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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of De Libris: Prose and Verse, by Austin Dobson
+
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+
+Title: De Libris: Prose and Verse
+
+Author: Austin Dobson
+
+Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9979]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on November 7, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO Latin-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DE LIBRIS: PROSE AND VERSE ***
+
+
+
+
+Charles Aldarondo, Keren Vergon, Sjaani and the Online Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+DE LIBRIS PROSE & VERSE
+
+BY AUSTIN DOBSON
+
+
+
+Vt Mel Os, sic Cor Melos afficit, & reficit. _Deuteromelia_.
+
+A mixture of a _Song_ doth ever adde Pleasure. BACON (_adapted_).
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LIMITED ST. MARTIN'S STREET, LONDON 1908
+
+
+_Copyright 1908 by The Macmillan Company_
+
+
+
+
+_PROLOGUE_
+
+_LECTOR BENEVOLE!_--FOR SO
+THEY USED TO CALL YOU, YEARS AGO,--
+I CAN'T PRETEND TO MAKE YOU READ
+THE PAGES THAT TO THIS SUCCEED;
+NOR COULD I--IF I WOULD--EXCUSE
+THE WAYWARD PROMPTINGS OF THE MUSE
+AT WHOSE COMMAND I WROTE THEM DOWN.
+
+I HAVE NO HOPE TO "PLEASE THE TOWN."
+I DID BUT THINK SOME FRIENDLY SOUL
+(NOT ILL-ADVISED, UPON THE WHOLE!)
+MIGHT LIKE THEM; AND "TO INTERPOSE
+A LITTLE EASE," BETWEEN THE PROSE,
+SLIPPED IN THE SCRAPS OF VERSE, THAT THUS
+THINGS MIGHT BE LESS MONOTONOUS.
+
+THEN, _LECTOR,_ BE _BENEVOLUS!_
+
+
+
+
+[_The Author desires to express his thanks to Lord Northcliffe, Messrs.
+Macmillan and Co., Messrs. Smith, Elder and Co., Mr. William Heinemann,
+and Messrs. Virtue and Co., for kind permission to reprint those pieces
+in this volume concerning which no specific arrangements were made on
+their first appearance in type._]
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+Prologue
+On Some Books And Their Associations
+An Epistle To An Editor
+Bramston's "Man Of Taste"
+The Passionate Printer To His Love
+M. Rouquet On The Arts
+The Friend Of Humanity And The Rhymer
+The Parent's Assistant
+A Pleasant Invective Against Printing
+Two Modern Book Illustrators--I. Kate Greenaway
+A Song Of The Greenaway Child
+Two Modern Book Illustrators--Ii. Mr. Hugh Thomson
+Horatian Ode On The Tercentenary Of "Don Quixote"
+The Books Of Samuel Rogers
+Pepys' "Diary"
+A French Critic On Bath
+A Welcome From The "Johnson Club"
+Thackeray's "Esmond"
+A Miltonic Exercise
+Fresh Facts About Fielding
+The Happy Printer
+Cross Readings--And Caleb Whitefoord
+The Last Proof
+General Index
+
+
+
+
+_ILLUSTRATIONS_
+
+
+* THE OTTER HUNT IN THE "COMPLEAT ANGLER." From an unpublished
+pen-drawing by Mr. Hugh Thomson _Frontispiece_
+
+*GROUP OF CHILDREN. From the original pen-drawing by Kate Greenaway for
+_The Library,_ 1881
+
+*PENCIL-SKETCHES, by the same (No. 1)
+
+*PENCIL-SKETCH, by the same (No. 2)
+
+*PENCIL-SKETCHES, by the same (No. 3)
+
+*PENCIL-SKETCH, by the same (No. 4)
+
+THE BROWN BOOK-PLATE. From the original design by Mr. Hugh Thomson in
+the possession of Mr. Ernest Brown
+
+*SIR ROGER DE COVERLEY AT THE ASSIZES. From a first rough pencil-sketch,
+by the same, for _Days with Sir Roger de Coverley,_ 1886
+
+PEN-SKETCHES, by the same, on the Half-Title of the _Ballad of Beau
+Brocade,_ 1892. From the originals in the possession of Mr. A.
+T.A. Dobson
+
+*PEN-SKETCH (TRIPLET), by the same, on a Flyleaf of _Peg Woffington,_
+1899
+
+EVELINA AND THE BRANGHTONS, by the same. From the Cranford _Evelina,_
+1903
+
+LADY CASTLEWOOD AND HER SON, by the same. From the Cranford _Esmond_,
+1905
+
+MERCERY LANE, CANTERBURY, by the same. From the original pencil-drawing
+for _Highways and Byways in Kent_, 1907
+
+_The originals of the illustrations preceded by an asterisk are in the
+possession of the Author._
+
+
+
+
+ON SOME BOOKS AND THEIR ASSOCIATIONS
+
+
+New books can have few associations. They may reach us on the best
+deckle-edged Whatman paper, in the newest types of famous presses, with
+backs of embossed vellum, with tasteful tasselled strings,--and yet be
+no more to us than the constrained and uneasy acquaintances of
+yesterday. Friends they may become to-morrow, the day after,--perhaps
+"hunc in annum et plures" But for the time being they have neither part
+nor lot in our past of retrospect and suggestion. Of what we were, of
+what we like or liked, they know nothing; and we--if that be
+possible--know even less of them. Whether familiarity will breed
+contempt, or whether they will come home to our business and
+bosom,--these are things that lie on the lap of the Fates.
+
+But it is to be observed that the associations of old books, as of new
+books, are not always exclusively connected with their text or
+format,--are sometimes, as a matter of fact, independent of both. Often
+they are memorable to us by length of tenure, by propinquity,--even by
+their patience under neglect. We may never read them; and yet by reason
+of some wholly external and accidental characteristic, it would be a
+wrench to part with them if the moment of separation--the inevitable
+hour--should arrive at last. Here, to give an instance in point, is a
+stained and battered French folio, with patched corners,--Mons. N.
+Renouard's translation of the _Metamorphoses d'Ovide_, 1637, "_enrichies
+de figures à chacune Fable_" (very odd figures some of them are!) and to
+be bought "_chez Pierre Billaine, ruë Sainct Iacques, à la Bonne-Foy,
+deuant S. Yues_." It has held no honoured place upon the shelves; it has
+even resided au rez-de-chaussée,--that is to say, upon the floor; but it
+is not less dear,-- not less desirable. For at the back of the
+"Dedication to the King" (Lewis XIII. to wit), is scrawled in a
+slanting, irregular hand: "_Pour mademoiselle de mons Son tres humble et
+tres obeissant Serviteur St. André._" Between the fourth and fifth word,
+some one, in a smaller writing of later date, has added "_par_" and
+after "St. André," the signature "_Vandeuvre_." In these irrelevant (and
+unsolicited) interpolations, I take no interest. But who was Mlle. de
+Mons? As Frederick Locker sings:
+
+ Did She live yesterday or ages back?
+ What colour were the eyes when bright and waking?
+ And were your ringlets fair, or brown, or black,
+ Poor little Head! that long has done with aching![1]
+
+"Ages back" she certainly did _not_ live, for the book is dated "1637,"
+and "yesterday" is absurd. But that her eyes were bright,--nay, that
+they were particularly lively and vivacious, even as they are in the
+sanguine sketches of Antoine Watteau a hundred years afterwards, I am
+"confidous"--as Mrs. Slipslop would say. For my theory (in reality a
+foregone conclusion which I shrink from dispersing by any practical
+resolvent) is, that Mile. de Mons was some delightful
+seventeenth--century French child, to whom the big volume had been
+presented as a picture-book. I can imagine the alert, strait-corseted
+little figure, with ribboned hair, eagerly craning across the tall
+folio; and following curiously with her finger the legends under the
+copper "figures,"--"Narcisse en fleur," "Ascalaphe en hibou," "Jason
+endormant le dragon,"--and so forth, with much the same wonder that the
+Sinne-Beelden of Jacob Cats must have stirred in the little Dutchwomen
+of Middelburg. There can be no Mlle. de Mons but this,--and for me she
+can never grow old!
+
+Note:
+
+[1] This quatrain has the distinction of having been touched upon by
+Thackeray. When Mr. Locker's manuscript went to the Cornhill Magazine
+in 1860, it ran thus:
+
+ Did she live yesterday, or ages sped?
+ What colour were the eyes when bright and waking?
+ And were your ringlets fair? Poor little head!
+ --Poor little heart! that long has done with aching.
+
+
+Sometimes it comes to pass that the association is of a more far-fetched
+and fanciful kind. In the great Ovid it lies in an inscription: in my
+next case it is "another-guess" matter. The folio this time is the
+_Sylva Sylvarum_ of the "Right Hon. Francis Lo. Verulam. Viscount St.
