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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53796 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53796)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Frederick Marryat, by David Hannay
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Life of Frederick Marryat
-
-Author: David Hannay
-
-Editor: Eric S. Robertson
-
-Release Date: December 23, 2016 [EBook #53796]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF FREDERICK MARRYAT ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
-images generously made available by The Internet
-Archive/Canadian Libraries)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- “Great Writers.”
-
- EDITED BY
- PROFESSOR ERIC S. ROBERTSON, M.A.
-
- _LIFE OF MARRYAT._
-
-
-
-
- LIFE
- OF
- FREDERICK MARRYAT
-
- BY
- DAVID HANNAY
-
- LONDON
- WALTER SCOTT, 24 WARWICK LANE
- NEW YORK AND TORONTO: W. J. GAGE & CO.
- 1889
-
- (_All rights reserved._)
-
- 🖛 FOR FULL LIST of the Volumes in this series,
- see Catalogue at end of book.
-
-
-
-
-NOTE.
-
-
-The materials for a life of Marryat are scanty, and I have acknowledged
-my obligation to them in the text. Mrs. Ross Church collected, in 1872,
-all the surviving knowledge about her father’s life--all of it, that is,
-which the family thought it right to publish to the world. The present
-little book has no pretensions to be founded on new materials. My
-object has only been to make the best use I could of already published
-matter--to tell what story there is to tell in the clearest possible
-manner, and to add the best estimate of Marryat’s work and position in
-letters that I could supply.
-
- D. H.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
-
- PAGE
- CHAPTER I.
-
- Frederick Marryat born 10th July, 1792; his parentage; his
- ancestry; home training; schooling at Enfield; runs away to sea;
- is sent into the navy and joins the _Impérieuse_ under Captain
- Lord Cochrane, in September, 1806 11
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- The naval war in 1806: the frigates of the Great War; Lord
- Cochrane, afterwards Lord Dundonald, Captain of the _Impérieuse_;
- his character; his influence on Marryat; the cruises of the
- frigate as described by Marryat in his private log; a narrow
- escape; Cochrane in the House of Commons; an affair in the boats;
- the Maltese privateer, Pasquil Giliano; movements of _Impérieuse_ 17
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- _Impérieuse_ on coast of Spain; cutting out privateer from
- Almeria Bay; alliance with Spain; Rosas; the Basque Roads;
- naval service of Marryat after parting with Cochrane till the
- end of the Great War; saves several men from drowning; various
- adventures; summary of his services from 1806 to 1815 31
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- Marryat’s position in 1815; goes abroad; marriage; appointed to
- _Beaver_; at St. Helena changes to _Rosario_; in Channel; pays
- off _Rosario_; the Channel smugglers; appointed to _Larne_;
- Burmese War; promotion and made a C.B.; transferred to _Tees_ in
- July, 1824; short command of _Ariadne_; the _Ariadne_ his last
- ship; resigns command November, 1830; begins writing; equerry to
- Duke of Sussex; story of William IV. 46
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- From 1830 to 1848 a writer; his literary life; expensive habits;
- early success in novel writing; editorial ventures; _The
- Metropolitan Magazine_; hard work in 1833-34; in 1833 he stands
- for Tower Hamlets, and fails; at Brighton in 1834; quotation from
- letter on lawsuit; goes abroad; life abroad; leaves for America 58
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- Marryat’s literary work up to 1837; his early success, and
- determination to make money; quarrels with publisher; prices paid
- him; “Frank Mildmay”; quotation from _Metropolitan Magazine_
- on “Frank Mildmay”; other books from “King’s Own” to “Pirate”
- and “Three Cutters”; quality of Marryat’s style; quotation from
- “Peter Simple”; his plots; his fun; quotation from “Midshipman
- Easy” 73
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Visit to America in 1837; his object in going there; in New
- York; letter to his mother describing where he has been; visit to
- Canada; affair of the _Caroline_; unpopularity in United States;
- Marryat stands his ground; return to England 98
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Movements in London; ruin of West Indian property; life and
- friendships in London; Duke Street, Wimbledon, Piccadilly,
- Spanish Place; first signs of breaking health; goes to Langham;
- books of these years; “Phantom Ship”; children’s stories;
- “Masterman Ready”; skirmish with _Fraser’s Magazine_; Marryat
- defends publication of his stories in the _Era_ 114
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Marryat goes to Langham for good in 1843; life there; Marryat
- and his children; kindness to his men; his scientific farming,
- and its financial results; his literary work; asked to write
- life of Collingwood; declines; last stories: “The Mission,” “The
- Settlers,” “The Children of the New Forest,” “The Little Savage” 132
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- His fatal illness; his _physique_ and personal appearance; letter
- to Lord Auckland on supposed slight; Hastings; loss of H.M.S.
- _Avenger_, and death of Marryat’s son, Lieutenant Frederick
- Marryat; returns to Langham; last months, and death on 9th
- August, 1848; estimate of his character and work 149
-
- INDEX. 161
-
-
-
-
-LIFE OF CAPTAIN MARRYAT.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-
-Frederick Marryat, one of the most brilliant, and the least fairly
-recognized, of English novelists, was born in Westminster, on the 10th
-July, 1792, some seven months before the outbreak of the Great War.
-He was the second son of Joseph Marryat, M.P. for Sandwich, chairman
-of the committee of Lloyds, and Colonial Agent for the island of
-Grenada. His mother was a Bostonian, of a loyalist family. Her maiden
-name was Geyer--or according to Mrs. Ross Church’s life of her father,
-Von Geyer--and the family is said to have been of Hessian origin.
-The Marryats themselves were a Suffolk stock. In Marshall’s “Naval
-Biography,” which appeared during Marryat’s own life, the novelist is
-said to have descended from one of the numerous Huguenot refugees who
-settled in the Eastern Counties during the persecutions of the sixteenth
-century. The family version of its history, as given by Mrs. Ross
-Church, contains a longer and more splendid pedigree, going back even
-to knights who came over with “Richard Conqueror.” These things, though
-set forth with faith no doubt, are to be received with polite reserve
-by the judicious reader. For the rest, whatever the remote origin of the
-Marryats may have been, they were during the seventeenth and eighteenth
-centuries very distinctly middle-class people--dissenting ministers,
-doctors, or business men--manifestly of good parts and industry. Some
-of them wrote sermons and printed them. Thomas Marryat, the novelist’s
-grandfather, was a doctor and the author of a medical book. His father
-was, as the places he held show, a prosperous man; and the future
-novelist entered the world under fairly favourable circumstances. There
-was, it is clear, no want of money, and the family were active people
-with a marked tendency to use their pens.
-
-As no detailed life of Marryat was written until long after his death,
-when no witnesses were left who could speak with knowledge, there is
-an almost absolute want of evidence as to the character and probable
-influence of his family life. If we are to argue from his stories, it was
-hardly to be called happy. These guides may not be entirely safe, and
-yet they afford evidence of a kind not to be lightly dismissed. A writer
-whose pictures of home and school life are habitually disagreeable,
-cannot have had many pleasant memories of his own to look back on.
-With Marryat this was the case. In all his earlier stories, and until
-he became decidedly didactic, and religious, in his later years, he
-described the relations of parents and children, of schoolboy and
-schoolmaster, as either indifferent or hostile, or as contemptuous
-even when affection is not absent. Peter Simple, Mr. Midshipman Easy,
-and Newton Foster are the sons of men whom they may like, but cannot
-respect, of whom two are maniacs, and one is a harmless imbecile. Their
-mothers are either utterly shadowy or repulsive. “Frank Mildmay,” the
-first and the most autobiographical of his stories, is also the most
-destitute of kindliness. Something may be allowed for rawness in the
-author, and something for direct imitation of the earlier Smollettian
-model. Marryat, too, publicly protested that he was not the “Naval
-Officer” of this first story. But, by his own confession, he put many
-of the incidents of his own life into it, and we may safely conclude
-that what is wholly wanting in the story was not prominent in his own
-experience. Now what is wanting is any trace that Frank Mildmay had the
-smallest filial regard for his father, or was conscious of any maternal
-influence, or thought of his home life with affection, or of his school
-as other than a place of torment. That is not how men write when they
-look back kindly on their first years. If Thackeray and Dickens drew
-such different pictures of boy and school life, we know why. It is not
-necessary to rack the scanty evidence about Marryat’s early years, to
-find reason for believing that his father was probably a hard and dry man
-of business, whose prosperity never melted the provincial dissenter quite
-out of him. Of his mother there is nothing to be supposed at all.
-
-It is to be noted that although Mr. Joseph Marryat was a prosperous man,
-he did not send his sons to a public school. Frederick and his elder
-brother (Joseph also, and not unknown as a collector of, and writer on,
-porcelain) were sent to some sort of academy kept by a Mr. Freeman, at
-Ponders End. It is an almost universal experience that the boy who has
-been at a private school may remember an individual master with kindness,
-but never has any degree of respect or affection for the place itself.
-He is not one of an ancient body like the public-school man, and has
-nothing in his memory to set off against the restraint--or in the old
-hard days the floggings and hardships of school life. The Wykamite might
-laugh at the wash pot of Moab, but what private-school boy would forgive
-his master for turning him out to wash in a back yard? What is inflicted
-by a public school is inflicted by the school itself; in a private
-establishment it is inflicted by the master, and is a personal wrong.
-Marryat was no exception to the rule. His memories of Ponders End were
-not of a kind to make him draw cheerful pictures of school life. That he
-was far from a model pupil, and had his share of the cane, has nothing
-to do with it. He scamped his work, and forgot it, as many other boys
-have done and will do. Not only that, but he was the cause of scamping
-in others. Mr. Babbage, who was for a time his schoolfellow, is the
-authority for a story which shows that Marryat was indeed a model young
-scamp. Babbage wished to work (it does not appear whether they called it
-“sweating” or “greasing” at Ponders End), and to get up for that purpose
-with another “swot” at the absurd hour of three. With intentions which
-were only too obvious, Marryat, who was his room fellow, proposed to join
-the party. Babbage objected, and thought to escape the intrusion by the
-easy method of not waking Marryat. This answered until the creator of
-Mr. Midshipman Easy first bethought himself of drawing his bed across
-the door, and then when even the moving of his bed did not rouse him,
-of tying his hand to the handle. For some nights Babbage got over the
-difficulty by cutting the fastening, until Marryat found a chain which
-could not be cut. Babbage had his revenge. He invented an ingenious
-machine for jerking the chain, and went on waking his chum repeatedly for
-no purpose. At last a compromise was made. Marryat joined the good boys
-for early study, and of course it was not long before others joined too,
-and then the letting off of fireworks and various noises betrayed the
-secret. How many of the party were flogged does not appear. Before long
-Marryat had to be up at six bells in the middle watch on duty too often
-to leave him much inclination to turn out voluntarily, even for mischief,
-when he could by any chance get a night in.
-
-It is also recorded of Marryat that he ran away to sea three times, that
-is, he ran away with the intention of getting to sea, but the end of the
-adventure was always capture, return to school, and more cane. His great
-grievance is reported to have been the obligation to wear the clothes
-which his elder brother had outgrown. The detail seems to indicate a
-certain narrowness, not to say sordidness, in so prosperous a household
-as the Marryats’, and the aggravation was certainly gross enough to
-justify the protest. On one of these occasions Mr. J. Marryat showed a
-remarkable weakness. He gave the truant money and sent him in a carriage
-back to school. This error of judgment had a very natural consequence.
-Marryat slipped out of the carriage, found his way quietly home, and took
-his younger brothers to the theatre. At last his father came to the
-very sensible conclusion that the sea was the best place for such a boy.
-Being a man of some influence and position, he was able to start his son
-well, on board a crack frigate, and under a distinguished captain. In
-September, 1806, Marryat entered the _Impérieuse_, captain Lord Cochrane,
-and sailed for the Mediterranean.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-
-Fortune could not have done Marryat a greater kindness than to send
-him to sea on the quarter-deck of the _Impérieuse_. She enabled him
-to share in the most stirring work to be done at the date at which he
-joined the service, and under the command of one the most brilliant of
-naval officers. In 1806 the war of fleets was over. Trafalgar had broken
-the heart of our enemies, and from that time forward their squadrons
-never even attempted to keep the sea. Napoleon built line-of-battle
-ships in batches, but only to keep them manned and armed, lying idle in
-port. The English fleets had so completely established their supremacy,
-that they used the French roadsteads as familiarly as their own. The
-blockading squadron off Brest anchored in Douarnenez Bay, in sight of
-the French lookout, and there repaired their rigging or caulked their
-seams as coolly as if no enemy’s fleet were in existence, and they
-did it with perfect impunity. Admiral Smyth has told how audaciously
-the Mediterranean fleet was wont to anchor off Hyères in the absolute
-confidence that the French would never come out of Toulon. Their only
-chance of service was when the French would be decoyed out by some
-particularly audacious frigate, which was sent in to insult them at the
-very mouth of their harbour. Then there was a chance that they might be
-drawn further than they could go back before the in-shore squadron was
-upon them. But such breaks in the monotony of blockade were rare. For the
-most part our line-of-battle ships were employed in cruising to and fro,
-with intervals of harbour--their officers and crews spent their lives
-in drilling aloft or at the guns, and in keeping decks and metal-work
-in a condition of faultless cleanliness. That passion for neatness and
-smartness which has never left the British navy rose to its height in the
-last years of the Great War, and did indeed sometimes attain to actual
-mania in the minds of captains and first lieutenants in want of something
-to employ themselves and their men upon.
-
-There was, however, one class of ship which had a fair chance of active
-service. The frigates were never, even to the end, reduced to mere
-patrolling. It was to them indeed that fell all the brilliant fighting in
-the last ten years or so of the war. The French never altogether ceased
-to send forth cruisers which had necessarily to be pursued and captured.
-Moreover, there was work to be done upon the enemy’s coasts, convoys to
-be taken, forts to be destroyed, privateers to be cut out. After 1808
-we were in alliance with the Spaniards, and there was then no want of
-chances for enterprising officers to distinguish themselves against the
-French invaders on the coasts, particularly in the Mediterranean. The
-Mediterranean, including the Adriatic, and the East Indies, were the
-great theatres of the war until the Americans struck in.
-
-It was a material addition to his good fortune in being appointed to
-such a ship, and on such service, that he should have begun under the
-captain who then commanded the _Impérieuse_. The novelist who was to
-give the most living of all pictures of the navy at its greatest time
-could not possibly have met with a better chief. Lord Cochrane, who is
-better known as the Earl of Dundonald, was, next to Nelson (the master
-of them all), that one of the naval officers of the Great War who was
-most distinctly a man of genius. There were others who were brave, able,
-honourable gentlemen. In pure seamanship many may have been his equals.
-In a service which included such men as Blackwood, Hallowell, Willoughby,
-the Captain Hamilton who cut out the _Hermione_, Broke of the _Shannon_,
-and a hundred other valiant gentlemen, even Dundonald could not hope for
-a pre-eminence in valour. It may even be allowed that he never, while
-fighting for his own country, was able to achieve anything so complete,
-so distinctly what Cortes called a “muy hermosa cosa,” a very pretty
-piece of fighting with a squadron, as Sir William Hoste’s little gem of
-a victory over the French frigates off Lissa. He was not allowed the
-chance to handle a detachment of ships in independent command. But there
-was in Dundonald the indefinable something--“those deliveries of a man’s
-self which have no name,” that combination of passion and faculty--which
-makes the man of genius. Whatever he did was done with a burning fire
-of energy. The fire was not always pure. There was a self-assertion
-about the man--never base, but always aggressive, a pragmatical Scotch
-fierceness, a love of hate and scorn, a total inability to keep measure,
-which can be seen on every page of his Autobiography, and explain why
-it was that he was always, in our service or out of it, a free lance.
-He was of the race of Peterborough not of Marlborough. To the highest
-rank he did not belong, but he was divided in kind from the brave, able,
-disciplined, but shadowy men, who do the regular drilled work of the
-world. He was a magnificent, rugged individuality. Even in books he is
-real as only such men as Nelson and Wellington are real. On those who
-knew him his influence, even if it only produced repulsion, must have
-been profound. One so open to impressions, and so able to retain them as
-Marryat, must have been another man all his life for having known and
-admired Dundonald. It must be remembered, too, that Marryat saw Dundonald
-at his best--on the deck of his frigate, and not at the Admiralty or the
-House of Commons, where he was apt to make himself intolerable by his
-wrong-headed violence in right, and his inability to see that for the
-work of the reformer, as for all work, there is a proper time, and a
-fitting manner which must not be mistaken, under penalty of failure.
-
-The influence which Cochrane had upon Marryat might indeed be
-demonstrated from his works. The captain of the _Impérieuse_ remained
-his type of what a British officer ought to be. All his frigates’
-captains who are mentioned for honour have something--and several of
-them have much--of his first commander in them. That this should be the
-case in “Frank Mildmay,” the first of his books, and to some extent
-an autobiography, was almost a matter of course. In this book the
-cruise of the frigate on the coast of Spain is the very service of the
-_Impérieuse_. But it is equally true of Captain Savage of the _Diomede_
-in “Peter Simple,” and of Captain M---- of the “King’s Own.” Both are
-Scotchmen, penniless gentlemen of good descent, officers of boundless
-skill, daring, and withal judgment. It is on this last quality that
-Marryat dwells by preference, and it is this which he picks out for
-special praise in Cochrane. “I must here remark,” he says in the private
-log quoted in Mrs. Ross Church’s life, “that I never knew any one so
-careful of the lives of his ship’s company as Lord Cochrane, or any one
-who calculated so closely the risks attending any expedition. Many of
-the (_sic_) most brilliant achievements were performed without loss of
-a single life, so well did he calculate the chances; and one half the
-merit which he deserves for what he did accomplish has never been awarded
-him, merely because in the official despatches there has not been a long
-list of killed and wounded to please the appetite of the English public.”
-This fondness of the public for a long list of killed and wounded was
-a favourite subject of half-serious jest with Marryat, and he learnt
-from others, if not from Cochrane, how a despatch ought to be written
-in a “concatenation accordingly.” It would seem that Marryat had little
-admiration for the brainless, headlong courage which rushes madly at
-whatever happens to be in front of its weapon. He would have condemned
-even with contempt (and Hawke, Nelson, Cochrane, would have condemned
-with him) such a piece of frantic swash-bucklery as the last fight of
-the _Revenge_. The men who were daring with judgment, who risked for a
-reason, who took care to cover themselves as they lunged, and who then
-went all together, sword, hand, and foot, with the speed of lightning,
-and with unerring accuracy of the eye which has brains behind it, were
-his heroes. In any case Marryat would have arrived at these conclusions,
-but he assuredly did so the sooner, and the more heartily, because for
-three years he fought under a fighter of this stamp.
-
-Marryat was fortunate in his messmates as well as in his captain. A
-crack frigate of those days had the pick of the lieutenants’ list, and
-of the “young gentlemen” who were to be the captains of the future. The
-_Impérieuse_ had a particularly good staff, some of them old officers
-of Cochrane’s, and in the midshipman’s mess Marryat met comrades who
-were good fellows, and gentlemen too. He formed friendships which lasted
-through life, particularly with Lord Napier, and with Houston Stewart.
-
-I have thought it well to dwell at some length on Marryat’s entry into
-the service, because its conditions are of vital importance in his life.
-Whatever his training had been he would have been a writer. His private
-log shows that from the beginning he found pleasure in the use of his
-pen; but had he not been a naval officer he would have been a very
-different writer, and, more, had he gone to sea in a less happy way, the
-misfortune would not have failed to have its effects on him. The tamer
-life of a line-of-battle ship, the tedium of a small craft engaged on
-convoy, might have driven him back on shore by mere boredom. On board
-the _Impérieuse_ he was able to live his life to the full. There he had
-three years of active and daring fighting. The impression they made on
-him was never effaced, and has been recorded by himself. In the private
-log, quoted by his daughter, he sums up his memories in words which it
-would be a dereliction of duty not to quote:
-
- “The cruises of the _Impérieuse_ were periods of continued
- excitement, from the hour in which she hove up her anchor till she
- dropped it again in port: the day that passed without a shot being
- fired in anger, was with us a blank day: the boats were hardly
- secured on the booms than they were cast loose and out again; the
- yard and stay tackles were for ever hoisting up and lowering down.
- The expedition with which parties were formed for service; the
- rapidity of the frigate’s movements night and day; the hasty sleep
- snatched at all hours; the waking up at the report of the guns,
- which seemed the very keynote to the hearts of those on board, the
- beautiful precision of our fire, obtained by constant practice; the
- coolness and courage of our captain, inoculating the whole of the
- ship’s company; the suddenness of our attacks, the gathering after
- the combat, the killed lamented, the wounded almost envied; the
- powder so burnt into our faces that years could not remove it; the
- proved character of every man and officer on board, the implicit
- trust and adoration we felt for our commander; the ludicrous
- situations which would occur in the extremest danger and create
- mirth when death was staring you in the face, the hair-breadth
- escapes, and the indifference to life shown by all--when memory
- sweeps along these years of excitement even now, my pulse beats
- more quickly with the reminiscence.”
-
-The years of service which thus impressed themselves on Marryat’s memory
-may be divided into three periods. First, a cruise on the coast of
-France from Ushant to the mouth of the Gironde; then a longer period of
-active work in the Mediterranean; and finally, a return to the ocean,
-and the action in the Basque Roads. The young midshipman’s first actual
-experience of cruising was one which was doubtless present in his mind
-when he wrote the song whereof the chorus tells how “Poll put her arms
-akimbo,” and said, “Port Admiral, you be----.” When the corporal reported
-to Mr. Vanslyperken that the crew of the revenue cutter were singing
-this ditty, the outraged commander asked whether it was the Port Admiral
-at Portsmouth or Plymouth. The officer who was, we may be sure, spoken
-of by the crew of the _Impérieuse_ on the 17th and succeeding few days
-of November, 1806, in an equally mutinous fashion, was the Port Admiral
-at Plymouth. According to the custom of Admirals who did not have to go
-to sea themselves, this officer was exceeding zealous in enforcing the
-Admiralty’s orders to despatch ships to sea smartly. The orders came
-down for the _Impérieuse_ to go to sea, and the Admiral would have them
-obeyed. Go she must--“The moment the rudder--which was being hung--would
-steer the ship,” as Dundonald says in his Autobiography, and while she
-had “a lighter full of provisions on one side, a second with ordnance
-stores on the other, and a third filled with gunpowder towing astern.”
-But the tale should be told in Marryat’s words, and not in his captain’s:
-
- “The _Impérieuse_ sailed; the Admiral of the port was one who
- _would_ be obeyed, but _would not_ listen always to reason or
- common sense. The signal for sailing was enforced by gun after gun;
- the anchor was hove up, and, with all her stores on deck, her guns
- not even mounted, in a state of confusion unparalleled from her
- being obliged to hoist in faster than it was possible she could
- stow away, she was driven out of harbour to encounter a heavy gale.
- A few hours more would have enabled her to proceed to sea with
- security, but they were denied; the consequences were appalling,
- they might have been fatal. In the general confusion some iron too
- near the binnacles had attracted the needle of the compasses; the
- ship was steered out of her course. At midnight, in a heavy gale
- at the close of November, so dark that you could not distinguish
- any object, however close, the _Impérieuse_ dashed upon the rocks
- between Ushant and the Main. The cry of terror which ran through
- the lower decks; the grating of the keel as she was forced in; the
- violence of the shocks which convulsed the frame of the vessel; the
- hurrying up of the ship’s company without their clothes; and then
- the enormous waves which again bore her up, and carried her clean
- over the reef, will never be effaced from my memory.”
-
-The frigate had been carried into a deep pool, and rode the gale out at
-anchor. When daylight came she was found to be inside instead of outside
-of Ushant--and was got off with no greater damage than the loss of her
-false keel. But the escape was a narrow one--the adventure must have
-shaken Marryat rudely into the life of the sea--and have impressed him
-deeply with the possible consequence of pig-headedness in pig-headed Port
-Admirals.
-
-The cruise of the frigate on the French coast was not very fruitful in
-incident, and early in 1807 she was back in port. There she remained for
-the greater part of the year, while her captain was fighting the battles
-of the navy in the House of Commons. A general election took place in the
-spring, and Cochrane, who had sat already for Honiton, stood with Sir
-Francis Burdett for Westminster. They were elected, and the captain of
-the _Impérieuse_ at once began, or rather returned to, those attacks on
-abuses in the Admiralty and dockyards which were so uniformly right in
-substance and wrong in form. It is a pleasing instance of the inability
-of man to hold the balance even when his own interest is in the scale,
-that Cochrane never seems to have seen anything wrong in the retention
-of a fine frigate in port during war in order that her captain (who was
-drawing full pay all the time) might attend to parliamentary duties in
-London. Conscious of rectitude, he would have treated the suggestion that
-he also was an abuse with scorn. According to his own version of the
-story, told in profound good faith, he did his higher duties as member of
-the House with such efficiency that the Admiralty decided to confine him
-to the exercise of his profession in future. At the close of the session
-the _Impérieuse_ was ordered to join Lord Collingwood’s fleet in the
-Mediterranean, and sailed from Portsmouth on the 12th of September, 1807.
-
-In October, Marryat made his first acquaintance with Malta, and the
-scenes associated with the immortal memory of Mr. Midshipman Easy. He
-was not to stay there long, for the _Impérieuse_ left almost immediately
-to join Lord Collingwood, who was cruising off Palermo. Soon after, the
-future describer of so many dashing affairs with boats had an opportunity
-of seeing one. On the 14th of November (Marryat himself says the 15th),
-the _Impérieuse_ sighted two vessels under the land of Corsica, and,
-as it was calm, the boats were ordered out to examine them, under the
-command of Napier and Fayrer.
-
-“As soon,” it is Marryat who speaks, “as they were within half a mile,
-the ship hoisted English colours. The sight of these colours, of course,
-checked the attack; the boats pulled slowly up toward her, and, when
-within hail, demanded what she was, for, if an English vessel, she could
-have no objection to be boarded by the boats of an English frigate. Now,
-as it afterwards was proved, the ship was a Maltese privateer of great
-celebrity, commanded by the well-known Pasquil Giliano, who had been very
-successful in his cruises, and, if report spoke truly, for the best of
-reasons, as he paid very little respect to any colours; in fact, he was a
-well-known pirate, and, when he returned to Malta, his hold was full of
-goods taken out of vessels, which he had burnt that he might not weaken
-his crew by sending them away; and in an Admiralty Court so notoriously
-corrupt as that of Malta, inquiries were easily hushed up. Although such
-was the fact, still it had nothing to do with the present affair.
-
-“When the boats pulled up astern, the captain of the polacre answered
-that he was a Maltese privateer, but that he would not allow them to come
-on board; for, although Napier had hailed him in English, and he could
-perceive the red jackets of the Marines in the boats, Giliano had an
-idea from the boats being fitted out with iron tholes and grummets, like
-the French, that they belonged to a ship of that nation. A short parley
-ensued, at the end of which the captain of the privateer pointed to his
-boarding nettings triced up, and told them that he was prepared, and if
-they attempted to board he should defend himself to the last. Napier
-replied that he must board, and Giliano leaped from the poop telling
-him that he must take the consequences. The answer was a cheer and a
-simultaneous dash of the boats to the vessel’s side.
-
-“A most desperate conflict ensued, perhaps the best contested and the
-most equally matched on record. In about ten minutes, the captain having
-fallen, a portion of the crew of the privateer gave way, the remainder
-fought until they were cut to pieces, and the vessel remained in our
-possession. And then, when the decks were strewn with the dying and the
-dead, was discovered the unfortunate mistake which had been committed.
-The privateer was a large vessel, pierced for fourteen guns and mounting
-ten, and the equality of the combatants, as well as the equality of the
-loss on both sides, was remarkable. On board of the vessel there had
-been fifty-two men; with [the] boats fifty-four. The privateer lost
-Giliano, her captain, and fifteen men; on our side we had fifteen men
-killed and wounded. Fayrer lost for ever the use of his right arm by a
-musket bullet, and Napier received a very painful wound, and had a very
-narrow escape--the bullet of Giliano’s pistol grazing his left cheek and
-passing through his ear, slightly splintering a portion of the bone.”
-
-Marryat’s version of the story does not agree in every detail with
-Cochrane’s, but in essentials they are at one. Particularly there is no
-difference of opinion between them as to the character of the Maltese
-Admiralty Court. In this case it not only refused to allow that the
-_King George_ (Giliano’s vessel) was a lawful prize, but it fined the
-_Impérieuse_ five hundred double sequins. That iniquitous court was one
-of the many abuses Cochrane had to fight in his life.
-
-Here certainly was an experience likely to be useful to the midshipman
-who was to record it. The fight was a dashing one--a thing well worth
-seeing in itself, and besides the _King George_ privateer so-called,
-but in fact pirate or little better, with her motley crew of Russians,
-Italians, Sclavonians (“a set of desperate savages” Cochrane styled
-them in his despatch), must have introduced him to the lawless, and
-scoundrelly fringe of the great naval war. From privateer to pirate was
-at all times but a step, and amid the confusion of the great wars, with
-the connivance of dishonest Colonial Admiralty Courts, and the tacit
-consent of some neutrals of little scruple, not a few ruffians were able
-to flourish,--the plundering, murdering, cowardly camp followers, so to
-speak, of the great regular naval armaments.
-
-From Corsica the _Impérieuse_ went on to Toulon, to report to Lord
-Collingwood, who was back at his regular blockading station. Thence
-Cochrane was sent to Malta, and on to the Ionian Islands to command a
-squadron then engaged in blockading some French frigates in Corfu. Here
-Cochrane, true to his character, fell out with another abuse. When he
-arrived on the station, he found that neutral vessels, or even vessels
-belonging to our enemies, were allowed to trade with the island under
-cover of passes supplied by the officer commanding the English blockading
-force. Of course Cochrane seized them, to the wrath of the officer in
-question, who consistently enough intrigued against him at headquarters.
-The captain of the _Impérieuse_ was recalled as being too indiscreet, by
-Lord Collingwood, apparently on the mere complaint of the officer whose
-passes had been treated with such scant respect, and so lost his one
-chance of commanding a squadron on work which he was eminently fitted
-to do well. The story of the passes (which of course were not given for
-nothing) must have been known to every man on board the _Impérieuse_,
-and, doubtless, the officer who had such a remarkable idea of his duties,
-went, in the course of time, to the making of Captain Capperbar. Having
-made one more place too hot to hold him, by hasty action, where a little
-tact and patience would have enabled him to have his way and to bring the
-trading naval officer to book, Cochrane was employed cruising to and fro
-till January, 1808, when he was despatched by Lord Collingwood to the
-coast of Spain, where he was to have a longer period of active brilliant
-work.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-
-When the _Impérieuse_ reached the coast of Spain early in 1808, we
-were still at war with that country. Napoleon had not yet turned his
-submissive ally into an enemy by that act of brigandage which was the
-capital error of his life. The war was for us still a “rich war,” as
-Nelson put it--there were still Spanish prizes to be picked up. Cochrane
-was master of the work to be done. His previous cruise in the _Speedy_
-had made him perfectly familiar with the Spanish coast. It had also
-given him an absolute confidence in his power to beat the Spaniards
-at any odds. On this occasion he had no opportunity to equal the most
-marvellous of all his feats--the capture of the frigate _Gamo_ with his
-tiny gun-brig the _Speedy_, but he was incessantly active and uniformly
-successful. The _Impérieuse_ hugged the Spanish coast, destroyed isolated
-forts, sailed into the very ports and marked her prey down coolly, before
-sending her boats in to cut out the more tempting prizes. In all this
-stirring fighting Marryat had such share as a midshipman might. The
-history of it is recorded in “Frank Mildmay,” in “Mr. Midshipman Easy,”
-in “Peter Simple.” One incident may be recorded as a type of the rest.
-Lord Cochrane learnt that a certain vessel which he was resolute to
-take was lying at anchor in Almeria. He himself, in his “Autobiography
-of a Seaman,” calls her “a large French vessel, laden with lead and
-other munitions of war.” Marryat, as quoted by his daughter, calls her
-a polacre privateer, and says nothing of her nationality, but in other
-respects the stories agree. The story may now go on in Marryat’s words:
-
- “At daybreak we were well in with American colours at the peak.
- [The place, as has been just said, was Almeria Bay, and this trick
- of hoisting neutral colours was a common stratagem of war.] The
- Spaniards had their suspicions, but, as we boldly ran into harbour,
- anchored among the other vessels, and furled our sails, they did
- not fire. They were puzzled, for they could not imagine that any
- vessel would act with such temerity, as we were surrounded by
- batteries. We had, however, anchored with springs upon our cables;
- close to us within half musket shot, lay a large polacre privateer
- of sixteen guns, the same vessel which had been attacked by, and
- had beaten off the boats of the _Spartan_ with a loss of nearly
- sixty men killed and wounded. On our other side were two large
- brigs heavily laden and a zebecque; the small craft were in-shore
- of us, the town and citadel about half a mile ahead of us at the
- bottom of the bay, the batteries all around us, and evidently well
- prepared. Our boats had long been hoisted out and lay alongside,
- which circumstance added to the suspicions of the Spaniards; still,
- as yet, not a gun was fired.
-
- “Lord Cochrane’s reasons for running in with the frigate was,
- that he considered the loss of life would be much less by this
- manœuvre than if he had despatched the boats, and this privateer
- he had determined to capture. He did not suppose, nor indeed did
- any one, that, lying as she was under the guns of the frigate, she
- would dare to fire a shot, but in this he was mistaken. The boats
- were manned, and the remaining crew of the _Impérieuse_ at their
- quarters. The word was given and the boats shoved off; one pinnace,
- commanded by Mr. Caulfield, the first lieutenant, pulling for the
- polacre ship, while the others went to take possession of the brigs
- and zebecque.
-
- “To our astonishment, as soon as the pinnace was alongside the
- ship, she was received with a murderous fire, and half of our
- boat’s crew were laid beneath the thwarts; the remainder boarded.
- Caulfield was the first on the vessel’s decks--a volley of
- musquetoons received him, and he fell dead with thirteen bullets
- in his body. But he was amply avenged; out of the whole crew of
- the privateer, but fifteen, who escaped below and hid themselves,
- remained alive; no quarter was shown, they were cut to atoms on
- the deck, and those who threw themselves into the sea to save
- their lives were shot as they struggled in the water. The fire
- of the privateer had been the signal for the batteries to open,
- and now was presented the animated scene of the boats boarding
- in every direction, with more or less resistance; the whole bay
- reverberating with the roar of cannon, the smooth water ploughed
- up in every quarter by the shot directed against the frigate and
- boats, while the _Impérieuse_ returned the fire, warping round and
- round with her springs to silence the most galling. This continued
- for nearly an hour, by which time the captured vessels were under
- all sail, and then the _Impérieuse_ hove up her anchor, and, with
- the English colours waving at her gaff, and still keeping up an
- undiminished fire, sailed slowly out the victor.”
-
-It was on such an occasion as this, if not in this very affair, that
-Marryat is said to have had the adventure recorded by him in “Frank
-Mildmay.” Like the hero of that story, he was knocked down by the body
-of his leader, who was shot in front of him in a boarding affair, and
-then almost trampled to death by the men who pressed on to carry the
-prize. When the fight was over he was dragged out insensible, and laid
-among the dead. The unfriendly remark of a comrade--that he had cheated
-the gallows--revived him to give a vigorous denial. Mrs. Ross Church
-states that this happened in Arcassan Bay during the first cruise of
-the _Impérieuse_, but Cochrane himself mentions no such fight there,
-and no loss of any of his officers. Frank Mildmay’s adventure happened
-in Arcassan Bay, but Marryat would have obvious reasons for not being
-strictly accurate as to place. If the incident was taken from his own
-life, it can only have happened at Almeria. It may be noted that both
-Mr. Handstone in the novel, and Mr. Caulfield in history, were first
-lieutenants, and that both died in the same way, riddled with bullets, at
-the head of a boarding party. Was Caulfield oppressed with a presentiment
-of his coming death like the lieutenant in “Frank Mildmay”--or was he
-indeed the original of that officer who, be it observed, is a very
-distinct character, and has much the air of being a portrait? Perhaps a
-preliminary question ought to be asked, namely, whether this incident
-did actually happen to Marryat as recorded in the novel? It is possible.
-The fact that he does not mention it in the passage quoted above proves
-nothing. It is apparently taken from his unfinished life of his friend
-Napier, in which he would naturally not dwell on his own personal
-adventures. On the other hand, it is very much the sort of story which
-might be transferred from the hero of the novel to its author.
-
-In the course of 1808 a great change came over the war in the Western
-Mediterranean. Napoleon made his famous (and infamous) grab at the
-Spanish monarchy, and instantly, without hesitation, without concert
-among themselves, in one great spontaneous burst of patriotic enthusiasm,
-the Spanish people rose in arms. Their efforts were often unsuccessful,
-and even disgraced by mismanagement or treason; but, on the whole, they
-set Europe a magnificent example, which was well followed later on by
-Russia, and they gave England what she had long wished for in vain--a
-field of battle on land against Napoleon. The _Impérieuse_ had her share
-in the Peninsular War. It was her duty not only to help the Spaniards in
-the coast towns, but to harass the French troops which endeavoured to
-enter Spain by the coast road. Cochrane was at his best in work of this
-kind. For months he was engaged in incessant boat attacks on the French
-transports, which endeavoured to reach Barcelona (then and throughout
-the war in their possession), by hugging the shore. With this service
-were mingled landing expeditions to blow up French telegraph stations or
-batteries, or to help the Spaniards to defend forts which commanded the
-road, and which the French for that very reason were particularly anxious
-to capture. It was Cochrane’s belief to the end of his life that if he
-had been supplied with a flotilla of light vessels and a regiment of
-troops, he would have made it impossible for the French to enter Spain by
-the Eastern Pyrenees at all. How far he was justified in this opinion, he
-never was able to show. Indeed, when he was offered just such a command
-on condition that he would abstain from attacking Admiral Gambier in the
-House of Commons, he refused it. Even as it was, however, he did much.
-His untiring vigilance made it impossible for the French to use the sea
-for the transport of men or provisions, and difficult for them to use the
-coast route which at many places was liable to be swept by the cannon of
-the English frigate. They were driven to use the inland route through
-a poor and rugged country swarming with guerrilleros. It is known that
-all this part of the war proved enormously costly to the French, and
-much of the credit due for imposing the loss upon them must go to the
-_Impérieuse_. Marryat had his share of it all, and in “Frank Mildmay” he
-has given a carefully finished sketch of one of the sharpest pieces of
-service in it--the defence of Rosas, where he himself received a bayonet
-wound.
-
-The desire to be back in his place in Parliament, in order that he
-might expose the malpractices of the Maltese Admiralty Court (this
-is the motive assigned by himself, and was doubtless that of which he
-was most conscious), induced Cochrane to apply for leave to bring the
-_Impérieuse_ home to England. It was granted with a facility which throws
-some doubt on his theory that the Admiralty feared his presence; and
-early in March, 1809, he dropped anchor in Plymouth Sound. Unhappily for
-himself, Cochrane was selected for a special piece of service before
-he could resume his Parliamentary work. In February of this year a
-French squadron had slipped out of Brest, with orders to drive off the
-British seventy-fours which were then watching L’Orient, to pick up
-three more ships at anchor there under Commodore Troude, and then to
-proceed to the West Indies to relieve Martinique. Admiral Willaumez,
-the French commander, did not escape the vigilance of the Channel
-squadron. His fleet was sighted at sea, followed till it entered the
-Pertuis d’Antioche, between the islands of Ré and Oléron, and very soon
-a blockading force collected under Admiral Gambier. The outcries of
-the London and Liverpool merchants roused the Admiralty to make great
-exertions for the destruction of an armament which was designed to
-operate in the West Indies, and would, by its mere presence in those
-waters, have greatly disturbed English trade. In an evil hour for
-Cochrane, my Lords remembered that he was well acquainted with this
-part of the French coast, and they resolved to send him to execute an
-attack on the enemy’s ships. Very reluctantly, for he knew how ill
-he was likely to be received by officers whom he would practically
-supersede, he undertook the work. He prepared a flotilla of explosion
-vessels and fire-ships. In April the _Impérieuse_ had joined Gambier’s
-squadron. A detailed account of the action which followed would be out
-of place here. Its rather melancholy history is to be read in Cochrane’s
-“Autobiography,” and the Minutes of the court martial on Lord Gambier.
-The squadron was in an indifferent moral condition, divided by sour
-professional factions, and impatient of its Admiral, a brave but weak
-officer, chiefly known as what was called in the navy a “blue light,”
-that is a pious man of a somewhat Methodistical turn. Very little zeal
-was shown in supporting Cochrane. The attack was made on the night of
-April 11th, and whatever the _Impérieuse_ could do was magnificently
-done. The French fleet of eight line-of-battle ships, and some smaller
-vessels, had withdrawn to the Basque Roads, at the mouth of the Charente,
-and had fortified itself with a heavy boom. Towards that boom the English
-explosion and fire-ships were driven by wind and tide after dark on the
-11th. It is doubtful whether more than one of them reached it--but that
-one was commanded by Cochrane himself. She was brought up to the boom
-at half a cable’s length off the French frigate _Indienne_, and there
-exploded, scattering the boom all over the mouth of the Charente. Through
-the opening thus made a few English vessels passed. They were a mere
-handful, and might have been sunk by the fire of the French, but our
-enemies were panic stricken. They cut their cables, and ran ashore. When
-day broke the French ships were fast aground, and might every one have
-been destroyed; but Lord Gambier was an officer of the stamp peculiarly
-hateful to Nelson. He was prompt to conclude that enough had been done,
-and was loth to risk ships and men in what he thought an unnecessary
-way. In vain did Cochrane, who had now returned to the _Impérieuse_,
-hoist signal after signal urging the Admiral to attack. He told him
-that the enemy were ashore, and could be destroyed; that they would get
-off if they were not stopped; that they were actually preparing to get
-off. It skilled not, and Gambier remained stolidly at anchor miles off.
-At last Cochrane, who by this time was nearly rabid with rage, work,
-and want of sleep, flew into a Berserker fury. He deliberately drifted
-the _Impérieuse_ stern first under the guns of the French liners, and
-then signalled that he was overpowered and in need of assistance. This
-desperate measure, worthy of Nelson in his most splendid moments, did
-at last force Admiral Gambier’s hand. Some vessels were sent--when it
-was well-nigh too late to do any service at all--and distinctly too late
-to do all that ought to have been done. Three of the French liners were
-destroyed, but the others by throwing their guns overboard and starting
-their water, were able to grovel over the mud-bar of the Charente, and
-escape into a pool out of reach up the river. They never appeared in
-the West Indies certainly, but the work was half done. Cochrane went
-back to England--with all that was best and worst in him fermenting with
-fury--to make his unhappy motion of opposition in the House to the vote
-of thanks to Admiral Gambier. From thence came his final quarrel with the
-Admiralty, and the court martial on Lord Gambier, in which it is only
-too probable that English officers and officials of rank winked at the
-suppression of evidence, and something not unlike forgery. Cochrane’s
-service in our navy was over for long years.
-
-With this scene of mingled heroism and stupidity, the more brilliant part
-of Marryat’s naval life came to an end. He was engaged in the Basque
-Roads on one of the fire-ships, and when they proved of little use, was
-probably recalled to the _Impérieuse_. It is to be hoped at least that
-he was on her deck when her captain, in an exaltation of fury, drifted
-her among the French liners. In point of time, however, his service was
-merely beginning, and he was to do good work yet, both as a subordinate
-and as commander; but it wanted the heroic touch of the first three
-years. When Cochrane was superseded from the _Impérieuse_, Marryat
-remained with the new captain, and under him took part in the wholly
-wretched Walcheren business, out of which he got--in common with some
-thousands of others--all that it had to give--a distinct idea of how a
-combined expedition ought _not_ to be conducted,--and an attack of marsh
-fever.
-
-From this time until the close of the Great War, he was on such active
-service as the overpowering supremacy we had attained at sea left to
-be performed. From the Scheldt he returned invalided on board the
-_Victorious_, 74. As soon as he was fit for service, he was appointed
-to the _Centaur_, 74, the flag-ship of Sir Samuel Hood, with whom he
-went back to the Mediterranean, but not to the stirring life of his
-old frigate. After a year of the seventy-four he returned home, and
-was appointed to the _Æolus_ frigate on the American station. He went
-out as a passenger on the _Atlas_, 64, and joined his ship at Halifax.
-In the _Æolus_, and then in another frigate, the _Spartan_, he became
-familiar with the West Indies, which are, with the Mediterranean, the
-scenes of so large a part of his stories. In 1812 he had served his time
-as midshipman, and returned home to pass. His influence was good, as
-the fact that he served so much in frigates proves, and he received his
-lieutenant’s commission immediately after going through his examination
-(December 26, 1812). Six months later he was appointed to _L’Espiègle_
-sloop, and cruised in her on the north coast of South America, till
-he was invalided by the breaking of a blood-vessel, and sent home as
-a passenger on board his old frigate, the _Spartan_, which had now
-finished her commission. This accident, due in part to a constitutional
-infirmity, which ultimately proved fatal to him, occurred at Barbadoes,
-at a dance--perhaps a dignity ball. In 1814 he was back on the coast of
-America in the _Newcastle_, 58, and was again invalided home, this time
-from Madeira. In June, 1815, just as the Great War was closing, Marryat
-was promoted commander, and the first period of his life came to an end.
-
-The years from 1809 to 1815 may be rapidly passed over, for though
-they added to his experience, they were colourless as compared with
-the cruises of the _Impérieuse_. He saw some service in them, but it
-was either tame, or a mere repetition of what he had seen before. The
-so-called “war of 1812” was in progress during part of his service in the
-_Spartan_ and all his service in the _Newcastle_, but he saw little of
-it. Some boat work--and sharp work too--he went through in Boston Bay,
-but he saw nothing of those unlucky frigate actions with the Americans,
-which gave us such a disagreeable shock, and it was not his good fortune
-to be one of the crew of the famous _Shannon_. The capture of a small
-privateer or two, by so powerful a vessel as the _Newcastle_, was no
-important experience to a man who had seen the boarding of the _King
-George_, the defence of the Trinidad fort at Rosas, and the affair in the
-Basque Roads. An acquaintance he made with an American prisoner of war
-while on board the _Newcastle_ was useful to him afterwards, but at the
-time he probably thought little about it.
-
-His captains in these years doubtless served him as models when he began
-his work as a novelist, but they were none of them men of the commanding
-kind. The best remembered of them was Captain E. P. Brenton of the
-_Spartan_, brother of the famous Sir Jahleel who fought a brilliant
-frigate action off Naples, under the very eyes of Murat. Captain Brenton
-had himself done good work, but his chief reputation was made in later
-days, as the author of a life of St. Vincent, and a history of the
-Great War, which is itself mainly remembered as the object of incessant
-corrections, often pettifogging, commonly superfluous, and always
-intensely wearisome, in James’s “Naval History.”
-
-Even in the most peaceful times, opportunities of facing danger come in
-every seaman’s way. He may have his chance to save life, and he must
-help to fight the storm. In both of these ways Marryat distinguished
-himself. Few men have more frequently risked their own lives to save
-others. As a midshipman in the _Impérieuse_ he went overboard to save a
-fellow midshipman. He saved the life of a seaman while serving on the
-_Æolus_, and narrowly escaped drowning on a similar occasion when serving
-in _L’Espiègle_. On this occasion he was a mile and a half off before the
-sloop could be brought to, and when a boat picked him up he was nearly
-senseless. This also was a part of experience to Marryat, for it was
-while overboard from _L’Espiègle_ that he discovered that drowning is not
-an unpleasant death. It is recorded in his Life by his daughter that,
-first and last, “during the time he served in the navy, he was presented
-with twenty-seven certificates, recommendations, and votes of thanks,
-for saving the lives of others at the risk of his own, beside receiving
-a gold medal from the Humane Society.” This mark of distinction given in
-1818 was assuredly well deserved.
-
-Not less pleasing to Marryat than the memory of his efforts to save
-others, must have been his recollection of the honour he gained in
-volunteering during a gale to cut away the main-yard of the _Æolus_.
-The story appears, more or less coloured and adapted, with so many
-other of his reminiscences in “Frank Mildmay.” In the sober pages of
-Marshall, it is, however, a quite sufficiently gallant story. “On the
-30th of September, 1811, in lat. 40° 50’ N., long. 65° W. (off the coast
-of New England), a gale of wind commenced at S.E., and soon blew with
-tremendous fury; the _Æolus_ was laid on her beam ends, her top-masts
-and mizen-masts were literally blown away, and she continued in this
-extremely perilous situation for at least half an hour. Directions were
-given to cut away the main-yard, in order to save the main-mast and
-right the ship, but so great was the danger attending such an operation
-considered, that not a man could be induced to attempt it until Mr.
-Marryat led the way. His courageous conduct in this emergency excited
-general admiration, and was highly approved by Lord James Townshend, one
-of whose ship’s company he also saved by jumping overboard at sea.”
-
-Up then to the age of three-and-twenty Marryat had prepared himself
-to write sea stories by making his life a sea story. He had, in fact,
-fulfiled the counsel of perfection given to the epic poet. He had seen
-no great battle; the last of them had been fought before he entered the
-service; he had not even shared in a single ship action. But what he did
-not witness himself he saw through the eyes of messmates. The battles,
-to judge from the little said of them in his stories, do not appear
-to have greatly interested Marryat--perhaps he found a difficulty in
-realizing what one would be like, perhaps he found them unmanageable.
-With the single ship actions he had no such difficulty. He could tell
-precisely what must happen, and he had no doubt heard tales of many such
-pieces of fighting. Indeed, in the actual sea-life of the time, the great
-battles did not play a much more considerable part than they do in the
-novels. Of the 2,437 lieutenants on the navy list when Marryat entered
-the service, the very great majority had never seen a general engagement.
-It was thought a rather exceptional thing that Collingwood should have
-been present in three battles. Nelson himself only took part in four,
-or five, if Admiral Hotham’s feeble action in the Gulf of Lyons is to be
-allowed the name. But most officers had seen service of some kind, and
-had tales to tell. Marryat, too, had been fortunate in an eminent degree.
-He had been wounded, but not severely--he had never been taken prisoner
-or shipwrecked. His service had been varied. Between 1806 and 1815 he had
-seen the North Sea, the Channel, the Mediterranean, and the Eastern Coast
-of America, from Nova Scotia to Surinam. His promotion had been rapid.
-Altogether he had had much to develop, and nothing to sour him, in this
-first period of his life.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-
-When the great war came at last to an end in 1815, leaving Marryat a
-commander at the age of three-and-twenty, his ambition was still to be
-the successful naval officer, and not the portrait painter of the sea
-life. Twelve years were to pass before he ceased to be employed. During
-this period he held three commands, and once more saw the face of war.
-It was a small and poor war after the heroic conflicts of his boyhood,
-but still it had its own difficulties and trials. He began to use his pen
-in these years, but at first it was for merely professional purposes.
-His code of signals must have been prepared, and his pamphlet on the
-best method of recruiting the navy, and his scheme for stopping Channel
-smuggling, were certainly written, in this second period, while he was
-still looking forward to the chance of hoisting his flag.
-
-Marryat was one of the great swarm of Englishmen who profited by the
-peace to visit the Continent, which had been as nearly as might be
-shut to the peaceful traveller for twenty-two years. He is credited
-with having “occupied himself in acquiring a perfect knowledge of such
-branches of science as might prove useful should the Lords of the
-Admiralty think fit to employ him in a voyage of discovery or survey.”
-Doubtless Marryat loved his profession, and worked at it, but when he was
-recalled from Italy, in 1818, on some vague scheme of African exploration
-he was probably engaged in amusing himself. The scheme came to nothing,
-and in January, 1819, he married--a most convincing proof that his
-intention of exploring Africa had not lasted long. Mrs. Marryat was a
-Miss Shairp, daughter of a Scotch gentleman who had been Consul-General
-in Russia. Marryat never agreed with St. Vincent that married men are
-ruined for the service, and some eighteen months later he was at sea
-again in command of the _Beaver_ sloop.
-
-In this commission he saw the end of the man who had kept Europe in
-turmoil for the major part of a generation. The _Beaver_ was ordered on
-an all-round cruise in the South Atlantic to show the flag at Madeira
-and the Azores, at the solitary rock of Tristan d’Acunha, at our own
-possessions at the Cape, and finally to do guard duty at St. Helena. When
-the _Beaver_ arrived at her station Napoleon was just reaching the end
-of his final years of imprisonment. We still maintained a naval guard
-against the enterprises of any Buonapartist adventurer who might try to
-take the Emperor off the rock where he sat, consumed with unavailing
-regrets, and disgracing his fall by undignified squabbles with Sir
-Hudson Lowe. An English man-of-war was always kept cruising to windward
-of the island. The last officer who performed this duty was Captain
-Marryat. The _Beaver_ was watching for the possible liberator, who never
-came, when Napoleon died. Marryat, who was a clever draughtsman, took
-a sketch of the Emperor on his death-bed. He was already apparently
-suffering from dysentery or he fell ill immediately (and somewhat
-conveniently) afterwards. As his health did not permit him to remain in
-the South Atlantic station any longer, he was allowed to exchange into
-the _Rosario_. In her he brought the despatches announcing the Emperor’s
-death home to Spithead. From Spithead he was ordered round to Harwich
-to form part of the squadron which escorted the body of Queen Caroline
-to Cuxhaven. This piece of ceremonial duty was followed by work of a
-very different kind. The _Rosario_ was told off for revenue duty in the
-Channel, and continued cruising for smugglers till she was put out of
-commission in February, 1822. This was service of a very sufficiently
-serious kind. There was indeed no fighting to be done, but the cruising
-was arduous and incessant. The smugglers were among the smartest seamen
-in the Channel, and to catch them required on the part of the revenue
-officers constant vigilance, great activity, and an intimate knowledge
-of the coast--that is to say, if the work was to be properly done. As a
-matter of fact it seems to have been scamped. Marryat, who had perhaps
-been infected by Cochrane with an inability to let a comfortable old
-abuse alone, forwarded to the Admiralty a long despatch showing that the
-preventive service was inefficiently performed, and pointing out how
-it could be improved. The despatch was written after the _Rosario_ had
-been paid off, and was founded on his own experience. It gives a curious
-glimpse into a phase of sea life which has entirely disappeared since the
-establishment of free trade ruined the smugglers by making it not worth
-any man’s while to smuggle. The industry which went on all round the
-coast, from the mouth of the Clyde to the mouth of the Firth of Forth,
-was conducted on varying principles in different districts. Marryat dealt
-only with what he had seen himself:--the smuggling carried on in that
-part of the English Channel which lies between Portsmouth and the Start.
-
-When he came to write as a novelist, Marryat displayed a certain sympathy
-with the adventurous scamps who ran cargoes of brandy from Cherbourg
-to the coast of Hampshire and Dorsetshire. But Captain Marryat the
-revenue officer was a very different person. In this severe and official
-capacity he did his best to suppress what he afterwards described with
-a distinctly humorous sympathy. The smugglers, he pointed out, profited
-by the system adopted by the English revenue boats. Cherbourg was the
-centre of the trade--the free trade, as the smugglers called it, not
-knowing, poor fellows, who their real enemy was. Their vessels were
-almost exclusively manned by Portland or Weymouth men. When they were
-going to run a cargo to a point of the coast with which they were not
-familiar, they would take on a local hand, but as a rule they kept the
-trade pretty exclusively to themselves. When one of their luggers was
-sighted by the revenue boats and could not show a clean pair of heels,
-the cargo was jettisoned. If this happened in mid-channel it was a clear
-loss to everybody. The smuggler crews were only paid when they landed a
-cargo. The revenue boats could get no prize money unless they seized the
-tubs of spirits. If, however, the cargo was jettisoned in shallow water,
-the case was different. The smugglers might return, or their confederates
-on shore could fish up the sunken kegs, and then of course they earned
-their money. On the other hand, if the landing was stopped, or the kegs
-were dredged up by the revenue officers _they_ earned their prize money.
-It is therefore perfectly obvious that it was the interest of the revenue
-officers not to see the smuggling luggers in mid-channel. The more brandy
-they picked up, the more prize money they earned, and the more credit
-also. But by allowing the smugglers to approach the English coast they
-gave them many opportunities of running cargoes. Partly because they
-wished to secure the approval of their chiefs, who took no account of
-any service which did not include the capture of kegs--partly also out
-of a natural human desire for prize money, the revenue boats nursed the
-illicit trade. They went very little to sea, and confined their exertions
-to scouring the coasts in cutters and gigs. Marryat’s idea was that much
-more effect would be produced by pursuing the luggers in mid-channel. If,
-he argued with great force, the smugglers found that they were compelled
-to make a dead loss, voyage after voyage, they would soon become tired.
-As it was, the immense profits earned on any cargo successfully run,
-paid them for the loss of two, or even three. Of course if his system
-were adopted there would be no captures to show for the credit of the
-coastguard, and no prize money to be earned. But the smuggling would
-be put a stop to. The despatch in which he set forth his opinions is a
-thoroughly able and business-like document, and shows that if Marryat
-was allowed to fall out of the service it was not because he was wanting
-in zeal or ability.
-
-Although Marryat, like every other naval officer who ever held His
-Majesty’s commission, thought himself “no favourite” with the Admiralty,
-he had no intelligible reason to complain--at least as yet. The
-grumblings of naval officers are generally, indeed, unintelligible to
-the landsman, who is apt, after hearing much of them, to arrive at the
-conclusion that if every gentleman in the service were promoted to be
-Lord High Admiral and made G.C.B. to morrow morning, they would all be as
-discontented as ever by midday. Certainly Marryat, who was a commander at
-twenty-three, and had received a command, on service which brought him
-into notice, in time of profound peace and reduction of armaments, when
-the great majority of his fellow officers were vegetating on half pay on
-shore, had little cause to growl. He must, in truth, have had very good
-influence at the Admiralty, for though he was only paid off the _Rosario_
-in February, 1822, he was re-appointed to the _Larne_, of twenty guns,
-in March, 1823, so that he had barely a year on shore. The _Larne_ was
-fitted out at Portsmouth for service in the East Indies. In July Marryat
-sailed from Spithead for his station, this time taking out his wife and
-family. An entry in his log briefly records an accident which might, if
-the amplified form of the story given in his biography is to be taken
-as literally true, have ended his career in a somewhat absurd manner.
-His gig upset in Falmouth Harbour while he was in it. To an athletic man
-and good swimmer a ducking in the month of July was no great disaster,
-but the boat carried a bumboat woman and a midshipman. The woman swam
-like a fish, and was delighted at the prospect of distinction and profit
-apparently thrown in her way. She fastened on Marryat, intent on saving
-a captain, and refused peremptorily to let him go when she was asked to
-transfer her help from the superior officer, who did not need it, to the
-obscure midshipman, who, not being able to swim, was in imminent danger
-of drowning. In some way or another Marryat did contrive to get rid
-of the incumbrance of her assistance, and the mid was not sacrificed.
-Whether he did not invent the bumboat woman’s devotion to rank, is
-perhaps doubtful. A bumboat woman was capable of acting in this way, no
-doubt, but then Marryat was equally capable of seeing that she ought to
-behave in this way, and of crediting her with fulfilling her duty.
-
-When the _Larne_ reached India, Marryat found that she was to form part
-of the combined force ordered to invade Burmah. This war, which filled
-1824 and 1825, was of a kind common with us before we learnt that in
-war, as in building, it is more economical to employ a hundred men for
-one day, than one man for a hundred days--before also the common use
-of steam had made great rapidity of movement possible. Sir Archibald
-Campbell’s force was not numerous enough, and was unable to move quick.
-The operations dragged on for months, till fevers, cholera, and scurvy,
-had almost annihilated our army, and had almost unmanned the squadron.
-The duties of the navy, in the war, were to clear the Irrawaddy of
-Burmese war-boats, to transport the troops, protect their landing, cover
-their flank, and now and then to help storm a stockade, or beat down the
-fire of native batteries mounted with guns which would not fire, handled
-by gunners who could not shoot. The enemy fought fiercely, according to
-his lights, but then he had neither good weapons, nor discipline, nor
-experience. Except when attacked in a particularly strong position, by an
-insufficient force, the poor Burmese were sent into action as cattle to
-the slaughter. We naturally make the most of these wars, and politically
-they are often of the utmost importance, but as far as fighting is
-concerned, a wilderness of them is not equal to the action between the
-_Shannon_ and the _Chesapeake_ or the _Blanche_ and the _Pique_. Yet
-Marryat was well entitled to say, as he did in a letter to his brother
-Samuel, that the crew of the _Larne_ had in the course of five months
-“undergone a severity of service almost unequalled.” The climate was
-deadly to unseasoned men exposed to it in an unhealthy season. Much toil
-had to be gone through in moving the troops, in rowing guard against the
-Burmese war-boats, and even in doing engineer work. It is a complaint
-sometimes made by the navy that, in combined operations with the army,
-a disproportionate amount of the toil falls to them, while the redcoats
-get all the fun and the glory of the fighting. In this war the navy had
-plenty of work, and suffered proportionately from the strain. It also
-complained, in later days, that its exertions were hardly sufficiently
-recognized by military historians. Yet their comparatively subordinate
-position was a necessity of the case. The war was a land, and not a naval
-war, and the sailors could hardly expect to be more than accessories in
-it.
-
-Marryat’s share, both of the work and the credit, was as large as that
-of any naval officer engaged. From the beginning of the campaign, in
-May, 1824, he was employed until September; at first as subordinate,
-and then, when Commodore Grant was invalided, as senior naval officer
-at Rangoon. The five months almost destroyed the crew of the _Larne_,
-and greatly damaged his own health. His men had been on salt provisions
-since February, and when fatigue and exposure were added to unwholesome
-diet, they naturally suffered grievously from scurvy. After a rest at
-Pulo Penang, he was back at Rangoon in December, and then, after being
-despatched on service to India, he was recalled to Burmah to take part
-in an attack on Bassein. There were more river work, more attacks on
-stockades, more exposure to fever. In July, 1824, on the death of
-Commodore Grant, he was transferred into the _Tees_, 26, a post-ship,
-which--as it was a death vacancy--should have given him post rank. The
-nomination was not, however, confirmed by the Admiralty, and Marryat
-was not actually posted till 1825, a loss of a year, which affected his
-seniority. It was in the _Larne_ that he took part in the occupation of
-Bassein, and the attack on the Burmese stockades at Negrais and Naputah,
-but he brought the _Tees_ home and paid her off early in 1826. The thanks
-of the general and the Indian Government, the Companionship of the Bath,
-and the command of the _Ariadne_, 28, were his rewards for good service
-in Burmah. This command he held for exactly two years, from November,
-1828, to November, 1830, when “private affairs” induced him to resign.
-The _Ariadne_ was his last ship. He was never employed again, nor does
-he ever seem to have applied for a command. When there was a prospect
-of war with the United States some years later, he spoke of going on
-active service again, but he was in ordinary times quite reconciled
-apparently to the termination of his career as a naval officer. The end
-was rather sudden. Up to 1830 he had been in constant employment and very
-successful. He could hardly have hoped for more than to be a post-captain
-and a C.B. at thirty-four. The truth doubtless is that he had begun to
-have other ambitions.
-
-As is not uncommonly the case, the end of the old life overlapped the
-beginning of the new. Indeed, the old cannot have consciously come to an
-end with Marryat for some years. The evidence as to his wishes and hopes
-is scanty--extraordinarily scanty considering his prominence and that he
-lived almost into this generation; but what has been made known about
-him shows that he did not cease to think and work for “the service,”
-or quite gave up for a long time expecting that he might again hold a
-command. As an active naval officer, however, his career ended when he
-resigned the command of the _Ariadne_. Before that date he had written
-and published “Frank Mildmay,” and had written the “King’s Own.” What
-the private affairs may have been which induced him to resign his ship
-does not appear very clearly. Mrs. Ross Church supposes that he wished
-to devote himself to his duties as equerry to the Duke of Sussex, which
-hardly appears a sufficient explanation. Perhaps, like many other
-sailors, he may have had a period of revolt against the routine work,
-and long absence from friends and family imposed by naval life, and for
-which there is little compensation in peace time. With a growing family
-to look after he had a strong attraction to the shore. Then service
-in peace time cannot have had many temptations to a man who enjoyed
-excitement as Marryat did. To be sent on “diplomatic duties,” which in
-practice would mean visits, in the company of His Majesty’s Consuls,
-to foreign governors, or to be ordered off in winter to look for reefs
-in the Atlantic, which never existed except in the bemused brains of
-some merchant skipper, must have been very trying. An experience or
-two of this kind, coinciding with the success of his first book and
-the equerryship, would be enough to decide him to try his fortune on
-shore--all the more as he had private means. Whatever the exact motives
-may have been, in 1830 he was on shore for good, and established in
-Sussex House, Hammersmith.
