its exuberant life&mdash;the wars
-abroad, the intrigues at home, the secret correspondences, the plots,
-the breathless hopes and fears&mdash;it is half ludicrous, half pathetic, to
-turn to the harmless figure of Queen Anne in the center of the scene&mdash;a
-fat, placid, middle-aged woman full of infirmities, with little about
-her of the picturesque yet artificial brightness of her time, and no
-gleam of reflection to answer to the wit and genius which have made her
-age illustrious. A monarch has the strangest fate in this respect: as
-long as she or he lives, the conscious center of everything whose notice
-elates and elevates the greatest; but as soon as his day is over, a mere
-image of state visible among his courtiers only as some unthought-of
-lackey or faded gentleman usher throws from his little literary lantern
-a ray of passing illumination upon him. The good things of their lives
-are thus almost counterbalanced by the insignificance of their
-historical<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_002" id="page_002"></a>{2}</span> position. Anne was one of the sovereigns who may, without
-too great a strain of hyperbole, be allowed to have been beloved in her
-day. She did nothing to repel the popular devotion. She was the best of
-wives, the most sadly disappointed of childless mothers. She made
-pecuniary sacrifices to the weal of her kingdom such as few kings or
-queens have thought of making. And she was a Stuart, Protestant, and
-safe, combining all the rights of the family with those of orthodoxy and
-constitutionalism, without even so much offense as lay in a foreign
-accent. There was indeed nothing foreign about her, a circumstance in
-her favor which she shared with the other great English queen regnant,
-who, like her, was English on both sides of the lineage.</p>
-
-<p>All these points made her popular and, it might be permissible to say,
-beloved. If she had been indifferent to her father’s deprivation, she
-had not at least shocked popular feeling by any immediate triumph in
-succeeding him, as Mary had done; and her mild Englishism was delightful
-to the people after grim William with his Dutch accent and likings. But
-the historians have not been kind to Anne. They have lavished ill names
-upon her: a stupid woman,&mdash;“a very weak woman, always governed blindly
-by some female favorite,”&mdash;nobody has a civil word to say for her. Yet
-there is a mixture of the amusing and the tragic in the appearance of
-this passive figure seated on high, presiding over all the great events
-of the epoch, with her humble feminine history, her long anguish of
-motherhood, her hopes so often raised and so often shattered, her
-stifled family feeling, her profound and helpless sense of misfortune.</p>
-
-<p>There is one high light in the picture, however, though but one, and it
-comes from one of the rarest and highest sentiments of humanity: the
-passion of friendship, of which women are popularly supposed to be
-incapable, but which never existed in more<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_003" id="page_003"></a>{3}</span> complete and disinterested
-exhibition than in the bosom of this poor queen. It is sad that it
-should have ended in disloyalty and estrangement; but, curiously enough,
-it is not the breach of this close union, but the union itself, which
-has exposed Anne to the censure and contempt of all her biographers and
-historians. To an impartial mind we think few things can be more
-interesting than the position of these two female figures in the
-foreground of English life. Their friendship brought with it no harm to
-England; no scandal, such as lurks about the antechamber of kings, and
-which has made the name of a favorite one of the most odious titles of
-reproach, could attach in any way to such a relationship. And nothing
-could be better adapted to enhance the dramatic features of the scene
-than the contrast between the two friends whose union for many years was
-so intimate and so complete.</p>
-
-<p>Yet her friend was as like to call forth such devotion as ever woman
-was. Seldom has there been a more brilliant figure in history than that
-of the great duchess, a woman beloved and hated as few have ever been;
-holding on one side in absolute devotion to her the greatest hero of the
-time, and on the other rousing to the height of adoration the mild and
-obtuse nature of her mistress; keeping her place on no ground but that
-of her own sense and spirit, amid all intrigues and opposition, for many
-of the most remarkable years of English history, and defending herself
-with such fire and eloquence when attacked, that her plea is as
-interesting and vivid as any controversy of to-day, and it is impossible
-to read it without taking a side, with more or less vehemence, in the
-exciting quarrel. Such a woman, standing like a beautiful Ishmael with
-every man’s hand against her, yet fearing no man, and ready to meet
-every assailant, makes a welcome variety amid the historical scenes
-which so seldom exhibit anything so living, so imperious, so bold and
-free. That she has got little mercy and no<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_004" id="page_004"></a>{4}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 383px;">
-<a href="images/ill_003_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_003.jpg" width="383" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: ANNE HYDE, DUCHESS OF YORK.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF EARL SPENCER." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">ANNE HYDE, DUCHESS OF YORK.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN<br />
-POSSESSION OF EARL SPENCER.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_005" id="page_005"></a>{5}</span></p>
-
-<p class="nind">indulgence, that all chivalrous sentiment has been mute in respect to
-her, and an angry ill-temper takes possession of every historian who
-names her name, rather adds to the interest than takes from it. Women in
-history, strangely enough, seem always to import into the chronicle a
-certain heat of personal feeling unusual and undesirable in that region
-of calm. Whether it is that the historian is impatient at finding
-himself arrested by the troublesome personalities of a woman, and that a
-certain resentment of her intrusion colors his appreciation of her, or
-that her appearance naturally possesses an individuality which breaks
-the line, it is difficult to tell; but the calmest chronicler becomes a
-partizan when he treats of Mary and Elizabeth, and no man can name Sarah
-of Marlborough without a heat of indignation or scorn, almost
-ridiculous, as being so long after date.</p>
-
-<p>To us the unfailing vivacity and spirit of the woman, the dauntless
-stand she makes, her determination not to be overcome, make her
-appearance always enlivening; and art could not have designed a more
-complete contrast than that of the homely figure by her side, with
-appealing eyes fixed upon her, a little bewildered, not always quick to
-understand&mdash;a woman born for other uses, but exposed all her harmless
-life to the fierce light that beats upon a throne. For her part, she has
-no defense to make, no word to say; let them spend all their jibes upon
-her, Anne knows no reply. Her slow understanding and want of perception
-give her a certain composure which in a queen answers very well for
-dignity; yet there is something whimsically pathetic, pitiful,
-incongruous in the fate which has placed her there, which can scarcely
-fail to soften the heart of the spectators.</p>
-
-<p>The tragedy of Anne’s life, unlike that of her friend, had no utterance,
-and there was nothing romantic in her appearance or surroundings to
-attract the lovers of the picturesque. Yet in the blank of her humble
-intellect she discharged not amiss<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_006" id="page_006"></a>{6}</span> the duties that were so much too
-great for her; and if she was disloyal to her friend in the end, that
-betrayal only adds another touch of pathos to the spectacle of
-helplessness and human weakness. It is only the favored few of mankind
-who are wiser and better, not feebler and less noble, as life draws
-toward its end.</p>
-
-<p>Anne was, like Elizabeth, the daughter of a subject. Her mother, Anne
-Hyde, the daughter of the great Clarendon, though naturally subjected to
-the hot criticism of the moment on account of that virtue which refused
-anything less from her prince than the position of wife, was not a woman
-of much individual character, nor did she live long enough to influence
-much the training of her daughters. Historians have not hesitated to
-sneer at the prudence with which this young lady secured herself by
-marriage, when so many fairer than she were less scrupulous&mdash;a reproach
-which is somewhat unfair, considering what would certainly have been
-said of her had she not done so. Curiously enough, her own father,
-whether in sincerity or pretense, seems at the moment to have been her
-most severe critic, exculpating himself with unnecessary energy from all
-participation in the matter, and declaring that if it were true “the
-king should immediately cause the woman to be sent to the Tower” till
-Parliament should have time to pass an act cutting off her head. It
-would appear, however, from the contemporary narratives of Pepys and
-Evelyn that he was not so bad as his words, for he seems to have
-supported and shielded his daughter during the period of uncertainty
-which preceded the acknowledgment of her marriage, and to have shared in
-the general satisfaction afterward. But this great marriage was not of
-much advantage to her family. It did not hinder Clarendon’s disgrace and
-banishment, nor were his sons after him anything advantaged by their
-close relationship to two queens.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_007" id="page_007"></a>{7}</span></p>
-
-<p>The Duchess of York does not seem to have been remarkable in any way.
-She is said to have governed her husband; and she died a Roman
-Catholic,&mdash;the first of the royal family to lead the way in that fatal
-particular: but did not live long enough to affect the belief or
-training of her children.</p>
-
-<p>There was an interval of three years in age between Mary and Anne. The
-eldest, Mary, was like the Stuarts, with something of their natural
-grace of manner; the younger was a fair English child, rosy and plump
-and blooming; in later life they became more like each other. But the
-chief thing they inherited from their mother was what is called in fine
-language, “a tendency to embonpoint,” with, it is said, a love of good
-eating, which helped to produce the other peculiarity.</p>
-
-<p>The religious training of the princesses is the first thing we hear of
-them. They were put under the charge of a most orthodox tutor, Compton,
-Bishop of London, with much haste and ostentation&mdash;their uncle, Charles
-II., probably feeling with his usual cynicism that the sop of two
-extra-Protestant princesses would please the people, and that the souls
-of a couple of girls could not be of much importance one way or another.
-How they fared in respect to the other features of education is not
-recorded. Lord Dartmouth, in his notes on Bishop Burnet’s history,
-informs us that King Charles II., struck by the melodious voice of the
-little Lady Anne, had her trained in elocution by Mrs. Barry, an
-actress; while Colley Cibber adds that she and her sister were
-instructed by the well-known Mrs. Betterton to take their parts in a
-little court performance when Anne was but ten and Mary thirteen; but
-whether these are two accounts of the same incident, or refer to
-distinct events, seems doubtful.</p>
-
-<p>The residence of the girls was chiefly at Richmond, where they were
-under the charge of Lady Frances Villiers, who had a number of daughters
-of her own, one of whom, Elizabeth, went with Mary to Holland, and was,
-in some respects, her<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_008" id="page_008"></a>{8}</span> evil genius. We have, unfortunately, no court
-chronicle to throw any light upon the lively scene at Richmond, where
-this little bevy of girls grew up together, conning their divinity,
-whatever other lessons might be neglected; taking the air upon the river
-in their barges; following the hounds in the colder season, for this
-robust exercise seems to have been part of their training. When their
-youthful seclusion was broken by such a great event as the court mask,
-in which they played their little parts,&mdash;Mrs. Blogge, the saintly
-beauty, John Evelyn’s friend, Godolphin’s wife, acting the chief
-character, in a blaze of diamonds,&mdash;or that state visit to the city when
-King Charles in all his glory took the girls, his heirs, with him, no
-doubt the old withdrawing-rooms and galleries of Richmond rang with the
-story for weeks after. Princess Mary, her mind perhaps beginning to own
-a little agitation as to royal suitors, would have other distractions;
-but as to the Lady Anne, it soon came to be her chief holiday when the
-young Duchess of York, her stepmother, came from town in her chariot, or
-by water, in a great gilded barge breasting up the stream, to pay the
-young ladies a visit. For in the train of that princess was the young
-maid of honor, a delightful, brilliant <i>espiègle</i>, full of spirit and
-wilfulness, who bore the undistinguished name of Sarah Jennings, and
-brought with her such life and stir and movement as dispersed the
-dullness wherever she went.</p>
-
-<p>There is no such love as a young girl’s adoration for a beautiful young
-woman, a little older than herself, whom she can admire and imitate and
-cling to, and dream of with visionary passion. This was the kind of
-sentiment with which the little princess regarded the bright and
-animated creature in her young stepmother’s train. Mary of Modena was
-herself only a few years older than her stepchildren. They were all
-young together, accustomed to the perpetual gaiety of the court of
-Charles II., though, let us hope, kept apart from its license, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_009" id="page_009"></a>{9}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 357px;">
-<a href="images/ill_004_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_004.jpg" width="357" height="456" alt="Image unavailable: JOHN EVELYN.
-
-ENGRAVED BY E. HEINEMANN, AFTER COPPERPLATE BY F. BARTOLOZZI IN THE
-BRITISH MUSEUM." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">JOHN EVELYN.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY E. HEINEMANN, AFTER COPPERPLATE BY F. BARTOLOZZI IN THE<br />
-BRITISH MUSEUM.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">no shadow of fate seems to have fallen upon the group of girls in their
-early peaceful days. Anne in particular would seem to have been left to
-hang upon the arm and bask in the smiles of her stepmother’s young lady
-in waiting at her pleasure&mdash;with many a laugh at premature favoritism.
-“We had used to play together when she was a child,” said the great
-duchess long after. “She even then expressed a particular fondness for
-me; this inclination increased with our years. I was often at court, and
-the princess always distinguished me by the pleasure she took to honor
-me preferably to others with her conversation and confidence. In all her
-parties for amusement, I was sure by her choice to be one.”</p>
-
-<p>Mistress Sarah was one of the actors in the mask above referred to; she
-was in the most intimate circle of the Duke of York’s household, closely
-linked to all its members, in that relationship, almost as close as
-kindred, which binds a court together.</p>
-
-<p>And no doubt it added greatly to the attractions which the bright and
-animated girl exercised over her playmates and companions, that she had
-already a romantic love-story, and, at a period when matches were
-everywhere arranged, as at present in continental countries, by the
-parents, made a secret marriage, under the most romantic circumstances,
-with a young hero already a soldier of distinction. He was not an
-irreproachable hero. Court scandal had not spared him. He was said to
-have founded his fortune upon the bounty of one of the shameless women
-of Charles’s court. But the imagination of the period was not
-over-delicate, and probably had he not become so great a man, and
-acquired so many enemies, we should have heard little of John
-Churchill’s early vices. About his sister, Arabella Churchill,
-unfortunately there could not be any doubt; and it is a curious instance
-of the sudden efflorescence now and then of a race which neither before
-nor after is of particular<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_010" id="page_010"></a>{10}</span> note, that Marlborough’s sister should have
-been the mother of that one illustrious Stuart who might, had he been
-legitimate, have changed the fortunes of the house&mdash;the Duke of Berwick.
-Had she, instead of Anne Hyde, been James’s duchess, what a difference
-might have been made in history! Nobody had heard of the Churchills
-before&mdash;they have not been a distinguished race since. It is curious
-that they should have produced, all unawares, without preparation or
-warning, the two greatest soldiers of the age.</p>
-
-<p>Young Churchill was attached to the Duke of York’s service, as Sarah
-Jennings was to that of the duchess. He had served abroad with
-distinction. In 1672, when France and England for once, in a way, were
-allies against Holland, he had served under the great Turenne, who
-called him “my handsome Englishman,” and vaunted his gallantry. He was
-but twenty-two when he thus gave proofs of his future greatness. When he
-returned, after various other exploits, and resumed his court service,
-the brilliant maid of honor, whom the little princess adored, attained a
-complete dominion over the spirit of the young soldier. There were
-difficulties about the marriage, for he had no fortune, and his
-provident parents had secured an heiress for him. But it was at length
-accomplished so secretly that even the bride was never quite certain of
-the date, in the presence and with the favor of Mary of Modena herself.
-Sarah, if the dates are correct, must have been eighteen at this period,
-and her little princess fourteen. What a delightful interruption to the
-dullness of Richmond to hear all about it when the Duchess of York came
-with her train and the two girls could wander away together in some
-green avenue till Lady Frances sent a page or an usher after them!</p>
-
-<p>Mary of Modena must have been a lover of romances, and true love also,
-though her youth had fallen to such a gruesome bridegroom as James
-Stuart; for not only Sarah Jennings<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_011" id="page_011"></a>{11}</span> and her great general, who were to
-have so great a hand in keeping that poor lady’s son from his kingdom,
-but Mary Blogge and her statesman, who was to rule England so wisely in
-the interest of the opposing side, were both secretly married under the
-young duchess’s wing, she helping, planning, and sanctioning the secret.
-How many additional bitternesses must this have put into her cup when
-she was sitting, a shadow queen, at St.-Germain, and all those people
-whom she had loved and caressed were swaying the fortunes of England!
-And who can tell what tender recollections of his secret wedding and the
-sweet and saintly prude whom King James’s young wife gave him, may have
-touched the soul of Godolphin in those hankerings after his old
-master&mdash;if it were not, as scandal said, to his old mistress&mdash;which
-moved him from time to time, great minister as he was, almost to the
-verge of treachery! The Churchills, it must be owned, showed little
-gratitude to their royal patrons.</p>
-
-<p>When the Princess Mary married and went to Holland with her husband, the
-position of her sister at home became a more important one. Anne was not
-without some experience of travel and those educational advantages which
-the sight of foreign countries are said to bring. She went to The Hague
-to visit her sister. She accompanied her father, sturdy little
-Protestant as she was, when he was in disgrace for his religious views,
-and spent some time in Brussels, from which place she wrote to one of
-the ladies about the court a letter which has been preserved,&mdash;with just
-as much and as little reason as any other letter of a fifteen-year-old
-girl with her eyes about her, at a distance of two hundred years,&mdash;in
-which the young lady describes a ball she had seen, herself <i>incognita</i>,
-at which some gentlemen “danced extremely well&mdash;as well if not better
-than the Duke of Monmouth or Sir E. Villiers, which I think is very
-extraordinary,” says the girl, no doubt sincerely believing<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_012" id="page_012"></a>{12}</span> that the
-best of all things was to be found at home. She had little difficulties
-about her spelling, but that was common enough. “As for the town,” says
-the Princess Anne, “methinks tho’ the streets are not so clean as in
-Holland, yet they are not so dirty as ours; they are very well paved and
-very easy&mdash;they only have od smells.” This is a peculiarity which has
-outlived her day, and it would seem to imply that England, even before
-the invention of sanitary science, was superior in this respect at least
-to the towns of the Continent.</p>
-
-<p>After these unusual dissipations Anne remained in the shade until she
-married, in 1683, George, Prince of Denmark, a perfectly inoffensive and
-insignificant person, to whom she gave, during the rest of her life, a
-faithful, humdrum, but unbroken attachment, such as shows to little
-advantage in print, but makes the happiness of many a home. This
-marriage was another sacrifice to the Protestantism of England, and in
-that point of view pleased the people much. King Charles, glad to
-satisfy the country by any act which cost him nothing, thought it “very
-convenient and suitable.” James, unwilling, but powerless, grumbled to
-himself that “he had little encouragement in the conduct of the Prince
-of Orange to marry another daughter in the same interest,” but made no
-effort against it. The prince himself produced no very great impression,
-one way or another, as indeed he was little fitted to do. “He has the
-Danish countenance, blonde,” says Evelyn, in his diary; “of few words;
-spoke French but ill; seemed somewhat heavy, but is reported to be
-valiant.” He had never any occasion to show his valor during his long
-residence in England, but many to prove the former quality,&mdash;the
-heaviness,&mdash;which was only too evident; but Anne herself was not
-brilliant, and she was made for friendship, not for passion in the
-ordinary sense of the word. She never seems to have been in the smallest
-way dissatisfied with her heavy, honest goodman. He was fond of eating
-and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_013" id="page_013"></a>{13}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 373px;">
-<a href="images/ill_005_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_005.jpg" width="373" height="480" alt="Image unavailable: PRINCE GEORGE OF DENMARK.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MEZZOTINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM BY JOHN
-SMITH, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">PRINCE GEORGE OF DENMARK.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MEZZOTINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM BY JOHN<br />
-SMITH, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">drinking, but of no more dangerous pleasures. Her peace of mind was
-fluttered by no rival, nor her feminine pride touched. Her attendants
-might be as seductive as they pleased, this steady, stolid husband was
-immovable, and there is no doubt that the princess appreciated the
-advantages of this immunity from one of the thorns which were planted in
-every other royal pillow.</p>
-
-<p>Her marriage had another advantage of giving her a household and court
-of her own, and enabled her at once to secure for herself the
-companionship of her always beloved friend. “So desirous was she,” says
-Duchess Sarah, “of having me always near her, that upon her marriage
-with the Prince of Denmark, in 1683, it was at her own earnest request
-to her father I was made one of the ladies of her bedchamber. What
-conduced to make me the more agreeable to her in this station was,
-doubtless,” she adds with candor, “the dislike she conceived to most of
-the other persons about her, and particularly for her first lady of the
-bedchamber&mdash;the Countess of Clarendon, a lady whose discourse and manner
-could not possibly recommend her to so young a mistress; for she looked
-like a mad-woman and talked like a scholar. Indeed, her highness’s court
-was so oddly composed that I think it would be making myself no great
-compliment if I should say her choosing to spend more of her time with
-me than with any of her other servants did no discredit to her taste.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Clarendon was the wife of the great chancellor’s son, and was thus
-the aunt, by marriage, of the princess&mdash;not always a very endearing
-relationship. She was not a great lady by birth, and though a friend of
-Evelyn’s and a highly educated woman, might easily be supposed to be a
-little oppressive in a young household where her relationship gave her a
-certain authority.</p>
-
-<p>The prince was dull, the princess had not many resources.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_014" id="page_014"></a>{14}</span> They settled
-down in homely virtue, close to the court with all its scandals and
-gaieties, but not quite of it; and nothing could be more natural than
-that Anne should eagerly avail herself of the always amusing, always
-lively companion who had been the friend of her youth. The Cockpit,
-which was Anne’s residence, had been built as a royal playhouse, first
-for the sport indicated by its name, then for the more refined
-amusements of the theater, but had been afterward turned into a private
-residence, and bought by Charles II. for his niece on her marriage. It
-formed part of the old palace of Whitehall, and must have been within
-sight and sound of the constant gaieties going on in that lawless
-household, in the best of which the princess and her attendant would
-have their natural share. No doubt to hear Lady Churchill’s lively
-satirical remarks upon all this, and the flow of her brilliant malice,
-must have kept the household lively, and brightened the dull days and
-tedious waitings of maternity, into which Anne was immediately plunged,
-drawing a laugh even from stupid George in the chimney-corner. And there
-was this peculiarity to make the whole more piquant; that it was virtue,
-irreproachable, and no doubt pleasantly self-conscious of its
-superiority, which thus got its fun out of vice. The two young couples
-on the other side of the way were immaculate, devoted exclusively to
-each other, thinking of neither man nor woman save their lawful mates.
-Probably neither the princess nor her lady in waiting were disgusted by
-gossip about the Portsmouths and Castlemaines, but took these ladies to
-pieces with indignant zest and spared no jibe. And though the remarks
-might be too broad for modern liking, and the fun somewhat unsavory, we
-cannot but think that amidst the noisy and picturesque life of that wild
-Restoration era, full of corruption, yet so gay and sparkling to the
-spectator, this little household of the Cockpit is not without its
-claims upon our attention. There was not in all Charles’s court so
-splendid a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_015" id="page_015"></a>{15}</span> couple as the young Churchills: he already one of the most
-distinguished soldiers of the age, she a beautiful young woman
-overflowing with wit and energy. And Princess Anne was very young; in
-full possession of that <i>beauté de diable</i> which, so long as it lasts,
-has its own charm, the beauty of color and freshness and youthful
-contour. She had a beautiful voice, the prettiest hands, and the most
-affectionate heart. If she were not clever, that matters but little to a
-girl of twenty, taught by love to be receptive, and called upon for no
-effort of genius. Honest George behind backs was not much more than a
-piece of still life, but an inoffensive and amiable one, taking nothing
-upon him. If there was calculation in the steadfastness with which the
-abler pair possessed themselves of the confidence, and held fast to the
-service of their royal friends, it would be hard to assert that there
-was not some affection too, at least on the part of Sarah, who had known
-every thought of her little princess’s heart since she was a child, and
-could not but be flattered and pleased by the love showered upon her. At
-all events, in Anne there was no unworthy sentiment; everything about
-her appeals to our tenderness. When she attained what seems to have been
-the summit of her desires and secured her type of excellence, the
-admired and adored paragon of her childhood, for her daily companion,
-the formal titles and addresses which her rank made necessary became
-irksome beyond measure to the simple-hearted young woman whose hard fate
-it was to have been born a princess. The impetuosity of her affection,
-her rush, so to speak, into the arms of her friend, her pretty youthful
-sentiment, so fresh and natural, her humility and simplicity, are all
-pleasant to contemplate. Little more than a year after her marriage,
-after the closer union had begun, she writes thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>If you will let me have the satisfaction of hearing from you again
-before I see you, let me beg of you not to call me “your highness”
-at<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_016" id="page_016"></a>{16}</span> every word, but to be as free with me as one friend ought to be
-with another. And you can never give me any greater proof of your
-friendship than in telling me your mind freely in all things, which
-I do beg of you to do: and if it ever were in my power to serve
-you, nobody would be more ready than myself. I am all impatience
-for Wednesday. Till then farewell.</p></div>
-
-<p>Upon this there ensued a little sentimental bargain between the two
-young women. It was not according to the manners of the time that they
-should call each other Anne and Sarah, and the fashion of the Aramintas
-and Dorindas had not yet arrived from Paris. They managed the
-transformation necessary in a curiously matter-of-fact and English way:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>She grew uneasy to be treated by me with the form and ceremony due
-to her rank; nor could she bear from me the sound of words which
-implied in them distance and superiority. It was this turn of mind
-which made her one day propose to me that whenever I should happen
-to be absent from her we might in all our letters write ourselves
-by feigned names, such as would import nothing of distinction of
-rank between us. Morley and Freeman were the names her fancy hit
-upon, and she left me to choose by which of them I should be
-called. My frank open temper led me naturally to pitch upon
-Freeman, and so the princess took the other; and from this time
-Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman began to converse as equals, made so
-by affection and friendship.</p></div>
-
-<p>Very likely these were the names in some young lady’s book which had
-been in the princess’s childish library,&mdash;something a generation before
-the “Spectator,”&mdash;in which rural virtues and the claims of friendship
-were the chief subjects. Morley is one of the typical names of
-sentimental literature in the eighteenth century, and might be
-originally introduced by some precursor of those proper little romances
-which have in all ages been considered the proper reading for “the
-fair.”</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Morley could be no other than the gentle <i>ingénue</i>, the type of
-modest virtue, and Freeman was of all others the title most suitable for
-Sarah, the bright and brave. Historians have not been able to contain
-themselves for angry ridicule of this<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_017" id="page_017"></a>{17}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 415px;">
-<a href="images/ill_006_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_006.jpg" width="415" height="540" alt="Image unavailable: CHARLES II.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER ORIGINAL PAINTING BY SAMUEL COOPER, IN THE
-GALLERY OF THE DUKE OF RICHMOND AND GORDON." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">CHARLES II.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER ORIGINAL PAINTING BY SAMUEL COOPER, IN THE<br />
-GALLERY OF THE DUKE OF RICHMOND AND GORDON.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">little friendly treaty. To us it seems a pretty incident. The princess
-was twenty, the bedchamber woman twenty-four. Their friendly traffic had
-not to their own consciousness attained the importance of a historical
-fact.</p>
-
-<p>The locality in which the royal houses in London stood was very
-different then from its appearance now. Whitehall at present is a great
-thoroughfare, full of life and movement, with but one remnant of the old
-palace,&mdash;once the banqueting-hall, now the chapel royal, where the
-window out of which Charles I. is supposed to have passed to the
-scaffold is pointed out to strangers,&mdash;and still presenting a bit of
-gloomy, stately front to the street.</p>
-
-<p>St. James’s Park opposite is screened off and separated now by the Horse
-Guards and other public buildings, a long and heavy line which forms one
-side of the way. But in those days there were neither public buildings
-nor busy street. The palace, straggling and irregular, with walls and
-roofs on many different levels, stood like a sort of royal village
-between the river and the park, with the turrets of St. James twinkling
-in the distance, in the sunshine, over the trees of the Mall, where King
-Charles with all his dogs and gentlemen would stream forth daily for his
-saunter or his game. The Cockpit was one of the outlying portions of
-Whitehall upon the edge of the park.</p>
-
-<p>Anne had been but two years married when King Charles died. And then the
-aspect of affairs changed. The mass in the private chapel, and the
-presence here and there of somebody who looked like a priest, at once
-started into prominence and began to alarm the gazers more than the
-dissolute amusements of the court had ever done. James was not virtuous
-any more than his brother. One of the first acts which the excellent
-Evelyn, one of the best of men, had to do as commissioner of the privy
-seal, was to affix that imperial stamp to a patent by<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_018" id="page_018"></a>{18}</span> which one of the
-new king’s favorites was made Countess of Dorchester; but James’s
-immoralities were not his chief characteristics. He was a more dangerous
-king than Charles, who was merely selfish, dissolute, and
-pleasure-loving. James was more; he was a bigoted Roman Catholic, eager
-to raise his faith to its old supremacy, and the mere thought that the
-door which had been so bolted and barred against popery was now set open
-filled all England with the wildest panic. The nation felt itself caught
-by the torrent which must carry it to destruction. Men saw the dungeons
-of the Inquisition, the fires of Smithfield, before them as soon as the
-proscribed priest was readmitted and mass once more openly said at an
-unconcealed altar. Never was there a more universal or all-influential
-sentiment. The terror, the unanimity, are things to wonder at. Sancroft
-and his bishops were not constitutionalists. The personal rule of the
-king had nothing in it that alarmed them; but the idea of the
-reintroduction of popery awoke such a panic in their bosoms as drove
-them, in spite of their own tenets, into resistance; and, for the first
-time absolutely unanimous, England was at their back. When we take
-history piecemeal, and read it through the individual lives of the chief
-actors, we perceive with the strangest sensations of surprise that at
-these great crises not one of the leaders of the nation was sure what he
-wanted or what he feared, or was even entirely sincere in his adherence
-to one party against another. They were the courtiers of James, and
-invited William; they were William’s ministers, and kept up a
-correspondence with James. The best of them was not without a
-treacherous side. They were never certain which was safest, which would
-last; always liable to lend an ear to temptations from the other party,
-never sure that they might not to-morrow morning find themselves in open
-rebellion against the master of to-day. Yet, while almost every
-individual of note was subject to this strange uncertainty, this
-confused<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_019" id="page_019"></a>{19}</span> and troubled vacillation, there was such a sweep of national
-conviction, so strong a current of the general will, that the supposed
-leaders of opinion were carried away by it, and compelled to assume and
-act upon a conviction which was England’s, but which individually they
-did not possess. Nothing can be made more remarkable, more unexplainable
-under any other interpretations, than the way in which his entire court,
-statesmen, soldiers, all who were worth counting, and so many who were
-not, abandoned King James&mdash;some with a sort of consternation, not
-knowing why they did it, driven by a force they could not resist. No
-example of this can be more remarkable than that of Clarendon, who
-received the news of his son’s defection to the Prince of Orange with
-what seems to be a heartbroken cry: “O God! that my son should be a
-rebel!” yet, presently, ten days afterward, is drawn away himself in a
-kind of extraordinary confusion, like a man in a dream, like a subject
-of mesmeric influence, although in all the following negotiations he
-maintained James’s cause as far as a man could who did not accept ruin
-as a consequence. Scarcely one of these men was whole-hearted or had any
-determined principle in the matter. But in the mass of the nation behind
-them was a force of conviction, of panic, of determination, that carried
-them off their feet. The chief names of England appear little more than
-straws upon the current, indicating its course, but forced along by its
-fierce sweep and impetus, and not by any impulse of their own.</p>
-
-<p>The Princess Anne occupied a very different position from that of these
-bewildered statesmen. She had been brought up in the strictest sect of
-her religion, Protestant almost more than Christian, a churchwoman above
-all. To those who are capable of thinking about their faith it is always
-possible to believe in the thoughts of other people, and conceive the
-likelihood, at least, that they, in their own esteem, if not in any one
-else’s,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_020" id="page_020"></a>{20}</span> may be right&mdash;which is the only true foundation of toleration.
-But it is the people who believe without thinking, who receive what they
-are taught without exercising any judgment of their own upon the
-subject, and cling to it in exactly the same form in which they received
-it, with a conviction that its least important detail is as necessary as
-its first principle, who furnish that <i>sancta simplicitas</i> which makes
-the cruelest persecution possible without turning the persecutors into
-fiends and barbarians. Though her mother had been a Roman Catholic, and
-her father was one, and though many of her relations belonged to the old
-church, Anne was a Protestant of the most unyielding kind. She was in
-herself as good a type of the England of her time as could have been
-found, far better than her abler and larger-minded advisers. The
-narrowness of her mind and the rigidity of her faith were above all
-reassurances of reason, all guarantees of possibility. She was as much
-dismayed by her father’s determination to liberate and tolerate popery
-as the least enlightened of his subjects. “Methinks it has a very dismal
-prospect,” she wrote as early as 1686, only the year after James’s
-accession. “Attempts,” Lady Marlborough tells us, “were made to draw his
-daughter into his designs. The king, indeed, used no harshness with her;
-he only discovered his wishes by putting into her hands some books and
-papers which he hoped might induce her to a change of religion, and had
-she had any inclination that way the chaplains about were such divines
-as could have said but little in defense of their own religion or to
-secure her against the pretenses of Popery recommended to her by a
-father and a king.” This low estimate of the princess’s spiritual
-advisers is whimsically supported by Evelyn’s opinion of Anne’s first
-religious preceptor,&mdash;Bishop Compton,&mdash;of whom the courtly philosopher
-declared after hearing a sermon from him that “this worthy person’s
-talent is not preaching.”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_021" id="page_021"></a>{21}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter2bdr" style="width: 308px;">
-<a href="images/ill_007_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_007a.jpg" width="308" height="358" alt="Image unavailable: HENRY COMPTON, BISHOP OF LONDON.
-
-ENGRAVED FROM LIFE BY DAVID LOGGAN, FROM PRINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
-ENGRAVED BY E. HEINEMANN." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">HENRY COMPTON, BISHOP OF LONDON.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED FROM LIFE BY DAVID LOGGAN, FROM PRINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.<br />
-ENGRAVED BY E. HEINEMANN.</small></span><br />
-<a href="images/ill_007_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_007b.jpg" alt="Image unavailable: HENRY COMPTON, BISHOP OF LONDON."
-/></a>
-</div>
-
-<p>But Anne required no persuading to stimulate her in the fear of popery
-and narrow devotion to the church, outside of which she knew of no
-salvation. No doubt her father’s popish tracts, things which in that age
-were held to possess many of the properties of the dynamite of to-day,
-scared the inflexible and unimaginative churchwoman as much as if they
-had been capable of exploding and doing her actual damage. Her training,
-so wisely adapted to please the Protestant party, had probably been
-thought by her father and uncle to be a matter of complete indifference
-on any other ground; but in this way they reckoned altogether without
-their princess. With both James’s daughters the process was too
-successful. They feared popery more than they loved their father. There
-seems not the slightest reason to suppose that Anne was insincere in her
-anxiety for the church, or that the panic which she shared with the
-whole country was affected or unreal. It is impossible that she could
-expect her own position to be improved by the substitution of her sister
-and her sister’s husband for the father who had always been kind to her.
-The Churchills, whose church principles were not perhaps so undeniable,
-and whose regard for their own interest was great, are more difficult to
-divine; and yet it appears an unnecessary thing to refer their action to
-unworthy motives. It is asserted by some that they had some visionary
-plan after they had overturned the existing economy by the help of
-William, of bringing in their princess by a side wind and reigning
-through her over the startled and subjugated nation. But granting that
-such an imagination might have been conceived in the fertile and
-restless brain of a young and sanguine woman, it seems impossible to
-imagine that Churchill&mdash;a man of some experience in the world, and some
-knowledge of William&mdash;could even for a moment have believed that the
-grave and ambitious prince, who was so near the throne, could have been
-persuaded or forced to waive his wife’s claims, and those still more
-imperative ones<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_022" id="page_022"></a>{22}</span> which his position of Deliverer gave him, in order to
-advance the fortunes of any one else, least of all of the sister-in-law
-whom he despised.</p>
-
-<p>It is half ludicrous, half pathetic, in the midst of all the tumult and
-confusion of the time, to note the constant allusions to the princess’s
-condition, which recurs whenever she is mentioned. There were always
-reasons why it should be especially cruel to disturb her, and her state
-had constantly to be taken into account. It was very natural in such
-circumstances that she should more and more cling to her stronger
-friend, and find no comfort out of her presence. “Whatever changes there
-are in the world, I hope you will never forsake me, and I shall be
-happy,” she writes during this period of excitement and distress. She
-herself was weak and not very wise. In a sudden emergency neither she
-nor her husband were good for much. They could carry on the routine of
-life well enough, but when unforeseen necessities came they stood
-helpless and bewildered; but Lady Churchill was quick of wit and full of
-inexhaustible resource. To her it was always given to know what to do.</p>
-
-<p>It is unnecessary here to enter into the history of what is called the
-Great Revolution. It is the great modern turning-point of English
-history, and no doubt it is one of the reasons why we have been exempted
-in later days from the agitations of desperate and bloody revolutions
-which have shaken all neighboring nations. Glorious and happy, however,
-scarcely seem to be fit words to describe this extraordinary event. A
-more painful era does not exist in history. There is scarcely an
-individual in the front of affairs who was not guilty of treachery at
-one time or another. They betrayed one another on every hand; they were
-perplexed, uncertain, full of continual alarms. The king who went away
-was a gloomy bigot; the king who came was a cold and melancholy alien.
-Enthusiasm there was none, nor even conviction, except of the necessity
-of doing something<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_023" id="page_023"></a>{23}</span> of a wide-reaching and undeniable change. The part
-which the ladies at the Cockpit played brings the hurry and excitement
-of the movement to its crisis. Both in their way were anxious for their
-respective husbands, absent in the suite of James, and still in his
-power. When the report came that Lord Feversham had begged of James “on
-his knees two hours” to order the arrest of Churchill, Mrs. Freeman must
-have needed all her courage; while the faithful Morley wept, yet tried
-to emulate the braver woman, wondering in her excitement what her own
-heavy prince was doing, and eager for William’s advance, which, somehow
-or other, was to bring peace and quiet. That heavy prince meanwhile was
-mooning about with the perplexed and unhappy king, uttering out of his
-blond mustache with an atrocious accent his dull wonder, “Est il
-possible?” as every new desertion was announced, till mounting heavily
-one evening after dinner, warmed and encouraged by a good deal of King
-James’s wine, and riding through the cold and dark, in his turn he
-deserted too. When this event happened, the excitement at the Cockpit
-was overwhelming. The princess was “in a great fright.” “She sent for
-me,” says Lady Churchill, “told me her distress, and declared that
-rather than see her father, she would jump out of window.” King James
-was coming back to London, sad and wroth, and perhaps the rumor that he
-would have her arrested lent additional terrors to the idea of
-encountering his angry countenance. Lady Churchill went immediately to
-Bishop Compton, the princess’s early tutor and confidential adviser, and
-instant means were taken to secure her flight. That very night, after
-her attendants were in bed, Anne rose in the dark, and with her beloved
-Sarah’s arm and support stole down the back stairs to where the bishop,
-in a hackney coach, was waiting for her. Other princesses in similar
-situations have owned to a thrill of pleasure in such an adventure. No
-doubt at least she breathed the freer when she was out of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_024" id="page_024"></a>{24}</span> the palace
-where King James with his dark countenance might have come any day to
-demand from her an account of her husband’s behavior, or to upbraid her
-with her own want of affection. Anyhow, the sweep of the current had now
-reached her tremulous feet, and she had no power any more than stronger
-persons of resisting it.</p>
-
-<p>Anne’s position was very much changed by the Revolution. If any
-ambitious hopes had been entertained or plans formed by her household,
-they were speedily and very completely brought to an end. The dull royal
-pair with their two brilliant guides and counselors now found themselves
-confronted by another couple of very different mark: the serious,
-somewhat gloomy, determined, and self-concentrated Dutchman, and the new
-queen, Mary, a person far more attractive and imposing than Anne; two
-people full of character and power. We have no space here, however, to
-appropriate to these remarkable persons. William, in particular, belongs
-to larger annals and a history more important than these sketches. Mary
-has left an epitome of herself in her letters which is among the most
-wonderful of individual revelations; but this cannot now be our theme,
-though the subject is a most attractive one.</p>
-
-<p>Two persons so remarkable threw into the shade even Churchill and Sarah,
-much more good Anne and George. We have no reason to suppose that Mary
-entertained any particular sentiment whatever toward her sister, from
-whom she had been entirely separated for the greater part of her life,
-and the history of their relations is a painful one from beginning to
-end. No doubt the queen regarded the household of the princess with the
-contempt which a woman with so entirely different a code would naturally
-entertain for a family in which the heads were so lax and secondary, the
-counselors so prominent. There was nothing in Mary which would help her
-to understand the feeling with which Anne regarded her friend<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_025" id="page_025"></a>{25}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 359px;">
-<a href="images/ill_008_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_008.jpg" width="359" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: JAMES II. IN HIS CORONATION ROBES.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">JAMES II. IN HIS CORONATION ROBES.
-<br />
-<small>ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN<br />
-POSSESSION OF THE DUKE OF NORTHUMBERLAND.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mary. She had herself made use of their influence in the time when it
-was all important to secure every power in England for William’s
-service, but a proud distaste for the woman whom the princess trusted as
-her equal soon awoke in the bosom of the queen. The Churchills, however,
-served the new sovereigns signally by persuading the princess to yield
-her own rights, and consent to the conjoint reign, and to William’s life
-sovereignty&mdash;no small concession on the part of the next heir, and one
-which only the passive character of Anne could have made to appear
-insignificant.</p>
-
-<p>Had she been a stronger and more intellectual woman, this act would have
-borne the aspect of a magnanimous and noble sacrifice to the good of the
-country, of her own interests, and that of her children. As it was, her
-self-renunciation has got her very little credit, either then or now,
-and it has been considered rather an evidence of the discretion of the
-Churchills than of the generosity and patriotism of the princess. These,
-perhaps, are rather large words to use in speaking of Anne, but it must
-be remembered that a narrow mind is usually not less, but more,
-tenacious of personal honor and advantage than a great one, and that the
-dimmer an understanding may be, the less it is accessible to high reason
-and noble motive. This sacrifice accomplished, however, there commenced
-a petty war between Whitehall and the Cockpit, in which perhaps Mary and
-Lady Churchill (now Marlborough) were the chief combatants, but which
-from henceforward until her sister’s death became the principal feature
-in Anne’s life. Continued squabbling is never lovely even when it is
-between queens and princesses, but in this case the injured person has
-had no little injustice, and the offender so many partizans that it may
-not be amiss to make Anne’s side of the question a little more apparent.</p>
-
-<p>If her friend was to blame for embroiling Anne with the queen, it can
-scarcely be believed that the princess’s case would<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_026" id="page_026"></a>{26}</span> have been more
-satisfactory had she been left in her helplessness to the tender mercies
-of William, and entirely dependent upon his kindness, which must have
-happened had there been no bold and strong adviser in the matter. There
-was no generosity in the treatment which Anne received from the royal
-pair. She had made a sacrifice to the security of their throne which
-deserved some grace in return. But her innocent fancy for the palace at
-Richmond, where the sisters had been brought up together, was not
-indulged, nor would there be much excuse even if she were in the wrong
-for the squabblings about her lodging at Whitehall. But she cannot be
-said to have been in the wrong in the next question which occurred,
-which was the settlement of her own income. This she had previously
-drawn from her father, according to the existing custom in the royal
-family, and James had been always liberal and kind to her. But it was a
-different thing to depend upon the somewhat grudging hand of an
-economical brother-in-law, who had a number of foreign dependents to
-provide for, and a great deal to do with the money granted to him. He
-alarmed her friends on this point at once by a remark made to Clarendon
-as to what the princess could want with so large an income as thirty
-thousand a year; and he does not seem at any time or in any particular
-to have shown consideration for her. Perhaps the Churchills were afraid
-that their mistress would be less able than usual to help and further
-their own fortunes, as is universally alleged against them; but, had
-they been the most disinterested couple in the world, it would still
-have been their duty to do what they could to secure her against any
-caprice of the new king, who had no right to be the arbiter of her fate.
-Lady Marlborough’s strenuous action to bring the question to the
-decision of Parliament was nothing less than her mistress’s interests
-demanded. And the sense of the country was so far with them that the
-princess’s income was settled with very little<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_027" id="page_027"></a>{27}</span> difficulty upon a more
-liberal basis than her father’s allowance; which, considering that she,
-and the children of whom she was every year becoming the mother, were
-the only acknowledged heirs of the throne, was a perfectly natural and
-just arrangement.</p>
-
-<p>But the king and queen did not see it in this light. “Friends! what
-friends have you but the king and me?” Queen Mary asked with
-indignation. It is not to be supposed that she meant any harm to her
-sister, but with also a sufficiently natural sentiment could not see
-what Anne’s objection was to dependence upon herself.</p>
-
-<p>The position on both sides is so clearly comprehensible that the
-strength of party feeling which makes Lord Macaulay defend the somewhat
-petty attitude of his favorite monarch on the occasion is very
-extraordinary. It requires no very subtle penetration to see the
-difference between an allowance that comes from a father and that which
-depends upon the doubtful friendship of a brother-in-law. Anne had fully
-proved her capacity to consider the public weal above her own, and it
-was unworthy of William even to wish to keep in the position of a
-hanger-on a woman who had so greatly promoted the harmony of his own
-settlement.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament finally voted her a revenue of fifty thousand pounds a year,
-as a sort of compromise between the thirty thousand pounds which King
-William grudged her and the unreasonably large sum which some of her
-supporters hoped to obtain; but the king and queen never forgave her,
-and still less her advisers, for what they chose to consider a want of
-confidence in themselves.</p>
-
-<p>But William was always impatient of the incapable, and the permission
-was absolutely denied to him. In all these claims and refusals the
-position of Lady Marlborough as the princess’s right hand had been
-completely acknowledged by Queen Mary<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_028" id="page_028"></a>{28}</span> and her husband, who indeed
-attempted secret negotiations with her on more than one occasion to
-induce her to moderate Anne’s claims and to persuade her into compliance
-with their wishes. “She [the queen] sent a great lord to me to desire I
-would persuade the Princess to keep the Prince from going to sea; and
-this I was to compass without letting the Princess know it was the
-Queen’s desire ... after this the Queen sent Lord Rochester to me to
-desire much the same thing. The Prince was not to go to sea, and this
-not going was to appear his own choice.”</p>
-
-<p>Similar attempts were made in the matter of the allowance. And it is
-scarcely possible to believe that Mary, a queen who was not without some
-of the absolutism of the Stuart mind, should have failed to feel a
-certain exasperation with the bold woman who thus upheld her sister’s
-little separate court and interest, and was neither to be flattered nor
-frightened into subservience. And very likely this little separate court
-was a thorn in the side of the royal pair, keeping constant watch upon
-all their actions, maintaining a perpetual criticism, no doubt leveling
-many a jibe at the Dutch retainers, and still more at the Dutch master.