+Alban," of whom some people still prefer to speak as Lord Bacon. 'Tis
+only the "sixt Edition"; but it was to be bought at the Great Turk's
+Head, "next to the Mytre Tauerne" (not the modern pretender, be it
+observed!), which is in itself a feature of interest. A former
+possessor, from his notes, appears to have been largely preoccupied with
+that ignoble clinging to life which so exercised Matthew Arnold, for
+they relate chiefly to laxative simples for medicine; and he comforts
+himself, in April, 1695, by transcribing Bacon's reflection that "a Life
+led in _Religion_ and in _Holy Exercises_" conduces to longevity,--an
+aphorism which, however useful as an argument for length of days, is a
+rather remote reason for religion. But what to me is always most
+seductive in the book is, that to this edition (not copy, of course) of
+1651 Master Izaak Walton, when he came, in his _Compleat Angler_ of
+1653, to discuss such abstract questions as the transmission of sound
+under water, and the ages of carp and pike, must probably have referred.
+He often mentions "Sir Francis Bacon's" _History of Life and Death_,
+which is included in the volume. No doubt it would be more reasonable
+and more "congruous" that Bacon's book should suggest Bacon. But there
+it is. That illogical "succession of ideas" which puzzled my Uncle Toby,
+invariably recalls to me, not the imposing folio to be purchased "next
+to the Mytre Tauerne" in Fleet Street, but the unpretentious
+eighteenpenny octavo which, two years later, was on sale at Richard
+Marriot's in St. Dunstan's churchyard hard by, and did no more than
+borrow its erudition from the riches of the Baconian storehouse.
+
+Life, and its prolongation, is again the theme of the next book (also
+mentioned, by the way, in Walton) which I take up, though unhappily it
+has no inscription. It is a little old calf-clad copy of Lewis Cornaro's
+_Sure and Certain Methods of attaining a Long and Healthful Life_, 4th
+ed., 24mo, 1727; and was bought at the Bewick sale of February, 1884, as
+having once belonged to Robert Elliot Bewick, only son of the famous old
+Newcastle wood-engraver. As will be shown later, it is easy to be misled
+in these matters, but I cannot help believing that this volume, which
+looks as if it had been re-bound, is the one Thomas Bewick mentions in
+his _Memoir_ as having been his companion in those speculative
+wanderings over the Town Moor or the Elswick Fields, when, as an
+apprentice, he planned his future _à la_ Franklin, and devised schemes
+for his conduct in life. In attaining Cornaro's tale of years he did not
+succeed; though he seems to have faithfully practised the periods of
+abstinence enjoined (but probably not observed) by another of the "noble
+Venetian's" professed admirers, Mr. Addison of the _Spectator_.
+
+If I have admitted a momentary misgiving as to the authenticity of the
+foregoing relic of the "father of white line," there can be none about
+the next item to which I now come. Once, on a Westminster bookstall,
+long since disappeared, I found a copy of a seventh edition of the
+_Pursuits of Literature_ of T.J. Mathias, Queen Charlotte's Treasurer's
+Clerk. Brutally cut down by the binder, that _durus arator_ had
+unexpectedly spared a solitary page for its manuscript comment, which
+was thoughtfully turned up and folded in. It was a note to this couplet
+in Mathias, his Dialogue II.:--
+
+ From Bewick's magick wood throw borrow'd rays
+ O'er many a page in gorgeous Bulmer's blaze,--
+
+"gorgeous Bulmer" (the epithet is over-coloured!) being the William
+Bulmer who, in 1795, issued the _Poems of Goldsmith and Parnell_. "I"
+(says the writer of the note) "was chiefly instrumental to this
+ingenious artist's [Bewick's] excellence in this art. I first initiated
+his master, Mr. Ra. Beilby (of Newcastle) into the art, and his first
+essay was the execution of the cuts in my Treatise on Mensuration,
+printed in 4to, 1770. Soon after I recommended the same artist to
+execute the cuts to Dr. Horsley's edition of the works of Newton.
+Accordingly Mr. B. had the job, who put them into the hands of his
+assistant, Mr. Bewick, who executed them as his first work in wood, and
+that in a most elegant manner, tho' spoiled in the printing by John
+Nichols, the Black-letter printer. C.H. 1798."
+
+"C.H." is Dr. Charles Hutton, the Woolwich mathematician. His note is a
+little in the vaunting vein of that "founder of fortun's," the excellent
+Uncle Pumblechook of _Great Expectations_, for his services scarcely
+amounted to "initiating" Bewick or his master into the art of engraving
+on wood. Moreover, his memory must have failed him, for Bewick, and not
+Beilby, did the majority of the cuts to the _Mensuration_, including a
+much-praised diagram of the tower of St. Nicholas Church at Newcastle,
+afterwards a familiar object in the younger man's designs and
+tail-pieces. Be this as it may, Dr. Hutton's note was surely worth
+rescuing from the ruthless binder's plough.
+
+Between the work of Thomas Bewick and the work of Samuel Pepys, it is
+idle to attempt any ingenious connecting link, save the fact that they
+both wrote autobiographically. The "Pepys" in question here, however, is
+not the famous _Diary_, but the Secretary to the Admiralty's "only other
+acknowledged work," namely, the privately printed _Memoires Relating to
+the State of the Royal Navy of England, for Ten Years, 1690_; and this
+copy may undoubtedly lay claim to exceptional interest. For not only
+does it comprise those manuscript corrections in the author's
+handwriting, which Dr. Tanner reproduced in his excellent Clarendon
+Press reprint of last year, but it includes the two portrait plates by
+Robert White after Kneller. The larger is bound in as a frontispiece;
+the smaller (the ex-libris) is inserted at the beginning. The main
+attraction of the book to me, however, is its previous owners--one
+especially. My immediate predecessor was a well-known collector,
+Professor Edward Solly, at whose sale in 1886 I bought it; and he in his
+turn had acquired it in 1877, at Dr. Rimbault's sale. Probably what drew
+us all to the little volume was not so much its disclosure of the
+lamentable state of the Caroline navy, and of the monstrous toadstools
+that flourished so freely in the ill-ventilated holds of His Majesty's
+ships-of-war, as the fact that it had once belonged to that brave old
+philanthropist, Captain Thomas Coram of the Foundling Hospital. To him
+it was presented in March, 1724, by one C. Jackson; and he afterwards
+handed it on to a Mr. Mills. Pasted at the end is Coram's autograph
+letter, dated "June 10th, 1746." "To Mr. Mills These. Worthy Sir I
+happend to find among my few Books, Mr. Pepys his memoires, w'ch I
+thought might be acceptable to you & therefore pray you to accept of it.
+I am w'th much Respect Sir your most humble Ser't. THOMAS CORAM."
+
+At the Foundling Hospital is a magnificent full-length of Coram, with
+curling white locks and kindly, weather-beaten face, from the brush of
+his friend and admirer, William Hogarth. It is to Hogarth and his
+fellow-Governor at the Foundling, John Wilkes, that my next jotting
+relates. These strange colleagues in charity afterwards--as is well
+known--quarrelled bitterly over politics. Hogarth caricatured Wilkes in
+the _Times_: Wilkes replied by a _North Briton_ article (No. 17) so
+scurrilous and malignant that Hogarth was stung into rejoining with that
+famous squint-eyed semblance of his former crony, which has handed him
+down to posterity more securely than the portraits of Zoffany and
+Earlom. Wilkes's action upon this was to reprint his article with the
+addition of a bulbous-nosed woodcut of Hogarth "from the Life." These
+facts lent interest to an entry which for years had been familiar to me
+in the Sale Catalogue of Mr. H.P. Standly, and which ran thus: "The
+NORTH BRITON, No. 17, with a PORTRAIT of HOGARTH in WOOD; _and a severe
+critique on some of his works: in Ireland's handwriting_ is the
+following--'_This paper was given to me by Mrs. Hogarth, Aug. 1782, and
+is the identical North Briton purchased by Hogarth, and carried in his
+pocket many days to show his friends_.'" The Ireland referred to (as
+will presently appear) was Samuel Ireland of the _Graphic
+Illustrations_. When, in 1892, dispersed items of the famous Joly
+collection began to appear sporadically in the second-hand catalogues, I
+found in that of a well-known London bookseller an entry plainly
+describing this one, and proclaiming that it came "from the celebrated
+collection of Mr. Standly, of St. Neots." Unfortunately, the scrap of
+paper connecting it with Mrs. Hogarth's present to Ireland had been
+destroyed. Nevertheless, I secured my prize, had it fittingly bound up
+with the original number which accompanied it; and here and there, in
+writing about Hogarth, bragged consequentially about my fortunate
+acquisition. Then came a day--a day to be marked with a black
+stone!--when in the British Museum Print Room, and looking through the
+"--Collection," for the moment deposited there, I came upon _another_
+copy of the _North Briton_, bearing in Samuel Ireland's writing a
+notification to the effect that it was the Identical No. 17, etc., etc.
+Now which is the right one? Is either the right one? I inspect mine
+distrustfully. It is soiled, and has evidently been folded; it is
+scribbled with calculations; it has all the aspect of a _vénérable
+vétusté_. That it came from the Standly collection, I am convinced. But
+that other pretender in the (now dispersed) "--Collection"? And was
+not Samuel Ireland (_nomen invisum_!) the, if not fraudulent, at least
+too-credulous father of one William Henry Ireland, who, at eighteen,
+wrote _Vortigern and Rowena_, and palmed it off as genuine Shakespeare?
+I fear me--I much fear me--that, in the words of the American showman,
+I have been "weeping over the wrong grave."