-
-His equerryship seems to have led him to no particular good. “The smiles
-of princes,” says Mrs. Church, “are by nature evanescent.” The favour
-of princes at least, like that of other men, requires to be cultivated
-with due skill and attention. Possibly Marryat may have been wanting in
-the will or the capacity to practise the art. Certain it is that neither
-from the Duke of Sussex, nor from the duke’s royal brother, William IV.,
-did he ever obtain any visible good beyond invitations to festivities
-which appear to have been of a somewhat dreary character. According to a
-story given in the preface to Bone’s edition of the “Pirate and Three
-Cutters,” and quoted on that authority by Mrs. Ross Church, the King,
-who all through his life seems to have been moved to do something silly
-whenever he remembered that he was a naval officer, was offended by
-Marryat’s condemnation of the press-gang. He not only refused to consent
-to the conferring of some mark of distinction on Marryat in addition to
-the C.B. given for the Burmah campaign, but would not even allow him to
-wear the Legion of Honour sent him by Louis Philippe as a reward for the
-code of signals. The story is credible enough of William IV., who, saving
-the reverence of the Crown, was very little better than a fool, and a
-spiteful fool, too, at times. The Admiralty of its own motion, or the
-Admiralty and the King together, seem to have decided that Marryat need
-not be employed again. In the enjoyment of literary success and liberty,
-he probably reconciled himself to the want of employment readily enough.
-He must have been prepared to do without it when he threw up his command.
-The Admiralty does not love captains who resign their ships.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-
-From 1830 to his death in 1848 Marryat was a working man of letters,
-and a busy one. His books were many, and they do not represent all
-his labours. There was a life of his old messmate, Lord Napier,
-begun--and stopped--at the request of the widow, and much miscellaneous
-journalism--if that is the correct description of contributions to
-magazines. His pen was rapid, and he had no fear of tackling new
-subjects, so that the length of the shelf which would hold his complete
-works would be considerable, and the variety of the contents of the
-edition not small. Sea stories and land stories, plays which never
-reached the stage, diaries on the Continent and in America, letters of
-Norfolk farmers, and didactic tales for children all went in.
-
-There is a difficulty in the way of the telling of Marryat’s own life
-during these busy eighteen years--the not uncommon difficulty, want
-of information. The biography published by his family leaves much
-unexplained, for reasons into which it would be useless, even if one
-had the right, to inquire. The causes of Marryat’s sudden changes of
-residence, and of his hasty journey to the Continent in 1835, are only
-to be guessed at. He did not live much in the literary world of his
-time. Of the eighteen years of his writing activity, several in the
-middle were spent on the Continent, and several at the end in Norfolk.
-In a general way one gathers that the question of money was a very
-important, sometimes a very pressing one, with Marryat. Money earned,
-inherited, spent--money to be recovered from debtors, and, doubtless,
-paid to creditors, had much of his attention. It is manifest that he
-was what Carlyle would have called “a very expensive Herr.” He liked to
-lead a large life, and to show a gentlemanly indifference to money. By
-preference he lived in good houses, in good neighbourhoods, and it is not
-overrash or uncharitable to guess that his income was not always adequate
-to his expenses. Finally, he was addicted to some of the most effectual
-of all methods of evacuation. If he did not promote, or have to face,
-a petition, at least he went through a contested election; and he had
-Balzac’s mania for ingenious speculations, which ought to have realized
-wealth beyond the dreams of avarice, and did achieve a dead loss with the
-most unfailing regularity. Like many another sailor before and since, he
-was sure that he could show the trained farmer how to extract more than
-he had yet done from the land. He undertook to do so on his small estate
-at Langham, in Norfolk--with disastrous financial results. That farming
-speculation was undoubtedly the type of much in his life.
-
-His movements, if not the causes of them, can be followed easily enough.
-Between 1830 and his departure for America in 1837, he was successively
-at Sussex House, Hammersmith; at Langham, in Norfolk; then back in
-London; then in Brighton; then in sudden haste off to Brussels; and from
-thence to Lausanne. “Frank Mildmay; or, The Naval Officer,” appeared
-in 1829. Nine months later, when he was fixed on shore, came out the
-“King’s Own.” In 1830 he acquired a thousand acres of land in Norfolk,
-which remained in his possession till his death. He exchanged Sussex
-House for it, but how Sussex House was got we are not told. It cannot
-have been bought either out of prize money, or the proceeds of the two
-books he had published already, although his prices were remarkably good
-for a beginner. Four hundred pounds is the sum said to have been given
-by Colburn for “Frank Mildmay”--a good deal more than the most sanguine
-of novices would expect to receive from the most generous of publishers
-for a first book in these days. Certainly, in 1830, Marryat was working
-as a man works who has reasons for making all the money he can. He was
-contributing to the _Metropolitan Magazine_, and receiving his sixteen
-pounds a sheet--which, again, is good magazine pay. It did not take him
-long to acquire a shrewd idea how to deal with publishers, and a distinct
-understanding of the due privileges of an editor. His knowledge of these
-important matters is shown conclusively in a letter to Bentley, setting
-forth the terms on which he would be prepared to edit a new nautical
-magazine, a proposed imitation of, or rather rival to, the _United
-Service Journal_.
-
-“My terms,” he says, with the confidence of a man who knew the market,
-and his own value in it, “would be as follows: The sole control of
-the work, for when I do my best I must be despotic or I shall not
-succeed; to be paid for all my writings at the price I received in the
-_Metropolitan_, sixteen guineas per sheet. The editorship I would then
-take at £400 per annum until the end of the first year, when, if the
-work succeeded, I should expect an addition of £100, and if it continued
-profitable, another £100, so as to raise the _final_ pay of the editor
-to £600 per annum. The stipulations may be talked over afterwards. To
-choose my sub-editor is indispensable. He must be a nautical man.”
-Marryat had learnt plainly how necessary it is to be captain of your own
-ship--and withal he quite understood how to launch the new kind of craft
-he was about to sail. “The first number must be most carefully got up, to
-insure success, and the papers ought now to be in preparation. You must,
-therefore, take but few days to decide, as I tell you honestly I have
-reason to expect the offer from another quarter, who are now talking the
-matter over, and I must be allowed to consider myself as unpledged to you
-after a short time.”
-
-As it is not recorded that Marryat had, like Arthur Pendennis, any George
-Warrington to guide his literary beginnings, he deserves all the more
-credit for his spontaneous appreciation of the advantage to be obtained
-by playing Bacon off against Bungay.
-
-“The offer from another quarter,” which was thus quoted to hasten the
-decision of Mr. Bentley, was the editorship of the _Metropolitan_,
-which he took in 1832, and held until he left England for Brussels. He
-either received as part payment, or purchased a proprietary right in the
-magazine, which he afterwards sold to Saunders and Otley for £1,050.
-For the next four or five years the _Metropolitan_ had the major part of
-Marryat’s time and work. He had, according to his wish, a nautical sub
-editor, the E. Howard, who wrote that strange book, “Rattlin the Reefer,”
-which still continues to be catalogued with Marryat’s own stories. There
-were contributors to be hunted up--kept up to the mark, more or less
-successfully--and occasionally soothed down--Thomas Moore for one, who
-wrote in agony to insist on the necessity there was that he should see
-his proofs, and also to make monetary arrangements. Of course there were
-quarrels to be fought out, for in those days no periodical was able to
-exist without its regular battle. But in the midst of these forgetable
-and forgotten things--Marryat contributed to the _Metropolitan_ five
-of the best of his books. “Newton Forster” appeared in 1832, “Peter
-Simple” in 1833; and in 1834 no less than three--“Jacob Faithful,” “Mr.
-Midshipman Easy,” and “Japhet in Search of a Father.” Not a little of
-what, to apply nautical language, may be called dunnage appeared with and
-after these--a comedy, a tragedy (of neither of which does Marryat seem
-to have thought highly), and a host of miscellaneous papers collected
-under the title of “Olla Podrida”--these last being only what Marryat
-frankly called his “Diary on the Continent”--namely, “very good magazine
-stuff.”
-
-His extraordinary industry in 1834 can be confidently accounted for by
-the need of money. In 1833 he had taken effectual means to lighten his
-purse by standing for Parliament. The constituency chosen for the venture
-was the Tower Hamlets, and Marryat stood as a Reformer. Although the
-year immediately following the passing of the Reform Bill was as good a
-one as he could well have found in which to try in that character, he was
-not successful. His reforming zeal was possibly too purely naval for the
-constituency, and he was wanting in the very necessary readiness to say
-ditto to a popular fad. Marryat seems to have considered that his dislike
-of the press-gang was claim enough to the character of Liberal Reformer.
-But in the midst of profound peace the press-gang was not a burning
-grievance, and on some other points he took a line not likely to prove
-pleasing to the sentimental among the Liberals, for whose votes he was
-asking. He could not be got to show a burning interest in the sorrows of
-the slave. He took up the logically strong, but practically ineffective,
-position of the man who declined to be troubled for the slave while
-there was so much suffering unremedied at home. This might be a very
-sensible decision, but unfortunately it was discredited by the fact that
-it had been a favourite one with the slave-holders, whose tenderness
-for sufferers at home was never heard of till their own property in the
-West Indies seemed to be in danger. On another question, which proved a
-trying one to candidates till very recently, Marryat took a disastrously
-sensible course. He was called upon to give his opinion of the practice
-of flogging in the navy--and committed himself to the side of discipline
-most fatally. “Sir,” he said to a heckler, who wanted to know whether the
-“gallant captain” would be capable of flogging him or his sons; “Sir,
-you say the answer I gave you is not direct; I will answer you again.
-If ever you, or one of your sons, should come under my command, and
-deserve punishment, if there be no other effectual mode of conferring it,
-I shall flog you.” After that it is not surprising to hear that “Captain
-Marryat and the Chairman left the room together, amidst a tumult of
-united applause and disapprobation”--in the midst, in fact, of an uproar,
-in which the part of the meeting which admired his pluck was engaged in
-shouting against the other part which detested his good sense. There was
-something of Colonel Newcome in the politics of Captain Marryat, and
-he had not the good fortune to contend against a Barnes Newcome. His
-parliamentary ambition had to take its place with the other schemes of
-his life which came to nothing. A plan for the establishment of brevet
-rank in the navy, which he sent in about this time to Sir James Graham,
-was part of his activity as a political naval officer. It also came to
-nothing, and nobody can well regret that it was still-born.
-
-After the misspent energy of 1833, Marryat had to make up by hard
-pen-work. He settled in Montpelier Villas, Western Road, Brighton, and
-there, in 1834, wrote his three books. The effort was a severe one, and
-he felt the effects later on, when fatigue, and possibly questions of
-money, had induced him to go abroad. He had not yet altogether given up
-thinking of Parliament--or, at least, if he had ceased hoping to sit
-as member, he kept up his correspondence with ministers on those naval
-affairs which he understood. He forwarded observations on the Merchant
-Shipping Bill of that year--one of our portentous list of shipping
-measures--to Sir James Graham. His volunteer help was well received, and
-the First Lord, one of the ablest men who ever was at the head of the
-department, invited him to come to Whitehall and talk the Bill over.
-This invitation may be taken as a proof, among others, that if Marryat
-remained unemployed, it was mainly by his own wish. He had already, by
-his writing on the manning of the navy, and, in less public ways, shown
-that in professional matters, at least, he was an excellent man of
-business. Sir James Graham was not the man to have refused employment to
-an officer of proved ability if he had wished for it, but it is tolerably
-plain that Marryat had other irons of a more attractive kind, for the
-moment, in the fire.
-
-The particular iron which he had heating in Norfolk--the estate at
-Langham--was not likely to relieve him from the necessity of making
-every penny he could by his pen. “No rent,” was his return in 1834,
-and as a rule ever after--till he took it in hand himself, and then it
-still realized him a steady yearly deficit. This year of “no rent” was
-also a year of legal unpleasantness in connection with his father’s
-memory--which he bore in a fashion to be recommended to the imitation
-of all who suffer from similar misfortunes. “As for the Chancellor’s
-judgment,” he wrote to his mother, who had plainly been hurt, “I cannot
-say I thought anything about it; on the contrary, it appears to me that
-he might have been much more severe if he had thought proper. It is easy
-to impute motives, and difficult to disprove them. I thought, considering
-his enmity, that he let us off cheap, as there is no _punishing a
-Chancellor_, and he might say what he pleased with impunity. I did not,
-therefore, _roar_, I only _smiled_. The effect will be nugatory. Not one
-in a thousand will read it; those who do, know it refers to a person not
-in this world, and of those, those who knew my father will not believe
-it; those who did not will care little about it, and forget the name
-in a week. Had he given the decision in our favour, I should have been
-better pleased, but _it’s no use crying; what’s done can’t be helped_.”
-With that piece of the philosophy of the elder Faithful, Marryat ends as
-neat a statement of reasons for not making a fuss, and as admirable an
-estimate of the relative unimportance of any man’s private affairs in a
-busy world, as will be found by much searching.
-
-Next year Marryat was off in haste to the Continent. “Not one day was
-our departure postponed; with post horses and postillions, we posted,
-post haste, to Brussels.” As is too commonly the case, Mrs. Ross Church
-has nothing to say as to the cause of this flight--and we are left to
-conclude that it was due to that desire to economize with dignity which
-has driven so many Englishmen to the same voluntary exile. At Brussels or
-at Spa he went on working for the _Metropolitan_. He cannot have edited
-it, but he sent in his “Diary on the Continent,” and he wrote, in this
-year, “The Pirate” and “The Three Cutters,” in which, for the first time,
-he had the advantage of being illustrated by Clarkson Stanfield. With the
-_Metropolitan_ his connection was coming to an end. In 1836 he returned
-to England, to get rid of his proprietary interest in it to Saunders and
-Otley, and to part with those publishers in a friendly manner--but to
-part decisively, on the ground that they would hear nothing of an advance
-for fresh work. _The New Monthly_ was now his resource--at the increased
-rate of twenty guineas a sheet. To 1836 belong “Snarley Yow” and “The
-Pasha of Many Tales,”--and also the beginning of that “Life of Lord
-Napier” which was never to be finished. In 1837 he had begun to feel the
-need of a change, the desire to break fresh ground, and in April, leaving
-his family at Lausanne, he started for the United States.
-
-His life during these two years of foreign residence may probably be
-fairly well realized by the reader who will give himself the pleasure to
-remember some parts of Thackeray and many parts of Lever. The Marryats
-must have formed part of that English colony on the Continent at the
-head of which marched the Marquess of Steyne, while Captain Rook and
-the Honourable Mr. Deuceace brought up the rear. It was a society much
-more merry than wise, and it is to be feared more easy than honest. Its
-members lived abroad to escape something--perhaps it was only restraint,
-perhaps it was the heavy bills of English tradesmen not yet reclaimed
-from the evil ways of long credit and high prices, sometimes it was the
-sheriff’s-officer. Now and then it was only the English winter. That was
-the most wholesome reason; but it was the least commonly genuine, and the
-most frequently assumed. In all that curious expatriated world there was
-something of the Cave of Adullam. It was often only the more pleasant
-on that account. Acquaintances matured quickly; among people who were
-all more or less fugitives, few questions were asked; even Captain Rook
-and Mr. Deuceace were received without too much inquiry by people who
-neither imitated nor liked all their ways. Now we are less strict at
-home, and by a natural reaction more circumspect abroad. Besides railways
-keep people rolling, and have greatly broken up the old English colonies.
-Still even now there is a continental English society, less Bohemian
-than the old, but still somewhat free and easy, addicted as it were to
-living in its shirt sleeves, very pleasant to see, and to go through, but
-not at all good to be lived in for the moral man. During the thirties
-this Cave of Adullam was in full swing, crowded with refugees--not for
-political causes--with veterans of the old war intent on making pension
-and half-pay go as far as possible, and with pleasure-seeking people
-ready for any amusement (the cheaper the better), and not too exacting as
-to the moral qualities or social position of those with whom they were
-prepared to amuse themselves.
-
-Marryat with his abundant spirits, his faculty for story-telling, and
-his sufficient command of money, would naturally fall on his feet in
-this rather gypsy world. He spoke French fluently, and his wife, as the
-daughter of an English consul in Russia, would be at home in continental
-society. Once more it must be confessed that the details are wanting.
-Mrs. Ross Church says, that “to this hour” (she wrote in 1872) “many
-anecdotes are related of him by the older residents at Brussels.” Sadly
-few of them seem to have been collected, for Mrs. Ross Church can only
-muster two--neither, it must be confessed, very brilliant nor very
-honourable. According to the first, Marryat was asked to dinner to meet
-a company of celebrities and friends of his own, in hopes that he would
-talk. He held his tongue, and when asked whether he had been silent
-because he was bored, answered, “Why did you imagine I was going to let
-out any of my jokes for those fellows to put in their next books? No,
-that is not _my_ plan. When I find myself in such company as _that_, I
-open my ears and hold my tongue, glean all I can, and give them nothing
-in return.” The story needs a good deal of explaining before the point of
-it becomes obvious; and unluckily the circumstances, which could alone
-explain it, are wanting. The fun, if there was any, was supplied (we must
-suppose) by the character of the person it was said to--and who was he?
-The other story contains a repartee--an awful repartee--a thing to be put
-in a collection of witticisms with the comment that “so and so smiled,
-but never forgave the jest.” It is about the bridge of somebody’s nose,
-and is not greatly inferior to the recorded jokes of Douglas Jerrold.
-
-There is little to be gleaned out of such reminiscences as these, which
-hardly reach the dignity of “dead nettles”: neither do we gather much
-from a surviving letter to Mr. Osmond de Beauvoir Priaulx about a debt
-of frs. 1250, owed to Marryat by R----, a hopeless debt. “I consider
-that if I have no better chance of heaven than of R----’s 1250 francs,
-I am in a bad way. Both he and Z---- are evidently a couple of rogues.
-The only chance of obtaining the money from R---- is by telling him that
-I am coming to Paris as soon as I can, and that I shall expose him by
-publishing the whole affair, his letters, &c.; and, moreover that you
-_strongly suspect_ that it is my intention, independent of exposure, to
-_break every bone in his body_ on my arrival. He holds himself as a
-gentleman, being the son of some post-captain, and will not like that
-message, and may perhaps pay the money rather than incur the risk.” Here
-obviously was a very pretty quarrel; but who was R----, and had he a
-case, and who was Mr. Osmond de Beauvoir Priaulx, and did any assault
-follow? Who knows? and indeed who cares? The rest of the letter is full
-of scandal about capital letters and dashes. The sight of it only make
-one remember how much entirely unimportant trash contrives to survive in
-this world.
-
-All the scraps of knowledge about Marryat which have escaped destruction
-are not so unpleasant, though they are nearly as obscure, as that letter
-to Mr. Osmond de Beauvoir Priaulx. It is recorded that he gave parties
-and Christmas trees, that he looked after children well, and was a neat
-hand at packing a portmanteau,--qualities which must have made him the
-most tolerable of husbands and fathers on his travels. He was at all
-times tender-hearted with children, as befitted an author who ended by
-writing almost wholly for them; and would quiet his own by telling them
-stories, when the rattling of carriages and diligences had made them
-fractious. A letter to his mother survives from these years which is
-worth quoting--not because it gives much information about his own life,
-but because it is kindly, and gives a very different picture of Marryat
-to that afforded by the threats against R----, and the vapid scandal
-written to the gentleman with the handsome French name.
-
- “SPA, _June 9, 1835_.
-
- “MY DEAREST MOTHER,--It is dreadfully hot, and we are all
- gasping for breath. Kate is very unwell. She cannot walk now,
- and is obliged to go out in the carriage. Children thrive. As
- for me, I am teaching myself German, and writing a little now
- and then ‘The Diary of a Blasé:’ one part has appeared in the
- _Metropolitan_--very good magazine stuff. I have a fractional part
- of the gout in my middle right finger. Is it possible to make
- V---- a member of the Horticultural? He is very anxious, and he
- deserves it; the personal knowledge is the only difficulty; but I
- know him, and I am part of you, and therefore you know him. Will
- that syllogism do? We are as quiet here as if we were out of the
- world, and I like it. I wanted quiet to recover me. Since I have
- been here I have discovered what I fancy will be new in England--a
- variety of carnation, with short stalks--the stalks are so short
- that the flowers do not rise above the leaves of the plant, and
- you have no idea how pretty they are; they are all in a bush (?
- blush). There are two varieties here, belonging to a man, but he
- will not part with them. He says they are very scarce, and only
- to be had at Vervier, a town eight miles off. They are celebrated
- for flowers at Liége, but a flower-woman from Liége, to whom I
- showed them, said she had never seen them there; so I presume the
- man was correct. Have you heard of them? By-the-by, you should ask
- V---- to send for some Ghent roses--they are extremely beautiful.
- I did give most positive orders that Fred should not go out unless
- with Mr. B---- or one of the masters. He remained three days in
- Paris, having escaped from the gentleman who had charge of him,
- and cannot, or will not, account for where he was, or what he did.
- He did not go to his school until his money was gone. He is at a
- dangerous age now, and must be kept close. Write me or Kate a long
- letter, telling us all the news. I intend to come home in October,
- or thereabouts; but I must arrange according to Kate’s manœuvres.
- If she goes her time of course I must be with her, and then she
- will winter here, I have no doubt, as we cannot travel in winter
- with babies, nor indeed do I wish to; as travelling costs a great
- deal of money--and I have none to spare.
-
- “God bless you, mamma. This is a famous place for your complaint,
- if it comes on again. The cures are miraculous. Love to Ellen. She
- sha’n’t come German over me when we meet. I don’t think I ever
- should have learnt it, only G---- gave himself such airs about it.”
-
-The letter is not a masterpiece, but it is good-natured and wholesome.
-The “Fred,” who had been playing truant so enviably in Paris, was
-afterwards the Lieutenant Frederick Marryat who perished in the wreck of
-the _Avenger_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-
-His departure for America is a convenient date at which to stop and
-survey Marryat’s literary work. After 1837, he did some things as good as
-anything he had done before, and some at once unlike what he had already
-written, and yet excellent of their kind. “Poor Jack” and “Percival
-Keene” have touches of the old sea life, and flashes of fun, not inferior
-to his earlier writing. The “Phantom Ship” has a character of its own;
-the children’s stories of his last years are excellent. All these are
-later than 1837. Still, if he had ceased to write entirely in that year,
-his place in literature would be as high as it is. We should have “The
-King’s Own,” “Peter Simple,” “Mr. Midshipman Easy,” “Japhet,” “Jacob
-Faithful,” and “Snarley Yow,” and with these we should possess the best
-of him. In those eight busy years Marryat had poured out the harvest of
-his experience profusely. His beginning in literature had been singularly
-fortunate. The time was favourable to writers of any originality
-certainly. A brilliant magazine article made a reputation. There was
-a marked readiness to recognize ability and reward it. What amount of
-praise and pudding would be given in these days for another essay on
-Milton it would be useless to guess, but undoubtedly it could hardly
-be greater than the share which fell to Macaulay for his early effort.
-Carlyle made a place for himself by a few articles. The wind which blew
-for them blew for others also. As has almost always been the case in
-great literary periods, the readiness of the reader to recognize and
-admire was as strong as the productive power of the writer. The audience
-met the playwright half way. Sir Walter Scott had prepared the market
-for the novelist. He had enormously increased the taste for novels,
-and whoever could write at all was the surer of a hearing, because
-“Waverley” had made stories a necessity to readers. There is among the
-more atrabilious kind of men of letters a secret belief that the sum of
-popularity is a fixed quantity, of which whatever is earned by one man is
-necessarily lost by another. That one nation’s gain is another’s loss in
-commerce, was an accepted axiom with economists of the days of darkness
-before Adam Smith. It has been given up on maturer consideration, and is
-assuredly no more true in literature than international trade. A great
-writer who gains a great popularity increases the chance of the smaller
-men. Sir Walter and Jane Austen helped the Mrs. Meeke in whom Macaulay
-delighted.
-
-Marryat had profited amply by the opening. With great adaptability he
-had thrown himself into the literary fight of his time. As has been
-already said, he soon showed himself at home in the regular business
-of literature--in writing for the press and in editing. To take the
-satisfactory though vulgar test of money, he was able to make his market,
-and put his price up. Nor was he at all reluctant to insist on the value
-of his goods. “I do not,” he said in 1837, “write for sixteen guineas
-a sheet now. I let them off for twenty guineas, as I do not wish to
-run them hard; and I now have commenced with the _New Monthly_ at that
-rate for one year certain, and the copyright secured to me. Times are
-hard, and I do not wish to break the backs of the publishers, although
-I ride over them roughshod. I have also made very much better terms for
-my books. ‘Snarley Yow,’ comes out on the 1st of June. I have parted
-very amicably with Saunders and Otley, who would not stand an advance.
-I _will_ make hay when the sun shines; for every dog has his day, and
-I presume my time will come as that of others.” Twenty guineas a sheet
-was the exceptional price which Fraser was paying Carlyle in those very
-years, and was five guineas above the usual rate. Obviously here was a
-gentleman who knew that business was business. With this determination
-to make the last penny there was to make, he naturally contributed his
-chapter to the history of the quarrels of authors with their publishers.
-
-“Although Captain Marryat,” says his daughter, “and his publishers
-mutually benefited by their transactions with each other, one would
-have imagined from the letters exchanged between them that they had
-been natural enemies.” It is a mistake which is not uncommon in these
-transactions, and particularly likely to arise when, as in this case, a
-publisher frankly tells the author that he thinks him “eccentric,” and
-an “odd creature,” and adds that he is himself “somewhat warm-tempered.”
-Who the particular publisher was who sent these pieces of criticism and
-self-criticism to Marryat we are not told. The answer he received might
-supply a clue to the Marryatist who was prepared to follow it up with the
-proper devotion.
-
- “There was no occasion for you to make the admission that you
- were somewhat warm-tempered. Your letter establishes the fact.
- Considering your age, you are a little volcano, and if the
- insurance were aware of your frequent visits to the Royal Exchange,
- they would demand double premium for the building. Indeed, I have
- my surmises _now_ as to the last conflagration.
-
- …
-
- “Your remark as to the money I have received may sound very well,
- mentioned as an isolated fact; but how does it sound when it is put
- into juxtaposition with the sums you have received? I, who have
- found everything, receiving a pittance; while you, who have found
- nothing but the shop to sell in, receiving such a lion’s share. I
- assert again, it is slavery. I am Sinbad the Sailor, and you are
- the Old Man of the Mountain (_sic_) clinging on my back, and you
- must not be surprised at my wishing to throw you off the first
- convenient opportunity.
-
- “The fact is, you have the vice of old age very strong upon you,
- and you are blinded by it; but put the question to your sons, and
- ask them if they consider the present agreement fair. Let them
- arrange with me, and do you go and read your Bible. We all have our
- own ideas of Paradise, and if other authors think like me, the more
- pleasurable portion of anticipated bliss is that there will be no
- publishers there. That idea often supports me after an interview
- with one of your fraternity.”
-
-Author and publisher told one another “their fact” plainly enough in this
-case, and one rather wonders what lies hid under the asterisks. In the
-absence of information as to the proportion in which they respectively
-shared the profits of the stories written before 1837, one cannot
-undertake to say whether the unnamed publisher of fiery temper, advanced
-age, and small stature, received a lion’s share or not. If so, it must
-have represented a handsome sum, for Marryat was by no means one of the
-worst treated of authors. Colburn gave him £400 for “Frank Mildmay.” For
-“Mr. Midshipman Easy” he received £1,400, apparently in a lump sum. “The
-Pirate” and “The Three Cutters,” published together, brought him in £750.
-His other books were paid on the same scale, and he certainly did not
-edit the _Metropolitan_ for nothing. His code of signals, which was not
-literature (and perhaps on that account only the more lucrative), was
-an appreciable income to him throughout his life. On the whole, Marryat
-seems to have found the profession of author sufficiently remunerative.
-His indignation with his publishers may be safely taken to be mainly a
-proof that, in common with most writing-men of his generation, he was a
-firm believer in the creed that authors are an ill-used body. This is
-no longer quite so orthodox as it was. The wind is rather blowing the
-other way, and it is becoming the right thing to say that authors have
-themselves to thank for their ill-luck if they do not earn as much as
-they ought, and must bear the burden like their fellow-men if they spend
-more than they earn. This good sense may corrupt into a cant as others
-have done, but it is good sense. Marryat--who would appear to have made
-three thousand pounds or so in 1835, for taking “Mr. Midshipman Easy”
-and the other two stories, with his copyrights and editorship, he can
-hardly have made less--was in any case not an example of an ill-paid
-author. If he had to complain of want of money it must have been because
-he was a gentleman of extravagant habits, with a fatal weakness for
-bad investments. To be sure, if an author were to be paid according
-to the pleasure he has given others, and if “the shop” which makes a
-profit on selling his work had to render some royalty on it for ever
-and ever, then indeed was Marryat, together with all those whose work
-is of the widely-read and lasting order, ill rewarded. But insuperable
-difficulties bar the road to that ideal. Since paper, printing, and
-advertisements must be provided, the provider of these necessary things
-must share; since the novelist cannot hawk his own goods in a barrow, he
-must pay somebody to do it for him; since the world’s copyright laws put
-a limit on the duration of proprietary right in books, there must come
-a time when they are at any man’s disposal to reprint. In the long run
-the balance of profit must needs be in favour of the shop. To be sure,
-the nation of authors may console itself by reflecting that it has its
-revenge. There is much on which the shop makes no gain, first or last.
-
-The first of Marryat’s books is one which, for reasons very neatly stated
-by himself, may stand apart from the others. When he had given it three
-successors, he thought fit to publish a proclamation on the subject of
-his work in the _Metropolitan_, and in that document he described “Frank
-Mildmay” as fairly as any honest critic could do for him.
-
- “‘The Naval Officer’ was our first attempt, and it having been
- our first attempt must be offered in extenuation of its many
- imperfections; it was written hastily, and before it was complete
- we were appointed to a ship. We cared much about our ship and
- little about our book. The first was diligently taken charge of by
- ourselves; the second was left in the hands of others, to get on
- how it could. Like most bantlings put out to nurse, it did not get
- on very well. As we happen to be in the communicative vein, it may
- be as well to remark that being written in the autobiographical
- style, it was asserted by good-natured friends, and believed in
- general, that it was a history of the author’s own life. Now,
- without pretending to have been better than we should have been in
- our earlier days, we do most solemnly assure the public that, had
- we run the career of vice of the hero of ‘The Naval Officer,’ at
- all events, we should have had sufficient sense of shame not to
- have avowed it. Except the hero and the heroine, and those parts
- of the work which supply the slight plot of it as a novel, the
- work in itself is materially true, especially in the narrative of
- sea adventure, most of which did (to the best of our recollection)
- occur to the author.… The ‘confounded licking’ we received for
- our first attempt in the critical notices is probably well known
- to the reader--at all events we have not forgotten it. Now, with
- some, this severe castigation of their first offence would have
- had the effect of their never offending again; but we felt that our
- punishment was rather too severe; it produced indignation instead
- of contrition, and we determined to write again in spite of all the
- critics in the universe: and in the due course of nine months we
- produced ‘The King’s Own.’ In ‘The Naval Officer’ we had sowed all
- our wild oats, we had _paid off_ those who had ill-treated us, and
- we had no further personality to indulge in.”
-
-From which, even if internal evidence were not enough to prove it, we
-learn that, between the paying off of the _Tees_ and the commissioning
-of the _Ariadne_, Marryat decided to have a general jail delivery of his
-old naval enemies, and that the result was “Frank Mildmay; or, The Naval
-Officer.” It cannot be said that the book is better than its origin. If
-Marryat had kept the promise he made in this proclamation of his to the
-readers of the _Metropolitan_--if he had re-written this so-called novel,
-he might, had he taken the right course, have made it one of the best of
-his works. He had only to make it an autobiography without disguise, to
-put in the good as well as the evil of his experience, to take care to
-explain everything to his readers, as he could well have done, and he
-would have given English literature a thing altogether unique--a naval
-memoir. We are not rich in memoirs, at least, not in good ones. The
-English hand is unhappy at that work. A man has only to turn to Ludlow,
-or Sir Philip Warwick, to see how lamentably little Englishmen of parts
-who lived through the most wonderful things could contrive to bring away
-with them--how little at least of the life, the colour, the dramatic
-swing of it all. Of the few we can show, which are not unfit to stand
-with the Frenchmen, Clarendon, Pepys, Colley Cibber, Evelyn (and four
-or five others), none were of the sea. “Cochrane’s Autobiography” maybe
-quoted against me, but even this, good as it is in places, is drowned in
-angry denunciations of human wickedness, and demonstrations that this
-or the other thing ought to have been done by official backsliders, so
-that what Cochrane did himself is almost crowded out. Besides, it is only
-a fragment, and then _reste à savoir s’il n’est pas mort_. It has not
-lived. One may, and must, use it for the history of the man and the time,
-but who reads it for its intrinsic literary merit? The French seamen have
-the better of us there. The memoirs of Forbin, of Duguay-Trouin, and even
-the recently published journal of a much less famous man, Jean Doublet,
-are capital reading. Marryat might, if he had so pleased, have done a
-book which would have been to the memoirs of Forbin what the memoirs of
-Clarendon are to the memoirs of Sully, to adopt the formula dear to Lord
-Macaulay. He might have done what Sir Walter Scott praised Basil Hall for
-attempting--have given in autobiographical form a picture of sea life,
-which would have been interesting, not only to those who already love
-the subject, but to all who love good reading. He did not so choose. He
-carried out his mission in another form, and “Frank Mildmay” remained as
-it first appeared.
-
-That the book was so much of an autobiography was a misfortune for
-Marryat. He might protest as much as he pleased that he was not Frank
-Mildmay, and had not run a career of vice, but the impression left by
-the book was and is disagreeable. Why should a man attribute his own
-adventures to a tiger? Now, Frank Mildmay is a tiger--a very insolent,
-callous, young cub. It shows Marryat to have been very inexperienced
-indeed that he should have made such a mistake. He must have known that
-the adventures would be recognized. The naval world is a small one,
-and an exclusive. Naval officers live together by choice on shore as
-they do by necessity at sea. Everything written about the profession
-is talked over, and interpreted, when interpretation is needed. Every
-incident in “Frank Mildmay” was no doubt recognized at once; and when
-it was found that the things that had happened to the hero of the story
-were the adventures of the author, it is not to be wondered at that the
-two were thought to be also identical in character. Marryat, in fact,
-committed with himself the very error of judgment into which Dickens was
-led with Leigh Hunt, when he made Harold Skimpole a rascal, in order to
-prove that he was not a caricature of his friend. But there is something
-more than inexperience and error of judgment about “The Naval Officer.”
-Marryat can hardly have seen what a bad fellow he had drawn. Frank
-Mildmay has not only those “sins of the devil,” which may be worse, but
-are more dignified, than the sins of men--he errs not only by “pride and
-rebellion,” but he is a mean scamp; and I am afraid that Marryat did not
-see it. He was as blind to the faults of his bantling as Smollett was
-to the ruffianism of Roderick Random, or Fielding to the very vulgar
-inferiority of Tom Jones. Criticism seems to have opened his eyes, and
-little as he liked the lesson, he took the warning; but it was only for
-a time. Unfortunately he fell back on it. Percival Keene is just such
-another--a very low fellow, with a kind of wild boar courage. It would
-appear that Marryat did not see some things as plainly as one could wish
-he had done. It is unnecessary to insist on the faults of construction
-in a book which belonged to an altogether bastard genre. What merits
-it had--and they were sufficient to give promise of a brilliant
-novelist--were to be repeated in other books much more pleasant, and much
-more capable of repaying examination.
-
-The other nine books which Marryat published in these seven years were
-“wholly fictitious in characters, in plot, and in events,” to quote
-his own words. In fact, they were stories, and what truth there is in
-them was not crudely taken from memory, but adapted and fitted into its
-place. The essential accuracy of the picture they give of sea life has
-never been questioned, at least it has never been challenged on serious
-grounds. It is undoubtedly the case that critics of a certain well-known
-stamp have been known to complain that no such series of adventures as
-these stories contain were ever known to occur, and that the daily life
-of a midshipman is not so amusing as Mr. Easy’s, nor so varied as Peter
-Simple’s. A criticism which only amounts to this--that the stories are
-stories, and not log-books, need hardly be seriously answered. Sailors
-read them, and always have read them. They are as popular in the American
-Naval School as they have been among English boys. To the skill with
-which the stories were built, less justice has been done. It has always,
-as it were, been taken for granted that Marryat owed everything to his
-experience as a seaman, and that, except in so far as he had seen things
-which other men had not seen, he was not of the race of novelists whose
-work lives. Now this is heresy. In truth, the sea life owes more to
-Marryat than he to the sea. No one meets Mr. Easy, or Terence O’Brien,
-or Mr. Chucks, or Mr. Vanslyperken in this commonplace world. He meets
-something out of which they may be made. Unquestionably his experience
-was of inestimable value to Marryat--as all exceptional experience is to
-all novelists. At the very beginning of his career he was complimented
-by Washington Irving on his good luck. “You have a glorious field before
-you, and one in which you cannot have many competitors, as so very few
-unite the author to the sailor.” No doubt it was Marryat’s happiness
-that he had so good a Sparta to cultivate--but, after all, the result
-was primarily due to the skill of the cultivator. Speaking as one who
-has a full share of the good English taste for reading about the things
-of the sea, I am inclined to maintain that few kinds of books are more
-tedious than sea stories which ask to be read and enjoyed simply because
-they are sea stories. Battle, and storm, and shipwreck may be poured out
-on you, and yet leave you cold. These things by themselves in fiction
-are capable of being as tiresome as the once prevalent detective, or now
-popular religious disputations. To compare the stock sea story with the
-great books of travel--with Dampier, or with Anson’s Voyage, or with
-Basil Ringrose--would be unfair. We do not need to compare the best of
-one kind with the worst of another. But they will not stand reading even
-with Captain Hacke’s dingy little compilation, or with the long winded
-journal of Woodes Rogers. The reality of the latter is some compensation
-for their undoubted dulness. At least in reading them one knows that one
-is looking at a strange old life told by the men who lived it. When taken
-by a workman and badly used, the adventures these actual adventurers
-passed through and recorded become merely badly used material. A painter
-was once shown the scrawlings of a youthful prodigy who had been covering
-paper with pictures of ships and sailors. He was asked whether these
-works did not show a genius for art. “No,” said the judicious artist,
-“the boy has been reading sea stories, and his head is full of them. He
-draws because he likes the things, not because he loves drawing.” The
-verdict stated a great critical truth--and, however unpleasant it may be
-to prodigies to learn that taste and faculty are not identical, and that
-they must rely on their power of interpreting their subject, and not on
-the subject itself, it is the case, nevertheless.
-
-Now with Marryat the faculty was always equal to the fusing and managing
-of the materials. In “Japhet,” where he does not touch the sea at all,
-he has yet contrived to impart life and interest to his puppets and
-their doings. It may stand by “Con Cregan” in the long list of stories
-which began with “Guzman de Alfarache,” and includes “Moll Flanders”
-and “Peregrine Pickle.” In this case Marryat’s best knowledge was
-not available and he had to rely on his power of re-using well-worn
-materials. Where his experience and his ability combined, he attained to
-a very considerable degree of narrative skill. Whether he had trained
-himself by early reading or not (and indeed there is nothing to show that
-he was a reader), he had early command of a very admirable narrative
-style. It might be plausibly maintained that this was a heritage among
-seamen. There is nothing in English literature at once more simple,
-more manly, more perfectly adequate to its purpose than the language of
-Dampier. In Marryat’s own time this power had not been lost by English
-seamen. The navy may have been a rough school, but there was nothing
-in its training which made men unable to use the pen, and use it well.
-As an example of flowing, and also perfectly unaffected, description,
-the account of the battle of the Nile, given by Captain Miller, of the
-_Theseus_, is without fault. It deserves a place of honour in every
-collection of English letters. The beauty of Collingwood’s letters is
-acknowledged even by those who have thought fit to carp at his character.
-Marryat brought this style to his literary work, and kept it unchanged
-to the end. It is a style in which there is no straining. Marryat never
-had recourse, as his contemporary, Michael Scott, was wont, to capital
-letters, italics, and broken lines when he wished to impress his readers.
-He never appears even to have been particularly anxious to impress. When
-a wreck or a battle comes in his way, it is told as Captain Miller might
-have told it. Therefore it has its effect, and convinces you, as the
-narrative of the battle of the Nile does, that the thing described had
-been seen, had been lived through. The most famous of his passages--the
-club-hauling of the _Diomede_, the fight with the Russian frigate in “Mr.
-Midshipman Easy”--the destruction of the French liner at the end of “The
-King’s Own”--are too long for quotation; but in “Peter Simple” there is
-one which is of not unmanageable length, and which shows the qualities of
-his writing at their best. It is the account of the hurricane which threw
-Peter on the coast of St. Pierre:--
-
- “In half an hour I shoved off with the boats. It was now quite
- dark, and I pulled towards the harbour of St. Pierre. The heat was
- excessive and unaccountable; not the slightest breath of wind moved
- in the heavens, or below; no clouds to be seen, and the stars were
- obscured by a sort of mist: there appeared a total stagnation in
- the elements. The men in the boats pulled off their jackets, for
- after a few moments’ pulling, they could bear them no longer. As
- we pulled in, the atmosphere became more opaque, and the darkness
- more intense. We supposed ourselves to be at the mouth of the
- harbour, but could see nothing, not three yards ahead of the boat.
- Swinburne, who always went with me, was steering the boat, and I
- observed to him the unusual appearance of the night.
-
- “‘I’ve been watching it, sir,’ replied Swinburne, ‘and I tell you,
- Mr. Simple, that if we only knew how to find the brig, I would
- advise you to get on board of her immediately. She’ll want all her
- hands this night, or I’m much mistaken.’
-
- “‘Why do you say so?’ replied I.
-
- “‘Because I think, nay, I may say that I’m sartain, we’ll have a
- hurricane afore morning. It’s not the first time I’ve cruised in
- these latitudes. I recollect in ’94----’
-
- “But I interrupted him. ‘Swinburne, I believe that you are right.
- At all events I’ll turn back; perhaps we may reach the brig before
- it comes on. She carries a light, and we can find her out.’ I then
- turned the boat round, and steered, as near as I could guess, for
- where the brig was lying. But we had not pulled out more than two
- minutes, before a low moaning was heard in the atmosphere--now
- here, now there--and we appeared to be pulling through solid
- darkness, if I may use the expression. Swinburne looked around him,
- and pointed out on the starboard bow.
-
- “‘It’s a coming, Mr. Simple, sure enough; many’s the living being
- that will not rise on its legs to-morrow. See, sir.’
-
- “I looked, and dark as it was, it appeared as if a sort of black
- wall was sweeping along the water right towards us. The moaning
- gradually increased to a stunning roar, and then at once it broke
- upon us with a noise to which no thunder can bear a comparison.
- The sea was perfectly level, but boiling, and covered with a white
- foam, so that we appeared in the night to be floating on milk.
- The oars were caught by the wind with such force, that the men
- were dashed forward under the thwarts, many of them severely hurt.
- Fortunately, we pulled with tholes and pins; or the gunwales and
- planks of the boat would have been wrenched off, and we should
- have foundered. The wind soon caught the boat on her broadside,
- and, had there been the least sea, would have inevitably thrown
- her over; but Swinburne put the helm down, and she fell off before
- the hurricane, darting through the boiling water at the rate of
- ten miles an hour. All hands were aghast; they had recovered
- their seats, but were obliged to relinquish them, and sit down at
- the bottom, holding on by the thwarts. The terrific roaring of
- the hurricane prevented any communication except by gesture. The
- other boats had disappeared; lighter than ours, they had flown
- away faster before the sweeping element; but we had not been a
- minute before the wind, before the sea rose in a most unaccountable
- manner--it appeared to be by magic.
-
- “Of all the horrors that ever I witnessed, nothing could be
- compared to the scene of this night. We could see nothing, and
- heard only the wind, before which we were darting like an arrow,
- to where we knew not, unless it were to certain death. Swinburne
- steered the boat, every now and then looking back as the waves
- increased. In a few minutes we were in a heavy swell, that at one
- minute bore us all aloft, and at the next almost sheltered us from
- the hurricane; and now the atmosphere was charged with showers of
- spray, the wind cutting off the summits of the waves, as if with a
- knife, and carrying it along with it, as it were, in its arms.
-
- “The boat was filling with water, and appeared to settle down
- fast. The men baled with their hats in silence, when a large wave
- culminated over the stern, filling us up to our thwarts. The next
- moment we all received a shock so violent, that we were jerked from
- our seats. Swinburne was thrown over my head. Every timber of the
- boat separated at once, and she appeared to crumble from under us,
- leaving us floating on the raging waters. We all struck out for
- our lives, but with little hope of preserving them; but the next
- wave washed us on the rocks, against which the boat had already
- been hurled. That wave gave life to some, and death to others. Me,
- in Heaven’s mercy, it preserved: I was thrown so high up, that I
- merely scraped against the top of the rock, breaking two of my
- ribs. Swinburne, and eight more, escaped with me, but not unhurt;
- two had their legs broken, three had broken arms, and the others
- were more or less contused. Swinburne miraculously received no
- injury. We had been eighteen in the boat, of which ten escaped:
- the others were hurled up at our feet; and the next morning we
- found them dreadfully mangled. One or two had their heads literally
- shattered to pieces against the rocks. I felt that I was saved,
- and was grateful; but still the hurricane howled--still the waves
- were washing over us. I crawled further up upon the beach, and
- found Swinburne sitting down with his eyes directed seaward. He
- knew me, took my hand, squeezed it, and then held it in his. For
- some moments we remained in this position, when the waves, which
- every moment increased in volume, washed up to us, and obliged
- us to crawl further up. I then looked around me: the hurricane
- continued in its fury, but the atmosphere was not so dark. I could
- trace for some distance the line of the harbour, from the ridge of
- foam upon the shore: and for the first time I thought of O’Brien
- and the brig. I put my mouth close to Swinburne’s ear, and cried
- out, ‘O’Brien!’ Swinburne shook his head, and looked up again at
- the offing. I thought whether there was any chance of the brig’s
- escape. She was certainly six, if not seven miles off, and the
- hurricane was not direct on the shore. She might have a drift
- of ten miles, perhaps; but what was that against such tremendous
- power?”
-
-Now this might have come straight from another Dampier. There is no
-attempt to convince you of the force of the hurricane by laborious
-descriptions of what it looked like. It is shown to be awful by the
-effect it produces. The sentences go rapidly on. Their very simplicity
-helps to convey the impression of the suddenness and overwhelming fury
-of the storm. The effect would have been lost if the writer had stopped
-to talk. The style seems to me to be the perfection of prose, for a tale
-of adventure--the straightforward, almost colloquial report of one who
-has gone through it all, carried to its very best--made into literature
-without being obtrusively literary.
-
-As the style is, so are the stories. A natural tact seems to have told
-Marryat when he had gone far enough in search of the strange. His
-heroes lead lives that are possible. He might, if he had chosen, have
-rivalled Michael Scott’s wondrous pirates. Once, indeed, in “Percival
-Keene,” he actually did it, but, as a rule, his pirate is a conceivable
-good-for-nothing rather cowardly blackguard, such as came in the natural
-course of things to swing at Kingston or at Execution Dock. Even Cain
-himself, “The Pirate,” is within the bounds of probability as compared
-with the wondrous Spanish Americans, or astounding Scotch gentlemen of
-superhuman wickedness, who flourish in “Tom Cringle’s Log,” and the
-“Cruise of the _Midge_.” Neither do incidents of the wilder and more
-horrific kind appear in Marryat’s books. There is nothing in him, for
-instance, like that scene of the “_Midge_ in the Hornets’ nest,” which
-may, by the way, be commended to the attention of critics who think that
-blood and horror have been recently imported into romance by a generation
-which is supposed to have been corrupted by the French taste of the
-decadence. The adventures of Marryat’s heroes might possibly and even
-probably have befallen an officer of his time.
-
-Of construction, except such as was imposed by an instinctive desire to
-make the incidents follow one another in some sort of natural sequence,
-there is little or no sign. When, as in “Peter Simple,” he tries to fit
-one on to his story, it is no addition to the merits of the book. Who
-cares a straw for Peter’s wicked uncle, for the changing of the children,
-or for the unravelling of the very transparent mystery? It is too obvious
-that Marryat took these things at random from the common fund of the
-Minerva Press. What he took from nobody was his fun.
-
-After all, it is this fun which is the living element in Marryat’s
-work. Wit, or humour of the highest class, he cannot be said to have
-possessed, though he was by no means destitute of the sympathy which
-is inseparable from all true humour. The sketch of the mate, Martin,
-in “Midshipman Easy,” is a sufficient defence against the charge of
-want of feeling, if, indeed, it had ever been made. Many who have had
-a more visible anxiety to be pathetic than Marryat have failed to draw
-so touching a figure as this slight outline of the melancholy officer,
-in whom the disappointments of years have crushed all hope, without
-hardening or souring him. “No, no,” said the mate, when his acting order
-as lieutenant was brought him as he lay wounded in his hammock, “I knew
-very well that I never should be made. If it is not confirmed, I may
-live; but if it is, I am sure to die.” And die he does, because hope
-deferred has dried up the spring of life within him. In the character of
-Mr. Chucks kindness and fun are mingled. He is respectable in spite of
-his absurdities, and lovable because of them. In the Dominie in “Jacob
-Faithful” there is an effort to produce a second Mr. Chucks, but it is
-not successful. He is too plainly a reminiscence of another Dominie--a
-fairly well-done copy, but only a copy. For the most part the fun of
-Marryat belongs to the grotesque order. This, unquestionably, is not
-the highest. But what is not the highest may yet be genuine, and _that_
-Marryat’s fun, as the world has now recognized for half a century,
-undoubtedly is. His gallery of “figures of fun” is a long one. Peter
-Simple in the days before Terence O’Brien made a man of him; Jack Easy
-before he had been converted from a belief in the equality of all men;
-in a rougher way his father; Mr. Muddle; and, above all, Mr. Chucks,
-have an intrinsic comic _vis_. The fun which they make, or which goes
-on about them, is never mere horse-play. They are not mannikins of the
-stamp of Smollett’s Pallet, created only to be knocked about, and to
-make grimaces, but possible, and even probable, human beings--a little
-distorted, a little exaggerated, put frequently into such positions as
-are more fit for farce than comedy, but not on that account ceasing to be
-real.
-
- “Mr. Smallsole’s violence made Mr. Biggs violent, which made the
- boatswain’s mate violent--and the captain of the forecastle violent
- also; all which is practically exemplified by philosophy in the
- laws of motion, communicated from one body to another; and as Mr.
- Smallsole swore, so did the boatswain swear. Also the boatswain’s
- mate, the captain of the forecastle, and all the men--showing the
- force of example.
-
- “Mr. Smallsole came forward.
-
- “‘Damnation, Mr. Biggs, what the devil are you about? Can’t you
- move here?’
-
- “‘As much as we can, sir,’ replied the boatswain, ‘lumbered as the
- forecastle is with idlers.’ And here Mr. Biggs looked at our hero
- and Mesty, who were standing against the bulwark.
-
- “‘What are you doing here, sir?’ cried Mr. Smallsole to our hero.
-
- “‘Nothing at all, sir,’ replied Jack.
-
- “‘Then I’ll give you something to do, sir. Go up to the mast-head,
- and wait there till I call you down. Come, sir, I’ll show you the
- way,’ continued the master, walking aft. Jack followed till they
- were on the quarter-deck.
-
- “‘Now, sir, up to the maintop gallant mast-head; perch yourself
- upon the cross-trees--up with you.’
-
- “‘What am I to go up there for, sir?’ inquired Jack.
-
- “‘For punishment, sir,’ replied the master.
-
- “‘What have I done, sir?’
-
- “‘No reply, sir--up with you.’
-
- “‘If you please, sir,’ replied Jack, ‘I should wish to argue this
- point a little.’
-
- “‘Argue the point!’ roared Mr. Smallsole--‘by Jove, I’ll teach you
- to argue the point--away with you, sir.’
-
- “‘If you please, sir,’ continued Jack, ‘the captain told me that
- the articles of war were the rules and regulations by which every
- one in the service was to be guided. Now, sir,’ said Jack, ‘I have
- read them over till I know them by heart, and there is not one word
- of mast-heading in the whole of them.’ Here Jack took the articles
- out of his pocket and unfolded them.
-
- “‘Will you go to the mast-head, sir, or will you not?’ said Mr.
- Smallsole.
-
- “‘Will you show me the mast-head in the articles of war, sir?’
- replied Jack; ‘here they are.’
-
- “‘I tell you, sir, to go to the mast-head: if not, I’ll be d----d
- if I don’t hoist you up in a bread-bag.’
-
- “‘There’s nothing about bread-bags in the articles of war, sir,’
- replied Jack; ‘but I’ll tell you what there is, sir;’ and Jack
- commenced reading,--
-
- “‘All flag-officers, and all persons in or belonging to his
- majesty’s ships or vessels of war, being guilty of profane oaths,
- execrations, drunkenness, uncleanness, or other scandalous actions,
- in derogation of God’s honour, and corruption of good manners,
- shall incur such punishment as----’
-
- “‘Damnation!’ cried the master, who was mad with rage, hearing that
- the whole ship’s company were laughing.
-
- “‘No, sir, not damnation,’ replied Jack; that’s when he’s tried
- above; but according to the nature and degree of the offence.’
-
- “‘Will you go to the mast-head, sir, or will you not?’
-
- “‘If you please,’ replied Jack, ‘I’d rather not.’
-
- “‘Then, sir, consider yourself under an arrest. I’ll try you by a
- court-martial, by God. Go down below, sir.’
-
- “‘With the greatest pleasure, sir,’ replied Jack; ‘that’s all right
- and according to the articles of war, which are to guide us all.’
- Jack folded up his articles of war, put them into his pocket, and
- went down into the berth.”
-
-Here is farce, but farce which almost borders on comedy. Given Jack
-Easy with his natural pluck and his absurd training, suddenly put into
-a man-of-war, and set to reconcile the practice of the service with
-the ideal picture of it presented by the articles of war, and this is
-precisely what might be expected to happen. The absurdity always arises
-from the clash of the characters; and though it be farce, it is farce of
-the highest order. Rarely does the grotesque lean to the horrible. The
-death of Mr. Vanslyperken is a case in which it does; but Marryat was,
-for the most part, content to amuse, and to amuse only.
-
-How well he succeeded we all know. Which of us has not laughed with him
-ever since we were boys? Mr. Chucks stands between Commodore Trunnion
-and Mr. Micawber. The scene I have quoted above, and a dozen others,
-live by the side of Pipe’s journey to the garrison with the nymph of the
-road. The adventures in battle and wreck are very good, but they are not
-the best. Romance of the brilliant order Marryat did not often try, and
-when he did, he was at best but moderately successful. He was more of
-the race of Defoe than of Dumas. But from Defoe, over whom no man ever
-laughed, he was divided by his love of laughter, and power of drawing
-it forth. His fun may be often mere animal spirits, but at least it
-was spontaneous, and was by natural instinct literary. He did not toil
-and labour to be funny. Even in his most hasty work he would hit off
-a scene with neat pen-strokes, marking just enough and no more. Take,
-for instance, the revenue officers in “The Three Cutters.” Lieutenant
-Appleboy and his companions are introduced simply because he had seen
-them, and as much for his own amusement as his readers. Marryat had seen
-the types when he was doing preventive work himself in the _Rosario_, and
-drew them out of his memory when he needed them. Some of his figures were
-doubtless portraits--all of them had possibly some touch of portraiture.
-But on his paper they have an interest altogether independent of their
-originals. There are, as Mr. Saintsbury, speaking of the personalities of
-Daudet, has said, two ways of drawing portraits in literature. The first
-is to adapt your sitter into somebody else whom we love for his own sake.
-The second is to give us an image for which we should care but little if
-it was not meant for A or B. Of these two methods Marryat took the first.
-If there was an original to Terence O’Brien we should like to have known
-him; but, whether or not, we like Terence for his own sake. Was there a
-boatswain in His Majesty’s Service who stood for Mr. Chucks? Possibly;
-but what then? In Marryat’s stories are types as well as individuals.
-They and their doings have an independent universal truth.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-
-When Marryat was about to start for the United States he gave a reason
-of some gravity for his proposed trip. The last words of the “Diary on
-the Continent” propound a serious question: “Do the faults of this people
-(to wit, the Swiss) arise from the peculiarity of their constitutions,
-or from the nature of their government? To ascertain this, one must
-compare them with those who live under similar institutions. I must go
-to America--that’s decided.” A biographer of any virtue will desire to
-be inspired with the Boswellian spirit--to write as loyally as Macaulay
-did of Addison--but I cannot quite believe that Marryat’s visit to
-America was caused by a sudden passion for the study of comparative
-politics, and the influence of institutions on national character. A more
-plausible explanation could be found. It was excellently given by the
-elder Mr. Weller in the course of some remarks made for the benefit of
-Mr. Pickwick. To write a book about America was a favourite enterprise
-with literary persons in those years. Miss Martineau and Mrs. Trollope
-had just done it, and there was no reason why Marryat should not do it
-also. A taste for seeing the world may have helped to turn his activity
-in that direction, and, besides he was, as will be seen, on the lookout
-for promising speculations, and may have had some thoughts on copyright.
-Possibly none of these motives were very clear to himself, and he may
-really have thought he was going to study American institutions.
-
-Moved by sufficient motives, whether the alleged or the unconsciously
-felt, he did go to America by the packet _Quebec_ in 1837, did stay there
-for two years, and write a book about the States in six volumes, and two
-series. Of this book it may be said, in a favourite phrase of the writer
-whom Marryat described as “Mr. Carlisle, the author of ‘Sartor Resartus’”
-(a slip which was dreadfully avenged), that “it is forgetable.” Marryat’s
-diary and remarks show that he would have made an excellent newspaper
-correspondent. He had a faculty for getting up information, a quick eye,
-and a ready pen. With these qualities a man can easily make “copy” out
-of a visit to a new country. Indeed, Marryat was no novice at the work,
-for which his “Diary on the Continent” had prepared him. When his six
-volumes on America are judged as what they were, they are on the whole
-creditable. He made the Americans very angry, but that it was never
-difficult to do. He had provocation to write more bitterly than he did.
-But whatever may be the merits of, or the excuses for, the thing, it
-is hardly worth while to return to “newspaper correspondence” at the
-end of half a century. Unless the correspondent has seen history in the
-making, and has noted it well so as to become an original authority, he
-can hardly hope to be read two generations or so later on. The worst of
-it, too, is that Marryat saw something which was well worth recording,
-and did not record it properly. A large part of his book is taken up with
-contradicting Miss Martineau; and who can rejoice in the refutation of an
-almost forgotten book by a still more forgotten book?
-
-The incidents of the visit form an interesting passage in Marryat’s life.
-He reached New York in the midst of the great financial smash of 1837,
-and saw the “Empire City” in all the excitement of panic. He stayed in
-America till after the suppression of the Canadian rising, and himself
-took part in the fighting. Of course he had a newspaper controversy--and
-it was of a kind sufficiently honourable to himself. When he first landed
-Marryat seems to have been well received, though with a certain reserve.
-By reserve is not to be understood anything so absurd as that he was left
-alone. On the contrary, he was abundantly overwhelmed with inquiry and
-comment. But the Americans were then in the midst of one of the sorest of
-their sore fits with foreign comment, and were (not quite unjustifiably)
-on their guard against travellers who came to spy out the land, and make
-a book about it. They were not averse to comment, but they were anxious
-that it should not only be favourable, but of exactly that kind of
-favourableness of which they approved. Therefore they were intent to know
-whether Marryat meant to write about them, and, if so, what he meant to
-say. He extricated himself from the difficulty dexterously enough, and,
-on the whole, succeeded in keeping on friendly terms with his hosts. As
-a matter of course, American copyright institutions, and their effect
-on the national character of the publisher, had their share of his
-attentions. In this respect, also, his experiences were pleasing enough
-in America. He was working in the intervals of observation. For American
-consumption he wrote a play, “The Ocean Waif; or, The Channel Outlaw,”
-which appeared at a New York theatre; and he was moreover engaged on “The
-Phantom Ship.” In 1838 he made an arrangement with Messrs. Carey and Hart
-to sell them “proof sheets of his ‘Diary in America’ and ‘Phantom Ship,’
-a month prior to their publication in London, for the sum of two thousand
-two hundred and fifty dollars; and provided no one else published the
-works in America within thirty days from the date they issued from their
-press, a further sum of two hundred and fifty dollars.” Whether pirate
-enterprise deprived him of the extra sum needed to make up the round two
-thousand five hundred, does not appear, but at least Marryat, with his
-usual turn for business, contrived to get something out of America for
-the amusement he had given it.
-
-A letter to his mother, pleasant and manly as all his letters to her
-were, gives a sufficient picture of the first part of his stay in America.
-
- “_October, 1837._
-
- “MY DEAREST MOTHER,--I have been so occupied and I have been
- moving about so fast that I really have had time to write to
- hardly anybody, and I put off a letter to you till I had a more
- quiet moment; but as it appears that moment was never to come, I
- now write to you on board of a steamer on Lake Erie. You have, of
- course, heard from the Tuckers [these were his cousins on his
- mother’s side] that I went up to Boston for a few days to see some
- of them; indeed all except Mrs. C---- and Mr. Tucker himself, who
- was mending his bridge, and could not leave his work; they were all
- very kind, but I like poor Mrs. G---- better than any of them.
-
- “I have since been a tour of the lakes, and have travelled some
- thousand miles. I went up the Hudson, crossed to Saratoga, Trenton
- Falls, Falls of the Mohawk, Oswego River to Lake Ontario; then to
- Niagara, Buffalo, and to Lake Erie--to Detroit; from Detroit to
- Lake St. Clair, and Lake Huron to Mackinan, from Mackinan took a
- bark canoe, and crossed the Huron, went up the River St. Clair to
- the Sault Sᵗᵉ Marie, and from thence to Lake Superior. The latter
- part of the journey, five days in a bark canoe, was very fatiguing,
- and I was devoured by the mosquitoes; but it has been very
- interesting, and I have been much gratified. I am now on my return
- and am bound for Canada, passing by Buffalo and Niagara to Toronto.
- Since I have been here I have been looking out for a good piece of
- land, for it more than doubles its value in five or six years, and
- I have been fortunate in purchasing some very fine land from the
- Government opposite to Detroit on the Canada side--about 600 acres.
- I have written to B---- B----, offering to settle him on it, as it
- is not out of the world, but in very good society. I think it will
- be worth his while, as in a few years he will be independent. He
- will however require £300 or so to fit himself out, but that he
- only need borrow as he will soon be able to pay off. I trust that
- if he accepts my offer his brother will assist him, and if so, he
- will do well.
-
- “I am going to Toronto to pay the first instalment, and from there
- to Montreal, and then I return by Lake Champlain so as to call
- upon Mrs. C---- at Burlington; and from thence proceed to Bellows
- Falls to see my Uncle Tucker, who is rather angry with me for not
- going there before, which I could not. From Bellows Falls I shall
- return to New York--I do not think by the way of Boston, for they
- want to give me a public dinner there, and I want to avoid it.
- At Philadelphia I must be in September for the same purpose, as
- I accepted the invitation; but I wish they had not paid me the
- compliment. From Philadelphia I go to Washington to canvass for the
- international copyright, and then I shall probably go south for the
- winter.
-
- “The more I see of America the more I feel the necessity of either
- saying nothing about it, or seeing the whole of it properly. Indeed
- I am in that situation that I cannot well do otherwise now. It is
- expected by the Americans, and will also be by the English; and if
- I do not, they will think I shrink from the task because it is too
- difficult, which it really is. All I have yet read about America,
- written by English travellers, is absurd, especially Miss M----’s
- work: that old woman was blind as well as deaf. I only mean to
- publish in the form of a diary (but that is the best way); but I
- will not publish till I have seen all, and can be sure I have not
- been led into error like others. It is a wonderful country, and
- not understood by the English now, and only the major part of the
- Americans.(?) They are very much afraid of me here, although they
- are very civil; but I do not wonder at it--they have been treated
- with great ingratitude. I at least shall do them justice, without
- praising them more than they deserve. No traveller has yet examined
- them with the eye of a philosopher, but with all the prejudices of
- little minds.