-Good-natured friends, even in the capacity of courtiers, were no doubt
-found to whisper in the presence-chamber the witticisms with which Sarah
-of Marlborough would entertain her mistress&mdash;utterances not very
-brilliant, perhaps, but sharp enough. It would not sweeten the temper of
-the queen if she found out, for instance, that her great William was
-known as Caliban in the correspondence of Mrs. Morley and Mrs. Freeman.
-A hundred petty irritations always come in in such circumstances to
-increase a breach. What the precise occurrence was which brought about
-the final explosion is not known, but one day after a stormy scene, in
-which the queen had in vain demanded from her sister the dismissal of
-Lady Marlborough, an event occurred which took away everybody’s breath.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_029" id="page_029"></a>{29}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 394px;">
-<a href="images/ill_009_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_009.jpg" width="394" height="502" alt="Image unavailable: MARY, PRINCESS OF ORANGE.
-
-ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF THE EARL OF CRAWFORD." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">MARY, PRINCESS OF ORANGE.<br />
-<small>
-ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN<br />
-POSSESSION OF THE EARL OF CRAWFORD.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was the sudden dismissal, without reason assigned, at least so far
-as the public knew, of Lord Marlborough from all his offices. He was
-lieutenant-general of the army, and he was a gentleman of the king’s
-bedchamber. Up to this time there had been nothing to find fault with in
-his conduct. William was too good a soldier himself not to appreciate
-Marlborough’s military talents, and he had behaved, if not with any
-enthusiasm for the new order of affairs, with good taste at least in
-very difficult circumstances. His desertion of James and his powerful
-presence and influence on the opposite side had contributed much to the
-bloodless victory of the Prince of Orange; but except so far as this
-went, Marlborough had shown no hostility to his old master. In the
-convention he had voted for a regency, and when it became evident that
-William’s terms must be accepted unconditionally or not at all, he had
-refrained from voting altogether; so that his support might be
-considered lukewarm. But, on the other hand, he had served with great
-distinction abroad, acting with perfect loyalty to his new chief while
-in command of the English forces. In short, his public aspect up to this
-time would seem on the face of it to have been irreproachable.</p>
-
-<p>This being the case, his sudden dismissal from court filled his friends
-with astonishment and dismay. Nobody understood its why or wherefore.
-“An incident happened which I unwillingly mention,” says Bishop Burnet,
-“because it cannot be told without some reflection on the memory of the
-queen, whom I always honored beyond all the persons whom I have ever
-known.” This regretful preface affords an excellent guarantee of the
-bishop’s sincerity; but Lord Macaulay omits his statement of the case
-altogether while quoting passages from the then unpublished manuscript
-which seemed to support his own views. “The Earl of Nottingham,” Burnet
-continues, “came to the Earl of Marlborough with a message from the King
-telling him<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_030" id="page_030"></a>{30}</span> that he had no more use for his services, and therefore he
-demanded all his commissions. What drew so sudden and hard a message was
-not known, for he had been with the King that morning and had parted
-with him in the ordinary manner. It seemed some letter was intercepted
-that gave suspicions: it is certain that he thought he was too little
-considered, and that he had upon many occasions censured the King’s
-conduct and reflected on the Dutch.” Lord Macaulay, on the other hand,
-ignoring this statement, assures his readers that the real ground of the
-dismissal had been communicated to Anne on the previous night
-(notwithstanding that the great general had been privileged to put on
-the king’s shirt next morning as if nothing had happened), and that it
-was in reality the discovery of a plot for James’s restoration,
-conceived by Marlborough, and in which the princess herself was
-implicated. It was reported to be Marlborough’s intention to move in the
-House of Lords an address to William, requesting him to dismiss the
-foreign servants who surrounded him, and of whom the English were
-bitterly jealous. Such a scheme of reprisals would have had a certain
-humor in its summary reversal of the position, and no doubt must Sarah
-herself have had some hand in its construction, if it ever existed.
-William was as little likely to give up Bentinck and Keppel as Anne was
-to sacrifice the friends whom she loved, and a breach between the
-Parliament and the king would have been, it was hoped, the natural
-result&mdash;to be followed by a <i>coup d’état</i>, in which James might be
-replaced under stringent conditions upon the throne. The sole evidence
-for this plot is King James himself, who describes it in his diary. Lord
-Macaulay adds that it is strongly confirmed by Burnet, but this, we take
-leave to think, is not the case. At the same time there seems no reason
-to doubt King James, who adds that the plan was defeated by the
-indiscreet zeal of some of his own <i>fidèles</i>, who feared that
-Marlborough, were he<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_031" id="page_031"></a>{31}</span> once master of the situation, would put Anne on
-the throne instead of her father.</p>
-
-<p>Whether, however, this supposed proposal was, or was not, the reason of
-Marlborough’s dismissal, it is clear enough that he had resumed a secret
-correspondence with the banished king at St.-Germain, whom, not very
-long before, he had deserted. But so had most of the statesmen who
-surrounded William, even the admiral in whose hands the English
-reputation at sea was soon to be placed. The sins of the others were
-winked at while Maryborough was thus made an example of: perhaps because
-he was the most dangerous; perhaps because he had involved the princess
-in his treachery, persuading her to send a letter and make affectionate
-overtures to her father. Is it possible that it was this very letter
-which Burnet says was intercepted, inclosed most likely in one from
-Marlborough more distinct in its offers? Here is Anne’s simple
-performance, a thing not calculated to do either harm or good:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I have been very desirous of some safe opportunity to make you a
-sincere and humble offer of my duty and submission, and to beg you
-will be assured that I am both truly concerned for the misfortunes
-of your condition, and sensible as I ought to be of my own
-unhappiness: as to what you may think I have contributed to it, if
-wishes could recall what is past, I had long since redeemed my
-fault. I am sensible that it would have been a great relief to me
-if I could have found means to have acquainted you earlier with my
-repentant thoughts, but I hope they may find the advantage of
-coming late&mdash;of being less suspected of insincerity than perhaps
-they would have been at any time before. It will be a great
-addition to the ease I propose to my own mind by this plain
-confession, if I am so happy as to find that it brings any real
-satisfaction to yours, and that you are as indulgent and easy to
-receive my humble submissions as I am to make them in a free
-disinterested acknowledgment of my fault, for no other end but to
-deserve and receive your pardon.</p></div>
-
-<p>These involved and halting sentences by themselves could afford but
-little satisfaction to the anxious banished court at<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_032" id="page_032"></a>{32}</span> St.-Germain. To
-say so much, yet to say so little, though easy to a confused
-intelligence, not knowing very well what it meant, is a thing which
-would have taxed the powers of the most astute conspirators. But there
-could be little doubt that a penitent princess thus ready to implore her
-father’s pardon, would be a powerful auxiliary, with the country just
-then in the stage of natural disappointment which is prone to follow a
-great crisis, and that Marlborough was doubly dangerous with such a card
-in his hands to play.</p>
-
-<p>A little pause occurred after his dismissal. The court by this time had
-gone to Kensington, out of sight and hearing of the Cockpit, Whitehall
-having been burned in the previous year. The princess continued, no
-doubt in no very friendly mood, to take her way to the suburban palace
-in the evenings and make one at her sister’s game of basset, showing by
-her abstraction, and the traces of tears about her eyes, her state of
-depression yet revolt. But about three weeks after that great event,
-something suggested to Lady Marlborough the idea of accompanying her
-princess to the royal presence. It was strictly within her right to do
-so, in attendance on her mistress, and perhaps it was considered in the
-family council at the Cockpit that the existing state of affairs could
-not go on, and that it was best to end it one way or another. One can
-imagine the stir in the ante-chambers, the suppressed excitement in the
-drawing-room, when the princess, less subdued than for some weeks past,
-her eyes no longer red, nor the corners of her mouth drooping, came
-suddenly in out of the night, with the well-known buoyant figure after
-her, proud head erect and eyes aflame, her mistress’s train upon her
-arm, but the air of a triumphant queen on her countenance. There would
-be a pause of consternation&mdash;and for a moment it would seem as if Mary,
-thus defied, must burst forth in wrath upon the culprit. What glances
-must have passed between the court ladies behind their fans! What
-whispers in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_033" id="page_033"></a>{33}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:384px;">
-<a href="images/ill_010_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_010.jpg" width="384" height="495" alt="Image unavailable: QUEEN MARY OF MODENA.
-
-ENGRAVED BY CHARLES STATE, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN
-POSSESSION OF EARL SPENCER." /></a>
-<br /><br />
-<div class="bbox">
-<span class="caption">QUEEN MARY OF MODENA.
-<br />
-<small>ENGRAVED BY CHARLES STATE, AFTER THE PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY, IN<br />
-POSSESSION OF EARL SPENCER.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">corners! The queen, in the midst, pale with anger, restraining herself
-with difficulty; the princess, perhaps beginning to quake; but Sarah,
-undaunted, knowing no reason why she should not be there&mdash;“since to
-attend the princess was only paying her duty where it was owing.”</p>
-
-<p>But next morning brought, as they must have foreseen it would bring, a
-royal missive, meant to carry dismay and terror, in which Mary commanded
-her sister to dismiss her friend and make instant submission. “I tell
-you plainly Lady Marlborough must not continue with you in the
-circumstances in which her lord is,” the queen wrote; “never anybody was
-suffered to live at court in my Lord Marlborough’s circumstances.” There
-is nothing undignified in Mary’s letter. She was in all respects more
-capable of expressing herself than her sister, and she had so far right
-on her side that Lady Marlborough’s appearance at court was little less
-than a deliberate insult to her. “I have all the reason imaginable to
-look upon you bringing her here as the strangest thing that ever was
-done, nor could all my kindness for you have hindered me showing you
-that moment, but I considered your condition, and that made me master of
-myself so far as not to take notice of it there,” the queen said. The
-princess’s condition had often to be taken into consideration, and
-perhaps she was not unwilling that her superiority in this respect to
-her childless sister should be fully evident. She was then within a few
-weeks of her confinement&mdash;not a moment when an affectionate and very
-dependent woman could lightly be parted from her bosom friend.</p>
-
-<p>Thus the situation was brought to a climax. It was not to be expected,
-however, that Anne could have submitted to a mandate which in reality
-would have taken from her all power to choose her own friends; and her
-affections were so firmly fixed upon her beloved companion that it is
-evident life without Sarah would have been a blank to her. She answered
-in a letter studiously<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_034" id="page_034"></a>{34}</span> compiled in defense both of herself and her
-retainer. “I am satisfied she cannot have been guilty of any fault to
-you, and it would be extremely to her advantage if I could here repeat
-every word that ever she had said to me of you in her whole life,” says
-the princess; and she ends entreating her sister to “recall your severe
-command,” and declaring that there is no misery “that I cannot readily
-resolve to suffer rather than the thought of parting with her.” But
-things had gone too far to be stopped by any such appeal. The letter was
-answered by the lord chamberlain in person with a message forbidding
-Lady Marlborough to continue at the Cockpit. This was arbitrary in the
-highest degree, for the house was Anne’s private property, bought for
-and settled upon her by Charles III.; and it was unreasonable, for
-Whitehall was lying in ruins, and Queen Mary’s sight at Kensington could
-not be offended by the spectacle of the couple who had so annoyed her.
-The princess’s spirit was roused. She wrote to her sister that she
-herself would be “obliged to retire,” since such were the terms of her
-continuance, and sent immediately to the Duke of Somerset to ask for a
-lease of Sion House. It is said that William so far interfered in the
-squabble&mdash;in which indeed he had been influential all along&mdash;as to ask
-the duke to refuse this trifling favor. But of all English noble houses
-the proud Somersets were the last to be dictated to; and Anne
-established herself triumphantly in her banishment on the banks of the
-Thames with her favorite at her side.</p>
-
-<p>A child was born a little later, and the queen paid Anne an angry visit
-of ceremony a day or two after the event, saying nothing to her but on
-the vexed subject. “I have made the first step by coming to you,” Mary
-said, approaching the bed where the poor princess lay, sad and
-suffering, for her baby had died soon after its birth, “and I now expect
-you should make the next by removing Lady Marlborough.” The princess,
-“trembling,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_035" id="page_035"></a>{35}</span> and as white as her sheet,” stammered forth her plaintive
-protest that this was the only thing in which she had disobliged her
-sister, and that “it was unreasonable to ask it of her,” whereupon Mary,
-without another word, left the room and the house. It was the last time
-they ever met, unlikely as such a thing seemed. Anne made various
-overtures of reconciliation, but as unconditional obedience was promised
-in none, Mary’s heart was not softened.</p>
-
-<p>The only justification that can be offered for the queen’s behavior was
-that they had been long separated and had little but the formal tie of
-relationship to bind them to each other. Anne had been but a child when
-Mary left England. They were both married and surrounded by other
-affections when they met again. They had so much resemblance of nature
-that each seems to have been capable of but one passion. It was Mary’s
-good fortune to love her husband with all her heart&mdash;but to all
-appearance no one else. She had not a friend among all the ladies who
-had shared her life for years&mdash;no intimate or companion who could give
-her any solace when he was absent. Natural affection was not strong in
-their family. They had no mother, nor bond of common relationship except
-the father whom they both superseded. All this explains to a certain
-extent her coldness to Anne, and it is very likely she thought she was
-doing the best thing possible for her sister in endeavoring to separate
-her from an evil influence, an inferior who was her mistress. But this
-does not excuse the paltry and cruel persecution to which the younger
-sister was henceforward exposed. Every honor that belonged to her rank
-was taken from her, from the sentry at her door to the text upon her
-cushion at church. She was allowed no guard; when she went into the
-country the rural mayors were forbidden to present addresses to her and
-pay the usual honors which mayors delight to pay. The great court ladies
-were given to understand that whoever visited her would<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_036" id="page_036"></a>{36}</span> not be received
-by the queen. A more irritating and miserable persecution could not be,
-nor one more lowering to the character of the chief performer in it.</p>
-
-<p>Anne was but recovering from the illness that followed her confinement,
-and with which her sister’s angry visit was supposed to have something
-to do, when another blow fell upon the band of friends. Marlborough was
-suddenly arrested and sent to the Tower. There was reason enough perhaps
-for his previous disgrace in the secret relations with St.-Germain which
-he was known to have resumed; but the charge afterward made was a purely
-fictitious one, and he and the other great personages involved had
-little difficulty in proving this innocence. The correspondence which
-took place while Lady Marlborough was in town with her husband on this
-occasion reveals Anne very clearly in her affectionate simplicity.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I hear Lord Marlborough is sent to the Tower; and though I am
-certain they have nothing against him, and expected by your letter
-it would be so, yet I was struck when I was told it; for methinks
-it is a dismal thing to have one’s friends sent to that place. I
-have a thousand melancholy thoughts, and cannot help fearing they
-hinder you from coming to me; though how they can do that without
-making you a prisoner, I cannot imagine. I am just told by pretty
-good hands that as soon as the wind turns westerly there will be a
-guard set upon the prince and me. If you hear there is any such
-thing designed and that ’tis easy to you, pray let me see you
-before the wind changes: for afterward one does not know whether
-they will let one have opportunities of speaking to one another.
-But let them do what they please, nothing shall ever vex me, so I
-can have the satisfaction of seeing dear Mrs. Freeman; and I swear
-I would live on bread and water between four walls with her without
-repining; for so long as you continue kind, nothing can ever be a
-real mortification to your faithful Mrs. Morley, who wishes she may
-never enjoy a moment’s happiness in this world or the next if ever
-she proves false to you.</p></div>
-
-<p>Whether the wind proving “westerly” was a phrase understood between the
-correspondents, or if it had anything to do<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_037" id="page_037"></a>{37}</span> with the event of the
-impending battle on which the fate of England was hanging, it is
-difficult to tell. If it was used in the latter sense, the victorious
-battle of La Hogue, by which all recent discomfitures were redeemed,
-soon restored the government to calm and the consciousness of triumph,
-and made conspiracy comparatively insignificant. Before this great
-deliverance was known, Anne had written a submissive letter to her
-sister, informing her that she had now recovered her strength “well
-enough to go abroad,” and asking leave to pay her respects to the queen.
-To which Mary returned a stern answer declaring that such civilities
-were unnecessary as long as her sister declined to do the thing required
-of her. Anne sent a copy of this letter to Lady Marlborough, announcing,
-as she was now “at liberty to go where I please by the queen refusing to
-see me,” her intention of coming to London to see her friend, but this
-intention does not seem to have been carried out. “I am very sensibly
-touched with the misfortune that my dear Mrs. Freeman has had in losing
-her son, knowing very well what it is to lose a child,” the princess
-writes, “but she, knowing my heart so well and how great a share I have
-in all her concerns, I will not say any more on this subject for fear of
-renewing her passion too much.” Throughout this separation these little
-billets were continually coming and going, and we cannot do better than
-transcribe for the reader some of those innocent letters, so natural and
-full of the writer’s heart.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Though I have nothing to say to my dear Mrs. Freeman I cannot help
-inquiring how she and her Lord does. If it be not convenient for
-you to write when you receive this, either keep the bearer till it
-is, or let me have a word from you by the next opportunity when it
-is easy to you, for I would not be a constraint to you at any time,
-much less now when you have so many things to do and think of. All
-I desire to hear from you at such a time is that you and yours are
-well, which next to having my Lord Marlborough out of his enemies’
-power, is the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_038" id="page_038"></a>{38}</span> best news that can come to her, who to the last
-moment of her life will be dear to Mrs. Freeman’s....</p>
-
-<p>I give dear Mrs. Freeman a thousand thanks for her letter which
-gives me an account of her concerns; and that is what I desire more
-to know than other news. I shall reckon the days and hours and
-think it very long till the time is out, both for your sake and my
-Lord Marlborough’s, and that he may be at liberty and your mind at
-ease. And, dear Mrs. Freeman, don’t say when I can see you if I
-come to town, therefore I ask which day will be most convenient for
-you. I confess I long to see you, but am not so unreasonable to
-desire that satisfaction till it is easy to you. I wish with all my
-soul that you may not be a true prophetess, and that it may soon be
-in our power to enjoy one another’s company more than it has been
-of late, which is all I covet in this world....</p>
-
-<p>I am sorry with all my heart Mrs. Freeman meets with so many
-delays, but it is a comfort they cannot keep my Lord Marlborough in
-the Tower longer than the end of the term, and I hope when the
-Parliament sits care will be taken that people may not be clapt up
-for nothing, or else there will be no living in quiet for anybody
-but insolent Dutch and sneaking mercenary Englishmen. Dear Mrs.
-Freeman, farewell&mdash;be assured your faithful Mrs. Morley can never
-change, and I hope you do not in the least doubt of her kindness,
-which, if it be possible, increases every day, and that can never
-have an end but with her life. Mrs. Morley hopes her dear Mrs.
-Freeman will let her have the satisfaction of hearing again from
-her to-morrow....</p>
-
-<p>Dear Mrs. Freeman may easily imagine I cannot have much to say
-since I saw her. However, I must write two words, for though I
-believe she does not doubt of my constancy, feeling how base and
-false all the world is, I am of that temper I think I can never say
-enough to assure you of it. Therefore give me leave to assure you
-they can never change me. And there is no misery I cannot readily
-resolve to suffer rather than the thoughts of parting from you. And
-I do swear I would sooner be torn in pieces than alter this my
-resolution. My dear Mrs. Freeman, I long to hear from you.</p></div>
-
-<p>This pretty correspondence changed a little, but only to grow more
-impassioned, when the princess had gone to Bath and the friends were
-less near each other.</p>
-
-<p>Anne was, however, pursued by the royal displeasure even in her invalid
-journey to Bath, and no less a person than<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_039" id="page_039"></a>{39}</span> Lord Nottingham, the lord
-chamberlain, was employed to warn the mayor of that city that his
-civilities to the princess were ill-timed. Such a disclosure of the
-family quarrel evinced a determination and bitterness which perhaps
-frightened even Lady Marlborough, courageous as she was; and she seems
-to have offered and even pressed her resignation as a means of making
-peace. But nothing altered the devotion of her faithful princess.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I really long to know how my dear Mrs. Freeman got home, and now I
-have this opportunity of writing she must give me leave to tell her
-if she should ever be so cruel as to leave her faithful Mrs. Morley
-she will rob her of all the joy and quiet of her life; for if that
-day should come, I could never enjoy a happy minute, and I swear to
-you I would shut myself up and never see a creature. If you do but
-remember what the queen said to me the night before your lord was
-turned out of all; then she began to pick quarrels; and if they
-should take off twenty or thirty thousand pounds, have I not lived
-upon as little before? When I was first married we had but twenty
-(it is true indeed the king was so kind to pay my debts) and if it
-should come to that again what retrenchment is there in my family I
-would not willingly make and be glad of that pretence to do it?
-Never fancy, my dear Mrs. Freeman, if what you fear should happen,
-that you are the occasion; no, I am very well satisfied, and so is
-the prince, too, that it would have been so however, for Caliban is
-capable of doing nothing but injustice; therefore rest satisfied
-you are noways the cause, and let me beg once more for God’s sake
-that you would not mention parting more, no, not so much as think
-of it, and if you should ever leave me, be assured it would break
-your faithful Mrs. Morley’s heart.</p></div>
-
-<p>A still stronger expression of the same sentiment, with a little gleam
-of self-assertion and sense of injured dignity, follows, after the
-princess had, as would seem, taken counsel with her George. That heavy
-prince fully acquiesced at least, if nothing more, in his wife’s
-devotion.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>In obedience to dear Mrs. Freeman I have told the prince all she
-desired me, and he is so far from being of another opinion, if
-there had been occasion, he would have strengthened me in my
-resolutions, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_040" id="page_040"></a>{40}</span> we both beg you would never mention so cruel a
-thing again. Can you think either of us so wretched that for the
-sake of twenty thousand pounds, and to be tormented from morning to
-night with flattering knaves and fools, we should forsake those we
-have such obligations to, and that we are so certain we are the
-occasion of all their misfortunes? Besides, will you believe we
-will truckle to Caliban, who from the first moment of his coming
-has used us at that rate as we are sensible he has done, and that
-all the world can witness that will not let their interest weigh
-more with them than their reason? But suppose I did submit, and
-that the king could change his nature so much as to use me with
-humanity, how would all reasonable people despise me? How would
-that Dutch monster laugh at me, and please himself with having got
-the better! and which is much more, how would my conscience
-reproach me for having sacrificed it&mdash;my honor, reputation, and all
-the substantial comforts of this life&mdash;for transitory interest,
-which even to those who make it their idol, can never afford any
-real satisfaction, much less to a virtuous mind? No, my dear Mrs.
-Freeman, never believe that your faithful Mrs. Morley will ever
-submit. She can wait with patience for a sunshine day, and if she
-does not live to see it, yet she hopes England will flourish again.
-Once more give me leave to beg you would be so kind never to speak
-of parting more, for, let what will happen, that is the only thing
-that can make me miserable.</p></div>
-
-<p>Such are the letters which Lord Macaulay describes as expressing “the
-sentiments of a fury in the style of a fish-woman.” It was not indeed
-pretty to call great William Caliban, but Anne was fond of nicknames,
-and the king’s personal appearance was not his strong point. To us the
-above outburst of indignation seems both natural and allowable. She had
-been subject to an inveterate and petty persecution&mdash;her little
-magnanimities had been answered by exactions. We are all so ready to
-believe that when a woman is involved she must be the offender, that
-most readers will have set down the insults to which Anne was subject to
-the account of Mary. But it is curious to note that in these letters all
-the blame is thrown upon the harsh brother-in-law, the Dutch monster,
-the alien, who had made so many strangers into English noblemen, and who
-identified Marlborough, among all the other courtiers who had been as<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_041" id="page_041"></a>{41}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:316px;" >
-<a href="images/ill_011_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_011.jpg" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: WILLIAM III.
-
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY CORNELIS VERMEULEN, AFTER THE PAINTING BY
-ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF." /></a>
-<br /><div class="bbox">
-<span class="caption">WILLIAM III.
-<br /><small>
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY CORNELIS VERMEULEN, AFTER THE PAINTING BY
-ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">little steadfast to him, as the object of a pertinacious persecution.
-The princess says nothing of her sister. It is Caliban who is capable of
-nothing but injustice. It is he who will laugh if he gets the better of
-her. Anne’s style is perhaps not quite worthy of the Augustan age, but
-it is at least very intelligible and full of little individual turns
-which are more characteristic than the smoother graces. That she loved
-her friend with her whole heart, that she had a generous contempt for
-interested motives, and, humble as she was, a just sense of her own
-dignity, are all abundantly and very simply manifest in them. They will
-give to the impartial reader the impression of a natural and artless
-character, with much generous feeling and much tender affectionateness:
-tenacious of her rank and its observances, yet willing to throw all
-these trifles down at the feet of her friend. Poor young lady! When we
-recollect how constantly the princess’s “condition” had to be thought
-of, how her long patience and many pains ended constantly in the little
-waxen image of a dead baby and nothing more, who can wonder that the
-world seemed falling to pieces about her when she was threatened with
-the loss of the one strong sustaining prop upon which she had hung from
-her childhood&mdash;the friend who had helped her through all the first
-experiences of life, the companion who had amused so many weary days and
-made the time pass as no one else could do!</p>
-
-<p>All these miserable disputes, however, were ended in a moment when
-brought into the cold twilight of a death-chamber, where even kings and
-queens are constrained to see things at their true value. Of all the
-royal personages in the kingdom, Mary’s would have seemed to any outside
-spectator the soundest and safest life. William had never been healthy,
-and was consumed by the responsibilities and troubles into which he had
-plunged. Anne had these ever-succeeding maternities to keep her at a low
-level; but Mary was young, vigorous, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_042" id="page_042"></a>{42}</span> happy&mdash;happy at least in her
-devotion to her husband and his love for her. It was she, however, who,
-to the awe and consternation of the world, was cut down in her prime
-after a few days’ illness, in the midst of her greatness. Such a
-catastrophe no one could behold without the profoundest impulse of pity.
-Whatever she had done a week before, there she lay now helpless, all her
-splendors gone from her, the promise of a long career ended, and her
-partner left heartbroken upon the solitary throne to which she had given
-him the first right.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of so forlorn a man,&mdash;so powerful, yet as impotent when his
-happiness was concerned as the meanest,&mdash;left thus heartbroken without
-courage or strength, his sole companion gone, and nothing but strangers,
-alien minds, and doubtful counselors round, is enough to touch any
-heart. Anne, like the rest of the world, was shocked and startled by the
-sudden calamity. She sent anxious messages asking to be admitted to her
-sister’s bedside; and, when all was over, partly no doubt from policy,
-but we may be at least permitted to believe partly from good feeling,
-presented herself at Kensington Palace to show at least that rancor was
-not in her heart. Unfortunately, there was no reconciliation between the
-sisters: the breach continued to the end of the queen’s life, Burnet
-informs us. But when the forlorn and solitary king was roused in his
-misery to receive his sister-in-law’s message, a sort of peace was
-patched up between them over that unthought-of grave. There was no
-longer any public quarrel or manifestation of animosity&mdash;and with this
-melancholy event the first half of Anne’s history may be brought to an
-end.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_043" id="page_043"></a>{43}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="Chapter_II" id="Chapter_II"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter II</span><br /><br />
-THE QUEEN AND THE DUCHESS</h2>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra">A</span> YEAR after the accession of William and Mary, and before any of the
-bitternesses and conflicts above recorded had openly begun, the only
-child of Anne on whose life any hopes could be built was born. Her many
-babies had died at birth or immediately after, and their quick and
-constant succession, as has been said, was the distinguishing feature of
-her personal life. But after the Revolution, when everything was
-settling out of the confusion of the crisis, and when as yet no further
-family troubles had disclosed the family rancors and disagreements, in
-the country air of Hampton Court, where the new king and queen were
-living, a little prince was born. Though he was sickly at first, like
-all the rest, he survived the dangers of infancy, and, called William
-after the king, and bearing from the first day of his life the title of
-Duke of Gloucester, was received joyfully by the nation at large and
-everybody concerned as the authentic heir to the crown. This child kept,
-it would seem, a little hold on the affections of the childless Mary
-during the whole course of the quarrel with his mother, bitter as it
-was, and continued an object of interest and kindness to William as long
-as he lived. The interposition of the quaint and precocious boy, with
-his big head, his premature enlightenment as to what it was and was not
-prudent to say, his sparkle of childish ambition, and all his
-old-fashioned ways, made a curious and welcome diversion in the troubled
-scene where nothing was happy, not even the child.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_044" id="page_044"></a>{44}</span> He was the chief
-occupation of Anne’s life when comparative peace followed the warlike
-interval above related, and a cold and forced civility replaced the
-active hostilities which for years had been raging between the court and
-the household of the princess.</p>
-
-<p>Anne has never got much credit for her forbearance and self-effacement
-at the critical moments of her career. But it is certain that she might
-have given William a great deal of trouble had she asserted her rights
-as Mary’s successor, as she might also have done at the time of the
-first settlement. No doubt he would on both occasions have carried the
-day, and with this certainty the historians have been satisfied, without
-considering that a woman who was not of a lofty character, and who was a
-Stuart, must have felt it doubly bitter to find herself the subject of a
-gloomy brother-in-law who slighted her, and who, her rasher partizans
-did not hesitate to say, ought to have been her subject so long as he
-remained in England after her sister’s death, and not she his. The
-absence of any attempt on her part to disturb or molest, nay, her little
-advances, her letters of condolence, and of congratulation the first
-time that a victory gave occasion for it, showed no inconsiderable
-magnanimity on the part of the prosaic princess&mdash;all the more that she
-had not been in the habit, as is usual among women, of putting the
-scorns she had suffered to another woman’s account, and holding Mary
-responsible, but had uniformly attributed to the “Dutch monster,” the
-Caliban of her correspondence, all the slights that were put on her&mdash;all
-the more that William did very little to encourage any overtures of
-friendship. He received her after his wife’s death, and they are said by
-one of her attendants to have wept together when the unwieldy princess,
-then unable to walk, was carried in her chair into the very
-presence-chamber. But if a common emotion drew them together at this
-moment, it did not last; and in the diminished<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_045" id="page_045"></a>{45}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 327px;">
-<a href="images/ill_012_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_012.jpg" width="327" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. G. TIETZE, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, AFTER THE
-PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY R. G. TIETZE, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, AFTER THE<br />
-PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">ceremonial of the bereaved court, Anne had but scant respect and no
-welcome. But she made no further complaint, and did what she could to
-keep on terms of civility at least with her brother-in-law, writing to
-him little letters of politeness, notwithstanding the disapproval of
-Lady Marlborough, who was of no such gentle temper, and the absence of
-all response from William. He, with all his foreign wars and home
-troubles, solitary, sad, broken in health and in life, had little heart,
-we may suppose, for those commonplace advances from a woman he had never
-been able to tolerate. But though Anne’s relations with the king were
-scarcely improved, her position in respect to the courtiers who had
-abandoned her in her sister’s lifetime was different indeed. Lady
-Marlborough describes this with her usual force.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>And now it being quickly known that the quarrel was made up,
-nothing was to be seen but crowds of people of all sorts flocking
-to Berkeley House to pay their respects to the prince and princess;
-a sudden alteration which I remember occasioned the half-witted
-Lord Carnarvon to say one night to the princess as he stood close
-by her in the circle, “I hope your highness will remember that I
-came to wait upon you when none of this company did,” which caused
-a great deal of mirth.</p></div>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the little boy, the heir of England, interposes his quaint
-little figure with that touch of nature which always belongs to a child,
-in the midst of all the excitement and dullness, awakening a certain
-interest even in the solitary and bereaved life of William, and filling
-his mother’s house with tender anxieties and pleasures. He was sickly
-and feeble from his childhood, but early learned the royal lesson of
-self-concealment, and was cuffed and hustled by the anxious cruelty of
-love into the use of his poor little legs years after his contemporaries
-had been in full enjoyment of their liberty. It is characteristic of the
-self-absorbed and belligerent chronicler of the princess’s household,
-whose narrative of all the quarrels and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_046" id="page_046"></a>{46}</span> struggles of royal personages
-is so vivid, that she has very little to say about either the living or
-dying of the only child who was of such importance both to her mistress
-and to the country. His little existence is pushed aside in Lady
-Marlborough’s record, and but for a little squabble over the appointment
-of the duke’s “family,” which she gives with great detail, we should
-scarcely have known from her that Anne had tasted that happiness of
-maternity which is so largely weighted with pains and cares. But the
-story of little Gloucester’s life, as found in the more familiar record
-of his waiting-gentleman, Lewis Jenkins, is both attractive and
-entertaining. The little fellow seems to have been full of lively spirit
-and observation, active and restless in spite of his feebleness, full of
-a child’s interest in everything about him, and of precocious judgment
-and criticism. Some of the stories that are told of him put these gifts
-in a startling light. “Who has taught you to say such words?” his mother
-asks him when the child has been betrayed into innocent repetition of
-the oaths he had heard from his attendants. The boy pauses before he
-replies. “If I say Dick Dewey,” he whispers to a favorite lady, “he will
-be sent down-stairs. Mama, I invented them myself,” he adds aloud. The
-little being moving among worlds not realized, learning to play his
-little part, taking his cue from the countenances round him, forming his
-little policy in the twinkling of an eye, could not have had a better
-representative. His careless indifference to his chaplain’s religious
-services, but happy learning of little prayers and verses with the old
-lady to whom he takes a fancy, his weariness of lessons, yet eager
-interest in the diagrams that drop from Lewis Jenkins’s pocket-book, and
-in all the bits of history he can induce his Welsh usher to tell him,
-and all the rest of his innocent childlike perversities, awaken in us an
-amused yet pathetic interest. A troublesome, lovable, perverse,
-delightful child, not always easy to manage, constantly asking the most
-awkward<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_047" id="page_047"></a>{47}</span> questions, full of ambition and energy and spirit and
-foolishness, the dull prince’s somewhat tedious house brightens into
-hope and sweetness so long as he is there.</p>
-
-<p>In every respect this was the brightest moment of Anne’s life. There was
-no longer any possibility of treating the next heir to the crown, the
-mother of the only prince in whom the imagination of England could take
-pleasure, with slighting or contumely. She was permitted to have her
-share of the honors and comforts of English royalty. St. James’s old
-red-brick palace was given over to her as became her position; and, what
-was more wonderful, Windsor Castle, one of the noblest of royal
-dwellings, became the country-house of Anne and her boy. King William
-preferred Hampton Court, with its Dutch gardens, in which he could
-imagine himself at home: the great feudal castle, erecting its massive
-towers from the crest of the gentle hill which has the value of a much
-greater eminence in the midst of the broad plain that sweeps forth in
-every direction round, was not, apparently, to his taste. And few
-prettier or more innocent scenes have been associated with its long
-history than those in which little Gloucester was the chief actor. He
-had a little regiment of boys of his own age whom it was his delight to
-drill and lead through a hundred mock battles and rapid skirmishings,
-mischievous little urchins who called themselves the Duke of
-Gloucester’s men, and played their little pranks like their elders, as
-favorites will. When he went to Windsor, four Eton boys were sent for to
-be his playmates, one of them being young Churchill, the son of Lady
-Marlborough. The little prince chose St. George’s Hall for the scene of
-his mimic battles, and there the little army stormed and besieged one
-another to their hearts’ content. When his mother’s marriage-day was
-celebrated, he received his parents with salvos of his small artillery,
-and, stepping forth in his little birthday-suit, paid them his
-compliment: “Papa, I wish you and Mama unity, peace, and concord, not
-for a time,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_048" id="page_048"></a>{48}</span> but forever,” said the serious little hero. One can fancy
-Anne, smiling and triumphant in her joy of motherhood, with her
-beautiful chestnut curls and sweet complexion and placid roundness,
-leaning on good George’s arm,&mdash;her peaceful companion, with whom she had
-never a quarrel,&mdash;and admiring her son’s infant wisdom. It was their
-happy time: no cares of state upon their heads, no quarrels on hand,
-Sarah of Marlborough, let us hope, smiling too, and at peace with
-everybody, her own boy taking part in the ceremonial.</p>
-
-<p>The little smoke and whiff of gunpowder, the little gunners at their toy
-artillery, the great hall still slightly athrill with the mimic salute,
-add something still to the boundless hopefulness of the scene; for why
-should not this little English William grow up as great a soldier and
-more fortunate than his grim godfather, and subdue France under the feet
-of England, and be the conqueror of the world? All this was possible in
-those pleasant days.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion there was a great chapter of Knights of the Garter
-to witness the installation of little Gloucester in knightly state as
-one of the order. The little figure, seven years old, seated under the
-noble canopywork in St. George’s beautiful chapel, scarcely visible over
-the desk upon which his prayer-book was spread out, gazing with blue
-eyes intent, in all the gravity of a child, upon the great English
-nobles in their stalls around him, listening to the voices of the
-choristers pealing high into space, makes another touching picture. King
-William himself had buckled the garter round the child’s knee and hung
-the jewel about his neck,&mdash;St. George slaying his dragon, that
-immemorial emblem of the victory over evil; and no doubt in the vague
-grandeur of childish anticipation, the boy felt himself ready to emulate
-the feat of the patron saint. He was a little patriot too, eager to lend
-the aid of his small squadron to his uncle when William went away to the
-wars, and bringing a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_049" id="page_049"></a>{49}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter2bdr" style="width: 463px;">
-<a href="images/ill_013_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_013.jpg" width="463" height="261" alt="Image unavailable: GARDEN FRONT, HAMPTON COURT.
-
-DRAWN BY JOSEPH PENNELL, ENGRAVED BY J. F. JUNGLING." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">GARDEN FRONT, HAMPTON COURT.
-<br /><small>
-DRAWN BY JOSEPH PENNELL, ENGRAVED BY J. F. JUNGLING.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">smile even upon that worn and melancholy face as he manœuvered his
-little company and showed how they would fight in Flanders when the
-moment came. When William was threatened with assassination and the
-country woke up to feel that though she did not love him it would be
-much amiss to lose him, little Gloucester, at eight, was one of the most
-loyal. Taking counsel with his little regiment, he drew up a memorial,
-written out, no doubt, by the best master of the pen among them, with
-much shedding of ink, if not of more precious fluid. “We, your Majesty’s
-subjects, will stand by you while we have a drop of blood,” was the
-address to which the Duke of Gloucester’s men set all their tiny fists.
-The little duke himself, not content with this, added to it another
-address of his own:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I, your Majesty’s most dutiful subject, had rather lose my life in
-your Majesty’s cause than in any man’s else; and I hope it will not
-be long ere you conquer France.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">Gloucester.</span><br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>Heroic little prince!&mdash;a Protestant William, yet a gallant and gentle
-Stuart. With this heart of enthusiasm and generous valor in him, what
-might he not have done had he ever lived to be king? These marred
-possibilities, which are so common in life, are almost the saddest
-things in it, and that must be a heart very strong in faith that is not
-struck dumb by the withdrawal from earth’s extreme need of so much
-faculty that seemed created for her help and succor. It certainly awoke
-a smile, and might have drawn an iron tear down William’s cheek, to see
-this faithful little warrior ready to “lose his life” in his defense.
-And the good pair behind, George and Anne, who had evidently suffered no
-treacherous suggestion to get to the ear of the boy,&mdash;no hint that
-William was a usurper, and little Gloucester had more right than he to
-be uppermost,&mdash;how radiant they stand in the light of their happiness
-and hope! The spectator is reluctant to turn the page to the coming
-gloom.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_050" id="page_050"></a>{50}</span></p>
-
-<p>“When the Duke of Gloucester was arrived at an age to be put into men’s
-hands,” William’s relenting and change of mind was proved by the fact
-that Marlborough, who had been in disgrace all these years, and whom
-only the constant favor of Anne had kept out of entire obscurity, was
-recalled into the front of affairs in order to be made “governor” of the
-young prince. It is true that this gracious act was partially
-neutralized by the appointment of Bishop Burnet as little Gloucester’s
-tutor, a choice which was supposed to be as disagreeable to Anne as the
-other was happy. No distinct reason appears for this sudden and
-extraordinary change. Marlborough’s connection with the family of the
-princess made him indeed peculiarly suitable to have the charge of her
-son, but William had not hitherto shown any desire to honor her likings;
-and this was not reason enough for all the other marks of favor bestowed
-upon him, bringing him back at once from private life and political
-disgrace to a position as high as any in the kingdom. Burnet himself did
-by no means relish the honor thus thrust upon him. He was almost
-disposed, he tells us, “to retire from the court and town,” much as that
-would have cost him, rather than take upon him such a charge. But the
-pleasure of believing that “the king would trust that care only to me,”
-and also an unexpected “encouragement” received from the princess,
-decided him to make the experiment. The little pupil was about nine when
-he came into the bishop’s hands, and he gives the following account of
-his charge:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I had been trusted with his education now for two years, and he had
-made amazing progress. I had read over the Psalms, Proverbs, and
-Gospels with him, and had explained things that fell in my way very
-copiously; and was often surprised with the questions that he put
-to me, and the reflections that he made. He came to understand
-things relating to religion beyond imagination. I went through
-geography so often with him that he knew all the maps very
-particularly. I explained to him the forms of government in every
-country, with the interests<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_051" id="page_051"></a>{51}</span> and trades of that country, and what
-was both bad and good in it. I acquainted him with all the great
-revolutions that had been in the world, and gave him a copious
-account of the Greek and Roman histories of Plutarch’s lives; the
-last thing I explained to him was the Gothic constitution and the
-beneficiary and feudal laws: I talked of these things at different
-times more than three hours a day; this was both easy and
-delighting to him. The king ordered five of his chief ministers to
-come once a quarter and examine the progress he made; they seemed
-amazed both at his knowledge and the good understanding that
-appeared in him; he had a wonderful memory and a very good
-judgment.</p></div>
-
-<p>Poor little Gloucester! The genial bishop breaking down all this
-knowledge into pleasant talks so that it should be “both easy and
-delighting,” and his lessons in fortification, which were more
-delightful still, and his own little private princelike observation of
-men’s faces and minds, were all to come to naught. On his eleventh
-birthday, amid the feastings and joy, a sudden illness seized him, and,
-a few days after, the promising boy had ended his bright little career.