+
+To prolong these vagrant adversaria would not be difficult. Here, for
+example, dated 1779, are the _Coplas_ of the poet Don Jorge Manrique,
+which, having no Spanish, I am constrained to study in the renderings of
+Longfellow. Don Jorge was a Spaniard of the Spaniards, Commendador of
+Montizon, Knight of the Order of Santiago, Captain of a company in the
+Guards of Castile, and withal a valiant _soldado_, who died of a wound
+received in battle. But the attraction of my volume is, that, at the
+foot of the title-page, in beautiful neat script, appear the words,
+"Robert Southey. Paris. 17 May 1817,"--being the year in which Southey
+stayed at Como with Walter Savage Landor. Here are the _Works_ of
+mock-heroic John Philips, 1720, whose _Blenheim_ the Tories pitted
+against Addison's _Campaign_, and whose _Splendid Shilling_ still shines
+lucidly among eighteenth-century parodies. This copy bears--also on the
+title-page--the autograph of James Thomson, not yet the author of _The
+Seasons_; and includes the book-plate of Lord Prestongrange,--that
+"Lord Advocate Grant" of whom you may read in the _Kidnapped_ of
+"R.L.S." Here again is an edition (the first) of Hazlitt's _Lectures on
+the English Comic Writers_, annotated copiously in MS. by a contemporary
+reader who was certainly not an admirer; and upon whom W.H.'s
+cockneyisms, Gallicisms, egotisms, and "_ille_-isms" generally, seem to
+have had the effect of a red rag upon an inveterately insular bull. "A
+very ingenious but pert, dogmatical, and Prejudiced Writer" is his
+uncomplimentary addition to the author's name. Then here is Cunningham's
+_Goldsmith_ of 1854, vol. i., castigated with equal energy by that
+Alaric Alexander Watts,[2] of whose egregious strictures upon Wordsworth
+we read not long since in the _Cornhill Magazine_, and who will not
+allow Goldsmith to say, in the _Haunch of Venison_, "the porter and
+eatables followed behind." "They could scarcely have followed
+before,"--he objects, in the very accents of Boeotia. Nor will he pass
+"the hollow-sounding bittern" of the _Deserted Village_. A barrel may
+sound hollow, but not a bird--this wiseacre acquaints us.
+
+Note:
+
+[2] So he was christened. But Lockhart chose to insist that his
+second pre-name should properly be "Attila," and thenceforth he was
+spoken of in this way.
+
+
+Had the gifted author of _Lyrics of the Heart_ never heard of rhetorical
+figures? But he is not Goldsmith's only hyper-critic. Charles Fox, who
+admired _The Traveller_, thought Olivia's famous song in the _Vicar_
+"foolish," and added that "folly" was a bad rhyme to "melancholy."[3] He
+must have forgotten Milton's:--
+
+ Bird that shunn'st the noise of folly,
+ Most musicall, most melancholy!
+
+Or he might have gone to the other camp, and remembered Pope on Mrs.
+Howard:--
+
+ Not warp'd by Passion, aw'd by Rumour,
+ Not grave thro' Pride,, or gay thro' Folly,
+ An equal Mixture of good Humour,
+ And sensible soft Melancholy.
+
+Note:
+
+[3] _Recollections_, by Samuel Rogers, 2nd ed., 1859, 43.
+
+
+
+
+AN EPISTLE TO AN EDITOR
+
+
+"Jamais les arbres verts n'ont essayé d'être bleus."--
+THÉOPHILE GAUTIER.
+
+
+"A new Review!" You make me tremble
+(Though as to that, I can dissemble
+Till I hear more). But is it "new"?
+And will it be a _real_ Review?--
+I mean, a Court wherein the scales
+Weigh equally both him that fails,
+And him that hits the mark?--a place
+Where the accus'd can plead his case,
+If wrong'd? All this I need to know
+Before I (arrogant!) say "Go."
+
+"We, that are very old" (the phrase
+Is STEELE'S, not mine!), in former days,
+Have seen so many "new Reviews"
+Arise, arraign, absolve, abuse;--
+Proclaim their mission to the top
+(Where there's still room!), then slowly drop,
+
+Shrink down, fade out, and _sans_ preferment,
+Depart to their obscure interment;--
+We should be pardon'd if we doubt
+That a new venture _can_ hold out.
+
+It _will_, you say. Then don't be "new";
+Be "old." The Old is still the True.
+Nature (said GAUTIER) never tries
+To alter her accustom'd dyes;
+And all your novelties at best
+Are ancient puppets, newly drest.
+What you must do, is not to shrink
+From speaking out the thing you think;
+And blaming where 'tis right to blame,
+Despite tradition and a Name.
+Yet don't expand a trifling blot,
+Or ban the book for what it's not
+(That is the poor device of those
+Who cavil where they can't oppose!);
+Moreover (this is _very_ old!),
+Be courteous--even when you scold!
+
+Blame I put first, but not at heart.
+You must give Praise the foremost part;--
+Praise that to those who write is breath
+Of Life, if just; if unjust, Death.
+Praise then the things that men revere;
+Praise what they love, not what they fear;
+Praise too the young; praise those who try;
+Praise those who fail, but by and by
+May do good work. Those who succeed,
+You'll praise perforce,--so there's no need
+To speak of that. And as to each,
+See you keep measure in your speech;--
+See that your praise be so exprest
+That the best man shall get the best;
+Nor fail of the fit word you meant
+Because your epithets are spent.
+Remember that our language gives
+No limitless superlatives;
+And SHAKESPEARE, HOMER, _should_ have more
+Than the last knocker at the door!
+
+"We, that are very old!"--May this
+Excuse the hint you find amiss.
+My thoughts, I feel, are what to-day
+Men call _vieux jeu_. Well!--"let them say."
+The Old, at least, we know: the New
+(A changing Shape that all pursue!)
+Has been,--may be, a fraud.
+--But there!
+Wind to your sail! _Vogue la galère!_
+
+
+
+BRAMSTON'S "MAN OF TASTE"
+
+Were you to inquire respectfully of the infallible critic (if such
+indeed there be!) for the source of the aphorism, "Music has charms to
+soothe a savage beast," he would probably "down" you contemptuously in
+the Johnsonian fashion by replying that you had "just enough of learning
+to misquote";--that the last word was notoriously "breast" and not
+"beast";--and that the line, as Macaulay's, and every Board School-boy
+besides must be abundantly aware, is to be found in Congreve's tragedy
+of _The Mourning Bride_. But he would be wrong; and, in fact, would only
+be confirming the real author's contention that "Sure, of all
+blockheads, _Scholars_ are the worst." For, whether connected with
+Congreve or not, the words are correctly given; and they occur in the
+Rev. James Bramston's satire, _The Man of Taste_, 1733, running in a
+couplet as follows:--
+
+ Musick has charms to sooth a savage beast,
+ And therefore proper at a Sheriff's feast.
+
+Moreover, according to the handbooks, this is not the only passage from
+a rather obscure original which has held its own. "Without
+black-velvet-britches, what is man?"--is another (a speculation which
+might have commended itself to Don Quixote);[4] while _The Art of
+Politicks_, also by Bramston, contains a third:--
+
+ What's not destroy'd by Time's devouring Hand?
+ Where's _Troy_, and where's the _May-Pole_ in the _Strand_?
+
+Polonius would perhaps object against a "devouring hand." But the
+survival of--at least--three fairly current citations from a practically
+forgotten minor Georgian satirist would certainly seem to warrant a few
+words upon the writer himself, and his chief performance in verse.
+
+The Rev. James Bramston was born in 1694 or 1695 at Skreens, near
+Chelmsford, in Essex, his father, Francis Bramston, being the fourth son
+of Sir Moundeford Bramston, Master in Chancery, whose father again was
+Sir John Bramston, Lord Chief Justice of the King's Bench, generally
+known as "the elder."[5]James Bramston was admitted to Westminster
+School in 1708. In 1713 he became a scholar at Christ Church, Oxford,
+proceeding B.A. in 1717, and M.A. in 1720. In 1723 he was made Vicar of
+Lurgashall, and in 1725 of Harting, both of which Sussex livings he held
+until his death in March 1744, ten weeks before the death of Pope. His
+first published verses (1715) were on Dr. Radcliffe. In 1729 he printed
+_The Art of Politicks_, one of the many contemporary imitations of the
+_Ars Poetica_; and in 1733 _The Man of Taste_. He also wrote a mediocre
+variation on the _Splendid Shilling_ of John Philips, entitled _The
+Crooked Sixpence_, 1743. Beyond a statement in Dallaway's _Sussex_ that
+"he [Bramston] was a man of original humour, the fame and proofs of
+whose colloquial wit are still remembered"; and the supplementary
+information that, as incumbent of Lurgashall, he received an annual
+_modus_ of a fat buck and doe from the neighbouring Park of Petworth,
+nothing more seems to have been recorded of him.
+
+Notes:
+
+[4] Whose _grand tenue_ or holiday wear--Cervantes tells us--was "a
+doublet of fine cloth and _velvet breeches_ and shoes to match." (ch. 1).
+
+[5] Sir John Bramston, the younger, was the author of the "watery
+incoherent _Autobiography_"--as Carlyle calls it--published by the Camden
+Society in 1845.