-
- “Except a letter from you, I have not received a line from England,
- which is rather strange. From Kate I have had many letters. I have
- so many correspondents now--not only at home, but I have a large
- American correspondence which is too valuable to break off--that
- I really find I cannot write letter for letter. I have so much to
- read, so much to write, and so much to think about, that I must be
- excused. My time is not idly employed, I assure you, although I do
- not grow thin upon it; but, on the contrary, I think I am fuller
- than when I left England. I have been so far away these last six
- weeks that I have heard little English news, except the death of
- the King and the accession of Princess Victoria. I met Captain
- V----’s brother the other day who told me that the _Etna_ was going
- home to England in consequence of Captain V----’s health. If so,
- I may hear something about Frederick, which I have not for a long
- while. I hope my dear Ellen [a sister] is quite well and happy. My
- kindest love to her. I will write to her as soon as I can; but it
- appears to me that I have more to do every day, and I really shall
- be glad to arrive at Bellows Falls and stay there for a week, if it
- is only _to take breath_. My journal is already swelled out nearly
- a volume, and the notes I have taken to work up afterwards will
- almost double it, and yet I have seen but a small portion of the
- country. I have picked up two or three good specimens for Joe’s
- mineral collection on Lake Superior, and some day or another he
- may get hold of them. Write and tell me all the news. I have not
- had a line from Mr. Howard or anybody else, which is very strange.
- The steamboat jogs so that I can hardly write, and I suspect you
- will hardly be able to read; but if so, it will take you time to
- decipher, and therefore will last the longer.
-
- “God bless you, dear mother. A hundred kisses to Ellen, and kind
- regards to all who care for me.
-
- “Yours ever truly and affectionately,
-
- “F. MARRYAT.”
-
-From this letter it may be gathered that in October, 1837, Marryat was,
-in good humour with America, and was seriously thinking of a study of
-it which should be a possession for ever. America was, on the whole,
-well pleased with him. He had been civilly received, with a certain
-reserve as might have been expected, seeing that he was a writing man,
-who had come with the hardly disguised intention of writing, and after
-many who had written by no means acceptably; but still, in spite of this
-natural wariness, with kindness. He was a good talker and showed it. He
-had kinsmen in the States who helped him on. Altogether things had gone
-smoothly with him. The Americans had even been glad to acknowledge his
-connection with Boston, and some of them had given him a helping hand in
-that great copyright fight in which the sympathy of the more right-minded
-has never been denied to the English author, but has also never been of
-any effect Unfortunately this very trip to Canada led to a storm which
-put Marryat for a time into the position of best-abused man on the
-continent.
-
-At Toronto he was naturally asked to a public dinner, and also naturally
-requested to speak. In the course of his speech he, again very naturally,
-took occasion to mention, in a laudatory manner, the cutting out of the
-_Caroline_, by Lieutenant Drew. This feat had then made some noise in
-the world. Canada was in a disturbed condition, and the confusion had
-been fomented by filibustering from the United States territory. The
-_Caroline_ had been fitted out to help the rebels, and had been “cut out”
-in gallant style from under the guns of Fort Schlosser on the American
-side of the river, after sharp fighting by a Lieutenant Drew and a body
-of Canadian volunteers. After capturing the vessel and removing her
-crew, the Canadians had sent her down over the falls of Niagara. The
-incident was one of which the loyalists were with good reason proud. As
-an Englishman, as a naval officer, and as a speaker at a public dinner,
-Marryat was triply justified in praising “Captain Drew (as he styled
-him), and his brave comrades who cut out the _Caroline_.” Nothing ought
-to have been a more complete matter of course than that he should propose
-their health. But Americans were then in a particularly thin-skinned
-state, even for them. They chose to be very angry with him for doing
-what any American officer would have done under similar circumstances,
-at least as loudly. What may be called the spirit of Hannibal Chollop
-awoke within them, and a chorus of denunciation was begun at once,
-in the most loud-mouthed and abusive style of American journalism.
-Paragraphs headed “More Insolence,” and so forth, appeared in abundance.
-Marryat’s books and his effigy were publicly burnt. When he returned
-from Canada to the States, deputations waited on him, much in the frame
-of mind of the enlightened citizens who were so indignant when Martin
-Chuzzlewit offended a free people by coming back from Eden. As a matter
-of course, any stick was good enough to serve the turn of American
-journalism. He was accused, among other things, of having “insulted and
-contradicted, and refused to drink wine” with Henry Clay. The story was,
-it is needless to say, only a piece of Yankee smartness, but Marryat
-drought it necessary to appeal to that distinguished politician for a
-certificate of character, and obtained from him an assurance that their
-meeting had afforded mutual satisfaction. In short, the whole business
-was one of those displays of noisy gregarious folly of which our American
-cousins are occasionally guilty. It was rather more absurd than a recent
-incident of the same sort, because Marryat was merely a traveller, and
-was speaking on British territory when he gave the toast which Yankee
-journalism chose to think offensive. But the old colonial hatred of
-England (not yet perhaps so entirely dead as after-dinner orators are
-accustomed to assert) was then full of vigorous life. Americans were
-wavering between reluctance to plunge into war, and desire to do the old
-country a damage by helping the rebellious French Canadians. In this
-divided state of mind they relieved their feelings by howling at Marryat,
-because he had not “cracked them up accordingly.”
-
-Marryat extricated himself from this pass with commendable nerve and
-dexterity. He faced and soft-sawdered the deputations. He took the
-burning of his books very coolly, went about as before, and finally had
-it out with his hosts at a dinner given him at Cincinnati. The speech,
-which is far too long to quote, is full of the manly good sense which
-the American, when not acting in the characters of raving journalist or
-anxious candidate, will commonly listen to. Marryat reminded his hearers
-that he had spoken in British territory to his countrymen, and that their
-own patriotic orators were not averse to waving the banner habitually,
-or restrained from doing so by the knowledge that an Englishman was
-present. His hosts being simply American gentlemen, sitting in their
-right senses, agreed with him. A somewhat dramatic finish was given to
-this stage of the incident by Captain J. Pierce, who had been captain
-of the American privateer _Ida_ when she was taken by the _Newcastle_,
-of which Marryat was then second lieutenant. Captain Pierce got on his
-legs to thank Marryat for the courtesy and good nature he had shown to
-himself and other prisoners. “The Wizard of the Sea,” as the American
-newspapers loved to call him when they were not in a flaming rage, might
-consider that, as far as his hosts at Cincinnati could answer for it,
-he was cleared of the charge of insulting the great American people.
-Their opinion, like that of the “respectable American,” in so many other
-matters, did not avail to stop all annoyance. Marryat continued to be
-pestered by abuse, frequently conveyed in unpaid letters. At last, and
-somewhat weakly, in October of 1838, he published a general protest in
-the form of a letter to the editors of the _Louisville Journal_, wherein
-he denied with much detail that he intended to spy out the barrenness of
-the land. He was, of course, answered as offensively as might be.
-
-Marryat had perhaps begun by this time to discover that it was not so
-easy to write of America in a philosophic spirit as he had once thought.
-To be sure he had laid himself open to annoyance by going to the States
-at all, and still more by going there with the intention of writing a
-book.
-
-The Canadian troubles were destined to break into his tour again. In the
-autumn of 1838 the French population rose in open rebellion, and, as is
-commonly the fate of insurgents, gained some preliminary successes, which
-made their final punishment all the more severe. Marryat remembering
-that he was an English naval officer still on the active list, gave up
-philosophic inquiry, hurried back to Canada, and volunteered for service
-under Sir John Colborne. This officer, a veteran of the Great War, and
-one who had had a distinguished share in winning the battle of Waterloo,
-made short work of the rising. Marryat saw some fighting once more in his
-life, and described it briefly in another of his capital letters to his
-mother.
-
- “MONTREAL, _Dec. 18, 1838_.
-
- “MY DEAREST MOTHER,--Except one letter from B---- B----, it is now
- nearly four months since I have heard either from England or the
- Continent; the latter I can in some way account for, at least in my
- own opinion--still I wish to hear how my little girls are.
-
- “I was going South when I heard of the defeat of St. Denis, and
- the dangerous position of the provinces of Upper and Lower Canada;
- and I considered it my duty as an officer to come up and offer my
- services as a volunteer. I have been with Sir John Colborne, the
- Commander-in-Chief, ever since, and have just now returned from
- an expedition of five days against St. Eustache and Grand Brulé,
- which has ended in the total discomfiture of the rebels, and, I
- may add, the putting down of the insurrection in both provinces.
- I little thought when I wrote last that I should have had the
- bullets whizzing about my ears again so soon. It has been a sad
- scene of sacrilege, murder, burning, and destroying. All the fights
- have been in the churches, and they are now burnt to the ground,
- and strewed with the wasted bodies of the insurgents. War is bad
- enough, but civil war is dreadful. Thank God, it is all over.
-
- “The winter has just set in; we have been fighting in the deep
- snow, and crossing rivers with ice thick enough to bear the
- artillery; we have been always in extremes--at one time our ears
- and noses frost-bitten by the extreme cold, at others roasting
- amidst the flames of hundreds of houses. I came out of Grand Brulé
- after it was all over. I had the greatest difficulty in getting
- through the fire. I had a sleigh with two grey horses driven
- _tandem_ (as it was too cold to ride the horse the general had
- offered me), and before I escaped, one side of each of the horses
- was burnt _brown_ and _yellow_ before we could force them through;
- however, the poor animals were more frightened than hurt.
-
- “As I can be of no further use now, I shall return to America in
- a few days. I really wish I could receive a letter from England. I
- feel very much about having no intelligence. It will be too late to
- go South now, and I think I shall winter quietly at New York, and
- proceed to Washington early in the year.
-
- “I really have nothing more to say. It is hard to fill a sheet when
- correspondence is all on one side. So give my love to Ellen, and
- God bless you both.
-
- “Ever your affectionate son,
-
- “F. MARRYAT.”
-
-A postscript gives directions to B---- B----, who appears to have decided
-to come out and settle on the desirable piece of land which Marryat had
-purchased in Canada.
-
-The American tour was near its end. Marryat never made that examination
-of the South which he had very justly thought necessary, if he was to
-obtain a thorough knowledge of the States. When he returned to New York
-in January, 1839, the country was in no condition to attract English
-travellers. The already existing hostility to England had been excited
-to a storm, and there was copious talk of the tallest kind about war
-going on from end to end of the Union. Everybody was waiting for the
-President’s message and professing to expect the outbreak of hostilities.
-Marryat waited to see what would come of it all. The prospect of serious
-war had for a moment swept all thought of books out of his mind. He
-waited for a summons to join Sir F. Head if his services were further
-needed in Canada; but while there was a prospect that he might again
-have “a man-of-war on the ocean,” he was in no hurry to run the risk
-of being shut up in Canada, where the best he could hope for would be a
-lake command. In a letter from New York to his mother he expresses very
-explicitly his wishes to serve again, and his hopes of further employment
-on blue water, and even ends up with one of those growls at the business
-of book-writing not uncommon among writing men when they happen to be
-languid, or to have heard bad news. “Mr. Howard” (his former sub-editor
-no doubt, and the author of “Rattlin the Reefer”) “writes me in very bad
-spirits. He says that I am injured by remaining away from England, and my
-popularity is on the wane. I laugh at that; it is very possible people
-will be ill-natured while I am not able to defend myself; but what I have
-done they cannot take from me, and if I wrote no more, I have written
-quite enough. If I were not rather in want of money I certainly would not
-write any more, for I am rather tired of it. I should like to disengage
-myself from the fraternity of authors, and be known in future only in my
-profession as a good officer and seaman.”
-
-There is about this a ring of manly good sense. Marryat could well afford
-to laugh at Mr. Howard’s croaking, knowing as he did, with his robust
-self-confidence, that his popularity was in no danger; that he had it
-in him to make another popularity if the old was indeed waning. It may
-well be that his wish to be back in active service was wise. His life
-might have been longer, and happier, if he had again walked his own
-quarter-deck. The wish was certainly no vague one, floating idly in his
-mind. He made plans in Canada, drew maps, and sent home information to
-the Admiralty in the manifest hope that his exertions would serve him at
-headquarters. If war had broken out with the United States it is certain
-that Marryat, recommended as he was not only by his past services,
-but by his knowledge of the American coast, would have stood well for
-employment. But the storm blew over; the British Empire settled down into
-peace again, and Marryat remained on shore, driving away with his pen
-under the pressure of that tyranny which he describes as the state of
-being “rather in want of money.” He left the States early in 1839, and by
-June of that year was settled in quarters of his own in 8, Duke Street,
-St. James’s.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-
-The state of being “rather in want of money” was to be chronic with
-Marryat, if we are to judge by the amount of writing he did during the
-remaining nine years of his life. Before very long, indeed, he began to
-have very serious reason indeed for complaining of straitened means. His
-father’s fortune, which must have been considerable, had been invested in
-the West Indies in those golden days at the end of the Great War, when
-the languor of Spain, and the ruin of San Domingo by the negro revolt,
-had given the English sugar islands a monopoly of the market for colonial
-produce. In the forties, however, these happy times had disappeared for
-ever. Competition and free trade brought down prices, the abolition of
-slavery stopped production, and the value of West Indian property went
-down with a run. The Marryat family suffered with the rest of the world.
-The novelist had resources which were wanting to his brothers; but then
-this advantage was compensated, as has been said before, by extravagant
-and speculative habits. In 1839 the pinch was not as yet felt so severely
-as it was later on. Marryat, immediately upon his return, went over to
-Paris for his family, which had moved thither from Lausanne during his
-stay in the States; and, bringing them to England, settled at 8, Duke
-Street, St. James’s. For some four years he led, as he had hitherto done,
-a somewhat wandering life. After a brief year in Duke Street, he moved
-to Wimbledon House; which had belonged to his father, and was still
-occupied by his mother. A short stay there was succeeded by a brief
-residence in chambers at 120, Piccadilly, and then by another year or so
-of occupation of a house in Spanish Place, Manchester Square. In 1843 be
-broke away from London for good, and established himself at his own house
-at Langham, in Norfolk.
-
-All this restlessness speaks for itself. Men who possess the faculty of
-managing their affairs with judgment, or who wish to apply themselves
-to steady work, do not run in this way from pillar to post. Once again
-I have to remark that much in Marryat’s life is left to be guessed at.
-It is as well that it should be so. The indications we possess tell the
-world all that it is entitled to learn. There is--though the contrary
-proposition is frequently maintained in these days--no inherent right in
-the public to be made acquainted with the private affairs of a gentleman
-simply because he has done it the inestimable service of supplying it
-with readable books. That Marryat, who has just been found expressing
-a wish to retire from the “fraternity of authors,” was writing himself
-blind in these years, is a fact which tells its own tale. Add to this a
-few indications which Mrs. Ross Church has thought it right to supply--a
-brief reference to some family misfortune of which the details are
-not given; a complaint in one of Marryat’s letters that somebody,
-apparently a relation, had suspected him of a wish to borrow money;
-and an increasing tone of grief and trouble in all his letters--and
-we have enough to form a general estimate of his position with. More
-we probably could not learn, and would have no right to hunt up if we
-could. That Marryat had a difficulty in making both ends meet; that his
-expedients did not always succeed; that some of them were, too probably,
-undignified; that the need for them was, at least partly, due to his own
-mismanagement, are acknowledged facts. We may, and must, be satisfied
-with them.
-
-It is also easily to be believed that Marryat would enjoy the
-hard living, and even hard drinking--artistic, literary, and
-semi-literary--life of his time. Clarkson Stanfield was an intimate
-friend. Rogers, who was acquainted with everybody, was an acquaintance.
-With Dickens and Forster his friendship was of long standing, and
-seems to have remained unbroken. One of the few, and too generally
-insignificant, letters to her father printed by Mrs. Ross Church, is
-an invitation to dinner from Dickens, ending with a pleasing promise
-to give him some hock which would do him good. He was a guest at those
-merry children’s parties which Mr. Forster has described. In his quarters
-in his various London lodgings we are given to understand that there
-was much and gay hospitality. Friends were profusely entertained in
-rooms adorned with furs, trophies, Burmese idols, and weapons--all
-the miscellaneous curios collected by a sailor and traveller during
-many wandering hours. In Burmah, Marryat had even made a collection of
-jewels cut from out of the bodies of slain enemies. The Burman who has
-a gem makes an incision in his leg and hides it there, as our sailors
-discovered more or less to their profit. Unfortunately the curios and the
-talk are all scattered and irrecoverable. “It has all vanished like ‘air,
-thin air’”--as Marryat wrote himself of certain common reminiscences
-to “a lady for whom, to the time of his death, he retained the highest
-sentiments of friendship and esteem.” Marryat’s friendships were not all
-of this enduring kind. “Like most warm-hearted people,” as his daughter
-puts it, “he was quick to take offence, and no one could have decided,
-after an absence of six months, with whom he was friends and with whom he
-was not.” Eager restlessness is the quality which seems to have been most
-noticed in him by all his friends. It kept him on the move, not only from
-house to house, but on excursions to Langham or other parts of England.
-
-The toil which circumstances forced upon Marryat must have greatly aided
-his natural restlessness in wearing out his life. Steady work and hard
-work are not necessarily synonymous, and Marryat worked very hard by fits
-and starts. While in America, and amid all the racket of his tour, he
-had written “The Phantom Ship” which appeared in 1839. The six volumes
-of his “Diary in America” followed in the same year. That was not off
-his hands before he was at work on “Poor Jack,” “Masterman Ready,” “The
-Poacher,” and “Percival Keene,” followed before the end of 1842. Here was
-an amount of work (six books within five years) which might not be found
-excessive by the orderly business-like novelist of to-day, but which must
-have put a severe strain on a man who wrote at irregular times, but when
-actually at it, wrote furiously. It was a distinct aggravation of the
-burden that his handwriting was very minute. A man who, having to write a
-great deal, writes very small, must either be very sure of his eyesight
-and his nerves, or prepared through ignorance or recklessness to ruin
-them both. It is, therefore, not to be wondered at that Marryat’s letters
-between 1839 and 1840 contain references to the state of his health of a
-constantly more melancholy nature. “I shall,” he wrote to the same lady
-friend in the first of these years, “be at leisure, I really believe,
-about the first week in December; but the second portion of ‘America’ has
-been a very tough job. I am now correcting press (_sic_) of the third
-volume, and half of it is done. I hope to be quite finished by the end
-of the month, and also to have the other work ready for publication on
-the 1st of January; but what with printers, engravers, stationers, and
-publishers, I have been much overworked. I have written and read till my
-eyes have been no bigger than a mole’s, and my sight about as perfect.
-I have remained sedentary till I have had _un accés de bile_, and have
-been under the hands of the doctor, and for some days obliged to keep my
-bed; all owing to want of air and exercise. Now I am quite well again.”
-Some two years later the news is much worse, and there is no mention of
-complete recovery. “That you may not think me unkind,” he writes again
-to the same correspondent, “in refusing your invitation, I must tell you
-that I am much worse than I have made myself out in my former letters. I
-fell down as if I had been shot a few days ago, and have been ever since
-obliged to be very quiet, and am not permitted to drink anything but
-water, or undergo the least excitement, and you would offer me every
-description in the shape of beauty, mirth, revelry, and feasting, putting
-yourself out of the question! No; for my sins--sins in the shape of three
-volumes chiefly--and heavy sins, too, I must now submit to mortification
-and penance. I am positively forbidden to write a line, but you may
-tell William and Dunny that the little book is finished, and will be
-out at Easter, when they will be able to read it.” Obviously work, and
-forms of relaxation as wearing as any work, had begun already to ruin a
-constitution not really robust. Marryat’s tendency to break blood vessels
-had already crippled him when a lieutenant in the navy, and should have
-warned him that though he might be muscularly powerful, he had no great
-reserve of constitutional strength to draw on.
-
-The visit to America makes a break in the character as well as in the
-continuity of Marryat’s work. He had said all he had to say about the sea
-life of his own time, and had to turn elsewhere. The “Diary in America”
-is perhaps a sign that he thought for a moment of rivalling Captain Basil
-Hall. If he was indeed tempted to do so, the temptation ceased to be
-difficult to resist after his return to Europe. The toil of travel, and
-then of writing out his impressions of travel, had been greater than he
-had expected, and had produced no equivalent result--either in money or
-reputation. Mrs. Ross Church states that he received for the “Diary,”
-“on first publishing the manuscript,” £1,600. But, according to the same
-authority, he had received nearly as much for several of his other books
-in a lump sum, and they continued to bring him in a yearly harvest,
-whereas the “Diary” sank at once into the position of a mere book about
-America. In truth, this kind of writing had been overdone. There was no
-longer a market for books of the Trollope or even the Martineau order.
-Everything had been said about the United States which the public wanted
-to hear for the time. The publishers of the “Diary” must have discovered
-that, in taking the “Diary,” they had made the mistake not uncommonly
-committed by the trade, and by theatrical managers, the mistake of
-overestimating the length of time during which the public will continue
-to care for the same thing. They, doubtless, told Marryat that the taste
-for stories was more enduring than the liking for descriptions, abusive,
-laudatory, or philosophical, of our American cousins. With or without
-advice of this kind, he returned to stories, and remained steadily
-faithful to them.
-
-“The Phantom Ship,” written during the American tour, differs materially
-from all the tales which had preceded it, except “Snarley Yow.” It is a
-romance with a strong element of _diablerie_. Possibly because it was
-not written in a hurry for the press, it shows more signs of care in
-construction than most of the earlier books. Also, it is an historical
-romance, and proves that Marryat had worked at the history of the
-sea-life--not, doubtless, very hard, but still to some purpose. The
-result makes one regret that he did not find, or seek for, the leisure to
-dig further, and to avail himself of his discoveries. No great amount of
-research can have been required to collect the materials for “The Phantom
-Ship.” Admiral Burney’s “Discoveries in the South Seas” would alone have
-given Marryat all he wanted for this picture of the old Dutch seamanship.
-Still he brought with him so much knowledge acquired by actual experience
-that a little was enough. Had he so pleased he might, with the help of
-Hakluyt, of Monson, and of Sir Richard Hawkins’ “Voyage,” have given us a
-picture of the Elizabethan seamen. He might have drawn the “chivalry of
-the sea,” as Washington Irving asked him to do. A “Westward Ho” he would
-not have written. We should not have had from him (nor have expected)
-anything equivalent to the dream of Amyas Leigh, or the exquisite speech
-at the grave of Salvation Yeo. But what he could have done was what
-Kingsley could not do, and, with the tact of an artist, did not try to
-do too much. He might have realized the actual sea life of the time--the
-ships, the seamen, and the seamanship of the past. It was a work in
-which only a sailor could have succeeded. The pictorial imagination of
-Kingsley and the conscientious workmanship of Charles Reade alike fail
-to give reality to their sea scenes. The first was a great artist, and
-the second an exceedingly clever man with no contemptible share of the
-imagination of the historian and biographer--the power of seeing the
-value of materials, of deducing from the report of a thing done the
-manner of the doing and the nature of the doer. They both worked hard to
-realize the sea, and yet, if we compare the cruises of the _Rose_ and
-the _Vengeance_, or the fight with the pirates in “Hard Cash,” with the
-“club-hauling” of the _Diomede_, there is a perceptible difference. I am
-not unaware that one may be unconsciously influenced by the knowledge
-that Marryat was a seaman, to expect, and see more truth in his pictures
-than in theirs. Remembering that, however, I still think that his sea
-scenes differ from Kingsley’s, or Reade’s, as the thing seen differs from
-the thing “got up”--with imagination, with insight, with conscientious
-industry, no doubt,--but still “got up.”
-
-In this, and in other ways, Marryat did not do all he might have
-done. “The Phantom Ship,” with “Snarley Yow” which preceded, and the
-“Privateersman” which followed it, must be taken for what they are worth
-in place of the possible better. Even so, however, the value of the first
-of them is considerable. Marryat made a good use of what Leigh Hunt
-has somewhat hastily decided is the only sea legend. There is no great
-originality in the incidents. Vanderdecken was made to his hand, and he
-had German enough--or failing that had translations enough--to supply him
-with the _diablerie_. But the materials are well used. The story swings
-along. Philip Vanderdecken, the Pilot Schriften, the greedy Portuguese
-governor, and the priests have a distinct vitality. Amine is by far
-his nearest approach to an acceptable heroine; for indeed it must be
-confessed that this sailor had an altogether maritime ignorance of women,
-except bumboat women and the ladies of the Hard. The scenes in which his
-heroines are on the stage are skip. Amine’s appearances, however, are not
-skip. She is a very acceptable heroine of melodrama, good of her kind,
-with a decided character of her own. The Inquisition scenes in which she
-is the central figure are the highest point Marryat reached in romance.
-Very good too are the successive appearances of the Phantom Ship, done
-as was commonly the case with Marryat, simply, without straining, without
-obvious desire to make you shiver. If the last scene of all trenches on
-the namby pamby, as I am afraid it does, it is preceded by a very good
-one indeed. Marryat has indicated the loneliness, the weary waiting, the
-heart-broken striving of Vanderdecken’s doomed crew, very sufficiently
-by the futile effort of the poor mate, who would fain persuade the
-Portuguese to carry the _Flying Dutchman’s_ fatal letters home. That
-Marryat was content to indicate is not the least of his claims to be
-considered an artist. He knew by instinct, or deduction, the advantage
-of coming suddenly on his reader. Too many other story-tellers prepare,
-and accumulate, and pour forth, the materials of the shower (too commonly
-of adjectives) which is to cause us the _frisson_. We see them doing it,
-and know what is meant, and, human nature being perverse, hold ourselves
-steady and refuse to shiver. The princess whose husband could not shiver
-gave him the emotion by turning the cold water and tittlebats down his
-back when he was expecting no such shock. If he had seen her filling the
-tub, putting in the little fishes, and coming to tilt it all over him,
-there would have been no surprise, and, too probably, he would never have
-known that delightful sensation.
-
-“Poor Jack,” the immediate successor of “The Phantom Ship,” is somewhat
-closer to “Mr. Midshipman Easy,” but it, too, is something of an
-historical study, whether it was deliberately designed to be so or
-not. Greenwich Hospital has become something very different from the
-retreat for wounded seamen which Marryat knew, and his picture of it,
-somewhat sketchy as it is, will always have the value of a document.
-The story one need not stop to analyse at any length. Incidents and
-characters are of the kind familiar with Marryat--not inferior to the
-average of the others, but not distinguished from them by any very marked
-characteristics. One piece of fun it does contain not inferior to his
-best, the immortal apology of the midshipman who had told the master that
-he was not fit to carry guts to a bear. The palpable absurdity of the
-incident is on a par with Mr. Easy’s amazing use of the Articles of War.
-“The Poacher” and “Percival Keene,” which also belong to these years,
-both have a flavour of work done only because the author was “rather
-in want of money.” The first is another venture in the same line as
-“Japhet.” The second is the least pleasant, take it for all in all, of
-the books which bear Marryat’s name. It is the only one which had better
-not be re-read in maturer years by him who has read it as a boy. The fun
-is forced--of the horse-play practical joking kind--and the serious parts
-are somewhat spoilt by fustian. The negro pirate captain and his crew
-are good enough for boyish tragedy, but that is not what we expect from
-Marryat. Finally, too, there is a disagreeable flavour in the book. The
-hero is a low fellow--not in a healthy human way even, but in a very mean
-intriguing fashion, and he plays his part in the meanest possible manner.
-
-The one story of these days which could least be spared from Marryat’s
-work is “Masterman Ready.” This, the first of his children’s books,
-is also one of the best, perhaps the very best, thing of its kind in
-English. It is a child’s story in which there is not one word above the
-intelligence of the readers it was designed for, one situation or one
-character they could not grasp, and yet it is distinctly literature. It
-is didactic, and yet there is no preachment. It is pathetic, and yet it
-is not mawkish. It ends with a death bed scene which is not an offence.
-In point of mere cleverness of workmanship it ranks, in my opinion, first
-among Marryat’s works, and yet it is perfectly simple and unstrained.
-Marryat was indeed well qualified to write for children. He had loved
-their company at all times, and had served a long apprenticeship in
-telling stories to his own. The practice had taught him to avoid the
-fatal mistake of condescension. An intelligent child, as even so weighty
-a writer as Guizot has remarked, can understand a great deal more than
-the duller kind of adult is disposed to allow. It does not like to be
-effusively addressed as “my little friend,” and made to see that the
-kind gentleman or lady who speaks is intent on improving its mind. “I
-can’t be always good,” said Tommy; “I’m very hungry; I want my dinner.”
-The unsophisticated youthful mind is apt to be equally direct about its
-literature. It can’t be always imbibing preachment; it becomes languid,
-and wants to be amused: but it also likes precision of detail, and is
-eager to learn the why and how of everything. With these two rules to
-guide him--not to be too obtrusively instructive, and yet to explain
-every incident as it came, Marryat wrote a model child’s story. Forster
-was certainly in the right in declaring it to be the most read, and the
-most willingly re-read, of its class. For its mere cleverness the book
-can be enjoyed by the oldest of readers who is not too dreadfully in
-earnest. It was no small feat to have taken so well worn a situation as
-the shipwreck and the desert island, and to have made out of it a book
-which may stand next to Defoe’s. The desertion of the _Pacific_ and her
-passengers by the crew, her wreck, the life on the island, the fight with
-the savages, and the rescue, are as probable, they follow one another
-as naturally, as the events in the life of Robinson Crusoe. Marryat
-had too much tact and knowledge to fall into the extravagances of the
-“Swiss Family Robinson.” The beasts and plants of the island are not an
-impossible collection of the flora and fauna of three continents. Then,
-too, the book contains two of Marryat’s very best characters. Masterman
-Ready is an ideal old sailor, brave, modest, kind, helpful, able to turn
-his hand to anything, and to do it well, yet, withal, no mere bundle of
-abstract virtues, but a most credible human being--such a man as might
-have been formed by such a life. Very different, but equally good, is
-Master Tommy Seagrave, the ideal of greedy, naughty boys. Tommy’s ever
-vigorous appetite and irrepressible passion for making a noise, for
-meddling with everything, for trying everything, for spoiling everything,
-are as perfect in their way as the meek heroism of Masterman Ready. At
-the end, the collision of the two produces very genuine tragedy. Master
-Tommy was just the boy who would have emptied the water-butt, under
-pretext of bringing water from the well, and would have accepted the very
-undeserved praise bestowed on his zeal without the faintest scruple. The
-consequences of his bad behaviour are absolutely natural and inevitable.
-That Masterman Ready should have met his death through Master Tommy was
-an artistic stroke of the highest merit. And Marryat tells it all with
-a calm detachment which might reduce the average Russian novelist to
-despair. He is not wroth with Tommy. He accepts him as inevitable, and
-only describes him with a calm artistic precision, simply as the type
-of “The Boy.” Then, too, consider the final no-repentance and escape of
-Tommy. He howled for water and got it, and Masterman Ready died that he
-might have it. The little wretch never knew what mischief he had done. He
-sailed away to Sydney with an excellent appetite, and as long as he had
-enough to eat, and things to break, was no doubt perfectly happy. There
-is a something colossal in the truth, and the artistic calmness of the
-whole story.
-
-While Marryat was at work on “The Poacher,” he had a slight literary
-skirmish--not unworthy of notice as a proof that certain things are
-unchanging in the literary world. The story appeared in _The Era_ in
-weekly numbers. One of those remarkable persons, who, in every successive
-generation, find it necessary to make a protest in favour of the dignity
-of literature, and whose idea of dignity commonly is that literature can
-only be good when it appears in a certain way and at a certain price,
-fell foul of Marryat for choosing this low method of publication. This
-egregious person wrote in _Fraser_, and very gratuitously attacked
-Marryat, in the course of some remarks on Harrison Ainsworth, in the
-following “slashing” style: “If writing monthly fragments threatened
-to deteriorate Mr. Ainsworth’s productions, what must be the result of
-this _hebdomadal_ habit? Captain Marryat, we are sorry to see, has
-taken to the same line. Both these popular authors may rely on our
-warning, that they will live to see their laurels fade unless they more
-carefully cultivate a spirit of _self-respect_. That which was venial in
-a miserable starveling of Grub Street is _perfectly disgusting_ in the
-extravagantly paid novelists of these days--the _caressed_ of generous
-booksellers. Mr. Ainsworth and Captain Marryat ought to disdain such
-_pitiful peddling_. Let them eschew it without delay.”
-
-These were very bitter words, but the only influence they had on Marryat
-was to provoke him to show that he could do the single-stick style as
-well as the _Fraser_ men themselves. With less wit, but more good humour
-than Thackeray, he, too, wrote his Essay on Thunder and Small Beer. He
-pointed out that there is no necessary connection between the manner
-of publication and the method of composition of a book, and even made
-quite respectable fun of _Fraser’s_ pedantry. “In the paragraph,” he
-says, “which I have quoted there is an implication on your part which
-I cannot pass over without comment. You appear to set up a standard
-of _precedency_ and _rank_ in literature, founded upon the rarity
-or frequency of an author’s appearing before the public, the scale
-descending from the ‘caressed of generous publishers’ to the ‘starveling
-of Grub Street’--the former, by your implication, constituting the
-_aristocracy_ and the latter the _profanum vulgus_ of the quill. Now
-although it is a fact that the larger and nobler animals of creation
-produce but slowly, while the lesser, such as rabbits, rats, and mice,
-are remarkable for their fecundity; I do not think that the comparison
-will hold good as to the breeding of brains; and to prove it, let us
-examine--if this argument by implication of yours is good--at what
-grades upon the scale it would place the writers of the present day.” By
-applying “this argument by implication” in a rigid fashion, Marryat has
-no difficulty in showing that “my Lady ---- anybody,” who produces one
-novel a year, is necessarily twice as great a writer as Hook or James
-who produces two, and twelve times as great as the _Fraser_ man himself,
-whose production is monthly. The reasoning is burlesquely fallacious, but
-it was meant to be so. Marryat spoke with more gravity, and more point
-too, when he urged that he was doing a good work by spreading his story
-“among the lower classes, who, until lately (and the chief credit of the
-alteration is due to Mr. Dickens), had hardly an idea of such recreation.”
-
-“In a moral point of view I hold that I am right. We are educating the
-lower classes; generations have sprung up who can read and write; and may
-I inquire what it is they have to read, in the way of amusement?--for
-I speak not of the Bible, which is for private examination. They
-have scarcely anything but the weekly newspapers, and as they cannot
-command amusement, they prefer those which create the most excitement;
-and this I believe to be the cause of the great circulation of _The
-Weekly Despatch_, which has but too well succeeded in demoralizing the
-public, in creating disaffection and ill-will towards the Government,
-and assisting the nefarious views of demagogues, and chartists. It is
-certain that men would rather laugh than cry--would rather be amused than
-rendered gloomy and discontented--would sooner dwell upon the joys and
-sorrows of others, in a tale of fiction, than brood over their supposed
-wrongs. If I put good and wholesome food (and, as I trust, sound moral)
-before the lower classes, they will eventually eschew that which is
-coarse and disgusting, which is only resorted to because no better is
-supplied. Our weekly newspapers are at present little better than records
-of immorality and crime, and the effect which arises from having no other
-matter to read and comment on, is of serious injury to the morality of
-the country.… I consider, therefore, that in writing for the amusement
-and instruction of the poor man, I am doing that which has been but too
-much neglected--that I am serving my country, and you surely will agree
-with me that to do so is not _infra dig._ in the proudest Englishman:
-and, as a Conservative, you should commend, rather than stigmatise my
-endeavours in the manner which you have so hastily done.”
-
-The intention and the argument here are better than the style. Marryat
-was better at narrative than exposition, and could at times be as free
-with the relative pronouns as that distinguished officer, Captain
-Rawdon Crawley. The confidence Marryat, in common with most of his
-contemporaries, reposed in the influence of wholesome amusement was
-doubtless excessive. It has not been found that when the “poor man” [or
-other reader for that matter], has a choice of Hercules given him between
-good literature and bad, he will cleave to the first and reject the last.
-Also, there is a candid confession of the faith “that there is nothing
-like leather” in Marryat’s confidence that good weekly stories would
-soothe the discontent which was seething in England before 1848. But
-in spite of slips of grammar, optimism, and over-confidence, Marryat’s
-answer to the priggery in _Fraser_ is a creditable manifesto. To desire
-to kill the trash of _The Weekly Despatch_ was at least a respectable
-ambition, and a man has a good right to believe in his causes, and his
-weapons.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-
-Langham, to which Marryat betook himself for good in 1843, had been
-in his possession for some thirteen years. Its history, as far as he
-was concerned, may be taken to have been characteristic of the man.
-He acquired it, according to Mrs. Ross Church, by exchange--having
-“swapped” it, after dinner and copious champagne, against Sussex House,
-Hammersmith. From that period it had been an interesting but unprofitable
-possession to him. Before he left for America he had already had
-occasion to complain of the difficulty of getting rent. A tenant had
-been expelled, and replaced by another of the fairest character. But
-appearances had proved delusive. Langham had been all along more of a
-burden than a profit to its owner. In 1843 he seems to have decided to
-see what he could do with it himself. A passage in his fragmentary life
-of Lord Napier, quoted by his daughter, shows that he shared to the full
-the common delusion of men, and the especial delusion of sailors, that it
-is easy to manage a small property. In this pleasing but fatal belief he
-set out to see what he could do with the 700 acres of the estate himself.
-Again I have to acknowledge my inability to give any account of the
-motives for this sudden (for it appears to have been sudden) decision.
-Considerations of economy were doubtless of weight with him. The fall in
-the value of West Indian property had, as has been said, hit him hard.
-The demands on his purse were as heavy as ever--indeed, to judge from
-a somewhat plaintive reference in one of his letters--even heavier. He
-speaks in this place of actions brought by tradesmen to recover money
-for goods supplied to his sons Frederick and Frank--from which we may
-conclude that the young men had inherited their share of the paternal
-faculty for spending money. Their father was driven to express the wish
-that the value of this necessary was taught in schools. Neither at school
-nor at home do the young Marryats appear to have gained this knowledge,
-and in those years the navy, which they had both entered, was no school
-of thrift. Doubtless they were among the causes which first induced
-Captain Marryat to betake himself to the country, and then kept him hard
-at work when he was there.
-
-Langham is in the northern division of Norfolk, halfway between
-Wells-next-the-Sea and Holt. The Manor House, says Mrs. Ross Church,
-“without having any great architectural pretensions, had a certain
-unconventional prettiness of its own. It was a cottage in the Elizabethan
-style, built after the model of one at Virginia Water belonging to his
-late Majesty, George IV., with latticed windows opening on to flights
-of stone steps ornamented with vases of flowers, and leading down from
-the long narrow dining-room, where (surrounded by Clarkson Stanfield’s
-illustrations of ‘Poor Jack,’ with which the walls were clothed) Captain
-Marryat composed his later works, to the lawn behind. The house was
-thatched and gabled, and its pinkish white walls and round porch were
-covered with roses and ivy, which in some parts climbed as high as the
-roof itself.” When Marryat came down to examine his property with an
-intention of living on it, he found it suffering from all the evils which
-commonly fall upon the property of absentee landlords. The tenant of the
-larger of the two farms into which the estate was divided had not only
-mismanaged his land. Having the house itself at his mercy, he had turned
-the drawing-room into a common lodging-house, in which tramps and other
-necessitous persons could have a bed for the modest sum of twopence a
-night. The windows were smashed or unclosed, and the birds of the air had
-built their nests in the rooms. This state of neglect was soon changed
-for the better, and Langham Manor became habitable.
-
-In it Marryat sat down during the last five years of his life, to show in
-practice the soundness of his theory touching the fitness of sailors for
-the management of small properties. It will surprise few to learn that
-the result only proved once more that small properties are not so easily
-forced to yield a profit. Even before actually coming to live on the
-estate, Marryat had tried various speculations with his land. The results
-of his efforts, personal and vicarious, are illustrated in his daughter’s
-“Life” by the following extracts, taken at random from his farm accounts.
-
- £ s. d.
-
- 1842. Total receipts 154 2 9
-
- Expenditure 1637 0 6
-
- 1846. Total receipts 898 12 6
-
- Expenditure 2023 10 8
-
-It will be seen that the balance was less heavily against Marryat in
-’46 when he was present, than in ’42 when he could only look on from
-afar. Even in these cases the master’s eye is of value. It is better to
-lose on your own ventures than to be robbed all round, and in so far
-Marryat no doubt gained by living on his land. In 1845 he even secured
-some compensation for the damage done to his house and property by the
-dishonest tenant--at least the courts decided that compensation should
-be paid him. After a lawsuit, an unsuccessful effort at compromise, and
-(Marryat declares) much hard swearing by his opponent, he was awarded
-£150. Whether he ever got it is a question, for the tenant seems to
-have been meditating bankruptcy immediately afterwards. The end of the
-business is wrapt up in mystery. On the whole, one can quite believe
-that the Captain’s “agricultural vagaries appeared almost like insanity
-to those steady plodding minds that could not understand that a man
-may have genius, and no common sense.” Quite credible, too, is it that
-Marryat was very particularly proud of his common sense, and “would have
-been very much hurt” if any man had doubted his claim to possess it in
-an eminent degree. If there is anything of which the more flighty kind
-of speculator is firmly persuaded, it is of his practical faculty and
-sober good sense. It is very characteristic that in all Marryat’s stories
-for children, and in touches scattered over his earlier works, there
-are proofs of a taste for thinking about matters of business, and for
-constructing plausible narratives of profitable investments of money and
-labour. It would seem that, among writing men (and not among them only)
-this taste is an infallible sign of a natural incapacity to acquire three
-pennyworth of anything for less than eighteen pence. Balzac had it, and
-he never could keep his fingers off a losing speculation. Marryat is so
-exact about sums of money, and has such a turn for showing how profits
-are to be made, that we are quite prepared to hear of him bursting into
-his brother’s room at 3 o’clock a.m., with splendid schemes for draining
-the marshes of Clay-by-the-Sea, and thereby realizing wealth beyond
-the dreams of avarice. It follows as a matter of course that his only
-surviving son, Frank, found Langham a worthless inheritance.
-
-It is at this period of his life that we can obtain the best, and,
-indeed, almost the only personal view of Marryat. Of the last years
-of his life at Langham, Mrs. Ross Church speaks from memory, and her
-evidence has independent support. The picture we obtain is in the main
-pleasant, though it is sufficiently clear that Marryat was not exactly
-an angel. “Many people,” says his daughter, “have asked whether Captain
-Marryat, when at home, was not ‘very funny.’ No, decidedly not. In
-society, with new topics to discuss, and other wits about him on which to
-sharpen his own--or, like flint and steel, to emit sparks by friction--he
-was as gay and humorous as the best of them; but at home he was always
-a thoughtful, and, at times, a very grave man; for he was not exempt
-from those ills that all flesh is heir to, and had his sorrows and his
-difficulties and moments of depression like the rest of us. At such times
-it was dangerous to thwart or disturb him, for he was a man of strong
-passions and indomitable determination; but, whoever felt the effects
-of his moods of perplexity or disappointment, his children never did.”
-Mrs. Ross Church must forgive it if this description reminds me more
-than a little of a certificate to character I once heard given to a
-British skipper, a mahogany-faced man of immense strength and violence,
-in the office of one of Her Majesty’s consuls, in a Mediterranean port.
-This gallant seaman had been summoned by one of his men for assault
-and battery. He confessed the beating, but denied that it had been so
-aggravated as the plaintiff alleged. Moreover he pleaded provocation,
-and called up his boatswain as a witness to character. The boatswain,
-an honest-looking rather chuckle-headed fellow, was obviously torn by
-conflicting desires. He did not wish to displease his captain, and yet
-he did not wish to tell lies which would go against his comrade. Nothing
-definite could be got out of him while in the presence of the parties.
-When asked in confidence (and in an outer office) what the truth of
-the matter was, he answered, “Why, you see, sir, it’s just this--the
-captain he’s a very good sort of man as long as he has everything his own
-way--but when he’s crossed he clears the place.”
-
-It may be taken as proved, then, that Marryat had in abundance that
-kind of good nature which is displayed when the owner is pleased and
-happy--of which this may at least be said, that it is vastly superior to
-no good nature at all. Moreover, we have to consider what things it was
-that made him displeased and unhappy. Mrs. Ross Church’s qualification
-to the character just quoted shows that he did not entirely hang his
-fiddle up when he came home. To his children “he was a most indulgent
-father and friend, caring little what escapades they indulged in so
-long as they were not afraid to tell the truth. ‘Tell truth and shame
-the devil’ was a quotation constantly on his lips; and he always upheld
-falsehood and cowardice as the two worst vices of mankind. He never
-permitted anything to be locked or hidden away from his children, who
-were allowed to indulge their appetites at their own discretion; nor were
-they ever banished from the apartments which he occupied. Even whilst he
-was writing, they would pass freely in and out of the room, putting any
-questions to him that occurred to them, and the worst rebuke they ever
-encountered was the short determined order, ‘Cease your prattle, child,
-and leave the room,’ an order that was immediately obeyed. For with all
-his indulgence of them, Captain Marryat took care to impress one fact
-upon his children--that his word was law.”
-
-The children were aware that they were dealing with a parent not
-incapable of getting in a rage, and therefore stopped in time--which
-is one of the many advantages of not possessing a too equable temper.
-These collisions of theirs with the sovereign authority at Langham
-cannot, however, have been frequent, as this further quotation from Mrs.
-Ross Church will show: “The long-expected governess [there were great
-negotiations over the engagement of this official], when eventually
-secured and transplanted to Langham, was not received by the children,
-who had been accustomed to have their own way in everything, with much
-enthusiasm; and their father was the friend to whom they invariably
-appealed for protection against her authority. Captain Marryat had
-rather an original plan with respect to punishment and reward. He kept
-a quantity of small articles for presents in his secretary, and at the
-termination of each week the children, and governess armed with a report
-of their general behaviour, were ushered with much solemnity into the
-library to render up an account. Those who had behaved well during the
-preceding seven days received a prize, because they had been so good;
-and those who had behaved ill also received one, in hopes that they
-would never be naughty again. The governess was also presented with a
-gift, that her criticism on the justice of the transaction might be
-disarmed. Thus all parties left the room perfectly satisfied; an end
-which, Captain Marryat used to observe, it required some diplomacy to
-attain. The governess was in the habit of restraining the children’s
-thoughtlessness by imposition of fines or lessons when they tore their
-clothes; but, as tearing their clothes was an event of daily occurrence,
-the punishment became rather heavy; and one of the younger ones, having
-made a large rent in a new frock, ran in dismay to her father in order
-to consult him how best to escape the impending doom. Captain Marryat,
-without any regard to the future of the garment in question, took hold of
-the rent and tore off the whole lower part of the skirt. ‘Tell her _I_
-did it,’ he said in explanation as he walked away.” This story, which had
-previously made its appearance in an article in the _Cornhill Magazine_,
-is supported there by the general assertion that whenever any of the
-young Marryats required punishment they were doubly petted for the rest
-of the day. “It seemed as if no amount of indulgence was thought too much
-for compensation; like the jam to take the taste of the physic out of the
-mouth.”
-
-Persons who make a serious study of the art of training children may not
-all agree that a system which recommended courage by giving them nothing
-to fear, inculcated the love of truth by making it safe and pleasant to
-tell it, and developed the moral virtues by unlimited indulgence, was one
-to be held up as a model to fathers. No doubt, however, it was abundantly
-pleasant for the children, and it may readily be believed that Captain
-Marryat was loved by his own house. With his children he lived on terms
-of affectionate freedom, making them his companions, and even training
-them to play piquet, for which scientific game he had a great affection,
-in order that they might share with him in all things.
-
-For animals, too, he had a genuine but not a maudlin affection. His
-dogs and his pony Dumpling figure much in the accounts given of his
-last years. His favourite bull, Ben Brace, was kept tethered opposite
-the window of the room in which he wrote. It is a good sign of his
-genuine kindness for animals that he seems to have been made rather
-impatient by the gushing talk about them, and the wondrous tales of
-their intelligence, which are (in the opinion of some) nearly the most
-nauseous of all forms of twaddle. We have it on his own authority that
-he joined Theodore Hook in inventing outrageous stories about the
-intelligence of animals, and palming them off on the too credulous
-popular naturalist. To his men Marryat seems to have been a kind master.
-He at least gave them copious feasts on proper occasions. “All the men
-who were on the farm,” he tells his god-daughter, “were invited to a
-Christmas dinner in the kitchen, and they sat down two-and-twenty at the
-table in the servants’ hall, and were waited upon by our own servants.
-They had two large pieces of roast beef, and a boiled leg of pork; four
-dishes of Norfolk dumplings; two large meat pies; two geese, eight ducks,
-and eight widgeon; and after that they had four large plum puddings.”
-This, with “plenty of strong beer,” which was also duly supplied, made,
-as Marryat seems to have felt with pardonable satisfaction, a feed
-likely to be remembered by the two-and-twenty farm hands. He was not so
-original as he perhaps thought himself, or as some have supposed him to
-have been, in employing an ex-poacher, one Barnes, as gamekeeper. That
-particular kind of thief had often been set to catch the other thieves
-before Captain Marryat went to live at Langham. The poacher who is not
-merely the paid hand of a London poulterer is commonly enough not such a
-bad fellow, and when he is allowed to combine his sporting tastes with
-a regular salary, and a position of some authority, is capable of doing
-fairly well. In this case whatever risk Marryat ran was justified by the
-result. Barnes proved not only a good servant to him, but is said to have
-been a loyal follower to his son Frank when he emigrated to California.
-
-Here, on his own land, surrounded by his family, Marryat spent what were,
-doubtless, not the least happy years of his life. An occasional friend
-from London found the ex-_viveur_ and dandy in velveteen shooting jacket
-and coloured trousers, turning out at five in the morning, trotting about
-his farm on Dumpling, attentive to scientific farming, and invincible
-in hope of profit from that deceptive venture. For company, he had his
-romps with his children, his game of piquet, and an occasional, or even
-frequent, visit from Lieutenant Thomas, of the coastguard station at
-Morston. The two old seamen met, and talked of the rapid progress of
-the service to the d----, as old seamen have done from the beginning,
-and will do to the end of time. From the outer world came requests for
-work from editors, suggestions that he should take up this subject or
-the other, and at times invitations to come up and take part in farewell
-dinners to Macready or to Dickens. These last he steadily declined.
-Except during a few brief visits to London on matters of business, he
-remained fixed at Langham till the disease which proved fatal drove him
-up to town in search of better medical help than he could obtain in
-Norfolk.
-
-He has himself described the work of these last years in a letter
-to Forster, who had written in 1845 to Marryat, suggesting that he
-should give “a month or two to a short biography, of about a volume;
-something of the size and manner of Southey’s ‘Nelson,’ and the subject
-‘Collingwood.’” Marryat thought it over, but declined, giving, among
-other reasons, this: “That I have lately taken to a different style of
-writing, that is, for young people. My former productions, like all
-novels, have had their day, and for the present, at least, will sell
-no more; but it is not so with the _juveniles_; they have an annual
-demand, and become _a little income_ to me; which I infinitely prefer
-to receiving any sum in a mass, which very soon disappears somehow
-or other.” Marryat justified his unwillingness to write the life of
-Collingwood by other than business reasons. “I should like,” he told
-Forster, “to write about Collingwood, but if I were to write it in
-anything like a stipulated time I should not do it well. Biography is
-most difficult writing, and requires more time and thought than any
-original composition, and if I take it up I must be free as air.” In
-addition to this (justly high) estimate of the difficulty and dignity
-of biography, Marryat, with sound critical judgment, decided that
-Collingwood was not a proper subject. There is not enough known or to be
-known about him. So much of his work was done as a subordinate under St.
-Vincent or Nelson. With them he was always in the second place at best,
-and when he reached great independent command, the heroic days of the
-naval war were over, and there was little for him to do beyond duties of
-a mainly routine character, performed in the midst of chronic illness.
-It is a pity perhaps that Marryat did not devote some part of his work
-to naval biography, but he would hardly have made a real success with
-Collingwood. For Forster himself, Marryat wrote a series of letters to
-the _Examiner_ on the “Condition of England Question,” or that part of
-England which he saw about him in Norfolk. “I have,” he wrote to Forster,
-“been amusing myself with putting together my thoughts and knowledge of
-the condition of the agricultural class--I mean the common labourer
-principally--and I believe I know more of the subject than anything I
-have seen in print. What I can say is from personal knowledge. I was
-thinking of writing some letters to Peel as a Norfolk farmer, ‘The Poor
-Man _versus_ Sir Robert Peel.’ It would not do to put my name to them as
-they would be anything but Conservative, but they would be the _truth_.”
-It was not Marryat’s destiny to be a politician, and his opinion of Sir
-Robert Peel is perhaps not very valuable. His own political activity was
-not particularly consistent, for he appears to have swayed from Reformer
-to Conservative, and back again, but it may be noted that he ended by
-sharing that dislike of the leader who always led his followers to
-surrender which was so widely felt in Peel’s last days.
-
-His main work was always his stories for children. Five of these belong
-to the Langham period--“The Narrative of the Travels and Adventures of
-Monsieur Violet,” “The Settlers in Canada,” “The Mission,” “The Children
-of the New Forest,” and “The Little Savage.” There may be some doubt
-whether the first ought to come under this heading. Marryat did not
-consider it a child’s story himself; but if it is not _that_ one has some
-difficulty in deciding what it was. The materials were, Mrs. Ross Church
-says, supplied by a young Frenchman, named Lasalles, who turned up at
-Langham, and astonished the neighbourhood by lassoing cattle and doing
-other barbarous feats. The matter supplied by this amusing adventurer
-was “licked into shape” by Marryat. This account of the origin of the
-book is certainly borne out by its contents. It is a somewhat rambling
-story of adventure among the Red Men, starting from an improbability, and
-ending somewhat abruptly. No small part of it consists of an account of
-the early Mormons, and has sadly the air of padding. On the whole, it has
-much more the look of a collection of notes for a tale of adventure than
-anything else, and has always been one of the least read, if not entirely
-the least read, of the books which bear Marryat’s name. Of “The Mission”
-its author gave an exact account in a letter to his friend Mrs. S----:
-“It is composed of scenes and descriptions of Africa in a journey to the
-Northward from the Cape of Good Hope--full of lions, rhinoceroses, and
-all manner of adventures, interspersed with a little common sense here
-and there, and interwoven with the history of the settlement of the Cape
-up to 1828--written for young people of course, and, therefore trifling,
-but amusing.” “The Mission,” although this promising sketch of it is
-strictly correct, has not been much more popular than “Monsieur Violet,”
-and the reason is obvious enough. It is not so much a story as a series
-of unconnected, or very loosely connected, incidents; and moreover, it
-contains what any right-minded boy could only regard as a cruel “sell.”
-The hero starts forth to clear up the fate of a relative--a lady who
-has been wrecked on the Caffre coast many years before. It is not known
-for certain whether she was drowned or died on shore, and a fear has
-always existed that she survived as a prisoner among the natives, and
-had grown up to be the wife of some Caffre chief, and bear him young
-barbarians in his kraal--a fate which it is believed did actually befall
-the daughters of an English officer, who were wrecked on that coast on
-their way back from India. He goes on, hears of a renowned chief, whose
-mother was an Englishwoman, finds him, and then discovers that it was
-another shipwrecked lady, who had the happiness to produce a half-bred
-hero in that distant region. His own relative has certainly perished. Now
-this is cruel. It was not worth while to go so far to learn so little,
-and the feeling of disappointment caused is too acute. Marryat made a
-fatal mistake when he overlooked the possibilities of the situation.
-For the rest, it is a pity he did, because the background of the story
-is particularly good. Marryat seems to have obtained a very clear idea
-of the Cape, which he must have visited during his service in the South
-Atlantic. His hunting adventures, his Zulu warriors, his Dutch Boers, and
-Hottentot boys are distinctly good. There is even a touch of something
-grandiose in the references to the invaders from the North, who were then
-pressing down on Caffraria. They weigh in an imposing fashion on the
-fortunes of the adventurers in “The Mission.” It is somewhat unfair to
-look at it all now, when these materials have again been made popular.
-But good as it is of its kind, the book has a feeble, aimless look,
-simply from want of satisfactory ending.
-
-Of the three children’s stories which remain--“The Settlers,” “The
-Children of the New Forest,” and “The Little Savage”--the second is
-most likely to be interesting to children, and the last is, in part at
-least, the most original. There is something rather gruesome in the
-picture of the child born on a desert island, and growing up by the side
-of a ruffian who bullies him. The natural savagery of the human animal
-is developed in him unchecked, and Marryat has shown some power in the
-scenes in which the boy discovers the helplessness of his companion,
-who has been blinded by a flash of lightning, and then turns on him
-with cool ferocity. But the promise of the beginning is not kept. “The
-Little Savage” becomes didactic--full of repetitions--and ends by being
-more than a little tiresome. On the whole, after all, “The Children” is
-better. Our old friends, the Cavaliers and Roundheads, are less new than
-“The Little Savage,” but they last out more briskly. It is a child’s
-story of merit--nothing more--and the historical erudition of it, if
-somewhat shallow, is on a level with that of more pretentious books. “The
-Privateersman” has a certain interest as being the last of Marryat’s sea
-stories, and as a picture, or at least a rough sketch, of the strange old
-privateer life of which “The Voyages and Cruises of Commodore Walker” is
-almost our only record from the inside. It is not a pleasant book, or a
-strong. Moreover, Marryat puts his hero in the very most ignoble position
-any hero was ever in. It may be safely laid down as a rule that under
-no conditions ought a gentleman to desert a woman in a forest full of
-Red American Indians. It is one of those things which a gentleman cannot
-do. Now the hero of “The Privateersman” does it--and the deduction is
-obvious. The story has touches which remind one of “Colonel Jack,” but
-it is too clearly a book written simply to fill space in a magazine.
-Marryat’s fun had gone when he wrote it for Harrison Ainsworth and _The
-New Monthly Magazine_. “Valerie,” a species of Japhet in petticoats, is
-not even all Marryat’s, and was, in any case, written when he was slowly
-dying.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-
-The weakness which proved fatal to Marryat had shown itself while he was
-still a young lieutenant in the West Indies. He had then been invalided
-home for rupture of a blood vessel in the lungs, and a military doctor
-“also certified to his tendency to ‘hæmoptysis,’ and prophesied that,
-without great care, ‘the most dangerous and perhaps fatal results’ would
-be the consequence” of rashness. The danger had passed at that time--had
-probably been avoided by the use of care--and for many years Marryat had
-to all appearance been a very robust man. He was of the best possible
-height and build for strength. He was some five feet ten inches high,
-with broad deep chest, and his muscular force was exceptionally great.
-His portrait, as far as it can be judged of from the engraving prefixed
-to “Frank Mildmay,” gives the impression of a man of boundless energy,
-open-faced, alert, and keen-eyed. He was black-haired with blue eyes, and
-his beard grew so thick and so fast that he was compelled to shave twice
-a day. When he came to Langham, in 1843, his strength was apparently
-still unbroken, and he might appear sure of long years of health and
-capacity for work. But it is clear that there was more appearance than
-reality in his strength. When a man has turned fifty he begins to suffer
-for the unwisdom of former years. Marryat, unfortunately, had never given
-himself any quarter. He had spared himself no burden a man can lay upon
-his strength. He had played and worked to excess, had lived in a whirl of
-nervous excitement, had spent beyond his means in constitution as well
-as in purse. If he had not spent his summer while it was May--at least
-he had run through it far too soon. Langham, which might have given him
-rest, was only the scene of more nervous excitement, more strenuous work.
-In 1847 the end began. In August of that year he speaks, in a letter to
-his sister, of having recently ruptured two blood vessels. The following
-letter shows that the accident occurred in London, but Marryat returned
-to Langham, and remained there till the want of medical advice likely
-to inspire more confidence than a country doctor’s drove him to London
-again. He remained at his mother’s house at Wimbledon for two months, and
-from it wrote to Lord Auckland, then at the Admiralty, on December 14th.
-
- “MY LORD,--When I had the honour of an audience with you, in July
- last, your lordship’s reception was so mortifying to me that, from
- excitement and annoyance, after I left you I ruptured a blood
- vessel, which has now for nearly five months laid me on a bed of
- sickness.
-
- “I will pass over much that irritated and vexed me, and refer to
- one point only. When I pointed out to your lordship the repeated
- marks of approbation awarded to Captain Chads--and the neglect with
- which my applications had been received by the Admiralty during so
- long a period of application--your reply was ‘That you could not
- admit such parallels to be drawn, as Captain Chads was a highly
- distinguished officer,’ thereby implying that my claims were not to
- be considered in the same light.
-
- “I trust to be able to prove to your lordship that I was justified
- in pointing out the difference in the treatment of Captain Chads
- and myself. The fact is that there are no two officers who have
- so completely run neck and neck in the service, if I may use
- the expression. If your lordship will be pleased to examine our
- respective services, previous to the Burmah War, I trust that you
- will admit that mine have been as creditable as those of that
- officer; and I may here take the liberty of pointing out to your
- lordship that Sir G. Cockburn thought proper to make a special
- mention relative to both our services, and of which your lordship
- may not be aware.
-
- “During the Burmah War Captain Chads and I both held the command
- of a very large force for several months--both were promoted on
- the same day, and both received the honour of the Order of the
- Bath--and, on the thanks of Government being voted in the House of
- Commons to the officers, and on Sir Joseph York, who was a great
- friend of Captain Chads, proposing that he should be particularly
- mentioned by name, Sir G. Cockburn rose and said that it would be
- the height of injustice to mention that officer without mentioning
- me.
-
- “I trust the above statement will satisfy your lordship that I
- was not so much to blame when I drew the comparison between our
- respective treatment--Captain Chads having hoisted his commodore’s
- pennant in India, having been since appointed to the _Excellent_,
- and lately received the good service pension; while I have applied
- in vain for employment, and have met with a reception which I have
- not deserved.
-
- “And now, my lord, apologizing for the length of this letter, allow
- me to state the chief cause of my addressing you. It is not to
- renew my applications for employment--for which my present state
- of health has totally unfitted me--it is, that my recovery has
- been much retarded by a feeling that your lordship could not have
- departed from your usual courtesy in your reception of me as you
- did, if it was not that some misrepresentations of my character had
- been made to you. This has weighed heavily upon me; and I entreat
- your lordship will let me know if such has been the case, and that
- you will give me an opportunity of justifying myself--which I
- feel assured that I can do--as I never yet have departed from the
- conduct of an officer and a gentleman. I am the more anxious upon
- this point, as, since the total wreck of West India property, I
- shall have little to leave my children but a good name, which, on
- their account, becomes doubly precious. I have the honour, &c.,
-
- “F. MARRYAT.”
-
-I have quoted this melancholy but not altogether unmanly letter at full
-for the light it throws on Marryat’s last years. It is clear that when
-the ruin of West Indian property had begun to embarrass him, he had
-striven to return to active service. The beginning of the letter proves
-that in the middle of 1847 his nerve was already gone. At last he was no
-longer able to bear the strain of that passion and determination of which
-his daughter speaks. When crossed by a First Lord of the Admiralty, with
-whom he could not give way to an explosion of rage, the effort required
-to control himself was too much for a man worn in health, and accustomed
-for many years past to give his feelings unchecked course. The letter
-may also stand as proof that Marryat’s reputation as a naval officer was
-dear to him. As to the merits of the dispute there is no evidence to form
-an opinion. Lord Auckland, in a temperate letter, replied that he had no
-recollection of what had passed at the time, but that he certainly could
-have had no intention of wounding so distinguished an officer as Captain
-Marryat. The letter ended with the agreeable information that a good
-service pension had been conferred on him. Heat and disappointment on the
-one side, and perhaps a little dry official formality on the other--a
-thing which those who deal with Government officials should learn to take
-for granted--will doubtless account for the trouble.