-As a matter of course, blame was attached to the doctor who attended
-him, and who had bled him in the beginning of a fever; but this was
-almost universally the case in the then state of medical science. “He
-was the only remaining child,” the bishop says, “of seventeen the
-princess had borne, some to the full time and the rest before it. She
-attended on him during his sickness with great tenderness, but with a
-grave composedness that amazed all who saw it. She bore his death with a
-resignation and piety that were indeed very singular.” It would be small
-wonder indeed if Anne had been altogether crushed by such a calamity. It
-is said by some historians of the Jacobite party that her mind was
-overwhelmed by a sense of her guilt toward her own father, and of just
-judgment executed upon her in the loss of her child, and that she
-immediately wrote to James, pouring out her whole heart in penitence,
-and pledging herself to support the claims of her brother should she
-ever come to the throne. This letter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_052" id="page_052"></a>{52}</span> however, was never found, and
-does not seem to be vouched for by witnesses beyond suspicion. But for
-the fact that Anne was stricken to the dust, no parent will need any
-further evidence. Her good days and hopes were over; henceforward, when
-she wrote to her dearest friend in the old confidential strain, it was
-as “your poor unfortunate Morley” that the bereaved mother signed
-herself. Nothing altered these sad adjectives. She felt herself as poor
-and unfortunate in her unutterable loss when she was queen as if she had
-been the humblest woman that ever lost an only child.</p>
-
-<p>Marlborough was absent when his little pupil fell ill, but hurried back
-to Windsor in time to see him die. It was etiquette in those days that
-in case of a death the survivors should instantly leave the place in
-which it had happened, leaving the dead in possession, to lie in state
-there and receive the homage of curious or interested spectators. But
-Anne would not be persuaded to leave the place where her child was, and,
-four or five days after, the little prince was carried solemnly by
-torchlight through the summer woods, through Windsor Park, and by the
-river, and under the trees of Richmond, to Westminster: a silent
-procession pouring slowly through the odorous August night. His little
-body lay in state in Westminster Hall&mdash;a noble chamber for such a tiny
-sleeper&mdash;for five days more, when it was laid with the kings in the
-great abbey which holds all the greatest of England. A more heartrending
-episode is not in history.</p>
-
-<p>William did not take any notice of the announcement of the death for a
-considerable time, which embarrassed the ambassador at Paris greatly on
-the subject of mourning, and has given occasion for much denunciation of
-his hardness and heartlessness. When he answered at last,
-however&mdash;though this was not till more than two months after, in a
-letter to Marlborough&mdash;it was with much subdued feeling. “I do not think
-it<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_053" id="page_053"></a>{53}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;">
-<a href="images/ill_014_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_014.jpg" width="252" height="271" alt="Image unavailable: THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MINIATURE BY LEWIS CROSSE IN THE
-COLLECTION AT WINDSOR CASTLE; BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF QUEEN
-VICTORIA." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">THE DUKE OF GLOUCESTER
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MINIATURE BY LEWIS CROSSE IN THE
-COLLECTION AT WINDSOR CASTLE; BY SPECIAL PERMISSION OF QUEEN
-VICTORIA.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">necessary to employ many words,” he writes, “in expressing my surprise
-and grief at the death of the Duke of Gloucester. It is so great a loss
-to me as well as to all England, that it pierces my heart with
-affliction.” It seems impossible that the loss of a child who had shown
-so touching an allegiance to himself should not have moved him; but
-perhaps there was in him, too, a touch of satisfaction that the rival
-pair who had been thorns in his flesh since ever he came to England,
-were not to have the satisfaction of founding a new line. At St.-Germain
-the satisfaction was more marked still, and it was supposed that the
-most dangerous obstacle in the way of the young James Stuart was removed
-by the death of his sister’s heir. We know now how futile that
-anticipation was; but at the time this was not so clear, and the anxiety
-of the English parliament to secure before William’s death a formal
-abjuration of the so-called Prince of Wales shows that the hope was not
-without foundation.</p>
-
-<p>This and the new and exciting combination of European affairs produced
-by what is called the “Spanish Succession,” occupied all minds during
-the two years that remained of William’s suffering life. It was a moment
-of great excitement and uncertainty. Louis XIV., into whose hands, as
-seemed likely, a sort of universal power must fall if his grandson were
-permitted to succeed to the throne of Spain, had just vowed at the
-death-bed of James his determination to support the claims of the
-exile’s son, and, on James’s death, had proclaimed the boy King of
-England. Thus England had every reason of personal irritation and even
-alarm for joining in the alliance against the threatening supremacy of
-France, whose power&mdash;had she been allowed to place one of her princes
-peaceably on the Spanish throne, to which the rich Netherlands still
-belonged&mdash;would have been paramount in Europe. It was on the eve of the
-great struggle that William died. With a determination equal to that
-with which he had made head against failing fortune in many a
-battle<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_054" id="page_054"></a>{54}</span>-field, he fought for his life, which, at such a crisis, was
-doubly important to the countries of his birth and of his crown, and to
-the cause of the Protestant religion and all that we have been taught to
-consider as freedom throughout Europe. There is something pathetic in
-the struggle, in the statement of his case, under one name or another as
-a private individual, that there might be no doubt as to the frankness
-of the opinions which he caused to be made among the great physicians of
-Europe. His life in itself could not have been a very happy or desirable
-one. He had no longer his popular and beloved Mary to leave behind him
-in England as his representative when he set out for the wars, and there
-were few in England whom he trusted fully, or who trusted him. To die at
-the beginning of a great European struggle, leaving the dull people whom
-he disliked to take his place in England, and the soldier whom he had
-crushed and subdued and sternly held in the shade as long as he was
-able, to assume his baton, and win the victories it had never been
-William’s fortune to gain, must have been bitter indeed. It would appear
-even that he had entertained some idea of disturbing the natural order
-of events to prevent this, and that it had been suggested to the
-Electress Sophia, after poor little Gloucester’s death, that her family
-should at once be nominated as his immediate successors, to the
-exclusion of Anne, a proposal which the prudent electress evaded with
-great skill and ingenuity by representing that the Prince of Wales&mdash;who
-must surely have learned, he and his counselors, wisdom from the failure
-of his father&mdash;was the natural heir, and would, no doubt, do well enough
-on a trial. Bishop Burnet denies that such a design was ever
-entertained, but Lord Dartmouth, in his notes upon Burnet, gives the
-following very distinct evidence on the subject:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I do not know how far the Whig party would trust a secret of that
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_055" id="page_055"></a>{55}</span>consequence to such a blab as the bishop was known to be: but the
-Dukes of Bolton and Newcastle both proposed it to me, and used the
-strongest arguments to induce me to come into it; which was that it
-would be making Lord Marlborough King at least for the time if the
-Princess succeeded; and that I had reason to expect nothing but
-ill-usage during such a reign. Lord Marlborough asked me afterward
-in the House of Lords if I had ever heard of such a design. I told
-him Yes, but did not think it very likely. He said it was very
-true: but by God if ever they attempted it we would walk over their
-bellies.</p></div>
-
-<p>Thus until the last moment Anne’s position would seem to have been
-menaced; but a more impossible scheme was never suggested, for even the
-idea of Marlborough’s triumph was unable to raise the smallest party
-against the princess, and to the country in general she was the object
-of a kind of enthusiasm. The people loved everything in her, even the
-fact that she was not clever, which of itself is often highly
-ingratiating with the masses. William, it is said, with a magnanimity
-which was infinitely to his credit, named Marlborough as his most fit
-successor in the command of the allied armies before he died. The formal
-abjuration of the Prince of Wales was made by Parliament only just in
-time to have his assent, and then all obstacles were removed out of the
-princess’s way. It was thought by the populace that everything
-brightened for the new reign. There had been an unexampled continuance
-of gloomy weather, bad harvests, and clouds and storms. But to great
-Queen Anne the sun burst forth, the gloom dispelled, the country broke
-out into gaiety and rejoicing. A new reign full of new possibilities has
-always something exhilarating in it. William’s greatness was marred by
-externals and never heartily acknowledged by the mass of the people, but
-Anne had many claims upon the popular favor. She was a woman, and a kind
-and simple one. That desertion of her father which some historical
-writers have condemned so bitterly, had no great effect upon the
-contemporary imagination, nor, so far as can be judged, upon her own;
-and it was the only offense that could be alleged<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_056" id="page_056"></a>{56}</span> against her. She had
-been unkindly treated and threatened with wrong, which naturally made
-the multitude strenuous in her cause; and everything conspired to make
-her accession happy. She was only thirty-seven, and though somewhat
-unwieldy in person, still preserved her English comeliness, her
-abundant, beautiful hair, and, above all, the melodious voice by which
-even statesmen and politicians were impressed. “She pronounced this,”
-says Bishop Burnet, describing her address to the Privy Council when
-they first presented themselves before her, “as she did all her other
-speeches, with great weight and authority, and with a softness of voice
-and sweetness in the pronunciation that added much life to all she
-spoke.” The commentators who criticize so sorely the bishop’s chronicles
-are in entire agreement with him on this subject. “It was a real
-pleasure to hear her,” says Lord Dartmouth, “though she had a
-bashfulness that made it very uneasy to herself to say much in public.”
-Speaker Onslow unites in the same testimony: “I have heard the queen
-speak from the throne, and she had all the author says here. I never saw
-an audience more affected; it was a sort of charm. She received all that
-came to her in so gracious a manner that they went from her highly
-satisfied with her goodness and her obliging deportment; for she
-hearkened with attention to everything that was said to her.” Thus all
-smiled upon Anne in the morning of her reign. Her coronation was marked
-with unusual splendor and enthusiasm, and though the queen herself had
-to be carried in a chair to the Abbey, her state of health being such
-that she could not walk, this did not affect the splendid ceremonial in
-which even to the Jacobites themselves there was little to complain of,
-since their hopes that Anne’s influence might advance her father’s young
-son to the succession after her were still high, notwithstanding that
-the settlement of the crown upon Sophia of Brunswick and her heirs had
-already been made.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_057" id="page_057"></a>{57}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:389px;">
-<a href="images/ill_015_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_015.jpg" width="389" height="540" alt="Image unavailable: QUEEN ANNE.
-
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY PIETER VAN GUNST, AFTER THE PAINTING BY
-SIR GODFREY KNELLER." /></a>
-<br /><div class="bbox">
-<span class="caption">QUEEN ANNE.<br />
-<small>
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY PIETER VAN GUNST, AFTER THE PAINTING BY
-SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is needless for us to attempt a history of the great war which was
-one of the most important features in Anne’s reign. No student of
-history can be ignorant of its general course, nor of the completeness
-with which Marlborough’s victories crushed the exorbitant power of
-France and raised the prestige of England. There is no lack of histories
-of the great general and his career of victory: how he out-fought,
-out-marched, and out-generaled all his rivals, and scarcely in his ten
-years of active warfare encountered one check; how, though he did not
-accomplish the direct object for which all the bloodshed and toil were
-undertaken, he yet secured such respect for the English name and valor
-as renewed our old reputation and made all interference with our natural
-settlement or intrusion into our private economy impossible forever.
-“What good came of it at last?” says the poet. But the inquiry, though
-so plausible, appealing at once to humanity and common sense, is not
-perhaps so hard to answer as it seems. Up to this time it has been
-impossible to procure in the intercourse of nations any other effectual
-arbiter but the sword: a terrible one, indeed, but apparently as yet the
-only means of keeping a check upon the rapacity of some, and protecting
-the weakness of others. At all events, whatever individual opinion may
-be on the point now, there was a unanimous conviction then, and no one
-doubted at the opening of the war that it was most necessary and just.
-And of its conduct there has been but one opinion. Contemporaries
-accused Marlborough of every conceivable wickedness,&mdash;of peculation,
-treachery, even personal cowardice; but no one ventured to say that he
-was not a great general. And as we have got further and further from the
-infuriated politics of his time, his gifts and graces, his wisdom and
-moderation, as well as his wonderful military genius, have been done
-more and more justice to. Coxe, his special biographer, may be supposed
-to look with partiality upon his hero; but this<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_058" id="page_058"></a>{58}</span> cannot be said of more
-recent writers,&mdash;of Lord Stanhope in his tolerant and sensible history,
-or of Dr. Hill Burton in his sagacious volumes on the reign of Queen
-Anne.</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, with Marlborough’s wife and not with himself that we are
-chiefly concerned, and with the stormy course of Anne’s future
-intercourse with her friend rather than the battles that were fought in
-her name. It is said that by the time she came to the throne her
-faithful affection to her lifelong companion had begun to be impaired,
-but the date of the first beginning of their severance will probably
-never be determined, nor its immediate cause. Miss Strickland professes
-to have ascertained that certain impatient words used by Sarah of
-Marlborough, which were overheard by the queen, were the occasion of the
-breach; but as there is no very satisfactory foundation for the story,
-and it is added that Anne kept her feelings undisclosed for long after,
-we may dismiss the legend as possible enough, but no more.</p>
-
-<p>All the great hopes which the pair must have formed seemed likely to be
-fulfilled in the early part of Queen Anne’s reign. A very short time
-after her accession, Marlborough, who had at once entered upon the
-conduct of foreign affairs and the preparations for war, according to
-William’s appointment, received the garter which Anne and her husband
-had vainly asked for him in the previous reign; and when he returned
-from his first campaign, a dukedom was bestowed upon him, with many
-pretty expressions on Anne’s part.</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the queen’s gift of “writing pretty, affectionate letters,”
-which was the only thing, according to the duchess’s opinion of her
-expressed in later days, that she could do well, is still abundantly
-proved by the correspondence. Anne was as anxious as ever to serve and
-please her friend and favorite. She prays God, in her little note of
-congratulation after the siege of Bonn in 1703, to send Marlborough
-“safe home to his and my<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_059" id="page_059"></a>{59}</span> dear adored Mrs. Freeman,” with all the grace
-of perfect sympathy; for the great duke was as abject in his adoration
-of that imperious, bewitching, and triumphant Sarah as the queen
-herself. With the tenderest recollection of her friend’s whims, the
-queen gave her the rangership of Windsor Park (strange office for a
-woman to hold!), in which was included “a lodge in the great park,”
-which the duchess describes as “a very agreeable place to live in,” ...
-“remembering that when we used in former days to ride by it, I had often
-wished for such a place,” although it was necessary to turn out
-Portland, King William’s friend and favorite, in order to replace him by
-Lady Marlborough; no doubt, however, this summary displacement of the
-Dutchman added to the pleasure both of giving and receiving. Lady
-Marlborough had a multiplicity of other offices in addition to
-this,&mdash;such as those of mistress of the robes, groom of the stole, and
-keeper of the privy purse,&mdash;offices, however, which she had virtually
-held for years in the household of the princess. All these brought in a
-great deal of money, a matter to which she was never indifferent; and
-along with the dukedom, the queen bestowed upon Marlborough a pension of
-£5000 a year; so that the resources of the new ducal house were
-abundant. They would seem by their posts and perquisites alone to have
-had an income between them not far short of £60,000 a year, an enormous
-sum for those times, not to speak of less legitimate profits&mdash;presents
-from contractors, and percentages on the pay of the troops, which
-Marlborough took, as everybody did, as a matter of course, though it was
-afterward charged against him as if he had invented the custom. The
-queen also promised a little fortune to each of their daughters as they
-married&mdash;a promise certainly fulfilled in the case of Henrietta, who
-married the son of Godolphin, thus uniting the colleagues in the closest
-family bonds. Anne also offered a pension of £2000 a year to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_060" id="page_060"></a>{60}</span>
-duchess from the privy purse, a bounty declined at first, but of which
-afterward, in the final breaking up of their relations, Sarah was mean
-enough to demand the arrears, amounting to no less a sum than £18,000.
-Thus every kind of gift and favor was pressed upon the royal favorite in
-the early days of Anne’s reign.</p>
-
-<p>Before this the means of the pair had been but small. Marlborough had
-been long deprived of all preferment, and the duchess informs us that
-she had discharged in the princess’s household all the offices for which
-afterward she was so highly paid on an allowance of £400 a year. It was
-for this reason that the dukedom was unwelcome to her. “I do agree with
-you,” her husband writes to her, “that we ought not to wish for a
-greater title till we have a better estate,” and he assures her that “I
-shall have a mind to nothing but as it may be easy to you.” It was in
-this strain that the great conqueror always addressed his wife, and it
-would be difficult to say which of her two adorers, her husband or her
-queen, showed the deepest devotion. When Marlborough set out for his
-first campaign in the war which was to cover him with glory, and in
-which for the first time he had full scope, this is how he writes to the
-companion of his life (she had gone with him to Margate to see him
-embark):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>It is impossible to express with what a heavy heart I parted from
-you when I was by the water’s side. I could have given my life to
-have come back though I knew my own weakness so much that I durst
-not, for I know I should have exposed myself to the company. I did
-for a great while with a perspective glass look out upon the cliffs
-in hopes I might have had one sight of you. We are now out of sight
-of Margate and I have neither soul nor spirits, but I do at this
-time suffer so much that nothing but being with you can recompense
-it.</p></div>
-
-<p>These lover-like words were written by a man of fifty-two to his wife of
-forty-two, to whom he had been married for nearly a quarter of a
-century. In all the pauses of these wars, amid the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_061" id="page_061"></a>{61}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter2bdr" style="width: 458px;">
-<a href="images/ill_016_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_016.jpg" width="458" height="301" alt="Image unavailable: WINDSOR TERRACE, LOOKING WESTWARD.
-
-ENGRAVED BY J. W. EVANS AFTER AQUATINT BY P. SANDBY" /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">WINDSOR TERRACE, LOOKING WESTWARD.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY J. W. EVANS AFTER AQUATINT BY P. SANDBY</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">plans and combinations of armies, and all the hard thinking and hard
-fighting, the perpetual activity and movement of his life for the next
-ten years, the same voice of passionate attachment, love, and longing
-penetrates for us the tumults of the time. She was flattered to the top
-of her bent both by husband and mistress; and it is not much to be
-wondered at if she came to think herself indispensable and above all
-law.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst, however, of this prosperity and quickly growing greatness,
-the same crushing calamity which had previously fallen upon Anne,
-overwhelmed these companions of her life. Their only son, a promising
-boy of seventeen, died at Cambridge, and both father and mother were
-bowed to the dust. The queen’s letter on this occasion expresses her
-sense of yet another melancholy bond between them. It is evident that
-she had offered to go to her friend in her affliction. “It would be a
-great satisfaction to your poor unfortunate faithful Morley if you would
-have given me leave to come to St. Alban’s,” she writes, “for the
-unfortunate ought to come to the unfortunate.” With a heavy heart
-Marlborough changed his will, leaving the succession of the titles and
-honors, so suddenly deprived of all value to him, to the family of his
-eldest daughter, and betook himself sadly to his fighting, deriving a
-gleam of satisfaction from the thought that other children might yet be
-granted to him, yet adjuring his wife to bear their joint calamity with
-patience, whatever might befall. She herself says nothing on this
-melancholy subject. Perhaps in her old age, as she sat surveying her
-life, that great but innocent sorrow no longer seemed to her of the
-first importance in a record crossed by so many tempests&mdash;or perhaps it
-was of so much importance that she would not trust herself to speak of
-it at all. The partizans of the exiled Stuarts were eager to point out
-how both she and her mistress had suffered the penalty of their sin
-against King James and his son, by being thus deprived of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_062" id="page_062"></a>{62}</span> their
-respective heirs. It was a “judgment”&mdash;a thing dear to the popular
-imagination and most easily concluded upon at all times.</p>
-
-<p>It would not seem, however, that this natural drawing of “the
-unfortunate to the unfortunate” had the effect it might have had in
-further cementing the union of the queen and the duchess. The</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i6">little rift within the lute<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">That by and by will make the music mute<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">began to be apparent shortly after, though not at first showing itself
-by any lessening of warmth or tenderness. The existence of a division of
-opinion is the first thing visible. “I cannot help being extremely
-concerned that you are so partial to the Whigs, because I would not have
-you and your poor unfortunate faithful Morley differ in the least thing.
-And, upon my word, my dear Mrs. Freeman,” adds Queen Anne, “you are
-mightily mistaken in your notion of a true Whig. For the character you
-give of them does not in the least belong to them.”</p>
-
-<p>We need not discuss here the difference between the meaning of the names
-Tory and Whig as understood then and now. Lord Mahon and Lord Macaulay
-both consider a complete transposition of terms to be the easiest way of
-making the matter clear, but in one particular at least this seems
-scarcely necessary; for the Tories, then as now, were emphatically the
-church party, which was to Anne the only party in which safety could be
-found. The queen had little understanding of history or politics in the
-wider sense of the words, but she was an excellent churchwoman, and in
-the sentiments of the Tory leaders she found, when brought into close
-contact with them, something more in accord with her own, the one
-sympathy in which her bosom friend had been lacking.</p>
-
-<p>“These were men who had all a wonderful zeal for the Church, a sort of
-public merit that eclipsed all others in the eye of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_063" id="page_063"></a>{63}</span> Queen.... For
-my own part,” the duchess adds, “I had not the same prepossessions. The
-word <i>Church</i> had never any charm for me in the mouths of those who made
-the most noise with it, for I could not perceive that they gave any
-other proof of their regard for the thing than a frequent use of the
-word, like a spell to enchant weak minds, and a persecuting zeal against
-dissenters and against the real friends of the Church who would not
-admit that persecution was agreeable to its doctrine.”</p>
-
-<p>This difference had not told for very much so long as neither the queen
-nor her friend had any share in public affairs, but it became strongly
-operative now. How much the queen had actually to do with the business
-of the nation, and how entirely it depended upon the influence brought
-to bear upon her limited mind who should be the guide of England at this
-critical moment, is abundantly evident from every detail of history.
-Queen Victoria, great as her experience is, and notwithstanding the
-respectful attention which all classes of politicians naturally give to
-her opinion, changes her ministry only when the majority in Parliament
-requires it, and has only the very limited choice which the known and
-acknowledged heads of the two parties permit when she transfers office
-and power from one side to the other. But Queen Anne had no compact body
-of statesmen, one replacing the other as occasion required, to deal
-with; but put in here one high official and there another, according as
-intrigue or impulse gained the upper hand.</p>
-
-<p>There is something about a quarrel of women which excites the scorn of
-every chronicler, an insidious contempt for the weaker half of the
-creation which probably no one would own to, lying dormant in the minds
-of the race generally, even of women themselves. Had Anne been a king of
-moderate abilities, and Marlborough the friend and guide to whom he owed
-his prosperity and fame, the relationship would have been noble and
-honorable to both; and when the struggle began, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_064" id="page_064"></a>{64}</span> strenuous efforts
-of the great general to secure the coöperation of ministers with whom he
-could work, and whose support would have helped toward the carrying out
-of his great plans for the glory of his country and the destruction of
-her enemies, would, whether the historical critic approved of them or
-not, have at least secured his respect and a dignified treatment. But
-when it is Sarah of Marlborough, with all the defects of temper that we
-know in her, who, while her lord fights abroad, has to fight for him at
-home, to scheme his enemies out of, and his friends into, power, to keep
-her hold upon her mistress by every means that her imagination can
-devise, the idea that some nobler motive than mere self-aggrandizement
-may be in the effort occurs to no one, and the hatred of political
-enmity is mingled with all the ridicule that spiteful wit can discharge
-upon a feminine squabble. Lady Marlborough was far from being a perfect
-woman. She had a fiery temper and a stinging tongue. When she was
-thwarted at the very moment of apparent victory, and found herself
-impotent where she had been all-powerful, her fury was like a torrent
-against which there was no standing. But with these patent defects it
-ought to be allowed her that the object for which she struggled was not
-only a perfectly legitimate, but a noble one. What the great William had
-spent his life and innumerable campaigns in endeavoring to do, against
-all the discouragements of frequent failure, Marlborough was doing, with
-a matchless and almost unbroken success. It was no shame to either the
-general or the general’s wife to believe, as William did, that this was
-the greatest work of the time, and could alone secure the safety of
-England as well as of her allies. And the gallant stand of Lady
-Marlborough for the party and the statesmen who were likely to carry out
-this object, deserved some better interpretation from history than it
-has ever received.</p>
-
-<p>And it cannot be said that there was anything petty in Anne’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_065" id="page_065"></a>{65}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 377px;">
-<a href="images/ill_017_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_017.jpg" width="377" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH.
-
-ENGRAVED BY J. H. E. WHITNEY, FROM AN ENGRAVING BY PIETER VAN GUNST,
-AFTER PAINTING BY ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">THE DUKE OF MARLBOROUGH.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY J. H. E. WHITNEY, FROM AN ENGRAVING BY PIETER VAN GUNST,<br />
-AFTER PAINTING BY ADRIAAN VANDER WERFF.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">public acts while she remained under the influence of her first friend.
-The beginning of her reign showed no ignoble spirit. One of the first
-things the queen did was to abolish the old and obstinate practice of
-selling places, which had hitherto been accepted as the course of
-nature; so much so that when Marlborough fell into disgrace under King
-William, he had been bidden to “sell or dispose of” the places he held,
-and the princess had herself informed Sarah at least on one occasion of
-vacancies, in order that her friend should have the profit of filling
-them up. “Afterwards, I began to consider in my own mind this practice,”
-the lady says; but whether she took the initiative in so honorable a
-measure, it would be rash to pronounce upon the authority of her own
-word alone. It certainly, however, was one of the first acts of the
-queen, and the credit of such a departure from the use and wont of
-courts should at least be allowed to the new reign. Anne did various
-other things for which there was no precedent. As soon as her civil list
-was settled, she gave up voluntarily £100,000 a year to aid the public
-expenses, then greatly increased by the war, and, shortly after, she
-made a still more important and permanent sacrifice by giving up the
-ecclesiastical tribute of first-fruits and tithes; namely, the first
-year’s stipend of each cure to which a new incumbent was appointed, and
-the tenth of all livings&mdash;to which the crown, as succeeding the Pope in
-the headship of the church, had become entitled. Her object was the
-augmentation of small livings, and better provision for the necessities
-of the church, and there can be little doubt that this act at least was
-exclusively her own. The fund thus formed continues to this day under
-the name of Queen Anne’s Bounty, but unfortunately remained quite
-inefficacious during her reign, in consequence of various practical
-difficulties; and it has never been by any means the important agency
-she intended it to be. But the intention was munificent and the desire
-sincere.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_066" id="page_066"></a>{66}</span> Throughout her life the church was the word which most moved
-Anne. She was willing to do anything to strengthen it, and to sacrifice
-any one, even as turned out her dear friend, in its cause.</p>
-
-<p>The first subject which quickened a vague and suspicious disagreement
-into opposition was the bill against what was called occasional
-conformity, a bill which was aimed at the dissenters and abolished the
-expedient formerly taken advantage of in order to admit nonconformists
-to some share in public life&mdash;of periodical compliance with the
-ceremonies of the church. The new law not only did away with this
-important “easement,” but was weighted with penal enactments against
-those who, holding office under government, should be present at any
-conventicle or assembly for worship in any form but that of the Church
-of England. Upon this subject the queen writes as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I must own to you that I never cared to mention anything on this
-subject to you because I knew you would not be of my mind, but
-since you have given me the occasion, I can’t forbear saying that I
-see nothing like persecution in the bill. You may think it is a
-notion Lord Nottingham has just put into my head, but upon my word
-it is my own thought. I promise my dear Mrs. Freeman faithfully I
-will read the book she sent me, and beg she will never let
-differences of opinion hinder us from living together as we used to
-do. Nothing shall ever alter your poor unfortunate faithful Morley,
-who will live and die with all truth and tenderness yours.</p></div>
-
-<p>As the differences go on increasing, however, Queen Anne gradually
-changes her ground. At first she “hopes her not agreeing with anything
-you say will not be imputed to want of value, esteem, or tender
-kindness, for my dear, dear Mrs. Freeman”; but at last, as the argument
-goes on, plucks up a spirit and finds courage enough to declare roundly
-that whenever public affairs are in the hands of the Whigs, “I shall
-think the Church beginning to be in danger.” Thus the political<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_067" id="page_067"></a>{67}</span>
-situation became more and more difficult, and gradually embittered even
-the personal relations between the friends, and the duchess had not even
-the support of her husband in her political preferences. He had himself
-belonged to the moderate Tory party, and, even though they thwarted and
-discouraged him, showed no desire to throw himself into the arms of the
-Whigs, whither his wife would so fain have led him. He was almost as
-little encouraging to her in this point as the queen was. “I know,” he
-says, “they would be as unreasonable as the others in their expectations
-if I should seek their friendship,&mdash;for all parties are alike.” It was
-thus a hard part she had to play between the queen’s determination that
-the Whigs were the enemies of the church, and her husband’s conviction
-that all parties were alike. He, perhaps, was the more hard to manage of
-the two. He voted for the occasional conformity bill, against which she
-was so hot, and trusted in Harley, who indeed owed his first beginning
-to Marlborough’s favor, but whom the duchess saw through. In young St.
-John, too, the great general had perfect faith; “I am very confident he
-will never deceive you,” he wrote to Godolphin. Thus the husband warmed
-in his bosom the vipers that were to sting him and bring a hasty end to
-his career. He, too, remained obstinately indifferent, while she stormed
-and entreated and wrote a hundred letters and used every art both of war
-and peace in vain. It is easy to see how this perpetual letter-writing,
-her determination to prove that her correspondent was in error and she
-right, and her continual reiteration of the same charges and reproaches,
-must have exasperated the queen and troubled Marlborough, in the midst
-of the practical difficulties of his career. But yet there are many
-points on which Sarah has a just claim to our sympathy. For she foresaw
-what actually did happen, and perceived whither the current was tending,
-but was refused any credit for her<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_068" id="page_068"></a>{68}</span> prognostications or help in subduing
-the dangerous forces she dreaded. How irritating this position must have
-been to a fiery temper it is needless to point out, and the duchess
-would not permit herself to be silenced by either husband or queen. Lord
-Macaulay’s description of the astonishing state of affairs which
-compelled two of the ablest statesmen in Europe to have recourse for the
-conduct of the imperial business to the influence of one woman over
-another, was thus far less true even than it seems on the surface; for
-Sarah of Marlborough suspected the real state of the case when no one
-else did, fighting violently against her husband’s enemies before they
-had disclosed themselves, and her final overthrow was as much the result
-of a new tide in political affairs as of the straining of the personal
-relations between her and her queen.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Marlborough was going on in his career of conquest. It was a
-very costly luxury; but the pride of England had never been so fed with
-triumphs. Queen Anne was in her closet one day at Windsor, a little
-turret-chamber with windows on every side looking over the green and
-fertile valley of the Thames, with all the trees in full summer foliage
-and the harvest beginning to be gathered in from the fields, when there
-was brought to her a scrap of crumpled paper bearing upon it the few
-hurried lines which told of the “glorious victory” of the battle of
-Blenheim. It had been torn off in haste from a memorandum book on the
-field, and was scribbled over with an inn-reckoning on the other side.
-The commotion it caused was not one of unmixed joy; for though the queen
-wrote her thanks and congratulations, and there was a great thanksgiving
-service at St. Paul’s, which she attended in state, the party in power
-did all that in them lay to depreciate the importance of the victory.
-When, however, Marlborough appeared in England with his prisoners and
-trophies,&mdash;a marshal of France among the former,&mdash;and many standards
-taken in the field, the popular<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_069" id="page_069"></a>{69}</span> sentiment burst all bounds, and his
-reception was enthusiastic. The crown lands of Woodstock were bestowed
-upon him as a further reward, and the queen herself commanded that a
-palace should be built upon the estate at the expense of the crown, to
-be called Blenheim in commemoration of the extraordinary victory. A
-curious relic of ancient custom religiously carried out to the present
-day was involved in this noble gift. The quit-rent which every holder of
-a royal fief has to pay, was appointed to be a banner embroidered with
-three <i>fleurs-de-lis</i>, the arms then borne by France, to be presented on
-every anniversary of the battle. Not very long ago the present writer
-accompanied a French lady of distinction through some part of Windsor
-Castle under the guidance of an important member of the queen’s
-household. When the party came into the armory, on each side of which, a
-vivid spot of color, hung a little standard fresh in embroidery of gold,
-the kind cicerone smiled, and whispered aside, “We need not point out
-these to her.” One of them was the Blenheim, the other the Waterloo
-banner, both yearly acknowledgments, after the old feudal fashion, for
-fiefs held of the crown.</p>
-
-<p>Among the honors done to Marlborough at this triumphant moment, when, an
-English duke, a prince of the Holy Roman Empire, and, still more
-splendid title, the greatest soldier of his time, he came home in glory
-to England, were the verses with which Addison saluted him. There were
-plenty of odes piping to all the winds in his honor, but this alone
-worthy of record. Every reader will recollect the simile of the great
-angel who “drives the furious blast;”</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">And, pleased the Almighty’s orders to perform,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Rides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The compliment might be supposed to be somewhat magnificent even for the
-greatest of commanders. And yet whatever<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_070" id="page_070"></a>{70}</span> Marlborough’s faults may have
-been, his attitude during this wonderful war is scarcely too splendidly
-described by the image of a calm and superior spirit beholding
-contemporary events from a higher altitude than that of common humanity,
-executing vengeance and causing destruction without either rage or fear,
-in serene fulfilment of a great command and in pursuance of a mighty
-purpose. His unbroken temper, his patience and courtesy in the midst of
-all contentions, the firm composure with which he supports all the
-burdens thrown upon him, appeals from home as well as necessities
-abroad, might well suggest a spirit apart, independent, not moved like
-lesser men. No man ever bore so many conflicting claims more calmly.
-Even the adjurations, the commands, the special pleadings of his
-“dearest soul” do not lead him a step farther than he thinks wise. “When
-I differ from you,” he says, “it is not that I think those are in the
-right whom you say are always in the wrong, but it is that I would be
-glad not to enter into the unreasonable reasoning of either party; for I
-have trouble enough for my little head in the business which of
-necessity I must do here.” There could not be a greater contrast than
-between the commotion and whirlwind that surrounds Duchess Sarah and the
-great general’s calm.</p>
-
-<p>It is not necessary for our purpose to enter into those changes of
-ministry which first temporarily consolidated the Marlborough interest
-and afterward wrought its destruction, nor into the intrigues by which
-Harley and St. John gradually secured the reins of state. It is not to
-be supposed that these fluctuations were wholly owing to the influences
-brought to bear upon the queen; but that her prevailing disposition to
-uphold the party which to her represented the church kept the
-continuance of the war and the foreign policy of the country in constant
-danger, there can be no doubt. It is only in 1707, however, that we are
-made aware of the entry of a new actor<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_071" id="page_071"></a>{71}</span> upon the scene, in the person of
-a smooth and noiseless woman, always civil, always soft-spoken,
-apologetic, and plausible, whose sudden appearance in the vivid
-narrative of her great rival is in the highest degree dramatic and
-effective. This was the famous Abigail who has given her name, somewhat
-injuriously to her own position, to the class of waiting-women ever
-since. She was in reality bedchamber-woman to the queen&mdash;a post now very
-far removed from that of a waiting-maid, and even then by no means on a
-level, notwithstanding the duchess’s scornful phrases, with that of the
-class which ever since has been distinguished by Mrs. Hill’s remarkable
-name. Her introduction altogether, and the vigorous <i>mise en scène</i> of
-this new episode in history, are fine examples of the graphic power of
-Duchess Sarah. Her suspicions, she informs us, were roused by the
-information that Abigail Hill, a relation of her own, and placed by
-herself in the royal household, had been married without her knowledge
-to Mr. Masham, who was one of the queen’s pages; but there are allusions
-before this in her letters to the queen to “flatterers,” which point at
-least to some suspected influence undermining her own. She tells us
-first in a few succinct pages who this was whose private marriage
-excited so much wonder and indignation in her mind. Abigail and all her
-family owed their establishment in life to the active exertions of the
-duchess, who had taken them in their poverty upon her shoulders&mdash;or
-rather had succeeded in passing them on to the broader shoulders of the
-public, which was still more satisfactory. Thus she had been the making
-of the whole band, henceforward through other members besides Abigail to
-prove thorns in her flesh. Harley, who was at this time secretary of
-state, and aiming at higher place, was related in the same degree on the
-father’s side to Mrs. Abigail; so that, first cousin to the great
-duchess on one hand and to the leader of the House of Commons on the
-other, though it suits the narrator’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_072" id="page_072"></a>{72}</span> purpose to humble her, Mrs. Hill
-was no child of the people. It is curious to remark here that Harley too
-came to his first advancement by Marlborough’s patronage.</p>
-
-<p>From the moment of this discovery, and of the further facts that the
-marriage had taken place under Anne’s auspices, and that Abigail had
-already taken advantage of her favor to bring Harley into close
-relations with the queen, the duchess gave her mistress little peace.
-Fiery letters were showered daily upon the queen. She let nothing pass
-without a hasty visit, or a long epistle. If it were not for the
-pertinacity with which she returns again and again to one subject, these
-letters have so much force of character in them that it would be
-impossible not to enter with sympathetic excitement into the fray. The
-reader is carried along by the passionate absorption of the writer’s
-mind as she pours forth page upon page, flying to her desk at every new
-incident, transmitting copies of every epistle to Godolphin to secure
-his coöperation, and to Marlborough, though so much farther off, to show
-him how she had confuted all his adversaries. And then there follows a
-record of stormy scenes, remonstrances, and appeals that lose their
-effect by repetition. The duchess would never accept defeat. Every new
-affront, every symptom of failure in the policy which she supported with
-so much zeal, made her rush, if possible, to the presence of the queen,
-with a storm of reproaches and invectives, with tears of fury and
-outcries of wrath,&mdash;or to the pen, with which she reiterated the same
-burning story of her wrongs. Anne is represented to us throughout in an
-attitude of stolid and passive resistance, which increases our sympathy
-with the weeping, raging, passionate woman, whose eloquence, whose
-arguments, whose appeals and entreaties all dash unheeded against the
-rock of tranquil obstinacy which is no more moved by them than the cliff
-is moved by the petulance of the rising tide; although, on the other
-hand, a similar sympathy is not<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_073" id="page_073"></a>{73}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 459px;">
-<a href="images/ill_018_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_018.jpg" width="459" height="565" alt="Image unavailable: THE DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUGH.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. G. TIETZE, FROM MEZZOTINT AFTER PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY
-KNELLER." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">THE DUCHESS OF MARLBOROUGH.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY R. G. TIETZE, FROM MEZZOTINT AFTER PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY
-KNELLER.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">wanting for the dull and placid soul which could get no peace, and which
-longed above all things for tranquillity, for gentle attentions and soft
-voices, and the privilege of nominating bishops and playing basset in
-peace. Poor lady! on the whole it is Queen Anne who is most to be
-pitied. She was often ill, always unwieldly and uncomfortable. She had
-nobody but a soft, gliding, smooth-tongued Abigail to fall back upon,
-while the duchess had half the great men of the time fawning upon her,
-putting themselves at her feet: her husband prizing a word of kindness
-from her more than anything in the world; her daughters describing her
-as the dearest mother that ever was; money&mdash;which she
-loved&mdash;accumulating in her coffers; and great Blenheim still a-building,
-and all kinds of noble hangings, cut velvets and satins, pictures, and
-every fine thing that could be conceived, getting collected for the
-adornment of that great house.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, there can be little doubt that Duchess Sarah represented a
-nobler idea and grander national policy than that into which her
-mistress was betrayed. Her later intercourse with Anne was little more
-than a persecution; and yet what she aimed at was better than the
-dishonoring and selfish policy by which she was finally conquered. The
-Marlboroughs were not of those who pressed the German heir upon the
-queen, or would have compelled her to receive his visit, which she
-passionately declared she could not bear; but they were determined, all
-treasonable correspondence notwithstanding, upon the maintenance of the
-Protestant succession, upon the firm establishment of English
-independence and greatness,&mdash;those objects which alone had justified the
-Revolution and made the stern chapter of William’s life and reign
-anything better than an incidental episode. Though he had been false to
-William, as everybody was false in those days, and had lain so long in
-the cold shade of his displeasure, Marlborough had, in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_074" id="page_074"></a>{74}</span> whole
-magnificent career, been little more than the executor of William’s
-plans, the fulfiller of his policy. The duchess, on her side, with much
-love of power and of gain, with all the drawbacks of her temper and
-pertinacity, still bent every faculty to the work of backing up that
-policy, as embodied in her husband, keeping his friends in power,
-neutralizing the efforts of his enemies, and bringing the war to an
-entirely successful conclusion. A certain enlightenment was in all her
-passionate interferences with the course of public affairs. The men whom
-she labored to thrust into office were the best men of the time; the
-ascendency she endeavored so violently to retain was one under which
-England had been elevated in the scale of nations and all her liberties
-confirmed. Such persecuting and intolerant acts as the bill against
-occasional conformity, which was a test of exceptional severity, had her
-strenuous opposition. In short, had there been no Marlborough to carry
-on the half-begun war at William’s death, and no Sarah at Anne’s ear to
-inspire the queen’s sluggish nature with spirit and to keep her up to
-the mark of the large plans of her predecessor, England might have
-fallen into another driveling period of foreign subserviency, into a new
-and meaner Restoration.</p>
-
-<p>That the reader may see, however, to what an extraordinary pass the
-friendship had come which had been so intimate and close, we add the
-duchess’s account of the concluding interview. Every kind of
-exasperating circumstance had accumulated in the mean time between the
-former friends. There had been violent meetings, violent letters by the
-score; even in the midst of a thanksgiving service Sarah had taken her
-mistress to task and imperiously bidden her not to answer. Indeed, the
-poor queen was more or less hunted down, pursued to her last corner of
-defense, when the mistress of the robes made her sudden appearance at
-Kensington one April afternoon<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_075" id="page_075"></a>{75}</span> in the year 1710, when everything was
-tending toward her downfall.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>As I was entering, the Queen said she was just going to write to
-me, and when I began to speak she interrupted me four or five times
-with these repeated words, “Whatever you have to say you may put it
-in writing.” I said her Majesty never did so hard a thing to any as
-to refuse to hear them speak, and assured her that I was not going
-to trouble her upon the subject which I knew to be so ungrateful to
-her, but that I could not possibly rest until I had cleared myself
-from some particular calumnies with which I had been loaded. I then
-went on to speak (though the Queen turned away her face from me)
-and to represent my hard case, that there were those about her
-Majesty that had made her believe that I said things of her which I
-was no more capable of saying than of killing my own children. The
-Queen said without doubt there were many lies told. I then begged,
-in order to make this trouble the shorter and my own innocence the
-plainer, that I might know the particulars of which I had been
-accused, because if I were guilty that would quickly appear, and if
-I were innocent this method alone would clear me. The Queen replied
-that she would give me no answer, laying hold on a word in my
-letter that what I had to say in my own vindication <i>need have no
-consequence in obliging her Majesty to answer</i>, etc., which surely
-did not at all imply that I did not desire to know the particular
-things laid to my charge, without which it was impossible for me to
-clear myself. This I assured her Majesty was all I desired, and
-that I did not ask the names of the authors or relaters of these
-calumnies, saying all that I could think reasonably to enforce my
-just request. I protested to her Majesty that I had no design in
-giving her this trouble, to solicit the return of her favor, but
-that my sole view was to clear myself: which was too just a design
-to be wholly disappointed by her Majesty. Upon this the Queen
-offered to go out of the room, I following her, and begging leave
-to clear myself, and the Queen repeating over and over again, “You
-desired no answer and shall have none.” When she came to the door I
-fell into great disorder; streams of tears flow’d down against my
-will and prevented my speaking for some time. At length I recovered
-myself and appealed to the Queen in the vehemence of my concern
-whether I might not still have been happy in her Majesty’s favour
-if I could have contradicted or dissembled my real opinion of men
-or things? whether I had ever, during our long friendship, told her
-one lie, or play’d the hypocrite once? whether I had offended in
-anything, unless in a very zealous pressing upon her that which I
-thought necessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_076" id="page_076"></a>{76}</span> for her service and security? I then said I was
-informed by a very reasonable and credible person about the court
-that things were laid to my charge of which I was wholly incapable;
-that this person knew that such stories were perpetually told to
-her Majesty to incense her, and had beg’d of me to come and
-vindicate myself: that the same person had thought me of late
-guilty of some omissions towards her Majesty, being entirely
-ignorant how uneasy to her my frequent attendance must be after
-what had happened between us. I explained some things which I had
-heard her Majesty had taken amiss of me, and then, with a fresh
-flood of tears and a concern sufficient to move compassion, even
-where all love was absent, I beg’d to know what other particulars
-she had heard of me, that I might not be denied all power of
-justifying myself. But the only return was, “You desired no answer
-and you shall have none.” I then beg’d to know if her Majesty would
-tell me some other time? “You desired no answer and you shall have
-none.” I then appealed to her Majesty again, if she did not herself
-know that I had often despised interest in comparison of serving
-her faithfully and doing right? And whether she did not know me to
-be of a temper incapable of disowning anything which I knew to be
-true? “You desired no answer and you shall have none.” This usage
-was so severe, and these words, so often repeated, were so shocking
-(being an utter denial of common justice to one who had been a most
-faithful servant, and now asked nothing more) that I could not
-conquer myself, but said the most disrespectful thing I ever spoke
-to the Queen in my life, and yet what such an occasion and such
-circumstances might well excuse if not justify, and that was, that
-“I was confident her Majesty would suffer for such an instance of
-inhumanity.” The Queen answered, “That will be to myself.” Thus
-ended this remarkable conversation, the last I ever had with her
-Majesty [the duchess adds].</p></div>
-
-<p>After this there was no more possibility of reconciliation. Attempts of
-all kinds were made, and there is even a record of a somewhat pitiful
-scene in which great Marlborough himself, on his return from the wars,
-appears on his knees pleading with Queen Anne to take back her old
-companion into favor, but without effect. Unfortunately for himself, he
-did not resign at this turning-point, being persuaded both by friends
-and foes not to do so; and with the evident risk before his eyes of
-hazarding all the combinations of the war and giving a distinct
-advantage to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_077" id="page_077"></a>{77}</span> enemy against whom he had hitherto operated so
-forcibly. He kept his command, therefore, for the public interest rather
-than his own, and returned, when the season of warfare recommenced, to
-the post which all these events made uneasy for him, and where his
-credit was shaken and his prestige diminished by the disfavor of the
-court and the opposition of the ministry. The responsibility was
-therefore left upon Anne and her ministers of dismissing him, which they
-did in the end of 1711, to the consternation of their allies, the
-delight of the French, and the bewilderment of the nation. The party
-plots by which this came about are far too long and involved to be
-capable of explanation here&mdash;neither can we enter into the semi-secret
-negotiations for the humiliating and disgraceful peace secured by the
-treaty of Utrecht, which were carried on unknown to Marlborough, to the
-destruction of the alliance and confusion of all his plans. Never,
-perhaps, was so great a man treated with such contumely. His associate
-in his work, the Lord Treasurer Godolphin, the great financier of his
-time, had already fallen, leaving office so poor a man that he would
-have been wholly dependent on his relations but for the unexpected death
-of a brother who left him a small fortune. He has left an account of his
-dismissal by the queen herself and on the ground apparently of personal
-offense, which is extraordinary indeed.</p>
-
-<p>Anne herself was no doubt little more than a puppet in the hands of
-successive politicians; but yet the struggle that took place around her
-at this unfortunate period&mdash;the maintenance by every wile of somebody
-who could influence her, the conflict for her ear and favor&mdash;shows her
-immense importance in the economy of public life. Queen Victoria is the
-object of universal veneration and respect, but not the smallest
-official in her government need fear the displeasure of the queen as the
-highest minister had to fear that of Anne, for whom no one entertained
-any particular respect. Yet there was little real power<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_078" id="page_078"></a>{78}</span> in the
-possession of the unfortunate woman who, badgered on all sides, and
-refused both peace and rest, sank slowly into disease and decay during
-the two years which followed the disgrace of the friend of her youth.</p>
-
-<p>She had no longer an audacious Freeman to tell her unwelcome truths and
-tease her with appeals and reproaches; but it is probable that she soon
-found her soft-voiced Abigail, her caressing duchess (of Somerset)
-little more satisfactory; never was a head that wore a crown more
-uneasy. She held fast to the power which she had been persuaded she was
-to get into her own hands when she was delivered from the sway of the
-Marlboroughs, and for a little while believed it possible that she could
-reign unaided. But this was a delusion that could not last long; and her
-death was hastened, it is said, by a violent altercation between Harley
-and St. John, when the inevitable struggle between the two who had
-pushed all competitors out of place occurred at last. They wrangled over
-the staff of office in Anne’s very presence, overwhelming her with
-agitation and excitement. Apart from politics, the royal existence was
-dull enough. When Dean Swift was at Windsor, following Harley and
-waiting for the decision of his Irish business, we have occasional
-glimpses through his eyes which show the tedium of the court. “There was
-a drawing-room to-day,” he says, “but so few company that the Queen sent
-for us into her bedchamber, where we made our bows, and stood, about
-twenty of us round the room, while she looked round with her fan in her
-mouth, and once a minute said about three words to some that were
-nearest her, and then she was told dinner was ready, and went out.” The
-same authority mentions her way of taking exercise, which was a strange
-one. “The Queen was hunting the stag till four this afternoon,” he says;
-“she drove in her chaise about forty miles, and it was five before we
-went to dinner.... She hunts in a chaise with one horse, which she<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_079" id="page_079"></a>{79}</span>
-drives herself, and drives furiously like Jehu, and is a mighty hunter
-like Nimrod.” Windsor’s great park and forest must have afforded room
-and space for some part at least of this course, and a hunt in August
-would need to have been confined to ground less cultivated than that of
-the smiling plain which skirts the castle hill on the other side. Queen
-Anne’s Ride and Queen Anne’s Drive are still well-known names in the
-locality where the strange apparition of the queen, solitary in her high
-chaise, and “driving furiously” after the hunt, must once have been a
-familiar sight.</p>
-
-<p>The end of this poor queen’s life was disturbed by a new and terrible
-struggle, in which natural sentiment and public duty, and all the
-prepossessions and prejudices of her nature, were set in conflict one
-against the other. This was upon the question of the succession. The
-family of Hanover, the Electress Sophia and her son and grandson, had
-been chosen solemnly by Parliament as the nearest members of the royal
-race who were Protestants, and were recognized as the heirs to the
-throne in all public acts and in the prayers of the church. But to Anne
-the house of Hanover was of no special interest. She did not love the
-idea of successor at all. She had declared to Marlborough passionately
-that the proposed visit of the Hanoverian prince was a thing which she
-could not bear, and there was no friendship, nor even acquaintance,
-between her and relatives so far removed. But apart from all public
-knowledge, in the secret chambers and by the back-stairs came whispers
-now of another name, that of James Stuart, more familiar and kindly&mdash;the
-baby-brother about whom Anne had believed the prevailing fable, that he
-was a supposititious child, for whom she had invented the name of the
-Pretender, but who now in her childless decay began to be presented
-before her as the victim of a great wrong. Poor queen! she was torn
-asunder by all these contradictions; and if her heart was melting<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_080" id="page_080"></a>{80}</span>
-toward her father’s son, all the dull experience which she had acquired
-in spite of herself must have convinced her that this solution of the
-difficulty was impossible. Her life of late had been one long conflict;
-imperious Sarah first, then Harley and St. John quarrelling in her very
-presence-chamber; and when the door was shut and the curtains drawn and
-all the world departed save Abigail lying on a mattress on the floor to
-be near her mistress, here was the most momentous question of all. She
-who desired nothing so much as quiet and to be left in peace, was once
-again compelled to face a problem of the utmost importance to England,
-and on which she alone had the power to say a decisive word. Little
-wonder if Anne was harassed beyond all endurance. But those who pressed
-this question upon her waning senses were the instruments of their own
-overthrow. The powers of life worn out before their time could bear no
-more. The hopes of the Jacobite party were rising higher every day as
-the end drew near; but at the last she escaped them, having uttered no
-word of support to their cause; and in the confusion which ensued,
-George I. was peacefully proclaimed as soon as the queen out of her
-lethargy had slipped beyond the boundaries of any earthly kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>The Marlboroughs, who had been living on the Continent since their
-disgrace, came back after this new change. The duke’s entry into London
-“in great state, attended by hundreds of gentlemen on horseback and some
-of the nobility in their coaches” a few days after, is reported by one
-of the chroniclers of the time. The duchess followed him soon after, and
-whether her temper and disposition had so far mended as to allow him to
-enjoy the peace he had so often longed for by the side of her he loved,
-he had at least a tranquil evening-time among his friends and
-dependents, and the grandchildren who were to be his heirs&mdash;for only one
-of his own children survived at his death. Duchess Sarah lived long
-after him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_081" id="page_081"></a>{81}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:396px;">
-<a href="images/ill_019_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_019.jpg" width="396" height="483" alt="Image unavailable: BISHOP GILBERT BURNET.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MEZZOTINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM BY JOHN
-SMITH, AFTER THE PAINTING BY JOHN RILEY." /></a>
-<br /><br /><div class="bbox">
-<span class="caption">BISHOP GILBERT BURNET.<br />
-<small>
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM MEZZOTINT IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM BY JOHN
-SMITH, AFTER THE PAINTING BY JOHN RILEY.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>She was sixty-two when he died, but, nevertheless, in spite of temper
-and every other failing, was still charming enough to be sought in
-marriage by two distinguished suitors&mdash;one of them that proud Duke of
-Somerset whose first wife had supplanted her at court. She answered this
-potentate in the only way consistent with the dignity of a woman of her
-age and circumstances; but added, with a noble pride which sat well upon
-her, that had she been but half her age, not the emperor of the world
-should ever have filled the place sacred to great Marlborough. It is a
-pity we could not leave her here in the glow of this proud tenderness
-and constancy. She was capable of that and many other noble things, but
-not of holding her tongue, of withdrawing into the background, or
-accepting in other ways the natural change from maturity to age. Her
-restless energies, however, had some legitimate outlet. She finished
-Blenheim, and she wrote innumerable explanations and memoranda, which
-finally shaped themselves into that “Account of the Conduct of the
-Duchess of Marlborough from her first Coming to Court,” which is one of
-the most interesting of all <i>mémoires pour servir</i>. This was published
-in her eighty-second year, and it is curious to think of the vivacious
-and unsubdued spirit which could throw itself back so completely out of
-the calm of age into the conflicts and the very atmosphere of what had
-passed thirty years before. And she did her best to prepare for a great
-life of Marlborough which should set him right with the world. But her
-time was not always so innocently employed, and it is to be feared that
-she wrangled to the end of her life. The “Characters” of her
-contemporaries which she left behind are full of spite and malice. There
-was no peace in her soul. A characteristic little story is told of her
-in an illness. “Last year she had lain a great while ill without
-speaking; her physicians said she must be blistered or she would die.