+
+
+_The Crooked Sixpence_ is, at best, an imitation of an imitation; and as
+a Miltonic _pastiche_ does not excel that of Philips, or rival the more
+serious _Lewesdon Hill_ of Crowe. _The Art of Politicks_, in its turn,
+would need a fairly long commentary to make what is only moderately
+interesting moderately intelligible, while eighteenth-century copies of
+Horace's letter to the Pisos are "plentiful as blackberries." But _The
+Man of Taste_, based, as it is, on the presentment of a never extinct
+type, the connoisseur against nature, is still worthy of passing notice.
+
+In the sub-title of the poem, it is declared to be "Occasion'd by an
+Epistle of Mr. Pope's on that Subject" [i.e. "Taste"]. This was what is
+now known as No. 4 of the _Moral Essays_, "On the Use of Riches." But
+its first title In 1731 was "Of Taste"; and this was subsequently
+altered to "Of False Taste." It was addressed to Pope's friend, Richard
+Boyle, Earl of Burlington; and, under the style of "Timon's Villa,"
+employed, for its chief illustration of wasteful and vacuous
+magnificence, the ostentatious seat which James Brydges, first Duke of
+Chandos, had erected at Canons, near Edgware. The story of Pope's
+epistle does not belong to this place. But in the print of _The Man of
+Taste_, William Hogarth, gratifying concurrently a personal antipathy,
+promptly attacked Pope, Burlington, and his own _bête noire_,
+Burlington's architect, William Kent. Pope, to whom Burlington acts as
+hodman, is depicted whitewashing Burlington Gate, Piccadilly, which is
+labelled "Taste," and over which rises Kent's statue, subserviently
+supported at the angles of the pediment by Raphael and Michelangelo. In
+his task, the poet, a deformed figure in a tye-wig, bountifully
+bespatters the passers-by, particularly the chariot of the Duke of
+Chandos. The satire was not very brilliant or ingenious; but its meaning
+was clear. Pope was prudent enough to make no reply; though, as Mr. G.S.
+Layard shows in his _Suppressed Plates_, it seems that the print was, or
+was sought to be, called in by those concerned. Bramston's poem, which
+succeeded in 1733, does not enter into the quarrel, it may be because of
+the anger aroused by the pictorial reply. But if--as announced on its
+title-page,--it was suggested by Pope's epistle, it would also seem to
+have borrowed its name from Hogarth's caricature.
+
+It was first issued in folio by Pope's publisher, Lawton Gilliver of
+Fleet Street, and has a frontispiece engraved by Gerard Vandergucht.
+This depicts a wide-skirted, effeminate-looking personage, carrying a
+long cane with a head fantastically carved, and surrounded by various
+objects of art. In the background rises what is apparently intended for
+the temple of a formal garden; and behind this again, a winged ass
+capers skittishly upon the summit of Mount Helicon. As might be
+anticipated, the poem is in the heroic measure of Pope. But though many
+of its couplets are compact and pointed, Bramston has not yet learned
+from his model the art of varying his pausation, and the period closes
+his second line with the monotony of a minute gun. Another defect,
+noticed by Warton, is that the speaker throughout is made to profess the
+errors satirised, and to be the unabashed mouthpiece of his own fatuity,
+"Mine," say the concluding lines,--
+
+ Mine are the gallant Schemes of Politesse,
+ For books, and buildings, politicks, and dress.
+ This is _True Taste_, and whoso likes it not,
+ Is blockhead, coxcomb, puppy, fool, and sot.
+
+One is insensibly reminded of a quotation from P.L. Courier, made in the
+_Cornhill_ many years since by the once famous "Jacob Omnium" when
+replying controversially to the author of _Ionica_, "_Je vois_"--says
+Courier, after recapitulating a string of abusive epithets hurled at him
+by his opponent--"_je vois ce qu'il veut dire: il entend que lui et moi
+sont d'avis different; et c'est là sa manière de s'exprimer_." It was
+also the manner of our Man of Taste.
+
+The second line of the above quotation from Bramston gives us four of
+the things upon which his hero lays down the law. Let us see what he
+says about literature. As a professing critic he prefers books
+with notes:--
+
+ Tho' _Blackmore's_ works my soul with raptures fill,
+ With notes by _Bently_ they'd be better still.
+
+Swift he detests--not of course for detestable qualities, but because he
+is so universally admired. In poetry he holds by rhyme as opposed to
+blank verse:--
+
+ Verse without rhyme I never could endure,
+ Uncouth in numbers, and in sense obscure.
+ To him as Nature, when he ceas'd to see,
+ _Milton's_ an _universal Blank_ to me ...
+ _Thompson _[_sic_] write blank, but know that for that reason
+ These lines shall live, when thine are out of season.
+ Rhyme binds and beautifies the Poet's lays
+ As _London_ Ladies owe their shape to stays.
+
+In this the Man of Taste is obviously following the reigning fashion.
+But if we may assume Bramston himself to approve what his hero condemns,
+he must have been in advance of his age, for blank verse had but sparse
+advocates at this time, or for some time to come. Neither Gray, nor
+Johnson, nor Goldsmith were ever reconciled to what the last of them
+styles "this unharmonious measure." Goldsmith, in particular, would
+probably have been in exact agreement with the couplet as to the
+controlling powers of rhyme. "If rhymes, therefore," he writes, in the
+_Enquiry into Polite Learning_,[6] "be more difficult [than blank
+verse], for that very reason, I would have our poets write in rhyme.
+Such a restriction upon the thought of a good poet, often lifts and
+encreases the vehemence of every sentiment; for fancy, like a fountain,
+plays highest by diminishing the aperture."[7]
+
+Notes:
+
+[6] Ed. 1759, p. 151.
+
+[7] Montaigne has a somewhat similar illustration: "As _Cleanthes_ The
+Man of Taste's idol, in matters dramatic, is said, that as the voice
+being forciblie pent in the narrow gullet of a trumpet, at last issueth
+forth more strong and shriller, so me seemes, that a sentence cunningly
+and closely couched in measure-keeping Posie, darts it selfe forth more
+furiously, and wounds me even to the quicke".
+(_Essayes_, bk. i. ch. xxv. (Florio's translation).
+
+
+The Man of Taste's idol, in matters dramatic, is Colley Cibber, who,
+however, deserves the laurel he wears, not for _The Careless Husband_,
+his best comedy, but for his Epilogues and other Plays.
+
+ It pleases me, that _Pope_ unlaurell'd goes,
+ While _Cibber_ wears the Bays for Play-house Prose,
+ So _Britain's_ Monarch once uncover'd sate,
+ While _Bradshaw_ bully'd in a broad-brimmed hat,--
+
+a reminiscence of King Charles's trial which might have been added to
+Bramston stock quotations. The productions of "Curll's chaste press" are
+also this connoisseur's favourite reading,--the lives of players in
+particular, probably on the now obsolete grounds set forth in Carlyie's
+essay on Scott.[8] Among these the memoirs of Cibber's "Lady Betty
+Modish," Mrs. Oldfield, then lately dead, and buried in Westminster
+Abbey, are not obscurely indicated.
+
+Note:
+
+[8] "It has been said. 'There are no English lives worth reading except
+those of Players, who by the nature of the case have bidden Respectability
+good-day.'"
+
+In morals our friend--as might be expected _circa_ l730--is a
+Freethinker and Deist. Tindal is his text-book: his breviary the _Fable
+of the Bees_;--
+
+ T' Improve In Morals _Mandevil_ I read,
+ And _Tyndal's_ Scruples are my settled Creed.
+ I travell'd early, and I soon saw through
+ Religion all, e'er I was twenty-two.
+ Shame, Pain, or Poverty shall I endure,
+ When ropes or opium can my ease procure?
+ When money's gone, and I no debts can pay,
+ Self-murder is an honourable way.
+ As _Pasaran_ directs I'd end my life,
+ And kill myself, my daughter, and my wife.
+
+He would, of course, have done nothing of the kind; nor, for the matter
+of that, did his Piedmontese preceptor.[9]
+
+Note:
+
+[9] Count Passeran was a freethinking nobleman who wrote _A
+Philosophical Discourse on Death_, in which he defended suicide, though
+he refrained from resorting to it himself. Pope refers to him in the
+_Epilogue to the Satires_, Dialogue i. 124:--
+
+ If Blount despatch'd himself, he play'd the man,
+ And so may'st thou, illustrious Passeran!
+
+
+_Nil admirari_ is the motto of the Man of Taste in Building, where he is
+naturally at home. He can see no symmetry in the Banqueting House, or in
+St. Paul's Covent Garden, or even in St. Paul's itself.
+
+ Sure wretched _Wren_ was taught by bungling _Jones_,
+ To murder mortar, and disfigure stones!
+
+"Substantial" Vanbrugh he likes-=chiefly because his work would make
+"such noble ruins." Cost is his sole criterion, and here he, too, seems
+to glance obliquely at Canons:--
+
+ _Dorick, Ionick,_ shall not there be found,
+ But it shall cost me threescore thousand pound.
+
+But this was moderate, as the Edgware "folly" reached £250,000. In
+Gardening he follows the latest whim for landscape. Here is his
+burlesque of the principles of Bridgeman and Batty Langley:--
+
+ Does it not merit the beholder's praise,
+ What's high to sink? and what is low to raise?