-
-From this time forward Marryat’s remnant of life was filled with flights
-in search of health, and with every sorrow. From Wimbledon he went
-to Hastings, in the vain hope that a milder climate would give him a
-chance of recovery. For a time he seemed to improve, but it was a mere
-flicker. Whatever chance of recovery he had was utterly destroyed by
-the terrible blow which fell on him at the end of the year. His son,
-Lieutenant Frederick Marryat, was lost in the wreck of the _Avenger_ in
-the Mediterranean. The _Avenger_, one of the first steamers in the navy,
-was steered on a reef between Galita and the mainland, during the night.
-She was under steam and sail at the time, and struck so heavily that in
-a very few minutes she was a complete wreck, with the sea breaking over
-her. Frederick Marryat was below when the vessel struck. In the confusion
-which followed, he was seen, by one of the few survivors, in the waist
-of the ship, endeavouring to keep the men steady, and clear away the
-boats. But the _Avenger_ broke up fast; the funnel and main-mast fell
-on the group in which Marryat stood, crushing some and hurling others
-overboard, where they were swept away in the sea that was then running.
-By one death or the other he perished, and the tragedy broke his father’s
-heart. The young man had been wild and extravagant--a source of expense
-and anxiety to his father. He had been a midshipman of the wild type, and
-as a young lieutenant had been unsettled, eager to get on shore and find
-some work more agreeable and more lucrative than a naval officer’s. But
-if he had the faults--or rather let us say the weaknesses--of the seaman,
-he also had his finer qualities. He was a gallant and good-hearted
-young fellow. A letter of his father’s, written two years or so before
-the wreck, speaks of him as turning up from the China station full of
-life and spirit, lighting up the house at Langham. In his then state
-of weakness it must have been a killing blow to the father to hear of
-the son’s death, under circumstances of which no man was better able to
-appreciate the horror than himself. Marryat bore the blow stoutly, for he
-too had the “qualities of his defects,” and as he was passionate so was
-he courageous.
-
-From Hastings, which he naturally felt had done him no good, he moved
-to Brighton for a month. It seemed for a moment as if the danger was
-past, and Dickens, among others, wrote to congratulate him on his
-recovery. But, in truth, the case was a hopeless one. From Brighton he
-returned to London for the last time to consult with the doctors. When
-he re-entered the outer room in which several of his family were waiting
-to hear the result, he had to tell them that he had been condemned.
-“They say,” he reported, “that in six months I shall be numbered with my
-forefathers.” He announced the decision, Mrs. Ross Church tells us, with
-an “undisturbed and half-smiling countenance,” and we can easily believe
-it, for, leaving his natural bravery out of the question, life can have
-had no temptation for him if it was to be lived under the constant threat
-of such a disease as menaced him.
-
-From London Marryat moved to Langham, and there waited for death all
-through the summer of 1848. It came at last through sheer weakness, and
-apparently with little or no pain. Ruptures of blood vessels could only
-be prevented by rigid abstinence from food. He speaks in the last letter
-he wrote--in at least the last that is printed--of living for days on
-lemonade till he “was reduced to a little above nothing.” The illness
-and the remedy were alike fatal, and between the two he was gradually
-reduced to extinction. During the summer days he lay in the drawing-room
-of the house at Langham, hearing his daughters read aloud to him, till
-his growing weakness brought on delirium. To the last he continued to
-dictate pages of incoherent talk, much as Sir Walter Scott had written
-mechanically long after his intellect was gone. He loved to have flowers
-brought him to the end. Finally, after he had long been unconscious
-between weakness and doses of morphia, he expired in perfect quiet just
-about dawn on August 9, 1848.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It ought to be unnecessary for me to add much on the character of Captain
-Marryat. Although our knowledge of him is fragmentary, it is my fault if
-enough has not been said in these pages to show what sort of man he must
-have been. It is tolerably clear that he was passionate, ready to think
-that he did well to be angry, and that anger was its own justification.
-Passionately eager to enjoy he must have been, and not wise in seeking
-enjoyment. It must be remembered, however, that he was trained in the
-navy in a wild time, when men repaid themselves for such hardships as
-the naval officer of to-day never undergoes, by excesses of which he
-would be incapable. Then Marryat fell into the literary and semi-literary
-life of London at a time when it was partly honestly, partly out of mere
-silly pose, dissipated and Bohemian. His wealth was the means of throwing
-him among a hard living set. Among them, his friends, doubtless, helped
-him to get rid of his money inherited and earned. He was the fast and
-hard living stamp of man whom the Bohemian literary gentlemen professed
-to admire, and he paid for his genuineness. In such a world the ardent
-natures wore themselves out, while the _poseur_ and the humbug escaped.
-But if Marryat wasted his substance and hastened his death by excesses,
-he seems to have been generous and good to those around him. To his
-younger children he was kind, and if his wife fell out of his life (she
-is not mentioned as having been present at Langham), there is nothing to
-show that it was for reasons discreditable to him, or indeed to either of
-them. If he was one of those who are mainly their own enemies, at least
-he did not belong to the worst rank of a very noxious class of persons.
-That he was a brave man and a good officer beyond question.
-
-As a writer Captain Marryat has never--as I began this little book
-by saying--been quite fairly treated. There has always been more or
-less a suspicion that an _Athenæum_ writer, who described him as a
-quarter-deck captain who defied critics, and trifled with the public,
-writing carelessly, and not even good English, taking it for granted
-that the public was to read just what he chose to write, was stating the
-facts. He has never been recognized as one of the front rank of English
-novelists. Macaulay only mentions him as one among several writers on
-America. Carlyle’s savage “slate” of him is unjust to a degree which can
-only be palliated by the fact that it was founded on a hasty reading
-of his books in the evil days after the loss of the manuscript of the
-French Revolution. At that time everything was looking more spectral to
-Carlyle than usual. Thackeray was just to him indeed, but Thackeray was
-exceptionally large-minded and fair. Yet I do not know what reason there
-is to exclude Marryat from the front rank which would not also exclude
-some whom we habitually put there. To rank him with Fielding, with Jane
-Austen, Thackeray or Richardson, would be absurd, but I see no reason why
-he should not stand with Smollett. He might stand a little below him for
-“Humphrey Clinker’s” sake, but not very far. Except Sir Walter Scott, no
-man can be read over a longer period of life. He may be enjoyed at school
-and for ever afterwards. I doubt whether many boys have delighted in “Tom
-Jones.” Did anybody, to take the other end of life, ever experience, on
-coming back to “Peter Simple” or “Mr. Midshipman Easy,” that shock which
-is produced by a mature re-reading of, say, “Zanoni”? I imagine not.
-There must be a great vitality, a genuine truth, in the writer who can
-stand this test, and stand it so long. That Marryat was to some extent
-a boyish writer is undeniable, and it seems to me to be the secret of
-his enduring popularity. His books revive in one the exact kind of
-pleasure one felt in reading them in one’s teens. We may re-read some
-writers who pleased then, and remember the pleasure, and regret it can
-be felt no longer. Others one re-reads with ever new pleasure, but they
-satisfy for reasons not felt in early days. We see more in them and ever
-more. But with Marryat it is different. He pleases for the same causes
-always, which is surely as much as to say that he is unique of his kind.
-More than any other man he made what was written for boys and children
-literature. He was the best of his class, and that alone entitles him to
-a high place. After all, a man can do no more than be the best of his
-order. Whoever is that is surely fairly entitled to be called a Great
-Writer. Whether that title is to be grudged him or not, he is assuredly
-the friend of all who read with a simple and healthy taste. No man has
-given more honest pleasure, more wholesome stimulus to youth; few have
-given more hearty fun to older readers. If we do not think of him as
-“great,” a word of which we might indeed be more chary than we are,
-at least we can think of him as kindly, as sound, as manly--and it is
-possible to make a stir with one’s pen and be none of those three things.
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
- A.
-
- Almeria Bay, Action in, 32-34
-
- America, Books about, 100
-
- America, Marryat’s visit to, 98-113
-
- Auckland, Lord, Letter to, 150-152;
- his answer, 153
-
- _Avenger_, Loss of, 153, 154
-
-
- B.
-
- Babbage, 14, 15
-
- Basque roads, Action in, 37-40
-
- Burmah, War in, 51-55
-
-
- C.
-
- Canada, Revolt in, 111, 112
-
- _Caroline_, Affair of the, 106
-
- “Children of New Forest, The,” 146, 147
-
- Chucks, Mr., 96
-
- Cochrane, Lord, Captain of _Impérieuse_, his character, 19-21;
- in Basque roads, 37-40;
- end of service, 40
-
- Collingwood, Admiral, Marryat asked to write life of, 143
-
- Continent, English on the, 67, 68
-
-
- D.
-
- Drew, Captain, _see_ _Caroline_
-
- Dundonald, Earl of, _see_ Cochrane
-
-
- F.
-
- _Fraser’s Magazine_, Marryat and, 127-131
-
-
- G.
-
- Giliano, Pasquil, fight with, 27, 28
-
-
- I.
-
- _Impérieuse_, frigate, 17;
- Marryat’s account of her service, 23, 24;
- sent hurriedly to sea, 25, 26;
- her cruises, 27-40
-
- Irving, Washington, quoted, 84, 121
-
-
- L.
-
- Langham, Marryat’s life at, 65, 132-134, 136-142
-
- “Little Savage, The,” 147
-
-
- M.
-
- Marryat, Frederick, born, 11;
- his family, 11-12;
- school-life, 12-15;
- goes to sea, 16;
- appointed to _Impérieuse_, 17;
- serves in her, 17-40;
- at Walcheren, 40;
- in _Victorious_, 40;
- _Centaur_, 40;
- _Atlas_, 41;
- _Æolus_, 41;
- _L’Espiègle_, 41;
- _Newcastle_, 41;
- a Lieutenant and Commander, 41;
- breaks blood-vessel, 41;
- saves life, 43;
- cuts away main-yard of _Æolus_, 43;
- his wound, 45;
- goes on Continent, 46;
- marriage, 47;
- command of _Beaver_, 47;
- St. Helena, and death of Napoleon, 47;
- exchange to the _Rosario_, 48;
- service in Channel, 48;
- Smugglers, 49;
- appointed to _Larne_, 51;
- service in Burmah, 51-54;
- Post-captain, and C.B., 55;
- _Ariadne_, 55;
- begins writing, 55;
- equerry to Duke of Sussex, 56;
- resigns command, 56;
- begins literary life, 58;
- expensive habits, 59;
- _Metropolitan Magazine_, 60;
- letter to Bentley, 60-61;
- editor of _Metropolitan Magazine_, 61-62;
- first books, 62;
- stands for Parliament, 63;
- at Brighton, 64;
- hard work in 1834, 64;
- Langham, 65;
- letter about lawsuit, 65;
- goes to Continent, 66;
- his work on, 66;
- resigns editorship, 66;
- writes for _New Monthly Magazine_, 67;
- stories of Marryat, 69-70;
- letter to his mother, 71-72;
- starts for America, 72;
- his literary work between 1832 and 1837, 73-97;
- his speedy success, 74;
- his earnings, 75;
- quarrels with publisher, 75;
- letter to publisher, 76-77;
- “Frank Mildmay,” his account of, 79-80;
- account and criticism of book, 81-82;
- Marryat as a story-writer, 83;
- truth of his pictures of sea-life, 84;
- his story-telling faculty, 85;
- his style, 86;
- quotation from “Peter Simple,” 87-91;
- his faculty of construction, 91, 92;
- his fun, 92;
- quotation from “Mr. Midshipman Easy,” 94-96;
- Marryat’s portraits, 97;
- his visit to America, 98;
- at New York, 100-101;
- letter to his mother from America, 101-105;
- visit to Canada, 106;
- affair of _Caroline_, 106;
- disturbance about, 106-109;
- letter to mother, 109-111;
- serves during Canadian rising, 112;
- return to England, 113;
- Marryat’s money matters, 114-115;
- life in London, 116-117;
- ill health, 118;
- his work from 1837 to 1843, 120-127;
- quarrel with Fraser, 128-131;
- goes to Langham, 132;
- Marryat as a farmer, 135;
- his life at Langham, 136-142;
- his children, 138, 139;
- fondness for animals, 140;
- his labourers, 141;
- his work at Langham, 143;
- beginning of fatal illness, 149;
- his personal appearance, 149;
- letter to Lord Auckland, 150-152;
- his good-service pension, 153;
- at Hastings, 153;
- at Brighton, 154;
- return to Langham, 155;
- death of Captain Marryat, 157;
- his personal character, 156-157;
- his place in literature, 157-159
-
- Marryat, Joseph, M.P., Marryat’s father, 11
-
- Marryat, Lieutenant F., Marryat’s son, his death, 154
-
- “Masterman Ready,” 124-127
-
- _Metropolitan Magazine_, 60, 61, 66
-
- “Mildmay, Frank,” 43, 79-82
-
- “Mission, The,” 144, 145, 146
-
-
- N.
-
- Naval war in 1806, 17, 18
-
-
- P.
-
- “Percival Keene,” 124
-
- “Phantom Ship, The,” 122, 123
-
- Pierce, Captain J., 108
-
- “Poor Jack,” 123
-
- “Poacher, The,” 124
-
- “Privateersman, The,” 147
-
-
- R.
-
- Ross Church, Mrs., Marryat’s daughter, quoted, 11, 57, 68, 75,
- 115, 133, 136, 138-140
-
-
- S.
-
- Seagrave, Tommy, 126
-
-
- V.
-
- “Violet, Monsieur,” 144
-
-
- W.
-
- William IV., story of, 56, 57
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY.
-
-BY
-
-JOHN P. ANDERSON
-
-(_British Museum_).
-
-
-I. WORKS.
-
-The Novels of Captain Marryat.--Percival Keene. Monsieur Violet. Rattlin
-the Reefer. Valerie. The author’s copyright edition. 4 pts. London,
-Guildford [printed 1875], 8vo.
-
-The Novels of Captain Marryat.--The Phantom Ship. The Dog Fiend. Olla
-Podrida. The Poacher. The author’s copyright edition. London, Guildford
-[printed 1875], 8vo.
-
-The Children of the New Forest. 2 vols. London [1847], 12mo. Part of a
-series entitled “The Juvenile Library.”
-
----- Another edition. 2 vols. London, 1849, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. 2 vols. London, 1850, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1853, 16mo.
-
-A Code of Signals for the use of vessels employed in the Merchant
-Service. London, 1837, 8vo.
-
----- Eighth edition. London, 1841, 8vo.
-
- The last edition edited by Captain Marryat.
-
----- Another edition. The Universal Code of Signals, for the Mercantile
-Marine of all Nations, etc. London, 1854, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1861, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1864, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1866, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1869, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1879, 8vo.
-
-A Diary in America, with remarks on its Institutions. 3 vols. London,
-1839, 12mo.
-
----- A Diary in America, with remarks on its Institutions. Part Second. 3
-vols. London, 1839, 12mo.
-
-The Floral Telegraph; or, Affection’s Signals. London [1850], 12mo.
-
-Jacob Faithful. 3 vols. London, 1834, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxiii. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, New York, 1873, 8vo.
-
----- Author’s edition, complete. London [1874], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, Guildford [printed 1877], 8vo.
-
- One of a series entitled “Notable Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, Halifax [printed 1878], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1881], 8vo.
-
- One of “Ward and Lock’s Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London [1883], 8vo.
-
-Japhet in Search of a Father. 3 vols. London, 1836, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxiv. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1857, 8vo.
-
- One of the “Railway Library” series.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1873, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1881], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1883], 8vo.
-
-Joseph Rushbrook; or, The Poacher. 3 vols. London, 1841, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. 3 vols. London, 1842, 8vo.
-
-Joseph Rushbrook; or, The Poacher. London, 1846, 8vo.
-
- No. civ. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- New edition. London, 1856, 12mo.
-
----- New edition. London, 1857, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London [1873], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
----- Reprinted from the original edition. (A Rencontre.) London [1883],
-8vo.
-
- One of a series entitled “Notable Novels.”
-
-The King’s Own. 3 vols. London, 1830, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxv. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1873, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1874], 8vo.
-
- One of a series entitled “Notable Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. With a Memoir by Florence Marryat. Author’s
-edition. London [1874], 8vo.
-
----- [“Handy-Volume Marryat” edition.] London [1880], 16mo.
-
-The Little Savage. [Edited by Frank S. Marryat.] 2 pts. London, 1848-49,
-12mo.
-
- Part of the “Juvenile Library.”
-
----- Another edition. 2 vols. London, 1850, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1853, 8vo.
-
-Masterman Ready; or, the Wreck of the Pacific. 3 vols. London, 1841, 8vo.
-
-Masterman Ready. New edition. (_Bohn’s Illustrated Library._) London,
-1851, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. 2 vols. London, 1853, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. (_Bell’s Reading Books._) London, 1875, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1878, 16mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1885, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London [1886], 8vo.
-
-The Metropolitan: a monthly journal of literature, science, and the fine
-arts.
-
-[Continued as]
-
-The Metropolitan Magazine. Successively edited by T. Campbell, F.
-Marryat, etc. 57 vols. London, 1831-50, 8vo.
-
-The Mission, or Scenes in Africa. London, 1845, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1853, 12mo.
-
----- New edition. (_Bohn’s Illustrated Library._) London, 1854, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1887, 8vo.
-
-Mr. Midshipman Easy. 3 vols. London, 1836, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London. 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxvi. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1873, 8vo.
-
-Mr. Midshipman Easy. Another edition. London [1879], 8vo.
-
- One of a series entitled “Notable Novels.”
-
----- [“Handy-Volume Marryat” edition.] London [1880], 16mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, [1881], 8vo.
-
- One of “Ward and Lock’s Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London [1883], 8vo.
-
-Narrative of the Travels and Adventures of Monsieur Violet in California,
-Sonora, and Western Texas, 3 vols. London, 1843, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1849, 8vo.
-
----- The Travels and Adventures of Monsieur Violet among the Snake
-Indians and Wild Tribes of the Great Western Prairies. London, 1849, 12mo.
-
- Vol. 33 of the “Parlour Library.”
-
----- The Travels and Adventures of Monsieur Violet in California, Sonora,
-and Western Texas. With illustrations. London, 1874, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1875], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-The Naval Officer; or, Scenes and Adventures in the life of Frank
-Mildmay. 3 vols. London, 1829, 12mo.
-
----- Revised edition. (_Colburn’s Modern Standard Novelists_, vol. x.)
-London, 1839, 8vo.
-
-----Frank Mildmay; or, the Naval Officer, with a Memoir by Florence
-Marryat. London [1873], 8vo.
-
-The Naval Officer. Another edition. London [1874], 8vo.
-
- One of a series, entitled “Notable Novels.”
-
----- Author’s edition. London [1874], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-Newton Forster; or, the Merchant Service. 3 vols. London, 1832, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxvii. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
- One of a series entitled the “Railway Library.”
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1873, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1874], 8vo.
-
- One of a series entitled “Notable Novels.”
-
----- Author’s edition. London [1874], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-Olla Podrida. 3 vols. London, 1840, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1849, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1874, 8vo.
-
----- Author’s copyright edition. London [1875], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-The Pacha of Many Tales. 3 vols. London, 1835, 12mo.
-
-The Pacha of Many Tales. Another edition. Paris, 1835, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxviii. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- New edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
----- Author’s edition. London [1874], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1873, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 8vo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-Percival Keene. 3 vols. London, 1842, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1848, 8vo.
-
- No. cxiii. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- New edition, with a Memoir of the Author. London, 1857, 8vo.
-
- One of the series entitled “Railway Library.”
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London [1873], 8vo.
-
----- New edition. London [1875], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With a Memoir of the Author. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-Peter Simple. 3 vols. London, 1834, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxii. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1870, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1873, 8vo.
-
-Peter Simple. Author’s edition, complete. London [1874], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, Guildford [printed 1876], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, Halifax [printed 1878], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
----- Another edition. London [1881], 8vo.
-
- One of “Ward and Lock’s Standard Novels.”
-
-The Phantom Ship. 3 vols. London, 1839, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1847, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1849, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1874, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-The Pirate and the Three Cutters. Illustrated with engravings from
-drawings by C. Stanfield. London, 1836, 4to.
-
----- Another edition. With engravings by Stanfield. London, 1848, 8vo.
-
----- New edition. (_Bohn’s Illustrated Library._) London, 1849, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. With a Memoir of the Author, etc. London, Beccles
-[printed 1877], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” series.
-
-The Pirate and the Three Cutters. Another edition. With illustrations.
-London [1886], 8vo.
-
-Poor Jack. With illustrations by C. Stanfield. London, 1840, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1880, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1883], 8vo.
-
- One of the series of “Notable Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations by C. Stanfield. London, 1883,
-8vo.
-
-The Privateer’s Man, one hundred years ago. 2 vols. London, 1846, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1853, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. 2 vols. London, 1854, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 8vo.
-
----- The Privateersman. Adventures by sea and land, in civil and savage
-life, one hundred years ago. (_Bohn’s Illustrated Library._) London,
-1860, 8vo.
-
-Rattlin the Reefer. London, 1838, 8vo.
-
- No. lxix. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 16mo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, 1873, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1875], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. Edited [or rather written] by Captain Marryat.
-[“Handy-Volume Marryat” edition.] London [1880], 16mo.
-
-The Settlers in Canada. 2 vols. London, 1844, 8vo.
-
-The Settlers in Canada. Another edition. London, 1854, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1855, 12mo.
-
----- New edition. With illustrations by Gilbert and Dalziel. London,
-1860, 8vo.
-
- Part of “Bohn’s Illustrated Library.”
-
----- Another edition. London [1886], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London [1887], 8vo.
-
-Snarleyyow; or, the Dog Fiend. 3 vols. London, 1837, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. Paris, 1837, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1847, 8vo.
-
- No. cvii. of the “Standard Novels.”
-
----- Another edition. London, 1856, 12mo.
-
----- The Dog Fiend; or, Snarleyyow. London, 1857, 8vo.
-
- One of the series entitled “Railway Library.”
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London, New York, 1873, 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. [Handy-Volume Marryat.] London [1880], 8vo.
-
-Suggestions for the Abolition of the present System of Impressment in the
-Naval Service. London, 1822, 8vo.
-
-Valerie, an Autobiography. 2 vols. London, 1849, 12mo.
-
----- Another edition. With illustrations. London [1873], 8vo.
-
----- Another edition. London, 1852, 16mo.
-
----- Author’s Copyright edition. London [1875], 8vo.
-
-Valerie, an Autobiography. Another edition. London [1880], 16mo.
-
- One of the “Handy-Volume Marryat” Series.
-
-
-II. APPENDIX.
-
-
-BIOGRAPHY, CRITICISM, ETC.
-
-Cary, T. G.--Letter to a lady in France on the supposed failure of a
-National Bank … with answers to enquiries concerning the books of Captain
-Marryat and Mr. Dickens. Boston [U.S.], 1843, 8vo.
-
----- Second edition. Boston [U.S.], 1844, 8vo.
-
-Marryat, Florence.--Life and Letters of Captain Marryat. 2 vols. London,
-1872, 8vo.
-
-Marryat, Frederick.--A Reply to Captain Marryat’s statements relative to
-the coloured West Indians, in his work entitled, “A Diary in America.”
-[Consisting of letters which appeared in the “St. George’s Chronicle.”]
-London, 1840, 8vo.
-
-Marshall, John.--Royal Naval Biography. 4 vols. London, 1823-35, 8vo.
-
- Frederick Marryat, vol. iii., pp. 261-270.
-
-Poe, Edgar A.--The Literati, etc. New York, 1850, 8vo.
-
- Frederick Marryat, pp. 456-460.
-
-
-MAGAZINE ARTICLES.
-
-Marryat, Frederick.--New Monthly Magazine, vol. 48, 1836, pp.
-228-232.--Bentley’s Miscellany (with portrait), by C. Whitehead, vol. 24,
-1848, pp. 524-530; same article, Eclectic Magazine, vol. 16, 1849, pp.
-135-139, and Littell’s Living Age, vol. 19, pp. 540-543.--Temple Bar,
-vol. 37, 1873, pp. 100-106.--London Society, by T. H. S. Escott, vol. 23,
-1873, pp. 34-44.
-
----- _and his Diary_. Southern Literary Messenger, vol. 7, 1841, pp.
-253-276.
-
----- _at Langham_. Cornhill Magazine, vol. 16, 1867, pp. 149-161.
-
----- _Life and Letters of_. Chambers’s Journal, 1872, pp. 691-695.
-
----- _Midshipman Easy_. Monthly Review, vol. 3 N.S., 1836, pp. 211-223.
-
----- _Newton Forster_. Westminster Review, vol. 16, 1832, pp. 390-394.
-
----- _Novels_. Fraser’s Magazine, vol. 17, 1838, pp. 571-577.
-
----- _Percival Keene_. Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, vol. 9 N.S., 1842, pp.
-670-680,--Monthly Review, vol. 3 N.S., 1842, pp. 213-223.
-
----- _Sea Novels_. Dublin University Magazine, vol. 47, 1856, pp.
-294-308; same article, Eclectic Magazine, vol. 38, pp. 46-60.--Cornhill
-Magazine, by J. Hannay, vol. 27, 1873, pp. 170-190; same article,
-Littell’s Living Age, vol. 116, pp. 676-689, and Eclectic Magazine, vol.
-17 N.S., pp. 464-478.
-
----- _Settlers in Canada_. Tait’s Edinburgh Magazine, vol. 11, 1844, pp.
-807, 808.
-
----- _Snarleyyow_. Dublin University Magazine, vol. 10, 1837, pp.
-325-338.
-
-
-III. CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF WORKS.
-
- Suggestions for the abolition of
- the present system of Impressment
- in the Naval Service 1822
-
- Adventures of a Naval Officer; or,
- Frank Mildmay 1829
-
- The King’s Own 1830
-
- Newton Forster 1832
-
- Peter Simple 1834
-
- Jacob Faithful 1834
-
- Pacha of Many Tales 1835
-
- Mr. Midshipman Easy 1836
-
- Japhet in Search of a Father 1836
-
- Pirate and the Three Cutters 1836
-
- Code of Signals 1837
-
- Snarleyyow; or, the Dog Fiend 1837
-
- Rattlin the Reefer 1838
-
- Phantom Ship 1839
-
- Diary in America 1839
-
- Olla Podrida 1840
-
- Poor Jack 1840
-
- Masterman Ready 1841
-
- Joseph Rushbrook; or, The Poacher 1841
-
- Percival Keene 1842
-
- Narrative of the Travels and
- Adventures of Monsieur Violet 1843
-
- Settlers in Canada 1844
-
- The Mission; or, Scenes in Africa 1845
-
- Privateer’s Man 1846
-
- Children of the New Forest 1847
-
- The Little Savage 1848-49
-
- Valerie 1849
-
-_Printed by WALTER SCOTT, Felling, Newcastle-on-Tyne_
-
-
-
-
-THE SCOTT LIBRARY.
-
-Cloth, Uncut Edges, Gilt Top. Price 1s. 6d. per Volume.
-
-
-VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED--
-
-1 MALORY’S ROMANCE OF KING ARTHUR AND THE Quest of the Holy Grail. Edited
-by Ernest Rhys.
-
-2 THOREAU’S WALDEN. WITH INTRODUCTORY NOTE by Will H. Dircks.
-
-3 THOREAU’S “WEEK.” WITH PREFATORY NOTE BY Will H. Dircks.
-
-4 THOREAU’S ESSAYS. EDITED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION, by Will H. Dircks.
-
-5 CONFESSIONS OF AN ENGLISH OPIUM-EATER, ETC. By Thomas De Quincey. With
-Introductory Note by William Sharp.
-
-6 LANDOR’S IMAGINARY CONVERSATIONS. SELECTED, with Introduction, by
-Havelock Ellis.
-
-7 PLUTARCH’S LIVES (LANGHORNE). WITH INTRODUCTORY Note by B. J. Snell,
-M.A.
-
-8 BROWNE’S RELIGIO MEDICI, ETC. WITH INTRODUCTION by J. Addington Symonds.
-
-9 SHELLEY’S ESSAYS AND LETTERS. EDITED, WITH Introductory Note, by Ernest
-Rhys.
-
-10 SWIFT’S PROSE WRITINGS. CHOSEN AND ARRANGED, with Introduction, by
-Walter Lewin.
-
-11 MY STUDY WINDOWS. BY JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. With Introduction by R.
-Garnett, LL.D.
-
-12 LOWELL’S ESSAYS ON THE ENGLISH POETS. WITH a new Introduction by Mr.
-Lowell.
-
-13 THE BIGLOW PAPERS. BY JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL. With a Prefatory Note by
-Ernest Rhys.
-
-14 GREAT ENGLISH PAINTERS. SELECTED FROM Cunningham’s _Lives_. Edited by
-William Sharp.
-
-15 BYRON’S LETTERS AND JOURNALS. SELECTED, with Introduction, by Mathilde
-Blind.
-
-16 LEIGH HUNT’S ESSAYS. WITH INTRODUCTION AND Notes by Arthur Symons.
-
-17 LONGFELLOW’S “HYPERION,” “KAVANAH,” AND “The Trouveres.” With
-Introduction by W. Tirebuck.
-
-18 GREAT MUSICAL COMPOSERS. BY G. F. FERRIS. Edited, with Introduction,
-by Mrs. William Sharp.
-
-19 THE MEDITATIONS OF MARCUS AURELIUS. EDITED by Alice Zimmern.
-
-20 THE TEACHING OF EPICTETUS. TRANSLATED FROM the Greek, with
-Introduction and Notes, by T. W. Rolleston.
-
-21 SELECTIONS FROM SENECA. WITH INTRODUCTION by Walter Clode.
-
-22 SPECIMEN DAYS IN AMERICA. BY WALT WHITMAN. Revised by the Author, with
-fresh Preface.
-
-23 DEMOCRATIC VISTAS, AND OTHER PAPERS. BY Walt Whitman. (Published by
-arrangement with the Author.)
-
-24 WHITE’S NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE. WITH a Preface by Richard
-Jefferies.
-
-25 DEFOE’S CAPTAIN SINGLETON. EDITED, WITH Introduction, by H. Halliday
-Sparling.
-
-26 MAZZINI’S ESSAYS: LITERARY, POLITICAL, AND Religious. With
-Introduction by William Clarke.
-
-27 PROSE WRITINGS OF HEINE. WITH INTRODUCTION by Havelock Ellis.
-
-28 REYNOLDS’S DISCOURSES. WITH INTRODUCTION by Helen Zimmern.
-
-29 PAPERS OF STEELE AND ADDISON. EDITED BY Walter Lewin.
-
-30 BURNS’S LETTERS. SELECTED AND ARRANGED, with Introduction, by J. Logie
-Robertson, M.A.
-
-31 VOLSUNGA SAGA. WILLIAM MORRIS. WITH INTRODUCTION by H. H. Sparling.
-
-32 SARTOR RESARTUS. BY THOMAS CARLYLE. WITH Introduction by Ernest Rhys.
-
-33 SELECT WRITINGS OF EMERSON. WITH INTRODUCTION by Percival Chubb.
-
-34 AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF LORD HERBERT. EDITED, with an Introduction, by Will
-H. Dircks.
-
-35 ENGLISH PROSE, FROM MAUNDEVILLE TO Thackeray. Chosen and Edited by
-Arthur Galton.
-
-36 THE PILLARS OF SOCIETY, AND OTHER PLAYS. BY Henrik Ibsen. Edited, with
-an Introduction, by Havelock Ellis.
-
-37 IRISH FAIRY AND FOLK TALES. EDITED AND Selected by W. B. Yeats.
-
-38 ESSAYS OF DR. JOHNSON, WITH BIOGRAPHICAL Introduction and Notes by
-Stuart J. Reid.
-
-39 ESSAYS OF WILLIAM HAZLITT. SELECTED AND Edited, with Introduction and
-Notes, by Frank Carr.
-
-40 LANDOR’S PENTAMERON, AND OTHER IMAGINARY Conversations. Edited, with a
-Preface, by H. Ellis.
-
-41 POE’S TALES AND ESSAYS. EDITED, WITH INTRODUCTION, by Ernest Rhys.
-
-42 VICAR OF WAKEFIELD. BY OLIVER GOLDSMITH. Edited, with Preface, by
-Ernest Rhys.
-
-43 POLITICAL ORATIONS, FROM WENTWORTH TO Macaulay. Edited, with
-Introduction, by William Clarke.
-
-44 THE AUTOCRAT OF THE BREAKFAST-TABLE. BY Oliver Wendell Holmes.
-
-45 THE POET AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE. BY OLIVER Wendell Holmes.
-
-46 THE PROFESSOR AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE. BY Oliver Wendell Holmes.
-
-47 LORD CHESTERFIELD’S LETTERS TO HIS SON. Selected, with Introduction,
-by Charles Sayle.
-
-48 STORIES FROM CARLETON. SELECTED, WITH INTRODUCTION, by W. Yeats
-
-49 JANE EYRE. BY CHARLOTTE BRONTË. EDITED BY Clement K. Shorter.
-
-50 ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND. EDITED BY LOTHROP Withington, with a Preface by
-Dr. Furnivall.
-
-51 THE PROSE WRITINGS OF THOMAS DAVIS. EDITED by T. W. Rolleston.
-
-52 SPENCE’S ANECDOTES. A SELECTION. EDITED, with an Introduction and
-Notes, by John Underhill.
-
-53 MORE’S UTOPIA, AND LIFE OF EDWARD V. EDITED, with an Introduction, by
-Maurice Adams.
-
-54 SADI’S GULISTAN, OR FLOWER GARDEN. TRANSLATED, with an Essay, by James
-Ross.
-
-55 ENGLISH FAIRY AND FOLK TALES. EDITED BY E. Sidney Hartland.
-
-56 NORTHERN STUDIES. BY EDMUND GOSSE. WITH a Note by Ernest Rhys.
-
-57 EARLY REVIEWS OF GREAT WRITERS. EDITED BY E. Stevenson.
-
-58 ARISTOTLE’S ETHICS. WITH GEORGE HENRY Lewes’s Essay on Aristotle
-prefixed.
-
-59 LANDOR’S PERICLES AND ASPASIA. EDITED, WITH an Introduction, by
-Havelock Ellis.
-
-60 ANNALS OF TACITUS. THOMAS GORDON’S TRANSLATION. Edited, with an
-Introduction, by Arthur Galton.
-
-61 ESSAYS OF ELIA. BY CHARLES LAMB. EDITED, with an Introduction, by
-Ernest Rhys.
-
-62 BALZAC’S SHORTER STORIES. TRANSLATED BY William Wilson and the Count
-Stenbock.
-
-63 COMEDIES OF DE MUSSET. EDITED, WITH AN Introductory Note, by S. L.
-Gwynn.
-
-64 CORAL REEFS. BY CHARLES DARWIN. EDITED, with an Introduction, by Dr.
-J. W. Williams.
-
-65 SHERIDAN’S PLAYS. EDITED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION, by Rudolf Dircks.
-
-66 OUR VILLAGE. BY MISS MITFORD. EDITED, WITH an Introduction, by Ernest
-Rhys.
-
-67 MASTER HUMPHREY’S CLOCK, AND OTHER STORIES. By Charles Dickens. With
-Introduction by Frank T. Marzials.
-
-68 TALES FROM WONDERLAND. BY RUDOLPH Baumbach. Translated by Helen B.
-Dole.
-
-69 ESSAYS AND PAPERS BY DOUGLAS JERROLD. EDITED by Walter Jerrold.
-
-70 VINDICATION OF THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN. BY Mary Wollstonecraft.
-Introduction by Mrs. E. Robins Pennell.
-
-71 “THE ATHENIAN ORACLE.” A SELECTION. EDITED by John Underhill, with
-Prefatory Note by Walter Besant.
-
-72 ESSAYS OF SAINT-BEUVE. TRANSLATED AND Edited, with an Introduction, by
-Elizabeth Lee.
-
-73 SELECTIONS FROM PLATO. FROM THE TRANSLATION of Sydenham and Taylor.
-Edited by T. W. Rolleston.
-
-74 HEINE’S ITALIAN TRAVEL SKETCHES, ETC. TRANSLATED by Elizabeth A.
-Sharp. With an Introduction from the French of Theophile Gautier.
-
-75 SCHILLER’S MAID OF ORLEANS. TRANSLATED, with an Introduction, by
-Major-General Patrick Maxwell.
-
-76 SELECTIONS FROM SYDNEY SMITH. EDITED, WITH an Introduction, by Ernest
-Rhys.
-
-77 THE NEW SPIRIT. BY HAVELOCK ELLIS.
-
-78 THE BOOK OF MARVELLOUS ADVENTURES. FROM the “Morte d’Arthur.” Edited
-by Ernest Rhys. [This, together with No. 1, forms the complete “Morte
-d’Arthur.”]
-
-79 ESSAYS AND APHORISMS. BY SIR ARTHUR HELPS. With an Introduction by E.
-A. Helps.
-
-80 ESSAYS OF MONTAIGNE. SELECTED, WITH A Prefatory Note, by Percival
-Chubb.
-
-81 THE LUCK OF BARRY LYNDON. BY W. M. Thackeray. Edited by F. T.
-Marzials.
-
-82 SCHILLER’S WILLIAM TELL. TRANSLATED, WITH an Introduction, by
-Major-General Patrick Maxwell.
-
-83 CARLYLE’S ESSAYS ON GERMAN LITERATURE. With an Introduction by Ernest
-Rhys.
-
-84 PLAYS AND DRAMATIC ESSAYS OF CHARLES LAMB. Edited, with an
-Introduction, by Rudolf Dircks.
-
-85 THE PROSE OF WORDSWORTH. SELECTED AND Edited, with an Introduction, by
-Professor William Knight.
-
-86 ESSAYS, DIALOGUES, AND THOUGHTS OF COUNT Giacomo Leopardi. Translated,
-with an Introduction and Notes, by Major-General Patrick Maxwell.
-
-87 THE INSPECTOR-GENERAL: A RUSSIAN COMEDY. By Nikolai V. Gogol.
-Translated from the original, with an Introduction and Notes, by Arthur
-A. Sykes.
-
-88 ESSAYS AND APOTHEGMS OF FRANCIS, LORD BACON: Edited, with an
-Introduction, by John Buchan.
-
-89 PROSE OF MILTON: SELECTED AND EDITED, WITH an Introduction, by Richard
-Garnett, LL.D.
-
-90 THE REPUBLIC OF PLATO. TRANSLATED BY Thomas Taylor, with an
-Introduction by Theodore Wratislaw.
-
-91 PASSAGES FROM FROISSART. WITH AN INTRODUCTION by Frank T. Marzials.
-
-92 THE PROSE AND TABLE TALK OF COLERIDGE. Edited by W. H. Dircks.
-
-93 HEINE IN ART AND LETTERS. TRANSLATED BY Elizabeth A. Sharp.
-
-94 SELECTED ESSAYS OF DE QUINCEY. WITH AN Introduction by Sir George
-Douglas, Bart.
-
-London: WALTER SCOTT, LIMITED, Paternoster Square.
-
-
-
-
-Great Writers.
-
-A NEW SERIES OF CRITICAL BIOGRAPHIES.
-
-Edited by E. ROBERTSON and F. T. MARZIALS.
-
-
-Cloth, Uncut Edges, Gilt Top. Price 1/6.
-
- Longfellow By Professor Eric S. Robertson
- Coleridge By Hall Caine
- Dickens By Frank T. Marzials
- Dante Gabriel Rossetti By J. Knight
- Samuel Johnson By Colonel F. Grant
- Darwin By G. T. Bettany
- Charlotte Brontë By A. Birrell
- Carlyle By R. Garnett, LL.D.
- Adam Smith By R. B. Haldane, M.P.
- Keats By W. M. Rossetti
- Shelley By William Sharp
- Smollett By David Hannay
- Goldsmith By Austin Dobson
- Scott By Professor Yonge
- Burns By Professor Blackie
- Victor Hugo By Frank T. Marzials
- Emerson By R. Garnett, LL. D.
- Goethe By James Sime
- Congreve By Edmund Gosse
- Bunyan By Canon Venables
- Crabbe By T. E. Kebbel
- Heine By William Sharp
- Mill By W. L. Courtney
- Schiller By Henry W. Nevinson
- Marryat By David Hannay
- Lessing By T. W. Rolleston
- Milton By R Garnett, LL.D.
- Balzac By Frederick Wedmore
- George Eliot By Oscar Browning
- Jane Austen By Goldwin Smith
- Browning By William Sharp
- Byron By Hon. Roden Noel
- Hawthorne By Moncure D. Conway
- Schopenhauer By Professor Wallace
- Sheridan By Lloyd Sanders
- Thackeray By H. Merivale and F. T. Marzials
- Cervantes By H. E. Watts
- Voltaire By Francis Espinasse
- Leigh Hunt By Cosmo Monkhouse
- Whittier By W. J. Linton
- Renan By Francis Espinasse
-
-A Complete Bibliography to each Volume, by J. P. ANDERSON, British
-Museum, London.
-
-Library Edition of “Great Writers,” Demy 8vo, 2/6.
-
-London: WALTER SCOTT, LIMITED.
-
-
-
-
-LIBRARY OF HUMOUR
-
-
-_Cloth Elegant, Large Crown 8vo, Price 3/6 per vol._
-
-_VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED._
-
-THE HUMOUR OF FRANCE. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by
-Elizabeth Lee. With numerous Illustrations by Paul Frénzeny.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF GERMANY. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by
-Hans Müller-Casenov. With numerous Illustrations by C. E. Brock.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF ITALY. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by A.
-Werner. With 50 Illustrations and a Frontispiece by Arturo Faldi.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF AMERICA. Selected with a copious Biographical Index of
-American Humorists, by James Barr.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF HOLLAND. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by A.
-Werner. With numerous Illustrations by Dudley Hardy.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF IRELAND. Selected by D. J. O’Donoghue. With numerous
-Illustrations by Oliver Paque.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF SPAIN. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by S.
-Taylor. With numerous Illustrations by H. R. Millar.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF RUSSIA. Translated, with Notes, by E. L. Boole, and an
-Introduction by Stepniak. With 50 Illustrations by Paul Frénzeny.
-
-THE HUMOUR OF JAPAN. Translated, with an Introduction, by A. M. With
-Illustrations by George Bigot (from Drawings made in Japan). [_In
-preparation._]
-
-London: WALTER SCOTT, LIMITED, Paternoster Square.
-
-
-
-
-IBSEN’S PROSE DRAMAS.
-
-EDITED BY WILLIAM ARCHER.
-
-
-Complete in Five Vols. Crown 8vo, Cloth, Price 3/6 each.
-
-Set of Five Vols., in Case, 17/6; in Half Morocco, in Case, 32/6.
-
- “_We seem at last to be shown men and women as they are; and at
- first it is more than we can endure.… All Ibsen’s characters
- speak and act as if they were hypnotised, and under their
- creator’s imperious demand to reveal themselves. There never was
- such a mirror held up to nature before: it is too terrible.…
- Yet we must return to Ibsen, with his remorseless surgery, his
- remorseless electric-light, until we, too, have grown strong
- and learned to face the naked--if necessary, the flayed and
- bleeding--reality._”--SPEAKER (London).
-
-VOL. I. “A DOLL’S HOUSE,” “THE LEAGUE OF YOUTH,” and “THE PILLARS OF
-SOCIETY.” With Portrait of the Author, and Biographical Introduction by
-WILLIAM ARCHER.
-
-Vol. II. “GHOSTS,” “AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE,” and “THE WILD DUCK.” With an
-Introductory Note.
-
-Vol. III. “LADY INGER OF ÖSTRÅT,” “THE VIKINGS AT HELGELAND,” “THE
-PRETENDERS.” With an Introductory Note and Portrait of Ibsen.
-
-Vol. IV. “EMPEROR AND GALILEAN.” With an Introductory Note by WILLIAM
-ARCHER.
-
-Vol. V. “ROSMERSHOLM,” “THE LADY FROM THE SEA,” “HEDDA GABLER.”
-Translated by WILLIAM ARCHER. With an Introductory Note.
-
-The sequence of the plays _in each volume_ is chronological; the complete
-set of volumes comprising the dramas thus presents them in chronological
-order.
-
- “The art of prose translation does not perhaps enjoy a very high
- literary status in England, but we have no hesitation in numbering
- the present version of Ibsen, so far as it has gone (Vols. I.
- and II.), among the very best achievements, in that kind, of our
- generation.”--_Academy._
-
- “We have seldom, if ever, met with a translation so absolutely
- idiomatic.”--_Glasgow Herald._
-
-London: WALTER SCOTT, LIMITED, Paternoster Square.
-
-
-
-
-NEW ENGLAND LIBRARY.
-
-GRAVURE EDITION.
-
-
-PRINTED ON ANTIQUE PAPER. 2s. 6d. PER VOL.
-
-_Each Volume with a Frontispiece in Photogravure._
-
-By NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.
-
- THE SCARLET LETTER.
- THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES.
- THE BLITHEDALE ROMANCE.
- TANGLEWOOD TALES.
- TWICE-TOLD TALES.
- A WONDER-BOOK FOR GIRLS AND BOYS.
- OUR OLD HOME.
- MOSSES FROM AN OLD MANSE.
- THE SNOW IMAGE.
- TRUE STORIES FROM HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY.
- THE NEW ADAM AND EVE.
- LEGENDS OF THE PROVINCE HOUSE.
-
-By OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.
-
- THE AUTOCRAT OF THE BREAKFAST-TABLE.
- THE PROFESSOR AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE.
- THE POET AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE.
- ELSIE VENNER.
-
-By HENRY THOREAU.
-
- ESSAYS AND OTHER WRITINGS.
- WALDEN; OR, LIFE IN THE WOODS.
- A WEEK ON THE CONCORD.
-
-London: WALTER SCOTT, LIMITED, Paternoster Square.
-
-
-
-
-THE Contemporary Science Series.
-
-EDITED BY HAVELOCK ELLIS.
-
-
-_Illustrated Volumes containing between 300 and 400 pp._
-
-_Crown 8vo, Cloth, 3s. 6d. each; Half Morocco, 6s. 6d._
-
- EVOLUTION OF SEX. By Prof. GEDDES and THOMSON.
- ELECTRICITY IN MODERN LIFE. By G. W. DE TUNZELMANN.
- THE ORIGIN OF THE ARYANS. By Dr. TAYLOR.
- PHYSIOGNOMY AND EXPRESSION. P. MANTEGAZZA.
- EVOLUTION AND DISEASE. By J. B. SUTTON.
- THE VILLAGE COMMUNITY. By G. L. GOMME.
- THE CRIMINAL. By HAVELOCK ELLIS.
- SANITY AND INSANITY. By Dr. C. MERCIER.
- HYPNOTISM. By Dr. ALBERT MOLL (Berlin).
- MANUAL TRAINING. By Dr. WOODWARD (St. Louis).
- SCIENCE OF FAIRY TALES. By E. S. HARTLAND.
- PRIMITIVE FOLK. By ELIE RECLUS.
- EVOLUTION OF MARRIAGE. By LETOURNEAU.
- BACTERIA AND THEIR PRODUCTS. Dr. WOODHEAD.
- EDUCATION AND HEREDITY. By J. M. GUYAU.
- THE MAN OF GENIUS. By Prof. LOMBROSO.
- THE GRAMMAR OF SCIENCE. By Prof. PEARSON.
- PROPERTY: ITS ORIGIN. By CH. LETOURNEAU.
- VOLCANOES, PAST and PRESENT. By Prof. HULL.
- PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEMS. By Dr. J. F. SYKES.
- MODERN METEOROLOGY. By FRANK WALDO, Ph.D.
- THE GERM-PLASM. By Professor WEISMANN. 6s.
- THE INDUSTRIES OF ANIMALS. By F. HOUSSAY.
- MAN AND WOMAN. By HAVELOCK ELLIS. 6s.
- THE EVOLUTION OF MODERN CAPITALISM.
- MODERN CAPITALISM. By JOHN A. HOBSON, M.A.
- THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE. By F. PODMORE, M.A.
- COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY. Prof. C. L. MORGAN. 6s.
- THE ORIGINS OF INVENTION. By O. T. MASON.
-
-
-
-
-SPECIAL EDITION OF THE CANTERBURY POETS.
-
-
-_Square 8vo, Cloth, Gilt Top Elegant, Price 2s._
-
-Each Volume with a Frontispiece in Photogravure.
-
- 1 CHRISTIAN YEAR. With Portrait of John Keble.
- 2 LONGFELLOW. With Portrait of Longfellow.
- 3 SHELLEY. With Portrait of Shelley.
- 4 WORDSWORTH. With Portrait of Wordsworth.
- 5 WHITTIER. With Portrait of Whittier.
- 6 BURNS. Songs } With Portrait of Burns, and View of “The
- 7 BURNS. Poems } Auld Brig o’ Doon.”
- 8 KEATS. With Portrait of Keats.
- 9 EMERSON. With Portrait of Emerson.
- 10 SONNETS OF THIS CENTURY. Portrait of D. G. Rossetti.
- 11 WHITMAN. With Portrait of Whitman.
- 12 LOVE LETTERS OF A VIOLINIST. Portrait of Eric Mackay.
- 13 SCOTT. Lady of the Lake, } With Portrait of Sir Walter Scott,
- etc. } and View of “The Silver
- 14 SCOTT. Marmion, etc. } Strand, Loch Katrine.”
- 15 CHILDREN OF THE POETS. With an Engraving of “The Orphans,”
- by Gainsborough.
- 16 SONNETS OF EUROPE. With Portrait of J. A. Symonds.
- 17 SYDNEY DOBELL. With Portrait of Sydney Dobell.
- 18 HERRICK. With Portrait of Herrick.
- 19 BALLADS AND RONDEAUS. Portrait of W. E. Henley.
- 20 IRISH MINSTRELSY. With Portrait of Thomas Davis.
- 21 PARADISE LOST. With Portrait of Milton.
- 22 FAIRY MUSIC. Engraving from Drawing by C. E. Brock.
- 23 GOLDEN TREASURY. With Engraving of Virgin Mother.
- 24 AMERICAN SONNETS. With Portrait of J. R. Lowell.
- 25 IMITATION OF CHRIST. With Engraving, “Ecce Homo.”
- 26 PAINTER POETS. With Portrait of Walter Crane.
- 27 WOMEN POETS. With Portrait of Mrs. Browning.
- 28 POEMS OF HON. RODEN NOEL. Portrait of Hon. R. Noel.
- 29 AMERICAN HUMOROUS VERSE. Portrait of Mark Twain.
- 30 SONGS OF FREEDOM. With Portrait of William Morris.
- 31 SCOTTISH MINOR POETS. With Portrait of R. Tannahill.
- 32 CONTEMPORARY SCOTTISH VERSE. With Portrait of Robert Louis
- Stevenson.
- 33 PARADISE REGAINED. With Portrait of Milton.
- 34 CAVALIER POETS. With Portrait of Suckling.
- 35 HUMOROUS POEMS. With Portrait of Hood.
- 36 HERBERT. With Portrait of Herbert.
- 37 POE. With Portrait of Poe.
- 38 OWEN MEREDITH. With Portrait of late Lord Lytton.
- 39 LOVE LYRICS. With Portrait of Raleigh.
- 40 GERMAN BALLADS. With Portrait of Schiller.
- 41 CAMPBELL. With Portrait of Campbell.
- 42 CANADIAN POEMS. With View of Mount Stephen.
- 43 EARLY ENGLISH POETRY. With Portrait of Earl of Surrey.
- 44 ALLAN RAMSAY. With Portrait of Ramsay.
- 45 SPENSER. With Portrait of Spenser.
- 46 CHATTERTON. With Engraving, “The Death of Chatterton.”
- 47 COWPER. With Portrait of Cowper.
- 48 CHAUCER. With Portrait of Chaucer.
- 49 COLERIDGE. With Portrait of Coleridge.
- 50 POPE. With Portrait of Pope.
- 51 BYRON. Miscellaneous. } With Portraits of Byron.
- 52 BYRON. Don Juan. }
- 53 JACOBITE SONGS. With Portrait of Prince Charlie.
- 54 BORDER BALLADS. With View of Neidpath Castle.
- 55 AUSTRALIAN BALLADS. With Portrait of A. L. Gordon.
- 56 HOGG. With Portrait of Hogg.
- 57 GOLDSMITH. With Portrait of Goldsmith.
- 58 MOORE. With Portrait of Moore.
- 59 DORA GREENWELL. With Portrait of Dora Greenwell.
- 60 BLAKE. With Portrait of Blake.
- 61 POEMS OF NATURE. With Portrait of Andrew Lang.
- 62 PRAED. With Portrait.
- 63 SOUTHEY. With Portrait.
- 64 HUGO. With Portrait.
- 65 GOETHE. With Portrait.
- 66 BERANGER. With Portrait.
- 67 HEINE. With Portrait.
- 68 SEA MUSIC. With View of Corbière Rocks, Jersey.
- 69 SONG-TIDE. With Portrait of Philip Bourke Marston.
- 70 LADY OF LYONS. With Portrait of Bulwer Lytton.
- 71 SHAKESPEARE: Songs and Sonnets. With Portrait.
- 72 CRABBE. With Portrait.
- 73 BEN JONSON. With Portrait.
- 74 CRADLE SONGS. With Drawing by T. Eyre Macklin.
-
-London: WALTER SCOTT, LIMITED, Paternoster Square.
-
-
-
-
-MR. GEORGE MOORE’S NEW NOVEL.
-
-Cloth, Crown 8vo, Price 6s.
-
-
-ESTHER WATERS: A Novel.
-
-BY GEORGE MOORE.
-
-“Strong, vivid, sober, yet undaunted in its realism, full to the brim
-of observation of life and character, _Esther Waters_ is not only
-immeasurably superior to anything the author has ever written before, but
-it is one of the most remarkable works that has appeared in print this
-year, and one which does credit not only to the author, but the country
-in which it has been written.”--_The World._
-
-“As we live the book through again in memory, we feel more and more
-confident that Mr. Moore has once for all vindicated his position
-among the half-dozen living novelists of whom the historian of English
-literature will have to take account.”--_Daily Chronicle._
-
-“It may be as well to set down, beyond possibility of misapprehension,
-my belief that in _Esther Waters_ we have the most artistic, the most
-complete, and the most inevitable work of fiction that has been written
-in England for at least two years.”--A.T.Q.C. in _The Speaker_.
-
-“Hardly since the time of Defoe have the habits and manners of the
-‘masses’ been delineated as they are delineated here.… _Esther Waters_ is
-the best story that he (Mr. Moore) has written, and one on which he may
-be heartily congratulated.”--_Globe._
-
-“Matthew Arnold, reviewing one of Tolstoï’s novels, remarked that the
-Russian novelist seemed to write because the thing happened so, and for
-no other reason. That is precisely the merit of Mr. Moore’s book.… It
-seems inevitable.”--_Westminster Gazette._
-
-
-OTHER NOVELS BY GEORGE MOORE.
-
-Crown 8vo, Cloth, 3s. 6d. each.
-
-A DRAMA IN MUSLIN. Seventh Edition.
-
-A MODERN LOVER. New Edition.
-
-A MUMMER’S WIFE. Twentieth Edition.
-
-VAIN FORTUNE. New Edition. With Five Illustrations by Maurice
-Greiffenhagen. Crown 8vo, Cloth, 6s.
-
-IMPRESSIONS AND OPINIONS. By Geo. Moore. Second Edition, Crown 8vo,
-Cloth, 6s.
-
-MODERN PAINTING. By George Moore.
-
- “Of the very few books on art that painters and critics should on
- no account leave unread this is surely one.”--_Studio._
-
- “His book is one of the best books about pictures that have come
- into our hands for some years.”--_St. James’s Gazette._
-
- “A more original, a better informed, a more suggestive, and, let us
- add, a more amusing work on the art of to-day, we have never read
- than this volume.”--_Glasgow Herald._
-
-London: WALTER SCOTT, LIMITED, Paternoster Square.
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Life of Frederick Marryat, by David Hannay
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
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-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Life of Frederick Marryat
-
-Author: David Hannay
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-Editor: Eric S. Robertson
-
-Release Date: December 23, 2016 [EBook #53796]
-
-Language: English
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIFE OF FREDERICK MARRYAT ***
-
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-Produced by MWS and the Online Distributed Proofreading
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-images generously made available by The Internet
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-
-</pre>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">“Great Writers.”</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smaller">EDITED BY</span><br />
-PROFESSOR ERIC S. ROBERTSON, M.A.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger"><i>LIFE OF MARRYAT.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">LIFE<br />
-<span class="smaller">OF</span><br />
-FREDERICK MARRYAT</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-DAVID HANNAY</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">LONDON<br />
-WALTER SCOTT, 24 WARWICK LANE<br />
-NEW YORK AND TORONTO: W. J. GAGE &amp; CO.<br />
-1889</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>All rights reserved.</i>)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">🖛 FOR FULL LIST of the Volumes in
-this series, see <a href="#THE_SCOTT_LIBRARY">Catalogue</a> at end of
-book.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>NOTE.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;">
-<img src="images/deco-1.jpg" width="150" height="30" alt="(decorative)" />
-</div>
-
-<p>The materials for a life of Marryat are scanty, and
-I have acknowledged my obligation to them in
-the text. Mrs. Ross Church collected, in 1872, all the
-surviving knowledge about her father’s life&mdash;all of it,
-that is, which the family thought it right to publish to
-the world. The present little book has no pretensions
-to be founded on new materials. My object has only
-been to make the best use I could of already published
-matter&mdash;to tell what story there is to tell in the clearest
-possible manner, and to add the best estimate of
-Marryat’s work and position in letters that I could
-supply.</p>
-
-<p class="right">D. H.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 150px;">
-<img src="images/deco-1.jpg" width="150" height="30" alt="(decorative)" />
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <th></th>
- <th class="tdr smaller">PAGE</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Frederick Marryat born 10th July, 1792; his parentage; his
- ancestry; home training; schooling at Enfield; runs away
- to sea; is sent into the navy and joins the <i>Impérieuse</i>
- under Captain Lord Cochrane, in September, 1806</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The naval war in 1806: the frigates of the Great War;
- Lord Cochrane, afterwards Lord Dundonald, Captain of
- the <i>Impérieuse</i>; his character; his influence on Marryat;
- the cruises of the frigate as described by Marryat in his
- private log; a narrow escape; Cochrane in the House of
- Commons; an affair in the boats; the Maltese privateer,
- Pasquil Giliano; movements of <i>Impérieuse</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_17">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Impérieuse</i> on coast of Spain; cutting out privateer from
- Almeria Bay; alliance with Spain; Rosas; the Basque
- Roads; naval service of Marryat after parting with Cochrane
- till the end of the Great War; saves several men from
- drowning; various adventures; summary of his services
- from 1806 to 1815</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_31">31</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Marryat’s position in 1815; goes abroad; marriage; appointed
- to <i>Beaver</i>; at St. Helena changes to <i>Rosario</i>; in Channel;
- pays off <i>Rosario</i>; the Channel smugglers; appointed to
- <i>Larne</i>; Burmese War; promotion and made a C.B.;
- transferred to <i>Tees</i> in July, 1824; short command of
- <i>Ariadne</i>; the <i>Ariadne</i> his last ship; resigns command
- November, 1830; begins writing; equerry to Duke of
- Sussex; story of William IV.</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_46">46</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>From 1830 to 1848 a writer; his literary life; expensive habits;
- early success in novel writing; editorial ventures; <cite>The
- Metropolitan Magazine</cite>; hard work in 1833-34; in 1833
- he stands for Tower Hamlets, and fails; at Brighton in
- 1834; quotation from letter on lawsuit; goes abroad; life
- abroad; leaves for America</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Marryat’s literary work up to 1837; his early success, and determination
- to make money; quarrels with publisher;
- prices paid him; “Frank Mildmay”; quotation from
- <cite>Metropolitan Magazine</cite> on “Frank Mildmay”; other
- books from “King’s Own” to “Pirate” and “Three
- Cutters”; quality of Marryat’s style; quotation from
- “Peter Simple”; his plots; his fun; quotation from
- “Midshipman Easy”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Visit to America in 1837; his object in going there; in New
- York; letter to his mother describing where he has been;
- visit to Canada; affair of the <i>Caroline</i>; unpopularity in
- United States; Marryat stands his ground; return to
- England</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Movements in London; ruin of West Indian property; life
- and friendships in London; Duke Street, Wimbledon,
- Piccadilly, Spanish Place; first signs of breaking health;
- goes to Langham; books of these years; “Phantom Ship”;
- children’s stories; “Masterman Ready”; skirmish with
- <cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>; Marryat defends publication of his
- stories in the <cite>Era</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_114">114</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Marryat goes to Langham for good in 1843; life there; Marryat
- and his children; kindness to his men; his scientific farming,
- and its financial results; his literary work; asked to
- write life of Collingwood; declines; last stories: “The
- Mission,” “The Settlers,” “The Children of the New
- Forest,” “The Little Savage”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>His fatal illness; his <i lang="fr">physique</i> and personal appearance; letter
- to Lord Auckland on supposed slight; Hastings; loss of
- H.M.S. <i>Avenger</i>, and death of Marryat’s son, Lieutenant
- Frederick Marryat; returns to Langham; last months,
- and death on 9th August, 1848; estimate of his character
- and work</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_149">149</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><a href="#INDEX">INDEX.</a></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>LIFE OF
-CAPTAIN MARRYAT.</h1>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 238px;">
-<img src="images/deco-2.jpg" width="238" height="30" alt="(decorative)" />
-</div>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-<p>Frederick Marryat, one of the most brilliant,
-and the least fairly recognized, of English
-novelists, was born in Westminster, on the 10th July,
-1792, some seven months before the outbreak of the
-Great War. He was the second son of Joseph Marryat,
-M.P. for Sandwich, chairman of the committee of Lloyds,
-and Colonial Agent for the island of Grenada. His
-mother was a Bostonian, of a loyalist family. Her maiden
-name was Geyer&mdash;or according to Mrs. Ross Church’s
-life of her father, Von Geyer&mdash;and the family is said to
-have been of Hessian origin. The Marryats themselves
-were a Suffolk stock. In Marshall’s “Naval Biography,”
-which appeared during Marryat’s own life, the novelist is
-said to have descended from one of the numerous
-Huguenot refugees who settled in the Eastern Counties
-during the persecutions of the sixteenth century. The
-family version of its history, as given by Mrs. Ross Church,
-contains a longer and more splendid pedigree, going
-back even to knights who came over with “Richard
-Conqueror.” These things, though set forth with faith<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-no doubt, are to be received with polite reserve by the
-judicious reader. For the rest, whatever the remote
-origin of the Marryats may have been, they were during
-the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries very distinctly
-middle-class people&mdash;dissenting ministers, doctors, or
-business men&mdash;manifestly of good parts and industry.
-Some of them wrote sermons and printed them. Thomas
-Marryat, the novelist’s grandfather, was a doctor and the
-author of a medical book. His father was, as the places
-he held show, a prosperous man; and the future novelist
-entered the world under fairly favourable circumstances.
-There was, it is clear, no want of money, and the family
-were active people with a marked tendency to use their
-pens.</p>
-
-<p>As no detailed life of Marryat was written until long
-after his death, when no witnesses were left who could
-speak with knowledge, there is an almost absolute want
-of evidence as to the character and probable influence of
-his family life. If we are to argue from his stories, it
-was hardly to be called happy. These guides may not
-be entirely safe, and yet they afford evidence of a kind
-not to be lightly dismissed. A writer whose pictures of
-home and school life are habitually disagreeable, cannot
-have had many pleasant memories of his own to look
-back on. With Marryat this was the case. In all his
-earlier stories, and until he became decidedly didactic,
-and religious, in his later years, he described the relations
-of parents and children, of schoolboy and schoolmaster,
-as either indifferent or hostile, or as contemptuous even
-when affection is not absent. Peter Simple, Mr. Midshipman
-Easy, and Newton Foster are the sons of men<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-whom they may like, but cannot respect, of whom two
-are maniacs, and one is a harmless imbecile. Their
-mothers are either utterly shadowy or repulsive. “Frank
-Mildmay,” the first and the most autobiographical of his
-stories, is also the most destitute of kindliness. Something
-may be allowed for rawness in the author, and
-something for direct imitation of the earlier Smollettian
-model. Marryat, too, publicly protested that he was not
-the “Naval Officer” of this first story. But, by his own
-confession, he put many of the incidents of his own life into
-it, and we may safely conclude that what is wholly wanting
-in the story was not prominent in his own experience.