-She called out, ‘I won’t be blistered and I won’t<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_082" id="page_082"></a>{82}</span> die!’ and apparently
-for the moment kept her word.” She lived long enough to be impaled by
-Pope in verses which an involuntary admiration for this daring,
-dauntless, impassioned woman makes us reluctant to quote. She survived
-almost her entire generation, and was capable of living a hundred years
-more had nature permitted. She was eighty-four when she succumbed at
-last, in the year 1744, thirty years after the death of the queen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_083" id="page_083"></a>{83}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="Chapter_III" id="Chapter_III"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter III</span><br /><br />
-THE AUTHOR OF “GULLIVER”</h2>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra">T</span>HERE are few figures in history, and still fewer in literature, which
-have occupied so great a place in the world’s attention, or which retain
-so strong a hold upon its interest, as that of Jonathan Swift, dean of
-St. Patrick’s. It is considerably more than a century since he died, old
-and mad and miserable: a man who had never been satisfied with life, or
-felt his fate equal to his deserts; who disowned and hated (even when he
-served it) the country of his birth, and with fierce and bitter passion
-denounced human nature itself, and left a sting in almost every
-individual whom he loved; a man whose preferment and home were far from
-the center of public affairs, and who had no hereditary claim on the
-attention of England. Yet when the English reader, or he who in the
-farthest corner of the New World has the same right to English
-literature as that which the subjects of Queen Victoria hold,&mdash;as the
-American does&mdash;from the subjects of Queen Anne,&mdash;reads the title at the
-head of this page, neither the one nor the other will have any
-difficulty in distinguishing among all the ecclesiastical dignitaries of
-that age who it is that stands conspicuous as the dean. Not in royal
-Westminster or Windsor is this man to be found; not the ruler of any
-great cathedral in the rich English midlands where tradition and wealth
-and an almost Catholic supremacy united to make the great official of
-the church as important as any official of the state&mdash;but far<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_084" id="page_084"></a>{84}</span> from
-those influences, half as far as America is now from the center of
-English society and the sources of power, one of a nation which the most
-obstinate conservative of to-day will not hesitate to allow was then
-deeply wronged and cruelly misgoverned by England, many and anxious as
-have been her efforts since to make amends. Yet among the many strange
-examples of that far more than republican power (not always most evident
-in republics) by which a man of native force and genius, however humble,
-finds his way to the head of affairs and impresses his individuality
-upon his age, when thousands born to better fortunes are swept away as
-nobodies, Swift is one of the most remarkable. His origin, though noted
-by himself, not without a certain pride, as from a family of gentry not
-unknown in their district, was in his own person almost as lowly and
-poor as it was possible to be. The posthumous son of a poor official in
-the Dublin law-courts, owing his education to the kindness, or perhaps
-less the kindness than the family pride, of an uncle, Swift entered the
-world as a hanger-on, waiting what fortune and a patron might do for
-him, a position scarcely comprehensible to young Englishmen nowadays,
-though then the natural method of advancement. Such a young man in the
-present day would betake himself to his books, with the practical aim of
-an examination before him, and the hope of immediate admission through
-that gate to the public service and all its chances. It is amusing to
-speculate what the difference might have been had Jonathan Swift, coming
-raw with his degree from Trinity College, Dublin, shouldered his robust
-way to the head of an examination list, and thus making himself at a
-stroke independent of patronage, gone out to reign and rule and
-distribute justice in India, or pushed himself upward among the
-gentlemanly mediocrities of a public office. One asks would he have
-found that method more successful, and endured the desk and the routine
-of his office, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_085" id="page_085"></a>{85}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 254px;">
-<a href="images/ill_020_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_020.jpg" width="254" height="363" alt="Image unavailable: JONATHAN SWIFT.
-
-FROM PHOTOGRAPH OF ORIGINAL MARBLE BUST OF SWIFT BY ROUBILLIAC
-(1695-1762), NOW IN THE LIBRARY OF TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">JONATHAN SWIFT.
-<br /><small>
-FROM PHOTOGRAPH OF ORIGINAL MARBLE BUST OF SWIFT BY ROUBILLIAC
-(1695-1762), NOW IN THE LIBRARY OF TRINITY COLLEGE, DUBLIN.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p>“got on” with the head of his department, better than he endured the
-monotony and subjection, the possible slights and spurns of Sir William
-Temple’s household, which he entered, half servant, half equal, the poor
-relation, the secretary and companion of that fastidious philosopher?
-The question may be cut short by the almost certainty that Swift could
-not have gained his promotion in any such way; but his age had not
-learned the habit of utilizing education, and he was one of the idle
-youths of fame. “He was stopped of his degree,” he himself writes in his
-autobiographical notes, “for dullness and insufficiency, and at last
-hardly admitted in a manner little to his credit, which is called in
-that college <i>speciali gratia</i>.” Recent biographers have striven to
-prove that this really meant nothing to Swift’s discredit, but it is to
-be supposed that in such a matter he is himself the best authority.</p>
-
-<p>The life of the household of dependents at Moor Park, where young Swift
-attended Sir William’s pleasure in the library, while the Johnsons and
-Dingleys, the waiting-gentlewomen of a system which now lingers only in
-courts, hung about my lady, her relatives, gossips, servants, is to us
-extremely difficult to realize, and still more to understand. This
-little cluster of secondary personages, scarcely at all elevated above
-the servants, with whom they sometimes sat at table, and whose offices
-they were always liable to be called on to perform, yet who were all
-conscious of gentle blood in their veins, and a relationship more or
-less distinct with the heads of the house, is indeed one of the most
-curious lingerings of the past in the eighteenth century. When we read
-in one of Macaulay’s brilliant sketches, or in Swift’s own words, or in
-the indications given by both history and fiction, that the
-parson,&mdash;perhaps at the great house,&mdash;humble priest of the parish, found
-his natural mate in the waiting-maid, it is generally forgotten that the
-waiting-maid was then in most cases quite as<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_086" id="page_086"></a>{86}</span> good as the parson: a
-gently bred and well-descended woman, like her whom an unkind but not
-ignoble fate made into the Stella we all know, the mild and modest star
-of Swift’s existence. It was no doubt a step in the transition from the
-great medieval household, where the squire waited on the knight with a
-lowliness justified by his certainty of believing himself knight in his
-turn, and where my lady’s service was a noble education, the only school
-accessible to the young gentlewomen of her connection&mdash;down to our own
-less picturesque and more independent days, in which personal service
-has ceased to be compatible with the pretensions of any who can assume,
-by the most distant claim, to be “gentle” folk. The institution is very
-apparent in Shakspere’s day, the waiting-gentlewomen who surround his
-heroines being of entirely different mettle from the soubrettes of
-modern comedy. At a later period such a fine gentleman as John Evelyn,
-in no need of patronage, was content and proud that his daughter should
-enter a great household to learn how to comport herself in the world. In
-the end of the seventeenth century the dependents were perhaps more
-absolutely dependent. But even this, like most things, had its better
-and worst side.</p>
-
-<p>That a poor widow with her child, like Stella’s mother, should find
-refuge in the house of her wealthy kinswoman at no heavier cost than
-that of attending to Lady Temple’s linen and laces, and secure thus such
-a training for her little girl as might indeed have ended in the rude
-household of a Parson Trulliber, but at the same time might fit her to
-take her place in a witty and brilliant society, and enter into all the
-thoughts of the most brilliant genius of his time, was no ill fate; nor
-is there anything that is less than noble and befitting (in theory) in
-the association of that young man of genius, whatsoever exercises of
-patience he might be put to, with the highly cultured man of the world,
-the ex-ambassador and councilor of kings, under<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_087" id="page_087"></a>{87}</span> whose auspices he could
-learn to understand both books and men, see the best company of his
-time, and acquire at second hand all the fruits of a ripe experience. So
-that, perhaps, there is something to be said after all for the curious
-little community at Moor Park, where Sir William, like a god, made the
-day good or evil for his people according as he smiled or frowned; where
-the young Irish secretary, looking but uneasily upon a world in which
-his future fate was so unassured, had yet the wonderful chance once, if
-no more, of explaining English institutions to King William, and in his
-leisure the amusement of teaching little Hester how to write, and
-learning from her baby prattle&mdash;which must have been the delight of the
-house, kept up and encouraged by her elders&mdash;that “little language”
-which had become a sort of synonym for the most intimate and endearing
-utterances of tenderness. No doubt Sir William himself (who left her a
-modest little fortune when he died) must have loved to hear the child
-talk, and even Lady Giffard and the rest, having no responsibility for
-her parts of speech, kept her a baby as long as possible, and delighted
-in the pretty jargon to which foolish child-lovers cling in all ages
-after the little ones themselves are grown too wise to use it more.</p>
-
-<p>Jonathan Swift left Ireland, along with many more, in the commotion that
-succeeded the revolution of 1688&mdash;a very poor and homely lad, with
-nothing but the learning, such as it was, picked up in a somewhat
-disorderly university career. Through his mother, then living at
-Leicester, and on the score of humble relationship between Mrs. Swift
-and Lady Temple, of whom the reader may perhaps remember the romance and
-tender history,&mdash;a pleasant association,&mdash;he was introduced to Sir
-William Temple’s household, but scarcely, it would appear, at first to
-any permanent position there. He was engaged, an unfriendly writer says,
-“at the rate of £20 a year” as amanuensis<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_088" id="page_088"></a>{88}</span> and reader, but “Sir William
-never favoured him with his conversation nor allowed him to sit at table
-with him.” Temple’s own account of the position, however, contains
-nothing at all derogatory to the young man, for whom, about a year
-after, he endeavored, no doubt in accordance with Swift’s own wishes, to
-find a situation with Sir Robert Southwell, then going to Ireland as
-secretary of state. Sir William describes Swift as “of good family in
-Herefordshire.... He has lived in my house, read to me, writ for me, and
-kept all my accounts as far as my small occasions required. He has Latin
-and Greek, some French, writes a very good current hand, is very honest
-and diligent, and has good friends, though they have for the present
-lost their fortunes,” the great man says; and he recommends the youth
-“either as a gentleman to wait on you, or a clerk to write under you, or
-upon any establishment of the College to recommend him to a fellowship
-there, which he has a just pretence to.” This shows how little there was
-in the position of “a gentleman to wait on you,” of which the young
-suitor need have been ashamed. Swift’s own account of this speedy return
-to Ireland is that it was by advice of the physicians, “who weakly
-imagined that his native air might be of some use to recover his
-health,” which he was young enough to have endangered by the temptations
-of Sir William’s fine gardens; a “surfeit of fruit” being the innocent
-cause to which he attributes the disease which haunted him for all the
-rest of his life.</p>
-
-<p>His absence, however, from the Temple household was of very short
-duration, Sir Robert Southwell having apparently had no use for his
-services, or means of preferring him to a fellowship, and he returned to
-Moor Park in 1690, where he remained for four years. It was quite clear,
-whatever his vicissitudes of feeling might have been, that he identified
-himself entirely with his patron’s opinions and even prejudices, and
-was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_089" id="page_089"></a>{89}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter2bdr" style="width: 479px;">
-<a href="images/ill_021_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_021.jpg" width="479" height="355" alt="Image unavailable: MOOR PARK, RESIDENCE OF SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE, AND OF SWIFT.
-
-DRAWN BY CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY, ENGRAVED BY R. VARLEY." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">MOOR PARK, RESIDENCE OF SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE, AND OF SWIFT.
-<br /><small>
-DRAWN BY CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY, ENGRAVED BY R. VARLEY.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">a loyal and devoted retainer both now and afterward. When Sir William
-became involved in a literary quarrel with the great scholar Bentley,
-young Swift rushed into the field with a <i>jeu d’esprit</i> which has
-outlived all other records of the controversy. The “Battle of the Books”
-could hardly have been written in aid of a hard or contemptuous master.
-Years after, when he had a house of his own and had entered upon his
-independent career, he turned his little rectory garden into a humble
-imitation of the Dutch paradise which Temple had made to bloom in the
-wilds of Surrey, with a canal and a willow walk like those which were so
-dear to King William and his courtiers. And when Temple died, it was to
-Swift, and not to any of his nephews, that Sir William committed the
-charge of his papers and literary remains. This does not look like a
-hard bondage on one side, or any tyrannical sway on the other,
-notwithstanding a few often-quoted phrases which are taken as implying
-complaint. “Don’t you remember,” Swift asks long after, “how I used to
-be in pain when Sir William Temple would look cold and out of temper for
-three or four days, and I used to suspect a hundred reasons?” But these
-words need not represent anything more than that sensitiveness to the
-aspect of the person on whom his prospects and comfort depend which is
-inevitable to every individual in a similar position, however
-considerate and friendly the patron may be. The hard-headed and
-unbending Scotch philosopher, James Mill, was just as sensitive to the
-looks of his kind friend and helper in the early struggles of life,
-Jeremy Bentham, in whose sunny countenance Mill discovered unspoken
-offense with an ingenuity worthy of a self-tormenting woman. It was
-natural indeed that Swift, a high-spirited young man, should fret and
-struggle as the years went on and nothing happened to enlarge his
-horizon beyond the trees of Moor Park. He was sent to King William, as
-has been said, when Temple was unable to wait<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_090" id="page_090"></a>{90}</span> upon his Majesty, to
-explain to him the expediency of certain parliamentary measures, and
-this was no doubt intended by his patron as a means of bringing him
-under the king’s notice. William would seem to have taken a kind of
-vague interest in the secretary, which he expressed in an odd way by
-offering him a captain’s commission in a cavalry regiment,&mdash;a proposal
-which did not tempt Swift,&mdash;and by teaching him how to cut asparagus “in
-the Dutch way,” and to eat up all the stalks, as the dean afterward, in
-humorous revenge, made an unlucky visitor of his own do. But William,
-notwithstanding these whimsical evidences of favor, neither listened to
-the young secretary’s argument nor gave him a prebend as had been hoped.</p>
-
-<p>Four years, however, is a long time for an ambitious young man to spend
-in dependence, watching one hope die out after another; and Swift’s
-impatience began to be irrestrainable and to trouble the peace of his
-patron’s learned leisure. Although destined from the first to the
-church, and for some time waiting in tremulous expectation of
-ecclesiastical preferment, Swift had not yet taken orders. The
-explanation he gives of how and why he finally determined on doing so is
-characteristic. His dissatisfaction and restlessness, probably his
-complaints, moved Sir William,&mdash;though evidently deeply offended that
-his secretary should wish to leave him,&mdash;to offer him an employ of about
-£120 a year in the Rolls Office in Ireland, of which Temple held the
-sinecure office of master. “Whereupon [says Swift’s own narrative] Mr.
-Swift told him that since he had now an opportunity of living without
-being driven into the Church for a maintenance, he was resolved to go to
-Ireland and take Holy Orders.” This arbitrary decision to balk his
-patron’s tardy bounty, and take his own way in spite of him, was
-probably as much owing to a characteristic blaze of temper as to the
-somewhat fantastic disinterestedness here put forward, though Swift was
-never a man greedy of money or disposed to sacrifice<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_091" id="page_091"></a>{91}</span> his pride to the
-acquisition of gain, notwithstanding certain habits of miserliness
-afterward developed in his character. Sir William was “extremely
-angry”&mdash;hurt, no doubt, as many a patron has been, by the ingratitude of
-the dependent who would not trust everything to him, but claimed some
-free will in the disposition of his own life. Had they been uncle and
-nephew, or even father and son, the same thing might easily have
-happened. Swift set out for Dublin full of indignation and excitement,
-“everybody judging I did best to leave him,”&mdash;but alas! in this, as in
-so many cases, pride was doomed to speedy downfall.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching Dublin, and taking the necessary steps for his ordination,
-Swift found that it was needful for him to have a recommendation and
-certificate from the patron in whose house so many years of his life had
-been spent. No doubt it must have been a somewhat bitter necessity to
-bow his head before the protector whom he had left in anger and ask for
-this. Macaulay describes him as addressing his patron in the language
-“of a lacquey, or even of a beggar,” but we doubt greatly if apart from
-prejudice or the tingle of these unforgettable words, any impartial
-reader would form such an impression. “The particulars expected of me,”
-Swift writes, “are what relates to morals and learning and the reasons
-of quitting your honour’s family, that is whether the last was
-occasioned by any ill action.” “Your honour” has a somewhat servile tone
-in our days, but in Swift’s the formality was natural. Lady Giffard,
-Temple’s sister-in-law, in the further quarrels which followed Sir
-William’s death, spoke of this as a penitential letter, and perhaps it
-was not wonderful that she should look on the whole matter with an
-unfavorable eye. No doubt the ladies of the house thought young Swift an
-unnatural monster for wishing to go away and thinking himself able to
-set up for himself without their condescending notice and the godlike
-philosopher’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_092" id="page_092"></a>{92}</span> society and instruction, and were pleased to find his
-pride so quickly brought down. Sir William, however, it would seem,
-behaved as a philosopher and a gentleman should, and gave the required
-recommendation with magnanimity and kindness. Thus the young man had his
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Swift got a small benefice in the north of Ireland, the little country
-parish of Kilroot, in which doubtless he expected that the sense of
-independence would make up to him for other deprivations. It was near
-Belfast, among those hard-headed Scotch colonists whom he could never
-endure; and probably this had something to do with the speedy revulsion
-of his mind. He remained there only a year; and it is perhaps the best
-proof we could have of his sense of isolation and banishment that this
-was the only time in his life in which he thought of marriage. There is
-in existence a fervent and impassioned letter addressed to the object of
-his affections, a Miss Waring, whom, after the fashion of the time, he
-called Varina. He does not seem in this case to have had the usual good
-fortune that attended his relationships with women. Miss Waring did not
-respond with the same warmth; indeed, she was discouraging and coldly
-prudent. And he was still pleading for a favorable answer when there
-arrived a letter from Moor Park inviting his return&mdash;Sir William’s
-pride, too, having apparently broken down under the blank made by
-Swift’s departure. He made instant use of this invitation&mdash;which must
-have soothed his injured feelings and restored his self-satisfaction&mdash;to
-shake the resolution of the ungrateful Varina. “I am once more offered,”
-he says, “the advantage to have the same acquaintance with greatness
-which I formerly enjoyed, and with better prospects of interest”; and
-though he offers magnanimously “to forego it all for your sake,” yet it
-is evident that the proposal had set the blood stirring in his veins,
-and that the dependence from which he had broken loose with a kind of
-desperation, once more seemed to<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_093" id="page_093"></a>{93}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 456px;">
-<a href="images/ill_022_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_022.jpg" width="456" height="553" alt="Image unavailable: DEAN SWIFT.
-
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY PIERRE FOURDRINIER, AFTER A PAINTING BY
-CHARLES JERVAS." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">DEAN SWIFT.
-<br /><small>
-FROM COPPERPLATE ENGRAVING BY PIERRE FOURDRINIER, AFTER A PAINTING BY
-CHARLES JERVAS.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">him, unless Varina had been melted by the sacrifice he would have made
-for her, to be the most desirable thing in the world.</p>
-
-<p>Macaulay, and after him Thackeray and many less distinguished writers,
-still persistently represent this part of Swift’s life as one of
-unmitigated hardship and suffering. The brilliant historian so much
-scorns the guidance of facts as to say that the humble student “made
-love to a pretty waiting-maid who was the chief ornament of the
-servant’s hall,” by way of explaining the strange yet tender story which
-has been more deeply discussed than any great national event, and which
-has made the name of Stella known to every reader.</p>
-
-<p>Hester Johnson was a child of seven when young Swift, “the humble
-student,” went first to Moor Park. She was only fifteen when he
-returned, no longer as a sort of educated man of all work, but on the
-entreaty of the patron who had felt the want of his company so much as
-to forget all grievances. He was not now a humble student, Temple’s
-satellite and servant, but his friend and coadjutor, fully versed in all
-his secrets, and most likely already chosen as the guardian of his fame
-and the executor of his purposes and wishes; therefore it is not
-possible that Macaulay’s reckless picturesque description could apply to
-either time. Such an easy picture, however, has more effect upon the
-general imagination than the outcries of all the biographers, and the
-many researches made to show that Swift was not a sort of literary
-lackey, nor Stella an Abigail, but that he had learned to prize the
-advantages of his home there during his absence from it, and that during
-the latter part of his life at Moor Park at least his position was as
-good as that of a dependent can ever be.</p>
-
-<p>Sir William Temple died, as Swift records affectionately, on the morning
-of January 27, 1699, “and with him all that was good and amiable among
-men.” He died, however, leaving the young man who had spent so many
-years of his life under<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_094" id="page_094"></a>{94}</span> his wing, scarcely better for that long
-subjection. Swift had a legacy of £100 for his trouble in editing his
-patron’s memoirs, and he got the profits of those memoirs, amounting,
-Mr. Forster calculates, to no less than £600&mdash;no inconsiderable present;
-but no one of the many appointments which were then open to the
-retainers of the great, and especially to a young man of letters, had
-come in Swift’s way. He himself, it is said, “still believed in the
-royal pledge for the first prebend that should fall vacant in
-Westminster or Canterbury,” but this was a hope which had accompanied
-him ever since he explained constitutional law to King William six years
-before, and could not be very lively after this long interval.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Swift’s life came to a sudden and complete break. The great
-household, with its easy and uneasy jumble of patrons and dependents,
-fell asunder and ceased to be. The younger members of the family were
-jealous of the last bequest, which put the fame of their distinguished
-relative into the hands of a stranger, and did their best to set Swift
-down in his proper place, and to proclaim how much he was the creature
-of their uncle’s bounty. In the breaking up which followed, there were
-many curious partings and conjunctions. Why Hester Johnson, to whom Sir
-William had bequeathed a little independence, should have left her
-mother’s care and joined her fortunes to those of Mrs. Dingley instead,
-remains unexplained, unless indeed it was Mrs. Johnson’s second marriage
-which was the cause, or perhaps some vexation on the part of Lady
-Giffard&mdash;with whom the girl’s mother remained, notwithstanding her
-marriage&mdash;at the liberality of her brother to the child brought up in
-his house. Mrs. Johnson had other daughters, one of whom Swift saw, and
-describes favorably, years after. Perhaps Mrs. Dingley and the girl whom
-he had taught and petted from her childhood had taken Swift’s side in
-the Giffard-Temple difference, and so got on uneasy terms with the rest
-of the household, always faithful<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_095" id="page_095"></a>{95}</span> to my lady. At all events, at the
-breaking up Hester with her little fortune separated herself from the
-connection generally, and with her elder friend made an independent new
-beginning, as Swift also had to do. The fact seems of no particular
-importance, except that it afforded a reason for Swift’s interference in
-her affairs, and threw them into a combination which lasted all their
-lives.</p>
-
-<p>Swift was thirty-one, too old to be beginning his career, yet young
-enough to turn with eager zest to the unknown, when this catastrophe
-occurred. Sir William Temple’s secretary and literary executor must have
-known, one would suppose, many people who could have helped him to
-promotion, but it would seem as if a kind of irresistible fate impelled
-him back to his native country, though he did not love it, and forced
-him to be an Irishman in spite of himself. The only post that came in
-his way was a chaplaincy, conjoined with a secretaryship, in the suite
-of the Earl of Berkeley, newly appointed one of the lords justices in
-Ireland, and just then entering upon his duties. Swift accepted the
-position in hopes that he should be continued as Lord Berkeley’s
-secretary, and possibly go with him afterward to more stirring scenes
-and a larger life, but this expectation was not carried out. Neither was
-his application&mdash;which seems at the moment a somewhat bold one&mdash;for the
-deanery of Derry successful, and all the preferment he succeeded in
-getting was another Irish living, with a better stipend and in a more
-favorable position than Kilroot: the parish of Laracor, within twenty
-miles of Dublin, which, conjoined with a prebend in St. Patrick’s and
-other small additions, brought him in £200 a year; a small promotion,
-indeed, yet not a bad income for the place and time. And he was
-naturally, as Lord Berkeley’s chaplain, in the midst of the finest
-company that Ireland could boast, one of a court more extended than Sir
-William Temple’s, yet of a similar description, and affording greater
-scope for his<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_096" id="page_096"></a>{96}</span> hitherto undeveloped social qualities. Satire more
-sportive than mere scorn, yet sometimes savage enough; an elephantine
-fun, which pleased the age; the puns and quibs in which the men emulated
-one another; the merry rhymes that pleased the ladies,&mdash;seem suddenly to
-have burst forth in him, throwing an unexpected gleam upon his new
-sphere.</p>
-
-<p>Swift was always popular with women. He treated them roughly on many
-occasions, with an arrogance that grew with age, but evidently possessed
-that charm&mdash;a quality by itself and not dependent upon any laws of
-amiability&mdash;which attracts one sex to the other. Lady Berkeley, whom he
-describes as a woman of “the most easy conversation joined with the
-truest piety,” and her young daughters were charming and lively
-companions with whom the chaplain soon found himself at home. And
-notwithstanding his disappointment with respect to the preferment which
-Lord Berkeley might have procured for him and did not, it would seem
-that this period of hanging on at the little Irish court was amusing at
-least. The lively little picture of the inferior members of a great
-household which Swift made for the entertainment of the drawing-rooms on
-the occasion when Mrs. Frances Harris lost her purse, is one of the most
-vivid and amusing possible.</p>
-
-<p>His stay in Ireland at this period lasted about two years, during which
-he paid repeated visits to his living at Laracor, and made trial of
-existence there also. The parsonage was in a ruinous condition; the
-church a miserable barn; the congregation numbered about twenty persons.
-Many are the tales of the new parson’s arrival there like a
-thunder-storm, frightening the humble curate and his wife with the
-arrogant roughness of manner which they, like many others, found
-afterward covered a great deal of genuine practical kindness. His mode
-of traveling, his sarcastic rhymes about the places at which he paused
-on the journey, the careless swing of imperious good and ill<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_097" id="page_097"></a>{97}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:347px;">
-<a href="images/ill_023_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_023.jpg" width="347" height="303" alt="Image unavailable: STELLA’S COTTAGE, ON THE BOUNDARY OF THE MOOR PARK
-ESTATE.
-
-DRAWN BY CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY, ENGRAVED BY S. DAVIS." /></a>
-<br /><br /><div class="bboxx">
-<span class="caption">STELLA’S COTTAGE, ON THE BOUNDARY OF THE MOOR PARK
-ESTATE.<br />
-<small>
-DRAWN BY CHARLES HERBERT WOODBURY, ENGRAVED BY S. DAVIS.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">humor in which he indulged, contemptuous of everybody’s opinion, have
-furnished many amusing incidents. One well-known anecdote, which
-describes him as finding his congregation to consist only of his clerk
-and beginning the service gravely with, “Dearly beloved Roger,” has
-found a permanent place among ecclesiastical pleasantries. In all
-probability it is true; but if not so, it is at least so <i>ben trovato</i>
-as to be as good as true. There were few claims upon the energies of
-such a man in such a sphere, and when Lord Berkeley was recalled to
-England his chaplain went with him. But neither did he find any
-promotion in London. Up to this time his only literary work had been
-that wonderful “Battle of the Books,” which had burst like a bombshell
-into the midst of the squabble of the <i>literati</i>, but which had only as
-yet been handed about in manuscript, and was therefore known to few. No
-doubt it was known to various wits and scholars that Sir William
-Temple’s late secretary and literary executor was a young man of no
-common promise; but statesmen in general, and the king in particular,
-sick and worn out with many preoccupations, had no leisure for the
-claims of the Irish parson. He hung about the Berkeley household, and
-gravely read out of the book of moral essays which the countess loved
-those Reflections on a Broomstick which her ladyship found so edifying,
-and launched upon the world an anonymous pamphlet or two, which he had
-the pleasure of hearing talked about and attributed to names greater
-than his own, but made no step toward the advancement for which he
-longed.</p>
-
-<p>The interest of this visit to England was however as great and told for
-as much in his life as if it had brought him a bishopric. It determined
-that long connection and close intercourse in which Swift’s inner
-history is involved. After he had paid in vain his court to the king,
-and made various ineffectual attempts to recommend himself in high
-quarters, he went on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_098" id="page_098"></a>{98}</span> visit to Farnham, where Hester Johnson and Mrs.
-Dingley had settled after Sir William’s death. Swift found the two women
-quite undetermined what to do, in an uncomfortable lodging, harassed for
-money, and without any object in their lives. Most probably he was
-called to advise as to their future plans, where they should settle and
-how they were to live, both being entirely inexperienced in the art of
-independent existence. They had lived together for years, and knew
-everything about each other: Hester had grown up from childhood under
-Swift’s eye, his pupil, his favorite and playfellow. She had now, it is
-true, arrived at an age when other sentiments are supposed to come in.
-She must have been about twenty, while he was thirty-four. There was no
-reason in the world why they should not have married then and there, had
-they so wished. But there seems no appearance or thought of any such
-desire, and the question was what should the ladies do for the
-arrangement of their affairs and pleasant occupation of their lives.
-Farnham being untenable, where should they go? Why not to Ireland, where
-Hester’s property was&mdash;where they would be near their friend, who could
-help them into society and give them his own companionship as often as
-he happened to be there? Here is his own account of the decision:</p>
-
-<p>“I prevailed with her and her dear friend and companion, the other
-lady,” he says, “to draw what money they had into Ireland, a great part
-of their fortunes being in annuities upon funds. Money was then ten per
-cent. in Ireland, besides the advantage of returning it, and all the
-necessaries of life at half the price. They complied with my advice, and
-soon after came over; but I happening to continue some time longer in
-England, they were much discouraged to live in Dublin, where they were
-wholly strangers. But this adventure looked so like a frolic, the
-censure held for some time as if there were a secret history in such a
-removal; which however soon blew off by<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_099" id="page_099"></a>{99}</span> her excellent conduct. She came
-over with her friend in the year 1700, and they both lived together
-until the day [of her death, 1728].”</p>
-
-<p>This was then the time which decided that which is called the “sad and
-mysterious history” of Swift and Stella&mdash;a story so strangely told, so
-obstinately insisted upon as miserable, unnatural, and tragical, that
-the reader or writer of to-day has scarcely the power of forming an
-impartial judgment upon it. We have not a word from the woman’s side of
-the question, who is supposed to have passed a melancholy existence of
-unsatisfied longings and disappointed love by Swift’s side, the victim
-of his capricious affections, neglect, cruelty, and fondness. That she
-should have wished to marry him, that the love was impassioned on her
-side, and her whole life blighted and overcast by his fantastic
-repugnance to the common ties of humanity, is taken for granted by every
-historian. These writers differ as to Swift’s motives, as to the
-character of his feelings, and even as to the facts of the case; but no
-one has the slightest doubt of what the woman’s sentiments must have
-been. But, as a matter of fact, we have no evidence at all what Stella’s
-sentiments were. By so much written testimony as remains we are fully
-entitled to form such conclusions as we please on Swift’s side of the
-question; but there is actually no testimony at all upon Stella’s side.
-Appearances of blighted life or unhappiness there are none in anything
-we know of her. As the ladies appear reflected in that “Journal to
-Stella”&mdash;which is the dean’s only claim upon our affections, but a
-strong one&mdash;they seem to have lived’ a most cheerful, lively life. They
-had a number of friends, they had their little tea-parties, their circle
-of witty society, to which the letters of the absent were a continual
-amusement and delight. And it is the man, not the woman, who complains
-of not receiving letters; it is he, not she, who exhausts every playful
-wile, every tender art, to keep<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_100" id="page_100"></a>{100}</span> himself in vivid recollection. Is it
-perhaps a certain mixture of masculine vanity and compassion for the
-gentle feminine creature who never succeeded in getting the man she
-loved to marry her, and thus failed to attain the highest end of woman,
-which has moved every biographer of Swift, each man more compassionate
-than his predecessor, thus to exhaust himself in pity for Stella?
-Johnson, Scott, Macaulay, Thackeray, not to mention many lesser names,
-have all taken her injured innocence to heart. And nobody notes the
-curious fact that Stella herself never utters any complaint, nor indeed
-seems to feel the necessity of being unhappy at all, but takes her dean
-most cheerfully,&mdash;laughing, scolding, giving her opinion with all the
-delightful freedom of a relationship which was at once nature and
-choice, the familiar trust and tenderness of old use and wont with the
-charm of voluntary association. We see her only as reflected in his
-letters, in the references he makes to hers, and all his tender,
-sportive allusions to her habits and ways of thinking. This reflection
-and image is not in rigid lines of black and white, but an airy and
-radiant vision, the representation of anything in the world rather than
-a downcast and disappointed woman. It is not that either of a wife or a
-lover; it is more like the wilful, delightful image of a favorite child,
-a creature confident that everything she says or does will be received
-with admiration from the mere fact that it is she who says or does it,
-and who tyrannizes, scoffs, and proffers a thousand comments and
-criticisms with all the elastic brightness of unforced and unimpassioned
-affection. It is through this medium alone that Stella is ever visible.
-And he, too, laughs, teases, fondles, and advises with the same doting,
-delightful ease of affection. By what process this attractive
-conjunction should have furnished the idea of a victim in Stella, and in
-Swift of a tyrannous secret lover crushing her heart, it is difficult to
-understand. The external circumstances of their intimacy were, no doubt,
-very<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_101" id="page_101"></a>{101}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 231px;">
-<a href="images/ill_024_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_024.jpg" width="231" height="313" alt="Image unavailable: HESTER JOHNSON, SWIFT’S “STELLA,” PAINTED FROM LIFE BY
-MRS. DELANY, ON THE WALL OF THE TEMPLE AT DELVILLE, AND ACCIDENTALLY
-DESTROYED.
-
-ENGRAVED BY M. HAIDER FROM COPY OF THE ORIGINAL BY HENRY MACMANUS, R. H.
-A., NOW IN POSSESSION OF PROFESSOR DOWDEN." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">HESTER JOHNSON, SWIFT’S “STELLA,” PAINTED FROM LIFE BY<br />
-MRS. DELANY, ON THE WALL OF THE TEMPLE AT DELVILLE, AND ACCIDENTALLY<br />
-DESTROYED.<br />
-<small>
-ENGRAVED BY M. HAIDER FROM COPY OF THE ORIGINAL BY HENRY MACMANUS, R. H.
-A., NOW IN POSSESSION OF PROFESSOR DOWDEN.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">unusual, and might have lent occasion to much evil speaking. But they do
-not seem to have done so, after the first moment at least. Nobody
-ventured to assail the good fame of Stella, and Swift took every means
-to make the perfect innocence of their friendship apparent. She cannot
-be made out to have suffered in the vulgar way, and it seems to us one
-of the most curious examples of an obstinately maintained theory to
-represent her as Swift’s victim in what is supposed to be a long
-martyrdom of the heart.</p>
-
-<p>One can well imagine, however, when the two ladies arrived in Dublin,
-where their friend had no doubt represented to them his power to gain
-them access into the best society, and found that he did not come and
-that they were stranded in a strange place, knowing nobody, how some
-annoyance and disappointment, and perhaps anger, must have been in their
-thoughts, and that P. D. F. R., as he is called in the little language,
-faithless rogue! had his share of abuse. And no doubt it might be
-believed by good-natured friends that their object in coming was to
-secure the vicar of Laracor either for the young and lovely girl or the
-elder woman, who was scarcely older than Swift&mdash;if not indeed that some
-“secret history” more damaging still was at the bottom of the adventure.
-Insensibly, however, Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Dingley found a place and
-position for themselves. Swift was often away in the following years,
-spending about half his time in London, and when he was absent they took
-possession of his newly repaired and renovated house, or occupied his
-lodging in Dublin, and gathered friends about them, and went out to
-their card-parties, and played a little, and talked, and lived a
-pleasant life. When he returned, they removed to their own rooms. Thus
-there could be no doubt about the close association between them, which,
-when it was quite apparent that it meant nothing closer to come, no
-doubt made everybody wonder. But we have no contemporary<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_102" id="page_102"></a>{102}</span> evidence that
-Stella was an object of pity, and her aspect as we see it in all Swift
-says of her is exactly the reverse, and gives us the impression of a
-charming and easy-minded woman, a queen of society in her little circle,
-enjoying everything that came her way.</p>
-
-<p>As Swift’s relations with Stella are the great interests of his life,
-the subject which occupies every new writer who so much as touches upon
-him, it is needless to make any excuse for entering into the question
-with an amount of detail which our limited space would otherwise
-scarcely justify. The mystery about it lends it an endless attraction,
-and as, whatever it was, it is the one great love of his life, and
-represents all the private satisfaction and comfort he got by means of
-his affections, it has a permanent interest which most readers will not
-find in the “Tale of a Tub,” or any other of the productions which made
-this period of his life remarkable. Swift was continually going and
-coming to London through these years. Though he had begun at once to
-make Laracor a sort of earthly paradise with a Dutch flavor, such as he
-had learnt from his early master, and though it was “very much for his
-own satisfaction” that he had invited Stella to come to Ireland, yet
-neither of these reasons was enough to keep him in the rural quiet among
-his willows, though he loved them. He hankered after society, after fame
-and power. He liked to meet with great men, to hear the news, to ride
-over weaker reasoners in society, to put forth his own vigorous views,
-and whip, with sharp satire, the men who displeased him. Tradition and
-habit had made him a Whig, but political names were of easy interchange
-in those days, and Swift’s objects were much more definite than his
-politics. From the moment of Queen Anne’s ascension, when she gratified
-the Church of England by the remission of certain dues hitherto paid to
-the crown, Swift’s energies were directed to obtaining a similar
-remission for the Irish Church, and this was the ostensible<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_103" id="page_103"></a>{103}</span> object of
-his repeated journeys to London. He had also a purpose still nearer to
-his heart, which was the advancement of Jonathan Swift to a post more
-fitted to his genius. For these great objects he haunted the anterooms
-of Halifax and Somers and Godolphin, and did what he could to show them
-what they were not wise enough to perceive, that he was himself an
-auxiliary well worth securing. The Whig lords played with, flattered,
-and neglected the brilliant but importunate envoy of the Irish Church,
-holding him upon tenterhooks of expectation, going so far as to make him
-believe that his cause for the church was won, and that his bishopric
-was certain, till disgust and disappointment overcame Swift’s patience.