+ Slopes shall ascend where once a green-house stood,
+ And in my horse-pond I will plant a wood.
+ Let misers dread the hoarded gold to waste,
+ Expence and alteration show a _Taste_.
+
+As a connoisseur of Painting this enlightened virtuoso is given over to
+Hogarth's hated dealers in the Black Masters:--
+
+ In curious paintings I'm exceeding nice,
+ And know their several beauties by their _Price_.
+ _Auctions_ and _Sales_ I constantly attend,
+ But chuse my pictures by a _skilful Friend_,
+ Originals and copies much the same,
+ The picture's value is the _painter's name_.[10]
+
+Of Sculpture he says--
+
+ In spite of _Addison_ and ancient _Rome_,
+ Sir _Cloudesly Shovel's_ is my fav'rite tomb.[11]
+ How oft have I with admiration stood,
+ To view some City-magistrate in wood?
+ I gaze with pleasure on a Lord May'r's head
+ Cast with propriety in gilded lead,--
+
+the allusion being obviously to Cheere's manufactory of such popular
+garden decorations at Hyde Park Corner.
+
+Notes:
+
+[10]: See _post_, "M. Ronquet on the Arts," p. 51.
+
+[11]: "Sir _Cloudesly Shovel's_ Monument has very often given me great
+Offence: Instead of the brave rough English Admiral, which was the
+distinguishing Character of that plain, gallant Man, he is represented
+on his Tomb [in Westminster Abbey] by the Figure of a Beau, dressed in a
+long Perriwig, and reposing himself upon Velvet Cushions under a Canopy
+of State" (_Spectator_, March 30, 1711).
+
+
+In Coins and Medals, true to his instinct for liking the worst the best,
+he prefers the modern to the antique. In Music, with Hogarth's Rake two
+years later, he is all for that "Dagon of the nobility and gentry,"
+imported song:--
+
+ Without _Italian_, or without an ear,
+ To _Bononcini's_ musick I adhere;--
+
+though he confesses to a partiality for the bagpipe on the ground that
+your true Briton "loves a grumbling noise," and he favours organs and
+the popular oratorios. But his "top talent is a bill of fare":--
+
+ Sir Loins and rumps of beef offend my eyes,[12]
+ Pleas'd with frogs fricass[e]ed, and coxcomb-pies.
+ Dishes I chuse though little, yet genteel,
+ _Snails_[13] the first course, and _Peepers_[14] crown the meal.
+ Pigs heads with hair on, much my fancy please,
+ I love young colly-flowers if stew'd in cheese,
+ And give ten guineas for a pint of peas!
+ No tatling servants to my table come,
+ My Grace is _Silence_, and my waiter _Dumb_.
+
+He is not without his aspirations.
+
+ Could I the _priviledge_ of _Peer_ procure,
+ The rich I'd bully, and oppress the poor.
+ To _give_ is wrong, but it is wronger still,
+ On any terms to _pay_ a tradesman's bill.
+ I'd make the insolent Mechanicks stay,
+ And keep my ready-money all for _play_.
+ I'd try if any pleasure could be found
+ In _tossing-up_ for twenty thousand pound.
+ Had I whole Counties, I to _White's_ would go,
+ And set lands, woods, and rivers at a throw.
+ But should I meet with an unlucky run,
+ And at a throw be gloriously undone;
+ My _debts of honour_ I'd discharge the first,
+ Let all my _lawful creditors_ be curst.
+
+Notes:
+
+[12] As they did those of Goldsmith's "Beau Tibbs." "I hate your
+immense loads of meat ... extreme disgusting to those who are in the
+least acquainted with high life" (_Citizen of the World_, 1762, i.
+241).
+
+[13]: The edible or Roman snail (_Helix pomatia_) is still
+known to continental cuisines--and gipsy camps. It was introduced into
+England as an epicure's dish in the seventeenth century.
+
+[14]: Young chickens.
+
+
+Here he perfectly exemplifies that connexion between connoisseurship and
+play which Fielding discovers in Book xiii. of _Tom Jones_.[15] An
+anecdote of C.J. Fox aptly exhibits the final couplet in action, and
+proves that fifty years later, at least, the same convenient code was in
+operation. Fox once won about eight thousand pounds at cards. Thereupon
+an eager creditor promptly presented himself, and pressed for payment.
+"Impossible, Sir," replied Fox," I must first discharge my debts of
+honour." The creditor expostulated. "Well, Sir, give me your bond." The
+bond was delivered to Fox, who tore it up and flung the pieces into the
+fire. "Now, Sir," said he, "my debt to you is a debt of honour," and
+immediately paid him.[16]
+
+Notes:
+
+[15] "But the science of gaming is that which above all others
+employs their thoughts [i.e. the thoughts of the 'young gentlemen of our
+times']. These are the studies of their graver hours, while for their
+amusements they have the vast circle of connoisseurship, painting,
+music, statuary, and natural philosophy, or rather _unnatural_, which
+deals in the wonderful, and knows nothing of nature, except her monsters
+and imperfections" (ch. v.).
+
+[16] _Table Talk of Samuel Rogers_ [by Dyce], 1856, p. 73.
+
+
+But we must abridge our levies on Pope's imitator. In Dress the Man of
+Taste's aim seems to have been to emulate his own footman, and at this
+point comes in the already quoted reference to velvet
+"inexpressibles"--(a word which, the reader may be interested to learn,
+is as old as 1793). His "pleasures," as might be expected, like those of
+Goldsmith's Switzers, "are but low"--
+
+ To boon companions I my time would give,
+ With players, pimps, and parasites I'd live.
+ I would with _Jockeys_ from _Newmarket_ dine,
+ And to _Rough-riders_ give my choicest wine ...
+ My ev'nings all I would with _sharpers_ spend,
+ And make the _Thief-catcher_ my bosom friend.
+ In _Fig_, the Prize-fighter, by day delight,
+ And sup with _Colly Cibber_ ev'ry night.
+
+At which point--and probably in his cups--we leave our misguided fine
+gentleman of 1733, doubtless a fair sample of many of his class under
+the second George, and not wholly unknown under that monarch's
+successors--even to this hour. _Le jour va passer; mais la folie ne
+passera pas!_
+
+A parting quotation may serve to illustrate one of those changes of
+pronunciation which have taken place in so many English words. Speaking
+of his villa, or country-box, the Man of Taste says--
+
+ Pots o'er the door I'll place like Cits balconies,
+ Which _Bently_ calls the _Gardens of Adonis_.
+
+To make this a peg for a dissertation on the jars of lettuce and fennel
+grown by the Greeks for the annual Adonis festivals, is needless. But it
+may be noted that Bramston, with those of his day,--Swift
+excepted,--scans the "o" in balcony long, a practice which continued far
+into the nineteenth century. "Cóntemplate," said Rogers, "is bad enough;
+but balcony makes me sick."[17] And even in 1857, two years after
+Rogers's death, the late Frederick Locker, writing of _Piccadilly_,
+speaks of "Old Q's" well-known window in that thoroughfare as
+"Primrose balcony."
+
+Note:
+
+[17:]_Table Talk_, 1856, p. 248.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSIONATE PRINTER TO HIS LOVE
+
+
+(_Whose name is Amanda._)
+
+With Apologies to the Shade of Christopher Marlowe.
+
+
+Come live with me and be my Dear;
+ And till that happy bond shall lapse,
+I'll set your Poutings in _Brevier_,[l8]
+ Your Praises in the largest CAPS.
+
+There's _Diamond_--'tis for your Eyes;
+ There's _Ruby_--that will match your Lips;
+_Pearl_, for your Teeth; and _Minion_-size.
+ To suit your dainty Finger-tips.
+
+In _Nonpareil_ I'll put your Face;
+ In _Rubric_ shall your Blushes rise;
+There is no _Bourgeois_ in _your_ Case;
+ Your _Form_ can never need "_Revise_."
+
+Your Cheek seems "_Ready for the Press_";
+ Your Laugh as _Clarendon_ is clear;
+There's more distinction in your Dress
+ Than in the oldest _Elzevir_.
+
+So with me live, and with me die;
+ And may no "FINIS" e'er intrude
+To break into mere "_Printers' Pie_"
+ The Type of our Beatitude!
+
+(ERRATUM.--If my suit you flout,
+ And choose some happier Youth to wed,
+'Tis but to cross AMANDA out,
+ And read another name instead.)
+
+Note:
+
+[18] "Pronounced Bre-veer" (Printers' Vocabulary).
+
+
+
+
+M. ROUQUET ON THE ARTS
+
+
+M. Rouquet's book is a rare duodecimo of some two hundred pages, bound
+in sheep, which, in the copy before us, has reached that particular
+stage of disintegration when the scarfskin, without much persuasion,
+peels away in long strips. Its title is--_L'État des Arts, en
+Angleterre. Par M. Rouquet, de l'Académie Royale de Peinture & de
+Sculpture_; and it is "_imprime à Paris_" though it was to be obtained
+from John Nourse, "_Libraire dans le_ Strand, _proche_ Temple-barr"--a
+well-known importer of foreign books, and one of Henry Fielding's
+publishers. The date is 1755, being the twenty-eighth year of the reign
+of His Majesty King George the Second--a reign not generally regarded as
+favourable to art of any kind. In what month of 1755 the little volume
+was first put forth does not appear; but it must have been before
+October, when Nourse issued an English version. There is a dedication,
+in the approved French fashion, to the Marquis de Marigny, "_Directeur &
+Ordonnateur Général de ses Bâtimens, Jardins, Arts, Académies &
+Manufactures_" to Lewis the Fifteenth, above which is a delicate
+headpiece by M. Charles-Nicolas Cochin (the greatest of the family),
+where a couple of that artist's well-nourished _amorini_, insecurely
+attached to festoons, distribute palms and laurels in vacuity under a
+coroneted oval displaying fishes. For Monsieur Abel-François Poisson,
+Marquis de Marigny et de Ménars, was the younger brother of
+Jeanne-Antoinette Poisson, the celebrated Marquise de Pompadour.