-Now what is wanting is any trace that Frank Mildmay
-had the smallest filial regard for his father, or was
-conscious of any maternal influence, or thought of his
-home life with affection, or of his school as other than a
-place of torment. That is not how men write when they
-look back kindly on their first years. If Thackeray and
-Dickens drew such different pictures of boy and school
-life, we know why. It is not necessary to rack the scanty
-evidence about Marryat’s early years, to find reason for
-believing that his father was probably a hard and dry
-man of business, whose prosperity never melted the
-provincial dissenter quite out of him. Of his mother
-there is nothing to be supposed at all.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be noted that although Mr. Joseph Marryat
-was a prosperous man, he did not send his sons to a
-public school. Frederick and his elder brother (Joseph
-also, and not unknown as a collector of, and writer on,
-porcelain) were sent to some sort of academy kept by a
-Mr. Freeman, at Ponders End. It is an almost universal<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-experience that the boy who has been at a private school
-may remember an individual master with kindness, but
-never has any degree of respect or affection for the place
-itself. He is not one of an ancient body like the public-school
-man, and has nothing in his memory to set off against
-the restraint&mdash;or in the old hard days the floggings and
-hardships of school life. The Wykamite might laugh at
-the wash pot of Moab, but what private-school boy would
-forgive his master for turning him out to wash in a back
-yard? What is inflicted by a public school is inflicted by
-the school itself; in a private establishment it is inflicted
-by the master, and is a personal wrong. Marryat was no
-exception to the rule. His memories of Ponders End
-were not of a kind to make him draw cheerful pictures
-of school life. That he was far from a model pupil, and
-had his share of the cane, has nothing to do with it. He
-scamped his work, and forgot it, as many other boys
-have done and will do. Not only that, but he was the
-cause of scamping in others. Mr. Babbage, who was
-for a time his schoolfellow, is the authority for a story
-which shows that Marryat was indeed a model young
-scamp. Babbage wished to work (it does not appear
-whether they called it “sweating” or “greasing” at Ponders
-End), and to get up for that purpose with another “swot”
-at the absurd hour of three. With intentions which
-were only too obvious, Marryat, who was his room fellow,
-proposed to join the party. Babbage objected, and
-thought to escape the intrusion by the easy method of
-not waking Marryat. This answered until the creator of
-Mr. Midshipman Easy first bethought himself of drawing
-his bed across the door, and then when even the moving<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-of his bed did not rouse him, of tying his hand to the
-handle. For some nights Babbage got over the difficulty
-by cutting the fastening, until Marryat found a chain
-which could not be cut. Babbage had his revenge. He
-invented an ingenious machine for jerking the chain, and
-went on waking his chum repeatedly for no purpose. At
-last a compromise was made. Marryat joined the good
-boys for early study, and of course it was not long before
-others joined too, and then the letting off of fireworks
-and various noises betrayed the secret. How many of
-the party were flogged does not appear. Before long
-Marryat had to be up at six bells in the middle watch on
-duty too often to leave him much inclination to turn out
-voluntarily, even for mischief, when he could by any
-chance get a night in.</p>
-
-<p>It is also recorded of Marryat that he ran away to sea
-three times, that is, he ran away with the intention of
-getting to sea, but the end of the adventure was always
-capture, return to school, and more cane. His great
-grievance is reported to have been the obligation to wear
-the clothes which his elder brother had outgrown. The
-detail seems to indicate a certain narrowness, not to say
-sordidness, in so prosperous a household as the
-Marryats’, and the aggravation was certainly gross
-enough to justify the protest. On one of these occasions
-Mr. J. Marryat showed a remarkable weakness.
-He gave the truant money and sent him
-in a carriage back to school. This error of judgment
-had a very natural consequence. Marryat slipped
-out of the carriage, found his way quietly home, and
-took his younger brothers to the theatre. At last his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-father came to the very sensible conclusion that the sea
-was the best place for such a boy. Being a man of
-some influence and position, he was able to start his
-son well, on board a crack frigate, and under a distinguished
-captain. In September, 1806, Marryat
-entered the <i>Impérieuse</i>, captain Lord Cochrane, and
-sailed for the Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-
-<p>Fortune could not have done Marryat a greater
-kindness than to send him to sea on the quarter-deck
-of the <i>Impérieuse</i>. She enabled him to share in
-the most stirring work to be done at the date at which
-he joined the service, and under the command of one
-the most brilliant of naval officers. In 1806 the war of
-fleets was over. Trafalgar had broken the heart of our
-enemies, and from that time forward their squadrons
-never even attempted to keep the sea. Napoleon built
-line-of-battle ships in batches, but only to keep them
-manned and armed, lying idle in port. The English
-fleets had so completely established their supremacy,
-that they used the French roadsteads as familiarly as
-their own. The blockading squadron off Brest anchored
-in Douarnenez Bay, in sight of the French lookout, and
-there repaired their rigging or caulked their seams as
-coolly as if no enemy’s fleet were in existence, and they
-did it with perfect impunity. Admiral Smyth has told
-how audaciously the Mediterranean fleet was wont to
-anchor off Hyères in the absolute confidence that the
-French would never come out of Toulon. Their only
-chance of service was when the French would be decoyed
-out by some particularly audacious frigate, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-was sent in to insult them at the very mouth of their
-harbour. Then there was a chance that they might be
-drawn further than they could go back before the in-shore
-squadron was upon them. But such breaks in the monotony
-of blockade were rare. For the most part our
-line-of-battle ships were employed in cruising to and fro,
-with intervals of harbour&mdash;their officers and crews spent
-their lives in drilling aloft or at the guns, and in keeping
-decks and metal-work in a condition of faultless cleanliness.
-That passion for neatness and smartness which
-has never left the British navy rose to its height in the
-last years of the Great War, and did indeed sometimes
-attain to actual mania in the minds of captains and first
-lieutenants in want of something to employ themselves
-and their men upon.</p>
-
-<p>There was, however, one class of ship which had a fair
-chance of active service. The frigates were never, even
-to the end, reduced to mere patrolling. It was to them
-indeed that fell all the brilliant fighting in the last ten
-years or so of the war. The French never altogether
-ceased to send forth cruisers which had necessarily to be
-pursued and captured. Moreover, there was work to be
-done upon the enemy’s coasts, convoys to be taken, forts
-to be destroyed, privateers to be cut out. After 1808
-we were in alliance with the Spaniards, and there was
-then no want of chances for enterprising officers to distinguish
-themselves against the French invaders on the
-coasts, particularly in the Mediterranean. The Mediterranean,
-including the Adriatic, and the East Indies,
-were the great theatres of the war until the Americans
-struck in.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was a material addition to his good fortune in
-being appointed to such a ship, and on such service,
-that he should have begun under the captain who then
-commanded the <i>Impérieuse</i>. The novelist who was to
-give the most living of all pictures of the navy at its
-greatest time could not possibly have met with a better
-chief. Lord Cochrane, who is better known as the
-Earl of Dundonald, was, next to Nelson (the master of
-them all), that one of the naval officers of the Great War
-who was most distinctly a man of genius. There were
-others who were brave, able, honourable gentlemen. In
-pure seamanship many may have been his equals. In a
-service which included such men as Blackwood, Hallowell,
-Willoughby, the Captain Hamilton who cut out the
-<i>Hermione</i>, Broke of the <i>Shannon</i>, and a hundred other
-valiant gentlemen, even Dundonald could not hope for a
-pre-eminence in valour. It may even be allowed that
-he never, while fighting for his own country, was able to
-achieve anything so complete, so distinctly what Cortes
-called a “muy hermosa cosa,” a very pretty piece of
-fighting with a squadron, as Sir William Hoste’s little
-gem of a victory over the French frigates off Lissa.
-He was not allowed the chance to handle a detachment
-of ships in independent command. But there
-was in Dundonald the indefinable something&mdash;“those
-deliveries of a man’s self which have no name,” that
-combination of passion and faculty&mdash;which makes the
-man of genius. Whatever he did was done with a burning
-fire of energy. The fire was not always pure. There
-was a self-assertion about the man&mdash;never base, but
-always aggressive, a pragmatical Scotch fierceness, a love<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-of hate and scorn, a total inability to keep measure,
-which can be seen on every page of his Autobiography,
-and explain why it was that he was always, in our service
-or out of it, a free lance. He was of the race of Peterborough
-not of Marlborough. To the highest rank he
-did not belong, but he was divided in kind from the
-brave, able, disciplined, but shadowy men, who do the
-regular drilled work of the world. He was a magnificent,
-rugged individuality. Even in books he is real as
-only such men as Nelson and Wellington are real. On
-those who knew him his influence, even if it only produced
-repulsion, must have been profound. One so
-open to impressions, and so able to retain them as
-Marryat, must have been another man all his life for
-having known and admired Dundonald. It must be
-remembered, too, that Marryat saw Dundonald at his
-best&mdash;on the deck of his frigate, and not at the Admiralty
-or the House of Commons, where he was apt to
-make himself intolerable by his wrong-headed violence
-in right, and his inability to see that for the work of the
-reformer, as for all work, there is a proper time, and a
-fitting manner which must not be mistaken, under penalty
-of failure.</p>
-
-<p>The influence which Cochrane had upon Marryat
-might indeed be demonstrated from his works. The
-captain of the <i>Impérieuse</i> remained his type of what a
-British officer ought to be. All his frigates’ captains
-who are mentioned for honour have something&mdash;and
-several of them have much&mdash;of his first commander in
-them. That this should be the case in “Frank Mildmay,”
-the first of his books, and to some extent an autobiography,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-was almost a matter of course. In this book the
-cruise of the frigate on the coast of Spain is the very
-service of the <i>Impérieuse</i>. But it is equally true of
-Captain Savage of the <i>Diomede</i> in “Peter Simple,” and
-of Captain M&mdash;&mdash; of the “King’s Own.” Both are
-Scotchmen, penniless gentlemen of good descent, officers
-of boundless skill, daring, and withal judgment. It is
-on this last quality that Marryat dwells by preference,
-and it is this which he picks out for special praise in
-Cochrane. “I must here remark,” he says in the private
-log quoted in Mrs. Ross Church’s life, “that I never
-knew any one so careful of the lives of his ship’s company
-as Lord Cochrane, or any one who calculated so closely
-the risks attending any expedition. Many of the (<i>sic</i>)
-most brilliant achievements were performed without loss
-of a single life, so well did he calculate the chances; and
-one half the merit which he deserves for what he did accomplish
-has never been awarded him, merely because in
-the official despatches there has not been a long list of
-killed and wounded to please the appetite of the English
-public.” This fondness of the public for a long list of
-killed and wounded was a favourite subject of half-serious
-jest with Marryat, and he learnt from others, if
-not from Cochrane, how a despatch ought to be written
-in a “concatenation accordingly.” It would seem that
-Marryat had little admiration for the brainless, headlong
-courage which rushes madly at whatever happens to be
-in front of its weapon. He would have condemned even
-with contempt (and Hawke, Nelson, Cochrane, would have
-condemned with him) such a piece of frantic swash-bucklery
-as the last fight of the <i>Revenge</i>. The men who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-were daring with judgment, who risked for a reason,
-who took care to cover themselves as they lunged, and
-who then went all together, sword, hand, and foot, with
-the speed of lightning, and with unerring accuracy of the
-eye which has brains behind it, were his heroes. In any
-case Marryat would have arrived at these conclusions,
-but he assuredly did so the sooner, and the more heartily,
-because for three years he fought under a fighter of this
-stamp.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat was fortunate in his messmates as well as
-in his captain. A crack frigate of those days had the
-pick of the lieutenants’ list, and of the “young gentlemen”
-who were to be the captains of the future. The
-<i>Impérieuse</i> had a particularly good staff, some of them
-old officers of Cochrane’s, and in the midshipman’s mess
-Marryat met comrades who were good fellows, and gentlemen
-too. He formed friendships which lasted through
-life, particularly with Lord Napier, and with Houston
-Stewart.</p>
-
-<p>I have thought it well to dwell at some length on
-Marryat’s entry into the service, because its conditions
-are of vital importance in his life. Whatever his training
-had been he would have been a writer. His private log
-shows that from the beginning he found pleasure in the
-use of his pen; but had he not been a naval officer he
-would have been a very different writer, and, more, had
-he gone to sea in a less happy way, the misfortune
-would not have failed to have its effects on him. The
-tamer life of a line-of-battle ship, the tedium of a small
-craft engaged on convoy, might have driven him back on
-shore by mere boredom. On board the <i>Impérieuse</i> he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-was able to live his life to the full. There he had three
-years of active and daring fighting. The impression they
-made on him was never effaced, and has been recorded
-by himself. In the private log, quoted by his daughter,
-he sums up his memories in words which it would be a
-dereliction of duty not to quote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The cruises of the <i>Impérieuse</i> were periods of continued
-excitement, from the hour in which she hove up
-her anchor till she dropped it again in port: the day
-that passed without a shot being fired in anger, was with
-us a blank day: the boats were hardly secured on the
-booms than they were cast loose and out again; the yard
-and stay tackles were for ever hoisting up and lowering
-down. The expedition with which parties were formed
-for service; the rapidity of the frigate’s movements
-night and day; the hasty sleep snatched at all hours;
-the waking up at the report of the guns, which seemed the
-very keynote to the hearts of those on board, the beautiful
-precision of our fire, obtained by constant practice;
-the coolness and courage of our captain, inoculating the
-whole of the ship’s company; the suddenness of our
-attacks, the gathering after the combat, the killed
-lamented, the wounded almost envied; the powder so
-burnt into our faces that years could not remove it; the
-proved character of every man and officer on board, the
-implicit trust and adoration we felt for our commander;
-the ludicrous situations which would occur in the extremest
-danger and create mirth when death was staring
-you in the face, the hair-breadth escapes, and the indifference
-to life shown by all&mdash;when memory sweeps along<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-these years of excitement even now, my pulse beats more
-quickly with the reminiscence.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The years of service which thus impressed themselves
-on Marryat’s memory may be divided into three periods.
-First, a cruise on the coast of France from Ushant to the
-mouth of the Gironde; then a longer period of active
-work in the Mediterranean; and finally, a return to the
-ocean, and the action in the Basque Roads. The young
-midshipman’s first actual experience of cruising was one
-which was doubtless present in his mind when he wrote
-the song whereof the chorus tells how “Poll put her
-arms akimbo,” and said, “Port Admiral, you be&mdash;&mdash;.”
-When the corporal reported to Mr. Vanslyperken that
-the crew of the revenue cutter were singing this ditty,
-the outraged commander asked whether it was the Port
-Admiral at Portsmouth or Plymouth. The officer who
-was, we may be sure, spoken of by the crew of the
-<i>Impérieuse</i> on the 17th and succeeding few days of
-November, 1806, in an equally mutinous fashion, was the
-Port Admiral at Plymouth. According to the custom of
-Admirals who did not have to go to sea themselves,
-this officer was exceeding zealous in enforcing the Admiralty’s
-orders to despatch ships to sea smartly. The
-orders came down for the <i>Impérieuse</i> to go to sea, and the
-Admiral would have them obeyed. Go she must&mdash;“The
-moment the rudder&mdash;which was being hung&mdash;would steer
-the ship,” as Dundonald says in his Autobiography, and
-while she had “a lighter full of provisions on one side, a
-second with ordnance stores on the other, and a third
-filled with gunpowder towing astern.” But the tale<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-should be told in Marryat’s words, and not in his
-captain’s:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“The <i>Impérieuse</i> sailed; the Admiral of the port was
-one who <em>would</em> be obeyed, but <em>would not</em> listen always to
-reason or common sense. The signal for sailing was enforced
-by gun after gun; the anchor was hove up, and,
-with all her stores on deck, her guns not even mounted,
-in a state of confusion unparalleled from her being
-obliged to hoist in faster than it was possible she could
-stow away, she was driven out of harbour to encounter a
-heavy gale. A few hours more would have enabled her
-to proceed to sea with security, but they were denied;
-the consequences were appalling, they might have been
-fatal. In the general confusion some iron too near the
-binnacles had attracted the needle of the compasses; the
-ship was steered out of her course. At midnight, in a
-heavy gale at the close of November, so dark that you
-could not distinguish any object, however close, the
-<i>Impérieuse</i> dashed upon the rocks between Ushant and
-the Main. The cry of terror which ran through the
-lower decks; the grating of the keel as she was forced
-in; the violence of the shocks which convulsed the frame
-of the vessel; the hurrying up of the ship’s company without
-their clothes; and then the enormous waves which
-again bore her up, and carried her clean over the reef,
-will never be effaced from my memory.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The frigate had been carried into a deep pool, and
-rode the gale out at anchor. When daylight came she
-was found to be inside instead of outside of Ushant&mdash;and
-was got off with no greater damage than the loss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-of her false keel. But the escape was a narrow one&mdash;the
-adventure must have shaken Marryat rudely into the
-life of the sea&mdash;and have impressed him deeply with the
-possible consequence of pig-headedness in pig-headed
-Port Admirals.</p>
-
-<p>The cruise of the frigate on the French coast was not
-very fruitful in incident, and early in 1807 she was back
-in port. There she remained for the greater part of the
-year, while her captain was fighting the battles of the
-navy in the House of Commons. A general election
-took place in the spring, and Cochrane, who had sat
-already for Honiton, stood with Sir Francis Burdett for
-Westminster. They were elected, and the captain of the
-<i>Impérieuse</i> at once began, or rather returned to, those
-attacks on abuses in the Admiralty and dockyards which
-were so uniformly right in substance and wrong in form.
-It is a pleasing instance of the inability of man to hold
-the balance even when his own interest is in the scale,
-that Cochrane never seems to have seen anything wrong
-in the retention of a fine frigate in port during war
-in order that her captain (who was drawing full pay all
-the time) might attend to parliamentary duties in London.
-Conscious of rectitude, he would have treated the suggestion
-that he also was an abuse with scorn. According to
-his own version of the story, told in profound good faith,
-he did his higher duties as member of the House with
-such efficiency that the Admiralty decided to confine him
-to the exercise of his profession in future. At the close
-of the session the <i>Impérieuse</i> was ordered to join Lord
-Collingwood’s fleet in the Mediterranean, and sailed from
-Portsmouth on the 12th of September, 1807.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In October, Marryat made his first acquaintance with
-Malta, and the scenes associated with the immortal
-memory of Mr. Midshipman Easy. He was not to stay
-there long, for the <i>Impérieuse</i> left almost immediately to
-join Lord Collingwood, who was cruising off Palermo.
-Soon after, the future describer of so many dashing affairs
-with boats had an opportunity of seeing one. On the
-14th of November (Marryat himself says the 15th), the
-<i>Impérieuse</i> sighted two vessels under the land of Corsica,
-and, as it was calm, the boats were ordered out to examine
-them, under the command of Napier and Fayrer.</p>
-
-<p>“As soon,” it is Marryat who speaks, “as they were
-within half a mile, the ship hoisted English colours.
-The sight of these colours, of course, checked the
-attack; the boats pulled slowly up toward her, and,
-when within hail, demanded what she was, for, if an
-English vessel, she could have no objection to be
-boarded by the boats of an English frigate. Now, as
-it afterwards was proved, the ship was a Maltese privateer
-of great celebrity, commanded by the well-known
-Pasquil Giliano, who had been very successful in his
-cruises, and, if report spoke truly, for the best of reasons,
-as he paid very little respect to any colours; in fact, he
-was a well-known pirate, and, when he returned to Malta,
-his hold was full of goods taken out of vessels, which he
-had burnt that he might not weaken his crew by sending
-them away; and in an Admiralty Court so notoriously
-corrupt as that of Malta, inquiries were easily hushed up.
-Although such was the fact, still it had nothing to do with
-the present affair.</p>
-
-<p>“When the boats pulled up astern, the captain of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-polacre answered that he was a Maltese privateer, but
-that he would not allow them to come on board; for,
-although Napier had hailed him in English, and he
-could perceive the red jackets of the Marines in the boats,
-Giliano had an idea from the boats being fitted out with
-iron tholes and grummets, like the French, that they
-belonged to a ship of that nation. A short parley ensued,
-at the end of which the captain of the privateer pointed
-to his boarding nettings triced up, and told them that he
-was prepared, and if they attempted to board he should
-defend himself to the last. Napier replied that he must
-board, and Giliano leaped from the poop telling him that
-he must take the consequences. The answer was a cheer
-and a simultaneous dash of the boats to the vessel’s side.</p>
-
-<p>“A most desperate conflict ensued, perhaps the best
-contested and the most equally matched on record. In
-about ten minutes, the captain having fallen, a portion of
-the crew of the privateer gave way, the remainder fought
-until they were cut to pieces, and the vessel remained in
-our possession. And then, when the decks were strewn
-with the dying and the dead, was discovered the unfortunate
-mistake which had been committed. The privateer
-was a large vessel, pierced for fourteen guns and mounting
-ten, and the equality of the combatants, as well
-as the equality of the loss on both sides, was remarkable.
-On board of the vessel there had been fifty-two men;
-with [the] boats fifty-four. The privateer lost Giliano,
-her captain, and fifteen men; on our side we had fifteen
-men killed and wounded. Fayrer lost for ever the use
-of his right arm by a musket bullet, and Napier received a
-very painful wound, and had a very narrow escape&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-bullet of Giliano’s pistol grazing his left cheek and passing
-through his ear, slightly splintering a portion of the
-bone.”</p>
-
-<p>Marryat’s version of the story does not agree in every
-detail with Cochrane’s, but in essentials they are at one.
-Particularly there is no difference of opinion between
-them as to the character of the Maltese Admiralty Court.
-In this case it not only refused to allow that the <i>King
-George</i> (Giliano’s vessel) was a lawful prize, but it fined
-the <i>Impérieuse</i> five hundred double sequins. That
-iniquitous court was one of the many abuses Cochrane
-had to fight in his life.</p>
-
-<p>Here certainly was an experience likely to be useful to
-the midshipman who was to record it. The fight was a
-dashing one&mdash;a thing well worth seeing in itself, and
-besides the <i>King George</i> privateer so-called, but in fact
-pirate or little better, with her motley crew of Russians,
-Italians, Sclavonians (“a set of desperate savages”
-Cochrane styled them in his despatch), must have introduced
-him to the lawless, and scoundrelly fringe of the
-great naval war. From privateer to pirate was at all
-times but a step, and amid the confusion of the great
-wars, with the connivance of dishonest Colonial Admiralty
-Courts, and the tacit consent of some neutrals of little
-scruple, not a few ruffians were able to flourish,&mdash;the
-plundering, murdering, cowardly camp followers, so to
-speak, of the great regular naval armaments.</p>
-
-<p>From Corsica the <i>Impérieuse</i> went on to Toulon, to
-report to Lord Collingwood, who was back at his regular
-blockading station. Thence Cochrane was sent to
-Malta, and on to the Ionian Islands to command a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-squadron then engaged in blockading some French
-frigates in Corfu. Here Cochrane, true to his character,
-fell out with another abuse. When he arrived on the
-station, he found that neutral vessels, or even vessels
-belonging to our enemies, were allowed to trade with the
-island under cover of passes supplied by the officer commanding
-the English blockading force. Of course Cochrane
-seized them, to the wrath of the officer in question,
-who consistently enough intrigued against him at headquarters.
-The captain of the <i>Impérieuse</i> was recalled
-as being too indiscreet, by Lord Collingwood, apparently
-on the mere complaint of the officer whose passes had
-been treated with such scant respect, and so lost his one
-chance of commanding a squadron on work which he
-was eminently fitted to do well. The story of the passes
-(which of course were not given for nothing) must have
-been known to every man on board the <i>Impérieuse</i>, and,
-doubtless, the officer who had such a remarkable idea of
-his duties, went, in the course of time, to the making of
-Captain Capperbar. Having made one more place too
-hot to hold him, by hasty action, where a little tact and
-patience would have enabled him to have his way and to
-bring the trading naval officer to book, Cochrane was
-employed cruising to and fro till January, 1808, when he
-was despatched by Lord Collingwood to the coast of
-Spain, where he was to have a longer period of active
-brilliant work.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-
-<p>When the <i>Impérieuse</i> reached the coast of Spain
-early in 1808, we were still at war with that
-country. Napoleon had not yet turned his submissive
-ally into an enemy by that act of brigandage which was
-the capital error of his life. The war was for us still a
-“rich war,” as Nelson put it&mdash;there were still Spanish
-prizes to be picked up. Cochrane was master of the
-work to be done. His previous cruise in the <i>Speedy</i>
-had made him perfectly familiar with the Spanish coast.
-It had also given him an absolute confidence in his
-power to beat the Spaniards at any odds. On this
-occasion he had no opportunity to equal the most marvellous
-of all his feats&mdash;the capture of the frigate <i>Gamo</i>
-with his tiny gun-brig the <i>Speedy</i>, but he was incessantly
-active and uniformly successful. The <i>Impérieuse</i> hugged
-the Spanish coast, destroyed isolated forts, sailed into
-the very ports and marked her prey down coolly, before
-sending her boats in to cut out the more tempting
-prizes. In all this stirring fighting Marryat had such
-share as a midshipman might. The history of it is
-recorded in “Frank Mildmay,” in “Mr. Midshipman
-Easy,” in “Peter Simple.” One incident may be recorded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-as a type of the rest. Lord Cochrane learnt that
-a certain vessel which he was resolute to take was lying
-at anchor in Almeria. He himself, in his “Autobiography
-of a Seaman,” calls her “a large French vessel, laden with
-lead and other munitions of war.” Marryat, as quoted
-by his daughter, calls her a polacre privateer, and says
-nothing of her nationality, but in other respects the
-stories agree. The story may now go on in Marryat’s
-words:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“At daybreak we were well in with American colours
-at the peak. [The place, as has been just said, was
-Almeria Bay, and this trick of hoisting neutral colours
-was a common stratagem of war.] The Spaniards had
-their suspicions, but, as we boldly ran into harbour,
-anchored among the other vessels, and furled our sails,
-they did not fire. They were puzzled, for they could
-not imagine that any vessel would act with such temerity,
-as we were surrounded by batteries. We had, however,
-anchored with springs upon our cables; close to us
-within half musket shot, lay a large polacre privateer of
-sixteen guns, the same vessel which had been attacked
-by, and had beaten off the boats of the <i>Spartan</i> with a
-loss of nearly sixty men killed and wounded. On our
-other side were two large brigs heavily laden and a zebecque;
-the small craft were in-shore of us, the town
-and citadel about half a mile ahead of us at the bottom
-of the bay, the batteries all around us, and evidently
-well prepared. Our boats had long been hoisted out and
-lay alongside, which circumstance added to the suspicions
-of the Spaniards; still, as yet, not a gun was fired.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Lord Cochrane’s reasons for running in with the
-frigate was, that he considered the loss of life would be
-much less by this manœuvre than if he had despatched
-the boats, and this privateer he had determined to
-capture. He did not suppose, nor indeed did any one,
-that, lying as she was under the guns of the frigate, she
-would dare to fire a shot, but in this he was mistaken.
-The boats were manned, and the remaining crew of the
-<i>Impérieuse</i> at their quarters. The word was given and
-the boats shoved off; one pinnace, commanded by Mr.
-Caulfield, the first lieutenant, pulling for the polacre ship,
-while the others went to take possession of the brigs and
-zebecque.</p>
-
-<p>“To our astonishment, as soon as the pinnace was
-alongside the ship, she was received with a murderous
-fire, and half of our boat’s crew were laid beneath the
-thwarts; the remainder boarded. Caulfield was the first
-on the vessel’s decks&mdash;a volley of musquetoons received
-him, and he fell dead with thirteen bullets in his body.
-But he was amply avenged; out of the whole crew of
-the privateer, but fifteen, who escaped below and hid
-themselves, remained alive; no quarter was shown, they
-were cut to atoms on the deck, and those who threw
-themselves into the sea to save their lives were shot as
-they struggled in the water. The fire of the privateer
-had been the signal for the batteries to open, and now
-was presented the animated scene of the boats boarding
-in every direction, with more or less resistance; the whole
-bay reverberating with the roar of cannon, the smooth
-water ploughed up in every quarter by the shot directed
-against the frigate and boats, while the <i>Impérieuse</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-returned the fire, warping round and round with her
-springs to silence the most galling. This continued for
-nearly an hour, by which time the captured vessels were
-under all sail, and then the <i>Impérieuse</i> hove up her
-anchor, and, with the English colours waving at her gaff,
-and still keeping up an undiminished fire, sailed slowly
-out the victor.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>It was on such an occasion as this, if not in this very
-affair, that Marryat is said to have had the adventure
-recorded by him in “Frank Mildmay.” Like the hero
-of that story, he was knocked down by the body of his
-leader, who was shot in front of him in a boarding affair,
-and then almost trampled to death by the men who
-pressed on to carry the prize. When the fight was over
-he was dragged out insensible, and laid among the dead.
-The unfriendly remark of a comrade&mdash;that he had
-cheated the gallows&mdash;revived him to give a vigorous
-denial. Mrs. Ross Church states that this happened in
-Arcassan Bay during the first cruise of the <i>Impérieuse</i>, but
-Cochrane himself mentions no such fight there, and no
-loss of any of his officers. Frank Mildmay’s adventure
-happened in Arcassan Bay, but Marryat would have
-obvious reasons for not being strictly accurate as to place.
-If the incident was taken from his own life, it can only have
-happened at Almeria. It may be noted that both Mr.
-Handstone in the novel, and Mr. Caulfield in history,
-were first lieutenants, and that both died in the same way,
-riddled with bullets, at the head of a boarding party. Was
-Caulfield oppressed with a presentiment of his coming death
-like the lieutenant in “Frank Mildmay”&mdash;or was he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-indeed the original of that officer who, be it observed, is
-a very distinct character, and has much the air of being
-a portrait? Perhaps a preliminary question ought to be
-asked, namely, whether this incident did actually happen
-to Marryat as recorded in the novel? It is possible.
-The fact that he does not mention it in the passage
-quoted above proves nothing. It is apparently taken
-from his unfinished life of his friend Napier, in which
-he would naturally not dwell on his own personal adventures.
-On the other hand, it is very much the sort of
-story which might be transferred from the hero of the
-novel to its author.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of 1808 a great change came over the
-war in the Western Mediterranean. Napoleon made
-his famous (and infamous) grab at the Spanish monarchy,
-and instantly, without hesitation, without concert
-among themselves, in one great spontaneous burst of
-patriotic enthusiasm, the Spanish people rose in arms.
-Their efforts were often unsuccessful, and even disgraced
-by mismanagement or treason; but, on the whole,
-they set Europe a magnificent example, which was well
-followed later on by Russia, and they gave England
-what she had long wished for in vain&mdash;a field of battle
-on land against Napoleon. The <i>Impérieuse</i> had her
-share in the Peninsular War. It was her duty not only
-to help the Spaniards in the coast towns, but to harass
-the French troops which endeavoured to enter Spain by
-the coast road. Cochrane was at his best in work of
-this kind. For months he was engaged in incessant
-boat attacks on the French transports, which endeavoured
-to reach Barcelona (then and throughout the war in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>
-their possession), by hugging the shore. With this
-service were mingled landing expeditions to blow up
-French telegraph stations or batteries, or to help the
-Spaniards to defend forts which commanded the road,
-and which the French for that very reason were particularly
-anxious to capture. It was Cochrane’s belief to
-the end of his life that if he had been supplied with a
-flotilla of light vessels and a regiment of troops, he
-would have made it impossible for the French to enter
-Spain by the Eastern Pyrenees at all. How far he was
-justified in this opinion, he never was able to show.
-Indeed, when he was offered just such a command on
-condition that he would abstain from attacking Admiral
-Gambier in the House of Commons, he refused it.
-Even as it was, however, he did much. His untiring
-vigilance made it impossible for the French to use the
-sea for the transport of men or provisions, and difficult
-for them to use the coast route which at many places
-was liable to be swept by the cannon of the English
-frigate. They were driven to use the inland route
-through a poor and rugged country swarming with
-guerrilleros. It is known that all this part of the war
-proved enormously costly to the French, and much of the
-credit due for imposing the loss upon them must go to
-the <i>Impérieuse</i>. Marryat had his share of it all, and in
-“Frank Mildmay” he has given a carefully finished
-sketch of one of the sharpest pieces of service in it&mdash;the
-defence of Rosas, where he himself received a bayonet
-wound.</p>
-
-<p>The desire to be back in his place in Parliament, in
-order that he might expose the malpractices of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-Maltese Admiralty Court (this is the motive assigned
-by himself, and was doubtless that of which he was
-most conscious), induced Cochrane to apply for leave
-to bring the <i>Impérieuse</i> home to England. It was
-granted with a facility which throws some doubt on
-his theory that the Admiralty feared his presence; and
-early in March, 1809, he dropped anchor in Plymouth
-Sound. Unhappily for himself, Cochrane was selected
-for a special piece of service before he could resume his
-Parliamentary work. In February of this year a French
-squadron had slipped out of Brest, with orders to drive
-off the British seventy-fours which were then watching
-L’Orient, to pick up three more ships at anchor there under
-Commodore Troude, and then to proceed to the West Indies
-to relieve Martinique. Admiral Willaumez, the French
-commander, did not escape the vigilance of the Channel
-squadron. His fleet was sighted at sea, followed till it
-entered the Pertuis d’Antioche, between the islands of
-Ré and Oléron, and very soon a blockading force collected
-under Admiral Gambier. The outcries of the
-London and Liverpool merchants roused the Admiralty
-to make great exertions for the destruction of an armament
-which was designed to operate in the West Indies,
-and would, by its mere presence in those waters, have
-greatly disturbed English trade. In an evil hour for
-Cochrane, my Lords remembered that he was well
-acquainted with this part of the French coast, and they
-resolved to send him to execute an attack on the
-enemy’s ships. Very reluctantly, for he knew how ill
-he was likely to be received by officers whom he would
-practically supersede, he undertook the work. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-prepared a flotilla of explosion vessels and fire-ships.
-In April the <i>Impérieuse</i> had joined Gambier’s squadron.
-A detailed account of the action which followed would
-be out of place here. Its rather melancholy history is
-to be read in Cochrane’s “Autobiography,” and the
-Minutes of the court martial on Lord Gambier. The
-squadron was in an indifferent moral condition, divided
-by sour professional factions, and impatient of its
-Admiral, a brave but weak officer, chiefly known as
-what was called in the navy a “blue light,” that is a
-pious man of a somewhat Methodistical turn. Very little
-zeal was shown in supporting Cochrane. The attack
-was made on the night of April 11th, and whatever
-the <i>Impérieuse</i> could do was magnificently done. The
-French fleet of eight line-of-battle ships, and some
-smaller vessels, had withdrawn to the Basque Roads, at
-the mouth of the Charente, and had fortified itself with
-a heavy boom. Towards that boom the English explosion
-and fire-ships were driven by wind and tide
-after dark on the 11th. It is doubtful whether more
-than one of them reached it&mdash;but that one was commanded
-by Cochrane himself. She was brought up to
-the boom at half a cable’s length off the French
-frigate <i>Indienne</i>, and there exploded, scattering the
-boom all over the mouth of the Charente. Through
-the opening thus made a few English vessels passed.
-They were a mere handful, and might have been sunk
-by the fire of the French, but our enemies were panic
-stricken. They cut their cables, and ran ashore. When
-day broke the French ships were fast aground, and might
-every one have been destroyed; but Lord Gambier was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-an officer of the stamp peculiarly hateful to Nelson.
-He was prompt to conclude that enough had been
-done, and was loth to risk ships and men in what he
-thought an unnecessary way. In vain did Cochrane,
-who had now returned to the <i>Impérieuse</i>, hoist signal
-after signal urging the Admiral to attack. He told him
-that the enemy were ashore, and could be destroyed;
-that they would get off if they were not stopped; that
-they were actually preparing to get off. It skilled not,
-and Gambier remained stolidly at anchor miles off.
-At last Cochrane, who by this time was nearly rabid
-with rage, work, and want of sleep, flew into a Berserker
-fury. He deliberately drifted the <i>Impérieuse</i> stern first
-under the guns of the French liners, and then signalled
-that he was overpowered and in need of assistance.
-This desperate measure, worthy of Nelson in his most
-splendid moments, did at last force Admiral Gambier’s
-hand. Some vessels were sent&mdash;when it was well-nigh
-too late to do any service at all&mdash;and distinctly too
-late to do all that ought to have been done. Three of
-the French liners were destroyed, but the others by
-throwing their guns overboard and starting their water,
-were able to grovel over the mud-bar of the Charente,
-and escape into a pool out of reach up the river. They
-never appeared in the West Indies certainly, but the
-work was half done. Cochrane went back to England&mdash;with
-all that was best and worst in him fermenting with
-fury&mdash;to make his unhappy motion of opposition in the
-House to the vote of thanks to Admiral Gambier.
-From thence came his final quarrel with the Admiralty,
-and the court martial on Lord Gambier, in which it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-is only too probable that English officers and officials
-of rank winked at the suppression of evidence, and
-something not unlike forgery. Cochrane’s service in
-our navy was over for long years.</p>
-
-<p>With this scene of mingled heroism and stupidity,
-the more brilliant part of Marryat’s naval life came to
-an end. He was engaged in the Basque Roads on one
-of the fire-ships, and when they proved of little use,
-was probably recalled to the <i>Impérieuse</i>. It is to be
-hoped at least that he was on her deck when her captain,
-in an exaltation of fury, drifted her among the French
-liners. In point of time, however, his service was merely
-beginning, and he was to do good work yet, both as a
-subordinate and as commander; but it wanted the heroic
-touch of the first three years. When Cochrane was
-superseded from the <i>Impérieuse</i>, Marryat remained with
-the new captain, and under him took part in the
-wholly wretched Walcheren business, out of which he
-got&mdash;in common with some thousands of others&mdash;all
-that it had to give&mdash;a distinct idea of how a combined
-expedition ought <em>not</em> to be conducted,&mdash;and an attack of
-marsh fever.</p>
-
-<p>From this time until the close of the Great War, he was
-on such active service as the overpowering supremacy we
-had attained at sea left to be performed. From the
-Scheldt he returned invalided on board the <i>Victorious</i>,
-74. As soon as he was fit for service, he was appointed
-to the <i>Centaur</i>, 74, the flag-ship of Sir Samuel Hood,
-with whom he went back to the Mediterranean, but not
-to the stirring life of his old frigate. After a year of the
-seventy-four he returned home, and was appointed to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-<i>Æolus</i> frigate on the American station. He went out as
-a passenger on the <i>Atlas</i>, 64, and joined his ship at
-Halifax. In the <i>Æolus</i>, and then in another frigate, the
-<i>Spartan</i>, he became familiar with the West Indies, which
-are, with the Mediterranean, the scenes of so large a
-part of his stories. In 1812 he had served his time as
-midshipman, and returned home to pass. His influence
-was good, as the fact that he served so much in frigates
-proves, and he received his lieutenant’s commission
-immediately after going through his examination
-(December 26, 1812). Six months later he was
-appointed to <i>L’Espiègle</i> sloop, and cruised in her on the
-north coast of South America, till he was invalided by
-the breaking of a blood-vessel, and sent home as a
-passenger on board his old frigate, the <i>Spartan</i>, which
-had now finished her commission. This accident, due
-in part to a constitutional infirmity, which ultimately
-proved fatal to him, occurred at Barbadoes, at a dance&mdash;perhaps
-a dignity ball. In 1814 he was back on the
-coast of America in the <i>Newcastle</i>, 58, and was again
-invalided home, this time from Madeira. In June,
-1815, just as the Great War was closing, Marryat was
-promoted commander, and the first period of his life
-came to an end.</p>
-
-<p>The years from 1809 to 1815 may be rapidly passed
-over, for though they added to his experience, they were
-colourless as compared with the cruises of the <i>Impérieuse</i>.
-He saw some service in them, but it was either tame, or
-a mere repetition of what he had seen before. The so-called
-“war of 1812” was in progress during part of his
-service in the <i>Spartan</i> and all his service in the <i>Newcastle</i>,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-but he saw little of it. Some boat work&mdash;and
-sharp work too&mdash;he went through in Boston Bay, but he
-saw nothing of those unlucky frigate actions with the
-Americans, which gave us such a disagreeable shock,
-and it was not his good fortune to be one of the crew of
-the famous <i>Shannon</i>. The capture of a small privateer
-or two, by so powerful a vessel as the <i>Newcastle</i>, was no
-important experience to a man who had seen the boarding
-of the <i>King George</i>, the defence of the Trinidad fort
-at Rosas, and the affair in the Basque Roads. An
-acquaintance he made with an American prisoner of
-war while on board the <i>Newcastle</i> was useful to him
-afterwards, but at the time he probably thought little
-about it.</p>
-
-<p>His captains in these years doubtless served him as
-models when he began his work as a novelist, but they
-were none of them men of the commanding kind. The
-best remembered of them was Captain E. P. Brenton
-of the <i>Spartan</i>, brother of the famous Sir Jahleel who
-fought a brilliant frigate action off Naples, under
-the very eyes of Murat. Captain Brenton had himself
-done good work, but his chief reputation was made in
-later days, as the author of a life of St. Vincent, and
-a history of the Great War, which is itself mainly remembered
-as the object of incessant corrections, often pettifogging,
-commonly superfluous, and always intensely
-wearisome, in James’s “Naval History.”</p>
-
-<p>Even in the most peaceful times, opportunities of
-facing danger come in every seaman’s way. He may
-have his chance to save life, and he must help to fight
-the storm. In both of these ways Marryat distinguished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-himself. Few men have more frequently risked their
-own lives to save others. As a midshipman in the
-<i>Impérieuse</i> he went overboard to save a fellow midshipman.
-He saved the life of a seaman while serving on
-the <i>Æolus</i>, and narrowly escaped drowning on a similar
-occasion when serving in <i>L’Espiègle</i>. On this occasion
-he was a mile and a half off before the sloop could be
-brought to, and when a boat picked him up he was nearly
-senseless. This also was a part of experience to Marryat,
-for it was while overboard from <i>L’Espiègle</i> that he discovered
-that drowning is not an unpleasant death. It
-is recorded in his Life by his daughter that, first and
-last, “during the time he served in the navy, he was
-presented with twenty-seven certificates, recommendations,
-and votes of thanks, for saving the lives of others
-at the risk of his own, beside receiving a gold medal
-from the Humane Society.” This mark of distinction
-given in 1818 was assuredly well deserved.</p>
-
-<p>Not less pleasing to Marryat than the memory of his
-efforts to save others, must have been his recollection of
-the honour he gained in volunteering during a gale to cut
-away the main-yard of the <i>Æolus</i>. The story appears,
-more or less coloured and adapted, with so many other
-of his reminiscences in “Frank Mildmay.” In the sober
-pages of Marshall, it is, however, a quite sufficiently
-gallant story. “On the 30th of September, 1811, in lat. 40°
-50’ N., long. 65° W. (off the coast of New England), a gale
-of wind commenced at S.E., and soon blew with tremendous
-fury; the <i>Æolus</i> was laid on her beam ends,
-her top-masts and mizen-masts were literally blown away,
-and she continued in this extremely perilous situation for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-at least half an hour. Directions were given to cut away
-the main-yard, in order to save the main-mast and right
-the ship, but so great was the danger attending such an
-operation considered, that not a man could be induced
-to attempt it until Mr. Marryat led the way. His
-courageous conduct in this emergency excited general
-admiration, and was highly approved by Lord James
-Townshend, one of whose ship’s company he also saved
-by jumping overboard at sea.”</p>
-
-<p>Up then to the age of three-and-twenty Marryat had
-prepared himself to write sea stories by making his life a
-sea story. He had, in fact, fulfiled the counsel of perfection
-given to the epic poet. He had seen no great
-battle; the last of them had been fought before he
-entered the service; he had not even shared in a single
-ship action. But what he did not witness himself he
-saw through the eyes of messmates. The battles, to judge
-from the little said of them in his stories, do not appear
-to have greatly interested Marryat&mdash;perhaps he found a
-difficulty in realizing what one would be like, perhaps he
-found them unmanageable. With the single ship actions
-he had no such difficulty. He could tell precisely what
-must happen, and he had no doubt heard tales of many
-such pieces of fighting. Indeed, in the actual sea-life of
-the time, the great battles did not play a much more
-considerable part than they do in the novels. Of the
-2,437 lieutenants on the navy list when Marryat entered
-the service, the very great majority had never seen a
-general engagement. It was thought a rather exceptional
-thing that Collingwood should have been present
-in three battles. Nelson himself only took part in four,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-or five, if Admiral Hotham’s feeble action in the Gulf of
-Lyons is to be allowed the name. But most officers had
-seen service of some kind, and had tales to tell. Marryat,
-too, had been fortunate in an eminent degree. He had
-been wounded, but not severely&mdash;he had never been
-taken prisoner or shipwrecked. His service had been
-varied. Between 1806 and 1815 he had seen the North
-Sea, the Channel, the Mediterranean, and the Eastern
-Coast of America, from Nova Scotia to Surinam. His
-promotion had been rapid. Altogether he had had
-much to develop, and nothing to sour him, in this first
-period of his life.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-
-<p>When the great war came at last to an end in
-1815, leaving Marryat a commander at the age
-of three-and-twenty, his ambition was still to be the
-successful naval officer, and not the portrait painter of
-the sea life. Twelve years were to pass before he ceased
-to be employed. During this period he held three
-commands, and once more saw the face of war. It was
-a small and poor war after the heroic conflicts of his
-boyhood, but still it had its own difficulties and trials.
-He began to use his pen in these years, but at first it
-was for merely professional purposes. His code of
-signals must have been prepared, and his pamphlet on
-the best method of recruiting the navy, and his scheme
-for stopping Channel smuggling, were certainly written,
-in this second period, while he was still looking forward to
-the chance of hoisting his flag.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat was one of the great swarm of Englishmen
-who profited by the peace to visit the Continent, which
-had been as nearly as might be shut to the peaceful
-traveller for twenty-two years. He is credited with
-having “occupied himself in acquiring a perfect knowledge
-of such branches of science as might prove useful
-should the Lords of the Admiralty think fit to employ<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-him in a voyage of discovery or survey.” Doubtless
-Marryat loved his profession, and worked at it, but
-when he was recalled from Italy, in 1818, on some vague
-scheme of African exploration he was probably engaged
-in amusing himself. The scheme came to nothing, and
-in January, 1819, he married&mdash;a most convincing proof
-that his intention of exploring Africa had not lasted
-long. Mrs. Marryat was a Miss Shairp, daughter of a
-Scotch gentleman who had been Consul-General in
-Russia. Marryat never agreed with St. Vincent that
-married men are ruined for the service, and some
-eighteen months later he was at sea again in command
-of the <i>Beaver</i> sloop.</p>
-
-<p>In this commission he saw the end of the man who
-had kept Europe in turmoil for the major part of a
-generation. The <i>Beaver</i> was ordered on an all-round
-cruise in the South Atlantic to show the flag at Madeira
-and the Azores, at the solitary rock of Tristan d’Acunha,
-at our own possessions at the Cape, and finally to do
-guard duty at St. Helena. When the <i>Beaver</i> arrived at
-her station Napoleon was just reaching the end of his
-final years of imprisonment. We still maintained a
-naval guard against the enterprises of any Buonapartist
-adventurer who might try to take the Emperor off the
-rock where he sat, consumed with unavailing regrets,
-and disgracing his fall by undignified squabbles with Sir
-Hudson Lowe. An English man-of-war was always
-kept cruising to windward of the island. The last
-officer who performed this duty was Captain Marryat.
-The <i>Beaver</i> was watching for the possible liberator, who
-never came, when Napoleon died. Marryat, who was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-clever draughtsman, took a sketch of the Emperor on his
-death-bed. He was already apparently suffering from
-dysentery or he fell ill immediately (and somewhat conveniently)
-afterwards. As his health did not permit him
-to remain in the South Atlantic station any longer, he
-was allowed to exchange into the <i>Rosario</i>. In her he
-brought the despatches announcing the Emperor’s death
-home to Spithead. From Spithead he was ordered
-round to Harwich to form part of the squadron which
-escorted the body of Queen Caroline to Cuxhaven.
-This piece of ceremonial duty was followed by work of
-a very different kind. The <i>Rosario</i> was told off for
-revenue duty in the Channel, and continued cruising for
-smugglers till she was put out of commission in February,
-1822. This was service of a very sufficiently serious
-kind. There was indeed no fighting to be done, but
-the cruising was arduous and incessant. The smugglers
-were among the smartest seamen in the Channel, and to
-catch them required on the part of the revenue officers
-constant vigilance, great activity, and an intimate knowledge
-of the coast&mdash;that is to say, if the work was to be
-properly done. As a matter of fact it seems to have
-been scamped. Marryat, who had perhaps been infected
-by Cochrane with an inability to let a comfortable old
-abuse alone, forwarded to the Admiralty a long despatch
-showing that the preventive service was inefficiently
-performed, and pointing out how it could be improved.
-The despatch was written after the <i>Rosario</i> had been
-paid off, and was founded on his own experience. It
-gives a curious glimpse into a phase of sea life which
-has entirely disappeared since the establishment of free<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-trade ruined the smugglers by making it not worth any
-man’s while to smuggle. The industry which went on
-all round the coast, from the mouth of the Clyde to the
-mouth of the Firth of Forth, was conducted on varying
-principles in different districts. Marryat dealt only with
-what he had seen himself:&mdash;the smuggling carried on
-in that part of the English Channel which lies between
-Portsmouth and the Start.</p>
-
-<p>When he came to write as a novelist, Marryat displayed
-a certain sympathy with the adventurous scamps
-who ran cargoes of brandy from Cherbourg to the coast
-of Hampshire and Dorsetshire. But Captain Marryat
-the revenue officer was a very different person. In this
-severe and official capacity he did his best to suppress
-what he afterwards described with a distinctly humorous
-sympathy. The smugglers, he pointed out, profited by
-the system adopted by the English revenue boats.
-Cherbourg was the centre of the trade&mdash;the free trade,
-as the smugglers called it, not knowing, poor fellows, who
-their real enemy was. Their vessels were almost exclusively
-manned by Portland or Weymouth men. When
-they were going to run a cargo to a point of the coast
-with which they were not familiar, they would take on a
-local hand, but as a rule they kept the trade pretty
-exclusively to themselves. When one of their luggers
-was sighted by the revenue boats and could not show
-a clean pair of heels, the cargo was jettisoned. If this
-happened in mid-channel it was a clear loss to everybody.
-The smuggler crews were only paid when they
-landed a cargo. The revenue boats could get no prize
-money unless they seized the tubs of spirits. If, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-the cargo was jettisoned in shallow water, the case was
-different. The smugglers might return, or their confederates
-on shore could fish up the sunken kegs, and then
-of course they earned their money. On the other hand,
-if the landing was stopped, or the kegs were dredged
-up by the revenue officers <em>they</em> earned their prize money.
-It is therefore perfectly obvious that it was the interest
-of the revenue officers not to see the smuggling luggers
-in mid-channel. The more brandy they picked up, the
-more prize money they earned, and the more credit
-also. But by allowing the smugglers to approach the
-English coast they gave them many opportunities of
-running cargoes. Partly because they wished to secure
-the approval of their chiefs, who took no account of any
-service which did not include the capture of kegs&mdash;partly
-also out of a natural human desire for prize money,
-the revenue boats nursed the illicit trade. They went
-very little to sea, and confined their exertions to
-scouring the coasts in cutters and gigs. Marryat’s idea
-was that much more effect would be produced by
-pursuing the luggers in mid-channel. If, he argued with
-great force, the smugglers found that they were compelled
-to make a dead loss, voyage after voyage, they
-would soon become tired. As it was, the immense
-profits earned on any cargo successfully run, paid them
-for the loss of two, or even three. Of course if his
-system were adopted there would be no captures to
-show for the credit of the coastguard, and no prize
-money to be earned. But the smuggling would be put
-a stop to. The despatch in which he set forth his
-opinions is a thoroughly able and business-like document,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-and shows that if Marryat was allowed to fall out
-of the service it was not because he was wanting in zeal
-or ability.</p>
-
-<p>Although Marryat, like every other naval officer who
-ever held His Majesty’s commission, thought himself
-“no favourite” with the Admiralty, he had no intelligible
-reason to complain&mdash;at least as yet. The grumblings of
-naval officers are generally, indeed, unintelligible to the
-landsman, who is apt, after hearing much of them, to
-arrive at the conclusion that if every gentleman in the
-service were promoted to be Lord High Admiral and
-made G.C.B. to morrow morning, they would all be as
-discontented as ever by midday. Certainly Marryat,
-who was a commander at twenty-three, and had received
-a command, on service which brought him into notice,
-in time of profound peace and reduction of armaments,
-when the great majority of his fellow officers were
-vegetating on half pay on shore, had little cause to
-growl. He must, in truth, have had very good influence
-at the Admiralty, for though he was only paid off the
-<i>Rosario</i> in February, 1822, he was re-appointed to the
-<i>Larne</i>, of twenty guns, in March, 1823, so that he had
-barely a year on shore. The <i>Larne</i> was fitted out at
-Portsmouth for service in the East Indies. In July
-Marryat sailed from Spithead for his station, this time
-taking out his wife and family. An entry in his log
-briefly records an accident which might, if the amplified
-form of the story given in his biography is to be taken
-as literally true, have ended his career in a somewhat
-absurd manner. His gig upset in Falmouth Harbour
-while he was in it. To an athletic man and good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-swimmer a ducking in the month of July was no great
-disaster, but the boat carried a bumboat woman and a
-midshipman. The woman swam like a fish, and was
-delighted at the prospect of distinction and profit
-apparently thrown in her way. She fastened on Marryat,
-intent on saving a captain, and refused peremptorily to
-let him go when she was asked to transfer her help from
-the superior officer, who did not need it, to the obscure
-midshipman, who, not being able to swim, was in
-imminent danger of drowning. In some way or another
-Marryat did contrive to get rid of the incumbrance of
-her assistance, and the mid was not sacrificed. Whether
-he did not invent the bumboat woman’s devotion to rank,
-is perhaps doubtful. A bumboat woman was capable of
-acting in this way, no doubt, but then Marryat was
-equally capable of seeing that she ought to behave in
-this way, and of crediting her with fulfilling her duty.</p>
-
-<p>When the <i>Larne</i> reached India, Marryat found that
-she was to form part of the combined force ordered to
-invade Burmah. This war, which filled 1824 and 1825,
-was of a kind common with us before we learnt that in
-war, as in building, it is more economical to employ a
-hundred men for one day, than one man for a hundred
-days&mdash;before also the common use of steam had made
-great rapidity of movement possible. Sir Archibald
-Campbell’s force was not numerous enough, and was
-unable to move quick. The operations dragged on for
-months, till fevers, cholera, and scurvy, had almost
-annihilated our army, and had almost unmanned the
-squadron. The duties of the navy, in the war, were to
-clear the Irrawaddy of Burmese war-boats, to transport<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>
-the troops, protect their landing, cover their flank, and
-now and then to help storm a stockade, or beat down the
-fire of native batteries mounted with guns which would
-not fire, handled by gunners who could not shoot. The
-enemy fought fiercely, according to his lights, but then he
-had neither good weapons, nor discipline, nor experience.
-Except when attacked in a particularly strong position,
-by an insufficient force, the poor Burmese were sent into
-action as cattle to the slaughter. We naturally make the
-most of these wars, and politically they are often of the
-utmost importance, but as far as fighting is concerned, a
-wilderness of them is not equal to the action between
-the <i>Shannon</i> and the <i>Chesapeake</i> or the <i>Blanche</i> and the
-<i>Pique</i>. Yet Marryat was well entitled to say, as he did
-in a letter to his brother Samuel, that the crew of the
-<i>Larne</i> had in the course of five months “undergone a
-severity of service almost unequalled.” The climate
-was deadly to unseasoned men exposed to it in an
-unhealthy season. Much toil had to be gone through
-in moving the troops, in rowing guard against the
-Burmese war-boats, and even in doing engineer work.
-It is a complaint sometimes made by the navy that,
-in combined operations with the army, a disproportionate
-amount of the toil falls to them, while the
-redcoats get all the fun and the glory of the fighting.
-In this war the navy had plenty of work, and suffered
-proportionately from the strain. It also complained, in
-later days, that its exertions were hardly sufficiently
-recognized by military historians. Yet their comparatively
-subordinate position was a necessity of the case.
-The war was a land, and not a naval war, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-sailors could hardly expect to be more than accessories
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat’s share, both of the work and the credit, was
-as large as that of any naval officer engaged. From the
-beginning of the campaign, in May, 1824, he was
-employed until September; at first as subordinate, and
-then, when Commodore Grant was invalided, as senior
-naval officer at Rangoon. The five months almost
-destroyed the crew of the <i>Larne</i>, and greatly damaged
-his own health. His men had been on salt provisions
-since February, and when fatigue and exposure were
-added to unwholesome diet, they naturally suffered
-grievously from scurvy. After a rest at Pulo Penang, he
-was back at Rangoon in December, and then, after
-being despatched on service to India, he was recalled to
-Burmah to take part in an attack on Bassein. There
-were more river work, more attacks on stockades, more
-exposure to fever. In July, 1824, on the death of
-Commodore Grant, he was transferred into the <i>Tees</i>, 26,
-a post-ship, which&mdash;as it was a death vacancy&mdash;should
-have given him post rank. The nomination was not,
-however, confirmed by the Admiralty, and Marryat was
-not actually posted till 1825, a loss of a year, which
-affected his seniority. It was in the <i>Larne</i> that he took
-part in the occupation of Bassein, and the attack on the
-Burmese stockades at Negrais and Naputah, but he
-brought the <i>Tees</i> home and paid her off early in 1826.
-The thanks of the general and the Indian Government,
-the Companionship of the Bath, and the command of
-the <i>Ariadne</i>, 28, were his rewards for good service in
-Burmah. This command he held for exactly two years,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-from November, 1828, to November, 1830, when “private
-affairs” induced him to resign. The <i>Ariadne</i> was his
-last ship. He was never employed again, nor does he ever
-seem to have applied for a command. When there was a
-prospect of war with the United States some years later,
-he spoke of going on active service again, but he was in
-ordinary times quite reconciled apparently to the termination
-of his career as a naval officer. The end was
-rather sudden. Up to 1830 he had been in constant
-employment and very successful. He could hardly
-have hoped for more than to be a post-captain and a
-C.B. at thirty-four. The truth doubtless is that he had
-begun to have other ambitions.</p>
-
-<p>As is not uncommonly the case, the end of the old
-life overlapped the beginning of the new. Indeed, the
-old cannot have consciously come to an end with Marryat
-for some years. The evidence as to his wishes and
-hopes is scanty&mdash;extraordinarily scanty considering his
-prominence and that he lived almost into this generation;
-but what has been made known about him shows
-that he did not cease to think and work for “the
-service,” or quite gave up for a long time expecting that
-he might again hold a command. As an active naval
-officer, however, his career ended when he resigned the
-command of the <i>Ariadne</i>. Before that date he had written
-and published “Frank Mildmay,” and had written the
-“King’s Own.” What the private affairs may have been
-which induced him to resign his ship does not appear
-very clearly. Mrs. Ross Church supposes that he wished
-to devote himself to his duties as equerry to the Duke
-of Sussex, which hardly appears a sufficient explanation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-Perhaps, like many other sailors, he may have had a
-period of revolt against the routine work, and long
-absence from friends and family imposed by naval life,
-and for which there is little compensation in peace time.
-With a growing family to look after he had a strong attraction
-to the shore. Then service in peace time cannot
-have had many temptations to a man who enjoyed excitement
-as Marryat did. To be sent on “diplomatic duties,”
-which in practice would mean visits, in the company of His
-Majesty’s Consuls, to foreign governors, or to be ordered
-off in winter to look for reefs in the Atlantic, which never
-existed except in the bemused brains of some merchant
-skipper, must have been very trying. An experience or
-two of this kind, coinciding with the success of his first
-book and the equerryship, would be enough to decide
-him to try his fortune on shore&mdash;all the more as he had
-private means. Whatever the exact motives may have
-been, in 1830 he was on shore for good, and established
-in Sussex House, Hammersmith.</p>
-
-<p>His equerryship seems to have led him to no particular
-good. “The smiles of princes,” says Mrs. Church,
-“are by nature evanescent.” The favour of princes at
-least, like that of other men, requires to be cultivated
-with due skill and attention. Possibly Marryat may
-have been wanting in the will or the capacity to practise
-the art. Certain it is that neither from the Duke of
-Sussex, nor from the duke’s royal brother, William IV.,
-did he ever obtain any visible good beyond invitations
-to festivities which appear to have been of a somewhat
-dreary character. According to a story given in the
-preface to Bone’s edition of the “Pirate and Three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-Cutters,” and quoted on that authority by Mrs. Ross
-Church, the King, who all through his life seems to have
-been moved to do something silly whenever he remembered
-that he was a naval officer, was offended by
-Marryat’s condemnation of the press-gang. He not only
-refused to consent to the conferring of some mark of distinction
-on Marryat in addition to the C.B. given for the
-Burmah campaign, but would not even allow him to wear
-the Legion of Honour sent him by Louis Philippe as a
-reward for the code of signals. The story is credible
-enough of William IV., who, saving the reverence of
-the Crown, was very little better than a fool, and a
-spiteful fool, too, at times. The Admiralty of its own
-motion, or the Admiralty and the King together, seem
-to have decided that Marryat need not be employed
-again. In the enjoyment of literary success and liberty,
-he probably reconciled himself to the want of employment
-readily enough. He must have been prepared to
-do without it when he threw up his command. The
-Admiralty does not love captains who resign their ships.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-
-<p>From 1830 to his death in 1848 Marryat was a
-working man of letters, and a busy one. His
-books were many, and they do not represent all his
-labours. There was a life of his old messmate, Lord
-Napier, begun&mdash;and stopped&mdash;at the request of the
-widow, and much miscellaneous journalism&mdash;if that is
-the correct description of contributions to magazines.
-His pen was rapid, and he had no fear of tackling new
-subjects, so that the length of the shelf which would
-hold his complete works would be considerable, and
-the variety of the contents of the edition not small.
-Sea stories and land stories, plays which never reached
-the stage, diaries on the Continent and in America, letters
-of Norfolk farmers, and didactic tales for children all
-went in.</p>
-
-<p>There is a difficulty in the way of the telling of
-Marryat’s own life during these busy eighteen years&mdash;the
-not uncommon difficulty, want of information. The
-biography published by his family leaves much unexplained,
-for reasons into which it would be useless, even
-if one had the right, to inquire. The causes of Marryat’s
-sudden changes of residence, and of his hasty journey to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
-the Continent in 1835, are only to be guessed at. He
-did not live much in the literary world of his time. Of
-the eighteen years of his writing activity, several in the
-middle were spent on the Continent, and several at the
-end in Norfolk. In a general way one gathers that the
-question of money was a very important, sometimes a
-very pressing one, with Marryat. Money earned, inherited,
-spent&mdash;money to be recovered from debtors,
-and, doubtless, paid to creditors, had much of his attention.
-It is manifest that he was what Carlyle would
-have called “a very expensive Herr.” He liked to lead
-a large life, and to show a gentlemanly indifference to
-money. By preference he lived in good houses, in good
-neighbourhoods, and it is not overrash or uncharitable
-to guess that his income was not always adequate to his
-expenses. Finally, he was addicted to some of the most
-effectual of all methods of evacuation. If he did not
-promote, or have to face, a petition, at least he went
-through a contested election; and he had Balzac’s
-mania for ingenious speculations, which ought to have
-realized wealth beyond the dreams of avarice, and did
-achieve a dead loss with the most unfailing regularity.
-Like many another sailor before and since, he was sure
-that he could show the trained farmer how to extract
-more than he had yet done from the land. He undertook
-to do so on his small estate at Langham, in Norfolk&mdash;with
-disastrous financial results. That farming speculation
-was undoubtedly the type of much in his life.</p>
-
-<p>His movements, if not the causes of them, can be
-followed easily enough. Between 1830 and his departure
-for America in 1837, he was successively at Sussex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-House, Hammersmith; at Langham, in Norfolk; then
-back in London; then in Brighton; then in sudden haste
-off to Brussels; and from thence to Lausanne. “Frank
-Mildmay; or, The Naval Officer,” appeared in 1829.
-Nine months later, when he was fixed on shore, came out
-the “King’s Own.” In 1830 he acquired a thousand
-acres of land in Norfolk, which remained in his possession
-till his death. He exchanged Sussex House for it,
-but how Sussex House was got we are not told. It
-cannot have been bought either out of prize money, or
-the proceeds of the two books he had published already,
-although his prices were remarkably good for a beginner.