-Nine years had passed in these vain negotiations. It was in 1701 that he
-paid that visit to Farnham which decided Stella’s fate, but his own was
-still hanging in the balance when, after almost yearly expeditions in
-the interval, he set out for London in the autumn of the year 1710 with
-a threat upon his lips. “I will apply to Mr. Harley, who formerly made
-some advances toward me, and, unless he be altered, will I believe think
-himself in the right to use me well.” The change was sudden, but it had
-little in it that could be called political apostasy. Every man was more
-or less for his own hand, and the balance of popular feeling fluctuated
-between war and peace: between pride and the glory of England on the one
-hand, and horror of the sacrifices and misery involved in the
-long-continued, never-ending campaigns of Marlborough on the
-other&mdash;almost as much as Queen Anne wavered between the influence of the
-imperious duchess and the obsequious Abigail. There was no shame to
-Swift at such a moment in the sudden revolution he made.</p>
-
-<p>The man who felt himself of sufficient importance to make this threat
-seems to have possessed already, notwithstanding the neglect of the Whig
-lords, the rank of his intellect rather than of his external position,
-and this not entirely because of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_104" id="page_104"></a>{104}</span> anonymous productions which were
-more or less known to be his. The “Tale of a Tub,” written while he was
-still an inmate of Moor Park, had by this time been before the world six
-years. It was published along with the “Battle of the Books” in 1704,
-and caused great excitement and sensation among politicians, wits, and
-critics. But the careless contempt of fame which mingled in him with so
-fierce a hunger for it kept it long a matter of doubt whether the
-immense reputation of these works belonged to him or not; and it would
-appear that his own personality, the size and rude splendor of his
-individual character, had at least as much to do with his position as
-the doubtful glory of an anonymous publication. The vicar of Laracor was
-not sufficiently important to be chosen as the representative of the
-Irish Church&mdash;but Jonathan Swift was; and though the bishops schemed
-against him in his absence when he seemed to have failed, no one seems
-to have ventured to suggest that he was too humble a person to hold that
-representative post. The book which dazzled English society and set all
-the wits talking was by no means the kind of book to support
-ecclesiastical dignity. It was indeed by way of being a vindication of
-the superiority of the Anglican Church over Rome on the one hand, and
-the dissenters on the other; but the tremendous raid against false
-pretenses, hypocrisy, and falsehood which is its real scope, was
-executed with such a riot and madness of laughter, and unscrupulous
-derision of everything that came in the satirist’s way, as had scarcely
-been known in English speech before. The mockery was at once brilliant
-and careless, dashed about hither and thither in a sort of giant’s play,
-full of the coarsest metaphors, the finest wit, indignation, ridicule,
-fun, almost too wild and reckless to be called cynical, though
-penetrated with the profoundest cynicism and disbelief of any good. The
-power which still lives and asserts itself in those strange and often
-detestable pages, must strike even the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_105" id="page_105"></a>{105}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:368px;">
-<a href="images/ill_025_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_025.jpg" width="368" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE.
-
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM AN ENGRAVING IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM, AFTER
-A PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY." /></a>
-<br /><div class="bbox">
-<span class="caption">SIR WILLIAM TEMPLE.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY R. A. MULLER, FROM AN ENGRAVING IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM, AFTER
-A PAINTING BY SIR PETER LELY.</small></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="nind">reader to whom they are most abhorrent. And the standard of taste was
-different in the reign of Anne, and critics were not easily alarmed. To
-some readers the most desperate satire that was ever written appeared a
-delightful piece of wit.</p>
-
-<p>William Penn sent to the author from America a gammon of bacon on the
-score of having been “often greatly amused by thy <i>Tale</i>,” and a hundred
-years later it “delighted beyond description” at the robust mind of
-William Cobbett, so that he forgot that he had not supped, and preferred
-the book to a bed. The effect upon the general mind of his
-contemporaries was equally great; and notwithstanding the immense
-difference of taste and public feeling it has never lost its place among
-English classics. Many indeed were horrified by its audacious treatment
-of the most sacred things, and the objection of Queen Anne to give its
-author a bishopric would probably have been shared by nine tenths of her
-subjects. The “Tale of a Tub” is one of those books which furnish a test
-of literary character. Like the man who was bound to hear the Ancient
-Mariner, and whom that mystic personage knew whenever he saw him, the
-reader of Swift’s great work must be born with the faculty necessary for
-due appreciation and understanding. It is not a power communicable, any
-more than it is possible to explain the story of the albatross, and the
-curse that fell upon its slayer. The greater part of the public take
-both for granted, and remain in a respectful ignorance. To such Swift’s
-work is little better than a dust-heap of genius, in which there are
-diamonds and precious things imbedded, which flash at every turning
-over; but the broken bits of treasure are mixed up with choking dust and
-dreary rubbish, as well as the offensive garbage which revolts the
-searcher. The dedication of the work to Prince Posterity is thus wholly
-justified, and at the same time a failure. It stands in the highest rank
-of classic satire, and yet to the mass of readers it is nothing but a
-name.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_106" id="page_106"></a>{106}</span></p>
-
-<p>It is characteristic, however, of the man that he should have tossed
-into the world without a name a book which made a greater impression
-than any contemporary publication, enjoying no doubt the wonders and
-queries, yet scorning to make himself dependent upon so small a thing as
-a book for his reputation and influence. He was no more disposed than
-the most sensitive of authors to let another man claim the credit of it,
-yet proud enough in native arrogance to hold himself independent of such
-aids to advancement, and thus to prove his scorn of the world’s opinion,
-even when he sought its applauses most. Whether this work had anything
-to do with his introduction to the society of the coffee-houses, and the
-wits of London, we are not told. He was addressed by Addison as “the
-most Agreeable Companion, the Truest Friend, and the Greatest Genius of
-his age,” very shortly after the publication of his great satire; so
-that it is probable he already enjoyed the advantage of its fame,
-without seeming to do so. The friendship of Addison was a better thing
-than the admiration of the crowd, and notwithstanding Swift’s imperious
-temper and arrogant ways, it is just to add that he always numbered
-among his friends the best and greatest of his time.</p>
-
-<p>On a first accost, it would not seem that his manners were ingratiating.
-This story, which is told of Swift’s appearance at the St. James
-coffee-house is amusing, and may be true.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>They had for several successive days observed a strange clergyman
-come into the house who seemed entirely unacquainted with any of
-those who frequented it, and whose custom was to lay down his hat
-on a table and walk backward and forward at a good pace, for half
-an hour or an hour, without speaking to any mortal, or seeming in
-the least to attend to anything that was going forward there. He
-then used to take up his hat, pay his money at the bar, and walk
-away without opening his lips. On one particular evening, as Mr.
-Addison and the rest were observing him, they saw him cast his eyes
-several times on a gentleman<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_107" id="page_107"></a>{107}</span> in boots who seemed to be just come
-out of the country, and at last advance, as if intending to address
-him. Eager to hear what this dumb, mad parson had to say, they all
-quitted their seats to get near him. Swift went up to the country
-gentleman, and in a very abrupt manner, without any previous
-salute, asked him, “Pray, sir, do you remember any good weather in
-the world?” The country gentleman, after staring a little at the
-peculiarity of his manner, answered, “Yes, sir, I remember a great
-deal of good weather in my time.” “That is more,” rejoined Swift,
-“than I can say. I never remember any weather that was not too hot
-or too cold, or too wet or too dry; but however God Almighty
-contrives at the end of the year it is all very well.” With which
-remark he took up his hat, and without uttering a syllable more, or
-taking the least notice of any one, walked out of the coffee-house.</p></div>
-
-<p>His whimsical humor, and love of making the spectators stare, remained a
-characteristic of Swift all his life.</p>
-
-<p>These beginnings of social life were, however, past, and no one was
-better known or more warmly welcomed, when he appeared with his wig new
-curled, and his azure eyes aglow, than the Irish parson, waiting upon
-Providence and the Whigs, whose political pamphlets, and papers in the
-“Tatler,” and malicious practical joking with poor Partridge, the
-astrologer, made him, at each appearance, a more notable figure to all
-the lookers-on. His eyes must have been on fire under those expressive
-brows when he came to London in 1710, resolved this time to be put off
-by Whig blandishments no longer, but to try what the other side would
-do. The other side received him with open arms, and the most instant
-appreciation of what he was worth to them and what he could do. Harley
-was not great in any sense of the word, but if he had shown as much
-insight in the conduct of public affairs as he did in his perception of
-the workmen best adapted to his purpose, in the struggle upon which he
-had entered, he would have been the most successful of ministers. He
-told Swift that his colleagues and himself had been afraid of none but
-him in the ranks of their enemies, and that they had resolved to have
-him. And in proof<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_108" id="page_108"></a>{108}</span> that they were ready to do anything to secure his
-services, they pushed on and decided as soon as might be his suit for
-the church, which had hung in the balance so long, was as good as
-granted, now as far off as ever. It was settled at once, to Swift’s
-great triumph. And to crown all, the new minister, the greatest man in
-England, called him Jonathan!&mdash;of all wonderful things, what could be
-more wonderful than that this great wit, this powerful and pitiless
-satirist, this ambitious man, should be altogether overcome with
-pleasure when Harley called him by his Christian name! Was it mere
-servility, vanity, the flattered weakness of a hanger-on in a great
-man’s familiarity, as everybody says? It is hard to believe this, though
-it is taken for granted on all sides. Swift seems, at all events, to
-have had a real affection for the shifty minister, who received him in
-so different a fashion from that of his former masters. He flung himself
-into all the backstair intrigues, and collogued with Abigail Masham, and
-took his share in every plot. When Harley was stabbed, Swift felt for
-him all the anxiety of a brother. He threw himself into the “Examiner,”
-the new Tory organ, with fervor and enthusiasm, and expounded the
-principles of his party and set their plans before the public with a
-force and clearness which nobody but he, his patrons declared,
-possessed. The two statesmen, Harley and Bolingbroke, who were so little
-like each other, so ill calculated to draw together, were alike in this:
-that neither could be flattering enough or kind enough to the great
-vassal whom they had secured. He seems to have thought of himself that
-he was a sort of third consul, an unofficial sharer of their power.</p>
-
-<p>This extraordinary episode in the life of a man of Swift’s profession,
-and so little likely to come to such promotion, lasted three years; and
-the history of it is not less remarkable than the fact. It was a period
-of the greatest intellectual<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_109" id="page_109"></a>{109}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter2bdr" style="width: 459px;">
-<a href="images/ill_026_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_026.jpg" width="459" height="358" alt="Image unavailable: DELANY’S HOUSE AT DELVILLE, WHERE SWIFT STAYED.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">DELANY’S HOUSE AT DELVILLE, WHERE SWIFT STAYED.
-<br /><small>
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN.
-ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">activity and brilliancy in Swift’s career, and besides his hard
-political work in the “Examiner” and elsewhere, he flung from him, amid
-the exhilarating appreciation of the great world and his patrons, a
-number of the best of his lighter productions. But nothing that he ever
-wrote can be compared to the letters in which the story of this period
-is told, since nowhere else do we find the charm of humanity, which is
-more great and attractive even than genius. As if the rule of paradox
-was to prevail in his life as well as in his wit, this cynic,
-misanthrope, and satirist, ignoring love and every softer thought,
-exhibits himself once to us in an abandon and melting of the heart such
-as common men are as little capable of as they are of his fierce
-laughter and bitter jests. If it is the true man whom we see in these
-unpremeditated and careless pages, written before he got up of a
-morning, or in the evening when he came home from his entertainments,
-with the chairmen still wrangling over their sixpences outside, how
-different is that man from the other who storms and laughs and mocks
-humanity, and sees through all its miserable pretenses without a thought
-of pardon or excuse! The “Journal” letters addressed to the ladies in
-Dublin, Madam P. P. T. and Madam Elderby, the two women who shared his
-every thought, now so well known as the “Journal to Stella,” are, of all
-Swift’s works, the only productions that touch the heart. They are not
-to be numbered among his “works” at all: publication of any kind never
-seems to have occurred to him, while writing: they are as frank as
-Pepy’s[spelling per original], and far more simple and true. They are
-English history and London life, and the eighteenth century, with its
-mannerisms and quaintness, all in one; and beyond and above every
-circumstance, they are Swift as he was in his deepest soul,&mdash;not as he
-appeared to men,&mdash;a human being full of tenderness, full of fun and
-innocent humor, full of genius and individual nature,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_110" id="page_110"></a>{110}</span> but, above all,
-of true affection, the warmest domestic love. Passion is not in those
-delightful pages; but the endearing playfulness, the absolute freedom of
-self-revelation, the tender intimacy and confidence of members of the
-same family, whose interests and subjects of thought and talk and merry
-jests and delusions are one. They describe every day&mdash;nay, hour&mdash;of his
-life, every little expedition, all the ups and downs of his occupations
-and progress, with the boundless freedom and sportive extravagance, the
-unimpassioned, unabashed adoration of something warmer than a father,
-more indulgent, more admiring than a brother, yet brother, father,
-lover, and friend all in one.</p>
-
-<p>Only to a woman could such letters have been addressed, and few women
-reading them will be disposed to pity Stella or think her life one of
-blight or injury. Without these the life of the dean would not have
-touched our human sympathies at all, but now that time has let us thus
-fully into his confidence, and opened to our sight what was never
-intended for any but hers and those of her shadow, her guardian, the
-humble third in this profound and perfect union, it is with moistened
-eyes that we read the ever living record. There is nothing in the coarse
-and struggling potency of those books which critics applaud, that comes
-within a hundred miles of the delightful life and ease of these
-outpourings of Swift’s innermost soul. The “Tale of a Tub,” the “Battle
-of the Books,” retain a sort of galvanic existence, but are for the
-greater part insupportable to the honest readers who have no tradition
-of superior acumen and perception to maintain. But when we turn to the
-“Journal,” the clean and wholesome pages smile with a cordial life and
-reality. If there is here and there a phrase too broad for modern ears,
-it is nothing more than the language of the time, and has not a ghost of
-evil meaning in it. The big arrogant wit&mdash;not unused to bluster and
-brag, to act like a tyrant and speak like a bully<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_111" id="page_111"></a>{111}</span>&mdash;meets us there
-defenseless, with the tenderest light upon his face, in his nightcap and
-without his wig, smiling over little M. D.’s letter in the wintry
-mornings, snatching a moment at bedtime when he is already “seepy,” and
-can do nothing but bid “nite deelest dea M. D. nite deelest loques,”
-making his mouth, he says, as if he were saying the broken, childish
-words, retiring into the sanctuary of the little language with an
-infinite sense of consolation and repose. Outside it may be he swaggered
-and defied all men, even his patrons; but here an exquisite softness
-comes over him. However he may be judged or mistaken in the world, he is
-always understood by the women in that secret world where they make
-their comments on whatever happens, and merrily answer back again with
-their criticisms, their strictures, no more afraid of that impetuous,
-angry genius than if he had been the meekest of rural priests. It is
-this that has got Swift his hold upon many a reader, who, beginning by
-hating him, the coarse and bitter wit, the scorner of men and crusher of
-women’s hearts, has suddenly found his own heart melt in his breast to
-see the giant lay by his thunders and prattle like an old gossip, like a
-tender mother, father, all in one, in the baby-talk that first had
-opened to him the knowledge of all that is sweetest in life. We do not
-understand the man, much less the woman, who can read without forgiving
-to Swift all his brutalities, as indeed most women who encountered him
-seem to have done without that argument. He would treat the fine ladies
-with the most imperious rudeness, giving forth his rule that it was they
-who should make advances to him, not he to them, yet captivating even
-those who resisted in the end.</p>
-
-<p>The little language which this fierce satirist and cynic dared to put in
-writing, the only man ever so bold as to pay such homage to affection,
-puzzled beyond measure his first editors and expositors, who, with a
-horrified prudery, seem to have done<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_112" id="page_112"></a>{112}</span> their best to interpret and
-restore it to decorum and dignity; but it has now become the point in
-his story which is most tenderly recollected, his sacred reconciliation
-with mankind. A homeless boy, with none of the traditions of a family,
-finding his unlovely life not less but more unpromising in his first
-experiences of Temple’s luxurious English home, what a sudden fountain
-of sweetness must have opened to him in the prattle of the delightful
-child, which was a new revelation to his heart&mdash;revelation of all that
-kindred meant, and delightful intimacy and familiar love. His little
-star of life never waned to Swift: Stella grew old, but never outgrew
-the little language, and every young woman had something in her of the
-sprightly creature that loved to do his bidding, the P. P. T. who held
-her own, and put him upon his best behavior often, yet never was other
-than the “deelest little loque” whom he bantered and laughed at with
-soft tears of tenderness in his eyes. “Better, thank God, and M. D.’s
-prayers,” he says among the private scribbles of his daily diary, which
-neither she nor any one was ever meant to see. Nevertheless, even while
-he was writing this “Journal,” which is the record of a tender intimacy
-so remarkable, Swift was meddling with the education of another girl,
-incautiously, foolishly, who was not of the uninflammable nature of
-Stella, but a hot-headed, passionate creature who did not at all imagine
-that the mere</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i6">... delight he took<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">To see the virgin mind her book<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">was all Dr. Swift meant by his talk and attention. Swift says nothing of
-this pupil in the “Journal.” He mentions his dinners at Mrs.
-Vanhomrigh’s, and her handsome daughter, but he does not tell Madam P.
-P. T. that he had given one of his usual caressing names to this girl,
-whose early beauty and frank devotion had pleased him. There is, indeed,
-no shadow<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_113" id="page_113"></a>{113}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:447px;">
-<a href="images/ill_027_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_027.jpg" width="447" height="442" alt="Image unavailable: MARLEY ABBEY, THE RESIDENCE OF VANESSA, NOW CALLED
-SELBRIDGE ABBEY.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY R. C. COLLINS." /></a>
-<br /><br /><div class="bboxx">
-<span class="caption">MARLEY ABBEY, THE RESIDENCE OF VANESSA,<br /> NOW CALLED
-SELBRIDGE ABBEY.<br /><small>
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY R. C. COLLINS</small>.</span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">of Vanessa anywhere visible, though the brief mention of her name shows
-that the second story, which was to be so fatally and painfully mingled
-with the first, had already begun.</p>
-
-<p>The three years of Swift’s stay in England were the climax of his life.
-They raised him higher than ever a simple parson had been raised before,
-and made of him (or so, at least, he believed) a power in the state. It
-has been doubted whether he was really so highly trusted, so much built
-upon, as he thought. The great lords who delighted in Swift’s talk, and
-called him Jonathan, did not, perhaps, follow his advice and accept his
-guidance, as he supposed. He says, jestingly,&mdash;yet half, perhaps, with
-an uneasy meaning,&mdash;that everything that was said between himself and
-Harley as they traveled sociably in my Lord Treasurer’s coach to
-Windsor, might have been told at Charing Cross; but this was a rare
-admission, and generally he was very full of the schemes of the
-ministers and their consultations, and his own important share in them.
-He seems to have constituted himself the patron of everybody he knew,
-really providing for a considerable number, and largely undertaking for
-others, though it was long before he got anything for himself. The
-following anecdote gives an unpleasant view from outside of his demeanor
-and habits. It is from Bishop Kennett’s diary during the year 1713, the
-last of Swift’s importance:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>Swift came into the coffee-room, and had a bow from everybody save
-me. When I came to the antechamber to wait before prayers, Dr.
-Swift was the principal man of talk and business, and acted as
-minister of requests. He was soliciting the Earl of Arran to speak
-to his brother the Duke of Ormond to get a chaplain’s place
-established in the garrison of Hull for Mr. Fiddes, a clergyman in
-that neighborhood, who had lately been in jail and published
-sermons to pay fees. He was promising Mr. Thorold to undertake with
-my Lord Treasurer that according to his position he should obtain a
-salary of £200 per annum as minister of the English Church in
-Rotterdam. He stopped F. Gwynne, Esq.,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_114" id="page_114"></a>{114}</span> going in with the red bag
-to the Queen, and told him aloud he had something to say to him
-from my Lord Treasurer. He talked with the son of Dr. Davenant, to
-be sent abroad, and took out his pocket-book, and wrote down
-several things as <i>memoranda</i> to do for him. He turned to the fire,
-and took out his gold watch, and, telling them the time of day,
-complained it was very late. A gentleman said, “It goes too fast.”
-“How can I help it,” says the Doctor, “if the courtiers give me a
-watch that won’t go right?” Then he instructed a young nobleman
-that the best poet in England was Mr. Pope (a papist), who had
-begun a translation of Homer into English verse, for which, he
-said, he must have them all subscribe. “For,” says he, “the author
-shall not begin to print it till I have a thousand guineas for
-him.” Lord Treasurer, after leaving the Queen, came through the
-room, beckoning Dr. Swift to follow him; both went off just before
-prayers.</p></div>
-
-<p>But the account of the patronage which he exercised, and the brag and
-general “swagger” of his demeanor, though it is by no means invisible in
-the “Journal,” has a different aspect there, where he tells all about
-his favor and power, to please his correspondents, with a good excuse in
-this tender reason for magnifying all that happens to him. It was,
-indeed, a position to turn even the soundest head, and Swift had
-thirsted all his life for power, for notability, for that buoyant sense
-of being on the top of the wave which was so contrary to all his
-previous experience. His own satirical account of himself, as desiring
-literary eminence only to make up for the mistake of not being born a
-lord, is a self-contemptuous way of stating the thirst he had to be
-foremost, to be doing, to be capable of moving the world. And he may
-very well be excused for thinking now that he had done so.</p>
-
-<p>Amid the many disappointments of his life he had these three years of
-triumph, which are much for a man to have. If there was a certain
-vulgarity in his enjoyment of them, there was at the same time a great
-deal of active kindness, and though he might brag of the services he
-did, he yet did service and remembered his friends, and helped as he
-could those<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_115" id="page_115"></a>{115}</span> hangers-on and waiters upon Providence who, in those days,
-were always about a minister’s antechamber. It is unnecessary to attempt
-to go over again the story of the politics of the time, in which he was
-so powerful an agent. To see Swift moving about in his gown and wig,
-with his eyes, “azure as the heavens,” glowing keen from underneath his
-deep brows, sometimes full of sport and laughter and tender kindness,
-sometimes with something “awful” in their look, sometimes dazzling with
-humorous tyranny and command, is more interesting than to fathom over
-again for the hundredth time the confusing intrigues of the age. One
-thing is evident, that while he served others he got nothing for
-himself: the bishopric so long longed for did not come, nor even a fat
-English deanery, which would have been worth the having and kept him
-near the center of affairs. Was Harley, too, disposed to flatter rather
-than promote his Jonathan? or was it the queen’s determined prejudice,
-and conviction that the “Tale of a Tub” was no fit foundation for a
-miter? The latter would have been little wonderful, for Swift had taken
-pains to embroil himself with the court, by a coarse and ineffective
-satire called the “Windsor Prophecy,” which no doubt amused the hostile
-coteries, yet could not but do the rash writer harm.</p>
-
-<p>At last, just before the fall of Harley, preferment was found for the
-champion who had served him so well. It was the last that Swift would
-have chosen for himself&mdash;a kind of dignified banishment and exile from
-all he loved best. There was a question between the deanery of St.
-Patrick’s and that of Windsor, he himself says. Had he gone to the royal
-borough, what a curious change might have come to all his after life!
-Would Stella, one wonders, have found a red-roofed house under the
-cloister walls? and the dean lived, perhaps, to get the confidence of
-Queen Caroline, a queen worth pleasing? and looked upon the world with
-azure eyes softened by prosperity<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_116" id="page_116"></a>{116}</span> from the storied slopes, and worn his
-ribbon of the Garter with a proud inflation of the bosom which had
-always sighed for greatness? How many differences, how much softening,
-expanding, almost elevation, might not the kind hand of Fortune work in
-such great but troubled natures were it allowed to smooth and caress the
-roughness away!</p>
-
-<p>When the issue of the conflict between Harley and Bolingbroke became too
-evident to be doubted, Swift showed the softer side of his character in
-a very unexpected way. He ran away from the catastrophe like a nervous
-woman, hiding himself in a country parsonage till the blow should be
-struck and the calamity be overpast, a very curious piece of moral
-timidity or nervous over-sensitiveness, for which we are entirely
-unprepared. It was less extraordinary that he should write to offer
-himself to Harley as a companion in his solitude when the minister was
-fairly ousted, although even then Bolingbroke was bidding eagerly for
-his services. But whether Swift would have accepted these offers, or
-would have carried his evidently genuine attachment to Harley so far as
-permanently to withdraw with him from public life, was never known. For
-the victory of St. John was short indeed. “The Earl of Oxford was
-removed on Tuesday, the Queen died on Sunday. What a world is this, and
-how does Fortune banter us!” writes Bolingbroke. It was such a stroke of
-the irony of fate as Swift himself might have invented, and St. John
-applauded with the laughter of the philosopher. There was an end of
-political power for both, and the triumph and greatness of Swift’s
-reflected glory was over without hope of renewal.</p>
-
-<p>He had now nothing to do but to return to Ireland, so long neglected,
-the country of his disappointments, which did not love him, and which he
-did not love, where his big genius (he thought) had not room enough to
-breathe, where society was small and provincial, and life flat and bare,
-and only a few<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_117" id="page_117"></a>{117}</span> familiar friends appreciated him or knew what he was.
-How he was to make himself the idol of that country, a kind of king in
-it, and gain power of a different kind from any he had yet wielded, was
-as yet a secret hidden in the mists of the future to Swift and everybody
-around. His account of himself when he got home to his dull deanery, “a
-vast unfurnished house,” with a few servants in it, “all on board
-wages,” is melancholy enough. “I live a country life in town, see
-nobody, and go every day once to prayers, and hope in a few months to
-grow as stupid as the present situation of affairs will require,” but he
-consoles himself: “after all, parsons are not such bad company,
-especially when they are <i>under subjection; and I let none but such come
-near me</i>,” a curious statement, in which the great satirist, as often
-before, gives a stroke of his idle sword at himself.</p>
-
-<p>But Swift was not long left in this stagnation. Extreme quiet is in many
-cases but a cover for brewing mischief, and the dean had not long
-returned to Ireland when that handsome daughter of Mrs. Vanhomrigh, of
-whom he had said so little in his letters, found herself, on her
-mother’s death, drawn to Ireland, and the neighborhood of her tutor and
-correspondent. It is curious to find so many links to Ireland in this
-little company. Stella had a farm in Meath left to her by Sir William
-Temple, Vanessa, “a small property at Celbridge,” to which it suited her
-to retire. And thus there were gathered together within a short distance
-the dean himself in his dull house, the assured and quiet possessor of
-his tenderest affections in Dublin near him, and the impassioned girl
-who had declared for him love of a very different kind, at Marley Abbey,
-within the reach of a ride. That Swift had a heart large enough to admit
-on his own terms many women is very evident, and that he had a fondness
-for Vanessa among the rest; but how far he was to blame for her fatal
-passion, it is scarcely possible to decide.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_118" id="page_118"></a>{118}</span> The story of their
-connection, as told from his side of the question in the poem of
-“Cadenus and Vanessa,” shows an unconsciousness and innocence of purpose
-which takes all the responsibility of her infatuation from the dean, and
-shows him in a light all too artless.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">The innocent delight he took,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">To see the virgin mind her book,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Was but the master’s secret joy<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">In school to hear the finest boy.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But this was not the light in which the headstrong young woman, who made
-no secret of her love, and filled him with “shame, disappointment,
-guilt, remorse,” by the revelation, regarded his attentions. Their
-correspondence went on for nearly ten years. It is a painful
-correspondence, as the outpouring of a woman’s passion for a man who
-does not respond to it must always be; but Swift never seems to have
-fostered that passion, nor to have done anything but discourage and
-subdue a love so embarrassing and troublesome.</p>
-
-<p>And now comes in the mystery which everybody has discussed, but which
-none have brought to any certain conclusion. In 1716, two years after
-Swift’s return to Ireland, it is said that he married Stella, thus
-putting himself at once out of all possibility of marrying Miss
-Vanhomrigh (which might have been a motive) and satisfying Stella, as
-the notion goes. Scott receives the statement as proved; so does Mr.
-Craik, Swift’s last, and a most conscientious and careful biographer.
-The evidence for it is that Lord Orrery and Dr. Delany, the earliest
-writers on the subject, both assert it (“if my informations are right,”
-as the former says) as a supposition universally believed in society;
-and that the fact was told by the Bishop of Clogher, who performed the
-ceremony, to Bishop Berkeley, who told it to his wife, who told it after
-her husband’s death, and long after the event, to George Monck Berkeley,
-who tells the story.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_119" id="page_119"></a>{119}</span> But Bishop Berkeley was in Italy at the time and
-could not have been told, though he might have heard it at second-hand
-from his pupil, the Bishop of Clogher’s son. We wonder if an inheritance
-or the legitimacy of a child would be considered proved by such
-evidence, or whether the prevailing sense of society that such a thing
-ought to have taken place has not a large share in the common belief. At
-all times, as at the present moment, wherever a close friendship between
-man and woman exists (and the very fact of such rumors makes it
-extremely rare), suggestions of the same description float in the air.
-Nobody supposes, if the marriage took place at all, that it was anything
-more than a mere form. It was performed, if performed at all, in the
-garden without any formal or legal preliminaries. Supposing such a
-fictitious rite to have any justification in Irish law, we wonder what
-the authorities of the church would have had to say to two high
-dignitaries who united to perform an act so disorderly and contrary to
-ecclesiastical decorum, if to nothing else. It is totally unlike Swift,
-whose feeling for the church was strong, to have used her ordinances so
-disrespectfully, and most unlike all we know of Stella that she should
-have consented to so utterly false a relationship. However, the question
-is one which the reader will decide according to his own judgment, and
-upon which no one can speak with authority. Mr. Forster, of all Swift’s
-biographers the most elaborate and anxious, did not get so far in his
-work as to examine the evidence, yet intimates his disbelief of the
-story. We do not need, however, to have recourse to the expedient of a
-marriage to explain how the story of Vanessa might have been a pain and
-offense to Stella. Swift had not in this particular been frank with his
-friends, and the discovery, so near them, of a woman making so
-passionate a claim upon his affections must have conveyed the shock at
-once of a deception and an unpardonable intrusion to one who was proudly
-conscious<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_120" id="page_120"></a>{120}</span> of being his most trusted confidant and closest companion.
-Whatever were the rights of the case, however, nobody can now know.
-Whether Vanessa had heard the rumor of the private marriage, whether she
-conceived that a desperate appeal to his dearest friend might help her
-own claim, or whether mere suspicion and misery, boiling over, found
-expression in the hasty letter to Stella which she wrote at the crisis
-of her career, is equally unessential. She did write, and Stella,
-surprised and offended, showed the letter to Swift. Nothing can be more
-tragic than the events that follow. Swift, in one of those wild bursts
-of passion which were beyond the control of reason, rode out at once to
-the unfortunate young woman’s house. He burst in without a word, threw
-her own letter on the table before her, and rode off again like a
-whirlwind. Vanessa came of a short-lived race, and was then, at
-thirty-four, the last of her family. She never recovered the blow, but,
-dying soon after, directed her letters and the poem which contained the
-story of her love and his coldness to be published. This was not done
-for nearly a century; and now more than half of another has gone, but
-the story is as full of passion and misery, as unexplained, as ever.
-This was one of the occupations of Swift’s stagnant time. He fled, as he
-had done at the moment of Harley’s fall, that, at least, he might not
-see what was going to happen.</p>
-
-<p>But a little while longer was the other, the love of his life, spared to
-him. Five years after the tragical end of Vanessa, Stella too died,
-after long suffering. There is a second story, of equally doubtful
-authenticity and confused and extraordinary details, about a proposed
-tardy acknowledgment of the apocryphal marriage; but whether it was he
-or she who suggested this, whether it was he or she who found it “too
-late,” whether there was any reality in it at all, no one has ever
-determined. Stella’s illness grew serious while Swift<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_121" id="page_121"></a>{121}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:389px;">
-<a href="images/ill_028_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_028.jpg" width="389" height="465" alt="Image unavailable: GEORGE, EARL OF BERKELEY.
-
-FROM AN UNFINISHED ENGRAVING, IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM, ATTRIBUTED TO DAVID
-LOGGAN." /></a>
-<br /><div class="bbox">
-<span class="caption">GEORGE, EARL OF BERKELEY.
-<br /><small>
-FROM AN UNFINISHED ENGRAVING, IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM,<br /> ATTRIBUTED TO DAVID
-LOGGAN.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">was absent, and his anguish at the news was curiously mingled with an
-overwhelming dread lest she should die at the deanery, and thus
-compromise her reputation and his own; perhaps, too, lest the house to
-which he must return should be made intolerable to him by the shadow of
-such an event. That he should have kept away, with his usual terror of
-everything painful, was entirely in keeping with his character. But the
-first alarm passed away, and Swift was in the deanery when this great
-sorrow overtook him. He who had kept a letter for an hour without daring
-to open it, in which he trembled to find the news of her death, now shut
-himself up heartbroken in his solitary house, and, somewhat calmed by
-the irrevocable,&mdash;as grief, however desperate, always must
-be,&mdash;proceeded to give himself what consolation was possible by writing
-a “Character,” as was the fashion of the time, of “the truest, most
-virtuous, and valuable friend I, or perhaps any other person, was ever
-blessed with.” The calm after the storm, but a calm of sober despair and
-dread, unreal composure, is in this strange document. He wrote till “my
-head aches, and I can write no more,” and on the third day resumed and
-completed the strange and melancholy narrative.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>This is the night of her funeral, which my sickness will not suffer
-me to attend. It is now nine at night, and I am removed into
-another apartment, that I may not see the light in the Church,
-which is just over against the window of my bedchamber.</p></div>
-
-<p>She was buried in his own cathedral by torchlight, as the custom was;
-but he would no more bear the glimpses of that awful light through the
-window, than he could witness the putting away of all that remained of
-Stella in the double gloom of the vault and the night. In that other
-apartment he concluded his sad panegyric, the story of all she was and
-did, showing with intense but subdued eloquence that there was no fault
-in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_122" id="page_122"></a>{122}</span> her. “There is none like her, none.” This is the burden of the old
-man’s self-restrained anguish, the tragedy of his age, as it is the
-young lover’s pæan of triumph. The truest, most valuable friend that
-ever man had&mdash;and now her beautiful life was ended, to be his
-consolation no more. He had a lock of her hair in his possession
-somewhere, either given him then or at some brighter moment, which was
-found after his death, as all the world knows, with these words written
-upon the paper that contained it: “Only a woman’s hair.” Only all the
-softness, the brightness, the love and blessing of a life; only all that
-the heart had to rest upon of human solace; only that&mdash;no more. He who
-had thanked God and M. D.’s prayers for his better health, had now no
-one to pray for him, or to receive his confidences. It was over, all
-that best of life&mdash;as if it had never been.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to expand such a text, and many have done it. In the mean
-time, before these terrible events had occurred, while Vanessa’s letters
-were still disturbing his peace, and death had as yet touched none of
-his surroundings, he had accomplished the greatest literary work of his
-life, that by which every child knows Swift’s name&mdash;the travels of the
-famous Gulliver. The children have made their selection with an unerring
-judgment which is above criticism, and have taken Lilliput and
-Brobdingnag into their hearts, rejecting all the rest. That Swift had a
-meaning, bitter and sharp, even in the most innocent part of that
-immortal fable, and meant to strike a blow at politicians and generals,
-and the human race, with its puny wars, and glories, and endless
-vanities and foolishness, is evident enough; and it was for this that
-the people of his time seized upon the book with breathless interest,
-and old Duchess Sarah in her old age chuckled and forgave the dean. But
-the vast majority of his readers have not so much as known that he meant
-anything except the most amusing and witty fancy,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_123" id="page_123"></a>{123}</span> the keenest comic
-delineation of impossible circumstances. That delightful Irish bishop,
-if ever he was, who declared that “the book was full of improbable lies,
-and for his part he hardly believed a word of it,” is the only critic we
-want. “‘Gulliver’s Travels’ is almost the most delightful children’s
-book ever written,” says Mr. Leslie Stephen, no small authority. It had
-no doubt been talked over and read to the ladies, who, it would
-incidentally appear, had not liked the “Tale of a Tub.” But Swift was at
-home when he wrote “Gulliver,” and had no need of a journal to
-communicate his proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>Between 1714 and 1726, for a dozen years, he remained in Ireland without
-intermission, altogether apart from public life. At the latter date he
-went to London, probably needing, after the shock of Miss Vanhomrigh’s
-death, and the grievous sense he must have had that it was he who had
-killed her, a change of scene; and it was then that “Gulliver” was
-published. The latter portions of it which the children have rejected we
-are glad to have no space to dwell upon. The bitterness, passion, and
-misery of them are beyond parallel. One would like to have any ground
-for believing that the Houyhnhms and the rest came into being after
-Stella’s death; but this was not the case. She was only a woman, and was
-not, after all, of such vital importance in the man’s existence.
-Withdrawal from the life he loved, confinement in a narrow sphere, the
-disappointment of a soul which felt itself born for greatness, and had
-tasted the high excitements of power, but now had nothing to do but
-fight over the choir with his archbishop, and give occasion for a
-hundred anecdotes in the Dublin coteries, had matured the angry passion
-in him and soured the sweetness of nature. Few people now when they take
-up their “Gulliver” go beyond Brobdingnag. The rest is like a succession
-of bad dreams, the confused miseries of a fever. To think that in a
-deanery, that calm seat of ecclesiastical luxury, within sound of the
-cathedral<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_124" id="page_124"></a>{124}</span> bells and the choristers’ chants, a brain so dark and
-distracted, and dreams so terrible, should have found shelter! They are
-all the more bitter and appalling from their contrast with the
-surroundings among which they had their disastrous birth.</p>
-
-<p>The later part of Swift’s life, however, had occupation of a very
-different and nobler kind. The Ireland he knew was so different from the
-Ireland with which we are acquainted, that to contemplate the two is apt
-to give a sort of moral vertigo, a giddiness of the intellect, to the
-observer. Swift’s Ireland was the country of the English-Irish,
-ultra-Protestant, like the real Ireland only in the keenness of its
-politics and the sharpness of its opposition to imperial measures. It
-was Ireland with a parliament of her own, and many of the privileges
-which are now her highest aspirations, yet she was not content. Swift,
-in speaking of the people, the true Irish, the Catholic masses, who at
-that moment bore their misery with a patience inconceivable, said of
-them that they were no more considerable than the women and children, a
-race so utterly trodden down and subdued that there was no need for the
-politician to take them into account. The position of the predominant
-class was almost like that of white men among the natives of a savage
-country, or at least like that of the English in India, the confident
-and assured rulers of a subject race. Nevertheless, these men were full
-of a sort of national feeling, and ready to rise up in hot and not
-ineffectual opposition when need was, and reckon themselves Irish,
-whereas no sahib has ever reckoned himself Indian. The real people of
-Ireland were held under the severest yoke, but those gentlemen who
-represented the nation can scarcely be said to have been oppressed.
-Their complaint was that Englishmen were put into vacant posts, that
-their wishes were disregarded, and their affairs neglected, complaints
-which even prosperous Scotland has been known to make. They were
-affected, however, as well as the race which<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_125" id="page_125"></a>{125}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter2bdr" style="width: 479px;">
-<a href="images/ill_029_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_029.jpg" width="479" height="347" alt="Image unavailable: ST. PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, DUBLIN.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">ST. PATRICK’S CATHEDRAL, DUBLIN.
-<br /><small>
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">they kept under their feet, by the intolerable law which suppressed
-woolen manufactures in Ireland, and it was on this subject that Swift
-first broke silence, and appeared as the national champion, recommending
-to his countrymen such reprisals as the small can employ against the
-great, in the form of a proposal that Irishmen should use Irish
-manufactures only, a proposal by no means unlikely to be carried out
-should an Irish parliament ever exist again.</p>
-
-<p>The commotion produced by this real and terrible oppression was nothing,
-however, to that called forth by an innocent attempt to give a copper
-coinage&mdash;the most convenient of circulating mediums&mdash;to Ireland. Nothing
-could have been more harmless, more useful and necessary in reality, and
-there is no reason to suppose that dishonesty of any kind was involved.
-But the public mind was embittered by the fact that the patent had been
-granted to one of King George’s German favorites, and by her sold to
-Wood, an Englishman, who was supposed to be about to make an enormous
-profit out of the country by half-pence not worth their nominal value.
-Such an idea stirred the prejudices and fears of the very lowest, and
-would even now rouse the ignorant into rage and panic. Whether Swift
-shared that natural and national, if unreasonable, outburst of
-indignation and alarm to the full extent, or if he threw himself into it
-with the instinct of an agitator foreseeing the capabilities of the
-subject, it is difficult to tell. But the “Drapier’s Letters” gave to
-the public outcry so powerful a force of resistance, and excited the
-entire country into such unanimity and opposition, that the English
-Government was forced to withdraw from this attempt, and the position of
-the Irish nation, as an oppressed yet not unpowerful entity, still able
-to face its tyrants and protest against their careless sway, became
-distinctly apparent. It is strange that a man who hated Ireland, and
-considered himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_126" id="page_126"></a>{126}</span> an exile in her, should have been the one to claim
-for her an independence, a freedom she had never yet possessed, and
-should have been able to inspire at once the subject and the ruling race
-with the sense that they had found a champion capable of all things, and
-through whom for the first time their voice might be heard in the world.
-The immediate result was to Swift a popularity beyond bounds. The people
-he despised were seized with an adoration for him which was shared by
-the class to which he himself belonged&mdash;perhaps the first subject on
-which they had agreed. “When he returned from England in 1726 bells were
-rung, bonfires lighted, and a guard of honor escorted him to the
-deanery. Towns voted him their freedom and received him as a prince.
-When Walpole spoke of arresting him a prudent friend told the minister
-that the messenger would require a guard of 10,000 soldiers.” When the
-crowd which had gathered to see an eclipse disturbed him by the hum they
-made, Swift sent out to tell them that the event was put off by order of
-the dean, and the simple-minded people dispersed obediently! Had he been
-so minded, and had he fully understood and loved the race over which his
-great and troubled spirit had gained such power, much might perhaps have
-been ameliorated in that unfortunate country, so cursed in her friends
-as in her foes, and much in the soul consuming itself in angry
-inactivity with no fit work in hand. But it would have taken a miracle
-indeed to have turned this Englishman born in Ireland, this political
-churchman and hater of papists and dissenters, into the savior of the
-subject race. That he was, however, deeply struck with an impression of
-their misery, and that his soul, always so ready to break forth upon the
-cruelty, the falsehood, the barbarous misconception of men by men, found
-in their wrongs a subject upon which he could scarcely exaggerate, is
-apparent enough. His “Modest Proposal for Preventing the Children of the
-Poor in Ireland<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_127" id="page_127"></a>{127}</span> from Being a Burden to their Parents or Country” is one
-of those pieces of terrible satire which lacerate the heart. Tears as of
-blood are in it, a passion of indignant pity, and fury, and despair.
-“Eat them, then, since there’s nothing else to be done with them,” he
-says, detailing with elaborate composure the way to do it and the
-desirableness of such a supply of delicate food. The reader, unwarned
-and simple-minded, might almost, with a gasp of horror, take the
-proposal for genuine. But Swift’s meaning was really more terrible than
-cannibalism. It was the sense that these children, the noblest fruit of
-nature, were in truth the embarrassment, the fatal glut of a miserable
-race, that forced this dreadful irony upon him. And what picture could
-be more terrible than that of the childless old man with his bleeding
-heart, himself deserted of all that made life sweet, thus facing the
-world with scorn so infinite that it transcends all symbols of passion,
-bidding it consume what it has brought forth?</p>
-
-<p>But Swift, unfortunately for himself and her, loved Ireland as little
-when he thus made himself her champion as he had done throughout his
-life. At all times his longing eyes were turned toward the country in
-which life was, and power, and friends, and fame. Though he was aware he
-was growing old and ought to be “done with this world,” he yet cries
-aloud his desire “to get into a better before I was called into the
-best, and not die here in a rage like a poisoned rat in a hole,”&mdash;a
-terrific image, and one of those phrases that burn and glow with a pale
-light of despair. But he never got into that better world he longed for.