+Cochin's etching is dated "1754"; and the "Approbation" at the end of
+the volume bears his signature in his capacity of _Censeur_.
+
+Of the "M. Rouquet" of the title-page biography tells us little; but it
+may be well, before speaking of his book, to bring that little together.
+He was a Swiss Protestant of French extraction, born at Geneva in 1702.
+His Christian names were Jean-André; and he had come to England from his
+native land towards the close of the reign of George the First. Many of
+his restless compatriots also sought these favoured shores. Labelye, who
+rose from a barber's shop to be the architect of London Bridge; Liotard,
+once regarded as a rival of Reynolds; Michael Moser, eventually Keeper
+of the Royal Academy, had all migrated from the "stormy mansions" where,
+in the words of Goldsmith's philosophic Wanderer--
+
+ Winter ling'ring chills the lap of May.
+
+Like Moser, Rouquet was a chaser and an enameller. He lodged on the
+south side of Leicester Fields, in a house afterwards the residence of
+another Switzer of the same craft, that miserable Theodore Gardelle, who
+in 1761 murdered his landlady, Mrs. King. Of Rouquet's activities as an
+artist in England there are scant particulars. The ordinary authorities
+affirm that he imitated and rivalled the popular miniaturist and
+enameller, Christian Zincke, who retired from practice in 1746; and he
+is loosely described as "the companion of Hogarth, Garrick, Foote, and
+the wits of the day." Of his relations with Foote and Garrick there is
+scant record; but with Hogarth, his near neighbour in the Fields, he was
+certainly well acquainted, since in 1746 he prepared explanations in
+French for a number of Hogarth's prints. These took the form of letters
+to a friend at Paris, and are supposed to have been, if not actually
+inspired, at least approved by the painter. They usually accompanied all
+the sets of Hogarth's engravings which went abroad; and, according to
+George Steevens, it was Hogarth's intention ultimately to have them
+translated and enlarged. Rouquet followed these a little later by a
+separate description of "The March to Finchley," designed specially for
+the edification of Marshal Foucquet de Belle-Isle, who, when the former
+letters had been written, was a prisoner of war at Windsor. In a brief
+introduction to this last, the author, hitherto unnamed, is spoken of as
+"_Mr. Rouquet, connu par ses Outrages d'Émail_."
+
+After thirty years' sojourn in this country, Rouquet transferred himself
+to Paris. At what precise date he did this is not stated, but by a
+letter to Hogarth from the French capital, printed by John Ireland, the
+original of which is in the British Museum, he was there, and had been
+there several months, in March 1753. The letter gives a highly
+favourable account of its writer's fortunes. Business is "coming in very
+smartly," he says. He has been excellently received, and is "perpetualy
+imploy'd." There is far more encouragement for modern enterprise in
+Paris than there is in London; and some of his utterances must have
+rejoiced the soul of his correspondent. As this, for instance--"The
+humbug _virtu_ is much more out of fashon here than in England, free
+thinking upon that & other topicks is more common here than amongst you
+if possible, old pictures & old stories fare's alike, a dark picture is
+become a damn'd picture." On this account, he inquires anxiously as to
+the publication of his friend's forthcoming _Analysis_; he has been
+raising expectations about it, and he wishes to be the first to
+introduce it into France. From other sources we learn that (perhaps
+owing to his relations with Belle-Isle, who had been released in 1745)
+he had been taken up by Marigny, and also by Cochin, then keeper of the
+King's Drawings, and soon to be Secretary to the Academy, of which
+Rouquet himself, by express order of Lewis the Fifteenth, was made a
+member. Finally, as in the case of Cochin, apartments were assigned to
+him in the Louvre. Whether he ever returned to this country is doubtful;
+but, as we have seen, the _État des Arts_ was printed at Paris in 1755.
+That it was suggested--or "commanded"--by Mme. de Pompadour's
+connoisseur brother, to whom it was inscribed, is a not unreasonable
+supposition.
+
+In any case, M. Rouquet's definition of the "Arts" is a generous one,
+almost as wide as Marigny's powers, already sufficiently set forth at
+the outset of this paper. For not only--as in duty bound--does he treat
+of Architecture, Sculpture, Painting and Engraving, but he also has
+chapters on Printing, Porcelain, Gold-and Silver-smiths' Work, Jewelry,
+Music, Declamation, Auctions, Shop-fronts, Cooking, and even on Medicine
+and Surgery. Oddly enough, he says nothing of one notable art with which
+Marigny was especially identified, that "art of creating landscape"--as
+Walpole happily calls Gardening--which, in this not very "shining
+period," entered upon a fresh development under Bridgeman and William
+Kent. Although primarily a Londoner, one would think that M. Rouquet
+must certainly have had some experience, if not of the efforts of the
+innovators, at least of the very Batavian performances of Messrs. London
+and Wise of Brompton; or that he should have found at Nonsuch or
+Theobalds--at Moor Park or Hampton Court--the pretext for some of his
+pages--if only to ridicule those "verdant sculptures" at which Pope, who
+played no small part in the new movement, had laughed in the _Guardian_;
+or those fantastic "coats of arms and mottoes in yew, box and holly"
+over which Walpole also made merry long after in the famous essay so
+neatly done into French by his friend the Duc de Nivernais. M. Rouquet's
+curious reticence in this matter cannot have been owing to any
+consideration for Hogarth's old enemy, William Kent, for Kent had been
+dead seven years when the _État des Arts_ made its appearance.
+
+If, for lack of space, we elect to pass by certain preliminary
+reflections which the _Monthly Review_ rather unkindly dismisses as a
+"tedious jumble," M. Rouquet's first subject is History Painting, a
+branch of the art which, under George the Second, attained to no great
+excellence. For this M. Rouquet gives three main reasons, the first
+being that afterwards advanced by Hogarth and Reynolds, namely,--the
+practical exclusion, in Protestant countries, of pictures from churches.
+A second cause was the restriction of chamber decorations to portraits
+and engravings; and a third, the craze of the connoisseur for Hogarth's
+hated "Black Masters," the productions of defunct foreigners. And this
+naturally brings about the following digression, quite in Hogarth's own
+way, against that contemporary charlatan, the picture-dealer:--"English
+painters have an obstacle to overcome, which equally impedes the
+progress of their talents and of their fortune. They have to contend
+with a class of men whose business it is to sell pictures; and as, for
+these persons, traffic in the works of living, and above all of native
+artists, would be impossible, they make a point of decrying them, and,
+as far as they can, of confirming amateurs with whom they have to deal
+in the ridiculous idea that the older a picture is the more valuable it
+becomes. See, say they (speaking of some modern effort), it still shines
+with that ignoble freshness which is to be found in nature; Time will
+have to indue it with his learned smoke--with that sacred cloud which
+must some day hide it from the profane eyes of the vulgar in order to
+reveal to the initiated alone the mysterious beauties of a venerable
+antiquity."
+
+These words are quite in the spirit of Hogarth's later "Time smoking a
+Picture." As a matter of fact, they are reproduced almost textually from
+the writer's letter of five years earlier on the "March to Finchley." To
+return, however, to History Painting. According to Rouquet, its leading
+exponent[19] under George the Second was Francis Hayman of the "large
+noses and shambling legs," now known chiefly as a crony of Hogarth, and
+a facile but ineffectual illustrator of Shakespeare and Cervantes. In
+1754, however, his pictures of _See-Saw, Hot Cockles, Blind Man's Buff_,
+and the like, for the supper-boxes at Vauxhall Gardens, with Sayer's
+prints therefrom, had made his name familiar, although he had not yet
+painted those more elaborate compositions in the large room next the
+rotunda, over which Fanny Burney's "Holborn Beau," Mr, Smith, comes to
+such terrible grief in ch. xlvi. of _Evelina_. But he had contributed a
+"Finding of Moses" to the New Foundling Hospital, which is still to be
+seen in the Court Room there, in company with three other pictures
+executed concurrently for the remaining compartments, Joseph Highmore's
+"Hagar and Ishmael," James Wills's "Suffer little Children," and
+Hogarth's "Moses brought to Pharaoh's Daughter"--the best of the four,
+as well as the most successful of Hogarth's historical pieces. All
+these, then recently installed, are mentioned by Rouquet.
+
+Note:
+
+[19] This is confirmed by Arthur Murphy: "Every Thing is put out
+of Hand by this excellent Artist with the utmost Grace and Delicacy, and
+his History-Pieces have, besides their beautiful Colouring, the most
+lively Expression of Character" (_Gray's Inn Journal, February
+9, 1754_).