-Four hundred pounds is the sum said to have been
-given by Colburn for “Frank Mildmay”&mdash;a good deal
-more than the most sanguine of novices would expect
-to receive from the most generous of publishers for a first
-book in these days. Certainly, in 1830, Marryat was
-working as a man works who has reasons for making all
-the money he can. He was contributing to the <cite>Metropolitan
-Magazine</cite>, and receiving his sixteen pounds a
-sheet&mdash;which, again, is good magazine pay. It did not
-take him long to acquire a shrewd idea how to deal with
-publishers, and a distinct understanding of the due
-privileges of an editor. His knowledge of these important
-matters is shown conclusively in a letter to
-Bentley, setting forth the terms on which he would be
-prepared to edit a new nautical magazine, a proposed
-imitation of, or rather rival to, the <cite>United Service Journal</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>“My terms,” he says, with the confidence of a man
-who knew the market, and his own value in it, “would
-be as follows: The sole control of the work, for when I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-do my best I must be despotic or I shall not succeed;
-to be paid for all my writings at the price I received in
-the <cite>Metropolitan</cite>, sixteen guineas per sheet. The editorship
-I would then take at £400 per annum until the
-end of the first year, when, if the work succeeded, I
-should expect an addition of £100, and if it continued
-profitable, another £100, so as to raise the <em>final</em> pay of
-the editor to £600 per annum. The stipulations may
-be talked over afterwards. To choose my sub-editor is
-indispensable. He must be a nautical man.” Marryat
-had learnt plainly how necessary it is to be captain of
-your own ship&mdash;and withal he quite understood how to
-launch the new kind of craft he was about to sail.
-“The first number must be most carefully got up, to
-insure success, and the papers ought now to be in preparation.
-You must, therefore, take but few days to decide,
-as I tell you honestly I have reason to expect the offer
-from another quarter, who are now talking the matter
-over, and I must be allowed to consider myself as
-unpledged to you after a short time.”</p>
-
-<p>As it is not recorded that Marryat had, like Arthur
-Pendennis, any George Warrington to guide his literary
-beginnings, he deserves all the more credit for his spontaneous
-appreciation of the advantage to be obtained by
-playing Bacon off against Bungay.</p>
-
-<p>“The offer from another quarter,” which was thus
-quoted to hasten the decision of Mr. Bentley, was the
-editorship of the <cite>Metropolitan</cite>, which he took in 1832,
-and held until he left England for Brussels. He either
-received as part payment, or purchased a proprietary right
-in the magazine, which he afterwards sold to Saunders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-and Otley for £1,050. For the next four or five years
-the <cite>Metropolitan</cite> had the major part of Marryat’s time
-and work. He had, according to his wish, a nautical
-sub editor, the E. Howard, who wrote that strange book,
-“Rattlin the Reefer,” which still continues to be catalogued
-with Marryat’s own stories. There were contributors to be
-hunted up&mdash;kept up to the mark, more or less successfully&mdash;and
-occasionally soothed down&mdash;Thomas Moore for
-one, who wrote in agony to insist on the necessity there was
-that he should see his proofs, and also to make monetary
-arrangements. Of course there were quarrels to be
-fought out, for in those days no periodical was able to
-exist without its regular battle. But in the midst of
-these forgetable and forgotten things&mdash;Marryat contributed
-to the <cite>Metropolitan</cite> five of the best of his
-books. “Newton Forster” appeared in 1832, “Peter
-Simple” in 1833; and in 1834 no less than three&mdash;“Jacob
-Faithful,” “Mr. Midshipman Easy,” and “Japhet in
-Search of a Father.” Not a little of what, to apply nautical
-language, may be called dunnage appeared with and
-after these&mdash;a comedy, a tragedy (of neither of which
-does Marryat seem to have thought highly), and a host
-of miscellaneous papers collected under the title of
-“Olla Podrida”&mdash;these last being only what Marryat
-frankly called his “Diary on the Continent”&mdash;namely,
-“very good magazine stuff.”</p>
-
-<p>His extraordinary industry in 1834 can be confidently
-accounted for by the need of money. In 1833 he had
-taken effectual means to lighten his purse by standing for
-Parliament. The constituency chosen for the venture
-was the Tower Hamlets, and Marryat stood as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-Reformer. Although the year immediately following the
-passing of the Reform Bill was as good a one as he
-could well have found in which to try in that character,
-he was not successful. His reforming zeal was possibly
-too purely naval for the constituency, and he was wanting
-in the very necessary readiness to say ditto to a popular
-fad. Marryat seems to have considered that his dislike
-of the press-gang was claim enough to the character of
-Liberal Reformer. But in the midst of profound peace
-the press-gang was not a burning grievance, and on some
-other points he took a line not likely to prove pleasing
-to the sentimental among the Liberals, for whose votes
-he was asking. He could not be got to show a burning
-interest in the sorrows of the slave. He took up the
-logically strong, but practically ineffective, position of the
-man who declined to be troubled for the slave while
-there was so much suffering unremedied at home. This
-might be a very sensible decision, but unfortunately it was
-discredited by the fact that it had been a favourite one
-with the slave-holders, whose tenderness for sufferers
-at home was never heard of till their own property in
-the West Indies seemed to be in danger. On another
-question, which proved a trying one to candidates till
-very recently, Marryat took a disastrously sensible
-course. He was called upon to give his opinion of the
-practice of flogging in the navy&mdash;and committed himself
-to the side of discipline most fatally. “Sir,” he said to
-a heckler, who wanted to know whether the “gallant
-captain” would be capable of flogging him or his sons;
-“Sir, you say the answer I gave you is not direct; I will
-answer you again. If ever you, or one of your sons,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-should come under my command, and deserve punishment,
-if there be no other effectual mode of conferring
-it, I shall flog you.” After that it is not surprising to
-hear that “Captain Marryat and the Chairman left the
-room together, amidst a tumult of united applause and
-disapprobation”&mdash;in the midst, in fact, of an uproar, in
-which the part of the meeting which admired his pluck
-was engaged in shouting against the other part which
-detested his good sense. There was something of
-Colonel Newcome in the politics of Captain Marryat,
-and he had not the good fortune to contend against a
-Barnes Newcome. His parliamentary ambition had to
-take its place with the other schemes of his life which
-came to nothing. A plan for the establishment of brevet
-rank in the navy, which he sent in about this time to
-Sir James Graham, was part of his activity as a political
-naval officer. It also came to nothing, and nobody can
-well regret that it was still-born.</p>
-
-<p>After the misspent energy of 1833, Marryat had to
-make up by hard pen-work. He settled in Montpelier
-Villas, Western Road, Brighton, and there, in 1834, wrote
-his three books. The effort was a severe one, and he felt
-the effects later on, when fatigue, and possibly questions of
-money, had induced him to go abroad. He had not yet
-altogether given up thinking of Parliament&mdash;or, at least,
-if he had ceased hoping to sit as member, he kept up
-his correspondence with ministers on those naval affairs
-which he understood. He forwarded observations on
-the Merchant Shipping Bill of that year&mdash;one of our
-portentous list of shipping measures&mdash;to Sir James
-Graham. His volunteer help was well received, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-First Lord, one of the ablest men who ever was at the
-head of the department, invited him to come to Whitehall
-and talk the Bill over. This invitation may be
-taken as a proof, among others, that if Marryat remained
-unemployed, it was mainly by his own wish. He had
-already, by his writing on the manning of the navy, and,
-in less public ways, shown that in professional matters, at
-least, he was an excellent man of business. Sir James
-Graham was not the man to have refused employment to
-an officer of proved ability if he had wished for it, but
-it is tolerably plain that Marryat had other irons of a
-more attractive kind, for the moment, in the fire.</p>
-
-<p>The particular iron which he had heating in Norfolk&mdash;the
-estate at Langham&mdash;was not likely to relieve him
-from the necessity of making every penny he could by
-his pen. “No rent,” was his return in 1834, and as a
-rule ever after&mdash;till he took it in hand himself, and then it
-still realized him a steady yearly deficit. This year of “no
-rent” was also a year of legal unpleasantness in connection
-with his father’s memory&mdash;which he bore in a fashion to
-be recommended to the imitation of all who suffer from
-similar misfortunes. “As for the Chancellor’s judgment,”
-he wrote to his mother, who had plainly been
-hurt, “I cannot say I thought anything about it; on the
-contrary, it appears to me that he might have been much
-more severe if he had thought proper. It is easy to
-impute motives, and difficult to disprove them. I
-thought, considering his enmity, that he let us off cheap,
-as there is no <em>punishing a Chancellor</em>, and he might say
-what he pleased with impunity. I did not, therefore,
-<em>roar</em>, I only <em>smiled</em>. The effect will be nugatory. Not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-one in a thousand will read it; those who do, know it
-refers to a person not in this world, and of those, those
-who knew my father will not believe it; those who did
-not will care little about it, and forget the name in a
-week. Had he given the decision in our favour, I should
-have been better pleased, but <cite>it’s no use crying; what’s
-done can’t be helped</cite>.” With that piece of the philosophy
-of the elder Faithful, Marryat ends as neat a statement
-of reasons for not making a fuss, and as admirable an
-estimate of the relative unimportance of any man’s
-private affairs in a busy world, as will be found by much
-searching.</p>
-
-<p>Next year Marryat was off in haste to the Continent.
-“Not one day was our departure postponed; with post
-horses and postillions, we posted, post haste, to Brussels.”
-As is too commonly the case, Mrs. Ross Church has
-nothing to say as to the cause of this flight&mdash;and we are
-left to conclude that it was due to that desire to
-economize with dignity which has driven so many
-Englishmen to the same voluntary exile. At Brussels
-or at Spa he went on working for the <cite>Metropolitan</cite>.
-He cannot have edited it, but he sent in his “Diary on
-the Continent,” and he wrote, in this year, “The Pirate”
-and “The Three Cutters,” in which, for the first time,
-he had the advantage of being illustrated by Clarkson
-Stanfield. With the <cite>Metropolitan</cite> his connection was
-coming to an end. In 1836 he returned to England, to
-get rid of his proprietary interest in it to Saunders and
-Otley, and to part with those publishers in a friendly
-manner&mdash;but to part decisively, on the ground that they
-would hear nothing of an advance for fresh work. <i>The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-New Monthly</i> was now his resource&mdash;at the increased
-rate of twenty guineas a sheet. To 1836 belong
-“Snarley Yow” and “The Pasha of Many Tales,”&mdash;and
-also the beginning of that “Life of Lord Napier” which
-was never to be finished. In 1837 he had begun to feel
-the need of a change, the desire to break fresh ground,
-and in April, leaving his family at Lausanne, he started
-for the United States.</p>
-
-<p>His life during these two years of foreign residence
-may probably be fairly well realized by the reader who
-will give himself the pleasure to remember some parts of
-Thackeray and many parts of Lever. The Marryats
-must have formed part of that English colony on the
-Continent at the head of which marched the Marquess
-of Steyne, while Captain Rook and the Honourable Mr.
-Deuceace brought up the rear. It was a society much
-more merry than wise, and it is to be feared more easy
-than honest. Its members lived abroad to escape something&mdash;perhaps
-it was only restraint, perhaps it was the
-heavy bills of English tradesmen not yet reclaimed from
-the evil ways of long credit and high prices, sometimes
-it was the sheriff’s-officer. Now and then it was only the
-English winter. That was the most wholesome reason;
-but it was the least commonly genuine, and the most
-frequently assumed. In all that curious expatriated
-world there was something of the Cave of Adullam. It
-was often only the more pleasant on that account.
-Acquaintances matured quickly; among people who
-were all more or less fugitives, few questions were
-asked; even Captain Rook and Mr. Deuceace were
-received without too much inquiry by people who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-neither imitated nor liked all their ways. Now we are
-less strict at home, and by a natural reaction more
-circumspect abroad. Besides railways keep people
-rolling, and have greatly broken up the old English
-colonies. Still even now there is a continental English
-society, less Bohemian than the old, but still somewhat
-free and easy, addicted as it were to living in its shirt
-sleeves, very pleasant to see, and to go through, but not
-at all good to be lived in for the moral man. During
-the thirties this Cave of Adullam was in full swing,
-crowded with refugees&mdash;not for political causes&mdash;with
-veterans of the old war intent on making pension and
-half-pay go as far as possible, and with pleasure-seeking
-people ready for any amusement (the cheaper the better),
-and not too exacting as to the moral qualities or social
-position of those with whom they were prepared to
-amuse themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat with his abundant spirits, his faculty for story-telling,
-and his sufficient command of money, would
-naturally fall on his feet in this rather gypsy world. He
-spoke French fluently, and his wife, as the daughter of
-an English consul in Russia, would be at home in
-continental society. Once more it must be confessed
-that the details are wanting. Mrs. Ross Church says,
-that “to this hour” (she wrote in 1872) “many anecdotes
-are related of him by the older residents at
-Brussels.” Sadly few of them seem to have been
-collected, for Mrs. Ross Church can only muster two&mdash;neither,
-it must be confessed, very brilliant nor very
-honourable. According to the first, Marryat was asked
-to dinner to meet a company of celebrities and friends<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-of his own, in hopes that he would talk. He held his
-tongue, and when asked whether he had been silent
-because he was bored, answered, “Why did you imagine
-I was going to let out any of my jokes for those fellows
-to put in their next books? No, that is not <em>my</em> plan.
-When I find myself in such company as <em>that</em>, I open my
-ears and hold my tongue, glean all I can, and give
-them nothing in return.” The story needs a good deal
-of explaining before the point of it becomes obvious;
-and unluckily the circumstances, which could alone
-explain it, are wanting. The fun, if there was any, was
-supplied (we must suppose) by the character of the
-person it was said to&mdash;and who was he? The other
-story contains a repartee&mdash;an awful repartee&mdash;a thing to
-be put in a collection of witticisms with the comment
-that “so and so smiled, but never forgave the jest.” It
-is about the bridge of somebody’s nose, and is not greatly
-inferior to the recorded jokes of Douglas Jerrold.</p>
-
-<p>There is little to be gleaned out of such reminiscences
-as these, which hardly reach the dignity of “dead nettles”:
-neither do we gather much from a surviving letter to Mr.
-Osmond de Beauvoir Priaulx about a debt of frs. 1250,
-owed to Marryat by R&mdash;&mdash;, a hopeless debt. “I consider
-that if I have no better chance of heaven than of
-R&mdash;&mdash;’s 1250 francs, I am in a bad way. Both he and
-Z&mdash;&mdash; are evidently a couple of rogues. The only
-chance of obtaining the money from R&mdash;&mdash; is by telling
-him that I am coming to Paris as soon as I can, and
-that I shall expose him by publishing the whole affair,
-his letters, &amp;c.; and, moreover that you <em>strongly suspect</em>
-that it is my intention, independent of exposure, to <i>break<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-every bone in his body</i> on my arrival. He holds himself
-as a gentleman, being the son of some post-captain, and
-will not like that message, and may perhaps pay the
-money rather than incur the risk.” Here obviously was
-a very pretty quarrel; but who was R&mdash;&mdash;, and had he a
-case, and who was Mr. Osmond de Beauvoir Priaulx,
-and did any assault follow? Who knows? and indeed
-who cares? The rest of the letter is full of scandal
-about capital letters and dashes. The sight of it only
-make one remember how much entirely unimportant
-trash contrives to survive in this world.</p>
-
-<p>All the scraps of knowledge about Marryat which have
-escaped destruction are not so unpleasant, though they
-are nearly as obscure, as that letter to Mr. Osmond de
-Beauvoir Priaulx. It is recorded that he gave parties and
-Christmas trees, that he looked after children well, and
-was a neat hand at packing a portmanteau,&mdash;qualities
-which must have made him the most tolerable of
-husbands and fathers on his travels. He was at all
-times tender-hearted with children, as befitted an author
-who ended by writing almost wholly for them; and
-would quiet his own by telling them stories, when the
-rattling of carriages and diligences had made them
-fractious. A letter to his mother survives from these
-years which is worth quoting&mdash;not because it gives much
-information about his own life, but because it is kindly, and
-gives a very different picture of Marryat to that afforded
-by the threats against R&mdash;&mdash;, and the vapid scandal
-written to the gentleman with the handsome French
-name.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Spa</span>, <i>June 9, 1835</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My Dearest Mother</span>,&mdash;It is dreadfully hot, and
-we are all gasping for breath. Kate is very unwell.
-She cannot walk now, and is obliged to go out in the
-carriage. Children thrive. As for me, I am teaching
-myself German, and writing a little now and then ‘The
-Diary of a Blasé:’ one part has appeared in the
-<cite>Metropolitan</cite>&mdash;very good magazine stuff. I have a
-fractional part of the gout in my middle right finger. Is
-it possible to make V&mdash;&mdash; a member of the Horticultural?
-He is very anxious, and he deserves it; the
-personal knowledge is the only difficulty; but I know
-him, and I am part of you, and therefore you know him.
-Will that syllogism do? We are as quiet here as if we
-were out of the world, and I like it. I wanted quiet to
-recover me. Since I have been here I have discovered
-what I fancy will be new in England&mdash;a variety of carnation,
-with short stalks&mdash;the stalks are so short that the
-flowers do not rise above the leaves of the plant, and you
-have no idea how pretty they are; they are all in a bush
-(? blush). There are two varieties here, belonging to
-a man, but he will not part with them. He says they
-are very scarce, and only to be had at Vervier, a town
-eight miles off. They are celebrated for flowers at
-Liége, but a flower-woman from Liége, to whom I
-showed them, said she had never seen them there; so I
-presume the man was correct. Have you heard of them?
-By-the-by, you should ask V&mdash;&mdash; to send for some
-Ghent roses&mdash;they are extremely beautiful. I did give
-most positive orders that Fred should not go out unless
-with Mr. B&mdash;&mdash; or one of the masters. He remained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-three days in Paris, having escaped from the gentleman
-who had charge of him, and cannot, or will not, account
-for where he was, or what he did. He did not go to his
-school until his money was gone. He is at a dangerous
-age now, and must be kept close. Write me or Kate a
-long letter, telling us all the news. I intend to come
-home in October, or thereabouts; but I must arrange
-according to Kate’s manœuvres. If she goes her time of
-course I must be with her, and then she will winter here,
-I have no doubt, as we cannot travel in winter with
-babies, nor indeed do I wish to; as travelling costs a
-great deal of money&mdash;and I have none to spare.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you, mamma. This is a famous place for
-your complaint, if it comes on again. The cures are
-miraculous. Love to Ellen. She sha’n’t come German
-over me when we meet. I don’t think I ever should
-have learnt it, only G&mdash;&mdash; gave himself such airs about
-it.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The letter is not a masterpiece, but it is good-natured
-and wholesome. The “Fred,” who had been playing
-truant so enviably in Paris, was afterwards the Lieutenant
-Frederick Marryat who perished in the wreck of the
-<i>Avenger</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-
-<p>His departure for America is a convenient date
-at which to stop and survey Marryat’s literary
-work. After 1837, he did some things as good as anything
-he had done before, and some at once unlike what
-he had already written, and yet excellent of their kind.
-“Poor Jack” and “Percival Keene” have touches of the
-old sea life, and flashes of fun, not inferior to his earlier
-writing. The “Phantom Ship” has a character of its
-own; the children’s stories of his last years are excellent.
-All these are later than 1837. Still, if he
-had ceased to write entirely in that year, his place in
-literature would be as high as it is. We should have
-“The King’s Own,” “Peter Simple,” “Mr. Midshipman
-Easy,” “Japhet,” “Jacob Faithful,” and “Snarley Yow,”
-and with these we should possess the best of him. In
-those eight busy years Marryat had poured out the
-harvest of his experience profusely. His beginning in
-literature had been singularly fortunate. The time was
-favourable to writers of any originality certainly. A
-brilliant magazine article made a reputation. There was
-a marked readiness to recognize ability and reward it.
-What amount of praise and pudding would be given in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-these days for another essay on Milton it would be useless
-to guess, but undoubtedly it could hardly be greater
-than the share which fell to Macaulay for his early effort.
-Carlyle made a place for himself by a few articles. The
-wind which blew for them blew for others also. As has
-almost always been the case in great literary periods, the
-readiness of the reader to recognize and admire was as
-strong as the productive power of the writer. The
-audience met the playwright half way. Sir Walter Scott
-had prepared the market for the novelist. He had
-enormously increased the taste for novels, and whoever
-could write at all was the surer of a hearing, because
-“Waverley” had made stories a necessity to readers.
-There is among the more atrabilious kind of men of
-letters a secret belief that the sum of popularity is a fixed
-quantity, of which whatever is earned by one man is necessarily
-lost by another. That one nation’s gain is another’s
-loss in commerce, was an accepted axiom with economists
-of the days of darkness before Adam Smith. It has been
-given up on maturer consideration, and is assuredly no
-more true in literature than international trade. A great
-writer who gains a great popularity increases the chance
-of the smaller men. Sir Walter and Jane Austen helped
-the Mrs. Meeke in whom Macaulay delighted.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat had profited amply by the opening. With
-great adaptability he had thrown himself into the literary
-fight of his time. As has been already said, he soon
-showed himself at home in the regular business of literature&mdash;in
-writing for the press and in editing. To take
-the satisfactory though vulgar test of money, he was
-able to make his market, and put his price up. Nor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-was he at all reluctant to insist on the value of his goods.
-“I do not,” he said in 1837, “write for sixteen guineas
-a sheet now. I let them off for twenty guineas, as I do
-not wish to run them hard; and I now have commenced
-with the <cite>New Monthly</cite> at that rate for one year certain,
-and the copyright secured to me. Times are hard, and
-I do not wish to break the backs of the publishers,
-although I ride over them roughshod. I have also made
-very much better terms for my books. ‘Snarley Yow,’
-comes out on the 1st of June. I have parted very amicably
-with Saunders and Otley, who would not stand an advance.
-I <em>will</em> make hay when the sun shines; for every
-dog has his day, and I presume my time will come as
-that of others.” Twenty guineas a sheet was the
-exceptional price which Fraser was paying Carlyle in
-those very years, and was five guineas above the usual
-rate. Obviously here was a gentleman who knew that
-business was business. With this determination to make
-the last penny there was to make, he naturally contributed
-his chapter to the history of the quarrels of authors with
-their publishers.</p>
-
-<p>“Although Captain Marryat,” says his daughter, “and
-his publishers mutually benefited by their transactions
-with each other, one would have imagined from the
-letters exchanged between them that they had been
-natural enemies.” It is a mistake which is not uncommon
-in these transactions, and particularly likely to arise
-when, as in this case, a publisher frankly tells the author
-that he thinks him “eccentric,” and an “odd creature,”
-and adds that he is himself “somewhat warm-tempered.”
-Who the particular publisher was who sent these pieces<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-of criticism and self-criticism to Marryat we are not told.
-The answer he received might supply a clue to the Marryatist
-who was prepared to follow it up with the proper
-devotion.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“There was no occasion for you to make the admission
-that you were somewhat warm-tempered. Your
-letter establishes the fact. Considering your age, you
-are a little volcano, and if the insurance were aware of
-your frequent visits to the Royal Exchange, they would
-demand double premium for the building. Indeed, I
-have my surmises <em>now</em> as to the last conflagration.</p>
-
-<p class="center">…</p>
-
-<p>“Your remark as to the money I have received may
-sound very well, mentioned as an isolated fact; but how
-does it sound when it is put into juxtaposition with the
-sums you have received? I, who have found everything,
-receiving a pittance; while you, who have found nothing
-but the shop to sell in, receiving such a lion’s share. I
-assert again, it is slavery. I am Sinbad the Sailor, and
-you are the Old Man of the Mountain (<i>sic</i>) clinging on
-my back, and you must not be surprised at my wishing
-to throw you off the first convenient opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>“The fact is, you have the vice of old age very strong
-upon you, and you are blinded by it; but put the question
-to your sons, and ask them if they consider the
-present agreement fair. Let them arrange with me,
-and do you go and read your Bible. We all have our
-own ideas of Paradise, and if other authors think like me,
-the more pleasurable portion of anticipated bliss is that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-there will be no publishers there. That idea often supports
-me after an interview with one of your fraternity.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Author and publisher told one another “their fact”
-plainly enough in this case, and one rather wonders what
-lies hid under the asterisks. In the absence of information
-as to the proportion in which they respectively
-shared the profits of the stories written before 1837, one
-cannot undertake to say whether the unnamed publisher
-of fiery temper, advanced age, and small stature, received
-a lion’s share or not. If so, it must have represented a
-handsome sum, for Marryat was by no means one of the
-worst treated of authors. Colburn gave him £400 for
-“Frank Mildmay.” For “Mr. Midshipman Easy” he
-received £1,400, apparently in a lump sum. “The
-Pirate” and “The Three Cutters,” published together,
-brought him in £750. His other books were paid on
-the same scale, and he certainly did not edit the <cite>Metropolitan</cite>
-for nothing. His code of signals, which was not
-literature (and perhaps on that account only the more
-lucrative), was an appreciable income to him throughout
-his life. On the whole, Marryat seems to have found
-the profession of author sufficiently remunerative. His
-indignation with his publishers may be safely taken to be
-mainly a proof that, in common with most writing-men
-of his generation, he was a firm believer in the creed that
-authors are an ill-used body. This is no longer quite so
-orthodox as it was. The wind is rather blowing the
-other way, and it is becoming the right thing to say that
-authors have themselves to thank for their ill-luck if
-they do not earn as much as they ought, and must bear<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-the burden like their fellow-men if they spend more than
-they earn. This good sense may corrupt into a cant as
-others have done, but it is good sense. Marryat&mdash;who
-would appear to have made three thousand pounds or so
-in 1835, for taking “Mr. Midshipman Easy” and the
-other two stories, with his copyrights and editorship, he
-can hardly have made less&mdash;was in any case not an
-example of an ill-paid author. If he had to complain of
-want of money it must have been because he was a
-gentleman of extravagant habits, with a fatal weakness
-for bad investments. To be sure, if an author were to
-be paid according to the pleasure he has given others,
-and if “the shop” which makes a profit on selling his
-work had to render some royalty on it for ever and ever,
-then indeed was Marryat, together with all those whose
-work is of the widely-read and lasting order, ill rewarded.
-But insuperable difficulties bar the road to that ideal.
-Since paper, printing, and advertisements must be provided,
-the provider of these necessary things must share;
-since the novelist cannot hawk his own goods in a barrow,
-he must pay somebody to do it for him; since the
-world’s copyright laws put a limit on the duration of proprietary
-right in books, there must come a time when
-they are at any man’s disposal to reprint. In the long
-run the balance of profit must needs be in favour of the
-shop. To be sure, the nation of authors may console
-itself by reflecting that it has its revenge. There is much
-on which the shop makes no gain, first or last.</p>
-
-<p>The first of Marryat’s books is one which, for reasons
-very neatly stated by himself, may stand apart from the
-others. When he had given it three successors, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-thought fit to publish a proclamation on the subject of
-his work in the <cite>Metropolitan</cite>, and in that document
-he described “Frank Mildmay” as fairly as any honest
-critic could do for him.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“‘The Naval Officer’ was our first attempt, and it having
-been our first attempt must be offered in extenuation of
-its many imperfections; it was written hastily, and before
-it was complete we were appointed to a ship. We cared
-much about our ship and little about our book. The
-first was diligently taken charge of by ourselves; the
-second was left in the hands of others, to get on how it
-could. Like most bantlings put out to nurse, it did not
-get on very well. As we happen to be in the communicative
-vein, it may be as well to remark that being
-written in the autobiographical style, it was asserted by
-good-natured friends, and believed in general, that it was
-a history of the author’s own life. Now, without pretending
-to have been better than we should have been in
-our earlier days, we do most solemnly assure the public
-that, had we run the career of vice of the hero of ‘The
-Naval Officer,’ at all events, we should have had sufficient
-sense of shame not to have avowed it. Except the
-hero and the heroine, and those parts of the work which
-supply the slight plot of it as a novel, the work in itself
-is materially true, especially in the narrative of sea
-adventure, most of which did (to the best of our recollection)
-occur to the author.… The ‘confounded
-licking’ we received for our first attempt in the critical
-notices is probably well known to the reader&mdash;at all
-events we have not forgotten it. Now, with some, this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-severe castigation of their first offence would have had
-the effect of their never offending again; but we felt
-that our punishment was rather too severe; it produced
-indignation instead of contrition, and we determined to
-write again in spite of all the critics in the universe: and
-in the due course of nine months we produced ‘The
-King’s Own.’ In ‘The Naval Officer’ we had sowed all
-our wild oats, we had <em>paid off</em> those who had ill-treated
-us, and we had no further personality to indulge in.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>From which, even if internal evidence were not
-enough to prove it, we learn that, between the paying off
-of the <i>Tees</i> and the commissioning of the <i>Ariadne</i>,
-Marryat decided to have a general jail delivery of his
-old naval enemies, and that the result was “Frank Mildmay;
-or, The Naval Officer.” It cannot be said that
-the book is better than its origin. If Marryat had kept
-the promise he made in this proclamation of his to the
-readers of the <cite>Metropolitan</cite>&mdash;if he had re-written this so-called
-novel, he might, had he taken the right course,
-have made it one of the best of his works. He had
-only to make it an autobiography without disguise, to put
-in the good as well as the evil of his experience, to take
-care to explain everything to his readers, as he could
-well have done, and he would have given English
-literature a thing altogether unique&mdash;a naval memoir.
-We are not rich in memoirs, at least, not in good ones.
-The English hand is unhappy at that work. A man has
-only to turn to Ludlow, or Sir Philip Warwick, to see
-how lamentably little Englishmen of parts who lived
-through the most wonderful things could contrive to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-bring away with them&mdash;how little at least of the life, the
-colour, the dramatic swing of it all. Of the few we can
-show, which are not unfit to stand with the Frenchmen,
-Clarendon, Pepys, Colley Cibber, Evelyn (and four or five
-others), none were of the sea. “Cochrane’s Autobiography”
-maybe quoted against me, but even this, good as
-it is in places, is drowned in angry denunciations of human
-wickedness, and demonstrations that this or the other
-thing ought to have been done by official backsliders, so
-that what Cochrane did himself is almost crowded out.
-Besides, it is only a fragment, and then <i lang="fr">reste à savoir s’il
-n’est pas mort</i>. It has not lived. One may, and must,
-use it for the history of the man and the time, but who
-reads it for its intrinsic literary merit? The French
-seamen have the better of us there. The memoirs of
-Forbin, of Duguay-Trouin, and even the recently published
-journal of a much less famous man, Jean Doublet,
-are capital reading. Marryat might, if he had so pleased,
-have done a book which would have been to the
-memoirs of Forbin what the memoirs of Clarendon are
-to the memoirs of Sully, to adopt the formula dear to
-Lord Macaulay. He might have done what Sir Walter
-Scott praised Basil Hall for attempting&mdash;have given in
-autobiographical form a picture of sea life, which would
-have been interesting, not only to those who already love
-the subject, but to all who love good reading. He did not
-so choose. He carried out his mission in another form,
-and “Frank Mildmay” remained as it first appeared.</p>
-
-<p>That the book was so much of an autobiography was
-a misfortune for Marryat. He might protest as much as
-he pleased that he was not Frank Mildmay, and had not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-run a career of vice, but the impression left by the book
-was and is disagreeable. Why should a man attribute
-his own adventures to a tiger? Now, Frank Mildmay
-is a tiger&mdash;a very insolent, callous, young cub. It shows
-Marryat to have been very inexperienced indeed that
-he should have made such a mistake. He must have
-known that the adventures would be recognized. The
-naval world is a small one, and an exclusive. Naval
-officers live together by choice on shore as they do by
-necessity at sea. Everything written about the profession
-is talked over, and interpreted, when interpretation
-is needed. Every incident in “Frank Mildmay” was no
-doubt recognized at once; and when it was found that
-the things that had happened to the hero of the story were
-the adventures of the author, it is not to be wondered
-at that the two were thought to be also identical in
-character. Marryat, in fact, committed with himself the
-very error of judgment into which Dickens was led with
-Leigh Hunt, when he made Harold Skimpole a rascal,
-in order to prove that he was not a caricature of his
-friend. But there is something more than inexperience
-and error of judgment about “The Naval Officer.”
-Marryat can hardly have seen what a bad fellow he had
-drawn. Frank Mildmay has not only those “sins of the
-devil,” which may be worse, but are more dignified, than
-the sins of men&mdash;he errs not only by “pride and
-rebellion,” but he is a mean scamp; and I am afraid that
-Marryat did not see it. He was as blind to the faults of
-his bantling as Smollett was to the ruffianism of Roderick
-Random, or Fielding to the very vulgar inferiority of
-Tom Jones. Criticism seems to have opened his eyes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-and little as he liked the lesson, he took the warning; but
-it was only for a time. Unfortunately he fell back on
-it. Percival Keene is just such another&mdash;a very low
-fellow, with a kind of wild boar courage. It would
-appear that Marryat did not see some things as plainly
-as one could wish he had done. It is unnecessary to
-insist on the faults of construction in a book which
-belonged to an altogether bastard genre. What merits
-it had&mdash;and they were sufficient to give promise of a
-brilliant novelist&mdash;were to be repeated in other books
-much more pleasant, and much more capable of repaying
-examination.</p>
-
-<p>The other nine books which Marryat published in
-these seven years were “wholly fictitious in characters,
-in plot, and in events,” to quote his own words. In fact,
-they were stories, and what truth there is in them was
-not crudely taken from memory, but adapted and fitted
-into its place. The essential accuracy of the picture
-they give of sea life has never been questioned, at
-least it has never been challenged on serious grounds.
-It is undoubtedly the case that critics of a certain well-known
-stamp have been known to complain that no such
-series of adventures as these stories contain were ever
-known to occur, and that the daily life of a midshipman
-is not so amusing as Mr. Easy’s, nor so varied as Peter
-Simple’s. A criticism which only amounts to this&mdash;that
-the stories are stories, and not log-books, need hardly
-be seriously answered. Sailors read them, and always
-have read them. They are as popular in the American
-Naval School as they have been among English boys.
-To the skill with which the stories were built, less justice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-has been done. It has always, as it were, been taken
-for granted that Marryat owed everything to his experience
-as a seaman, and that, except in so far as he had
-seen things which other men had not seen, he was not
-of the race of novelists whose work lives. Now this is
-heresy. In truth, the sea life owes more to Marryat than
-he to the sea. No one meets Mr. Easy, or Terence
-O’Brien, or Mr. Chucks, or Mr. Vanslyperken in this
-commonplace world. He meets something out of which
-they may be made. Unquestionably his experience was
-of inestimable value to Marryat&mdash;as all exceptional experience
-is to all novelists. At the very beginning of his
-career he was complimented by Washington Irving on
-his good luck. “You have a glorious field before you,
-and one in which you cannot have many competitors, as
-so very few unite the author to the sailor.” No doubt
-it was Marryat’s happiness that he had so good a Sparta
-to cultivate&mdash;but, after all, the result was primarily due to
-the skill of the cultivator. Speaking as one who has a
-full share of the good English taste for reading about the
-things of the sea, I am inclined to maintain that few kinds
-of books are more tedious than sea stories which ask to
-be read and enjoyed simply because they are sea stories.
-Battle, and storm, and shipwreck may be poured out on
-you, and yet leave you cold. These things by themselves
-in fiction are capable of being as tiresome as the once
-prevalent detective, or now popular religious disputations.
-To compare the stock sea story with the great books of
-travel&mdash;with Dampier, or with Anson’s Voyage, or with
-Basil Ringrose&mdash;would be unfair. We do not need to
-compare the best of one kind with the worst of another.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-But they will not stand reading even with Captain Hacke’s
-dingy little compilation, or with the long winded journal
-of Woodes Rogers. The reality of the latter is some
-compensation for their undoubted dulness. At least in
-reading them one knows that one is looking at a strange
-old life told by the men who lived it. When taken by
-a workman and badly used, the adventures these actual
-adventurers passed through and recorded become merely
-badly used material. A painter was once shown the
-scrawlings of a youthful prodigy who had been covering
-paper with pictures of ships and sailors. He was asked
-whether these works did not show a genius for art.
-“No,” said the judicious artist, “the boy has been
-reading sea stories, and his head is full of them. He
-draws because he likes the things, not because he loves
-drawing.” The verdict stated a great critical truth&mdash;and,
-however unpleasant it may be to prodigies to learn that
-taste and faculty are not identical, and that they must
-rely on their power of interpreting their subject, and not
-on the subject itself, it is the case, nevertheless.</p>
-
-<p>Now with Marryat the faculty was always equal to the
-fusing and managing of the materials. In “Japhet,”
-where he does not touch the sea at all, he has yet contrived
-to impart life and interest to his puppets and their
-doings. It may stand by “Con Cregan” in the long
-list of stories which began with “Guzman de Alfarache,”
-and includes “Moll Flanders” and “Peregrine Pickle.”
-In this case Marryat’s best knowledge was not available
-and he had to rely on his power of re-using well-worn materials.
-Where his experience and his ability combined, he
-attained to a very considerable degree of narrative skill.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-Whether he had trained himself by early reading or not
-(and indeed there is nothing to show that he was a
-reader), he had early command of a very admirable
-narrative style. It might be plausibly maintained that
-this was a heritage among seamen. There is nothing in
-English literature at once more simple, more manly,
-more perfectly adequate to its purpose than the language
-of Dampier. In Marryat’s own time this power had
-not been lost by English seamen. The navy may have
-been a rough school, but there was nothing in its training
-which made men unable to use the pen, and use it well.
-As an example of flowing, and also perfectly unaffected,
-description, the account of the battle of the Nile, given
-by Captain Miller, of the <i>Theseus</i>, is without fault. It
-deserves a place of honour in every collection of English
-letters. The beauty of Collingwood’s letters is
-acknowledged even by those who have thought fit to
-carp at his character. Marryat brought this style to his
-literary work, and kept it unchanged to the end. It is
-a style in which there is no straining. Marryat never
-had recourse, as his contemporary, Michael Scott, was
-wont, to capital letters, italics, and broken lines when he
-wished to impress his readers. He never appears even
-to have been particularly anxious to impress. When a
-wreck or a battle comes in his way, it is told as Captain
-Miller might have told it. Therefore it has its effect,
-and convinces you, as the narrative of the battle of the
-Nile does, that the thing described had been seen, had
-been lived through. The most famous of his passages&mdash;the
-club-hauling of the <i>Diomede</i>, the fight with the
-Russian frigate in “Mr. Midshipman Easy”&mdash;the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-destruction of the French liner at the end of “The King’s
-Own”&mdash;are too long for quotation; but in “Peter Simple”
-there is one which is of not unmanageable length, and
-which shows the qualities of his writing at their best.
-It is the account of the hurricane which threw Peter on
-the coast of St. Pierre:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“In half an hour I shoved off with the boats. It was
-now quite dark, and I pulled towards the harbour of St.
-Pierre. The heat was excessive and unaccountable; not
-the slightest breath of wind moved in the heavens, or
-below; no clouds to be seen, and the stars were obscured
-by a sort of mist: there appeared a total stagnation in
-the elements. The men in the boats pulled off their
-jackets, for after a few moments’ pulling, they could bear
-them no longer. As we pulled in, the atmosphere became
-more opaque, and the darkness more intense. We
-supposed ourselves to be at the mouth of the harbour,
-but could see nothing, not three yards ahead of the
-boat. Swinburne, who always went with me, was steering
-the boat, and I observed to him the unusual appearance
-of the night.</p>
-
-<p>“‘I’ve been watching it, sir,’ replied Swinburne, ‘and
-I tell you, Mr. Simple, that if we only knew how to find
-the brig, I would advise you to get on board of her
-immediately. She’ll want all her hands this night, or I’m
-much mistaken.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Why do you say so?’ replied I.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Because I think, nay, I may say that I’m sartain,
-we’ll have a hurricane afore morning. It’s not the first
-time I’ve cruised in these latitudes. I recollect in ’94&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“But I interrupted him. ‘Swinburne, I believe that
-you are right. At all events I’ll turn back; perhaps we
-may reach the brig before it comes on. She carries a
-light, and we can find her out.’ I then turned the boat
-round, and steered, as near as I could guess, for where
-the brig was lying. But we had not pulled out more
-than two minutes, before a low moaning was heard in the
-atmosphere&mdash;now here, now there&mdash;and we appeared to be
-pulling through solid darkness, if I may use the expression.
-Swinburne looked around him, and pointed out on the
-starboard bow.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s a coming, Mr. Simple, sure enough; many’s the
-living being that will not rise on its legs to-morrow. See,
-sir.’</p>
-
-<p>“I looked, and dark as it was, it appeared as if a sort
-of black wall was sweeping along the water right towards
-us. The moaning gradually increased to a stunning roar,
-and then at once it broke upon us with a noise to which
-no thunder can bear a comparison. The sea was perfectly
-level, but boiling, and covered with a white foam,
-so that we appeared in the night to be floating on milk.
-The oars were caught by the wind with such force, that
-the men were dashed forward under the thwarts, many
-of them severely hurt. Fortunately, we pulled with
-tholes and pins; or the gunwales and planks of the boat
-would have been wrenched off, and we should have
-foundered. The wind soon caught the boat on her
-broadside, and, had there been the least sea, would have
-inevitably thrown her over; but Swinburne put the helm
-down, and she fell off before the hurricane, darting
-through the boiling water at the rate of ten miles an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-hour. All hands were aghast; they had recovered their
-seats, but were obliged to relinquish them, and sit down
-at the bottom, holding on by the thwarts. The terrific
-roaring of the hurricane prevented any communication
-except by gesture. The other boats had disappeared;
-lighter than ours, they had flown away faster before the
-sweeping element; but we had not been a minute before
-the wind, before the sea rose in a most unaccountable
-manner&mdash;it appeared to be by magic.</p>
-
-<p>“Of all the horrors that ever I witnessed, nothing could
-be compared to the scene of this night. We could see
-nothing, and heard only the wind, before which we were
-darting like an arrow, to where we knew not, unless it
-were to certain death. Swinburne steered the boat, every
-now and then looking back as the waves increased. In
-a few minutes we were in a heavy swell, that at one
-minute bore us all aloft, and at the next almost sheltered
-us from the hurricane; and now the atmosphere was
-charged with showers of spray, the wind cutting off the
-summits of the waves, as if with a knife, and carrying it
-along with it, as it were, in its arms.</p>
-
-<p>“The boat was filling with water, and appeared to
-settle down fast. The men baled with their hats in
-silence, when a large wave culminated over the stern,
-filling us up to our thwarts. The next moment we all
-received a shock so violent, that we were jerked from our
-seats. Swinburne was thrown over my head. Every
-timber of the boat separated at once, and she appeared
-to crumble from under us, leaving us floating on the
-raging waters. We all struck out for our lives, but with
-little hope of preserving them; but the next wave washed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-us on the rocks, against which the boat had already been
-hurled. That wave gave life to some, and death to
-others. Me, in Heaven’s mercy, it preserved: I was
-thrown so high up, that I merely scraped against the top
-of the rock, breaking two of my ribs. Swinburne, and
-eight more, escaped with me, but not unhurt; two had
-their legs broken, three had broken arms, and the others
-were more or less contused. Swinburne miraculously
-received no injury. We had been eighteen in the boat,
-of which ten escaped: the others were hurled up at our
-feet; and the next morning we found them dreadfully
-mangled. One or two had their heads literally
-shattered to pieces against the rocks. I felt that I was
-saved, and was grateful; but still the hurricane howled&mdash;still
-the waves were washing over us. I crawled further
-up upon the beach, and found Swinburne sitting down
-with his eyes directed seaward. He knew me, took my
-hand, squeezed it, and then held it in his. For some
-moments we remained in this position, when the waves,
-which every moment increased in volume, washed up to
-us, and obliged us to crawl further up. I then looked
-around me: the hurricane continued in its fury, but the
-atmosphere was not so dark. I could trace for some
-distance the line of the harbour, from the ridge of foam
-upon the shore: and for the first time I thought of
-O’Brien and the brig. I put my mouth close to Swinburne’s
-ear, and cried out, ‘O’Brien!’ Swinburne
-shook his head, and looked up again at the offing. I
-thought whether there was any chance of the brig’s
-escape. She was certainly six, if not seven miles off,
-and the hurricane was not direct on the shore. She<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-might have a drift of ten miles, perhaps; but what was
-that against such tremendous power?”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Now this might have come straight from another
-Dampier. There is no attempt to convince you of the
-force of the hurricane by laborious descriptions of what
-it looked like. It is shown to be awful by the effect it
-produces. The sentences go rapidly on. Their very
-simplicity helps to convey the impression of the suddenness
-and overwhelming fury of the storm. The effect
-would have been lost if the writer had stopped to talk.
-The style seems to me to be the perfection of prose, for
-a tale of adventure&mdash;the straightforward, almost colloquial
-report of one who has gone through it all, carried to its
-very best&mdash;made into literature without being obtrusively
-literary.</p>
-
-<p>As the style is, so are the stories. A natural tact
-seems to have told Marryat when he had gone far enough
-in search of the strange. His heroes lead lives that are
-possible. He might, if he had chosen, have rivalled
-Michael Scott’s wondrous pirates. Once, indeed, in
-“Percival Keene,” he actually did it, but, as a rule, his
-pirate is a conceivable good-for-nothing rather cowardly
-blackguard, such as came in the natural course of things
-to swing at Kingston or at Execution Dock. Even Cain
-himself, “The Pirate,” is within the bounds of probability
-as compared with the wondrous Spanish Americans, or
-astounding Scotch gentlemen of superhuman wickedness,
-who flourish in “Tom Cringle’s Log,” and the “Cruise
-of the <i>Midge</i>.” Neither do incidents of the wilder and
-more horrific kind appear in Marryat’s books. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-is nothing in him, for instance, like that scene of the
-“<i>Midge</i> in the Hornets’ nest,” which may, by the way, be
-commended to the attention of critics who think that
-blood and horror have been recently imported into
-romance by a generation which is supposed to have been
-corrupted by the French taste of the decadence. The
-adventures of Marryat’s heroes might possibly and even
-probably have befallen an officer of his time.</p>
-
-<p>Of construction, except such as was imposed by an
-instinctive desire to make the incidents follow one
-another in some sort of natural sequence, there is little
-or no sign. When, as in “Peter Simple,” he tries to fit
-one on to his story, it is no addition to the merits of the
-book. Who cares a straw for Peter’s wicked uncle, for
-the changing of the children, or for the unravelling of
-the very transparent mystery? It is too obvious that
-Marryat took these things at random from the common
-fund of the Minerva Press. What he took from
-nobody was his fun.</p>
-
-<p>After all, it is this fun which is the living element in
-Marryat’s work. Wit, or humour of the highest class,
-he cannot be said to have possessed, though he was by
-no means destitute of the sympathy which is inseparable
-from all true humour. The sketch of the mate,
-Martin, in “Midshipman Easy,” is a sufficient defence
-against the charge of want of feeling, if, indeed, it had
-ever been made. Many who have had a more visible
-anxiety to be pathetic than Marryat have failed to draw
-so touching a figure as this slight outline of the melancholy
-officer, in whom the disappointments of years have
-crushed all hope, without hardening or souring him.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-“No, no,” said the mate, when his acting order as
-lieutenant was brought him as he lay wounded in his
-hammock, “I knew very well that I never should be
-made. If it is not confirmed, I may live; but if it is,
-I am sure to die.” And die he does, because hope
-deferred has dried up the spring of life within him.
-In the character of Mr. Chucks kindness and fun are
-mingled. He is respectable in spite of his absurdities, and
-lovable because of them. In the Dominie in “Jacob
-Faithful” there is an effort to produce a second Mr.
-Chucks, but it is not successful. He is too plainly a
-reminiscence of another Dominie&mdash;a fairly well-done
-copy, but only a copy. For the most part the fun of
-Marryat belongs to the grotesque order. This, unquestionably,
-is not the highest. But what is not the highest
-may yet be genuine, and <em>that</em> Marryat’s fun, as the
-world has now recognized for half a century, undoubtedly
-is. His gallery of “figures of fun” is a long one.
-Peter Simple in the days before Terence O’Brien made
-a man of him; Jack Easy before he had been converted
-from a belief in the equality of all men; in a rougher
-way his father; Mr. Muddle; and, above all, Mr. Chucks,
-have an intrinsic comic <i lang="fr">vis</i>. The fun which they make,
-or which goes on about them, is never mere horse-play.
-They are not mannikins of the stamp of Smollett’s
-Pallet, created only to be knocked about, and to make
-grimaces, but possible, and even probable, human beings&mdash;a
-little distorted, a little exaggerated, put frequently into
-such positions as are more fit for farce than comedy, but
-not on that account ceasing to be real.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Mr. Smallsole’s violence made Mr. Biggs violent,
-which made the boatswain’s mate violent&mdash;and the
-captain of the forecastle violent also; all which is practically
-exemplified by philosophy in the laws of motion,
-communicated from one body to another; and as Mr.
-Smallsole swore, so did the boatswain swear. Also the
-boatswain’s mate, the captain of the forecastle, and all
-the men&mdash;showing the force of example.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Smallsole came forward.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Damnation, Mr. Biggs, what the devil are you
-about? Can’t you move here?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘As much as we can, sir,’ replied the boatswain,
-‘lumbered as the forecastle is with idlers.’ And here
-Mr. Biggs looked at our hero and Mesty, who were
-standing against the bulwark.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What are you doing here, sir?’ cried Mr. Smallsole
-to our hero.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Nothing at all, sir,’ replied Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then I’ll give you something to do, sir. Go up
-to the mast-head, and wait there till I call you down.
-Come, sir, I’ll show you the way,’ continued the master,
-walking aft. Jack followed till they were on the quarter-deck.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Now, sir, up to the maintop gallant mast-head;
-perch yourself upon the cross-trees&mdash;up with you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘What am I to go up there for, sir?’ inquired Jack.</p>
-
-<p>“‘For punishment, sir,’ replied the master.</p>
-
-<p>“‘What have I done, sir?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No reply, sir&mdash;up with you.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘If you please, sir,’ replied Jack, ‘I should wish to
-argue this point a little.’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘Argue the point!’ roared Mr. Smallsole&mdash;‘by Jove,
-I’ll teach you to argue the point&mdash;away with you, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘If you please, sir,’ continued Jack, ‘the captain
-told me that the articles of war were the rules and
-regulations by which every one in the service was to be
-guided. Now, sir,’ said Jack, ‘I have read them over
-till I know them by heart, and there is not one word of
-mast-heading in the whole of them.’ Here Jack took
-the articles out of his pocket and unfolded them.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Will you go to the mast-head, sir, or will you not?’
-said Mr. Smallsole.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Will you show me the mast-head in the articles of
-war, sir?’ replied Jack; ‘here they are.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘I tell you, sir, to go to the mast-head: if not, I’ll
-be d&mdash;&mdash;d if I don’t hoist you up in a bread-bag.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘There’s nothing about bread-bags in the articles of
-war, sir,’ replied Jack; ‘but I’ll tell you what there is,
-sir;’ and Jack commenced reading,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“‘All flag-officers, and all persons in or belonging to
-his majesty’s ships or vessels of war, being guilty of profane
-oaths, execrations, drunkenness, uncleanness, or
-other scandalous actions, in derogation of God’s honour,
-and corruption of good manners, shall incur such punishment
-as&mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Damnation!’ cried the master, who was mad with
-rage, hearing that the whole ship’s company were
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, sir, not damnation,’ replied Jack; that’s when
-he’s tried above; but according to the nature and degree
-of the offence.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Will you go to the mast-head, sir, or will you not?’</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“‘If you please,’ replied Jack, ‘I’d rather not.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘Then, sir, consider yourself under an arrest. I’ll
-try you by a court-martial, by God. Go down below, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘With the greatest pleasure, sir,’ replied Jack;
-‘that’s all right and according to the articles of war,
-which are to guide us all.’ Jack folded up his articles of
-war, put them into his pocket, and went down into the
-berth.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Here is farce, but farce which almost borders on
-comedy. Given Jack Easy with his natural pluck and
-his absurd training, suddenly put into a man-of-war, and
-set to reconcile the practice of the service with the ideal
-picture of it presented by the articles of war, and this is
-precisely what might be expected to happen. The absurdity
-always arises from the clash of the characters;
-and though it be farce, it is farce of the highest order.
-Rarely does the grotesque lean to the horrible. The death
-of Mr. Vanslyperken is a case in which it does; but
-Marryat was, for the most part, content to amuse, and to
-amuse only.</p>
-
-<p>How well he succeeded we all know. Which of us has
-not laughed with him ever since we were boys? Mr.
-Chucks stands between Commodore Trunnion and Mr.
-Micawber. The scene I have quoted above, and a
-dozen others, live by the side of Pipe’s journey to the
-garrison with the nymph of the road. The adventures
-in battle and wreck are very good, but they are not the
-best. Romance of the brilliant order Marryat did not
-often try, and when he did, he was at best but moderately
-successful. He was more of the race of Defoe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-than of Dumas. But from Defoe, over whom no
-man ever laughed, he was divided by his love of
-laughter, and power of drawing it forth. His fun may
-be often mere animal spirits, but at least it was spontaneous,
-and was by natural instinct literary. He did
-not toil and labour to be funny. Even in his most hasty
-work he would hit off a scene with neat pen-strokes,
-marking just enough and no more. Take, for instance,
-the revenue officers in “The Three Cutters.” Lieutenant
-Appleboy and his companions are introduced simply
-because he had seen them, and as much for his own
-amusement as his readers. Marryat had seen the types
-when he was doing preventive work himself in the
-<i>Rosario</i>, and drew them out of his memory when he
-needed them. Some of his figures were doubtless portraits&mdash;all
-of them had possibly some touch of portraiture.
-But on his paper they have an interest altogether
-independent of their originals. There are, as
-Mr. Saintsbury, speaking of the personalities of Daudet,
-has said, two ways of drawing portraits in literature.
-The first is to adapt your sitter into somebody else whom
-we love for his own sake. The second is to give us an
-image for which we should care but little if it was not
-meant for A or B. Of these two methods Marryat took
-the first. If there was an original to Terence O’Brien
-we should like to have known him; but, whether or
-not, we like Terence for his own sake. Was there a
-boatswain in His Majesty’s Service who stood for Mr.
-Chucks? Possibly; but what then? In Marryat’s stories
-are types as well as individuals. They and their doings
-have an independent universal truth.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-
-<p>When Marryat was about to start for the United
-States he gave a reason of some gravity for his
-proposed trip. The last words of the “Diary on the Continent”
-propound a serious question: “Do the faults of
-this people (to wit, the Swiss) arise from the peculiarity
-of their constitutions, or from the nature of their government?
-To ascertain this, one must compare them with
-those who live under similar institutions. I must go to
-America&mdash;that’s decided.” A biographer of any virtue
-will desire to be inspired with the Boswellian spirit&mdash;to
-write as loyally as Macaulay did of Addison&mdash;but I cannot
-quite believe that Marryat’s visit to America was
-caused by a sudden passion for the study of comparative
-politics, and the influence of institutions on national
-character. A more plausible explanation could be
-found. It was excellently given by the elder Mr. Weller
-in the course of some remarks made for the benefit of
-Mr. Pickwick. To write a book about America was a
-favourite enterprise with literary persons in those years.
-Miss Martineau and Mrs. Trollope had just done it, and
-there was no reason why Marryat should not do it also.
-A taste for seeing the world may have helped to turn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-his activity in that direction, and, besides he was, as will
-be seen, on the lookout for promising speculations, and
-may have had some thoughts on copyright. Possibly
-none of these motives were very clear to himself, and
-he may really have thought he was going to study
-American institutions.</p>
-
-<p>Moved by sufficient motives, whether the alleged or
-the unconsciously felt, he did go to America by the
-packet <i>Quebec</i> in 1837, did stay there for two years, and
-write a book about the States in six volumes, and two
-series. Of this book it may be said, in a favourite
-phrase of the writer whom Marryat described as “Mr.
-Carlisle, the author of ‘Sartor Resartus’” (a slip which was
-dreadfully avenged), that “it is forgetable.” Marryat’s diary
-and remarks show that he would have made an excellent
-newspaper correspondent. He had a faculty for getting
-up information, a quick eye, and a ready pen. With
-these qualities a man can easily make “copy” out of a visit
-to a new country. Indeed, Marryat was no novice at the
-work, for which his “Diary on the Continent” had prepared
-him. When his six volumes on America are
-judged as what they were, they are on the whole creditable.
-He made the Americans very angry, but that it
-was never difficult to do. He had provocation to write
-more bitterly than he did. But whatever may be the
-merits of, or the excuses for, the thing, it is hardly worth
-while to return to “newspaper correspondence” at the end
-of half a century. Unless the correspondent has seen
-history in the making, and has noted it well so as to
-become an original authority, he can hardly hope to be
-read two generations or so later on. The worst of it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-too, is that Marryat saw something which was well worth
-recording, and did not record it properly. A large part of
-his book is taken up with contradicting Miss Martineau;
-and who can rejoice in the refutation of an almost forgotten
-book by a still more forgotten book?</p>
-
-<p>The incidents of the visit form an interesting passage
-in Marryat’s life. He reached New York in the midst of
-the great financial smash of 1837, and saw the “Empire
-City” in all the excitement of panic. He stayed in
-America till after the suppression of the Canadian rising,
-and himself took part in the fighting. Of course he had
-a newspaper controversy&mdash;and it was of a kind sufficiently
-honourable to himself. When he first landed
-Marryat seems to have been well received, though with a
-certain reserve. By reserve is not to be understood anything
-so absurd as that he was left alone. On the contrary,
-he was abundantly overwhelmed with inquiry and
-comment. But the Americans were then in the midst of
-one of the sorest of their sore fits with foreign comment,
-and were (not quite unjustifiably) on their guard against
-travellers who came to spy out the land, and make a book
-about it. They were not averse to comment, but they
-were anxious that it should not only be favourable, but
-of exactly that kind of favourableness of which they
-approved. Therefore they were intent to know whether
-Marryat meant to write about them, and, if so, what he
-meant to say. He extricated himself from the difficulty
-dexterously enough, and, on the whole, succeeded in keeping
-on friendly terms with his hosts. As a matter of
-course, American copyright institutions, and their effect on
-the national character of the publisher, had their share<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>
-of his attentions. In this respect, also, his experiences
-were pleasing enough in America. He was working in
-the intervals of observation. For American consumption
-he wrote a play, “The Ocean Waif; or, The Channel
-Outlaw,” which appeared at a New York theatre; and
-he was moreover engaged on “The Phantom Ship.” In
-1838 he made an arrangement with Messrs. Carey and
-Hart to sell them “proof sheets of his ‘Diary in
-America’ and ‘Phantom Ship,’ a month prior to their
-publication in London, for the sum of two thousand two
-hundred and fifty dollars; and provided no one else
-published the works in America within thirty days from
-the date they issued from their press, a further sum of
-two hundred and fifty dollars.” Whether pirate enterprise
-deprived him of the extra sum needed to make up
-the round two thousand five hundred, does not appear,
-but at least Marryat, with his usual turn for business,
-contrived to get something out of America for the
-amusement he had given it.</p>
-
-<p>A letter to his mother, pleasant and manly as all his
-letters to her were, gives a sufficient picture of the first
-part of his stay in America.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“<i>October, 1837.</i></p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My dearest Mother</span>,&mdash;I have been so occupied
-and I have been moving about so fast that I really have
-had time to write to hardly anybody, and I put off a
-letter to you till I had a more quiet moment; but as it
-appears that moment was never to come, I now write to
-you on board of a steamer on Lake Erie. You have,
-of course, heard from the Tuckers [these were his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-cousins on his mother’s side] that I went up to Boston
-for a few days to see some of them; indeed all except
-Mrs. C&mdash;&mdash; and Mr. Tucker himself, who was mending
-his bridge, and could not leave his work; they were all
-very kind, but I like poor Mrs. G&mdash;&mdash; better than any
-of them.</p>
-
-<p>“I have since been a tour of the lakes, and have
-travelled some thousand miles. I went up the Hudson,
-crossed to Saratoga, Trenton Falls, Falls of the Mohawk,
-Oswego River to Lake Ontario; then to Niagara, Buffalo,
-and to Lake Erie&mdash;to Detroit; from Detroit to Lake St.
-Clair, and Lake Huron to Mackinan, from Mackinan took
-a bark canoe, and crossed the Huron, went up the River
-St. Clair to the Sault Sᵗᵉ Marie, and from thence to
-Lake Superior. The latter part of the journey, five days
-in a bark canoe, was very fatiguing, and I was devoured
-by the mosquitoes; but it has been very interesting, and
-I have been much gratified. I am now on my return
-and am bound for Canada, passing by Buffalo and
-Niagara to Toronto. Since I have been here I have
-been looking out for a good piece of land, for it more
-than doubles its value in five or six years, and I have
-been fortunate in purchasing some very fine land from
-the Government opposite to Detroit on the Canada side&mdash;about
-600 acres. I have written to B&mdash;&mdash; B&mdash;&mdash;,
-offering to settle him on it, as it is not out of the world,
-but in very good society. I think it will be worth his
-while, as in a few years he will be independent. He
-will however require £300 or so to fit himself out, but
-that he only need borrow as he will soon be able to
-pay off. I trust that if he accepts my offer his brother
-will assist him, and if so, he will do well.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I am going to Toronto to pay the first instalment,
-and from there to Montreal, and then I return by Lake
-Champlain so as to call upon Mrs. C&mdash;&mdash; at Burlington;
-and from thence proceed to Bellows Falls to see my
-Uncle Tucker, who is rather angry with me for not going
-there before, which I could not. From Bellows Falls I
-shall return to New York&mdash;I do not think by the way of
-Boston, for they want to give me a public dinner there,
-and I want to avoid it. At Philadelphia I must be in
-September for the same purpose, as I accepted the
-invitation; but I wish they had not paid me the
-compliment. From Philadelphia I go to Washington to
-canvass for the international copyright, and then I shall
-probably go south for the winter.</p>
-
-<p>“The more I see of America the more I feel the
-necessity of either saying nothing about it, or seeing
-the whole of it properly. Indeed I am in that situation
-that I cannot well do otherwise now. It is expected by
-the Americans, and will also be by the English; and if
-I do not, they will think I shrink from the task because
-it is too difficult, which it really is. All I have yet read
-about America, written by English travellers, is absurd,
-especially Miss M&mdash;&mdash;’s work: that old woman was
-blind as well as deaf. I only mean to publish in the
-form of a diary (but that is the best way); but I will
-not publish till I have seen all, and can be sure I have
-not been led into error like others. It is a wonderful
-country, and not understood by the English now, and
-only the major part of the Americans.(?) They are very
-much afraid of me here, although they are very civil;
-but I do not wonder at it&mdash;they have been treated with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-great ingratitude. I at least shall do them justice,
-without praising them more than they deserve. No
-traveller has yet examined them with the eye of a
-philosopher, but with all the prejudices of little minds.</p>
-
-<p>“Except a letter from you, I have not received a line
-from England, which is rather strange. From Kate I
-have had many letters. I have so many correspondents
-now&mdash;not only at home, but I have a large American
-correspondence which is too valuable to break off&mdash;that
-I really find I cannot write letter for letter. I have so
-much to read, so much to write, and so much to think
-about, that I must be excused. My time is not idly
-employed, I assure you, although I do not grow thin
-upon it; but, on the contrary, I think I am fuller than
-when I left England. I have been so far away these last
-six weeks that I have heard little English news, except
-the death of the King and the accession of Princess
-Victoria. I met Captain V&mdash;&mdash;’s brother the other day
-who told me that the <i>Etna</i> was going home to England
-in consequence of Captain V&mdash;&mdash;’s health. If so, I
-may hear something about Frederick, which I have not
-for a long while. I hope my dear Ellen [a sister] is
-quite well and happy. My kindest love to her. I will
-write to her as soon as I can; but it appears to me that
-I have more to do every day, and I really shall be glad
-to arrive at Bellows Falls and stay there for a week, if it
-is only <em>to take breath</em>. My journal is already swelled out
-nearly a volume, and the notes I have taken to work up
-afterwards will almost double it, and yet I have seen but
-a small portion of the country. I have picked up two
-or three good specimens for Joe’s mineral collection on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-Lake Superior, and some day or another he may get hold
-of them. Write and tell me all the news. I have not
-had a line from Mr. Howard or anybody else, which is
-very strange. The steamboat jogs so that I can hardly
-write, and I suspect you will hardly be able to read; but
-if so, it will take you time to decipher, and therefore will
-last the longer.</p>
-
-<p>“God bless you, dear mother. A hundred kisses to
-Ellen, and kind regards to all who care for me.</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Yours ever truly and affectionately,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">F. Marryat</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>From this letter it may be gathered that in October,
-1837, Marryat was, in good humour with America, and
-was seriously thinking of a study of it which should be
-a possession for ever. America was, on the whole, well
-pleased with him. He had been civilly received, with a
-certain reserve as might have been expected, seeing that
-he was a writing man, who had come with the hardly
-disguised intention of writing, and after many who had
-written by no means acceptably; but still, in spite of this
-natural wariness, with kindness. He was a good talker
-and showed it. He had kinsmen in the States who
-helped him on. Altogether things had gone smoothly
-with him. The Americans had even been glad to
-acknowledge his connection with Boston, and some of
-them had given him a helping hand in that great copyright
-fight in which the sympathy of the more right-minded
-has never been denied to the English author,
-but has also never been of any effect Unfortunately this
-very trip to Canada led to a storm which put Marryat for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-a time into the position of best-abused man on the continent.</p>
-
-<p>At Toronto he was naturally asked to a public dinner,
-and also naturally requested to speak. In the course of
-his speech he, again very naturally, took occasion to
-mention, in a laudatory manner, the cutting out of the
-<i>Caroline</i>, by Lieutenant Drew. This feat had then made
-some noise in the world. Canada was in a disturbed
-condition, and the confusion had been fomented by
-filibustering from the United States territory. The
-<i>Caroline</i> had been fitted out to help the rebels, and had
-been “cut out” in gallant style from under the guns
-of Fort Schlosser on the American side of the river,
-after sharp fighting by a Lieutenant Drew and a body
-of Canadian volunteers. After capturing the vessel
-and removing her crew, the Canadians had sent her
-down over the falls of Niagara. The incident was one
-of which the loyalists were with good reason proud. As
-an Englishman, as a naval officer, and as a speaker
-at a public dinner, Marryat was triply justified in praising
-“Captain Drew (as he styled him), and his brave
-comrades who cut out the <i>Caroline</i>.” Nothing ought to
-have been a more complete matter of course than that he
-should propose their health. But Americans were then
-in a particularly thin-skinned state, even for them. They
-chose to be very angry with him for doing what any
-American officer would have done under similar circumstances,
-at least as loudly. What may be called the
-spirit of Hannibal Chollop awoke within them, and a
-chorus of denunciation was begun at once, in the most
-loud-mouthed and abusive style of American journalism.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-Paragraphs headed “More Insolence,” and so forth,
-appeared in abundance. Marryat’s books and his effigy
-were publicly burnt. When he returned from Canada
-to the States, deputations waited on him, much in the
-frame of mind of the enlightened citizens who were so
-indignant when Martin Chuzzlewit offended a free people
-by coming back from Eden. As a matter of course,
-any stick was good enough to serve the turn of American
-journalism. He was accused, among other things, of
-having “insulted and contradicted, and refused to drink
-wine” with Henry Clay. The story was, it is needless to
-say, only a piece of Yankee smartness, but Marryat
-drought it necessary to appeal to that distinguished politician
-for a certificate of character, and obtained from
-him an assurance that their meeting had afforded mutual
-satisfaction. In short, the whole business was one of
-those displays of noisy gregarious folly of which our
-American cousins are occasionally guilty. It was rather
-more absurd than a recent incident of the same sort, because
-Marryat was merely a traveller, and was speaking
-on British territory when he gave the toast which Yankee
-journalism chose to think offensive. But the old
-colonial hatred of England (not yet perhaps so entirely
-dead as after-dinner orators are accustomed to assert)
-was then full of vigorous life. Americans were wavering
-between reluctance to plunge into war, and desire to do
-the old country a damage by helping the rebellious
-French Canadians. In this divided state of mind they
-relieved their feelings by howling at Marryat, because he
-had not “cracked them up accordingly.”</p>
-
-<p>Marryat extricated himself from this pass with commendable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-nerve and dexterity. He faced and soft-sawdered
-the deputations. He took the burning of his
-books very coolly, went about as before, and finally had
-it out with his hosts at a dinner given him at Cincinnati.