-The slow years crept over him, and he lived on, making existence
-tolerable by such expedients as he could, a wonderful proof how the body
-will resist all the frettings of the soul, yet growing more angry, more
-desperate, more subject to the bitter passions which had broken forth
-even in his best days, as he grew older and had fewer reasons for<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_128" id="page_128"></a>{128}</span>
-restraining himself. At last the great dean, the greatest genius of his
-age, the man of war and battle, of quip and jest, he who had thirsted to
-be doing through all his life, fell into imbecility and stupor, with
-occasional wild awakenings into consciousness which were still more
-terrible. He died, denuded of all things, in 1745, having lived till
-seventy-eight in spite of himself.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i3">Ubi saeva indignatio<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Cor ulterius lacerare nequit<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">is written on his tomb. No more can fiery wrath and indignation reach
-him where he lies by Stella’s side in the aisle over against his chamber
-window. The touch of her quiet dust must have soothed, one would think,
-the last fever that lingered still in him even after death had done its
-worst.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_129" id="page_129"></a>{129}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="Chapter_IV" id="Chapter_IV"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter IV</span><br /><br />
-THE AUTHOR OF “ROBINSON CRUSOE”</h2>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra">T</span>HE age of Queen Anne was one which abounded in paradoxes, and loved
-them. It was an age when England was full of patriotic policy, yet every
-statesman was a traitor; when tradition was dear, yet revolution
-practicable; when speech was gross and manners unrefined, yet the laws
-of literary composition rigid, and correctness the test of poetry. It
-was full of high ecclesiasticism and strict Puritanism, sometimes united
-in one person. In it ignorance was most profound, yet learning most
-considered and prominent. An age when Parson Trulliber was not an unfit
-representative of the rural clergy, yet the public could be interested
-in such a recondite pleasantry as the “Battle of the Books,” seems the
-strangest self-contradiction; yet so it was in this paradoxical age. No
-man lived who was a more complete paradox than Defoe. His fame is
-world-wide, yet all that is known of him is one or two of his least
-productions, and his busy life is ignored in the permanent place in
-literary history which he has secured. His characteristics, as apart
-from his conduct, are all those of an honest man, but when that most
-important part of him is taken into the question it is difficult to
-pronounce him anything but a knave. His distinguishing literary quality
-is a minute truthfulness to fact which makes it almost impossible not to
-take what he says for gospel. But his constant inspiration is fiction,
-not to say, in some circumstances, falsehood. He spent his life<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_130" id="page_130"></a>{130}</span> in the
-highest endeavors that a man can engage in: in the work of persuading
-and influencing his country, chiefly for her good; and he is remembered
-by a boy’s book, which is indeed the first of boy’s books, yet not much
-more. Through these contradictions we must push our way before we can
-reach to any clear idea of Defoe, the London tradesman who by times
-composed almost all the newspapers in London, wrote all the pamphlets,
-had his finger in every pie, and a share in all that was done, yet
-brought nothing out of it but a damaged reputation and an unhonored end.</p>
-
-<p>It is curious that something of a similar fate should have happened to
-the other and greater figure, his contemporary, his enemy, in some
-respects his fellow-laborer, another and more brilliant slave of the
-government, which in itself had so little that was brilliant,&mdash;the great
-dean whose name has already appeared so often in these sketches. Swift,
-too, of all his books, is remembered chiefly by the book of the travels
-of “Gulliver,” which, though full of a satirical purpose unknown to
-Defoe, has come to rank along with “Robinson Crusoe.” We may say indeed
-that these two books form a class by themselves, of perennial
-enchantment for the young, and full of a curious and enthralling
-illusion which even in age we rarely shake off. Swift rises into bitter
-and terrible tragedy, while Defoe sinks into matter of fact and
-commonplace; but the shipwrecked sailor on his desolate island, and the
-exile at the courts of Lilliput and Brobdingnag, both in the beginnings
-of their careers hold our imaginations captive, and are as fresh and as
-powerful to-day as when, the one in keen satire, the other in the
-legitimate way of business, they first made their appearance in the
-world. It is a singular link between the men who both did Harley’s dirty
-work for him, and were subject to a leader so much smaller than
-themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Daniel Defoe was born in London in 1661, of what would<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_131" id="page_131"></a>{131}</span> seem to have
-been a respectable burgher family, only one generation out of the
-country, which probably was why his father, with yeomen and grazier
-relations in Northamptonshire, was a butcher in town. The butcher’s
-name, however, was Foe; and whether the Defoe of his son was a mere
-pleasantry upon his signature of D. Foe, or whether it embodied an
-intention of setting up for something better than the tradesman’s
-monosyllable, is a quite futile question upon which nobody can throw any
-light. The boy was well educated, according to the capabilities of his
-kindred, in a school at Newington, probably intended for the sons of
-comfortable dissenting tradesmen, who were to be devoted to the
-ministry, with the assistance in some cases of a fund raised for that
-purpose. The master was good, and if Defoe attained there even the
-rudiments of the information he afterward showed, and laid claim to, the
-education must have been excellent indeed. He claims to have known
-Latin, Spanish, Italian, French, “and could read the Greek,”&mdash;which
-latter is as much as could have been expected had he been the most
-advanced of scholars,&mdash;besides an acquaintance with science, geography,
-and history not to be surpassed, apparently, by any man of his time. “If
-I am a blockhead,” he says, “it was nobody’s fault but my own,” his
-father having “spared nothing” on his education. Much of this
-information, however, was no doubt picked up in the travels and much
-knocking about of his early years, of which there is little record. He
-would seem to have changed his mind about becoming a dissenting minister
-at an early age, and was probably a youth of somewhat wandering
-tendencies, as he claims to have been “out” with Monmouth, and does not
-appear in any recognized occupation till after that unfortunate attempt.
-He must have been twenty-four when he first becomes visible as a hosier
-in Cornhill, which seems a very natural and indeed rather superior
-beginning in life for the son of the butcher in Cripplegate.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_132" id="page_132"></a>{132}</span> He laid
-claim afterward to having been a trader,&mdash;not a shopkeeper,&mdash;a claim
-supported more or less from a source not favorable to Defoe, by
-Oldmixon, who says that his only connection with the trade was that of
-“peddling to Portugal,” whatever that may mean. We may take it for
-granted that he had occasions of visiting the Continent in connection,
-one way or other, with his trade. The volume of advice to shopkeepers
-which is entitled the “Complete English Tradesman,” written and
-published in the latter part of his life, though it does not seem to be
-taken by his biographers in general as any certain indication that he
-himself made his beginning in a shop, is nevertheless full of curious
-details of the life of the London shopkeeper of his time, to which class
-he assuredly belonged. We learn from this curious production that vanity
-was even more foolish in the eighteenth century than it is now. We are
-acquainted with sporting shopkeepers who ride to hounds, and with
-foolish young men who fondly hope to be mistaken for “swells”; but a
-shopkeeper in a wig and a sword passes the power of imagination. It is a
-droll example of the fallacy of all our fond retrospections and
-preference of the good old times to find that in Defoe’s day this was by
-no means an extraordinary circumstance. “The playhouses and balls,” he
-says, “are more filled with citizens and young tradesmen than with
-gentlemen and families of distinction; the shopkeepers wear different
-garbs than what they were wont to do, are decked out with long wigs and
-swords, and all the frugal badges of trade are quite disdained and cast
-aside.”</p>
-
-<p>We may take from this book as an illustration of the habits of the age
-the following description of a young firm which is clearly on the way to
-ruin:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>They say there are two partners of them, but there had as good be
-none, for they are never at home or in the shop. One wears a long
-peruke and a sword, I hear, and you see him often at the ball and
-at<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_133" id="page_133"></a>{133}</span> court, but very seldom in his shop, or waiting on his
-customers; and the other, they say, lies abed till eleven o’clock
-every day, just comes into the shop and shows himself, then stalks
-about to the tavern to take a whet, then to the coffee-house to
-hear the news, comes home to dinner at one, takes a long sleep in
-his chair after it, and about four o’clock comes into the shop for
-half an hour or thereabouts, then to the tavern, where he stays
-till two in the morning, gets drunk, and is led home by the watch,
-and so lies till eleven again; and thus he walks round like the
-hand of a dial. And what will it all come to? They’ll certainly
-break. They can’t hold long.</p></div>
-
-<p>The account of the shop kept by these two idle masters is equally
-characteristic.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>There is a good stock of goods in it, but there is nobody to serve
-but a prentice boy or two and an idle journeyman. One finds them
-all at play together rather than looking out for customers; and
-when you come to buy, they look as if they did not care whether
-they showed you anything or no. Then it is a shop always exposed;
-it is perfectly haunted with thieves and shoplifters. They are
-nobody but raw boys in it that mind nothing, so that there are more
-outcries of stop thief! at their door, and more constables fetched
-to that shop than to all the shops in the street.</p></div>
-
-<p>The households of the soberer and more sensible members of the craft are
-also open to grave animadversion. The ladies are too fine; they treat
-their friends with wine or punch or fine ale, and have their parlors set
-off with the tea-table and the chocolate-pot, and the silver coffee-pot,
-and oftentimes an ostentation of plate into the bargain, and they keep
-“three or four maid servants, nay, sometimes five,” and some a footman
-besides, “for ’tis an ordinary thing to see the tradesmen and
-shopkeepers of London keep footmen, as well as the gentlemen. Witness
-the infinite number of blue liveries which are so common now that they
-are called the tradesmens’ liveries, and few gentlemen care to give blue
-to their servants for that very reason.” Of the maids themselves, who
-ask “six, seven, nay<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_134" id="page_134"></a>{134}</span> eight pounds per annum” for their services, a
-terrible account is given in a pamphlet published about 1725, where
-there is a humorous description in the first person of a young woman who
-comes to apply for the place of housemaid, evidently maid of all work to
-the speaker, who lives with his sister, with a man and maid for their
-household. She is so fine that Defoe himself shows her into the parlor
-and keeps her company till his sister is ready, thinking her a
-gentlewoman come to pay a visit. Perhaps it is not Defoe, but, with his
-usual skill, he makes us think so. All these details bring before us the
-London of his time. The mercers had their shops in Paternoster Row,
-“where the spacious shops, back warehouses, skylights, and other
-conveniences, made on purpose for their trade, are still to be seen,”
-where “they all grew rich and very seldom any failed or miscarried,” and
-also in Cornhill, where Defoe’s own establishment was, though there,
-apparently, business was carried on wholesale. It appears to him that
-trade is going downhill fast when this order is changed, when Paul’s
-Churchyard is filled with cane-chair makers, and Cornhill with the
-meanest of trades, even Cheapside itself, “how is it now filled up with
-shoemakers, toy shops, and pastry cooks?” Everything is going to
-destruction, the old trader thinks, shaking his head as he goes through
-the well-known streets, where once the fine ladies came in their fine
-coaches standing in two rows; he cannot think but that trade itself is
-coming to an end when such changes can come to pass. Trade, he says,
-like vice, has come to a height, and as things decline when they are at
-their extremes, so trade not only must decline, but does already
-sensibly decline. It ought to be a comfort to the many timid persons who
-have lived and prophesied evil since then to hear that Defoe a hundred
-and fifty years ago had come to this sad conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>He was born into a world he thus describes, into the atmosphere<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_135" id="page_135"></a>{135}</span> of
-shops and counting-houses, where the good tradesman lived in the parlor
-above or behind his shop, and was called with a bell when need was, and
-was constant at business “from seven in the morning till twelve, and
-from two to nine at night,” the interval being occupied with dinner;
-where the appearance of the long, flowing periwig and the sword and the
-man in blue livery were the danger-signals, and showed that he must
-break, he could not hold; where the cry of “Stop, thief!” might suddenly
-get up in the midst of the traffic, and the constable be called to some
-fainting fine lady who had got a piece of taffeta or a lace in her muff
-or under her hoop; and where, perhaps the greatest risk of all, a young
-man of genius, who was but a hosier, might betray himself in a
-coffee-house and be visited afterward by great personages veiling their
-lace and embroidery under their cloaks, who wanted a seasonable pamphlet
-or a newspaper put into the right way. A strange old London, more
-difficult to put on record in its manners and features than it is to
-record in pasteboard its outward aspect; where town could be convulsed
-by a chance broadsheet, and the Government propped or wounded to death
-by an anonymous essayist; when men of letters were secretaries of state,
-and other men of letters starved in Grub street, and the masses thanked
-God they could not read; when a revolution was made for liberty of
-conscience, yet every office and privilege was barred by a test, and
-intolerance was the habit of the time. The author of “Robinson Crusoe”
-must have got all his ideas in the narrow, bustling streets, full of
-rumors, of wars and commotions, and talk about the scandals of the
-court, and sight of the finery and license which revolted, yet exercised
-some strange fascinations upon the sober dissenting tradesmen who had
-found the sway of Oliver a hard one. He was born the year after the
-Restoration, and was no doubt carried out of London post-haste with the
-rest of his family in the early summer when the roads were<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_136" id="page_136"></a>{136}</span> crowded with
-wagons and carts full of women, children, and servants, all flying from
-the plague. The butcher’s little son was but four, but very likely
-retained a recollection of the crowded ways and strange spectacles of
-the time; and no doubt he saw, with eyes starting out of their little
-sockets with excitement and terror, the glare of the great fire which
-burned down all the haunts of the pestilence and cured London by
-destroying it. Then, both at school, at Newington, and in the parlor
-behind the shop, there would be many a grave talk over what was to come
-of all the wickedness in high places; and when the papist king came to
-the throne, many discussions as to how much his new-born liberality was
-good for, and whether there was any safety in trusting to his
-indulgences and declarations of liberty of conscience. Defoe by this
-time was old enough to speak his own mind. He had left school at
-nineteen, and till he was twenty-four there is no appearance that he was
-doing anything, save, perhaps, picking up notions on trade in general,
-and as much as a young dissenter could, among his own class, or in the
-coffee-houses where it was safe, delivering his sentiments upon
-questions so vital to the welfare of the country. According to his own
-statement, he had written a pamphlet in 1683 to prove that a Christian
-power, though popish, was better than the Turk. He was now so bold as to
-tell the dissenters “he had rather the Church of England should pull our
-clothes off by fines and forfeitures than the papists should fall both
-upon the church and the dissenters, and pull our skins off by fire and
-faggot.” No doubt he was then about in London noticing everything,
-discoursing largely with a wonderful, long-winded, sober enthusiasm,
-making every statement that occurred to him look like the most certain
-truth; talking everywhere, in the coffee-house, at the street corners,
-down in Cripplegate in the paternal parlor, never silent; a swarthy
-youth, with quick gray eyes and keen, eager features,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_137" id="page_137"></a>{137}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 373px;">
-<a href="images/ill_030_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_030.jpg" width="373" height="444" alt="Image unavailable: DANIEL DEFOE.
-
-ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL, AFTER COPPERPLATE BY M. VAN DER GUCHT, IN
-THE BRITISH MUSEUM." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">DANIEL DEFOE.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY C. A. POWELL, AFTER COPPERPLATE BY M. VAN DER GUCHT,<br /> IN
-THE BRITISH MUSEUM.</small></span><br /><br />
-<a href="images/ill_030_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_030a.jpg" width="150" alt="Image unavailable." /></a>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">and large, loquacious mouth. Better be fined and silenced than let in
-popery to burn you into the bargain. Better stand fast in all those
-deprivations and hold your faith in corners, than accept suspicious
-favor from such a source, and help to bring in again the Jesuit and the
-Pope. While Penn, with his plausible speech and amiable temper, drew his
-Quaker brethren into a strange harmony with the courtier’s arts, and
-presented addresses to James, and accepted his grace, the young
-tradesman would be pressing his very different argument upon the
-suspicious somber groups far from St. James’s, where there was no
-finery, but a great deal of determination. And when in the disturbed and
-confused wretchedness of the time, no man knowing what was about to
-happen, but sure that some change must come, young Monmouth set up his
-hapless standard, could it be Defoe’s own impulse, or the catch of some
-eddy of feeling into which he had been swept, which carried him off into
-the ranks of the adventurer? It is said that three of his
-fellow-students at Newington figure among the victims of the Bloody
-Assize. Defoe would always be more disposed to talk than fight. He must,
-we cannot help thinking, have thought it a feeble proceeding to put
-yourself in the way of getting your head cut off, when you could use it
-so much more effectually in convincing your fellow-creatures. His mind,
-ever so ready to slip through every loophole, carried his body off
-safely out of the clutches of Jeffreys. Probably when he turned up at
-home against all hope after this unlucky escapade, his friends were too
-thankful to thrust him into the hosier’s warehouse, where no doubt he
-would give himself the air of having sold and bought hose all his life.</p>
-
-<p>There is, however, nothing to build any account of his life upon in
-these earlier years. The revolution filled him with enthusiasm, and King
-William gained his full and honest support&mdash;a support both bold and
-serviceable, and with nothing in
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_138"
-id="page_138"></a>{138}</span>
-it which was not to his credit. But
-apparently a man cannot be so good a talker, so active a politician, and
-follow the rules which he himself laid down for a successful tradesman
-at the same time. Most likely his mind was never in his hose, and the
-world was full of so many more exciting matters. Seven years after he
-had been set up in business he “broke,” and had to fly, though no
-further than Bristol, apparently, where he made an arrangement with his
-creditors. He would seem to have failed for the large sum at that time
-of seventeen thousand pounds, which he honestly exerted himself to pay,
-and so far succeeded in doing so that he reduced in a few years his
-debts to five thousand pounds in all; and, what was still more, finding
-certain of the creditors with whom he had compounded to be poor, after
-he had paid his composition fully, he made up to them the entire amount
-of his debt&mdash;an unlooked-for and exceptional example of honorable
-sentiment. Some years later, when Defoe had got into notoriety, and was
-the object of a great deal of violent criticism, a contemporary gives
-this fact, on the authority indeed of an anonymous gentleman in a
-coffee-house only, but it seems to have been generally received as true.
-The writer was in a company “where I and everybody else were railing at
-him,” when “the gentleman took us up with this short speech:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Gentlemen,’ said he, ‘I know this Defoe as well as any of you, for I
-was one of his creditors, compounded with him and discharged him fully.
-Several years afterward he sent for me, and, though he was clearly
-discharged, he paid me all the remainder of his debt, voluntarily and of
-his own accord, and he told me that, as far as God should enable him, he
-intended to do so with everybody. When he had done he desired me to set
-my hand to a paper to acknowledge it, which I readily did, and found a
-great many names to the paper before me, and I think myself bound to own
-it.’”<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_139" id="page_139"></a>{139}</span></p>
-
-<p>This has a suspicious resemblance to Defoe’s own style, but the fact
-seems to be generally received as true.</p>
-
-<p>Neither his business nor his failure, however, kept him from the active
-exercise of his literary powers, which he used in the service of King
-William with what seems to have been a most genuine and hearty sympathy.
-Pamphlet after pamphlet came from his pen with an influence upon public
-opinion which it is difficult to estimate nowadays, but which was
-certainly much greater than any fugitive political publications could
-have now. He wrote in defense of a standing army, the curious insular
-prejudice against which was naturally astonishing as well as annoying to
-the continental prince who had become king of Great Britain. He wrote in
-support of the war, which to William was a vital necessity, but which
-England was somewhat slow to see in the same light. And, most
-effectively of all, he answered the always ready national grumble
-against foreigners, which was especially angry and thunderous against
-the Dutchmen, by the triumphant doggerel of “The True-born Englishman,”
-the first of Defoe’s works which takes a conspicuous place. In this
-strange and not very refined production he held up to public admiration
-the pedigree of the race which complained so warmly of every new
-invasion, and held so high an opinion of itself. “A true-born Englishman
-’s a contradiction,” he cries, and sets forth, step by step, the
-admixtures of new blood which have gone to the formation of the English
-people&mdash;Roman, Saxon, Dane, Norman.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">From this amphibious, ill-born mob began<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">That vain, ill-natured thing, an Englishman.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">It is not a very delicate hand which traces these, and many another wave
-of strange ancestors. “Still the ladies loved the conquerors.” But
-Defoe’s rude lines went straight to the mark. The public had no
-objection to a coarse touch when it was effective,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_140" id="page_140"></a>{140}</span> and Englishmen are
-rarely offended by ridicule; never, we may say, when it is home-born.
-The stroke was so true that the native sense of humor was hit. Perhaps
-England did not, on account of Defoe’s verses, like the Dutchmen any
-better, but she acknowledged Tutchin’s seditious assault upon the
-foreigners to be fully answered, and the universal laugh cleared the
-air. Eighty thousand copies of this publication were sold, it is said,
-in the streets, where everybody bought the “lampoon,” which, assailing
-everybody, gave no individual sting. It also procured for Defoe a
-personal introduction to the king. Whether it was to this or to his
-former services that he owed a small appointment he held for some years,
-it is difficult to say, but evidently he did not serve King William for
-nothing. In the mean time Defoe resumed his business occupations, and
-set up a manufactory of pantiles at Tilbury, where he employed a hundred
-poor laborers, and throve, or seems to have thriven, in his new
-industry, living in something like luxury, and paying off, as described,
-his previous debts. His head was full of the projects upon which one of
-his most successful pamphlets was written, and he recommended many
-sweeping schemes and made many bold suggestions on all subjects, from
-the institution of an income tax to that of an academy like the French.
-It was a period when the air was swarming with schemes, and Defoe was
-not necessarily original in his suggestions; but his brain was teeming
-with life and energy, and there is no saying which was absolutely his
-own thought, and which the thought of others. He was a man to whom ideas
-came as he was writing, and were flung off into the air, to fly or fall
-as they might. One thought, one fancy, suggested another. For instance,
-after arguing long and well in favor of the war with France, which was
-the object of King William’s life, and the only thing that could
-save&mdash;according to the ideas of his party on the Continent, and
-eventually of most sound Protestants in England&mdash;the Protestant<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_141" id="page_141"></a>{141}</span> faith,
-Defoe, with a sudden whimsical perception of certain possibilities on
-the other side, came out with a pamphlet entitled, “Reasons Against a
-War with France,” which was founded on the suggestion that a war with
-Spain instead would be very profitable, and that the Spanish Indies were
-a booty well worth having: a sudden dash into new fields which must have
-brought up the public which he had persuaded to fight France with a
-certain gasp of breathless inability to follow this rapid reasoner in
-the instantaneous change of front, which meant no real change of
-opinion, but only the flash of a sudden happy thought.</p>
-
-<p>When William died, however, and the times changed, the High Church came
-back with Anne into a potency which had been impossible in the
-unsympathetic reign of that Dutchman. Defoe had written some time before
-against the practice of occasional conformity; that is, the device by
-which dissenters managed to hold public offices in despite of existing
-tests, by kneeling now and then at the altars of the established church,
-and receiving the communion there. Defoe took the highest view of
-principle in this respect, and denounced the nonconformists who thus
-secured office to themselves by the sacrifice of their consciences,
-“bowing in the House of Rimmon.” There seems no reason, in fact, why a
-moderate dissenter should not do this, except that any religious duty
-specially performed for the sake of a secular benefit is always suspect
-and odious. Yet the obvious argument that a man who could reconcile it
-with his conscience to attend the worship of the church should not be a
-dissenter, was unquestionably sound and unassailable in point of logic.
-Defoe had deeply offended the dissenters, to whom he himself belonged,
-by his protest; but this did not prevent him from rushing into print in
-defense of the expedient of occasional conformity as soon as it was
-threatened from the other side. There is little difficulty in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_142" id="page_142"></a>{142}</span> following
-the action of his mind in such a question. It was wrong and a deflection
-from the highest point of duty to sacrifice one’s conscience, even
-occasionally, for the sake of office; but, on the other hand, it was
-equally wrong to abolish an expedient which broke the severity of the
-test, and made life possible to the nonconforming classes. The views
-were contradictory, yet both were true, and it was his nature to see
-both sides with most impartial good sense, while he felt it to be, if a
-breach of external consistency, no wrong to defend or assail one side or
-the other, as might seem most necessary. He allowed himself so complete
-a license on this point that it is curious he should be found the public
-champion of the higher duty. No doubt his utterance to his dissenting
-brethren on that question was to himself no reason why he should not
-defend their right to use the expedient if they had a mind. But this is
-too fine a distinction for the general intelligence.</p>
-
-<p>The discussions on this subject were the occasion of one of the most
-striking episodes in his life. When the bill against occasional
-conformity was introduced, to the delight of the High Church party, from
-the queen downward, and when the air began to buzz around him with the
-bluster, hitherto subdued by circumstances, of the reviving party, who
-would have made short work with the dissenters had their power been
-equal to their will, a grimly humorous perception of the capabilities of
-the occasion seems to have seized Defoe. Notwithstanding that he had
-angered all the sects by his plain speaking, he was a dissenter born,
-and there is no such way of reconverting a stray Israelite as to hear
-the Philistines blaspheme. He seized upon the extremest views of the
-high-fliers with characteristic insight, and, with a keen consciousness
-of the power of his weapon, used it remorselessly. The “Shortest Way to
-Deal with Dissenters” is a grave and elaborate statement of the wild
-threats and violent talk in which, in the intoxication of newly<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_143" id="page_143"></a>{143}</span>
-acquired power, the partizans of the church indulged, with noise and
-exaggeration proportioned to the self-suppression which had been forced
-upon them by the panic of a papal restoration under James, and by the
-domination of the more moderate party during William’s unsympathetic
-reign. They were now at the top of the wave, and could brandish their
-swords in the eyes of their adversaries. Their talk in some of their
-public utterances was as bloodthirsty as if they intended a St.
-Bartholomew. Defoe took up this frenzied babble, and put it into the
-form of a grave and practical proposal. As serious as was Swift when he
-proposed to utilize the superabundant babies of the poor by eating them,
-Defoe propounded the easy way to get rid of the dissenters and the
-necessity of settling this question forever. “Shall any law be given to
-such wild creatures? Some beasts are for sport, and the huntsman gives
-them advantages of ground, but some are knocked on the head by all
-possible ways of violence and surprise.” He says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>’T is vain to trifle in this matter. The light, foolish handling of
-them by mulcts, fines, etc., ’t is their glory and their advantage.
-If the gallows instead of the counter, and the galleys instead of
-the fines, were the reward of going to a conventicle to preach or
-to hear, there would not be so many sufferers. The spirit of
-martyrdom is over. They that will go to church to be chosen
-sheriffs and mayors would go to forty churches rather than be
-hanged. If one severe law were made and punctually executed, that
-whoever was found at a conventicle should be banished, the nation
-and the preacher be hanged, we should see an end of the tale. They
-would all come to church, and one age would make us all one again.</p>
-
-<p>To talk of 5s. a month for not coming to this sacrament, and 1s.
-per week for not coming to church, this is such a way of converting
-people as never was known. This is selling them a liberty to
-transgress for so much money. If it be not a crime, why don’t we
-give them full license? And if it be, no price ought to compound
-for committing it, for that is selling a liberty to people to sin
-against God and the government.</p>
-
-<p>If it be a crime of the highest consequence, both against the peace
-and welfare of the nation, the glory of God, the good of the
-church, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_144" id="page_144"></a>{144}</span> the happiness of the soul, let us rank it among
-capital offences, and let it receive a punishment in proportion to
-it.</p>
-
-<p>We hang men for trifles and banish them for things not worth
-naming. But an offence against God and the church, against the
-welfare of the world, and the dignity of religion shall be bought
-off for 5s.&mdash;this is such a shame to a Christian Government that
-’tis with regret I transmit it to posterity.</p>
-
-<p>If men sin against God, affront his ordinances, rebel against his
-church, and disobey the precepts of their superiors, let them
-suffer as such capital crimes deserve: so will religion flourish,
-and this divided nation be once again united.... I am not supposing
-that all the dissenters in England should be hanged or banished,
-but as in cases of rebellions and insurrections, if a few of the
-ringleaders suffer, the multitude are dismissed; so a few obstinate
-people being bad examples, there’s no doubt but the severity of the
-law would find a stop in the compliance of the multitude.</p></div>
-
-<p>The reader will perceive by what a serious argument the hot-headed
-fanatic was betrayed and the wiser public put upon their guard. The
-mirror thus held up to nature, with a grotesque twist in it which made
-the likeness bewildering, gave London such a sensation as she had not
-felt for many a day. The wildest excitement arose. At first all parties
-in the shock of surprise took it for genuine. “The wisest churchmen in
-the nation were deceived by it,” and while some were even so foolish as
-to receive it with unthinking applause, which was the case, according to
-Oldmixon, “in our two famous Universities,” the more sensible reader of
-the church party was first indignant with the high-flyers for expressing
-such opinions, and then furious with the satirist who had insulted the
-church by putting them into her mouth. Nobody indeed saw the joke. The
-fellow of Cambridge who thanked his bookseller for packing up “so
-excellent a treatise” along with the books he had ordered, and
-considered it “next to the Sacred Bible and Holy Comments the best book
-he ever saw”; the “soberer churchman” who “openly exclaimed against the
-proposal, condemned the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_145" id="page_145"></a>{145}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter2bdr" style="width:398px;">
-<a href="images/ill_031_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_031.jpg" width="398" height="523" alt="Image unavailable: CHURCH OF ST. GILES, CRIPPLEGATE,
-
-WHERE DEFOE IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN BAPTIZED.
-
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY H. E. SYLVESTER." /></a>
-<br /><div class="bboxx">
-<span class="caption">CHURCH OF ST. GILES, CRIPPLEGATE,
-<br />
-WHERE DEFOE IS SUPPOSED TO HAVE BEEN BAPTIZED.<br />
-<small>
-DRAWN BY HARRY FENN. ENGRAVED BY H. E. SYLVESTER.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">warmth that appeared in the clergy, and openly professed that such a man
-as Sacheverell and his brethren would blow up the foundations of the
-church”; the dissenters who were at once insulted and alarmed by the
-extraordinary threats thus set forth against them&mdash;all alike turned upon
-the perpetrator of the hoax when he was discovered. Some “blushed when
-they reflected how far they had applauded,” some labored to prove that
-it was “a horrible slander against the church.” The government, sharing
-the general commotion, placed Defoe in the position of a revolutionary
-leader who, “by the villainous insinuations of that pamphlet, would have
-frightened the dissenters into another rebellion.” Defoe himself seems
-to have had a moment of panic, and fled. He was proclaimed in the
-“Gazette,” and a reward offered for his discovery. His biographers in
-general assert that he gave himself up with some generosity to save the
-printer and publisher, who had been arrested, but there are public
-documents which seem to prove a different procedure, showing how “My
-Lord Nottingham hunted him out,” and how “the person who discovered
-Daniel Foe” claimed and was paid the reward of fifty pounds offered for
-the offender, described as a “middle-aged, spare man, about forty years
-old, of a brown complexion and dark brown colored hair (but wears a
-wig), a hooked nose, a sharp chin, gray eyes, and a large mole near his
-mouth.” However that might be, he was arrested and committed to Newgate
-in the spring of 1703, and the obnoxious publication&mdash;“this little book,
-a contemptible pamphlet of but three sheets of paper,” as he describes
-it&mdash;was burned by the common hangman. It was not, however, till the
-summer, three or four months after his arrest, that he was tried, and
-that period he seems to have spent in Newgate in perfect freedom, at
-least for literary productions, since he filled the air with a mist of
-pamphlets explaining that he meant nothing but a harmless satire at one
-moment, at another exhorting the dissenters<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_146" id="page_146"></a>{146}</span> to be content with
-spiritual freedom, and again bursting into the rude but potent strains
-of the “Hymn to the Pillory.” He was sentenced to fine and imprisonment,
-as well as to that grotesque but sometimes terrible instrument of
-torture; but the pillory was no torture to Defoe. On the last three days
-of July&mdash;once before the Royal Exchange in Cornhill, where his shop had
-been, and where no doubt everybody knew him, once in Cheapside, and
-again at Temple Bar&mdash;he stood aloft with the crowd surging round and
-performed his penance. The crowd in those days was not a soft or civil
-one when it indorsed the sentence pronounced by law. Its howls and
-cries, its missiles and its curses, made the punishment horrible. But
-the crowd had by this time found time to take in the joke,&mdash;banter, when
-it is broad enough to be intelligible, always pleases the general,&mdash;and
-there must have been some bonhomie about the sufferer, some good repute
-as a merry fellow and one who loved a jest, which conciliated the
-populace. Instead of dead cats, they flung him nosegays; they gathered
-about his platform under the low deep arch which once made a mock gate
-to the city, and behind the bustling ’Change, and between the shops of
-Cheapside, holding a series of impromptu festivals, drinking his health,
-shouting out his new verses, which were sold by thousands in the
-streets:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Hail, hieroglyphic state machine,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Contriv’d to punish fancy in;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Men that are men, in thee can feel no pain,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And all thy insignificants disdain;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Exalted on thy stool of state,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">What prospect do I see of sovereign fate.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The bold satirist, looking through those “lofty loops,” recalls all the
-good men that have stood there, reminding himself that even the learned
-Selden had the pillory in prospect, and that, had he “triumphed on thy
-stage,” no man could have<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_147" id="page_147"></a>{147}</span> shunned it more. Contempt, “that false new
-word for shame,” has no power where there is no crime, he declares. The
-lines are rough, but the sentiments are manly and full of honest scorn,
-which here and there reaches a high tone. From his platform where he
-stood in all the emancipation of feeling that the worst had happened, he
-throws a bold glance upon the disorders of the time, political and
-social, and summons to this post of scorn the firebrands, the cowards,
-the failures of the age. One can imagine those keen gray eyes inspecting
-through the loops the hoarse and roaming groups, not sure perhaps what
-his reception was to be, gathering courage as the shouts became
-intelligible and turned into hurrahs for Defoe. No doubt he marked the
-fluctuating crowd as keenly as if he had been a careless spectator at a
-window, and saw Colonel Jack and his brother pickpockets threading
-devious ways among the multitude, with here and there a gallant from St.
-James in his long curled periwig fluttering on the edge, and the
-tradesmen, half curious, half unwilling to join in the riot, looking on
-from their doors. A pillory is a coign of vantage when the man upon it
-has eyes like Defoe’s. “Tell ’em,” he says, apostrophizing his platform
-contemptuously&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Tell ’em the men that placed him here<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Are friends unto the times,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But at a loss to find his guilt,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">They can’t commit his crimes.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Burton, in his “Reign of Queen Anne,” quotes from manuscript
-authority a statement that Penn had been commissioned by Defoe to offer
-“an account of all his accomplices in whatsoever he has been concerned,”
-on condition that he should be freed from the pillory, which is a very
-confusing statement, since it seems impossible to understand what
-accomplices he could have had. This, according to the same authority,
-was<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_148" id="page_148"></a>{148}</span> considered important enough to call for a special meeting of the
-cabinet council; but “the Queen seems to think that his confession
-amounts to nothing.” Another account is that Nottingham visited him in
-prison and offered him his liberty if he would say who set him on to do
-it. Thus this <i>jeu d’esprit</i>&mdash;the first exercise of Defoe’s special and
-most characteristic gift, that of endowing a fictitious production with
-every appearance of reality&mdash;set the world aflame. It is almost a more
-astonishing feat than the narratives which look so like literal
-transcripts of experience; for the subtle power which, by a cunning
-fitting together of actual utterances, could thus indicate the alarming
-tendency and danger of a great party, is more wonderful than to create
-an imaginary man and trace his every action as if he were a real one.
-The art may be less noble, but it is more difficult. Indeed, the
-“Shortest Way” is about the only example of such an extraordinary
-achievement. Swift’s tremendous satire was more bitter, more scathing,
-and treated not so much the exaggerated opinions of a class as the cruel
-and callous indifference of human nature to the sufferings of its slaves
-and victims.</p>
-
-<p>This curious episode once more ruined Defoe. It is to be supposed that
-when he went into hiding his business had to be abandoned, and all his
-affairs got into confusion. The official document already quoted
-describes him as “living at Newington Green with his father-in-law, who
-is a lay elder of a conventicle there.” This description, however, is
-evidently drawn up by an enemy, since his previous bankruptcy is spoken
-of as fraudulent, an assertion made nowhere else. His biographer,
-Wilson, informs us that though he had “kept his coach” before this
-period, the pantile works had now to be broken up, and his business was
-ruined. He had, though there is no information about her, a wife and six
-children&mdash;perhaps supported by the elder at Newington, who very likely
-thought, like his brethren, but badly of Defoe.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_149" id="page_149"></a>{149}</span></p>
-
-<p>He lay in Newgate for nearly a year, without, however, to all
-appearance, losing any opportunity for a pamphlet during the whole time,
-and laying in grist for his mill amid the strange and terrible
-surroundings of an eighteenth-century prison. Mr. Minto, in the
-admirable sketch of Defoe which he has contributed to the “English Men
-of Letters” series, seems to think that his hero must have enjoyed
-himself in this teeming world of new experiences, and that “he spent
-many pleasant hours” listening to the tales of his fellow-prisoners. No
-doubt there must have been some compensation to such a man in making
-acquaintance with a new aspect of life, but it is, perhaps, going too
-far to attribute a possibility of enjoyment to any undegraded man in the
-pandemonium described in so many contemporary narratives. Defoe did,
-however, what, so far as we are aware, no other man before or after him
-has ever done (except, perhaps, Leigh Hunt, in whose case we have a
-vague recollection of similar activity): he originated, wrote, and
-published a newspaper in his prison. “The Review,” so called, “of the
-Affairs of France”&mdash;that is, of the affairs of Europe and the
-world&mdash;that is, of any political subject that might be uppermost&mdash;was
-published twice a week, and appeared during the whole time of his
-imprisonment. A brilliant, familiar, graphic commentary upon all that
-was happening, a dialogue between the imprisoned spectator of life and
-the busy world outside, in which he was both questioner and answerer,
-pouring out upon the country with the keenest understanding of other
-people’s views, and the most complete mastery of his own, his remarks
-and criticisms, his judgment and advice. A newspaper in those days was
-not, of course, the huge broadsheet which it has now become. The
-“Review” was a sheet of eight, but afterward of only four small quarto
-pages. It was no assemblage of paragraphs, trivial or important, the
-work of many anonymous persons whose profession it is to manufacture a
-newspaper, but one<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_150" id="page_150"></a>{150}</span> man’s eager and lively conversation with his
-countrymen, full of the vigor of personal opinion and the unity of an
-individual view. A keener intelligence was never brought to the
-treatment of public affairs, nor a mind more thoughtful, reasonable, and
-practical. His prejudices were few&mdash;too few, perhaps. Granted that the
-aim was good, Defoe was disdainful of punctilio in the way of carrying
-it out. He was not above doing evil that good might come, but he had a
-far higher refinement of meaning than could be embraced by any such
-vulgar statement in his subtle faculty of discovering, and all but
-proving, that what might have seemed evil to a common intelligence was
-in reality a good, if not the best, way of carrying his excellent
-purpose out. Up to the moment of his leaving Newgate, however, there was
-nothing equivocal in the use he made of his extraordinary faculties. He
-was a free man discussing boldly on his own responsibility, and without
-any <i>arrière pensée</i>, the affairs of England. If he had first keenly
-assailed the dissenters, who were his own people, in respect of the
-compliances by which they made themselves capable of bearing office, and
-then exposed to grimmest ridicule the adversaries who aimed at rendering
-them altogether incapable, there was in this no real inconsistency. His
-championship of King William had been honest and thorough. If he loved
-to have a finger in every pie, and let loose his opinion at every
-crisis, there was no contemporary opinion which was better worth having.
-But now this unwearying critic, this keen observer, this restless,
-brilliant casuist, this practical man of business, had come to the
-turning-point of his life.</p>
-
-<p>His liberation from Newgate followed closely upon the advent of Harley
-to power. When this event happened, it is said that one of the first
-things the new minister did was to send a message to Defoe in prison:
-“Pray ask that gentleman what I can do for him.” Whether it was in
-direct sequence to this<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_151" id="page_151"></a>{151}</span> question, or whether the Queen had formed an
-independent intention of freeing the prisoner, we need not inquire; but
-he was set free, Queen Anne furnishing the means of paying his fine. She
-is said also to have taken an interest in his family, and contributed to
-their support during his confinement. He declared himself to be
-liberated on the condition of writing nothing (further modified as
-nothing “which some people might not like”) for some years; a condition
-which he immediately fulfilled by publishing an “Elegy on the Author of
-the True-born Englishman,” to tell the world so, and took no further
-notice of the prohibition, so far as appears. The real meaning of this
-curious statement would seem by all evidence to have been that Defoe
-there and then accepted the position of a secret servant of the
-government, a writer pledged to support their measures and carry out
-their views. At the moment, and perhaps in reality during the greater
-part of his career, their measures were those which he approved; and
-certainly at this period of his history he has never been accused of
-writing against his conscience. Even when, after eager championship of
-peace, he was obliged by political changes to veer into what looked like
-support of war, he was never without the strong defense to fall back
-upon, that he demanded peace only after securing certain indispensable
-conditions, and that war might be, and was, the only means of gaining
-them&mdash;an argument most simple and evident to his mind.</p>
-
-<p>Harley has never appeared in history as a great man, but when we
-consider that he was able thus to subjugate and secure to his own
-service two of the greatest intelligences of his time, it is impossible
-not to respect his influence and judgment. The great and somber genius
-of Swift, the daring, brilliant, and ever-ready intellect of Defoe,
-became instruments in the hands of this ordinary and scheming statesman.
-Once more, with a curious parallelism, these two men stand before us&mdash;no
-friends<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_152" id="page_152"></a>{152}</span> to each other. “An illiterate fellow, whose name I forget,”
-says Swift, with the almost brutal scorn which was part of his
-character; while Defoe replies to the taunt with angry virulence,
-setting forth his own acquirements, “though he wrote no bill at his
-door, nor set Latin on the front of his productions,” a piece of
-pretension, habitual to the time, of which the other was guilty. But
-Harley, who was not worthy, so far as intellect went, to clean the shoes
-of either, had them both at his command, serving his purposes, doing his
-bidding. Which of them suffered most by the connection it is not easy to
-say. It turned Swift’s head, and brought into humiliating demonstration
-the braggart and the bully in his nature. Defoe had not the demoralizing
-chance of being the lord treasurer’s boon companion; but Harley made a
-dishonest partizan, a paid and slippery special pleader and secret
-agent, out of the free-lance of politics. From this moment the defenders
-and champions of Defoe have to turn into casuists, as he himself did.
-They have to give specious explanations to suppress and account for his
-shifts and changes, though at first they were sufficiently innocent. The
-evil grew, however, so that toward the end of his career even the
-apologist must keep silence; but this is the nature of all evil.</p>
-
-<p>If excuses are to be sought for Defoe’s conduct in this first beginning
-of his slavery, it will not be difficult to find them. The age, for one
-thing, was corrupt through and through. There was not a statesman but
-had two strings to his bow, nor a politician of any description who did
-not attempt to serve two masters. To hold the balance between Hanover
-and St.-Germain, ready to perform a demi-volt in the air at any moment
-as the scale should turn, was the science of the day. On the other hand,
-Defoe was now a ruined man, with a family to support, and nothing but
-his busy and inexhaustible pen to do it with. The material inducement of
-a certain income to fall back upon, whatever<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_153" id="page_153"></a>{153}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width:394px;">
-<a href="images/ill_032_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_032.jpg" width="394" height="501" alt="Image unavailable: ROBERT HARLEY, EARL OF OXFORD.
-
-ENGRAVED BY JOHN P. DAVIS, AFTER THE ORIGINAL PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY
-KNELLER, IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM." /></a>
-<br /><div class="bbox">
-<span class="caption">ROBERT HARLEY, EARL OF OXFORD.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY JOHN P. DAVIS, AFTER THE ORIGINAL PAINTING BY SIR GODFREY
-KNELLER, IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.</small></span></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">might be the chances of journalism, must have been very strong. And what
-was stronger still was the delight of his own vivacious, restless, ready
-mind, with its sense of boundless power and infinite resource, to which
-difficulty was a delight and the exercise of walking over hot coals or
-dancing on a sword-point the most exhilarating possibility, in making
-its triumphant way over obstacles which would have baffled almost all
-his contemporaries. “The danger’s self was lure alone” to this skilled
-and cunning fencer, this master of all the arts. In a very different
-sense from that of Tennyson’s noble hero, “Faith Unfaithful” was
-inspiration and strength to him, and to be falsely true the most
-delightful situation. He loved to support his principles by a hundred
-dodges, and plead them from the other side, and make of himself the
-devil’s advocate in the interest of heaven. All this was life to his
-mind. He must have had a positive pleasure in proving to himself first,
-and then to all England, that the happiest thing a Whig could do was to
-find the Tory measures exactly those which he would have recommended,
-and that his allegiance to the queen required a change of policy on his
-part whenever circumstances compelled her to change her ministry. It was
-all devotion&mdash;not time-serving, as the vulgar thought. Defoe took
-infinite pleasure in proving that it was so, in making everything clear.
-The commonplace and humdrum expedient of following your party would have
-been dull to him&mdash;a proceeding without interest as without danger. He
-wanted excitement, obstacles to get over; a position which would make
-sudden claims upon his ingenuity to account for and fortify it. Such a
-mind is rare, and still more rarely is it accompanied by genius. But
-when such a combination does occur it is a very curious spectacle.</p>
-
-<p>In the mean time, however, all that Defoe had to do was simple enough.
-He had to support peace and the union&mdash;two things which in his free
-estate he had already advocated<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_154" id="page_154"></a>{154}</span> with all his powers. He did it with the
-utmost skill, fervor, and success, and to all appearance contributed
-much to the great public act which was the subject of so many struggles
-and resistances on the part of the smaller nation&mdash;the union. This great
-expedient, of which from the first he had seen the advantage, Defoe
-worked for with unwearying zeal. He praised and caressed Caledonia&mdash;upon
-which subject he wrote one of those vigorous essays in verse which he
-called poetry&mdash;and the tolerance of the Presbyterian Church, and the
-good sense of the nation generally, which was not always perceptible to
-English politicians; and even risked a visit to Edinburgh in performance
-of the orders of the government, though at the risk of rude handling to
-himself. In all this there cannot be the slightest doubt that he was
-entirely honest and patriotic, and acted from an enlightened personal
-view of the necessities of the case. When the curious incident of the
-Sacheverell prosecution occurred, he had once more a subject entirely to
-his own mind, and expressed his own feelings in supporting with all his
-might the measures of the government against that High Church firebrand,
-one of the chief of those whom he had held up to public ridicule in the
-“Shortest Way.” So far he was fortunate, being employed upon subjects
-entirely congenial to his mind, and on which he had already strong
-convictions. The equivocal part of the matter is that he never ceased to
-assert and insist upon his independence. “Contemn,” he says, “as not
-worth mentioning, the suggestions of some people of my being employed to
-carry on the interests of a party. I have never loved any party, but
-with my utmost zeal have sincerely espoused the great and original
-interest of this nation and of all nations&mdash;I mean truth and
-liberty”&mdash;which was the truth, yet not all the truth. Again, with still
-more violent protestations, he refers to his private circumstances, of
-which nothing is known, to prove how little he was protected by power.
-It would seem from this<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_155" id="page_155"></a>{155}</span> statement that he was still being pursued for
-the remnant of old debts, or those new ones with which the failure of
-his tile factory and his long imprisonment had saddled him.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>If paid, gentlemen, for writing [he cries], if hired, if employed,
-why still harassed with merciless and malicious men; why pursued to
-all extremities of law for old accounts which you clear other men
-of every day? Why oppressed, distressed, and driven from his
-family, and from all his prospects of delivering them and himself?
-Is this the fate of men employed and hired? Is this the figure the
-agents of courts and princes make?</p></div>
-
-<p>The argument is a feeble one for such a practised reasoner as Defoe,
-without considering the trifling detail that it was untrue, for debts
-are by no means unknown to favorites of the crown. Nor could he have
-been saved by Harley’s pay, which probably was never very great, from
-the consequences of previous misfortunes. The reader will think that a
-judicious silence would have been more appropriate, but that was not
-Defoe’s way. The only wonder is that he did not adduce such detailed
-evidence of his own freedom as would have deceived any man, and shown to
-demonstration that it was he who subsidized the ministry, and not they
-him. The wonderful thing is that he was free through all, maintaining
-his own favorite opinions, working as an independent power. Servile
-journalists have existed in plenty, but seldom one who took the pay of
-his masters and served their interests, yet fought under his own flag
-with honesty and a good conscience all the while.</p>
-
-<p>This happy state, however, did not last. Harley fell, but with his last
-breath (as a minister) adjured his champion not to sacrifice himself,
-but to come to an understanding with his successor, Godolphin. This
-necessitated a certain revolution in respect to peace, which Defoe
-managed cleverly with the excellent device above mentioned. And there
-was still higher ground which he felt himself entitled to take. The
-public safety was involved<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_156" id="page_156"></a>{156}</span> in the stability of the new ministry such as
-it was. And he faces the dilemma with boundless pluck and assurance.