+
+
+It will be observed that he says nothing about Hogarth's earlier and
+more ambitious efforts in the "Grand Style," the "Pool of Bethesda" and
+the "Good Samaritan" at St. Bartholomew's, nor of the "Paul before
+Felix," also lately added to Lincoln's Inn Hall--omissions which must
+have sadly exercised the "author" of those monumental works when he came
+to read his Swiss friend's little treatise. Nor, for the matter of that,
+does M. Rouquet, when he treats of portrait, refer to Hogarth's
+masterpiece in this kind, the full-length of Captain Coram at the
+Foundling. On the other hand, he says a great deal about Hogarth which
+has no very obvious connection with History Painting. He discusses the
+_Analysis_ and the serpentine Line of Beauty with far more insight than
+many of its author's contemporaries; refers feelingly to the Act by
+which in 1735 the painter had so effectively cornered the pirates; and
+finally defines his satirical pictures succinctly as follows:--"M.
+Hogarth has given to England a new class of pictures. They contain a
+great number of figures, usually seven or eight inches high. These
+remarkable performances are, strictly speaking, the history of certain
+vices, to a foreign eye often a little overcharged, but always full of
+wit and novelty. He understands in his compositions how to make pleasant
+pretext for satirising the ridiculous and the vicious, by firm and
+significant strokes, all of which are prompted by a lively, fertile and
+judicious imagination."
+
+From History Painting to Portrait in Oil, the title given by M. Rouquet
+to his next chapter, transition is easy. Some of the artists mentioned
+above were also portrait painters. Besides Captain Coram, for example,
+Hogarth had already executed that admirable likeness of himself which is
+now at Trafalgar Square, and which Rouquet must often have seen in its
+home at Leicester Fields. Highmore too had certainly at this date
+painted more than one successful portrait of Samuel Richardson, the
+novelist; and even Hayman had made essay in this direction with the
+picture of Lord Orford, now in the National Portrait Gallery. A good
+many of the painters of the last reign must also, during Rouquet's
+residence in England, have been alive and active, _e.g._ Jervas, Dahl,
+Aikman, Thornhill and Richardson. But M. Rouquet devotes most of his
+pages in this respect to Kneller, whose not altogether beneficent
+influence long survived him. Strangely enough, Rouquet does not mention
+that egregious and fashionable face-painter, Sir Joshua's master, Thomas
+Hudson, whose "fair tied-wigs, blue velvet coats, and white satin
+waistcoats" (all executed by his assistants) reigned undisputed until he
+was eclipsed by his greater pupil. The two artists in portraiture
+selected by Rouquet for special notice are Allan Ramsay and the younger
+Vanloo (Jean Baptiste). Both were no doubt far above their predecessors;
+but Ramsay would specially appeal to Rouquet by his continental
+training, and Vanloo by his French manner and the superior variety of
+his attitudes.[20] The only other name Rouquet recalls is that of the
+drapery-painter Joseph Vanhaken; and we suspect it is to Rouquet that we
+owe the pleasant anecdote of the two painters who, for the sum of £800 a
+year, pre-empted his exclusive and inestimable services, to the
+wholesale discomfiture of their brethren of the brush. The rest shall be
+told in Rouquet's words:--"The best [artists] were no longer able to
+paint a hand, a coat, a background; they were forced to learn, which
+meant additional labour--what a misfortune! Henceforth there arrived no
+more to Vanhaken from different quarters of London, nor by coach from
+the most remote towns of England, canvases of all sizes, where one or
+more heads were painted, under which the painter who forwarded them had
+been careful to add, pleasantly enough, the description of the figures,
+stout or slim, great or small, which were to be appended. Nothing could
+be more absurd than this arrangement; but it would exist still--if
+Vanhaken existed."[21]
+
+Note:
+
+[20] Another French writer, the Abbé le Blanc, gives a depressing account
+of English portraits before Vanloo came to England: "At some distance one
+might easily mistake a dozen of them for twelve copies of the same original.
+Some have the head turned to the left, others to the right; and this is the
+most sensible difference to be observed between them. Moreover, excepting
+the face, you find in all the same neck, the same arms, the same flesh, the
+same attitude; and to say all, you observe no more life than design in
+those pretended portraits. Properly speaking, they [the artists] are not
+painters, they know how to lay colours on the canvas; but they know not how
+to animate it" (_Letters on the English and French Nations, 1747_, i. 160).
+
+[21] He died in 1749.]
+
+_"La peinture à l'huile, C'est bien difficile; Mais c'est beaucoup plus
+beau Que la peinture à l'eau."_ About _la peinture à l'eau_, M. Rouquet
+says very little, in all probability because the English Water Colour
+School, which, with the advance of topographic art, grew so rapidly in
+the second half of the century, was yet to come. He refers, however,
+with approval to the _gouaches_ of Joseph Goupy, Lady Burlington's
+drawing-master, perhaps better known to posterity by his (or her
+ladyship's) caricature of Handel as the "Charming Brute." (Caricature,
+by the way, is a branch of Georgian Art which M. Rouquet neglects.) As
+regards landscape and animal painting, he "abides in generalities"; but
+he must have been acquainted with the sea pieces of Monamy, and
+Hogarth's and Walpole's friend Samuel Scott; and should, one would
+think, have known of the horses and dogs of Wootton and Seymour. Upon
+Enamel he might be expected to enlarge, although he mentions but one
+master, his own model, Zincke, who carried the art of portrait in this
+way much farther than any predecessor. Moreover, like Petitot, he made
+discoveries which he was wise enough to keep to himself.
+"It is most humiliating," says Rouquet, "for the genius of painting that
+it can sometimes exist alone. M. Zincke left no pupil." Seeing that
+Rouquet is also accused of jealously guarding his own contributions to
+the perfection of his art, the words are--as Diderot says--remarkable.
+
+With Sculpture, chiefly employed at this date for mortuary purposes, he
+has less opportunity of being indefinite, since there were but three
+notabilities, Scheemakers, Rysbrack, and Roubillac,--all foreigners. Of
+these Scheemakers, whom Chesterfield regarded as a mere stone-cutter,
+and who did the Shakespeare in Westminster Abbey, is certainly the least
+considerable. Next come Rysbrack, whom Walpole and Rouquet would put
+highest, the latter apparently because Rysbrack had been spoken of
+contemptuously by the Abbé le Blanc. But the first is assuredly
+Roubillac, whose monument to Mrs. Nightingale, however, belongs to a
+later date than the _État des Arts_, though he had already achieved the
+masterly figure of Eloquence on the Argyll monument. The only other
+sculptor referred to by Rouquet is Gabriel Cibber, whose statues of
+Madness and Melancholy, long at Bedlam, and now at South Kensington,
+certainly deserve his praise. But Cibber died in 1700, and belongs to
+the Caroline epoch. He no doubt owes his place in the _État des Arts_ to
+the fact that he had been abused in the already-mentioned _Letters on
+the English and French Nations_.
+
+At this point we may turn M. Rouquet's pages more rapidly. It is not
+necessary to linger over his account of Silk Stuffs, more excellent in
+his opinion by their material than their make up. Under Medallists he
+commends the clever medals of great men by his compatriot, Anthony
+Dassier; under Printing he refers to that liberty of the Press which, in
+England, amounted to impunity. "A few too thinly disguised blasphemies;
+a few too rash reflections upon the Government, a few defamatory
+libels--are the sole things which, at the present time, are not
+allowed." And this brings about the following lively and very accurate
+description of the eighteenth-century newspaper:--"One of the most
+notable peculiarities which liberty of the Press produces in England, is
+the swarm of fugitive sheets and half-sheets which one sees break forth
+every morning, except Sunday, covering all the coffee-house tables.
+Twenty of these different papers, under different titles, appear each
+day; some contain a moral or philosophical discourse; the majority of
+the rest offer political, and frequently seditious, comments on some
+party question. In them is to be found the news of Europe, England,
+London, and the day before. Their authors profess to be familiar with
+the most secret deliberations of the Cabinet, which they make public. If
+a fire occurs in a chimney or elsewhere; if a theft or a murder has
+taken place; if any one commits suicide from _ennui_ or despair, the
+public is informed thereof on the morning after with the utmost amount
+of detail. After these articles come advertisements of all sorts, and in
+very great numbers. In addition to those of different things which it is
+desired to let, sell or purchase, there are some that are amusing. If a
+man's wife runs away he declares that he will not be liable for any
+debts she may contract; and as a matter of fact, this precaution,
+according to the custom of the country, is essential if he desires to
+secure himself from doing so. He threatens with all the rigour of the
+law those who dare to give his wife an asylum. Another publishes the
+particulars of his fortune, his age and his position, and adds that he
+is prepared to unite himself to any woman whose circumstances are such
+as he requires and describes; he further gives the address where
+communications must be sent for the negotiation and conclusion of the
+business. There are other notices which describe a woman who has been
+seen at the play or elsewhere, and announces that some one has
+determined to marry her. If any one has a dream which seems to him to
+predict that a certain number will be lucky in the lottery, he proclaims
+that fact, and offers a consideration to the possessor of the number if
+he cares to dispose of it."