-The speech, which is far too long to quote, is full of the
-manly good sense which the American, when not acting
-in the characters of raving journalist or anxious candidate,
-will commonly listen to. Marryat reminded his
-hearers that he had spoken in British territory to his
-countrymen, and that their own patriotic orators were
-not averse to waving the banner habitually, or restrained
-from doing so by the knowledge that an Englishman was
-present. His hosts being simply American gentlemen,
-sitting in their right senses, agreed with him. A somewhat
-dramatic finish was given to this stage of the incident
-by Captain J. Pierce, who had been captain of the
-American privateer <i>Ida</i> when she was taken by the
-<i>Newcastle</i>, of which Marryat was then second lieutenant.
-Captain Pierce got on his legs to thank Marryat for the
-courtesy and good nature he had shown to himself and
-other prisoners. “The Wizard of the Sea,” as the
-American newspapers loved to call him when they were
-not in a flaming rage, might consider that, as far as his
-hosts at Cincinnati could answer for it, he was cleared
-of the charge of insulting the great American people.
-Their opinion, like that of the “respectable American,”
-in so many other matters, did not avail to stop all
-annoyance. Marryat continued to be pestered by abuse,
-frequently conveyed in unpaid letters. At last, and
-somewhat weakly, in October of 1838, he published a
-general protest in the form of a letter to the editors of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-the <cite>Louisville Journal</cite>, wherein he denied with much
-detail that he intended to spy out the barrenness of the
-land. He was, of course, answered as offensively as
-might be.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat had perhaps begun by this time to discover
-that it was not so easy to write of America in a philosophic
-spirit as he had once thought. To be sure he
-had laid himself open to annoyance by going to the
-States at all, and still more by going there with the intention
-of writing a book.</p>
-
-<p>The Canadian troubles were destined to break into
-his tour again. In the autumn of 1838 the French
-population rose in open rebellion, and, as is commonly
-the fate of insurgents, gained some preliminary successes,
-which made their final punishment all the more severe.
-Marryat remembering that he was an English naval
-officer still on the active list, gave up philosophic inquiry,
-hurried back to Canada, and volunteered for service
-under Sir John Colborne. This officer, a veteran of the
-Great War, and one who had had a distinguished share
-in winning the battle of Waterloo, made short work of the
-rising. Marryat saw some fighting once more in his life,
-and described it briefly in another of his capital letters to
-his mother.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">Montreal</span>, <i>Dec. 18, 1838</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My Dearest Mother</span>,&mdash;Except one letter from
-B&mdash;&mdash; B&mdash;&mdash;, it is now nearly four months since I have
-heard either from England or the Continent; the latter I
-can in some way account for, at least in my own opinion&mdash;still
-I wish to hear how my little girls are.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I was going South when I heard of the defeat of St.
-Denis, and the dangerous position of the provinces of
-Upper and Lower Canada; and I considered it my
-duty as an officer to come up and offer my services as
-a volunteer. I have been with Sir John Colborne, the
-Commander-in-Chief, ever since, and have just now
-returned from an expedition of five days against St.
-Eustache and Grand Brulé, which has ended in the
-total discomfiture of the rebels, and, I may add, the
-putting down of the insurrection in both provinces. I
-little thought when I wrote last that I should have had
-the bullets whizzing about my ears again so soon. It
-has been a sad scene of sacrilege, murder, burning, and
-destroying. All the fights have been in the churches,
-and they are now burnt to the ground, and strewed with
-the wasted bodies of the insurgents. War is bad enough,
-but civil war is dreadful. Thank God, it is all over.</p>
-
-<p>“The winter has just set in; we have been fighting in
-the deep snow, and crossing rivers with ice thick enough
-to bear the artillery; we have been always in extremes&mdash;at
-one time our ears and noses frost-bitten by the extreme
-cold, at others roasting amidst the flames of hundreds of
-houses. I came out of Grand Brulé after it was all over.
-I had the greatest difficulty in getting through the fire.
-I had a sleigh with two grey horses driven <i lang="la">tandem</i> (as it
-was too cold to ride the horse the general had offered
-me), and before I escaped, one side of each of the horses
-was burnt <em>brown</em> and <em>yellow</em> before we could force them
-through; however, the poor animals were more frightened
-than hurt.</p>
-
-<p>“As I can be of no further use now, I shall return to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-America in a few days. I really wish I could receive a
-letter from England. I feel very much about having no
-intelligence. It will be too late to go South now, and I
-think I shall winter quietly at New York, and proceed to
-Washington early in the year.</p>
-
-<p>“I really have nothing more to say. It is hard to fill
-a sheet when correspondence is all on one side. So
-give my love to Ellen, and God bless you both.</p>
-
-<p class="center">“Ever your affectionate son,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">F. Marryat</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>A postscript gives directions to B&mdash;&mdash; B&mdash;&mdash;, who
-appears to have decided to come out and settle on the
-desirable piece of land which Marryat had purchased in
-Canada.</p>
-
-<p>The American tour was near its end. Marryat never
-made that examination of the South which he had very
-justly thought necessary, if he was to obtain a thorough
-knowledge of the States. When he returned to New
-York in January, 1839, the country was in no condition
-to attract English travellers. The already existing
-hostility to England had been excited to a storm, and
-there was copious talk of the tallest kind about war going
-on from end to end of the Union. Everybody was waiting
-for the President’s message and professing to expect
-the outbreak of hostilities. Marryat waited to see what
-would come of it all. The prospect of serious war had
-for a moment swept all thought of books out of his mind.
-He waited for a summons to join Sir F. Head if his services
-were further needed in Canada; but while there was
-a prospect that he might again have “a man-of-war on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-the ocean,” he was in no hurry to run the risk of being
-shut up in Canada, where the best he could hope for
-would be a lake command. In a letter from New York
-to his mother he expresses very explicitly his wishes to
-serve again, and his hopes of further employment on blue
-water, and even ends up with one of those growls at the
-business of book-writing not uncommon among writing
-men when they happen to be languid, or to have heard
-bad news. “Mr. Howard” (his former sub-editor no doubt,
-and the author of “Rattlin the Reefer”) “writes me in very
-bad spirits. He says that I am injured by remaining
-away from England, and my popularity is on the wane.
-I laugh at that; it is very possible people will be ill-natured
-while I am not able to defend myself; but what
-I have done they cannot take from me, and if I wrote no
-more, I have written quite enough. If I were not rather
-in want of money I certainly would not write any more,
-for I am rather tired of it. I should like to disengage
-myself from the fraternity of authors, and be known in
-future only in my profession as a good officer and seaman.”</p>
-
-<p>There is about this a ring of manly good sense.
-Marryat could well afford to laugh at Mr. Howard’s
-croaking, knowing as he did, with his robust self-confidence,
-that his popularity was in no danger; that he had
-it in him to make another popularity if the old was
-indeed waning. It may well be that his wish to be back
-in active service was wise. His life might have been
-longer, and happier, if he had again walked his own quarter-deck.
-The wish was certainly no vague one, floating
-idly in his mind. He made plans in Canada, drew maps,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-and sent home information to the Admiralty in the manifest
-hope that his exertions would serve him at headquarters.
-If war had broken out with the United States
-it is certain that Marryat, recommended as he was not
-only by his past services, but by his knowledge of the
-American coast, would have stood well for employment.
-But the storm blew over; the British Empire settled
-down into peace again, and Marryat remained on
-shore, driving away with his pen under the pressure
-of that tyranny which he describes as the state of being
-“rather in want of money.” He left the States early in
-1839, and by June of that year was settled in quarters of
-his own in 8, Duke Street, St. James’s.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-
-<p>The state of being “rather in want of money” was
-to be chronic with Marryat, if we are to judge by
-the amount of writing he did during the remaining nine
-years of his life. Before very long, indeed, he began to
-have very serious reason indeed for complaining of
-straitened means. His father’s fortune, which must
-have been considerable, had been invested in the West
-Indies in those golden days at the end of the Great
-War, when the languor of Spain, and the ruin of San
-Domingo by the negro revolt, had given the English
-sugar islands a monopoly of the market for colonial produce.
-In the forties, however, these happy times had disappeared
-for ever. Competition and free trade brought
-down prices, the abolition of slavery stopped production,
-and the value of West Indian property went down with
-a run. The Marryat family suffered with the rest of
-the world. The novelist had resources which were wanting
-to his brothers; but then this advantage was compensated,
-as has been said before, by extravagant and
-speculative habits. In 1839 the pinch was not as yet
-felt so severely as it was later on. Marryat, immediately
-upon his return, went over to Paris for his family, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-had moved thither from Lausanne during his stay in
-the States; and, bringing them to England, settled at
-8, Duke Street, St. James’s. For some four years he led,
-as he had hitherto done, a somewhat wandering life.
-After a brief year in Duke Street, he moved to Wimbledon
-House; which had belonged to his father, and was
-still occupied by his mother. A short stay there was
-succeeded by a brief residence in chambers at 120,
-Piccadilly, and then by another year or so of occupation
-of a house in Spanish Place, Manchester Square. In
-1843 be broke away from London for good, and established
-himself at his own house at Langham, in Norfolk.</p>
-
-<p>All this restlessness speaks for itself. Men who
-possess the faculty of managing their affairs with judgment,
-or who wish to apply themselves to steady work,
-do not run in this way from pillar to post. Once again
-I have to remark that much in Marryat’s life is left to be
-guessed at. It is as well that it should be so. The
-indications we possess tell the world all that it is entitled
-to learn. There is&mdash;though the contrary proposition is
-frequently maintained in these days&mdash;no inherent right
-in the public to be made acquainted with the private
-affairs of a gentleman simply because he has done it
-the inestimable service of supplying it with readable
-books. That Marryat, who has just been found expressing
-a wish to retire from the “fraternity of authors,” was
-writing himself blind in these years, is a fact which tells
-its own tale. Add to this a few indications which Mrs.
-Ross Church has thought it right to supply&mdash;a brief reference
-to some family misfortune of which the details are
-not given; a complaint in one of Marryat’s letters that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-somebody, apparently a relation, had suspected him of a
-wish to borrow money; and an increasing tone of grief
-and trouble in all his letters&mdash;and we have enough to
-form a general estimate of his position with. More we
-probably could not learn, and would have no right to
-hunt up if we could. That Marryat had a difficulty in
-making both ends meet; that his expedients did not
-always succeed; that some of them were, too probably,
-undignified; that the need for them was, at least partly,
-due to his own mismanagement, are acknowledged facts.
-We may, and must, be satisfied with them.</p>
-
-<p>It is also easily to be believed that Marryat would
-enjoy the hard living, and even hard drinking&mdash;artistic,
-literary, and semi-literary&mdash;life of his time. Clarkson
-Stanfield was an intimate friend. Rogers, who was
-acquainted with everybody, was an acquaintance. With
-Dickens and Forster his friendship was of long standing,
-and seems to have remained unbroken. One of the
-few, and too generally insignificant, letters to her father
-printed by Mrs. Ross Church, is an invitation to dinner
-from Dickens, ending with a pleasing promise to give
-him some hock which would do him good. He was a
-guest at those merry children’s parties which Mr. Forster
-has described. In his quarters in his various London
-lodgings we are given to understand that there was much
-and gay hospitality. Friends were profusely entertained
-in rooms adorned with furs, trophies, Burmese idols, and
-weapons&mdash;all the miscellaneous curios collected by a
-sailor and traveller during many wandering hours. In
-Burmah, Marryat had even made a collection of jewels
-cut from out of the bodies of slain enemies. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-Burman who has a gem makes an incision in his leg and
-hides it there, as our sailors discovered more or less to
-their profit. Unfortunately the curios and the talk are
-all scattered and irrecoverable. “It has all vanished like
-‘air, thin air’”&mdash;as Marryat wrote himself of certain
-common reminiscences to “a lady for whom, to the time
-of his death, he retained the highest sentiments of friendship
-and esteem.” Marryat’s friendships were not all of
-this enduring kind. “Like most warm-hearted people,”
-as his daughter puts it, “he was quick to take offence,
-and no one could have decided, after an absence of six
-months, with whom he was friends and with whom he
-was not.” Eager restlessness is the quality which seems
-to have been most noticed in him by all his friends. It
-kept him on the move, not only from house to house, but
-on excursions to Langham or other parts of England.</p>
-
-<p>The toil which circumstances forced upon Marryat
-must have greatly aided his natural restlessness in wearing
-out his life. Steady work and hard work are not
-necessarily synonymous, and Marryat worked very hard
-by fits and starts. While in America, and amid all the
-racket of his tour, he had written “The Phantom Ship”
-which appeared in 1839. The six volumes of his “Diary
-in America” followed in the same year. That was not
-off his hands before he was at work on “Poor Jack,”
-“Masterman Ready,” “The Poacher,” and “Percival
-Keene,” followed before the end of 1842. Here was an
-amount of work (six books within five years) which
-might not be found excessive by the orderly business-like
-novelist of to-day, but which must have put a severe
-strain on a man who wrote at irregular times, but when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-actually at it, wrote furiously. It was a distinct aggravation
-of the burden that his handwriting was very minute.
-A man who, having to write a great deal, writes very
-small, must either be very sure of his eyesight and his
-nerves, or prepared through ignorance or recklessness to
-ruin them both. It is, therefore, not to be wondered at
-that Marryat’s letters between 1839 and 1840 contain
-references to the state of his health of a constantly more
-melancholy nature. “I shall,” he wrote to the same
-lady friend in the first of these years, “be at leisure, I
-really believe, about the first week in December; but the
-second portion of ‘America’ has been a very tough job.
-I am now correcting press (<i>sic</i>) of the third volume, and
-half of it is done. I hope to be quite finished by the end
-of the month, and also to have the other work ready for
-publication on the 1st of January; but what with printers,
-engravers, stationers, and publishers, I have been much
-overworked. I have written and read till my eyes have
-been no bigger than a mole’s, and my sight about as perfect.
-I have remained sedentary till I have had <i lang="fr">un accés
-de bile</i>, and have been under the hands of the doctor, and
-for some days obliged to keep my bed; all owing to want
-of air and exercise. Now I am quite well again.” Some
-two years later the news is much worse, and there is no
-mention of complete recovery. “That you may not think
-me unkind,” he writes again to the same correspondent,
-“in refusing your invitation, I must tell you that I am
-much worse than I have made myself out in my former
-letters. I fell down as if I had been shot a few days ago,
-and have been ever since obliged to be very quiet, and am
-not permitted to drink anything but water, or undergo the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-least excitement, and you would offer me every description
-in the shape of beauty, mirth, revelry, and feasting, putting
-yourself out of the question! No; for my sins&mdash;sins
-in the shape of three volumes chiefly&mdash;and heavy
-sins, too, I must now submit to mortification and penance.
-I am positively forbidden to write a line, but you
-may tell William and Dunny that the little book is
-finished, and will be out at Easter, when they will be
-able to read it.” Obviously work, and forms of relaxation
-as wearing as any work, had begun already to ruin a
-constitution not really robust. Marryat’s tendency to
-break blood vessels had already crippled him when a
-lieutenant in the navy, and should have warned him that
-though he might be muscularly powerful, he had no great
-reserve of constitutional strength to draw on.</p>
-
-<p>The visit to America makes a break in the character
-as well as in the continuity of Marryat’s work. He had
-said all he had to say about the sea life of his own time,
-and had to turn elsewhere. The “Diary in America” is
-perhaps a sign that he thought for a moment of rivalling
-Captain Basil Hall. If he was indeed tempted to do so,
-the temptation ceased to be difficult to resist after his
-return to Europe. The toil of travel, and then of
-writing out his impressions of travel, had been greater
-than he had expected, and had produced no equivalent
-result&mdash;either in money or reputation. Mrs. Ross
-Church states that he received for the “Diary,” “on first
-publishing the manuscript,” £1,600. But, according to
-the same authority, he had received nearly as much for
-several of his other books in a lump sum, and they continued
-to bring him in a yearly harvest, whereas the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-“Diary” sank at once into the position of a mere book
-about America. In truth, this kind of writing had been
-overdone. There was no longer a market for books of
-the Trollope or even the Martineau order. Everything
-had been said about the United States which the public
-wanted to hear for the time. The publishers of the
-“Diary” must have discovered that, in taking the
-“Diary,” they had made the mistake not uncommonly
-committed by the trade, and by theatrical managers,
-the mistake of overestimating the length of time during
-which the public will continue to care for the same thing.
-They, doubtless, told Marryat that the taste for stories
-was more enduring than the liking for descriptions,
-abusive, laudatory, or philosophical, of our American
-cousins. With or without advice of this kind, he
-returned to stories, and remained steadily faithful to
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“The Phantom Ship,” written during the American
-tour, differs materially from all the tales which had preceded
-it, except “Snarley Yow.” It is a romance with a
-strong element of <i lang="fr">diablerie</i>. Possibly because it was not
-written in a hurry for the press, it shows more signs of
-care in construction than most of the earlier books.
-Also, it is an historical romance, and proves that Marryat
-had worked at the history of the sea-life&mdash;not, doubtless,
-very hard, but still to some purpose. The result makes
-one regret that he did not find, or seek for, the leisure
-to dig further, and to avail himself of his discoveries.
-No great amount of research can have been required to
-collect the materials for “The Phantom Ship.” Admiral
-Burney’s “Discoveries in the South Seas” would alone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-have given Marryat all he wanted for this picture of the
-old Dutch seamanship. Still he brought with him so
-much knowledge acquired by actual experience that a
-little was enough. Had he so pleased he might, with
-the help of Hakluyt, of Monson, and of Sir Richard
-Hawkins’ “Voyage,” have given us a picture of
-the Elizabethan seamen. He might have drawn the
-“chivalry of the sea,” as Washington Irving asked him
-to do. A “Westward Ho” he would not have written.
-We should not have had from him (nor have expected)
-anything equivalent to the dream of Amyas Leigh, or
-the exquisite speech at the grave of Salvation Yeo. But
-what he could have done was what Kingsley could not do,
-and, with the tact of an artist, did not try to do too much.
-He might have realized the actual sea life of the time&mdash;the
-ships, the seamen, and the seamanship of the past.
-It was a work in which only a sailor could have succeeded.
-The pictorial imagination of Kingsley and the
-conscientious workmanship of Charles Reade alike fail to
-give reality to their sea scenes. The first was a great
-artist, and the second an exceedingly clever man with
-no contemptible share of the imagination of the historian
-and biographer&mdash;the power of seeing the value of
-materials, of deducing from the report of a thing done
-the manner of the doing and the nature of the doer.
-They both worked hard to realize the sea, and yet, if we
-compare the cruises of the <i>Rose</i> and the <i>Vengeance</i>, or
-the fight with the pirates in “Hard Cash,” with the “club-hauling”
-of the <i>Diomede</i>, there is a perceptible difference.
-I am not unaware that one may be unconsciously influenced
-by the knowledge that Marryat was a seaman,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-to expect, and see more truth in his pictures than in
-theirs. Remembering that, however, I still think that his
-sea scenes differ from Kingsley’s, or Reade’s, as the thing
-seen differs from the thing “got up”&mdash;with imagination,
-with insight, with conscientious industry, no doubt,&mdash;but
-still “got up.”</p>
-
-<p>In this, and in other ways, Marryat did not do all he
-might have done. “The Phantom Ship,” with “Snarley
-Yow” which preceded, and the “Privateersman” which
-followed it, must be taken for what they are worth in
-place of the possible better. Even so, however, the
-value of the first of them is considerable. Marryat
-made a good use of what Leigh Hunt has somewhat
-hastily decided is the only sea legend. There is no great
-originality in the incidents. Vanderdecken was made
-to his hand, and he had German enough&mdash;or failing that
-had translations enough&mdash;to supply him with the <i lang="fr">diablerie</i>.
-But the materials are well used. The story swings along.
-Philip Vanderdecken, the Pilot Schriften, the greedy
-Portuguese governor, and the priests have a distinct
-vitality. Amine is by far his nearest approach to an
-acceptable heroine; for indeed it must be confessed that
-this sailor had an altogether maritime ignorance of
-women, except bumboat women and the ladies of the
-Hard. The scenes in which his heroines are on the stage
-are skip. Amine’s appearances, however, are not skip.
-She is a very acceptable heroine of melodrama, good of
-her kind, with a decided character of her own. The
-Inquisition scenes in which she is the central figure are
-the highest point Marryat reached in romance. Very
-good too are the successive appearances of the Phantom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-Ship, done as was commonly the case with Marryat,
-simply, without straining, without obvious desire to make
-you shiver. If the last scene of all trenches on the
-namby pamby, as I am afraid it does, it is preceded by a
-very good one indeed. Marryat has indicated the loneliness,
-the weary waiting, the heart-broken striving of
-Vanderdecken’s doomed crew, very sufficiently by the
-futile effort of the poor mate, who would fain persuade
-the Portuguese to carry the <i>Flying Dutchman’s</i> fatal letters
-home. That Marryat was content to indicate is not the
-least of his claims to be considered an artist. He knew
-by instinct, or deduction, the advantage of coming suddenly
-on his reader. Too many other story-tellers
-prepare, and accumulate, and pour forth, the materials of
-the shower (too commonly of adjectives) which is to
-cause us the <i lang="fr">frisson</i>. We see them doing it, and know
-what is meant, and, human nature being perverse, hold
-ourselves steady and refuse to shiver. The princess
-whose husband could not shiver gave him the emotion
-by turning the cold water and tittlebats down his back
-when he was expecting no such shock. If he had seen
-her filling the tub, putting in the little fishes, and coming
-to tilt it all over him, there would have been no surprise,
-and, too probably, he would never have known that
-delightful sensation.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor Jack,” the immediate successor of “The Phantom
-Ship,” is somewhat closer to “Mr. Midshipman
-Easy,” but it, too, is something of an historical study,
-whether it was deliberately designed to be so or not.
-Greenwich Hospital has become something very different
-from the retreat for wounded seamen which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-Marryat knew, and his picture of it, somewhat sketchy as
-it is, will always have the value of a document. The
-story one need not stop to analyse at any length. Incidents
-and characters are of the kind familiar with
-Marryat&mdash;not inferior to the average of the others, but
-not distinguished from them by any very marked characteristics.
-One piece of fun it does contain not inferior
-to his best, the immortal apology of the midshipman who
-had told the master that he was not fit to carry guts to a
-bear. The palpable absurdity of the incident is on a
-par with Mr. Easy’s amazing use of the Articles of War.
-“The Poacher” and “Percival Keene,” which also
-belong to these years, both have a flavour of work done
-only because the author was “rather in want of money.”
-The first is another venture in the same line as “Japhet.”
-The second is the least pleasant, take it for all in all, of
-the books which bear Marryat’s name. It is the only
-one which had better not be re-read in maturer years
-by him who has read it as a boy. The fun is forced&mdash;of
-the horse-play practical joking kind&mdash;and the serious
-parts are somewhat spoilt by fustian. The negro pirate
-captain and his crew are good enough for boyish tragedy,
-but that is not what we expect from Marryat. Finally,
-too, there is a disagreeable flavour in the book. The
-hero is a low fellow&mdash;not in a healthy human way even,
-but in a very mean intriguing fashion, and he plays his
-part in the meanest possible manner.</p>
-
-<p>The one story of these days which could least be
-spared from Marryat’s work is “Masterman Ready.”
-This, the first of his children’s books, is also one of the
-best, perhaps the very best, thing of its kind in English.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-It is a child’s story in which there is not one word above
-the intelligence of the readers it was designed for, one
-situation or one character they could not grasp, and yet
-it is distinctly literature. It is didactic, and yet there is
-no preachment. It is pathetic, and yet it is not mawkish.
-It ends with a death bed scene which is not an offence.
-In point of mere cleverness of workmanship it ranks, in
-my opinion, first among Marryat’s works, and yet it is perfectly
-simple and unstrained. Marryat was indeed well
-qualified to write for children. He had loved their company
-at all times, and had served a long apprenticeship
-in telling stories to his own. The practice had taught
-him to avoid the fatal mistake of condescension. An
-intelligent child, as even so weighty a writer as Guizot
-has remarked, can understand a great deal more than
-the duller kind of adult is disposed to allow. It does not
-like to be effusively addressed as “my little friend,” and
-made to see that the kind gentleman or lady who speaks
-is intent on improving its mind. “I can’t be always
-good,” said Tommy; “I’m very hungry; I want my
-dinner.” The unsophisticated youthful mind is apt to be
-equally direct about its literature. It can’t be always
-imbibing preachment; it becomes languid, and wants to
-be amused: but it also likes precision of detail, and is
-eager to learn the why and how of everything. With
-these two rules to guide him&mdash;not to be too obtrusively
-instructive, and yet to explain every incident as it came,
-Marryat wrote a model child’s story. Forster was certainly
-in the right in declaring it to be the most read,
-and the most willingly re-read, of its class. For its mere
-cleverness the book can be enjoyed by the oldest of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-readers who is not too dreadfully in earnest. It was no
-small feat to have taken so well worn a situation as the
-shipwreck and the desert island, and to have made out of
-it a book which may stand next to Defoe’s. The desertion
-of the <i>Pacific</i> and her passengers by the crew, her wreck,
-the life on the island, the fight with the savages, and the
-rescue, are as probable, they follow one another as naturally,
-as the events in the life of Robinson Crusoe.
-Marryat had too much tact and knowledge to fall into
-the extravagances of the “Swiss Family Robinson.”
-The beasts and plants of the island are not an impossible
-collection of the flora and fauna of three continents.
-Then, too, the book contains two of Marryat’s very best
-characters. Masterman Ready is an ideal old sailor,
-brave, modest, kind, helpful, able to turn his hand to
-anything, and to do it well, yet, withal, no mere bundle
-of abstract virtues, but a most credible human being&mdash;such
-a man as might have been formed by such a life.
-Very different, but equally good, is Master Tommy
-Seagrave, the ideal of greedy, naughty boys. Tommy’s
-ever vigorous appetite and irrepressible passion for making
-a noise, for meddling with everything, for trying everything,
-for spoiling everything, are as perfect in their way
-as the meek heroism of Masterman Ready. At the end,
-the collision of the two produces very genuine tragedy.
-Master Tommy was just the boy who would have emptied
-the water-butt, under pretext of bringing water from the
-well, and would have accepted the very undeserved praise
-bestowed on his zeal without the faintest scruple. The
-consequences of his bad behaviour are absolutely natural
-and inevitable. That Masterman Ready should have met<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-his death through Master Tommy was an artistic stroke
-of the highest merit. And Marryat tells it all with a calm
-detachment which might reduce the average Russian
-novelist to despair. He is not wroth with Tommy. He
-accepts him as inevitable, and only describes him with a
-calm artistic precision, simply as the type of “The Boy.”
-Then, too, consider the final no-repentance and escape
-of Tommy. He howled for water and got it, and
-Masterman Ready died that he might have it. The
-little wretch never knew what mischief he had done.
-He sailed away to Sydney with an excellent appetite,
-and as long as he had enough to eat, and things to break,
-was no doubt perfectly happy. There is a something
-colossal in the truth, and the artistic calmness of the
-whole story.</p>
-
-<p>While Marryat was at work on “The Poacher,” he
-had a slight literary skirmish&mdash;not unworthy of notice as
-a proof that certain things are unchanging in the literary
-world. The story appeared in <cite>The Era</cite> in weekly numbers.
-One of those remarkable persons, who, in every successive
-generation, find it necessary to make a protest in
-favour of the dignity of literature, and whose idea of
-dignity commonly is that literature can only be good
-when it appears in a certain way and at a certain price,
-fell foul of Marryat for choosing this low method of
-publication. This egregious person wrote in <cite>Fraser</cite>, and
-very gratuitously attacked Marryat, in the course of some
-remarks on Harrison Ainsworth, in the following “slashing”
-style: “If writing monthly fragments threatened to
-deteriorate Mr. Ainsworth’s productions, what must be
-the result of this <em>hebdomadal</em> habit? Captain Marryat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-we are sorry to see, has taken to the same line. Both
-these popular authors may rely on our warning, that they
-will live to see their laurels fade unless they more carefully
-cultivate a spirit of <em>self-respect</em>. That which was
-venial in a miserable starveling of Grub Street is <em>perfectly
-disgusting</em> in the extravagantly paid novelists of these
-days&mdash;the <em>caressed</em> of generous booksellers. Mr. Ainsworth
-and Captain Marryat ought to disdain such <em>pitiful
-peddling</em>. Let them eschew it without delay.”</p>
-
-<p>These were very bitter words, but the only influence
-they had on Marryat was to provoke him to show that he
-could do the single-stick style as well as the <cite>Fraser</cite> men
-themselves. With less wit, but more good humour
-than Thackeray, he, too, wrote his Essay on Thunder
-and Small Beer. He pointed out that there is no necessary
-connection between the manner of publication and
-the method of composition of a book, and even made
-quite respectable fun of <cite>Fraser’s</cite> pedantry. “In the
-paragraph,” he says, “which I have quoted there is an implication
-on your part which I cannot pass over without
-comment. You appear to set up a standard of <em>precedency</em>
-and <em>rank</em> in literature, founded upon the rarity or frequency
-of an author’s appearing before the public, the scale descending
-from the ‘caressed of generous publishers’ to
-the ‘starveling of Grub Street’&mdash;the former, by your implication,
-constituting the <em>aristocracy</em> and the latter the
-<i lang="la">profanum vulgus</i> of the quill. Now although it is a fact
-that the larger and nobler animals of creation produce
-but slowly, while the lesser, such as rabbits, rats, and
-mice, are remarkable for their fecundity; I do not think
-that the comparison will hold good as to the breeding of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-brains; and to prove it, let us examine&mdash;if this argument
-by implication of yours is good&mdash;at what grades upon
-the scale it would place the writers of the present day.”
-By applying “this argument by implication” in a rigid
-fashion, Marryat has no difficulty in showing that “my
-Lady &mdash;&mdash; anybody,” who produces one novel a year, is
-necessarily twice as great a writer as Hook or James who
-produces two, and twelve times as great as the <cite>Fraser</cite> man
-himself, whose production is monthly. The reasoning is
-burlesquely fallacious, but it was meant to be so. Marryat
-spoke with more gravity, and more point too, when he
-urged that he was doing a good work by spreading his
-story “among the lower classes, who, until lately (and
-the chief credit of the alteration is due to Mr. Dickens),
-had hardly an idea of such recreation.”</p>
-
-<p>“In a moral point of view I hold that I am right.
-We are educating the lower classes; generations have
-sprung up who can read and write; and may I inquire
-what it is they have to read, in the way of amusement?&mdash;for
-I speak not of the Bible, which is for private examination.
-They have scarcely anything but the weekly
-newspapers, and as they cannot command amusement,
-they prefer those which create the most excitement; and
-this I believe to be the cause of the great circulation of
-<cite>The Weekly Despatch</cite>, which has but too well succeeded
-in demoralizing the public, in creating disaffection and
-ill-will towards the Government, and assisting the nefarious
-views of demagogues, and chartists. It is certain
-that men would rather laugh than cry&mdash;would rather be
-amused than rendered gloomy and discontented&mdash;would
-sooner dwell upon the joys and sorrows of others, in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-tale of fiction, than brood over their supposed wrongs.
-If I put good and wholesome food (and, as I trust, sound
-moral) before the lower classes, they will eventually
-eschew that which is coarse and disgusting, which is only
-resorted to because no better is supplied. Our weekly
-newspapers are at present little better than records of
-immorality and crime, and the effect which arises from
-having no other matter to read and comment on, is of
-serious injury to the morality of the country.… I
-consider, therefore, that in writing for the amusement
-and instruction of the poor man, I am doing that which
-has been but too much neglected&mdash;that I am serving my
-country, and you surely will agree with me that to do so
-is not <i lang="la">infra dig.</i> in the proudest Englishman: and, as a
-Conservative, you should commend, rather than stigmatise
-my endeavours in the manner which you have so
-hastily done.”</p>
-
-<p>The intention and the argument here are better than
-the style. Marryat was better at narrative than exposition,
-and could at times be as free with the relative
-pronouns as that distinguished officer, Captain Rawdon
-Crawley. The confidence Marryat, in common with
-most of his contemporaries, reposed in the influence of
-wholesome amusement was doubtless excessive. It has
-not been found that when the “poor man” [or other
-reader for that matter], has a choice of Hercules given
-him between good literature and bad, he will cleave to
-the first and reject the last. Also, there is a candid
-confession of the faith “that there is nothing like
-leather” in Marryat’s confidence that good weekly stories
-would soothe the discontent which was seething in England<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-before 1848. But in spite of slips of grammar,
-optimism, and over-confidence, Marryat’s answer to the
-priggery in <cite>Fraser</cite> is a creditable manifesto. To desire
-to kill the trash of <cite>The Weekly Despatch</cite> was at least a
-respectable ambition, and a man has a good right to
-believe in his causes, and his weapons.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-
-<p>Langham, to which Marryat betook himself for
-good in 1843, had been in his possession for
-some thirteen years. Its history, as far as he was concerned,
-may be taken to have been characteristic of the
-man. He acquired it, according to Mrs. Ross Church,
-by exchange&mdash;having “swapped” it, after dinner and
-copious champagne, against Sussex House, Hammersmith.
-From that period it had been an interesting but unprofitable
-possession to him. Before he left for America
-he had already had occasion to complain of the difficulty
-of getting rent. A tenant had been expelled, and replaced
-by another of the fairest character. But appearances
-had proved delusive. Langham had been all along more
-of a burden than a profit to its owner. In 1843 he
-seems to have decided to see what he could do with it
-himself. A passage in his fragmentary life of Lord
-Napier, quoted by his daughter, shows that he shared to
-the full the common delusion of men, and the especial
-delusion of sailors, that it is easy to manage a small
-property. In this pleasing but fatal belief he set out to
-see what he could do with the 700 acres of the estate
-himself. Again I have to acknowledge my inability to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-give any account of the motives for this sudden (for it
-appears to have been sudden) decision. Considerations
-of economy were doubtless of weight with him. The
-fall in the value of West Indian property had, as has
-been said, hit him hard. The demands on his purse
-were as heavy as ever&mdash;indeed, to judge from a somewhat
-plaintive reference in one of his letters&mdash;even heavier.
-He speaks in this place of actions brought by tradesmen
-to recover money for goods supplied to his sons Frederick
-and Frank&mdash;from which we may conclude that the young
-men had inherited their share of the paternal faculty for
-spending money. Their father was driven to express the
-wish that the value of this necessary was taught in schools.
-Neither at school nor at home do the young Marryats
-appear to have gained this knowledge, and in those years
-the navy, which they had both entered, was no school of
-thrift. Doubtless they were among the causes which first
-induced Captain Marryat to betake himself to the
-country, and then kept him hard at work when he was
-there.</p>
-
-<p>Langham is in the northern division of Norfolk, halfway
-between Wells-next-the-Sea and Holt. The Manor
-House, says Mrs. Ross Church, “without having any
-great architectural pretensions, had a certain unconventional
-prettiness of its own. It was a cottage in the
-Elizabethan style, built after the model of one at Virginia
-Water belonging to his late Majesty, George IV., with
-latticed windows opening on to flights of stone steps
-ornamented with vases of flowers, and leading down
-from the long narrow dining-room, where (surrounded
-by Clarkson Stanfield’s illustrations of ‘Poor Jack,’ with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-which the walls were clothed) Captain Marryat composed
-his later works, to the lawn behind. The house was
-thatched and gabled, and its pinkish white walls and
-round porch were covered with roses and ivy, which in
-some parts climbed as high as the roof itself.” When
-Marryat came down to examine his property with an
-intention of living on it, he found it suffering from all
-the evils which commonly fall upon the property of
-absentee landlords. The tenant of the larger of the two
-farms into which the estate was divided had not only
-mismanaged his land. Having the house itself at his
-mercy, he had turned the drawing-room into a common
-lodging-house, in which tramps and other necessitous
-persons could have a bed for the modest sum of twopence
-a night. The windows were smashed or unclosed,
-and the birds of the air had built their nests in the
-rooms. This state of neglect was soon changed for the
-better, and Langham Manor became habitable.</p>
-
-<p>In it Marryat sat down during the last five years of his
-life, to show in practice the soundness of his theory
-touching the fitness of sailors for the management of
-small properties. It will surprise few to learn that the
-result only proved once more that small properties are
-not so easily forced to yield a profit. Even before
-actually coming to live on the estate, Marryat had tried
-various speculations with his land. The results of his
-efforts, personal and vicarious, are illustrated in his
-daughter’s “Life” by the following extracts, taken at
-random from his farm accounts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<table summary="How Marryat did at property management">
- <tr>
- <th></th>
- <th></th>
- <th>£</th>
- <th>s.</th>
- <th>d.</th>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1842.</td>
- <td>Total receipts</td>
- <td class="tdr">154</td>
- <td class="tdr">2</td>
- <td class="tdr">9</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>Expenditure</td>
- <td class="tdr">1637</td>
- <td class="tdr">0</td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>1846.</td>
- <td>Total receipts</td>
- <td class="tdr">898</td>
- <td class="tdr">12</td>
- <td class="tdr">6</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td>Expenditure</td>
- <td class="tdr">2023</td>
- <td class="tdr">10</td>
- <td class="tdr">8</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>It will be seen that the balance was less heavily against
-Marryat in ’46 when he was present, than in ’42 when
-he could only look on from afar. Even in these cases
-the master’s eye is of value. It is better to lose on your
-own ventures than to be robbed all round, and in so far
-Marryat no doubt gained by living on his land. In 1845
-he even secured some compensation for the damage done
-to his house and property by the dishonest tenant&mdash;at
-least the courts decided that compensation should be
-paid him. After a lawsuit, an unsuccessful effort at
-compromise, and (Marryat declares) much hard swearing
-by his opponent, he was awarded £150. Whether he
-ever got it is a question, for the tenant seems to have
-been meditating bankruptcy immediately afterwards.
-The end of the business is wrapt up in mystery. On the
-whole, one can quite believe that the Captain’s “agricultural
-vagaries appeared almost like insanity to those
-steady plodding minds that could not understand that a
-man may have genius, and no common sense.” Quite
-credible, too, is it that Marryat was very particularly
-proud of his common sense, and “would have been very
-much hurt” if any man had doubted his claim to possess
-it in an eminent degree. If there is anything of which
-the more flighty kind of speculator is firmly persuaded,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-it is of his practical faculty and sober good sense. It is
-very characteristic that in all Marryat’s stories for
-children, and in touches scattered over his earlier works,
-there are proofs of a taste for thinking about matters of
-business, and for constructing plausible narratives of
-profitable investments of money and labour. It would
-seem that, among writing men (and not among them
-only) this taste is an infallible sign of a natural incapacity
-to acquire three pennyworth of anything for less than
-eighteen pence. Balzac had it, and he never could keep
-his fingers off a losing speculation. Marryat is so exact
-about sums of money, and has such a turn for showing
-how profits are to be made, that we are quite prepared
-to hear of him bursting into his brother’s room at 3
-o’clock a.m., with splendid schemes for draining the
-marshes of Clay-by-the-Sea, and thereby realizing wealth
-beyond the dreams of avarice. It follows as a matter of
-course that his only surviving son, Frank, found Langham
-a worthless inheritance.</p>
-
-<p>It is at this period of his life that we can obtain the
-best, and, indeed, almost the only personal view of
-Marryat. Of the last years of his life at Langham, Mrs.
-Ross Church speaks from memory, and her evidence has
-independent support. The picture we obtain is in the
-main pleasant, though it is sufficiently clear that Marryat
-was not exactly an angel. “Many people,” says his
-daughter, “have asked whether Captain Marryat, when
-at home, was not ‘very funny.’ No, decidedly not. In
-society, with new topics to discuss, and other wits about
-him on which to sharpen his own&mdash;or, like flint and steel,
-to emit sparks by friction&mdash;he was as gay and humorous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-as the best of them; but at home he was always a
-thoughtful, and, at times, a very grave man; for he was
-not exempt from those ills that all flesh is heir to, and
-had his sorrows and his difficulties and moments of
-depression like the rest of us. At such times it was
-dangerous to thwart or disturb him, for he was a man
-of strong passions and indomitable determination; but,
-whoever felt the effects of his moods of perplexity or
-disappointment, his children never did.” Mrs. Ross
-Church must forgive it if this description reminds me
-more than a little of a certificate to character I once
-heard given to a British skipper, a mahogany-faced man
-of immense strength and violence, in the office of one
-of Her Majesty’s consuls, in a Mediterranean port.
-This gallant seaman had been summoned by one of his
-men for assault and battery. He confessed the beating,
-but denied that it had been so aggravated as the plaintiff
-alleged. Moreover he pleaded provocation, and called
-up his boatswain as a witness to character. The boatswain,
-an honest-looking rather chuckle-headed fellow,
-was obviously torn by conflicting desires. He did not
-wish to displease his captain, and yet he did not wish to
-tell lies which would go against his comrade. Nothing
-definite could be got out of him while in the presence
-of the parties. When asked in confidence (and in an
-outer office) what the truth of the matter was, he
-answered, “Why, you see, sir, it’s just this&mdash;the captain
-he’s a very good sort of man as long as he has everything
-his own way&mdash;but when he’s crossed he clears the place.”</p>
-
-<p>It may be taken as proved, then, that Marryat had in
-abundance that kind of good nature which is displayed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-when the owner is pleased and happy&mdash;of which this
-may at least be said, that it is vastly superior to no good
-nature at all. Moreover, we have to consider what things
-it was that made him displeased and unhappy. Mrs.
-Ross Church’s qualification to the character just quoted
-shows that he did not entirely hang his fiddle up when
-he came home. To his children “he was a most indulgent
-father and friend, caring little what escapades
-they indulged in so long as they were not afraid to tell
-the truth. ‘Tell truth and shame the devil’ was a
-quotation constantly on his lips; and he always upheld
-falsehood and cowardice as the two worst vices of mankind.
-He never permitted anything to be locked or
-hidden away from his children, who were allowed to
-indulge their appetites at their own discretion; nor were
-they ever banished from the apartments which he occupied.
-Even whilst he was writing, they would pass freely
-in and out of the room, putting any questions to him
-that occurred to them, and the worst rebuke they ever
-encountered was the short determined order, ‘Cease
-your prattle, child, and leave the room,’ an order that
-was immediately obeyed. For with all his indulgence of
-them, Captain Marryat took care to impress one fact
-upon his children&mdash;that his word was law.”</p>
-
-<p>The children were aware that they were dealing with
-a parent not incapable of getting in a rage, and therefore
-stopped in time&mdash;which is one of the many advantages
-of not possessing a too equable temper. These collisions
-of theirs with the sovereign authority at Langham cannot,
-however, have been frequent, as this further quotation
-from Mrs. Ross Church will show: “The long-expected<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-governess [there were great negotiations over the engagement
-of this official], when eventually secured and
-transplanted to Langham, was not received by the
-children, who had been accustomed to have their own
-way in everything, with much enthusiasm; and their
-father was the friend to whom they invariably appealed
-for protection against her authority. Captain Marryat
-had rather an original plan with respect to punishment
-and reward. He kept a quantity of small articles for
-presents in his secretary, and at the termination of each
-week the children, and governess armed with a report of
-their general behaviour, were ushered with much solemnity
-into the library to render up an account. Those
-who had behaved well during the preceding seven days
-received a prize, because they had been so good; and
-those who had behaved ill also received one, in hopes
-that they would never be naughty again. The governess
-was also presented with a gift, that her criticism on the
-justice of the transaction might be disarmed. Thus all
-parties left the room perfectly satisfied; an end which,
-Captain Marryat used to observe, it required some diplomacy
-to attain. The governess was in the habit of
-restraining the children’s thoughtlessness by imposition
-of fines or lessons when they tore their clothes; but, as
-tearing their clothes was an event of daily occurrence,
-the punishment became rather heavy; and one of the
-younger ones, having made a large rent in a new frock,
-ran in dismay to her father in order to consult him how
-best to escape the impending doom. Captain Marryat,
-without any regard to the future of the garment in question,
-took hold of the rent and tore off the whole lower<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-part of the skirt. ‘Tell her <em>I</em> did it,’ he said in explanation
-as he walked away.” This story, which had previously
-made its appearance in an article in the <cite>Cornhill
-Magazine</cite>, is supported there by the general assertion
-that whenever any of the young Marryats required punishment
-they were doubly petted for the rest of the day.
-“It seemed as if no amount of indulgence was thought
-too much for compensation; like the jam to take the
-taste of the physic out of the mouth.”</p>
-
-<p>Persons who make a serious study of the art of training
-children may not all agree that a system which recommended
-courage by giving them nothing to fear, inculcated
-the love of truth by making it safe and pleasant to
-tell it, and developed the moral virtues by unlimited
-indulgence, was one to be held up as a model to fathers.
-No doubt, however, it was abundantly pleasant for the
-children, and it may readily be believed that Captain
-Marryat was loved by his own house. With his children
-he lived on terms of affectionate freedom, making them
-his companions, and even training them to play piquet,
-for which scientific game he had a great affection, in
-order that they might share with him in all things.</p>
-
-<p>For animals, too, he had a genuine but not a maudlin
-affection. His dogs and his pony Dumpling figure much
-in the accounts given of his last years. His favourite
-bull, Ben Brace, was kept tethered opposite the window
-of the room in which he wrote. It is a good sign
-of his genuine kindness for animals that he seems to
-have been made rather impatient by the gushing talk
-about them, and the wondrous tales of their intelligence,
-which are (in the opinion of some) nearly the most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-nauseous of all forms of twaddle. We have it on his
-own authority that he joined Theodore Hook in inventing
-outrageous stories about the intelligence of animals,
-and palming them off on the too credulous popular
-naturalist. To his men Marryat seems to have been a
-kind master. He at least gave them copious feasts on
-proper occasions. “All the men who were on the farm,”
-he tells his god-daughter, “were invited to a Christmas
-dinner in the kitchen, and they sat down two-and-twenty
-at the table in the servants’ hall, and were waited upon
-by our own servants. They had two large pieces of
-roast beef, and a boiled leg of pork; four dishes of
-Norfolk dumplings; two large meat pies; two geese,
-eight ducks, and eight widgeon; and after that they
-had four large plum puddings.” This, with “plenty of
-strong beer,” which was also duly supplied, made, as
-Marryat seems to have felt with pardonable satisfaction,
-a feed likely to be remembered by the two-and-twenty
-farm hands. He was not so original as he perhaps thought
-himself, or as some have supposed him to have been, in
-employing an ex-poacher, one Barnes, as gamekeeper.
-That particular kind of thief had often been set to catch
-the other thieves before Captain Marryat went to live at
-Langham. The poacher who is not merely the paid
-hand of a London poulterer is commonly enough not
-such a bad fellow, and when he is allowed to combine
-his sporting tastes with a regular salary, and a position
-of some authority, is capable of doing fairly well. In
-this case whatever risk Marryat ran was justified by the
-result. Barnes proved not only a good servant to him,
-but is said to have been a loyal follower to his son Frank
-when he emigrated to California.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Here, on his own land, surrounded by his family,
-Marryat spent what were, doubtless, not the least happy
-years of his life. An occasional friend from London
-found the ex-<i lang="fr">viveur</i> and dandy in velveteen shooting
-jacket and coloured trousers, turning out at five in the
-morning, trotting about his farm on Dumpling, attentive
-to scientific farming, and invincible in hope of profit
-from that deceptive venture. For company, he had his
-romps with his children, his game of piquet, and an
-occasional, or even frequent, visit from Lieutenant
-Thomas, of the coastguard station at Morston. The
-two old seamen met, and talked of the rapid progress of
-the service to the d&mdash;&mdash;, as old seamen have done from
-the beginning, and will do to the end of time. From
-the outer world came requests for work from editors,
-suggestions that he should take up this subject or the
-other, and at times invitations to come up and
-take part in farewell dinners to Macready or to
-Dickens. These last he steadily declined. Except
-during a few brief visits to London on matters of business,
-he remained fixed at Langham till the disease
-which proved fatal drove him up to town in search of
-better medical help than he could obtain in Norfolk.</p>
-
-<p>He has himself described the work of these last years
-in a letter to Forster, who had written in 1845 to Marryat,
-suggesting that he should give “a month or two to a short
-biography, of about a volume; something of the size and
-manner of Southey’s ‘Nelson,’ and the subject ‘Collingwood.’”
-Marryat thought it over, but declined, giving,
-among other reasons, this: “That I have lately taken to
-a different style of writing, that is, for young people.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-My former productions, like all novels, have had their
-day, and for the present, at least, will sell no more; but
-it is not so with the <em>juveniles</em>; they have an annual
-demand, and become <em>a little income</em> to me; which I
-infinitely prefer to receiving any sum in a mass, which
-very soon disappears somehow or other.” Marryat justified
-his unwillingness to write the life of Collingwood by
-other than business reasons. “I should like,” he told
-Forster, “to write about Collingwood, but if I were to
-write it in anything like a stipulated time I should not do
-it well. Biography is most difficult writing, and requires
-more time and thought than any original composition,
-and if I take it up I must be free as air.” In addition to
-this (justly high) estimate of the difficulty and dignity of
-biography, Marryat, with sound critical judgment, decided
-that Collingwood was not a proper subject. There is not
-enough known or to be known about him. So much of
-his work was done as a subordinate under St. Vincent or
-Nelson. With them he was always in the second place
-at best, and when he reached great independent command,
-the heroic days of the naval war were over, and
-there was little for him to do beyond duties of a mainly
-routine character, performed in the midst of chronic
-illness. It is a pity perhaps that Marryat did not devote
-some part of his work to naval biography, but he would
-hardly have made a real success with Collingwood. For
-Forster himself, Marryat wrote a series of letters to the
-<cite>Examiner</cite> on the “Condition of England Question,” or
-that part of England which he saw about him in Norfolk.
-“I have,” he wrote to Forster, “been amusing myself with
-putting together my thoughts and knowledge of the condition<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-of the agricultural class&mdash;I mean the common
-labourer principally&mdash;and I believe I know more of the
-subject than anything I have seen in print. What I can
-say is from personal knowledge. I was thinking of
-writing some letters to Peel as a Norfolk farmer, ‘The
-Poor Man <i lang="la">versus</i> Sir Robert Peel.’ It would not do to
-put my name to them as they would be anything but
-Conservative, but they would be the <em>truth</em>.” It was not
-Marryat’s destiny to be a politician, and his opinion of
-Sir Robert Peel is perhaps not very valuable. His own
-political activity was not particularly consistent, for he
-appears to have swayed from Reformer to Conservative,
-and back again, but it may be noted that he ended by
-sharing that dislike of the leader who always led his followers
-to surrender which was so widely felt in Peel’s
-last days.</p>
-
-<p>His main work was always his stories for children.
-Five of these belong to the Langham period&mdash;“The
-Narrative of the Travels and Adventures of Monsieur
-Violet,” “The Settlers in Canada,” “The Mission,”
-“The Children of the New Forest,” and “The Little
-Savage.” There may be some doubt whether the first
-ought to come under this heading. Marryat did not
-consider it a child’s story himself; but if it is not <em>that</em>
-one has some difficulty in deciding what it was. The
-materials were, Mrs. Ross Church says, supplied by a
-young Frenchman, named Lasalles, who turned up at
-Langham, and astonished the neighbourhood by lassoing
-cattle and doing other barbarous feats. The matter
-supplied by this amusing adventurer was “licked into
-shape” by Marryat. This account of the origin of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-book is certainly borne out by its contents. It is a
-somewhat rambling story of adventure among the Red
-Men, starting from an improbability, and ending somewhat
-abruptly. No small part of it consists of an account
-of the early Mormons, and has sadly the air of padding.
-On the whole, it has much more the look of a collection
-of notes for a tale of adventure than anything else, and
-has always been one of the least read, if not entirely the
-least read, of the books which bear Marryat’s name. Of
-“The Mission” its author gave an exact account in a
-letter to his friend Mrs. S&mdash;&mdash;: “It is composed of
-scenes and descriptions of Africa in a journey to the
-Northward from the Cape of Good Hope&mdash;full of lions,
-rhinoceroses, and all manner of adventures, interspersed
-with a little common sense here and there, and interwoven
-with the history of the settlement of the Cape up
-to 1828&mdash;written for young people of course, and, therefore
-trifling, but amusing.” “The Mission,” although
-this promising sketch of it is strictly correct, has not
-been much more popular than “Monsieur Violet,” and
-the reason is obvious enough. It is not so much
-a story as a series of unconnected, or very loosely
-connected, incidents; and moreover, it contains what
-any right-minded boy could only regard as a cruel
-“sell.” The hero starts forth to clear up the fate of
-a relative&mdash;a lady who has been wrecked on the Caffre
-coast many years before. It is not known for certain
-whether she was drowned or died on shore, and a fear has
-always existed that she survived as a prisoner among the
-natives, and had grown up to be the wife of some Caffre
-chief, and bear him young barbarians in his kraal&mdash;a fate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-which it is believed did actually befall the daughters of
-an English officer, who were wrecked on that coast on
-their way back from India. He goes on, hears of a
-renowned chief, whose mother was an Englishwoman,
-finds him, and then discovers that it was another shipwrecked
-lady, who had the happiness to produce a half-bred
-hero in that distant region. His own relative has
-certainly perished. Now this is cruel. It was not worth
-while to go so far to learn so little, and the feeling of disappointment
-caused is too acute. Marryat made a fatal
-mistake when he overlooked the possibilities of the situation.
-For the rest, it is a pity he did, because the
-background of the story is particularly good. Marryat
-seems to have obtained a very clear idea of the Cape,
-which he must have visited during his service in the
-South Atlantic. His hunting adventures, his Zulu warriors,
-his Dutch Boers, and Hottentot boys are distinctly
-good. There is even a touch of something grandiose in
-the references to the invaders from the North, who were
-then pressing down on Caffraria. They weigh in an imposing
-fashion on the fortunes of the adventurers in
-“The Mission.” It is somewhat unfair to look at it
-all now, when these materials have again been made
-popular. But good as it is of its kind, the book has a
-feeble, aimless look, simply from want of satisfactory
-ending.</p>
-
-<p>Of the three children’s stories which remain&mdash;“The
-Settlers,” “The Children of the New Forest,” and “The
-Little Savage”&mdash;the second is most likely to be interesting
-to children, and the last is, in part at least, the most
-original. There is something rather gruesome in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-picture of the child born on a desert island, and growing
-up by the side of a ruffian who bullies him. The
-natural savagery of the human animal is developed in
-him unchecked, and Marryat has shown some power
-in the scenes in which the boy discovers the helplessness
-of his companion, who has been blinded by a flash
-of lightning, and then turns on him with cool ferocity.
-But the promise of the beginning is not kept. “The
-Little Savage” becomes didactic&mdash;full of repetitions&mdash;and
-ends by being more than a little tiresome. On the
-whole, after all, “The Children” is better. Our old
-friends, the Cavaliers and Roundheads, are less new
-than “The Little Savage,” but they last out more briskly.
-It is a child’s story of merit&mdash;nothing more&mdash;and the
-historical erudition of it, if somewhat shallow, is on a
-level with that of more pretentious books. “The
-Privateersman” has a certain interest as being the last
-of Marryat’s sea stories, and as a picture, or at least a
-rough sketch, of the strange old privateer life of which
-“The Voyages and Cruises of Commodore Walker” is
-almost our only record from the inside. It is not a
-pleasant book, or a strong. Moreover, Marryat puts his
-hero in the very most ignoble position any hero was ever
-in. It may be safely laid down as a rule that under no
-conditions ought a gentleman to desert a woman in a
-forest full of Red American Indians. It is one of those
-things which a gentleman cannot do. Now the hero of
-“The Privateersman” does it&mdash;and the deduction is
-obvious. The story has touches which remind one of
-“Colonel Jack,” but it is too clearly a book written
-simply to fill space in a magazine. Marryat’s fun had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-gone when he wrote it for Harrison Ainsworth and <cite>The
-New Monthly Magazine</cite>. “Valerie,” a species of Japhet
-in petticoats, is not even all Marryat’s, and was, in any
-case, written when he was slowly dying.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-
-<p>The weakness which proved fatal to Marryat had
-shown itself while he was still a young lieutenant
-in the West Indies. He had then been invalided home
-for rupture of a blood vessel in the lungs, and a military
-doctor “also certified to his tendency to ‘hæmoptysis,’
-and prophesied that, without great care, ‘the most dangerous
-and perhaps fatal results’ would be the consequence”
-of rashness. The danger had passed at that
-time&mdash;had probably been avoided by the use of care&mdash;and
-for many years Marryat had to all appearance been
-a very robust man. He was of the best possible height
-and build for strength. He was some five feet ten inches
-high, with broad deep chest, and his muscular force was
-exceptionally great. His portrait, as far as it can be judged
-of from the engraving prefixed to “Frank Mildmay,”
-gives the impression of a man of boundless energy,
-open-faced, alert, and keen-eyed. He was black-haired
-with blue eyes, and his beard grew so thick and so fast
-that he was compelled to shave twice a day. When he
-came to Langham, in 1843, his strength was apparently
-still unbroken, and he might appear sure of long years of
-health and capacity for work. But it is clear that there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-was more appearance than reality in his strength. When
-a man has turned fifty he begins to suffer for the unwisdom
-of former years. Marryat, unfortunately, had never
-given himself any quarter. He had spared himself no
-burden a man can lay upon his strength. He had played
-and worked to excess, had lived in a whirl of nervous
-excitement, had spent beyond his means in constitution
-as well as in purse. If he had not spent his summer
-while it was May&mdash;at least he had run through it far too
-soon. Langham, which might have given him rest, was
-only the scene of more nervous excitement, more
-strenuous work. In 1847 the end began. In August of
-that year he speaks, in a letter to his sister, of having
-recently ruptured two blood vessels. The following
-letter shows that the accident occurred in London, but
-Marryat returned to Langham, and remained there till
-the want of medical advice likely to inspire more confidence
-than a country doctor’s drove him to London
-again. He remained at his mother’s house at Wimbledon
-for two months, and from it wrote to Lord Auckland,
-then at the Admiralty, on December 14th.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<span class="smcap">My Lord</span>,&mdash;When I had the honour of an audience
-with you, in July last, your lordship’s reception was so
-mortifying to me that, from excitement and annoyance,
-after I left you I ruptured a blood vessel, which has now
-for nearly five months laid me on a bed of sickness.</p>
-
-<p>“I will pass over much that irritated and vexed me,
-and refer to one point only. When I pointed out to
-your lordship the repeated marks of approbation
-awarded to Captain Chads&mdash;and the neglect with which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>
-my applications had been received by the Admiralty
-during so long a period of application&mdash;your reply was
-‘That you could not admit such parallels to be drawn,
-as Captain Chads was a highly distinguished officer,’
-thereby implying that my claims were not to be considered
-in the same light.</p>
-
-<p>“I trust to be able to prove to your lordship that I
-was justified in pointing out the difference in the treatment
-of Captain Chads and myself. The fact is that
-there are no two officers who have so completely run
-neck and neck in the service, if I may use the expression.