-“Though I don’t like the crew, I won’t sink the ship; I’ll pump and
-heave and haul and do everything I can, though he that pulls with me
-were my enemy. The reason is plain. We are all in the ship and must sink
-or swim together.” These admirable reasonings brought him at last to the
-calm rectitude of the following conclusion:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>It occurred to me instantly as a principle for my conduct that it
-was not material to me what ministers her Majesty was pleased to
-employ. My duty was to go along with every ministry so far as they
-did not break in upon the constitution and the laws and liberties
-of my country, my part being only the duty of a subject, viz: to
-submit to all lawful commands, and to enter into no service that
-was not justifiable by the laws, to all of which I have exactly
-obliged myself.</p></div>
-
-<p>When Harley returned to power, another modification became necessary,
-but Defoe piously felt it was providential that he should thus be thrown
-back upon his original protector; and had the matter ended here, as was
-long supposed, it is difficult to see what indictment could be brought
-against him. It is not expedient certainly that a director of public
-opinion should have state pay, and does not look well when the secret is
-betrayed. But so long as the scope of all his productions is good,
-honest, and patriotic, with only as much submission in trifles as is
-inevitable, the bargain is a personal meanness rather than a public
-crime, and this was long supposed to have been the case. It was believed
-that after the death of Queen Anne and Harley’s final fall, Defoe’s
-eloquent mouth was closed, and he disappeared into the calm of private
-life to earn a better hire and a more lasting influence through the two
-immortal works of fiction by which alone, but for the painful labors of
-biographers, his name would have been known. Had the matter been left
-so, how much happier would it have been for the hero of this romance<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_157" id="page_157"></a>{157}</span> of
-literary life, how much more edifying for posterity! We could have
-imagined the tired warrior retiring from that hot and painful field in
-which even the laurels were not worth the plucking, where defeat was
-miserable and success mean, and scarcely any combatant could keep his
-honor intact, to the quietness of some suburban house in which his three
-pretty daughters could care for him and idolize him, and where his
-wonderful imagination, no longer a slave to the exigencies of political
-warfare, could weave its dreams into a sober certainty of life awake. We
-should then have said of the author of “Robinson Crusoe” and the
-“Journal of the Plague,” that in his poverty and anxiety and overhaste
-he had been beguiled into a bargain which might have been a shameful one
-had not his marvelous power of seeing every side of a subject, and that
-insight of genius which divines the real unity of honest souls through
-all the external diversities which fill the limited vision of common
-men, carried him triumphantly through. And upon what real fault there
-was we should have thrown a veil. The age would have borne the blame&mdash;an
-age which was corrupt to the core, and in which men changed their
-principles every day. In the garden at Newington, where the young ladies
-entertained their lovers, we could have pictured him benevolent and
-friendly in the flowing peruke under which his keen eyes sparkled,
-looking on at the love-making with prudent, tradesmanlike thoughts of
-Sophia’s portion, and how much the young people would have to set up
-housekeeping upon, coming in not inappropriately between the pages of
-Crusoe&mdash;perhaps taking a suggestion about Robinson’s larder from some
-passing talk about the storeroom, or modifying for the use of Friday
-some rustical remark of the young serving-man from the country, or in
-the renewing of old recollections produced by some old friend’s visit
-finding an anecdote, a detail, to incorporate into the “Journal of the
-Plague.” And we should have asked ourselves by what strange<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_158" id="page_158"></a>{158}</span> play of
-genius the unenchanted island, where all the sober elaborations of fact
-clothed so completely the vivid realizations of imagination, should have
-risen out of the mists amid those trim, old-fashioned alleys, and green
-plots, and stiff parterres of flowers.</p>
-
-<p>Alas! That demon of research which in its poking and prying sometimes
-puts old bones together, and sometimes scatters to the winds the ashes
-of the dead, has spoiled this pleasant picture. Impelled by its
-influence, an unwary or else too painstaking student, some twenty years
-ago, was seized with the idea of roaming the earth in search of relics
-of Defoe. And the diabolical powers which put this fatal pursuit into
-his mind directed him to a bundle of yellow papers in the State Paper
-Office which has, alas! for ever and ever made an end of our man of
-genius. These treacherous papers give us to wit under his own hand that
-he was in reality in full action in the most traitorous of employments
-during the period of his supposed retirement. The following, which is
-the first of these fatally self-elucidatory letters, will reveal at once
-the inconceivable occupation to which Defoe in his downfall lent
-himself. He had perhaps compromised himself too much, and been too
-completely identified with Harley at the end to be considered capable of
-more honorable and evident employment. The letter is addressed to the
-secretary of the minister who had given him his disgraceful office:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>It was proposed by my Lord Townsend that I should appear as if I
-were as before under the displeasure of the government, and
-separated from the Whigs, and that I might be more serviceable in a
-kind of disguise than if I appeared openly. In the interval of
-this, Dyer, the “News-Letter” writer, being dead, and Dormer, his
-successor, being unable by his troubles to carry on that work, I
-had an offer of a share in the property as well as in the
-management of that work.</p>
-
-<p>I immediately acquainted my Lord Townsend of it, who, by Mr.
-Buckley, let me know it would be a very acceptable piece of
-service,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_159" id="page_159"></a>{159}</span> for that letter was really very prejudicial to the
-public, and the most difficult to come at in a judicial way in case
-of offense given. My Lord was pleased to add, by Mr. Buckley, that
-he would consider my service in that case, as he afterwards did.</p>
-
-<p>Upon this I engaged in it, and that so far, that though the
-property was not wholly my own, yet the conduct and government of
-the style of news was so entirely in me, that I ventured to assure
-His Lordship the sting of that mischievous paper should be entirely
-taken out, though it was granted that the style should continue
-Tory, as it was, that the party might be amused and not set up
-another, which would have destroyed the design, and this part I
-therefore take entirely on myself still.</p>
-
-<p>This went on for a year before my Lord Townsend went out of the
-office, and His Lordship, in consideration of the service, made me
-the appointment which Mr. Buckley knows of, with promise of a
-further allowance as service presented.</p>
-
-<p>My Lord Sunderland, to whose goodness I had many years ago been
-obliged, when I was in a secret commission sent to Scotland, was
-pleased to approve and continue this service, and the appointment
-annexed, and, with His Lordship’s approbation I introduced myself,
-in the disguise of a translator of the foreign news, to be so far
-concerned in this weekly paper of Mist’s as to be able to keep it
-within the circle of a secret management, also prevent the
-mischievous part of it, and yet neither Mist, or any of those
-concerned with him, have the least guess or suspicion by whose
-direction I do it.</p></div>
-
-<p>There is nothing, it seems to us, for any apologist to say in
-explanation of this extraordinary statement. The emissary of a Whig and
-Hanoverian government acting as editor of a Tory and Jacobite
-newspaper,&mdash;nay, of three newspapers,&mdash;in order to take the harm out of
-them, to amuse the Tory party with a pretense of style and subjects
-suitable to their views, while balking all their purposes, is at once
-the most ingenious and the most shameless of all devices. It continued
-for a long period, and was very successful. But when the deceit was
-discovered at last, Mist, the deluded publisher, made a murderous
-assault upon the deceiver, and the journalists of the period seem to
-have risen unanimously against him. That Defoe must have<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_160" id="page_160"></a>{160}</span> fallen sadly
-before he came to this is very evident; but how he fell, except by the
-natural vengeance of deterioration, which makes a man who has long
-paltered with the truth unable at last to distinguish the gradations
-which separate the doubtful from the criminal, no one can say. He must,
-however, have fallen indeed in position and importance before he could
-be put to such miserable work; and he must have fallen more fatally,
-like that other son of the morning, deep down into hades, where he
-became the father of lies and the betrayer of mankind, before he could
-have been capable of this infamous mission.</p>
-
-<p>We turn with relief to the work which, of all these manifold labors, is
-the only portion which has really survived the effects of time. Defoe’s
-political writings, with all their lucidity, their brilliant good sense,
-daring satire, and astonishing readiness and variety, are for the
-student, and retain a place among the materials of history, studied no
-longer for their own sake, but for the elucidations they may give. But
-“Robinson Crusoe” lives by his own right, and will, we may confidently
-affirm, after the long trial he has had, never die. We need not discuss
-the other works of fiction which are all as characteristic as distinct
-narratives of apparent fact, as carefully elaborated in every detail.
-They are almost all excellent in their beginning, but, a fault which is
-shared by Crusoe himself, run into such a prodigality of detail toward
-their close, that the absence of dramatic construction and of any real
-inspiration of art, becomes painfully (or rather tediously, which is
-worse) apparent. We do not, however, share the opinion of those critics
-who disparage Defoe’s marvelous power of narrative. “The little art he
-is truly master of, of forging a story and imposing it on the world for
-truth,” is an art which he possesses in common with but very few who
-have ever lived; and even among these few he has it in a very high
-degree.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_161" id="page_161"></a>{161}</span> The gift is peculiar; we are not moved by it to pity or
-tenderness, and not much to admiration of the hero. The inner circle of
-our emotions is seldom, if ever, entered; but, on the other hand, there
-is nothing in that island where the shipwrecked mariner finds a shelter,
-and which he makes into a home, which we do not know and see, as well as
-if we had dwelt in it like Robinson. It is an island which is added to
-the geography of the world. Not only would no child ever doubt of its
-existence, but to the most experienced reader it is far more true and
-real than half of those of which we have authentic histories, which our
-relatives and countrymen have visited and colonized. Those South Sea
-Islands, about which we have so many flowery volumes, are not half so
-certain. And every detail of the life of its solitary inhabitant comes
-up before us like our own personal proceedings&mdash;more than visible,
-incontestable experiences. Not one of us but could draw the picture of
-the solitary in his furs, with all his odd implements about him; and,
-more wonderful still, not a child from four upward but could tell who it
-was. The tale does not move us as do imaginative histories on a more
-poetic level; but in its humbler range it is as living as the best. And
-there is something in this very absence of emotion which gives a still
-more wonderful force to the tale. Men in such desperate circumstances,
-driven to the use of all their faculties for the mere preservation of
-their lives, have presumably but little time for feeling. The absorption
-of every faculty in this one primitive need brings a certain serenity, a
-calm which is like the hush of the solitude&mdash;the silence of the seas.
-The atmosphere is full of this stillness. There is the repose of Nature,
-not filled with reflections of human sentiment, but imposing her
-patience, her calm repetition of endless endeavor upon the solitary
-flung into her bosom; and there is a sobriety in the story which adds
-immensely to the power. Other unknown islands have<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_162" id="page_162"></a>{162}</span> been in fiction, but
-none where the progress of events was so gradual, where there were so
-few miraculous accessories. One of the most able of English romancers,
-the late Charles Reade, is the last who has carried us to a desolate
-island. His story is full of charm, of humor, and sentiment far beyond
-the reach of Defoe. Nothing could be more tender, more delightful, than
-the idyl of the two lovers cut off from all mankind, lost in the silence
-of the seas. But in every way his isle is an enchanted isle. Not only is
-it peopled with love and all the graces, but it is running over with
-every convenience,&mdash;everything that is useful and beautiful. The
-inexhaustible ingenuity of the lover is not more remarkable than the
-wealth of necessary articles of every kind that turns up at every step.
-He builds his lady a bower lined with mother-of-pearl; he clothes her in
-a cloak of sealskin; he finds jewels for her; she has but to wish and to
-have, as if Regent street had been within reach. Very different is the
-sober sanity of the elder narrative. Defoe knows nothing about lovers;
-all his heroes marry with prodigality; but he has no love, any more than
-he has pearls or gutta-percha, on his island. Conveniences come very
-slowly to Robinson Crusoe; he has to grope his way, and find his living
-hardly, patiently. Day after day, and year after year, the story-teller
-goes on working out the order of events. It is as leisurely as nature,
-as little helped by accident, as sober even as matter of fact, and yet
-what a potent, clear, all-realizing fancy&mdash;a faculty which in its
-limited sphere saw and felt and acted in completest appropriation of the
-circumstances&mdash;this sober imagination was!</p>
-
-<p>He was fifty-eight at the time this book was written&mdash;a man worn with
-endless work and strife, but ever ready for more&mdash;a man who had fallen
-and failed, and made but little of his life. It is said that he was at
-his highest point of external prosperity when he published “Robinson
-Crusoe”; but when we remember that he was at that time engaged in the
-inconceivable muddle of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_163" id="page_163"></a>{163}</span> “Mist’s Journal,” it seems almost impossible to
-believe this, or to understand how anything but poverty could drive him
-into such a disgraceful employment. No doubt, to a man who at heart had
-once been an honest man, and was so no more, it must have been a relief
-and blessed deliverance to escape away into the distant seas, to refresh
-his ever-active soul with the ingenious devices of the shipwrecked
-sailor, and bury himself in that life so different from his own, the
-savage necessities, the primitive cares. The goats and the parrot and
-poor Friday: what an ease and comfort to escape into their society after
-bamboozling Mist, and reporting to my lord at St. James’s! Was it a
-desperate expedient of nature to save him from utter self-contempt? Such
-a man, even if his conscience had grown callous, must have required some
-outlet from the dreadful slavery to which he had bound himself.</p>
-
-<p>“Robinson Crusoe” is the work by which Defoe is best known, which is,
-after all, the most effectual guarantee that it is his best work. But it
-is not, to our thinking, worthy of being placed in competition with the
-“Journal of the Plague”&mdash;a history so real, so solemn and impressive, so
-full of the atmosphere and sentiment of the time, that it reaches a far
-higher point of literary art than anything else Defoe has written. For
-this is not prose alone, nor that art of making fiction look like truth,
-which is supposed to be his greatest excellence: it is one of the most
-impressive pictures of a historical incident which has struck the poetic
-imagination everywhere, and of which we have perhaps more authentic
-records than of any other historical episode. Neither Boccaccio nor
-Manzoni have equaled Defoe in the story of the plague. To the old
-Italian it was a horror from which the life-loving fled with loathing as
-well as fear, and which they tried to forget and put out of their sight.
-Defoe’s minute description of the argument carried on within his own
-mind by the narrator is curiously characteristic of the tendency<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_164" id="page_164"></a>{164}</span> to
-elaborate and explain which enters so largely into all his works. The
-mental condition of the respectable citizen, divided between concern for
-his life and concern for his property, seeing with reasonable eyes that
-death was not certain, but that in case of flight ruin was,&mdash;moved by
-the divination which he uses in all good faith, yet perhaps not with
-sufficient devoutness to have allowed himself to be guided by it had it
-been contrary to his previous dispositions, and at bottom by a certain
-<i>vis inertiæ</i> and disinclination to move, which is clearly indicated
-from the beginning,&mdash;is in his best manner, and so real that it is
-impossible to resist its air of absolute truthfulness. But the state of
-the shut-up streets, the dreadful sounds and sights, the brooding heat
-and stillness of the long and awful days, the cloud of fate that is
-about the doomed city, are beyond description impressive. This curious
-spectator of all things, this impartial yet eager looker-on, determined
-to see all that can be seen, prudent yet fearless, adopting every
-precaution, yet neglecting no means of investigation, inquiring
-everywhere, always with his eyes and ears open, at once a philosophical
-inquirer and an eager gossip, is without doubt Defoe himself. But he is
-also a marked figure of the time. He is like Pepys; he is almost, but
-for the unmistakable difference between the bourgeois and the fine
-gentleman, like Evelyn. He is one of the special kind of man born to
-illustrate that period. Pepys would have found means for some piece of
-junketing even in the midst of his alarm, whereas Defoe thinks of his
-property, when he has time to think of anything but the plague, which is
-a very natural modification consequent on the changes of the times. But
-they are at bottom the same. While, however, this central figure remains
-the characteristic but not elevated personage with whom we are already
-acquainted, the history which he records is done with a tragic force and
-completeness which it is impossible to surpass. In this there is nothing
-commonplace, no wearying monotony; the very statistics have a tragic
-solemnity in them; the awful unseen presence<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_165" id="page_165"></a>{165}</span> dominates everything. We
-scarcely breathe while we move about the streets emptied of all
-passers-by, or with a suspicious throng in the middle of the way keeping
-as far apart as possible from the houses. This is not mere prose: it is
-poetry in its most rare form; it is an ideal representation, in all its
-sober details, of one of the most tragical moments of human suffering
-and fate.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing else that Defoe has done is on the same level. It is pitched on
-too high a key perhaps for the multitude. His innocent thief, “Colonel
-Jack,” begins with a picture both amusing and touching of the curious
-moral denseness and confusion of a street boy; his “Cavalier” is a
-charming young man. But both these and all the rest of Defoe’s heroes
-and heroines grow heavy and tedious at the end. The “Journal of the
-Plague” is not like them in this respect. The conclusion&mdash;the sudden
-surprise and delicious sense of relief, the joy which makes the
-passers-by stop and shake hands with one another in the streets, and the
-women call out from windows with tears and outcries of gladness&mdash;is
-sudden and overwhelming as the reality. We are caught in the growing
-despair, and suddenly in a moment deliverance comes. Here alone Defoe is
-not too long; the unexpected is brought in with a skill and force not
-less remarkable than that which in the previous pages has portrayed the
-slow growth and inevitable development of the misery. Up to this
-anticlimax of unlooked-for joy the calamity has grown, every new touch
-intensifying the awful reality. But the recovery is sudden, and told
-without an unnecessary word. It is the only instance in which Defoe has
-followed the instinct of a great artist and shown that he knew how to
-avail himself of the unwritten code and infallible methods of art.</p>
-
-<p>We forget his shortcomings when we discuss this which is to our mind
-much his greatest work, and it is well that we should leave him in this
-disposition. He died mysteriously alone, after a period of wandering and
-hiding which nobody<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_166" id="page_166"></a>{166}</span> can explain. Whether he was in trouble with
-creditors, or with political enemies, or with the exasperated party
-which he had managed to outwit; whether he kept out of the way that his
-family might make better terms for themselves, or that he might keep the
-remains of his money out of the hands of an undutiful son, or a grasping
-son-in-law, nobody can tell. He died in remote lodgings, all alone, and
-his affairs were administered by a stranger, perhaps his landlady, no
-one knows. His domestic circumstances have been referred to during his
-life only in the vaguest way. He had a wife and a numerous family when
-he was put in the pillory; he had a wife, a son who was unkind, and
-three daughters at the end; but that is all we know. He died at
-seventy-two “of a lethargy,” no doubt fallen into the feebleness and
-hopelessness of lonely old age; and that is all. His life overflowed
-with activity and business. To be doing seems to have been a necessity
-of his being. But he never seems to have enjoyed the importance due to
-his powers, and in an age when men of letters filled the highest posts
-never would appear to have risen above his citizen circle, his
-shop-keeping ways. Something in the man must have accounted for this,
-but it is difficult to say what it was; for the age did not require a
-high standard of truthfulness, and the worst of his misdoings were kept
-secret from the public. Perhaps his manners were not such as society,
-though very easy in those days, could tolerate; perhaps&mdash;but this is
-simple guesswork. All we know of Defoe is that as a writer he was of the
-greatest influence and note, but as a man nothing. He died poor and
-alone; he had little reward for unexampled labor. When Addison was
-secretary of state, and Prior an ambassador, he was nobody&mdash;a sword in
-the hand of an unscrupulous statesman; a shopkeeper manufacturing his
-genius and selling it by the yard. A sadder conclusion never was told.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_167" id="page_167"></a>{167}</span></p>
-
-<h2><a name="Chapter_V" id="Chapter_V"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter</span> V<br /><br />
-ADDISON, THE HUMORIST</h2>
-
-<p class="nind"><span class="letra">T</span>HERE is not a name in the entire range of English literature to which
-so full and universal an appreciation has been given by posterity as
-that of Addison. He had his critics in his day. He had, indeed, more
-than critics, and from one quarter at least has received in his breast
-the finest and sharpest sting which a friend estranged could put into
-poetic vengeance. But the burden even of contemporary voices was always
-overwhelmingly in his favor, and nowadays there is no one in the world,
-we believe, that has other than gentle words for the gentle writer&mdash;the
-finest critic, the finest gentleman, the most tender humorist of his
-age. It is not only admiration, but a sort of personal affection with
-which we look back, detecting in all the bustling companies of that
-witty and depraved period his genial figure, with a delightful
-simplicity in the midst of all the formalism, and whole-heartedness
-among the conceits and pretensions, of the fops and wits, the intriguing
-statesmen and busy conspirators, of an age in which public faith can
-scarcely be said to have existed at all. He had his little defects,
-which were the defects of the time. And perhaps his age would not have
-loved him as it did had he been entirely without a share in its
-weaknesses. As it was, no one could call him a milksop then, as no one
-would venture to record any offensive name against him now. The smile of
-benevolent good nature, of indulgent humor, of observation always as
-sweet and merciful<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_168" id="page_168"></a>{168}</span> as it is acute and refined, is never absent from his
-countenance. He treats no man hardly; the ideal beings whom he creates
-are the friends of all: we could, indeed, more easily spare dozens of
-living acquaintances than we could part with Sir Roger de Coverley.
-Addison is the very embodiment of that delightful gift of humor on which
-we pride ourselves so much as a specially English quality; his soft
-laugh touches all the chords of sympathy and loving comprehension with a
-tender ridicule in which the applauses of admiration are conveyed with
-double effect. That his style is the perfection, in its way, of English
-style is less dear and delightful to us than that what it conveys is the
-perfection of feeling. His art is the antipodes of that satirical art
-which allows human excellence only to gird at it, and insinuate motives
-which diminish or destroy. Addison, on the other hand, allows
-imperfections which his interpretation turns into something more sweet
-than virtue, and throws a delightful gleam of love and laughter upon the
-eccentricities and characteristic follies of individual nature. That he
-sees everything is one of the conditions of his genial forgiveness of
-everything that is not mean or base or cruel. With these he makes no
-terms. They are not within the range of his treatment. <i>Non ragionam di
-lor.</i> He passes by to the genial rural circle where all is honest,
-simple, and true; or to town, where in the coffee-houses themselves a
-kind soul will find humors enough to keep him cheerful without harm to
-any of his fellow-creatures&mdash;even the post-writers whom he jocularly
-recommends to a supplementary Chelsea as having killed more men in the
-wars than any general ever did, or the “needy persons” hungry for news,
-whom he promises to keep supplied with good and wholesome sentiments. He
-was at the same time the first of his kind. Thackeray associates
-Congreve&mdash;one does not exactly know why&mdash;with this nobler name: but at
-once makes it clear that there could be no comparison between them,
-since the world<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_169" id="page_169"></a>{169}</span> of the comedy-writer was an entirely fictitious world,
-altogether unlike the human nature of the essayist. Of the humorists we
-may venture to say that Addison is the first, as well as the most
-refined and complete. Swift draws a heavier shaft, which lacerates and
-kills, and Pope sends his needle-pointed arrows, all touched with
-poisonous venom, to the most vulnerable points; but Addison has no heart
-to slay. He transfixes the veil of folly with light, shining,
-irresistible darts, and pins it aloft in triumph, but he lets the fool
-go free&mdash;perhaps lets you see even, by some reflection from his
-swift-flying polished spear, a gleam of human meaning in the poor
-wretch’s face which touches your heart. Even when he diverts himself
-with Tom Folio or Ned Softly, instead of plunging these bores into a
-bottomless gulf of contempt, he plays with them as one might with a
-child, a twinkle of soft fun in his eye, drawing out their simple
-absurdities. That habit of his which Swift describes to Stella, as one
-which she herself shared, of seeming to consent to follies which it is
-not worth while contradicting, and which Pope venomously characterizes
-as “assents with evil leer,” lures him, and us along with him, into
-byways of human nature which the impatient critic closes with a kick,
-and in which there is much amusement and little harm. Molière’s
-<i>Trissotin</i> is a social conspirator meaning to build advancement upon
-his bad verses; but Addison’s poetaster is only an exposition of
-harmless vanity, humored by the gently malicious, but kind and patient,
-listener, who amid his laughter finds a certain pleasure in pleasing the
-victim too. There is sympathy even in the dissection, a conjunction of
-feelings which is of the very nature of the true humorist. These, no
-doubt, are of a very different caliber from that creation which still
-charms the reader&mdash;the delightful figure of Sir Roger, and all the
-simple folks full of follies and of virtues who surround him; but they
-are scarcely less remarkable. The lesser pictures, taken at a sitting in
-which the author has had<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_170" id="page_170"></a>{170}</span> no time to elaborate those features of human
-character which always draw forth his tenderness, are yet full of this
-instinctive sweetness, as well as of insight, keen, though always
-tempered, as the touch of Ithuriel’s spear. The angel, indeed, was far
-more severe, disclosing the demon under his innocent disguise; but
-Addison has nothing to do with demons, he has no deep-laid plan of
-mischief to unveil. The worst he does is to smile and banter the little
-absurdities out of us&mdash;those curious little delusions which deceive
-ourselves as well as the world.</p>
-
-<p>This most loved of English writers was the son of one of those English
-parsons who confuse our belief in the extremely unfavorable account,
-given by both the graver and the lighter historians of the time, of the
-condition of country clergymen. Neither Parson Adams in his virtue, nor
-Parson Trulliber in his grossness, nor Macaulay’s keen and clear
-picture, nor Thackeray’s fine disrespectful studies of the chaplain who
-marries the waiting-maid, seem to afford us any guidance to the nature
-of the household which the Rev. Launcelot Addison, after many wanderings
-and experiences, set up in the little parish of Milston in Wiltshire
-somewhere about the year 1670. Steele’s description of it has, no doubt,
-the artificial form affected by the age, and sets it forth as one of
-those models of perfection and examples to the world which nowadays we
-are more disposed to distrust and laugh at than to follow. “I remember
-among all my acquaintances,” he says, “but one man whom I have thought
-to live with his children with equanimity and a good grace”; and he goes
-on to describe the “three sons and one daughter whom he bred with all
-the care imaginable in a liberal and ingenious way&mdash;their thoughts
-turned into an emulation for the superiority in kind and generous
-affection toward each other,” the boys behaving themselves with a manly
-friendship, their sister treated by them with as much complaisance as
-any other young lady of their acquaintance. “It was an unspeakable<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_171" id="page_171"></a>{171}</span>
-pleasure to visit or sit at a meal in this family,” he adds. “I have
-often seen the old man’s heart flow at his eyes with joy upon occasions
-which would appear indifferent to such as were strangers to the turn of
-his mind; but a very slight accident wherein he saw his children’s good
-will to one another created in him the Godlike pleasure of loving them
-because they loved one another.” The family tenderness thus inculcated
-no doubt came from a mind full of the milk of human kindness, and
-happily transmitting that possession to the gentle soul of the eldest
-son, who probably was the one whom the father “had the weakness to love
-much better than the others”&mdash;a weakness which “he took as much pains to
-correct as any other criminal passion that could arise in his mind.”
-Such a paternity and training does something to account for the
-prevailing gentleness of Addison’s temper and judgments.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Addison had seen the world not in a very brilliant or luxurious way.
-He had been chaplain at Dunkirk, and afterward at Tangier among the
-Moors, upon which latter strange experience he wrote a book: and he rose
-afterward to be Dean of Lichfield, a dignified clergyman. One of the
-brothers went to India, and attained to some eminence; the other was
-eventually, like Joseph, a fellow of Magdalen. They dispersed themselves
-in the world as the children of a clergyman might very well do at the
-present day, and it is evident belonged distinctly to the caste of
-gentlemen. The sons, or at least the son with whom we have specially to
-do, after sundry local schoolings went to Charterhouse, which he left at
-fifteen for Oxford, perhaps because of his unusual advancement, more
-probably because the custom of the time sent boys earlier to the
-university, as is still the practice in Scotland. Addison was much
-distinguished in that elegant branch of learning, the writing of Latin
-verse, a kind of distinction which remains dear to the finest minds, in
-spite of all the remarks concerning its inutility and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_172" id="page_172"></a>{172}</span> the time wasted
-in acquiring the art, which the rest of the world has so largely
-indulged in. A copy of verses upon the accession of King William,
-written while he was still a very youthful scholar at Queen’s College,
-no more than seventeen, got him his first promotion. The boy’s verses
-came&mdash;perhaps from some proud tutor at Queen’s, boasting what could be
-done under the cupola in the High street, finer than anything attempted
-in more distinguished seats of learning&mdash;into the hands of the Provost
-of Magdalen, to the amazement and envy of that more learned corporation.
-There had been no election of scholars in the previous year, during the
-melancholy time when the college was embroiled with King James, and the
-courtly Quaker Penn had all the disturbed and troubled fellows under his
-heel; but now that freedom had returned with the revolution and the
-heaven-sent William, there was room for a double number of distinguished
-poor demies. Dr. Lancaster of Magdalen decided at once that to leave
-such Latinity as that of the young author of these verses to a college
-never very great in such gifts would be a sin against his own: and young
-Addison was accordingly elected to all the privileges of a Magdalen
-demyship. It is with this beautiful college that his name is connected
-in Oxford. There could be no more fit association. The noble trees and
-velvet lawns of Magdalen speckled with deer, shy yet friendly creatures
-that embellish the retired and silent glades&mdash;the long-winding walk by
-the Cherwell round the meadows where the fritillaries grow, the
-time-worn dignity of the place with its graceful old-world architecture
-and associations, are all in the finest keeping with the shy and silent
-student who talked so little and thought so much, living among his books
-in his college rooms, keeping his lamp alight half through the night, or
-musing under the elms, where the little stream joins the greater. It is
-dreadful to think that in all probability Addison thought the imposing
-classicism of<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_173" id="page_173"></a>{173}</span> Queen’s, at which the cultivated scholar of to-day
-shudders, much finer than Magdalen: for he had no opinion of Gothic, and
-lamented the weakness, if not wickedness, of those mistaken ages which
-wasted ornament upon such antiquated forms; but at least he loved his
-retired promenade under the trees, with all its sweetness of primrose
-and thrush in spring, and the wonderful yellow sunsets over the floods
-in winter, and the pleasant illusions of the winding way. There the
-stranger may realize still in the quiet of the cloistered shades how the
-shy young student wandered in Addison’s Walk and pondered his verses,
-and formed the delicate wealth of speech which was to distinguish him
-from all his fellows. He spent about ten years in his college, first as
-a student and then as a fellow, in the position which, perhaps, is more
-ideal for a scholar than any other in Christendom. But the young man was
-not much more enlightened than the other young men of his age,
-notwithstanding his genius at Latin verses, and that still finer genius
-which had not as yet come to utterance. He wrote an “Account of the
-Greatest English Poets,” not much wiser than the school-boy essays of
-our own day which set Lord Tennyson and Mr. Browning down in their right
-places. Addison went further. He leaves out all mention of Shakspere,
-and speaks of Cowley as a “mighty genius.” He describes “the spacious
-times of great Elizabeth” as “a barbarous age,” amused by “Old Spenser”
-with “long-spun allegories” and “dull morals,” which have lost all power
-to charm an age of understanding. The youth, indeed, ran amuck among all
-the greatest names till we shiver at his temerity. But he knew better
-afterward; and, if he still condescended a little to his elders and
-betters, learned to love and comprehend them too.</p>
-
-<p>It would seem that he wavered for a time whether he should not take
-orders, a step necessary to retain his fellowship, and dedicate himself
-to the church, as was the wish of his father.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_174" id="page_174"></a>{174}</span> It would have been
-entirely suitable to him one cannot but think; to his meditative mood,
-and shy temper, and high moral tone. He would have missed the humors of
-town, the coffee-houses, and the wits, and the vagaries of the beaus and
-belles; but with still a tenderer and more genial humor might have made
-his villagers live before us, and found out all the amusing follies of
-the knights and squires, which even in London town did not escape his
-smiling observation. The manner in which the question was decided is
-curiously characteristic of the age. That he was not himself inclined
-that way seems probable, since he bids his muse farewell after the
-fashion of the time, when this ending seemed imminent, with something
-like regret, and it is said that he distrusted his own fitness for the
-sacred office. At all events, the matter came to the ears of Charles
-Montague, afterward Lord Halifax, himself an elegant scholar, and at
-that time in office. Young Addison had addressed to him, on the occasion
-of the Peace of Ryswick in 1697, one of those pieces of Latin verse for
-which the young man was known among the scholars of his time. He
-accompanied the gift with a letter couched in the hyperbole of the age,
-deprecating his patron’s possible disapproval of “the noble subject
-debased by my numbers,” and justifying himself by the poverty of the
-verses already published on the same theme. “For my part,” he says, “I
-never could prevail on myself to offer you a poem written in our native
-tongue, since you yourself deter all others by your own Compositions
-from such an Attempt, as much as you excite them by your Favour and
-Humanity.” Montague returned this compliment by interfering in the young
-poet’s concerns as soon as he heard of the danger that so promising a
-youth might fall into the gulf of the church, and be lost to the other
-kinds of work more useful to statesmen. He wrote to the authorities of
-Magdalen begging that Addison might not be urged into holy orders, and
-in the mean time took more active<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_175" id="page_175"></a>{175}</span> measures to secure him for the state.
-Lord Somers had also received the dedication of some of Addison’s
-verses, and was equally interested in the young man’s career. Between
-them the two statesmen secured for him a pension of three hundred a
-year, on no pretense of work to be done or duty fulfilled, but merely
-that he might be able to prepare himself the better for the public
-service, and be thus at hand and ready when his work was wanted. Public
-opinion has risen up nowadays against any such arrangement, and much
-slighter efforts at patronage would be denounced now over all England as
-a job. And yet one wonders whether it was so profitless a proceeding as
-we think it. Addison was worth more than the money to England. To be
-sure, without the money he would still have been Addison; yet something,
-no doubt, of the mellow sweetness of humanity in him was due to this
-fostering of his youth.</p>
-
-<p>He went abroad in 1699, and addressed himself in the first place to the
-learning of French, which he did slowly at Blois, without apparently
-gaining much enlightenment as to the state of France or the other
-countries which he visited in his prolonged tour. No doubt, with his
-pension and the income of his fellowship, Addison traveled like a young
-man of fortune and fashion in those times of leisure, with excellent
-introductions everywhere, seeing the best society, and the greatest men
-both in rank and letters. Boileau admired his Latin verses as much as
-the English statesmen did, and the young man went upon his way more and
-more convinced that Latin verses were the highroad to fame. From France
-he went to Italy, making a classical pilgrimage. “Throughout,” says Mr.
-Leslie Stephen, quaintly, “if we are to judge by his narrative, he seems
-to have considered the scenery as designed to illustrate his beloved
-poets.” The much-debated uses of travel receive a new question from the
-records of such a journey, pursued with the fullest leisure and under
-the best auspices; and one wonders<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_176" id="page_176"></a>{176}</span> whether the man who hurries across a
-continent in a few weeks, catching flying impressions, and forming crude
-judgments, is, after all, much less advantaged than he who, oblivious of
-all the human interests around him, discusses Rome, for instance, as if
-it had no interest later than Martial or Silius Italicus&mdash;as if neither
-Church, nor Pope, nor all the convulsions of the Middle Ages, nor
-Crusader, nor Jesuit, had ever been. This extraordinary impoverishment
-of the imagination was the fashion of the time, just as it has been the
-fashion in other days to fix upon the vile records of the Renaissance as
-the one thing interesting in the history of a noble country. According
-to that fashion, however, Addison did everything that a young man of the
-highest culture could be expected to do. He traced the footsteps of
-Æneas, and remembered every spot on which a classical battle had been
-fought, or an ode sung. He wrote an eloquent essay upon medals, and
-lingered among the sculptures of the museums; and he picked up a subject
-for a heroic tragedy from the suggestion of a foolish play which he saw
-at a Venetian theater. With his head full of such themes, he had gone
-out from Oxford, and with a deepened sense of their importance he came
-back again. Though in after days he touches lightly with his satiric
-dart the young man who can talk of nothing better on his return than how
-“he had like to have been drowned at such a place; how he fell out of a
-chaise at another”; yet in the hymn of praise with which he celebrates
-his own return from all the dangers of foreign travel something like the
-same record is made, though in a more imposing manner:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">In foreign Realms and Lands remote,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Supported by thy care,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Thro’ burning Climes I passed unhurt,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">And breath’d in Tainted Air.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Thy mercy sweetened every Soil,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Made every Region please,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The hoary Alpine Hills it warmed,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">And smooth’d the Tyrrhene Seas.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page_177" id="page_177"></a>{177}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 364px;">
-<a href="images/ill_033_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_033.jpg" width="364" height="500" alt="Image unavailable: JOSEPH ADDISON.
-
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JEAN SIMON, AFTER PAINTING
-BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">JOSEPH ADDISON.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY T. JOHNSON, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JEAN SIMON, AFTER PAINTING
-BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is only the vulgarity of our modern imagination that makes us think
-of hot water-pipes when the idea of warming the Alps is presented to our
-profane minds. The burrowing of the railway that climbs the St. Gothard
-may be taken as a large contribution to the carrying out of this
-suggestion.</p>
-
-<p>When Addison returned home after these four years of classical
-wanderings, it was to prospects sadly overcast. King William had died a
-year before, which had stopped his pension; Halifax was out of office,
-and all the hopes of public life, for which he had been training
-himself, seemed to drop as he came back. It is said that during the last
-year he had charge of a pupil; but there is no proof of the statement,
-nor has any pupil ever been identified by name. An offer was made to him
-to accompany upon his travels a son of the Duke of Somerset, his
-services to be paid by the present of a hundred guineas at the year’s
-end, which did not seem to Addison an advantageous offer: but this,
-which came to nothing, is the only authentic reference to any possible
-“bear-leading” such as Thackeray refers to in “Esmond”; and fine as is
-the sketch made by that kindred humorist, he seems to exaggerate at once
-the poverty and the neglect into which for the moment Addison fell.</p>
-
-<p>He returned to England in 1703, being then thirty-one, full of every
-accomplishment, but with only his fellowship to depend upon, and the
-uncertain chances of Jacob Tonson’s favor instead of the king’s. He is
-said to have sunk, or rather risen, to a poor lodging in London, in the
-Haymarket, up three pairs of stairs, which was indeed a sad change from
-the importance of his position as a rich young Englishman making the
-grand tour. But if he carried a disappointed or despondent heart to
-those elevated quarters, he never made any moan on the subject, and it
-is very likely enjoyed his freedom and the happy sense of being at home
-like other young men; and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_178" id="page_178"></a>{178}</span> seems to have been at once advanced to the
-membership of the Kit-Cat Club, which would supply him with the finest
-of company, and a center for the life which otherwise must have appeared
-as if it had come to a broken end. It was not long, however, that this
-period of neglect was suffered to last, and once more the transaction
-which elevated Addison to the sphere in which he passed the rest of his
-life is admirably characteristic of the period, and alas! profoundly
-unlike anything that could happen to a young man of genius now.</p>
-
-<p>We will not return again to any bewildering discussion of the Whigs and
-Tories of Queen Anne, but only say that Godolphin and Marlborough, those
-“great twin brethren” of the state, had come into possession of England
-at this great crisis, and that every means by which they could secure
-the suffrages of both parties were doubly necessary, considering the
-disappointment on one side that the policy of the country remained
-unchanged, and on the other that it had to be carried out by Whig, not
-Tory, hands. Nothing could be better adapted than the great victory of
-Blenheim to arouse an outburst of national feeling, and sweep, for a
-time at least, the punctilios of party away. The lord treasurer, who had
-everything in his hands at home, while his great partner fought and
-conquered abroad, was almost comically at a loss how to sound the
-trumpet of warlike success so as to excite the country, and, if
-possible, turn the head of the discontented. In one of Leopardi’s fables
-there is an account of the tremendous catastrophe with which the world
-was threatened when his illustrious excellency the Sun declined one
-morning to rise and tread his old-world course around the earth for the
-comfort of mankind. “Let her in her turn go round me if she wants my
-warmth and light,” says the potentate&mdash;with great reason, it must be
-allowed, since Copernicus was born, and everything in the celestial
-spheres was about to be set right. But how to persuade the earth that
-she must<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_179" id="page_179"></a>{179}</span> now undertake this circuit? Let a poet be found to do it is
-the first suggestion. “La via più spedita è la più sicura è di trovare
-un poeta ovvero un filosofo che persuada alla Terra di muoversi.”
-Godolphin found himself in the same position as that in which the
-luckless agencies of the Universe were left when the Sun struck work. A
-poet!&mdash;but where to find a poet he knew not, being himself addicted to
-other modes of exercise and entertainment. He went to Halifax to ask
-where he should find what was wanted&mdash;a poet. But that statesman was coy
-and held back. He could, indeed, produce the very man; but why should he
-interfere to betray neglected merit and induce a man of genius to labor
-for those who would leave him to perish in obscurity? Godolphin,
-however, was ready to promise anything in the great necessity of the
-case; and Halifax permitted himself to be persuaded to mention the name
-which no doubt was bursting from his lips. He would not, however,
-undertake to be the ambassador, but insisted that the real possessors of
-power should ask in their own persons, and with immediate and
-substantial proofs of their readiness to recompense the service they
-demanded. That day, all blazing in gold lace and splendor, the coach of
-the chancellor of the exchequer stopped before the little shop in the
-Haymarket over which the young scholar had his airy abode: and that
-great personage clambered up the long flights of stairs carrying with
-him, very possibly, the patent of the appointment which was an earnest
-of what the powers that were could do for Addison. This was how the
-great poem of the “Campaign,” that illustrious composition, was brought
-into being. Poems made to order seldom fulfil expectation, but in this
-case there was no disappointment. Godolphin and England alike were
-delighted, and Addison’s life and success were at once secured.</p>
-
-<p>No one now, save as an illustration of history, would think<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_180" id="page_180"></a>{180}</span> of reading
-the “Campaign,” though most readers are familiar with the famous simile
-which dazzled a whole generation:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">’T was there great Marlborough’s mighty soul was proved,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">That in the shock of charging hosts unmoved,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Amidst confusion, horror, and despair<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Examined all the dreadful scenes of war,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">In powerful thought the field of death surveyed,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">To fainting squadrons sent the timely aid,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Inspired repulsed battalions to engage,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And taught the doubtful battle where to rage.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">So when an angel by Divine command<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">With rising tempest shakes a guilty land,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Such as of late o’er pale Britannia past,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Calm and serene he drives the furious blast;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And, pleased the Almighty’s orders to perform,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Rides in the whirlwind, and directs the storm.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Macaulay points out with much felicity how the fact of the Great
-Storm&mdash;so called in English history&mdash;which had passed over England in
-the previous year, and was yet full in the memory of all, gave strength
-and meaning to this famous simile, which at once opened to Addison the
-gates of fortune and of fame. Two years after he was promoted to be one
-of the undersecretaries of state, and from that time languished no more
-in the cold shade of obscurity where Halifax had upbraided the
-Government for leaving him. He was not a man born to linger there. Shy
-though he was, and little apt to put himself forward, this favorite of
-the muses&mdash;to use the phraseology of his time&mdash;was also the favorite of
-fortune. Everything that he touched throve with him. The gifts he
-possessed were all especially adapted to the requirements of his time.
-At no other period, perhaps, in history did the rulers of the country
-bethink themselves of a poet as the auxiliary most necessary: and his
-age was the only one that relished poetry of Addison’s kind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_181" id="page_181"></a>{181}</span></p>
-
-<p>This event brought more than mere prosperity to the fortunate young man.
-If he had been already of note enough to belong to the Kit-Cat Club,
-with what a blaze of modest glory would he now appear&mdash;not swelling in
-self-conceit, like so many of the wits; not full of silent passion, like
-the strange big Irish clergyman who pushed into the chattering company
-in the coffee-house and astounded them with his masterful and arrogant
-ways: but always modest&mdash;never heard at all in a large company, opening
-out a little when the group dispersed, and an audience fit but few
-gathered around him&mdash;but with one companion <i>half</i> divine. The one
-companion by and by became often that very same Irishman whose silent
-prowl about the room in which he knew nobody had amused all the luckier
-members. Swift found himself in a kind of coffee-house paradise when he
-got Addison alone, and the two took their wine together, spending their
-half-crowns according to the stranger’s thrifty record, and wishing for
-no third. They were as unlike as could be conceived in every particular,
-and yet what company they must have been, as they sat together, the wine
-going a little too freely&mdash;though Swift was always temperate, and
-Addison, notwithstanding that common peccadillo, the most irreproachable
-of men! It was then that the “Travels in Italy” were published, while
-still the fame of the “Campaign” was warm; and Addison gave his new
-friend a copy inscribed to “Jonathan Swift, the most Agreeable
-Companion, the Truest Friend, and the Greatest Genius of his Age.” What
-quick understanding, what recognition as of two who had been born to
-know each other! They were both in their prime&mdash;Swift thirty-eight,
-Addison five years younger, still young enough to hope for everything
-that can befall a man; the one fully entered upon the path of fortune,
-the other surely so much nearer it for being thus received and welcomed.