-If your lordship will be pleased to examine our
-respective services, previous to the Burmah War, I trust
-that you will admit that mine have been as creditable as
-those of that officer; and I may here take the liberty of
-pointing out to your lordship that Sir G. Cockburn
-thought proper to make a special mention relative to
-both our services, and of which your lordship may not
-be aware.</p>
-
-<p>“During the Burmah War Captain Chads and I both
-held the command of a very large force for several
-months&mdash;both were promoted on the same day, and both
-received the honour of the Order of the Bath&mdash;and, on
-the thanks of Government being voted in the House of
-Commons to the officers, and on Sir Joseph York, who
-was a great friend of Captain Chads, proposing that he
-should be particularly mentioned by name, Sir G. Cockburn
-rose and said that it would be the height of
-injustice to mention that officer without mentioning me.</p>
-
-<p>“I trust the above statement will satisfy your lordship
-that I was not so much to blame when I drew the comparison<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-between our respective treatment&mdash;Captain Chads
-having hoisted his commodore’s pennant in India, having
-been since appointed to the <i>Excellent</i>, and lately received
-the good service pension; while I have applied in vain
-for employment, and have met with a reception which I
-have not deserved.</p>
-
-<p>“And now, my lord, apologizing for the length of this
-letter, allow me to state the chief cause of my addressing
-you. It is not to renew my applications for employment&mdash;for
-which my present state of health has totally unfitted
-me&mdash;it is, that my recovery has been much retarded
-by a feeling that your lordship could not have departed
-from your usual courtesy in your reception of me as you
-did, if it was not that some misrepresentations of my
-character had been made to you. This has weighed
-heavily upon me; and I entreat your lordship will let me
-know if such has been the case, and that you will give me
-an opportunity of justifying myself&mdash;which I feel assured
-that I can do&mdash;as I never yet have departed from the
-conduct of an officer and a gentleman. I am the more
-anxious upon this point, as, since the total wreck of West
-India property, I shall have little to leave my children
-but a good name, which, on their account, becomes
-doubly precious. I have the honour, &amp;c.,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“<span class="smcap">F. Marryat</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>I have quoted this melancholy but not altogether
-unmanly letter at full for the light it throws on Marryat’s
-last years. It is clear that when the ruin of West Indian
-property had begun to embarrass him, he had striven to
-return to active service. The beginning of the letter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-proves that in the middle of 1847 his nerve was already
-gone. At last he was no longer able to bear the strain
-of that passion and determination of which his daughter
-speaks. When crossed by a First Lord of the Admiralty,
-with whom he could not give way to an explosion of rage,
-the effort required to control himself was too much for a
-man worn in health, and accustomed for many years past
-to give his feelings unchecked course. The letter may
-also stand as proof that Marryat’s reputation as a
-naval officer was dear to him. As to the merits of the
-dispute there is no evidence to form an opinion. Lord
-Auckland, in a temperate letter, replied that he had no
-recollection of what had passed at the time, but that he
-certainly could have had no intention of wounding so
-distinguished an officer as Captain Marryat. The letter
-ended with the agreeable information that a good service
-pension had been conferred on him. Heat and disappointment
-on the one side, and perhaps a little dry
-official formality on the other&mdash;a thing which those
-who deal with Government officials should learn to take
-for granted&mdash;will doubtless account for the trouble.</p>
-
-<p>From this time forward Marryat’s remnant of life was
-filled with flights in search of health, and with every
-sorrow. From Wimbledon he went to Hastings, in the
-vain hope that a milder climate would give him a chance
-of recovery. For a time he seemed to improve, but it
-was a mere flicker. Whatever chance of recovery he had
-was utterly destroyed by the terrible blow which fell on him
-at the end of the year. His son, Lieutenant Frederick
-Marryat, was lost in the wreck of the <i>Avenger</i> in the Mediterranean.
-The <i>Avenger</i>, one of the first steamers in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-navy, was steered on a reef between Galita and the mainland,
-during the night. She was under steam and sail at the
-time, and struck so heavily that in a very few minutes
-she was a complete wreck, with the sea breaking over her.
-Frederick Marryat was below when the vessel struck. In
-the confusion which followed, he was seen, by one of the
-few survivors, in the waist of the ship, endeavouring to
-keep the men steady, and clear away the boats. But the
-<i>Avenger</i> broke up fast; the funnel and main-mast fell on
-the group in which Marryat stood, crushing some and
-hurling others overboard, where they were swept away
-in the sea that was then running. By one death or the
-other he perished, and the tragedy broke his father’s
-heart. The young man had been wild and extravagant&mdash;a
-source of expense and anxiety to his father. He had
-been a midshipman of the wild type, and as a young
-lieutenant had been unsettled, eager to get on shore and
-find some work more agreeable and more lucrative than
-a naval officer’s. But if he had the faults&mdash;or rather let
-us say the weaknesses&mdash;of the seaman, he also had his
-finer qualities. He was a gallant and good-hearted
-young fellow. A letter of his father’s, written two years
-or so before the wreck, speaks of him as turning up from
-the China station full of life and spirit, lighting up the
-house at Langham. In his then state of weakness it
-must have been a killing blow to the father to hear of the
-son’s death, under circumstances of which no man was
-better able to appreciate the horror than himself.
-Marryat bore the blow stoutly, for he too had the “qualities
-of his defects,” and as he was passionate so was he
-courageous.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From Hastings, which he naturally felt had done him
-no good, he moved to Brighton for a month. It seemed
-for a moment as if the danger was past, and Dickens,
-among others, wrote to congratulate him on his recovery.
-But, in truth, the case was a hopeless one. From
-Brighton he returned to London for the last time to
-consult with the doctors. When he re-entered the outer
-room in which several of his family were waiting to hear
-the result, he had to tell them that he had been condemned.
-“They say,” he reported, “that in six months
-I shall be numbered with my forefathers.” He announced
-the decision, Mrs. Ross Church tells us, with
-an “undisturbed and half-smiling countenance,” and we
-can easily believe it, for, leaving his natural bravery out of
-the question, life can have had no temptation for him if
-it was to be lived under the constant threat of such a
-disease as menaced him.</p>
-
-<p>From London Marryat moved to Langham, and
-there waited for death all through the summer of 1848.
-It came at last through sheer weakness, and apparently
-with little or no pain. Ruptures of blood vessels could
-only be prevented by rigid abstinence from food. He
-speaks in the last letter he wrote&mdash;in at least the last that
-is printed&mdash;of living for days on lemonade till he “was
-reduced to a little above nothing.” The illness and the
-remedy were alike fatal, and between the two he was
-gradually reduced to extinction. During the summer
-days he lay in the drawing-room of the house at Langham,
-hearing his daughters read aloud to him, till his growing
-weakness brought on delirium. To the last he continued
-to dictate pages of incoherent talk, much as Sir Walter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-Scott had written mechanically long after his intellect was
-gone. He loved to have flowers brought him to the end.
-Finally, after he had long been unconscious between
-weakness and doses of morphia, he expired in perfect
-quiet just about dawn on August 9, 1848.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It ought to be unnecessary for me to add much on
-the character of Captain Marryat. Although our knowledge
-of him is fragmentary, it is my fault if enough has
-not been said in these pages to show what sort of man he
-must have been. It is tolerably clear that he was
-passionate, ready to think that he did well to be angry,
-and that anger was its own justification. Passionately
-eager to enjoy he must have been, and not wise in seeking
-enjoyment. It must be remembered, however, that
-he was trained in the navy in a wild time, when men
-repaid themselves for such hardships as the naval officer
-of to-day never undergoes, by excesses of which he
-would be incapable. Then Marryat fell into the literary
-and semi-literary life of London at a time when it was
-partly honestly, partly out of mere silly pose, dissipated
-and Bohemian. His wealth was the means of throwing
-him among a hard living set. Among them, his friends,
-doubtless, helped him to get rid of his money inherited
-and earned. He was the fast and hard living stamp of
-man whom the Bohemian literary gentlemen professed to
-admire, and he paid for his genuineness. In such a
-world the ardent natures wore themselves out, while the
-<i lang="fr">poseur</i> and the humbug escaped. But if Marryat wasted
-his substance and hastened his death by excesses, he
-seems to have been generous and good to those around<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-him. To his younger children he was kind, and if his
-wife fell out of his life (she is not mentioned as having
-been present at Langham), there is nothing to show that
-it was for reasons discreditable to him, or indeed to
-either of them. If he was one of those who are mainly
-their own enemies, at least he did not belong to the
-worst rank of a very noxious class of persons. That he
-was a brave man and a good officer beyond question.</p>
-
-<p>As a writer Captain Marryat has never&mdash;as I began
-this little book by saying&mdash;been quite fairly treated.
-There has always been more or less a suspicion that an
-<cite>Athenæum</cite> writer, who described him as a quarter-deck
-captain who defied critics, and trifled with the public, writing
-carelessly, and not even good English, taking it for
-granted that the public was to read just what he chose to
-write, was stating the facts. He has never been recognized
-as one of the front rank of English novelists.
-Macaulay only mentions him as one among several
-writers on America. Carlyle’s savage “slate” of him is
-unjust to a degree which can only be palliated by the fact
-that it was founded on a hasty reading of his books in the
-evil days after the loss of the manuscript of the French
-Revolution. At that time everything was looking more
-spectral to Carlyle than usual. Thackeray was just to
-him indeed, but Thackeray was exceptionally large-minded
-and fair. Yet I do not know what reason
-there is to exclude Marryat from the front rank which
-would not also exclude some whom we habitually put
-there. To rank him with Fielding, with Jane Austen,
-Thackeray or Richardson, would be absurd, but I see
-no reason why he should not stand with Smollett. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-might stand a little below him for “Humphrey Clinker’s”
-sake, but not very far. Except Sir Walter Scott, no man
-can be read over a longer period of life. He may be
-enjoyed at school and for ever afterwards. I doubt
-whether many boys have delighted in “Tom Jones.”
-Did anybody, to take the other end of life, ever
-experience, on coming back to “Peter Simple” or “Mr.
-Midshipman Easy,” that shock which is produced by a
-mature re-reading of, say, “Zanoni”? I imagine not.
-There must be a great vitality, a genuine truth, in the
-writer who can stand this test, and stand it so long. That
-Marryat was to some extent a boyish writer is undeniable,
-and it seems to me to be the secret of his enduring
-popularity. His books revive in one the exact kind of
-pleasure one felt in reading them in one’s teens. We
-may re-read some writers who pleased then, and remember
-the pleasure, and regret it can be felt no longer.
-Others one re-reads with ever new pleasure, but they
-satisfy for reasons not felt in early days. We see more
-in them and ever more. But with Marryat it is different.
-He pleases for the same causes always, which is surely
-as much as to say that he is unique of his kind. More
-than any other man he made what was written for boys
-and children literature. He was the best of his class,
-and that alone entitles him to a high place. After all, a
-man can do no more than be the best of his order.
-Whoever is that is surely fairly entitled to be called a
-Great Writer. Whether that title is to be grudged him
-or not, he is assuredly the friend of all who read with a
-simple and healthy taste. No man has given more honest
-pleasure, more wholesome stimulus to youth; few have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-given more hearty fun to older readers. If we do not
-think of him as “great,” a word of which we might indeed
-be more chary than we are, at least we can think of him
-as kindly, as sound, as manly&mdash;and it is possible to make
-a stir with one’s pen and be none of those three things.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The End.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="INDEX">INDEX.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 238px;">
-<img src="images/deco-2.jpg" width="238" height="30" alt="(decorative)" />
-</div>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="ifrst">A.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Almeria Bay, Action in, <a href="#Page_32">32-34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">America, Books about, <a href="#Page_100">100</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">America, Marryat’s visit to, <a href="#Page_98">98-113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Auckland, Lord, Letter to, <a href="#Page_150">150-152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his answer, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Avenger</i>, Loss of, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">B.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Babbage, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Basque roads, Action in, <a href="#Page_37">37-40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burmah, War in, <a href="#Page_51">51-55</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">C.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canada, Revolt in, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Caroline"><i>Caroline</i>, Affair of the, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Children of New Forest, The,” <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chucks, Mr., <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx" id="Cochrane">Cochrane, Lord, Captain of <i>Impérieuse</i>, his character, <a href="#Page_19">19-21</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in Basque roads, <a href="#Page_37">37-40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">end of service, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collingwood, Admiral, Marryat asked to write life of, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Continent, English on the, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">D.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drew, Captain, <i>see</i> <a href="#Caroline"><i>Caroline</i></a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dundonald, Earl of, <i>see</i> <a href="#Cochrane">Cochrane</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">F.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Fraser’s Magazine</cite>, Marryat and, <a href="#Page_127">127-131</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">G.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Giliano, Pasquil, fight with, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">I.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Impérieuse</i>, frigate, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Marryat’s account of her service, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sent hurriedly to sea, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her cruises, <a href="#Page_27">27-40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irving, Washington, quoted, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">L.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langham, Marryat’s life at, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132-134</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136-142</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Little Savage, The,” <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">M.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marryat, Frederick, born, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his family, <a href="#Page_11">11-12</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">school-life, <a href="#Page_12">12-15</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to sea, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appointed to <i>Impérieuse</i>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">serves in her, <a href="#Page_17">17-40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Walcheren, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in <i>Victorious</i>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Centaur</i>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Atlas</i>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span><i>Æolus</i>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>L’Espiègle</i>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Newcastle</i>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">a Lieutenant and Commander, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">breaks blood-vessel, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">saves life, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">cuts away main-yard of <i>Æolus</i>, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his wound, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">goes on Continent, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">marriage, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">command of <i>Beaver</i>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">St. Helena, and death of Napoleon, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">exchange to the <i>Rosario</i>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">service in Channel, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Smugglers, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appointed to <i>Larne</i>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">service in Burmah, <a href="#Page_51">51-54</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Post-captain, and C.B., <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Ariadne</i>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">begins writing, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">equerry to Duke of Sussex, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">resigns command, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">begins literary life, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">expensive habits, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><cite>Metropolitan Magazine</cite>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter to Bentley, <a href="#Page_60">60-61</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">editor of <cite>Metropolitan Magazine</cite>, <a href="#Page_61">61-62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">first books, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">stands for Parliament, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Brighton, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hard work in 1834, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Langham, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter about lawsuit, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Continent, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his work on, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">resigns editorship, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">writes for <cite>New Monthly Magazine</cite>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">stories of Marryat, <a href="#Page_69">69-70</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter to his mother, <a href="#Page_71">71-72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">starts for America, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his literary work between 1832 and 1837, <a href="#Page_73">73-97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his speedy success, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his earnings, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quarrels with publisher, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter to publisher, <a href="#Page_76">76-77</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">“Frank Mildmay,” his account of, <a href="#Page_79">79-80</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">account and criticism of book, <a href="#Page_81">81-82</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Marryat as a story-writer, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">truth of his pictures of sea-life, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his story-telling faculty, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his style, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quotation from “Peter Simple,” <a href="#Page_87">87-91</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his faculty of construction, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his fun, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quotation from “Mr. Midshipman Easy,” <a href="#Page_94">94-96</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Marryat’s portraits, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his visit to America, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at New York, <a href="#Page_100">100-101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter to his mother from America, <a href="#Page_101">101-105</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">visit to Canada, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">affair of <i>Caroline</i>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">disturbance about, <a href="#Page_106">106-109</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter to mother, <a href="#Page_109">109-111</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">serves during Canadian rising, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">return to England, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Marryat’s money matters, <a href="#Page_114">114-115</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">life in London, <a href="#Page_116">116-117</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ill health, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his work from 1837 to 1843, <a href="#Page_120">120-127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quarrel with Fraser, <a href="#Page_128">128-131</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Langham, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Marryat as a farmer, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his life at Langham, <a href="#Page_136">136-142</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his children, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fondness for animals, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his labourers, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his work at Langham, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beginning of fatal illness, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his personal appearance, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">letter to Lord Auckland, <a href="#Page_150">150-152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his good-service pension, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Hastings, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Brighton, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">return to Langham, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">death of Captain Marryat, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his personal character, <a href="#Page_156">156-157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his place in literature, <a href="#Page_157">157-159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marryat, Joseph, M.P., Marryat’s father, <a href="#Page_11">11</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marryat, Lieutenant F., Marryat’s son, his death, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>“Masterman Ready,” <a href="#Page_124">124-127</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Metropolitan Magazine</cite>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Mildmay, Frank,” <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_79">79-82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Mission, The,” <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">N.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Naval war in 1806, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">P.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Percival Keene,” <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Phantom Ship, The,” <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pierce, Captain J., <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Poor Jack,” <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Poacher, The,” <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Privateersman, The,” <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">R.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ross Church, Mrs., Marryat’s daughter, quoted, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_68">68</a>, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138-140</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">S.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seagrave, Tommy, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">V.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Violet, Monsieur,” <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">W.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">William IV., story of, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="bibliography">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="BIBLIOGRAPHY">BIBLIOGRAPHY.</h2>
-
-<p class="center">BY<br />
-JOHN P. ANDERSON</p>
-
-<p class="center">(<i>British Museum</i>).</p>
-
-<h3>I. WORKS.</h3>
-
-<p>The Novels of Captain Marryat.&mdash;Percival
-Keene. Monsieur
-Violet. Rattlin the Reefer.
-Valerie. The author’s copyright
-edition. 4 pts. London,
-Guildford [printed 1875], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>The Novels of Captain Marryat.&mdash;The
-Phantom Ship. The
-Dog Fiend. Olla Podrida. The
-Poacher. The author’s copyright
-edition. London, Guildford
-[printed 1875], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>The Children of the New Forest.
-2 vols. London [1847], 12mo.
-Part of a series entitled “The
-Juvenile Library.”</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. 2 vols.
-London, 1849, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. 2 vols.
-London, 1850, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1853, 16mo.</p>
-
-<p>A Code of Signals for the use of
-vessels employed in the Merchant
-Service. London, 1837,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Eighth edition. London,
-1841, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>The last edition edited by Captain
-Marryat.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. The Universal
-Code of Signals, for the
-Mercantile Marine of all Nations,
-etc. London, 1854, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1861, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1864, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1866, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1869, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1879, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>A Diary in America, with remarks
-on its Institutions. 3 vols.
-London, 1839, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; A Diary in America, with
-remarks on its Institutions.
-Part Second. 3 vols. London,
-1839, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Floral Telegraph; or, Affection’s
-Signals. London [1850],
-12mo.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob Faithful. 3 vols. London,
-1834, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxiii. of the “Standard Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-New York, 1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Author’s edition, complete.
-London [1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-Guildford [printed 1877], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of a series entitled “Notable
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-Halifax [printed 1878], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1881], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of “Ward and Lock’s
-Standard Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1883], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Japhet in Search of a Father. 3
-vols. London, 1836, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxiv. of the “Standard Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1857, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Railway Library”
-series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1881], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1883], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph Rushbrook; or, The
-Poacher. 3 vols. London,
-1841, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. 3 vols.
-London, 1842, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph Rushbrook; or, The
-Poacher. London, 1846, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. civ. of the “Standard Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition. London, 1856,
-12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition. London, 1857,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London [1873], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Reprinted from the original
-edition. (A Rencontre.) London
-[1883], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of a series entitled “Notable
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The King’s Own. 3 vols. London,
-1830, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxv. of the “Standard Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of a series entitled “Notable
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With a
-Memoir by Florence Marryat.
-Author’s edition. London [1874],
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; [“Handy-Volume Marryat”
-edition.] London [1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<p>The Little Savage. [Edited by
-Frank S. Marryat.] 2 pts.
-London, 1848-49, 12mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Part of the “Juvenile Library.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. 2 vols.
-London, 1850, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1853, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Masterman Ready; or, the Wreck
-of the Pacific. 3 vols. London,
-1841, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Masterman Ready. New edition.
-(<i>Bohn’s Illustrated Library.</i>)
-London, 1851, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. 2 vols.
-London, 1853, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. (<i>Bell’s
-Reading Books.</i>) London, 1875,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1878, 16mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1885, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London [1886], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>The Metropolitan: a monthly
-journal of literature, science,
-and the fine arts.</p>
-
-<p class="center">[Continued as]</p>
-
-<p>The Metropolitan Magazine. Successively
-edited by T. Campbell,
-F. Marryat, etc. 57 vols.
-London, 1831-50, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>The Mission, or Scenes in Africa.
-London, 1845, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1853, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition. (<i>Bohn’s Illustrated
-Library.</i>) London, 1854,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1887, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Midshipman Easy. 3 vols.
-London, 1836, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London.
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxvi. of the “Standard
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Midshipman Easy. Another
-edition. London [1879], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of a series entitled “Notable
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; [“Handy-Volume Marryat”
-edition.] London [1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-[1881], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of “Ward and Lock’s Standard
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1883], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Narrative of the Travels and Adventures
-of Monsieur Violet in
-California, Sonora, and Western
-Texas, 3 vols. London, 1843,
-12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1849, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; The Travels and Adventures
-of Monsieur Violet among the
-Snake Indians and Wild Tribes
-of the Great Western Prairies.
-London, 1849, 12mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Vol. 33 of the “Parlour Library.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; The Travels and Adventures
-of Monsieur Violet in California,
-Sonora, and Western Texas.
-With illustrations. London,
-1874, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1875], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Naval Officer; or, Scenes and
-Adventures in the life of Frank
-Mildmay. 3 vols. London,
-1829, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Revised edition. (<i>Colburn’s
-Modern Standard Novelists</i>, vol.
-x.) London, 1839, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash;Frank Mildmay; or, the Naval
-Officer, with a Memoir by
-Florence Marryat. London
-[1873], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Naval Officer. Another edition.
-London [1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of a series, entitled “Notable
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Author’s edition. London
-[1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Newton Forster; or, the Merchant
-Service. 3 vols. London, 1832,
-12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxvii. of the “Standard Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of a series entitled the
-“Railway Library.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of a series entitled “Notable
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Author’s edition. London
-[1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Olla Podrida. 3 vols. London,
-1840, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1849, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1874, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Author’s copyright edition.
-London [1875], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Pacha of Many Tales. 3 vols.
-London, 1835, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>The Pacha of Many Tales. Another
-edition. Paris, 1835, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxviii. of the “Standard
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition. London, 1856,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Author’s edition. London
-[1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Percival Keene. 3 vols. London,
-1842, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1848, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. cxiii. of the “Standard
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition, with a Memoir
-of the Author. London, 1857,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the series entitled
-“Railway Library.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With
-illustrations. London [1873],
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition. London [1875],
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With a
-Memoir of the Author. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Peter Simple. 3 vols. London,
-1834, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxii. of the “Standard
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1870, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Peter Simple. Author’s edition,
-complete. London [1874], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-Guildford [printed 1876], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-Halifax [printed 1878], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1881], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of “Ward and Lock’s
-Standard Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Phantom Ship. 3 vols.
-London, 1839, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1847, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1849, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1874, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Pirate and the Three Cutters.
-Illustrated with engravings from
-drawings by C. Stanfield. London,
-1836, 4to.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With engravings
-by Stanfield. London,
-1848, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition. (<i>Bohn’s Illustrated
-Library.</i>) London, 1849,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With a
-Memoir of the Author, etc.
-London, Beccles [printed 1877],
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The Pirate and the Three Cutters.
-Another edition. With illustrations.
-London [1886], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Jack. With illustrations by
-C. Stanfield. London, 1840,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1880, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1883], 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the series of “Notable
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations
-by C. Stanfield. London,
-1883, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>The Privateer’s Man, one hundred
-years ago. 2 vols. London,
-1846, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1853, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. 2 vols.
-London, 1854, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; The Privateersman. Adventures
-by sea and land, in
-civil and savage life, one
-hundred years ago. (<i>Bohn’s
-Illustrated Library.</i>) London,
-1860, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Rattlin the Reefer. London,
-1838, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. lxix. of the “Standard
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 16mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, 1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1875], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. Edited [or
-rather written] by Captain
-Marryat. [“Handy-Volume
-Marryat” edition.] London
-[1880], 16mo.</p>
-
-<p>The Settlers in Canada. 2 vols.
-London, 1844, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Settlers in Canada. Another
-edition. London, 1854, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1855, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; New edition. With illustrations
-by Gilbert and Dalziel.
-London, 1860, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Part of “Bohn’s Illustrated
-Library.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1886], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London
-[1887], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Snarleyyow; or, the Dog Fiend.
-3 vols. London, 1837, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. Paris, 1837,
-8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1847, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>No. cvii. of the “Standard
-Novels.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1856, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; The Dog Fiend; or, Snarleyyow.
-London, 1857, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the series entitled “Railway
-Library.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London, New York,
-1873, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. [Handy-Volume
-Marryat.] London
-[1880], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Suggestions for the Abolition of
-the present System of Impressment
-in the Naval Service.
-London, 1822, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Valerie, an Autobiography. 2
-vols. London, 1849, 12mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. With illustrations.
-London [1873], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Another edition. London,
-1852, 16mo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Author’s Copyright edition.
-London [1875], 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Valerie, an Autobiography. Another
-edition. London [1880],
-16mo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>One of the “Handy-Volume
-Marryat” Series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h3>II. APPENDIX.</h3>
-
-<h4>BIOGRAPHY, CRITICISM, ETC.</h4>
-
-<p>Cary, T. G.&mdash;Letter to a lady in
-France on the supposed failure
-of a National Bank … with
-answers to enquiries concerning
-the books of Captain Marryat
-and Mr. Dickens. Boston
-[U.S.], 1843, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; Second edition. Boston
-[U.S.], 1844, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat, Florence.&mdash;Life and
-Letters of Captain Marryat. 2
-vols. London, 1872, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Marryat, Frederick.&mdash;A Reply to
-Captain Marryat’s statements
-relative to the coloured West
-Indians, in his work entitled,
-“A Diary in America.” [Consisting
-of letters which appeared
-in the “St. George’s Chronicle.”]
-London, 1840, 8vo.</p>
-
-<p>Marshall, John.&mdash;Royal Naval
-Biography. 4 vols. London,
-1823-35, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Frederick Marryat, vol. iii., pp.
-261-270.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Poe, Edgar A.&mdash;The Literati, etc.
-New York, 1850, 8vo.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>Frederick Marryat, pp. 456-460.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<h4>MAGAZINE ARTICLES.</h4>
-
-<p>Marryat, Frederick.&mdash;New
-Monthly Magazine, vol. 48,
-1836, pp. 228-232.&mdash;Bentley’s
-Miscellany (with portrait), by
-C. Whitehead, vol. 24, 1848,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span>
-pp. 524-530; same article,
-Eclectic Magazine, vol. 16,
-1849, pp. 135-139, and Littell’s
-Living Age, vol. 19,
-pp. 540-543.&mdash;Temple Bar,
-vol. 37, 1873, pp. 100-106.&mdash;London
-Society, by T. H. S.
-Escott, vol. 23, 1873, pp. 34-44.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>and his Diary</i>. Southern
-Literary Messenger, vol. 7,
-1841, pp. 253-276.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>at Langham</i>. Cornhill
-Magazine, vol. 16, 1867, pp.
-149-161.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Life and Letters of</i>.
-Chambers’s Journal, 1872, pp.
-691-695.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Midshipman Easy</i>. Monthly
-Review, vol. 3 N.S., 1836, pp.
-211-223.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Newton Forster</i>. Westminster
-Review, vol. 16, 1832, pp. 390-394.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Novels</i>. Fraser’s Magazine,
-vol. 17, 1838, pp. 571-577.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Percival Keene</i>. Tait’s Edinburgh
-Magazine, vol. 9 N.S.,
-1842, pp. 670-680,&mdash;Monthly
-Review, vol. 3 N.S., 1842, pp.
-213-223.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Sea Novels</i>. Dublin University
-Magazine, vol. 47, 1856,
-pp. 294-308; same article,
-Eclectic Magazine, vol. 38, pp.
-46-60.&mdash;Cornhill Magazine, by
-J. Hannay, vol. 27, 1873, pp.
-170-190; same article, Littell’s
-Living Age, vol. 116, pp. 676-689,
-and Eclectic Magazine,
-vol. 17 N.S., pp. 464-478.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Settlers in Canada</i>. Tait’s
-Edinburgh Magazine, vol. 11,
-1844, pp. 807, 808.</p>
-
-<p>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Snarleyyow</i>. Dublin University
-Magazine, vol. 10, 1837,
-pp. 325-338.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h4>III. CHRONOLOGICAL LIST OF WORKS.</h4>
-
-<table summary="Works, with publication dates">
- <tr>
- <td>Suggestions for the abolition of the present system of Impressment in the Naval Service</td>
- <td class="tdr">1822</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Adventures of a Naval Officer; or, Frank Mildmay</td>
- <td class="tdr">1829</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The King’s Own</td>
- <td class="tdr">1830</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Newton Forster</td>
- <td class="tdr">1832</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Peter Simple</td>
- <td class="tdr">1834</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Jacob Faithful</td>
- <td class="tdr">1834</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pacha of Many Tales</td>
- <td class="tdr">1835</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mr. Midshipman Easy</td>
- <td class="tdr">1836</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Japhet in Search of a Father</td>
- <td class="tdr">1836</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Pirate and the Three Cutters</td>
- <td class="tdr">1836</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Code of Signals</td>
- <td class="tdr">1837</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Snarleyyow; or, the Dog Fiend</td>
- <td class="tdr">1837</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Rattlin the Reefer</td>
- <td class="tdr">1838</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Phantom Ship</td>
- <td class="tdr">1839</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Diary in America</td>
- <td class="tdr">1839</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Olla Podrida</td>
- <td class="tdr">1840</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Poor Jack</td>
- <td class="tdr">1840</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Masterman Ready</td>
- <td class="tdr">1841</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Joseph Rushbrook; or, The Poacher</td>
- <td class="tdr">1841</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Percival Keene</td>
- <td class="tdr">1842</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Narrative of the Travels and Adventures of Monsieur Violet</td>
- <td class="tdr">1843</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Settlers in Canada</td>
- <td class="tdr">1844</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Mission; or, Scenes in Africa</td>
- <td class="tdr">1845</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Privateer’s Man</td>
- <td class="tdr">1846</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Children of the New Forest</td>
- <td class="tdr">1847</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>The Little Savage</td>
- <td class="tdr">1848-49</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Valerie</td>
- <td class="tdr">1849</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><i>Printed by <span class="smcap">Walter Scott</span>, Felling,
-Newcastle-on-Tyne</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2 id="THE_SCOTT_LIBRARY">THE SCOTT LIBRARY.</h2>
-
-<p class="center">Cloth, Uncut Edges, Gilt Top. Price 1s. 6d. per Volume.</p>
-
-<p class="center">VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED&mdash;</p>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="book">1 MALORY’S ROMANCE OF KING ARTHUR AND THE
-Quest of the Holy Grail. Edited by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">2 THOREAU’S WALDEN. WITH INTRODUCTORY NOTE
-by Will H. Dircks.</li>
-
-<li class="book">3 THOREAU’S “WEEK.” WITH PREFATORY NOTE BY
-Will H. Dircks.</li>
-
-<li class="book">4 THOREAU’S ESSAYS. EDITED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION,
-by Will H. Dircks.</li>
-
-<li class="book">5 CONFESSIONS OF AN ENGLISH OPIUM-EATER, ETC.
-By Thomas De Quincey. With Introductory Note by William Sharp.</li>
-
-<li class="book">6 LANDOR’S IMAGINARY CONVERSATIONS. SELECTED,
-with Introduction, by Havelock Ellis.</li>
-
-<li class="book">7 PLUTARCH’S LIVES (LANGHORNE). WITH INTRODUCTORY
-Note by B. J. Snell, M.A.</li>
-
-<li class="book">8 BROWNE’S RELIGIO MEDICI, ETC. WITH INTRODUCTION
-by J. Addington Symonds.</li>
-
-<li class="book">9 SHELLEY’S ESSAYS AND LETTERS. EDITED, WITH
-Introductory Note, by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">10 SWIFT’S PROSE WRITINGS. CHOSEN AND ARRANGED,
-with Introduction, by Walter Lewin.</li>
-
-<li class="book">11 MY STUDY WINDOWS. BY JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
-With Introduction by R. Garnett, LL.D.</li>
-
-<li class="book">12 LOWELL’S ESSAYS ON THE ENGLISH POETS. WITH
-a new Introduction by Mr. Lowell.</li>
-
-<li class="book">13 THE BIGLOW PAPERS. BY JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
-With a Prefatory Note by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">14 GREAT ENGLISH PAINTERS. SELECTED FROM
-Cunningham’s <i>Lives</i>. Edited by William Sharp.</li>
-
-<li class="book">15 BYRON’S LETTERS AND JOURNALS. SELECTED,
-with Introduction, by Mathilde Blind.</li>
-
-<li class="book">16 LEIGH HUNT’S ESSAYS. WITH INTRODUCTION AND
-Notes by Arthur Symons.</li>
-
-<li class="book">17 LONGFELLOW’S “HYPERION,” “KAVANAH,” AND
-“The Trouveres.” With Introduction by W. Tirebuck.</li>
-
-<li class="book">18 GREAT MUSICAL COMPOSERS. BY G. F. FERRIS.
-Edited, with Introduction, by Mrs. William Sharp.</li>
-
-<li class="book">19 THE MEDITATIONS OF MARCUS AURELIUS. EDITED
-by Alice Zimmern.</li>
-
-<li class="book">20 THE TEACHING OF EPICTETUS. TRANSLATED FROM
-the Greek, with Introduction and Notes, by T. W. Rolleston.</li>
-
-<li class="book">21 SELECTIONS FROM SENECA. WITH INTRODUCTION
-by Walter Clode.</li>
-
-<li class="book">22 SPECIMEN DAYS IN AMERICA. BY WALT WHITMAN.
-Revised by the Author, with fresh Preface.</li>
-
-<li class="book">23 DEMOCRATIC VISTAS, AND OTHER PAPERS. BY
-Walt Whitman. (Published by arrangement with the Author.)</li>
-
-<li class="book">24 WHITE’S NATURAL HISTORY OF SELBORNE. WITH
-a Preface by Richard Jefferies.</li>
-
-<li class="book">25 DEFOE’S CAPTAIN SINGLETON. EDITED, WITH
-Introduction, by H. Halliday Sparling.</li>
-
-<li class="book">26 MAZZINI’S ESSAYS: LITERARY, POLITICAL, AND
-Religious. With Introduction by William Clarke.</li>
-
-<li class="book">27 PROSE WRITINGS OF HEINE. WITH INTRODUCTION
-by Havelock Ellis.</li>
-
-<li class="book">28 REYNOLDS’S DISCOURSES. WITH INTRODUCTION
-by Helen Zimmern.</li>
-
-<li class="book">29 PAPERS OF STEELE AND ADDISON. EDITED BY
-Walter Lewin.</li>
-
-<li class="book">30 BURNS’S LETTERS. SELECTED AND ARRANGED,
-with Introduction, by J. Logie Robertson, M.A.</li>
-
-<li class="book">31 VOLSUNGA SAGA. <span class="smcap">William Morris.</span> WITH INTRODUCTION
-by H. H. Sparling.</li>
-
-<li class="book">32 SARTOR RESARTUS. BY THOMAS CARLYLE. WITH
-Introduction by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">33 SELECT WRITINGS OF EMERSON. WITH INTRODUCTION
-by Percival Chubb.</li>
-
-<li class="book">34 AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF LORD HERBERT. EDITED,
-with an Introduction, by Will H. Dircks.</li>
-
-<li class="book">35 ENGLISH PROSE, FROM MAUNDEVILLE TO
-Thackeray. Chosen and Edited by Arthur Galton.</li>
-
-<li class="book">36 THE PILLARS OF SOCIETY, AND OTHER PLAYS. BY
-Henrik Ibsen. Edited, with an Introduction, by Havelock Ellis.</li>
-
-<li class="book">37 IRISH FAIRY AND FOLK TALES. EDITED AND
-Selected by W. B. Yeats.</li>
-
-<li class="book">38 ESSAYS OF DR. JOHNSON, WITH BIOGRAPHICAL
-Introduction and Notes by Stuart J. Reid.</li>
-
-<li class="book">39 ESSAYS OF WILLIAM HAZLITT. SELECTED AND
-Edited, with Introduction and Notes, by Frank Carr.</li>
-
-<li class="book">40 LANDOR’S PENTAMERON, AND OTHER IMAGINARY
-Conversations. Edited, with a Preface, by H. Ellis.</li>
-
-<li class="book">41 POE’S TALES AND ESSAYS. EDITED, WITH INTRODUCTION,
-by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">42 VICAR OF WAKEFIELD. BY OLIVER GOLDSMITH.
-Edited, with Preface, by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">43 POLITICAL ORATIONS, FROM WENTWORTH TO
-Macaulay. Edited, with Introduction, by William Clarke.</li>
-
-<li class="book">44 THE AUTOCRAT OF THE BREAKFAST-TABLE. BY
-Oliver Wendell Holmes.</li>
-
-<li class="book">45 THE POET AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE. BY OLIVER
-Wendell Holmes.</li>
-
-<li class="book">46 THE PROFESSOR AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE. BY
-Oliver Wendell Holmes.</li>
-
-<li class="book">47 LORD CHESTERFIELD’S LETTERS TO HIS SON.
-Selected, with Introduction, by Charles Sayle.</li>
-
-<li class="book">48 STORIES FROM CARLETON. SELECTED, WITH INTRODUCTION,
-by W. Yeats</li>
-
-<li class="book">49 JANE EYRE. BY CHARLOTTE BRONTË. EDITED BY
-Clement K. Shorter.</li>
-
-<li class="book">50 ELIZABETHAN ENGLAND. EDITED BY LOTHROP
-Withington, with a Preface by Dr. Furnivall.</li>
-
-<li class="book">51 THE PROSE WRITINGS OF THOMAS DAVIS. EDITED
-by T. W. Rolleston.</li>
-
-<li class="book">52 SPENCE’S ANECDOTES. A SELECTION. EDITED,
-with an Introduction and Notes, by John Underhill.</li>
-
-<li class="book">53 MORE’S UTOPIA, AND LIFE OF EDWARD V. EDITED,
-with an Introduction, by Maurice Adams.</li>
-
-<li class="book">54 SADI’S GULISTAN, OR FLOWER GARDEN. TRANSLATED,
-with an Essay, by James Ross.</li>
-
-<li class="book">55 ENGLISH FAIRY AND FOLK TALES. EDITED BY
-E. Sidney Hartland.</li>
-
-<li class="book">56 NORTHERN STUDIES. BY EDMUND GOSSE. WITH
-a Note by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">57 EARLY REVIEWS OF GREAT WRITERS. EDITED BY
-E. Stevenson.</li>
-
-<li class="book">58 ARISTOTLE’S ETHICS. WITH GEORGE HENRY
-Lewes’s Essay on Aristotle prefixed.</li>
-
-<li class="book">59 LANDOR’S PERICLES AND ASPASIA. EDITED, WITH
-an Introduction, by Havelock Ellis.</li>
-
-<li class="book">60 ANNALS OF TACITUS. THOMAS GORDON’S TRANSLATION.
-Edited, with an Introduction, by Arthur Galton.</li>
-
-<li class="book">61 ESSAYS OF ELIA. BY CHARLES LAMB. EDITED,
-with an Introduction, by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">62 BALZAC’S SHORTER STORIES. TRANSLATED BY
-William Wilson and the Count Stenbock.</li>
-
-<li class="book">63 COMEDIES OF DE MUSSET. EDITED, WITH AN
-Introductory Note, by S. L. Gwynn.</li>
-
-<li class="book">64 CORAL REEFS. BY CHARLES DARWIN. EDITED,
-with an Introduction, by Dr. J. W. Williams.</li>
-
-<li class="book">65 SHERIDAN’S PLAYS. EDITED, WITH AN INTRODUCTION,
-by Rudolf Dircks.</li>
-
-<li class="book">66 OUR VILLAGE. BY MISS MITFORD. EDITED, WITH
-an Introduction, by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">67 MASTER HUMPHREY’S CLOCK, AND OTHER STORIES.
-By Charles Dickens. With Introduction by Frank T. Marzials.</li>
-
-<li class="book">68 TALES FROM WONDERLAND. BY RUDOLPH
-Baumbach. Translated by Helen B. Dole.</li>
-
-<li class="book">69 ESSAYS AND PAPERS BY DOUGLAS JERROLD. EDITED
-by Walter Jerrold.</li>
-
-<li class="book">70 VINDICATION OF THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN. BY
-Mary Wollstonecraft. Introduction by Mrs. E. Robins Pennell.</li>
-
-<li class="book">71 “THE ATHENIAN ORACLE.” A SELECTION. EDITED
-by John Underhill, with Prefatory Note by Walter Besant.</li>
-
-<li class="book">72 ESSAYS OF SAINT-BEUVE. TRANSLATED AND
-Edited, with an Introduction, by Elizabeth Lee.</li>
-
-<li class="book">73 SELECTIONS FROM PLATO. FROM THE TRANSLATION
-of Sydenham and Taylor. Edited by T. W. Rolleston.</li>
-
-<li class="book">74 HEINE’S ITALIAN TRAVEL SKETCHES, ETC. TRANSLATED
-by Elizabeth A. Sharp. With an Introduction from the French of
-Theophile Gautier.</li>
-
-<li class="book">75 SCHILLER’S MAID OF ORLEANS. TRANSLATED,
-with an Introduction, by Major-General Patrick Maxwell.</li>
-
-<li class="book">76 SELECTIONS FROM SYDNEY SMITH. EDITED, WITH
-an Introduction, by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">77 THE NEW SPIRIT. BY HAVELOCK ELLIS.</li>
-
-<li class="book">78 THE BOOK OF MARVELLOUS ADVENTURES. FROM
-the “Morte d’Arthur.” Edited by Ernest Rhys. [This, together with
-No. 1, forms the complete “Morte d’Arthur.”]</li>
-
-<li class="book">79 ESSAYS AND APHORISMS. BY SIR ARTHUR HELPS.
-With an Introduction by E. A. Helps.</li>
-
-<li class="book">80 ESSAYS OF MONTAIGNE. SELECTED, WITH A
-Prefatory Note, by Percival Chubb.</li>
-
-<li class="book">81 THE LUCK OF BARRY LYNDON. BY W. M.
-Thackeray. Edited by F. T. Marzials.</li>
-
-<li class="book">82 SCHILLER’S WILLIAM TELL. TRANSLATED, WITH
-an Introduction, by Major-General Patrick Maxwell.</li>
-
-<li class="book">83 CARLYLE’S ESSAYS ON GERMAN LITERATURE.
-With an Introduction by Ernest Rhys.</li>
-
-<li class="book">84 PLAYS AND DRAMATIC ESSAYS OF CHARLES LAMB.
-Edited, with an Introduction, by Rudolf Dircks.</li>
-
-<li class="book">85 THE PROSE OF WORDSWORTH. SELECTED AND
-Edited, with an Introduction, by Professor William Knight.</li>
-
-<li class="book">86 ESSAYS, DIALOGUES, AND THOUGHTS OF COUNT
-Giacomo Leopardi. Translated, with an Introduction and Notes, by
-Major-General Patrick Maxwell.</li>
-
-<li class="book">87 THE INSPECTOR-GENERAL: A RUSSIAN COMEDY.
-By Nikolai V. Gogol. Translated from the original, with an Introduction
-and Notes, by Arthur A. Sykes.</li>
-
-<li class="book">88 ESSAYS AND APOTHEGMS OF FRANCIS, LORD BACON:
-Edited, with an Introduction, by John Buchan.</li>
-
-<li class="book">89 PROSE OF MILTON: SELECTED AND EDITED, WITH
-an Introduction, by Richard Garnett, LL.D.</li>
-
-<li class="book">90 THE REPUBLIC OF PLATO. TRANSLATED BY
-Thomas Taylor, with an Introduction by Theodore Wratislaw.</li>
-
-<li class="book">91 PASSAGES FROM FROISSART. WITH AN INTRODUCTION
-by Frank T. Marzials.</li>
-
-<li class="book">92 THE PROSE AND TABLE TALK OF COLERIDGE.
-Edited by W. H. Dircks.</li>
-
-<li class="book">93 HEINE IN ART AND LETTERS. TRANSLATED BY
-Elizabeth A. Sharp.</li>
-
-<li class="book">94 SELECTED ESSAYS OF DE QUINCEY. WITH AN
-Introduction by Sir George Douglas, Bart.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center smaller">London: <span class="smcap">Walter Scott, Limited</span>, Paternoster Square.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>Great Writers.</h2>
-
-<p class="center">A NEW SERIES OF CRITICAL BIOGRAPHIES.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Edited by <span class="smcap">E. Robertson</span> and <span class="smcap">F. T. Marzials</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Cloth, Uncut Edges, Gilt Top. Price 1/6.</p>
-
-<table summary="Books and their authors">
- <tr>
- <td>Longfellow</td>
- <td class="right">By Professor Eric S. Robertson</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Coleridge</td>
- <td class="right">By Hall Caine</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dickens</td>
- <td class="right">By Frank T. Marzials</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Dante Gabriel Rossetti</td>
- <td class="right">By J. Knight</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Samuel Johnson</td>
- <td class="right">By Colonel F. Grant</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Darwin</td>
- <td class="right">By G. T. Bettany</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Charlotte Brontë</td>
- <td class="right">By A. Birrell</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Carlyle</td>
- <td class="right">By R. Garnett, LL.D.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Adam Smith</td>
- <td class="right">By R. B. Haldane, M.P.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Keats</td>
- <td class="right">By W. M. Rossetti</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Shelley</td>
- <td class="right">By William Sharp</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Smollett</td>
- <td class="right">By David Hannay</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Goldsmith</td>
- <td class="right">By Austin Dobson</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Scott</td>
- <td class="right">By Professor Yonge</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Burns</td>
- <td class="right">By Professor Blackie</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Victor Hugo</td>
- <td class="right">By Frank T. Marzials</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Emerson</td>
- <td class="right">By R. Garnett, LL. D.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Goethe</td>
- <td class="right">By James Sime</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Congreve</td>
- <td class="right">By Edmund Gosse</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Bunyan</td>
- <td class="right">By Canon Venables</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Crabbe</td>
- <td class="right">By T. E. Kebbel</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Heine</td>
- <td class="right">By William Sharp</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Mill</td>
- <td class="right">By W. L. Courtney</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Schiller</td>
- <td class="right">By Henry W. Nevinson</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Marryat</td>
- <td class="right">By David Hannay</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Lessing</td>
- <td class="right">By T. W. Rolleston</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Milton</td>
- <td class="right">By R Garnett, LL.D.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Balzac</td>
- <td class="right">By Frederick Wedmore</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>George Eliot</td>
- <td class="right">By Oscar Browning</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Jane Austen</td>
- <td class="right">By Goldwin Smith</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Browning</td>
- <td class="right">By William Sharp</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Byron</td>
- <td class="right">By Hon. Roden Noel</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Hawthorne</td>
- <td class="right">By Moncure D. Conway</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Schopenhauer</td>
- <td class="right">By Professor Wallace</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Sheridan</td>
- <td class="right">By Lloyd Sanders</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Thackeray</td>
- <td class="right">By H. Merivale and F. T. Marzials</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Cervantes</td>
- <td class="right">By H. E. Watts</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Voltaire</td>
- <td class="right">By Francis Espinasse</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Leigh Hunt</td>
- <td class="right">By Cosmo Monkhouse</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Whittier</td>
- <td class="right">By W. J. Linton</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>Renan</td>
- <td class="right">By Francis Espinasse</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">A Complete Bibliography to each Volume, by
-<span class="smcap">J. P. Anderson</span>, British Museum, London.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Library Edition of “Great Writers,” Demy 8vo, 2/6.</p>
-
-<p class="center smaller">London: <span class="smcap">Walter Scott, Limited</span>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>LIBRARY OF HUMOUR</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Cloth Elegant, Large Crown 8vo, Price 3/6 per vol.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>VOLUMES ALREADY ISSUED.</i></p>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF FRANCE. Translated, with an
-Introduction and Notes, by Elizabeth Lee. With
-numerous Illustrations by Paul Frénzeny.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF GERMANY. Translated, with an
-Introduction and Notes, by Hans Müller-Casenov.
-With numerous Illustrations by C. E. Brock.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF ITALY. Translated, with an Introduction
-and Notes, by A. Werner. With 50 Illustrations
-and a Frontispiece by Arturo Faldi.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF AMERICA. Selected with a
-copious Biographical Index of American Humorists, by
-James Barr.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF HOLLAND. Translated, with
-an Introduction and Notes, by A. Werner. With
-numerous Illustrations by Dudley Hardy.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF IRELAND. Selected by D. J.
-O’Donoghue. With numerous Illustrations by Oliver
-Paque.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF SPAIN. Translated, with an Introduction
-and Notes, by S. Taylor. With numerous
-Illustrations by H. R. Millar.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF RUSSIA. Translated, with Notes,
-by E. L. Boole, and an Introduction by Stepniak.
-With 50 Illustrations by Paul Frénzeny.</li>
-
-<li class="book">THE HUMOUR OF JAPAN. Translated, with an
-Introduction, by A. M. With Illustrations by George
-Bigot (from Drawings made in Japan). [<i>In preparation.</i>]</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center smaller">London: <span class="smcap">Walter Scott, Limited</span>, Paternoster Square.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>IBSEN’S PROSE DRAMAS.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Edited by WILLIAM ARCHER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Complete in Five Vols. Crown 8vo, Cloth, Price 3/6 each.</p>
-
-<p class="center">Set of Five Vols., in Case, 17/6; in Half Morocco, in Case, 32/6.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“<i>We seem at last to be shown men and women as they are; and at first it
-is more than we can endure.… All Ibsen’s characters speak and act as if
-they were hypnotised, and under their creator’s imperious demand to reveal
-themselves. There never was such a mirror held up to nature before: it is
-too terrible.… Yet we must return to Ibsen, with his remorseless surgery,
-his remorseless electric-light, until we, too, have grown strong and learned to
-face the naked&mdash;if necessary, the flayed and bleeding&mdash;reality.</i>”&mdash;<span class="smcap">Speaker</span>
-(London).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="book">VOL. I. “A DOLL’S HOUSE,” “THE LEAGUE OF
-YOUTH,” and “THE PILLARS OF SOCIETY.” With
-Portrait of the Author, and Biographical Introduction by
-<span class="smcap">William Archer</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="book">Vol. II. “GHOSTS,” “AN ENEMY OF THE PEOPLE,”
-and “THE WILD DUCK.” With an Introductory Note.</li>
-
-<li class="book">Vol. III. “LADY INGER OF ÖSTRÅT,” “THE VIKINGS
-AT HELGELAND,” “THE PRETENDERS.” With an
-Introductory Note and Portrait of Ibsen.</li>
-
-<li class="book">Vol. IV. “EMPEROR AND GALILEAN.” With an
-Introductory Note by <span class="smcap">William Archer</span>.</li>
-
-<li class="book">Vol. V. “ROSMERSHOLM,” “THE LADY FROM THE
-SEA,” “HEDDA GABLER.” Translated by <span class="smcap">William
-Archer</span>. With an Introductory Note.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>The sequence of the plays <em>in each volume</em> is chronological; the complete
-set of volumes comprising the dramas thus presents them in chronological
-order.</p>
-
-<p>“The art of prose translation does not perhaps enjoy a very high literary
-status in England, but we have no hesitation in numbering the present
-version of Ibsen, so far as it has gone (Vols. I. and II.), among the very
-best achievements, in that kind, of our generation.”&mdash;<i>Academy.</i></p>
-
-<p>“We have seldom, if ever, met with a translation so absolutely
-idiomatic.”&mdash;<i>Glasgow Herald.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">London: <span class="smcap">Walter Scott, Limited</span>, Paternoster Square.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>NEW ENGLAND LIBRARY.</h2>
-
-<p class="center">GRAVURE EDITION.</p>
-
-<p class="center">PRINTED ON ANTIQUE PAPER. 2s. 6d. PER VOL.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Each Volume with a Frontispiece in Photogravure.</i></p>
-
-<h3>By NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE.</h3>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="book">THE SCARLET LETTER.</li>
-<li class="book">THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES.</li>
-<li class="book">THE BLITHEDALE ROMANCE.</li>
-<li class="book">TANGLEWOOD TALES.</li>
-<li class="book">TWICE-TOLD TALES.</li>
-<li class="book">A WONDER-BOOK FOR GIRLS AND BOYS.</li>
-<li class="book">OUR OLD HOME.</li>
-<li class="book">MOSSES FROM AN OLD MANSE.</li>
-<li class="book">THE SNOW IMAGE.</li>
-<li class="book">TRUE STORIES FROM HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY.</li>
-<li class="book">THE NEW ADAM AND EVE.</li>
-<li class="book">LEGENDS OF THE PROVINCE HOUSE.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<h3>By OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES.</h3>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="book">THE AUTOCRAT OF THE BREAKFAST-TABLE.</li>
-<li class="book">THE PROFESSOR AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE.</li>
-<li class="book">THE POET AT THE BREAKFAST-TABLE.</li>
-<li class="book">ELSIE VENNER.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<h3>By HENRY THOREAU.</h3>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="book">ESSAYS AND OTHER WRITINGS.</li>
-<li class="book">WALDEN; OR, LIFE IN THE WOODS.</li>
-<li class="book">A WEEK ON THE CONCORD.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center smaller">London: <span class="smcap">Walter Scott, Limited</span>, Paternoster Square.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2><span class="smaller">THE</span><br />
-Contemporary Science Series.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Edited by HAVELOCK ELLIS.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Illustrated Volumes containing between 300 and 400 pp.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Crown 8vo, Cloth, 3s. 6d. each; Half Morocco, 6s. 6d.</i></p>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="book">EVOLUTION OF SEX. By Prof. <span class="smcap">Geddes</span> and <span class="smcap">Thomson</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">ELECTRICITY IN MODERN LIFE. By <span class="smcap">G. W. de Tunzelmann</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">THE ORIGIN OF THE ARYANS. By Dr. <span class="smcap">Taylor</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">PHYSIOGNOMY AND EXPRESSION. <span class="smcap">P. Mantegazza</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">EVOLUTION AND DISEASE. By <span class="smcap">J. B. Sutton</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">THE VILLAGE COMMUNITY. By <span class="smcap">G. L. Gomme</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">THE CRIMINAL. By <span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">SANITY AND INSANITY. By Dr. <span class="smcap">C. Mercier</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">HYPNOTISM. By Dr. <span class="smcap">Albert Moll</span> (Berlin).</li>
-<li class="book">MANUAL TRAINING. By Dr. <span class="smcap">Woodward</span> (St. Louis).</li>
-<li class="book">SCIENCE OF FAIRY TALES. By <span class="smcap">E. S. Hartland</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">PRIMITIVE FOLK. By <span class="smcap">Elie Reclus</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">EVOLUTION OF MARRIAGE. By <span class="smcap">Letourneau</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">BACTERIA AND THEIR PRODUCTS. Dr. <span class="smcap">Woodhead</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">EDUCATION AND HEREDITY. By <span class="smcap">J. M. Guyau</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">THE MAN OF GENIUS. By Prof. <span class="smcap">Lombroso</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">THE GRAMMAR OF SCIENCE. By Prof. <span class="smcap">Pearson</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">PROPERTY: ITS ORIGIN. By <span class="smcap">Ch. Letourneau</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">VOLCANOES, PAST and PRESENT. By Prof. <span class="smcap">Hull</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">PUBLIC HEALTH PROBLEMS. By Dr. <span class="smcap">J. F. Sykes</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">MODERN METEOROLOGY. By <span class="smcap">Frank Waldo</span>, Ph.D.</li>
-<li class="book">THE GERM-PLASM. By Professor <span class="smcap">Weismann</span>. 6s.</li>
-<li class="book">THE INDUSTRIES OF ANIMALS. By <span class="smcap">F. Houssay</span>.</li>
-<li class="book">MAN AND WOMAN. By <span class="smcap">Havelock Ellis</span>. 6s.</li>
-<li class="book">THE EVOLUTION OF MODERN CAPITALISM.</li>
-<li class="book">MODERN CAPITALISM. By <span class="smcap">John A. Hobson</span>, M.A.</li>
-<li class="book">THOUGHT-TRANSFERENCE. By <span class="smcap">F. Podmore</span>, M.A.</li>
-<li class="book">COMPARATIVE PSYCHOLOGY. Prof. <span class="smcap">C. L. Morgan</span>. 6s.</li>
-<li class="book">THE ORIGINS OF INVENTION. By <span class="smcap">O. T. Mason</span>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>SPECIAL EDITION OF THE
-CANTERBURY POETS.</h2>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Square 8vo, Cloth, Gilt Top Elegant, Price 2s.</i></p>
-
-<p class="center">Each Volume with a Frontispiece in Photogravure.</p>
-
-<ul>
-<li class="book">1 CHRISTIAN YEAR. With Portrait of John Keble.</li>
-<li class="book">2 LONGFELLOW. With Portrait of Longfellow.</li>
-<li class="book">3 SHELLEY. With Portrait of Shelley.</li>
-<li class="book">4 WORDSWORTH. With Portrait of Wordsworth.</li>
-<li class="book">5 WHITTIER. With Portrait of Whittier.</li>
-<li class="book">6 BURNS. Songs } With Portrait of Burns, and View of “The Auld Brig o’ Doon.”</li>
-<li class="book">7 BURNS. Poems }</li>
-<li class="book">8 KEATS. With Portrait of Keats.</li>
-<li class="book">9 EMERSON. With Portrait of Emerson.</li>
-<li class="book">10 SONNETS OF THIS CENTURY. Portrait of D. G. Rossetti.</li>
-<li class="book">11 WHITMAN. With Portrait of Whitman.</li>
-<li class="book">12 LOVE LETTERS OF A VIOLINIST. Portrait of Eric Mackay.</li>
-<li class="book">13 SCOTT. Lady of the Lake, etc. } With Portrait of Sir Walter Scott, and View of “The Silver Strand, Loch Katrine.”</li>
-<li class="book">14 SCOTT. Marmion, etc. }</li>
-<li class="book">15 CHILDREN OF THE POETS. With an Engraving of “The Orphans,” by Gainsborough.</li>
-<li class="book">16 SONNETS OF EUROPE. With Portrait of J. A. Symonds.</li>
-<li class="book">17 SYDNEY DOBELL. With Portrait of Sydney Dobell.</li>
-<li class="book">18 HERRICK. With Portrait of Herrick.</li>
-<li class="book">19 BALLADS AND RONDEAUS. Portrait of W. E. Henley.</li>
-<li class="book">20 IRISH MINSTRELSY. With Portrait of Thomas Davis.</li>
-<li class="book">21 PARADISE LOST. With Portrait of Milton.</li>
-<li class="book">22 FAIRY MUSIC. Engraving from Drawing by C. E. Brock.</li>
-<li class="book">23 GOLDEN TREASURY. With Engraving of Virgin Mother.</li>
-<li class="book">24 AMERICAN SONNETS. With Portrait of J. R. Lowell.</li>
-<li class="book">25 IMITATION OF CHRIST. With Engraving, “Ecce Homo.”</li>
-<li class="book">26 PAINTER POETS. With Portrait of Walter Crane.</li>
-<li class="book">27 WOMEN POETS. With Portrait of Mrs. Browning.</li>
-<li class="book">28 POEMS OF HON. RODEN NOEL. Portrait of Hon. R. Noel.</li>
-<li class="book">29 AMERICAN HUMOROUS VERSE. Portrait of Mark Twain.</li>
-<li class="book">30 SONGS OF FREEDOM. With Portrait of William Morris.</li>
-<li class="book">31 SCOTTISH MINOR POETS. With Portrait of R. Tannahill.</li>
-<li class="book">32 CONTEMPORARY SCOTTISH VERSE. With Portrait of Robert Louis Stevenson.</li>
-<li class="book">33 PARADISE REGAINED. With Portrait of Milton.</li>
-<li class="book">34 CAVALIER POETS. With Portrait of Suckling.</li>
-<li class="book">35 HUMOROUS POEMS. With Portrait of Hood.</li>
-<li class="book">36 HERBERT. With Portrait of Herbert.</li>
-<li class="book">37 POE. With Portrait of Poe.</li>
-<li class="book">38 OWEN MEREDITH. With Portrait of late Lord Lytton.</li>
-<li class="book">39 LOVE LYRICS. With Portrait of Raleigh.</li>
-<li class="book">40 GERMAN BALLADS. With Portrait of Schiller.</li>
-<li class="book">41 CAMPBELL. With Portrait of Campbell.</li>
-<li class="book">42 CANADIAN POEMS. With View of Mount Stephen.</li>
-<li class="book">43 EARLY ENGLISH POETRY. With Portrait of Earl of Surrey.</li>
-<li class="book">44 ALLAN RAMSAY. With Portrait of Ramsay.</li>
-<li class="book">45 SPENSER. With Portrait of Spenser.</li>
-<li class="book">46 CHATTERTON. With Engraving, “The Death of Chatterton.”</li>
-<li class="book">47 COWPER. With Portrait of Cowper.</li>
-<li class="book">48 CHAUCER. With Portrait of Chaucer.</li>
-<li class="book">49 COLERIDGE. With Portrait of Coleridge.</li>
-<li class="book">50 POPE. With Portrait of Pope.</li>
-<li class="book">51 BYRON. Miscellaneous. } With Portraits of Byron.</li>
-<li class="book">52 BYRON. Don Juan. }</li>
-<li class="book">53 JACOBITE SONGS. With Portrait of Prince Charlie.</li>
-<li class="book">54 BORDER BALLADS. With View of Neidpath Castle.</li>
-<li class="book">55 AUSTRALIAN BALLADS. With Portrait of A. L. Gordon.</li>
-<li class="book">56 HOGG. With Portrait of Hogg.</li>
-<li class="book">57 GOLDSMITH. With Portrait of Goldsmith.</li>
-<li class="book">58 MOORE. With Portrait of Moore.</li>
-<li class="book">59 DORA GREENWELL. With Portrait of Dora Greenwell.</li>
-<li class="book">60 BLAKE. With Portrait of Blake.</li>
-<li class="book">61 POEMS OF NATURE. With Portrait of Andrew Lang.</li>
-<li class="book">62 PRAED. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">63 SOUTHEY. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">64 HUGO. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">65 GOETHE. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">66 BERANGER. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">67 HEINE. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">68 SEA MUSIC. With View of Corbière Rocks, Jersey.</li>
-<li class="book">69 SONG-TIDE. With Portrait of Philip Bourke Marston.</li>
-<li class="book">70 LADY OF LYONS. With Portrait of Bulwer Lytton.</li>
-<li class="book">71 SHAKESPEARE: Songs and Sonnets. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">72 CRABBE. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">73 BEN JONSON. With Portrait.</li>
-<li class="book">74 CRADLE SONGS. With Drawing by T. Eyre Macklin.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="center smaller">London: <span class="smcap">Walter Scott, Limited</span>, Paternoster Square.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>MR. GEORGE MOORE’S NEW NOVEL.</h2>
-
-<p class="center">Cloth, Crown 8vo, Price 6s.</p>
-
-<h3>ESTHER WATERS: A Novel.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By GEORGE MOORE.</span></p>
-
-<p>“Strong, vivid, sober, yet undaunted in its realism, full to the brim of observation
-of life and character, <i>Esther Waters</i> is not only immeasurably superior
-to anything the author has ever written before, but it is one of the most
-remarkable works that has appeared in print this year, and one which does
-credit not only to the author, but the country in which it has been written.”&mdash;<i>The
-World.</i></p>
-
-<p>“As we live the book through again in memory, we feel more and more confident
-that Mr. Moore has once for all vindicated his position among the half-dozen
-living novelists of whom the historian of English literature will have to
-take account.”&mdash;<i>Daily Chronicle.</i></p>
-
-<p>“It may be as well to set down, beyond possibility of misapprehension, my
-belief that in <i>Esther Waters</i> we have the most artistic, the most complete, and
-the most inevitable work of fiction that has been written in England for at
-least two years.”&mdash;A.T.Q.C. in <i>The Speaker</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly since the time of Defoe have the habits and manners of the
-‘masses’ been delineated as they are delineated here.… <i>Esther Waters</i> is
-the best story that he (Mr. Moore) has written, and one on which he may be
-heartily congratulated.”&mdash;<i>Globe.</i></p>
-
-<p>“Matthew Arnold, reviewing one of Tolstoï’s novels, remarked that the
-Russian novelist seemed to write because the thing happened so, and for no
-other reason. That is precisely the merit of Mr. Moore’s book.… It seems
-inevitable.”&mdash;<i>Westminster Gazette.</i></p>
-
-<h3>OTHER NOVELS BY GEORGE MOORE.</h3>
-
-<p class="center">Crown 8vo, Cloth, 3s. 6d. each.</p>
-
-<ul>
-
-<li class="book">A DRAMA IN MUSLIN. Seventh Edition.</li>
-
-<li class="book">A MODERN LOVER. New Edition.</li>
-
-<li class="book">A MUMMER’S WIFE. Twentieth Edition.</li>
-
-<li class="book">VAIN FORTUNE. New Edition. With Five Illustrations by Maurice Greiffenhagen.
-Crown 8vo, Cloth, 6s.</li>
-
-<li class="book">IMPRESSIONS AND OPINIONS. By Geo. Moore.
-Second Edition, Crown 8vo, Cloth, 6s.</li>
-
-<li class="book">MODERN PAINTING. By George Moore.</li>
-
-</ul>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“Of the very few books on art that painters and critics should on no account
-leave unread this is surely one.”&mdash;<i>Studio.</i></p>
-
-<p>“His book is one of the best books about pictures that have come into our
-hands for some years.”&mdash;<i>St. James’s Gazette.</i></p>
-
-<p>“A more original, a better informed, a more suggestive, and, let us add, a
-more amusing work on the art of to-day, we have never read than this volume.”&mdash;<i>Glasgow
-Herald.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class="center smaller">London: <span class="smcap">Walter Scott, Limited</span>, Paternoster Square.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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