-Addison gave “his little senate laws” for many years in these convivial
-meetings, and all who surrounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_182" id="page_182"></a>{182}</span> him adored him. But Swift was never
-again so close a member of the little company. Politics, and the curious
-part which the Irish parson took in them, separated him from the
-consistent and moderate politician, who acted faithfully with his party,
-and who was always true whoever might be false. But Swift held fast to
-Addison so far at least as feeling was concerned. Over and over he
-repeated the sentiment, that “if he had a mind to be king he would
-hardly be refused.” Their meetings ceased, and all those outflowings of
-wit and wisdom, and the talk long into the night which was the most
-delightful thing in life; but for years after Swift still continued to
-say that there was nothing his friend might not be if he would: that his
-election was carried without a word of opposition when every other
-member had to fight for his life, and that he might be king in Ireland,
-or anywhere else, had he the mind. They were used to terms of large
-applause in those days, but to no one else did it take this particular
-form.</p>
-
-<p>In 1708 Addison lost his post as under-secretary by a change of the
-ministry, or rather of the minister, it being the habit in those days to
-form a government piecemeal, a Whig here, a Tory there, as favor or
-circumstances required, so that it was by no means needful that all
-should go out or come in together. In fact, no sooner was the
-under-secretary deprived of one place than he obtained another, that of
-secretary to the lord lieutenant of Ireland, the same office, we
-presume, as that which is now called chief secretary for Ireland, though
-its seriousness and power are now so much greater. In those days there
-was no Irish people to deal with, but only a very lively, contentious,
-pushing, and place-hunting community&mdash;the Protestant English-Irish,
-which, so far as literature and public knowledge go, has been accepted
-as the type of the much darker and less simple character of the Celt.
-The wild, mystic, morose, and often cruel nature of the native race,
-with its gleams of poetry and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_183" id="page_183"></a>{183}</span> dreams of fortune, has turned out a very
-different thing to reckon with. No such problem was presented to the
-statesmen of that time. The admixture of Irish blood would seem to go to
-the head of the Saxon and endow him with a gaiety and sparkle which does
-not exist either in one race or the other unmixed; and it was with the
-society formed on this basis, the ascendant minority, contemptuous of
-every possible power of the people so-called, yet far less unsympathetic
-than the anxious politicians of to-day, that Addison had to deal. His
-post was “very lucrative,” we are told&mdash;in fees and pieces of patronage,
-no doubt, for the income was but £2000 a year&mdash;and he soon acquired an
-even greater popularity on the one side of the channel than on the
-other. Something amiable and conciliatory must have rayed out of the
-man: otherwise it is curious to understand the popularity in brilliant
-and talkative Dublin of a stranger whose chief efforts in conversation
-were only to be accomplished <i>tête-a-tête</i>. But he had the foil of a
-detestable and detested chief&mdash;Wharton, whose corrupt and brutal
-character gave double acceptance to the secretary’s charm and goodness,
-and the Tories contended with the Whigs, says Swift, which should speak
-best of this favorite of fortune. “How can you think so meanly of a
-kingdom,” he exclaims, “as not to be pleased that every creature in it
-who hath one grain of worth has a veneration for you?” It is not often
-that even in hyperbole such a thing can be said.</p>
-
-<p>It was while Addison was in Ireland thus gathering golden opinions that
-an event occurred which was of the utmost importance to his reputation,
-so far especially as posterity was concerned. Among the little band of
-friends over whom he held a kind of genial sway, and who acknowledged
-his superiority with boundless devotion, was one who was more nearly his
-equal than any other of the band; a friend of youth, one of those
-erratic but generous natures whose love of excellence is<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_184" id="page_184"></a>{184}</span> almost
-rapturous, though they are unable themselves to keep up to the high
-level they approve. Steele can never be forgotten where Addison is
-honored. He had been at Charterhouse and at Oxford along with his
-friend, and no doubt it was a wonder among the reading men in their
-earlier days how it was that the correct, the polished, the
-irreproachable scholar of Magdalen, with his quiet ways, could put up
-with that gay scapegrace who was perpetually in trouble. Such alliances,
-however, have not been rare. The cheerful, careless Dick, full of
-expedients, full of animal spirits, always amusing, friendly, generous
-in his impulses, if unintentionally selfish in the constant breaches of
-his better meaning, must have had a charm for the steadier and purer
-nature which was formed with pulses more orderly. No doubt Steele’s
-perpetual self-revelation, his unfolding of a hundred quips and cranks
-of human nature, and unsuspicious rendering up of all his natural
-anomalies and contradictions to the instinctive spectatorship of his
-amused companion, helped to endear him to the humorist, who must have
-laughed till he cried on many an occasion over poor Dick’s amazing
-wisdoms and follies, without any breach of that indulgent affection
-which between two men who have grown up together can rarely be said to
-be mingled with anything so keen as contempt. Steele, it is evident,
-must have known Addison “at home,” as school-boys say, or he could not
-have made that little sketch of the household where brothers and sisters
-were taught to be so loving to each other. While the young hero who had,
-as in the favorite allegories of the time, chosen the right path, and
-taken the steady hand of Minerva, instead of that more lovely one of
-fatal Venus to guide him, was reaching the heights of applause and good
-fortune, the unlucky youth who chose pleasure for his pursuit had gone
-disastrously the other way, and fallen into all sorts of adventures,
-extremely amusing for his friend to hear of, though he disapproved, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_185" id="page_185"></a>{185}</span>
-no doubt very amusing to the actual actor in them, though he suffered.
-But Addison was not a mere “spectator” so far as the friend of his youth
-was concerned. When he began to rise there seems little reason to doubt
-that he pulled Steele up with him, introducing him to the notice of the
-fine people, who in those days might make the fortune of a gentlemanly
-and clever adventurer, and that either by his own interest or that of
-one of his powerful friends he procured him a place and started him in
-public life. Steele had already floated into literature, and, whether it
-is true or not that Addison helped him in the concoction of one play at
-least, it is clear that he kept his purse and his heart well open to his
-friend, now a man about town ruffling at the coffee-houses with the
-best, and full of that energy and readiness which so often strike out
-new ways of working, though it may require steadier heads to carry them
-out.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, while Addison was in Ireland that Steele was moved by
-the most important of these original impulses, an idea full, as it
-proved, of merit and practical use. Journalism was then in its infancy.
-A little “News Letter,” or “Flying Post”&mdash;a shabby broadsheet containing
-the bulletin of a battle, a formal and brief notice of parliamentary
-proceedings, an account of some monstrous birth, a child with two heads,
-or that perennial gooseberry which has survived into our own time&mdash;and
-an elaborate list of births, deaths, and marriages, was almost all that
-existed in the way of public record. The post to which Steele had been
-appointed was that of Gazetteer, which naturally led him to the
-consideration of such matters: and among the crowd of projects which
-worked together in his “barmy noddle,” there suddenly surged uppermost
-the idea of a paper which should come out on the post days, the
-Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays which were, up to that time, the only
-days of communication with the country; a paper written after the fancy
-of the time, in itself a letter from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_186" id="page_186"></a>{186}</span> wits and the knowing persons
-in town, revealing not only the existing state of public affairs, but
-all those exquisite particulars of society which have always been the
-delight of country circles, and which were doubly sure to please at a
-time when society was governed by talk, when all public criticism was
-verbal, and the echoes of the wits in the coffee-houses were blown about
-on all the breezes. Happy the Sir Harry who, sitting mum over his wine
-in a corner, could hear these gentlemen discussing what Sunderland or
-Somers had said, what my Lord Treasurer intended, or, more delightful,
-the newest incident in the tragedy-comedy of the great duchess&mdash;how the
-queen looked glumly at her over the card-table, or let her stand
-unnoticed at a drawing-room; and still more deeply blest the parson who
-had Mr. Addison pointed out to him, and heard the young Templars and
-scholars pressing him with questions as to when his “Cato” was coming
-out, or asking his opinion on a set of verses. Such worthies would go
-back to the country full of these reflections from the world, and tell
-how the gallants laughed at the mantua which was going out of fashion,
-and made fun of the red heels which, perhaps, were just then appearing
-at the Manor or the Moated Grange. Steele saw at once what a thing it
-would be to convey these impressions at first hand in a privileged
-“Tatler” direct to the houses of the gentry all over the country.
-Perhaps he did not perceive at first what a still finer thing to have
-them served up with the foaming chocolate or fragrant tea at every
-breakfast in Mayfair.</p>
-
-<p>It is an idea that has occurred to a great many heads since with less
-success. In these latter days there have been many literary adventurers,
-to whom the starting of a new paper has seemed an opening into El
-Dorado. But the opening in the majority of cases does not prove a
-practicable one&mdash;for, in fact, there is no longer any need of news; and
-the concise little essays and elegant banterings of those critics of the
-time have<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_187" id="page_187"></a>{187}</span> fallen out of date. News means in our day an elaborate
-system, and instantaneous reports from all the world; and one London
-newspaper&mdash;far more one of the gigantic journals proper to
-America&mdash;contains as much matter as half a hundred “Tatlers.” One
-wonders, if Addison’s genius, and the light hand of Steele, and Swift’s
-tremendous and scathing humor could be conjured up again, whether such a
-production, with its mingled thread of the finest sentiments and the
-pettiest subjects, metaphysics and morals, and the “Eneid” and “Paradise
-Lost,” and periwigs and petticoats, would find sufficient acceptance
-with “the fair” and the wise to keep it afloat, or would still go up to
-sages and fine ladies with their breakfast trays.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the immediate foundation of one of Swift’s savage <i>jeux
-d’esprits</i> that the new undertaking was begun, a mystification which
-greatly amused the wits then, but which does not, perhaps, appear
-particularly delightful now. Swift had been seized by a freak of
-mischief in respect to a certain Partridge, an astrologer, who made an
-income out of the public by pretended revelations of the future, as is
-still done, we believe, among those masses, beneath the ascertained
-audience of literature, who spend their sixpences at Christmas upon
-almanacs and year-books containing predictions of what is to happen. It
-occurred to Swift in some merry moment to emulate and to doom the Merlin
-of the day: and with the prodigious gravity which characterizes his
-greatest jests he wrote “Predictions for the year 1708,” in which, among
-many other things, he announced that he had consulted the stars on
-behalf of Partridge, and had ascertained that the wizard would certainly
-die on March 29, at eleven o’clock at night, of a raging fever. The
-reader will probably remember that the jest was kept up, and that,
-notwithstanding Partridge’s protest that he was not dead at all, Isaac
-Bickerstaff insisted on asserting that his prophecy had been fulfilled,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_188" id="page_188"></a>{188}</span>
-to the grave confusion of various serious affairs, and the
-inextinguishable laughter of the wits. It was not a pretty jest, but it
-brought into being a visionary critic of public matters, a new personage
-in the literary world, in whom other wits saw capabilities. Steele in
-particular perceived that Isaac Bickerstaff was just the personality he
-wanted, and therewith proceeded to make of that shadowy being the Mentor
-of the time. The design was excellent, the immediate execution cleverly
-adapted to seize the interest of the public, which had been already
-amused and mystified under that name. Mr. Isaac Bickerstaff presented
-his readers with the first number of his journal without charge. “I
-earnestly desire,” he says, “all persons, without distinction, to take
-it in for the present <i>gratis</i>, and hereafter at the price of one penny,
-forbidding all hawkers to take more for it at their peril.” The idea
-took the town. No doubt there would be many an allusion to this and that
-which the wits would guess at, and which would to them have a double
-meaning; but, to do the “Tatler” justice, the kind of gossip which fills
-the so-called society newspapers in our day was unknown to the witty
-gentlemen who sometimes satirize a ruffle or a shoe-tie, but never
-personally a woman. The types of fine ladies who flutter through his
-pages could never raise a pang in any individual bosom; and when he
-addressed himself to the reform of the theater, to the difficult duty of
-checking play and discouraging duels, he had all the well-thinking on
-his side.</p>
-
-<p>Steele had gone on for some numbers before his new venture attracted the
-attention of Addison. He recognized whose the hand was from a classical
-criticism in the sixth number which he had himself made to Steele; and
-he must have been pleased with the idea, since he soon after appears as
-a coadjutor, sending his contributions from the Secretary’s office in
-Dublin. There has been a great and prolonged controversy upon the
-respective merits of these two friends: some, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_189" id="page_189"></a>{189}</span> first among them
-Macaulay, will have it that Addison had all the merit of the
-publication. “Almost everything good in the ‘Tatler’ was his,” says the
-historian. But there are many who, despite Macaulay’s great authority,
-find a certain difficulty in distinguishing Addison from Steele and
-Steele from Addison, and are inclined to find the latter writer as
-entertaining and as gifted as the former. No question could be more
-difficult to settle. As we glance over the little gray volumes which
-bring back to us dimly the effect which the little broadsheet must have
-had when it appeared day by day, there is no doubt that the eye is
-oftenest caught by something which, when we look again, proves to be
-from Addison’s hand. We open, it is by chance, and yet not altogether by
-chance, upon Tom Folio and his humors; upon the poor poet and his
-verses; upon some group of shabby heroes, or stumbling procession of
-country gentlemen which there is no mistaking. But on the other hand it
-is Steele who gives us that family picture, which reads like the Vicar
-of Wakefield, yet with a more tender touch (for Mrs. Primrose was never
-her husband’s equal), showing us the good woman among her family, the
-husband half distracted with the fear of losing her, the wife for his
-sake smiling her paleness away. Indeed, we think, in these early essays
-at least, it would be a mistake for the critic to risk his reputation on
-the superiority of Addison. He set up no higher standard than that which
-his friend had raised, but fell into the same humor, adding his
-contribution of social pictures with less force of moral generally, and
-more delicacy of workmanship, but no remarkable preëminence. The
-character of the publication changed gradually as the great new pen came
-into it; but whether by Addison’s influence or by the mere action of
-time, and a sense of what suited the audience he had obtained&mdash;which a
-soul so sympathetic as Steele’s would naturally divine with
-readiness&mdash;no one can tell. Gradually<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_190" id="page_190"></a>{190}</span> the news which at first had
-regularly filled a column dropped away. It had been, no doubt, well
-authenticated news, the freshest and best, as it came from the
-authorized hand of the Gazetteer; but either Steele got tired of
-supplying it, or a sense of the inexpediency of publishing anything
-which might displease his patrons and the government, convinced him that
-it was unnecessary. It is scarcely possible, either, to tell why the
-“Tatler” came to an end. Mr. Austin Dobson, in his recent life of
-Steele, gives sundry reasons which do not seem, however, of any
-particular weight. Steele’s own account is that he had become known, and
-his warnings and lessons were thus made of no avail:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>I considered [he says] that severity of manners was absolutely
-necessary to him who would censure others, and for that reason and
-that only chose to talk in a mask. I shall not carry my humility so
-far as to call myself a vicious man, but at the same time confess
-my life is at best but pardonable. And with no greater character
-than this a man could make an indifferent progress in attacking
-prevailing and fashionable vices, which Mr. Bickerstaff has done
-with a freedom of spirit that would have lost both its beauty and
-efficacy had it been pretended to by Mr. Steele.</p></div>
-
-<p>This reason is, however,&mdash;though pretty and just enough had its writer
-renounced the trade,&mdash;a somewhat fantastic one when we reflect that
-though the “Tatler” ended in January, 1711, the “Spectator” began in
-March of the same year. The one died only to be replaced by the other.
-It is said that Addison did not know of his friend’s intention to cut
-the “Tatler” short, and it was he who was the chief agent in beginning
-the “Spectator.” Therefore it may have been that the breach was but an
-impatience of Steele’s, which his slow and less impulsive and more
-constant comrade could not permanently consent to. No doubt Addison had
-by this time learned the advantage of such a mode of utterance, and felt
-how entirely it suited his own manner of work and constitution of mind.
-The fictitious<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_191" id="page_191"></a>{191}</span> person of Isaac Bickerstaff was relinquished in the new
-series: it no longer assumed to give any news. Its contents were less
-varied, consisting generally of a single essay, and, notwithstanding the
-impression which the casual reader often has, and which some critics
-have largely dwelt upon, that the comments of this critic are upon the
-merest vanities of the time, the hoops, the gold-lace, the snuff-boxes,
-and patches of the period, it is astonishing how little space is
-actually taken up with these lighter details, and how many graver
-questions, how many fine sentiments and delicate situations, afford the
-moralist occasion for those remarks which he makes in the most beautiful
-and picturesque English to the edification of all the generations. There
-is, perhaps, no book which is so characteristic of an epoch in history,
-and none which gives so clear a conception of the English world of the
-time. We sit and look on, always amused, often instructed, while the
-delicate panorama unfolds before us&mdash;and see everything pass, the fine
-coaches, the gentlemen on foot, the parsons in their gowns, the young
-Templars jesting in the doorways: but always with the little monologue
-going on, which accompanies the movement, and runs off into a hundred
-byways of thought, sometimes serious, sometimes gay, often with no
-particular connection with the many-colored streams of passers-by, yet
-never obscuring our sight of them as they come and go. There is,
-perhaps, a noisy group at the door while Mr. Spectator talks, with their
-wigs in the last fashion, and their clouded canes hung to a button,
-while they discourse. In one corner there are some two or three grave
-gentlemen putting their heads together over the latest news; and in
-another the young fellows over their wine eager in discussion of Mrs.
-Oldfield and Mrs. Bracegirdle at the theater, or of Chloe and Clarissa,
-the reigning beauties of society; or perhaps it is a poet, poor Ned
-Softly, as the case may be, who is reading his last sonnet to his
-mistress’s eyebrow, amid the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_192" id="page_192"></a>{192}</span> laughing commentaries or the ridicule of
-his companions. What is Mr. Spectator talking of all the while? His
-discourse does not prevent us hearing the impertinences of the others.
-Perhaps he is talking of honest love, a favorite theme of his, at which
-the wits do not dare to laugh in his presence,&mdash;or he is telling one of
-his fables, to which everybody in the midst of his levity or his
-business gives half an ear at least; or by a caprice he has turned aside
-to metaphysics, and is discussing the processes of the mind, and how “no
-thought can be beautiful that is not just”; how “’t is a property of
-the heart of man to be diffusive, its kind wishes spread abroad over the
-face of the creation,” and such like; not to speak of graver subjects
-still to which he will direct our minds on Saturdays, perhaps to prepare
-us for Sunday, when he is silent. Or he will read aloud a letter from
-some whimsical correspondent, which the wits will pause to hear, for
-gossip is ever sweet, but which before they know lands them in a case of
-hardship or trouble which touches their consciences and rouses their
-pity. Sometimes the hum of life will stop altogether and even Softly put
-his verses in his pocket to listen: and on the brink of tears the fine
-gentlemen, and we too along with them, incontinently burst out
-a-laughing at some touch that no one expected. But whether we laugh or
-cry, or are shamed in our levity, or diverted in our seriousness,
-outside the windows the crowd is always streaming on. There is no
-separating the “Spectator” from the lively, crowded, troublous, and
-perplexing scenes upon which all his reflections are made. The young
-lady looking out of her coach&mdash;at sight of whom all the young fellows
-doff their hats and make their comments, how much her fortune is, who is
-in pursuit of her, or if any mud has yet been flung upon her&mdash;shows to
-the philosopher a face disturbed with all the puzzles of an existence
-which nobody will allow her to take seriously. The poor wit who
-endeavors so wistfully to amuse my lord in<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_193" id="page_193"></a>{193}</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 389px;">
-<a href="images/ill_034_lg.jpg">
-<br />
-<img src="images/ill_034.jpg" width="389" height="472" alt="Image unavailable: SIDNEY, EARL OF GODOLPHIN.
-
-ENGRAVED BY PETER AITKEN, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, IN BRITISH
-MUSEUM. PAINTED BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER." /></a>
-<br />
-<span class="caption">SIDNEY, EARL OF GODOLPHIN.
-<br /><small>
-ENGRAVED BY PETER AITKEN, FROM MEZZOTINT BY JOHN SMITH, IN BRITISH<br />
-MUSEUM. PAINTED BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</small></span>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">his dullness betrays to that critic not so much the soul of a toady, as
-that of the anxious father with children that starve at home. His young
-fellows, though they look so careless, have their troubles too. Wherever
-that keen eye turns another group shows through the crowd, or a lonely
-whimsical figure as distinct as if there was no one but he. Save perhaps
-on those Saturdays when he plays his soft accompaniment to Milton’s
-grand, sonorous organ he is never abstracted or retired from men: on all
-other occasions, though he is thinking of a great deal else, and has his
-mind absorbed in other themes, this busy world of which he forms a part
-is always with him. Sometimes he permits us to see him over their heads
-only, seated on his familiar bench at his table, from whence he delivers
-his homilies, with all these figures moving and re-moving on the busy
-pavement in the foreground; sometimes we are admitted inside, and watch
-them through open door and window by his side: but he is never to be
-parted from the society in which he finds his models, his subjects, his
-audience. Like other men he takes it for granted that the fashion of his
-contemporaries is to go on forever. For posterity that smiling, keen
-observer takes no thought.</p>
-
-<p>But of all things else that Addison has done there remains one
-preëminent figure which is his chief claim to immortality. The
-“Campaign” has disappeared out of literature; “Cato” is known only by a
-few well-known lines; the “Spectator” itself, though a work which no
-gentleman’s library can be without, dwells generally in dignified
-retirement there, and is seldom seen on any table but the student’s,
-though we are all supposed to be familiar with it: but Sir Roger de
-Coverley is the familiar friend of most people who have read anything at
-all, and the acquaintance by sight, if we may so speak, of everybody.
-There is no form better known in all literature. His simple rustic
-state, his modest sense of his own importance, his kind and genial
-patronage<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_194" id="page_194"></a>{194}</span> of the younger world, which would laugh at him if it were not
-overawed by his modesty and goodness, and which still sniggers in its
-sleeve at all those kind, ridiculous ways of his as he walks about in
-London, taken in on all sides, with his hand always in his purse and his
-heart in its right place, are always familiar and delightful. We learn
-with a kind of shock that it was Steele who first introduced this
-perfect gentleman to the world, and can only hope that it was Addison’s
-idea from the first, and that he did not merely snatch out of his
-friend’s hands and appropriate a conception so entirely according to his
-own heart. To Steele, too, we are indebted for some pretty scenes in the
-brief history: for Will the Huntsman’s wooing, which is the most
-delicate little enamel, and for the knight’s own love-making, which,
-however, is pushed a little too near absurdity. But it is Addison who
-leads him forth among his country neighbors, and to the assizes, and
-meets the gipsies with him, and brings him up to town, carrying him to
-Westminster and to Spring Gardens, in the wherry with the one-legged
-waterman, and to the play. The delightful gentleman is never finer than
-in this latter scene. He has to be conveyed in his coach, attended by
-all his servants, armed with “good oaken plants,” and Captain Sentry in
-the sword he had worn at Steinkirk, for fear of the Mohocks, those
-brutal disturbers of the public peace whom Addison justly feels it would
-be unbecoming to bring within sight of his noble old knight.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>As soon as the house was full and the candles lighted my old friend
-stood up and looked about him with that pleasure which a mind
-seasoned with humanity naturally feels in itself at the sight of a
-multitude of people who seem pleased with one another, and partake
-of the same common entertainment. I could not but fancy to myself
-as the old man stood up in the middle of the pit that he made a
-very proper centre to a tragick Audience. Upon the entering of
-Pyrrhus the Knight told me that he did not believe the King of
-France had a better strut. I was indeed very attentive to my old
-friend’s remarks because I looked<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_195" id="page_195"></a>{195}</span> upon them as a piece of natural
-criticism and was well pleased to hear him, at the conclusion of
-almost every scene, telling me that he could not imagine how the
-play would end; one while he appeared much concerned for
-Andromache, and a little while after as much for Hermione; and was
-extremely puzzled to know what would become of Pyrrhus. When Sir
-Roger saw Andromache’s obstinate refusal to her lover’s
-importunities, he whispered me in the ear that he was sure she
-would never have him; to which he added with a more than ordinary
-vehemence, “You can’t imagine, sir, what ’t is to have to do with a
-widow.” Upon Pyrrhus, his threatening afterwards to leave her, the
-Knight shook his head and murmured, “Ay! do it if you can.” This
-part dwelt so much upon my friend’s imagination that at the close
-of the third act, as I was thinking of something else, he whispered
-in my ear, “These widows, sir, are the most perverse creatures in
-the world. But pray,” says he, “you that are a critick, is this
-play according to your dramatick rules, as you call them? Should
-your People in Tragedy always talk to be understood? Why, there is
-not a single sentence in this play that I do not know the meaning
-of!”</p>
-
-<p>The fourth act very luckily began before I had time to give the old
-gentleman an answer. “Well,” says the Knight, sitting down with
-great satisfaction, “I suppose we are now to see Hector’s Ghost?”
-He then renewed his attention, and from time to time fell
-a-praising the widow. He made, indeed, a little mistake as to one
-of her pages, whom, at his first entering, he took for Astyanax;
-but we quickly set him right in that particular, though at the same
-time he owned he should have been very glad to see the little boy,
-who, says he, must needs be a very fine child by the account that
-is given of him.</p></div>
-
-<p>Could anything be more delightful than this genial picture? We have all
-met in later years a certain Colonel Newcome, who is very like Sir
-Roger, one of his descendants, though he died a bachelor. But the
-Worcestershire knight was the first of his lineage, and few are the
-gifted hands who have succeeded in framing men after his model. Those
-little follies which are so dear to us, the good faith which makes the
-young men laugh, yet feel ashamed of themselves for laughing, and all
-the circumstances of that stately simple life which are so different
-from anything we know, yet so lifelike and genuine, have grown into the
-imagination of the after-generations. We<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_196" id="page_196"></a>{196}</span> seem to know Sir Roger from
-our cradle, though we may never even have read the few chapters of his
-history. This is the one infallible distinction of genius above all
-commoner endowments. Of all the actors in that stirring time Sir Roger
-remains the most living and real. The queen and her court are no more
-than shadows moving across the historic stage. Halifax, and Somers, and
-Harley, and even the great Bolingbroke, what are they to us? Figures
-confused and uncertain, that appear and disappear in one combination or
-another, so that our head aches in the effort to follow, to identify, to
-make sure what the intrigues and the complications mean. But we have no
-difficulty in recollecting all about Sir Roger. We would not have the
-old man mocked at any more than Mr. Addison would, but kiss his kind old
-hand as we smile at those little foibles which are all ingratiating and
-delightful. In that generation, with all its wars and successes, there
-was, perhaps, no such gain as Sir Roger. Marlborough’s victories made
-England feared and respected, but cost the country countless treasure,
-and gave her little advantage; the good knight cost nobody anything, and
-made all the world the richer. He is one of those inhabitants who never
-grow old or pass away, and he gives us proof undeniable that when we
-speak of a corrupt and depraved age, as we have reason to do, we have
-still nobler reason for believing&mdash;as the despairing prophet was taught
-by God himself in far older times: that however dark might be the
-prospect there were still seven thousand men in Israel who had never
-bowed the knee to Baal&mdash;what we learn over again, thank Heaven! from
-shining example everywhere, that there are always surviving the seed of
-the just, the salt of the earth, by whose silent agency, and pure love,
-and honest truth, life is made practicable and the world rolls on.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Roger is the great point of the “Spectator,” as the “Spectator” is
-the truest history of the time. It contains,<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_197" id="page_197"></a>{197}</span> however, beside, much that
-is admirable and entertaining, as well as a good deal that was
-temporary, and is now beyond the fashion of our understanding, or, at
-least, of our appreciation. Addison’s criticism, or rather exposition,
-of Milton, which no doubt taught his age a far more general regard for
-that great poet, is well enough known, but yet not nearly so well known
-as Sir Roger, and not necessary now as it was then. When these
-criticisms began it is evident that Addison, as well as his friend
-Steele, had made a great advance from the time when the young Oxford
-scholar left Shakspere out of his reckoning altogether, and considered
-“Old Spenser” only fit to amuse a barbarous age. Though the balance of
-things had not been redressed throughout the English world, yet these
-scholars had come to perceive that the greatness of their predecessors
-had been, perhaps, a little mixed up; that Cowley was not so mighty a
-genius as their boyhood believed, and that there were figures as of gods
-behind which it was shame to have misconceived. Throughout all, the
-meaning was wholesome, and tended toward the elevation of the time.
-Steele had it specially at heart to discourage gambling, and to put down
-the hateful tyranny of the duel. And both writers used all their powers
-to improve and raise the character of theatrical representations,
-keeping a watch not only over the plays that were performed, but also
-over the manners of the audience, who crowded the stage so that the
-players could scarcely be seen, and played cards in their boxes, and
-used the public entertainment for their own private quarrels and
-assignations. It is curious, too, to note how these authorities regarded
-the opera, the new form of amusement which had pushed its way, against
-all the prejudices of the English, into fashion. Addison himself,
-indeed, wrote an opera which was not successful; but he did not love
-that new-fangled entertainment. He devotes two or three numbers to the
-description of it, for, says he, “There is no question our grandchildren
-will be<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_198" id="page_198"></a>{198}</span> very anxious to know the reason why their forefathers used to
-sit together like an audience of foreigners in their own country, and to
-hear whole plays acted before them in a tongue which they did not
-understand.” It is evident by this that his age had not reached to the
-further sublimity of believing that when the utterance is musical there
-is no need of understanding at all. “One scarce knows how to be
-serious,” he adds, “in the confutation of an absurdity that shows itself
-at the first sight. It does not want any great measure of sense to see
-the ridicule of this monstrous practice. If the Italians have a genius
-for music above the English, the English have a genius for other
-performances of a much higher nature, and capable of giving the mind a
-much nobler entertainment.” We wonder if our “Spectator” would be less
-affronted now by the constant adaptation of equivocal French plays to
-the English stage, than by the anomaly of a representation given in
-language which nobody understood? He would, perhaps, feel it to be an
-advantage often not to understand, and doubt whether the English after
-all “have a genius for other performances of a much higher nature.”</p>
-
-<p>We are not informed that the “Tatler” and “Spectator,” the real
-foundation of his fame, gave Addison any help in his career. That was
-assured by the “Campaign.” He received his first post, that of “a
-commissionership with £200 a year,” at once, in the end of 1704: his
-pension having ceased at King William’s death in 1702: the interval is
-not a very long one, and during this time he had retained his college
-fellowship. In 1706 he became under-secretary. In 1708, his chief, Lord
-Sunderland, was dismissed, and Addison along with him; but the latter
-stepped immediately into the Irish secretaryship, which was worth £2000
-a year. Two years afterward occurred the political convulsions brought
-about by the trial of Sacheverell and the intrigues of the back stairs,
-which brought Harley<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_199" id="page_199"></a>{199}</span> into power, and Addison with his leaders was once
-more out of office; but in 1714 they came triumphantly back, and he rose
-to the height of political elevation as secretary of state with a seat
-in the Cabinet. Though he did not retain this position long on account
-of his failing health, he retired on a pension of £1500 a year. In 1711,
-at a period when he was supposed to be at a low ebb of fortune, in the
-cold shade of political opposition, he was able to buy the estate of
-Bilton, near Rugby, for which he paid £10,000&mdash;which is not bad for a
-moment of misfortune. Altogether Addison was provided for as the
-deserving and honorable hero&mdash;the wise youth of one of his own
-allegories, the good apprentice&mdash;should be, by poetic justice, but is
-not always in the experience of the world. The success of the
-“Spectator,” however, which was more his than Steele’s (as the “Tatler”
-had been much more Steele’s than Addison’s), was apparently very
-considerable; Addison himself says, in an early number, that it had
-reached the circulation of three thousand copies a day. On a special
-occasion fourteen thousand copies are spoken of; and the passing of the
-Stamp Act, which destroyed many of the weaker publications of the time,
-did comparatively little harm to the “Spectator,” which doubled its
-price without much diminishing its popularity. It had also what no other
-daily, and very few periodicals of any time, ever reach, the advantage
-of a permanent issue afterward, in a succession of volumes, of which the
-first edition seems to have reached an issue of ten thousand copies.
-Fortunate writers! pleasant public! The “Times,” and the rest of our
-great newspapers, boast a circulation beyond that which the eighteenth
-century could have dreamed of; and thirty years ago it was the fashion
-among public orators more indebted to genius than education&mdash;Mr. Cobden
-for one, and, we think, Mr. John Bright&mdash;to say that the leading
-articles of that day were more than equal to Thucydides and all the
-other writers of whom classical<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_200" id="page_200"></a>{200}</span> scholars made their boast. But we
-wonder how the “Times” leaders would read collected into a volume,
-against those little dingy books (tobacco paper, as a contemporary says)
-with all their wisdom and their wit. “I will not meddle with the
-‘Spectator,’” says Swift to Stella, “let him <i>fair sex</i> it to the
-world’s end.” And so he has, at least so far as the world has yet
-advanced toward that undesirable conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>The “Spectator” ended with the year 1712, having existed less than two
-years. Whether the authors had found their audience beginning to fail,
-or their inspiration, or had considered it wise (as is most likely) to
-forestall the possibility of either catastrophe, we are not informed.
-Almost immediately after the conclusion of this greatest undertaking of
-his life, Addison plunged into what probably appeared to the weakness of
-contemporary vision a much greater undertaking, the production of his
-tragedy “Cato,” which made a commotion in town such as few plays did
-even at that period. It was partly as a political movement, to stir up
-the patriotism and love of liberty which were supposed to be failing
-under the dominion of the Tories, suspected of all manner of evil
-designs, that his Whig friends urged Addison to bring out the great play
-which had been simmering in his brain since his travels, and which had
-no doubt been read in detached acts and pieces of declamation to all his
-literary friends. These friends had received several additions in the
-mean time, especially in the person of Pope, who was still young enough
-to be proud of Addison’s notice, yet remarkable enough to be intrusted
-with the composition of a prologue to the great man’s work. Swift,
-notwithstanding the coldness which had ensued between them on his change
-of politics, was still sufficiently in Addison’s friendship to be
-present at a rehearsal, and the whole town on both sides was moved with
-excitement and expectation. On the first night, “our house,” says
-Cibber, “was in a manner invested and entrance<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_201" id="page_201"></a>{201}</span> demanded by twelve
-o’clock at noon; and before one it was not wide enough for many who came
-too late for their places.” The following account of its reception is
-given in a letter by Pope:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><p>The numerous and violent claps of the Whig party on the one side of
-the theatre were echoed back by the Tories on the other; while the
-author sweated behind the scenes with concern to find their
-applause proceeding more from the hand than the head. This was the
-case, too, with the Prologue-writer, who was clapped into a sound
-Whig at the end of every two lines. I believe you have heard that,
-after all the applause of the opposite faction, my lord Bolingbroke
-sent for Booth, who played <i>Cato</i>, into the box between one of the
-acts, and presented him with fifty guineas, in acknowledgment, as
-he expressed it, for defending the cause of liberty so well against
-a perpetual dictator. The Whigs are unwilling to be distanced this
-way, and therefore design a present to the same <i>Cato</i> very
-speedily.</p></div>
-
-<p>Bolingbroke’s speech about a perpetual dictator was a gibe which
-everybody understood, directed against the devotion of the Whigs to
-Marlborough, and was quite honest warfare; but what, we wonder, would
-Mr. Irving think if Mr. Gladstone sent for him to his box, and
-“presented him with fifty guineas”? The actor who considers himself one
-of the most distinguished members of good society had not been thought
-of in those days. One wonders, too, in passing, where a fine gentleman
-kept his money, and whether the purse of the stage, which is always
-ready to be flung to a deserving object, was a reality in the days of
-Queen Anne? Fifty guineas is a somewhat heavy charge for the pocket;
-however, perhaps, Lord Bolingbroke had come specially provided, or he
-had a secretary handy who did not mind the bulging of his coat.</p>
-
-<p>Of this great tragedy, which turned the head of London, and which the
-two great political parties vied with each other in applauding, there
-are but a few lines virtually existing nowadays. To be sure, it is in
-print with the rest of Addison’s<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_202" id="page_202"></a>{202}</span> works, to be read by whosoever will;
-but very few avail themselves of that privilege.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">’T is not in mortals to command success.<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But we ’ll do more, Sempronius; we ’ll deserve it<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">is the chief relic, and that of a very prosaic common sense and familiar
-kind, which the great tragedy has left us. “Plato, thou reasonest well!”
-is another quotation, which is, perhaps, more frequently used in a
-jocular than serious sense. But for these scraps <i>Cato</i> is as dead as
-most of his contemporaries; and we do not even remember the great
-tragedy when we hear the name of its author. We think, indeed, only of
-the “Spectator” if we have read a little in the literature of the
-period; but if we have no special tastes and studies that way, of Sir
-Roger de Coverley alone; for Sir Roger is Addison’s gift to his country
-and the world, the creation by which his name will always be known.</p>
-
-<p>The end of a man’s life is seldom so interesting as its beginning. After
-he has achieved all of which he is capable, our interest is more usually
-a sad than a cheerful one. Addison made in 1716 what seems to have been
-an ambitious marriage, though he was not the man, one would think, to
-care for the rank which gave his wife always a distinct personality and
-another name than his. The Countess of Warwick, however, was, it would
-appear, a beautiful woman. She had the charge of a troublesome boy, for
-whom, no doubt, she would be eager to have the advice of such a man as
-Mr. Addison, whom all the world respected and admired. The little house
-at Chelsea (the house was called Sandford Manor House, and was some
-years ago figured against its present doleful background of gasometers,
-in the <i>Century</i>) which that statesman had acquired, and where he
-delighted to withdraw from the noise and contention of town, was within
-reach through the fields of Holland House, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_203" id="page_203"></a>{203}</span> residence of Lady
-Warwick. They had known each other for years, and Addison had written
-exquisite little letters to the boy-earl&mdash;no doubt with intentions upon
-the heart of the mother, to which, as is well known, that method is a
-very successful way&mdash;long before. It was, Dr. Johnson says, a long and
-anxious courtship; and perhaps&mdash;who knows?&mdash;when Steele performed that
-picture of the beloved knight sitting silent before the two fine ladies
-and unable to articulate the desires of his honest heart, it was some
-similar performance of the shy man of genius who found utterance with
-such difficulty, which was in Dick’s mind. But perhaps Addison grew
-bolder when he was a secretary of state. The great Mr. Addison, the
-delightful “Spectator,” the author of “Cato,” the man whose praises were
-in everybody’s mouth, and whom Whig and Tory delighted to honor, was no
-insignificant fine gentleman for a lady of rank to stoop to; and finally
-those evening walks over the fields, and pleasant rural encounters&mdash;for
-Chelsea was the country in those days, and Holland House quite retired
-among all the songsters of the grove, and out of town&mdash;came to a
-legitimate conclusion. Addison was forty, and her ladyship had been a
-widow for fifteen years; but there is no reason for concluding that
-there was no romance in the wedding, which, however, is always a nervous
-sort of business under such circumstances. There was the boy, too, to be
-taken into account, who evidently was not a nice boy, but a tale-bearer,
-who did not love his mother’s faithful lover, and made mischief when he
-could. There seems no evidence, however, that the marriage was unhappy,
-beyond a malicious note of Pope’s, which all the commentators have
-enlarged. The poor women who have the misfortune to be married to men of
-genius, fare badly at the hands of the critics. There seems no warrant
-whatever for Thackeray’s picture of the vulgar vixen whom he calls Mrs.
-Steele. Steele’s letters exist, but not those of poor Prue, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_204" id="page_204"></a>{204}</span> was so
-sadly tried in her husband; and so that suffering woman had to suffer
-over again in her reputation after her life’s trouble is over. It is
-very unfair to the poor women who have left no champions behind.</p>
-
-<p>The end of our “Spectator’s” life was, however, clouded with more than
-one unfortunate quarrel, the greatest of which has left its sting behind
-to quiver in Addison’s name as long as Pope and he are known. It is
-neither necessary nor edifying to enter at length into the bitternesses
-of the past. Pope fancied himself aggrieved in various ways by the man
-who had warmly acknowledged his youthful merits, and received him
-(though so much his senior in years and fame) on a footing of equality,
-and who all through never spoke an ill-natured word of the waspish
-little poet. He believed, or persuaded himself to believe, in his
-malignant little soul that Addison was jealous of his greatness, and had
-set up Tickell to rival him in the translation of Homer; and he
-believed, or pretended to believe, on the supposed authority of young
-Warwick, that Addison had hired a vulgar critic to attack him. There
-seems not the slightest reason to believe that either of these
-grievances was real. Tickell had written simultaneously a translation,
-which Addison had read and corrected, on account of which he courteously
-declined to read Pope’s translation of the same, telling him the reason,
-but accepting the office of critic to the second part of Pope’s work. He
-had himself, according to the poet’s brag, accepted Pope’s corrections
-of “Cato,” leaving “not a word unchanged that I objected to”; and he was
-not moved to any retaliation by Pope’s attack upon him, but continued
-serenely to praise his envious little assailant with a magnanimity which
-is wonderful if he had seen the brilliant and pitiless picture so
-cunningly drawn within the lines of nature, with every feature
-travestied so near the real, that even Addison’s most faithful partizan
-has to pause with alarm lest the wicked thing so near the truth<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_205" id="page_205"></a>{205}</span> might
-perhaps be true. We hesitate to add to the serene and gentle story of
-our man of letters this embittered utterance of spite and malice and
-genius. The lines are sufficiently well known.</p>
-
-<p>Addison did not end his periodical work with the “Spectator.” He took up
-that familiar character once again for a short time, long enough to
-produce an additional volume,&mdash;the eighth,&mdash;in which he had no longer
-the help of his old vivacious companion. The series is full of fine
-things, but we are not sure, though Macaulay thinks otherwise, that we
-do not a little miss the light and shade which Steele helped to supply.
-And other publications followed. Steele himself set up the “Guardian,”
-in which Addison had little share; and various others after that in
-which he had no share at all. And Addison himself had a “Freeholder,” in
-which he said some notable things; but these are all dead and gone, like
-so much of the contemporary furnishings of the age. Students find and
-read them in the old, collected editions; but life and recollection have
-gone out of them. Perhaps his own time even had by then got as much as
-it could enjoy and digest out of Addison. We, at least, have done so
-after these hundred and fifty years, and are capable of no more.</p>
-
-<p>He died in 1719, at the early age of forty-seven. The story goes that he
-sent for young Warwick when he was on his death-bed, that he might see
-how a Christian could die: which we should say was unlike Addison, save
-for the reason that he had been drawing morals all his life, and might
-at that supreme moment be beyond seeing the ridicule of a last
-exhibition. Perhaps it was in reality a message of charity and
-forgiveness to the wayward boy, who, there seems reason to believe, was
-not fond of his stepfather. And thus the great writer glided gently out
-of a life in which he had more honor than falls to the lot of most men,
-and, let us hope, a great deal of mild satisfaction and<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_206" id="page_206"></a>{206}</span> pleasure.
-Thackeray has a little scoff at him as a man without passion. “I doubt
-until after his marriage whether he ever lost his night’s rest or his
-day’s tranquillity about any woman in his life.” Neither, perhaps, did
-Sir Roger, whose forty years’ love-making and unrequited affection was a
-sentimental luxury of the most delicate kind, as his maker intended it
-to be. But Addison’s fine and meditative genius had no need of passion.
-He is the “Spectator” of humankind. He had little temptation in his own
-calm nature to descend into the arena; the honors of the fight came to
-him somehow without any soil of the actual engagement. No smoke of
-gunpowder is about his laurels, no spot of blood upon his sword. He
-looks on at the others fighting, always with a nod of encouragement for
-the man of honor and virtue, of keen scorn for the selfish and
-evil-minded, of pity for the fallen. But it is not his part to fight. He
-makes no pretense of any inclination that way. He is the looker-on; and,
-as such, more valuable than a thousand men-at-arms.</p>
-
-<p>He died at Holland House, that fine historical mansion sacred to the
-wits of a later age, but which in Addison’s time contained no tyrannical
-tribunal of literary patronage, whatever else there might be there which
-was contrary to peace. His life and death there make an association more
-touching, and at the same time of sweeter meaning, than the
-after-struggles of the Whig men of letters for Lady Holland’s arbitrary
-favors. The great humorist died in the middle of summer, in June, 1719,
-and was carried from that leafy retirement to the Jerusalem Chamber,
-where he lay in state: why, it seems difficult to understand&mdash;but his
-position had in it a kind of gentle royalty unlike that of other men. He
-was buried at Westminster by night, the wonderful solemn arches over the
-funeral party, half seen by the wavering lights, going off into vistas
-of mysterious gloom, echoing with the hymns of the choir, who sang him
-to his rest. Did they sing, one wonders, one of those<span class="pagenum"><a name="page_207" id="page_207"></a>{207}</span> verses which had
-been the most intimate utterance of his life: that great hymn of
-creation, scarcely inferior to the angelic murmurings of medieval
-Francis in his cell at Assisi?&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Soon as the evening shades prevail<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">The moon takes up the wondrous tale,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And nightly to the listening earth<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Repeats the story of her birth;<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Whilst all the stars that round her burn,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And all the planets in their turn,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Confirm the tidings as they roll,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And spread the truth from pole to pole.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="nind">Or one of those humble and more fervent human utterances of faith and
-humility and thanksgiving?&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Through every period of my life,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Thy goodness I’ll pursue,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">And after death, in distant worlds,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">The glorious theme renew.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">When nature fails, and day and night<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Divide thy works no more,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">My ever-grateful heart, O Lord,<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">Thy mercy shall adore.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="i0">Through all eternity to thee<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">A joyful song I’ll raise,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But, oh! eternity’s too short<br /></span>
-<span class="i2">To utter all thy praise.<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>With such a soft, yet rapturous, strain the lofty arches and half-seen
-aisles, perhaps with a summer moon looking in, taking up the wondrous
-tale, might have echoed over Addison&mdash;the gentlest soul of all those
-noble comrades who lie together awaiting the restitution of all
-things&mdash;when our great humorist, our mildest kind “Spectator,” all his
-comments over, was laid in the best resting-place England can give to
-those whom she loves.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="border:none;">
-<a href="images/back_lg.jpg">
-<img src="images/back.jpg" width="298" height="500" alt="Image
-unavailble: book's back cover" /></a>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="full" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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