+
+After these come the advertisements of the Quack Doctors. Of the account
+of belles-lettres in 1754, two years after _Amelia_ and in the actual
+year of _Sir Charles Grandison_, M. Rouquet's report is not
+flattering:--"The presses of England, made celebrated by so many
+masterpieces of wit and science, now scarcely print anything but
+miserable and insipid romances, repulsive volumes, frigid and tedious
+letters, where the most tasteless puerility passes for wit and genius,
+and an inflamed imagination exerts itself under the pretext of forming
+manners." It is possible that the last lines are aimed at Richardson;
+certainly they describe the post-Richardsonian novel. But that the
+passage does not in any part refer to Fielding is clear from the fact
+that the writer presently praises _Joseph Andrews_, coupling it with
+_Gil Blas_.
+
+Mezzotint, Gem-cutting, Chasing (which serves to bring in M. Rouquet's
+countryman, Moser), Jewelry, China, (_i.e._ Chelsea ware) are all
+successfully treated with more or less minuteness, while, under
+Architecture, are described the eighteenth-century house, and the new
+bridge at Westminster of another Swiss, Labelye, who is not named: "The
+architect is a foreigner," says Rouquet, who considered he had been
+inadequately rewarded. "It must be confessed (he adds drily) that in
+England this is a lifelong disqualification." From Architecture the
+writer passes to the oratory of the Senate, the Pulpit and the Stage. In
+the last case exception is made for "_le célébre M. Garic_," whose only
+teacher is declared to be Nature. As regards the rest, M. Rouquet thus
+describes the prevailing style:--"The declamation of the English stage
+is turgid, full of affectation, and perpetually pompous. Among other
+peculiarities, it frequently admits a sort of dolorous exclamation,--a
+certain long-drawn tone of voice, so woeful and so lugubrious that it is
+impossible not to be depressed by it." This reads like a recollection of
+Quin in the Horatio of Rowe's _Fair Penitent_.
+
+Upon Cookery M. Rouquet is edifying; and concerning the
+eighteenth-century physician, with his tye-wig and gilt-head cane,
+sprightly and not unmalicious. But we must now confine ourselves to
+quoting a few detached passages from this discursive chronicle. The
+description of Ranelagh (in the chapter on Music) is too lengthy to
+reproduce. Here is that of the older Vauxhall:--"The Vauxhall concert
+takes place in a garden singularly decorated. The Director of Amusements
+in this garden [Jonathan Tyers] gains and spends successively
+considerable annual sums. He was born for such enterprises. At once
+spirited and tasteful, he shrinks from no expense where the amusement of
+the public is concerned, and the public, in its turn, repays him
+liberally. Every year he adds some fresh decoration, some new and
+exceptional scene. Sculpture, Painting, Music, bestir themselves
+periodically to render this resort more agreeable by the variety of
+their different productions: in this way opportunities of relaxation are
+infinite in England, above all at London; and thus Music plays a
+prominent part. The English take their pleasure without amusing
+themselves, or amuse themselves without enjoyment, except at table, and
+there only up to the point when sleep supervenes to the fumes of wine
+and tobacco."
+
+Elsewhere M. Rouquet, like M. le Blanc before him, is loud in his
+denunciation of the pitiful practices of Vails-giving, which blocks the
+vestibule of every English house with an army of servants "ranged in
+line, according to their rank," and ready "to receive, or rather exact,
+the contribution of every guest." The excellent Jonas Hanway wrote a
+pamphlet reprehending this objectionable custom. Hogarth steadily set
+his face against it; but Reynolds is reported to have given his man £100
+a year for the door. Here, from another place, is a description of one
+of those popular auctions, at which, in the _Marriage À-la-Mode_, my
+Lady Squanderfieid purchases the _bric-à-brac_ of Sir Timothy Babyhouse,
+The scene is probably Cock's in the Piazza at Covent Garden:--"Nothing
+is so diverting as this kind of sale--the number of those assembled, the
+diverse passions which animate them, the pictures, the auctioneer
+himself, his very rostrum, all contribute to the variety of the
+spectacle. There you see the faithless broker purchasing in secret what
+he openly depreciates; or--to spread a dangerous snare--pretending to
+secure with avidity a picture which already belongs to him. There, some
+are tempted to buy; and some repent of having bought. There, out of
+pique and bravado, another shall pay fifty louis for an article which he
+would not have thought worth five and twenty, had he not been ashamed to
+draw back when the eyes of a crowded company were upon him. There, you
+may see a woman of condition turn pale at the mere thought of losing a
+paltry pagoda which she does not want, and, in any other circumstances,
+would never have desired."
+
+A closing word as to M. Rouquet himself. The _État des Arts_ was duly
+noticed by the critics--contemptuously by the _Monthly Review_, and
+sympathetically by the _Gentleman's_ and the _Scots Magazine_. In 1755,
+the year to which it belongs, its author put forth another work--_L'Art
+Nouveau de la Peinture en Fromage ou en Ramequin_ [toasted cheese],
+_inventé pour suivre le louable projet de trouver graduellement des
+facons de peindre inférieures à celles qui existent_. This, as its title
+imports, is a skit, levelled at the recent _Histoire et Secret de la
+Peinture en Cire_ of Diderot, who nevertheless refers to Rouquet under
+_Émail_, in the _Dictionnaire Encyclapédique_, as "_un homme habile_."
+He seems, however (like "_la_ _peinture à l'huile_)," to have been
+somewhat "_difficile_"; and as we have said, his discoveries (for he had
+that useful element in enamel-work, considerable chemical knowledge),
+like Zincke's, perished with him. Several of his portraits, notably
+those of Cochin and Marigny, were exhibited at the Paris Salons. Whether
+he was overparted, or overworked, in the Pompadour atmosphere; or
+whether he succumbed to the "continual headache" of which he speaks in
+his letter to Hogarth, his health gradually declined. In the last year
+of his life, his reason gave way; and when he died in 1759, it was as an
+inmate of Charenton.
+
+
+
+
+THE FRIEND OF HUMANITY AND THE RHYMER
+
+
+"Emam tua carmína sanus?"--MARTIAL.
+
+F. OF H. I want a verse. It gives you little pains;--
+ You just sit down, and draw upon your brains.
+
+ Come, now, be amiable.
+
+R. To hear you talk,
+ You'd make it easier to fly than walk.
+ You seem to think that rhyming is a thing
+ You can produce if you but touch a spring;
+
+ That fancy, fervour, passion--and what not,
+
+ Are just a case of "penny in the slot."
+ You should reflect that no evasive bird
+ Is half so shy as is your fittest word;
+ And even similes, however wrought,
+ Like hares, before you cook them, must be caught;--
+
+ Impromptus, too, require elaboration,
+ And (unlike eggs) grow fresh by incubation;
+ Then,--as to epigrams,..
+
+F. of H. Nay, nay, I've done.
+ I did but make petition. You make fun.
+
+R. Stay. I am grave. Forgive me if I ramble:
+ But, then, a negative needs some preamble
+ To break the blow. I feel with you, in truth,
+ These complex miseries of Age and Youth;
+ I feel with you--and none can feel it more
+ Than I--this burning Problem of the Poor;
+ The Want that grinds, the Mystery of Pain,
+ The Hearts that sink, and never rise again;--
+ How shall I set this to some careless screed,
+ Or jigging stave, when Help is what you need,
+ Help, Help,--more Help?
+
+F. of H. I fancied that with ease
+ You'd scribble off some verses that might please,
+ And so give help to us.
+
+R. Why then--TAKE THESE!
+
+
+
+
+THE PARENT'S ASSISTANT
+
+
+One of the things that perplexes the dreamer--for, in spite of the
+realists, there are dreamers still--is the almost complete extinction of
+the early editions of certain popular works. The pompous, respectable,
+full-wigged folios, with their long lists of subscribers, and their
+magniloquent dedications, find their permanent abiding-places in
+noblemen's collections, where, unless--with the _Chrysostom_ in Pope's
+verses--they are used for the smoothing of bands or the pressing of
+flowers, no one ever disturbs their drowsy diuturnity. Their bulk makes
+them sacred: like the regimental big drum, they are too large to be
+mislaid. But where are all the first copies of that little octavo of 246
+pages, price eighteenpence, "Printed by T. Maxey for Rich. Marriot, in
+S. Dunstans Church-yard, Fleetstreet" in 1653, which constitutes the
+_editio princeps_ of Walton's _Angler_. Probably they were worn out in
+the pockets of Honest Izaak's "brothers of the Angle," or left to bake
+and cockle in the sunny corners of wasp-haunted alehouse windows, or
+dropped in the deep grass by some casual owner, more careful for flies
+and caddis-worms, or possibly for the contents of a leathern bottle,
+than all the "choicely-good" madrigals of Maudlin the milkmaid. In any
+case, there are very few of the little tomes, with their quaint
+"coppers" of fishes, in existence now, nor is it silver that pays for
+them. And that other eighteenpenny book, put forth by "_Nath. Ponder_ at
+the _Peacock_ in the _Poultrey_ near _Cornhil_" five and twenty years
+later,--_The Pilgrim's Progress from This World, to That which is to
+come_,--why is it that there are only five known copies, none quite
+perfect, now extant, of which the best sold not long since for more than
+£1400? Of these five, the first that came to light had been preserved
+owing to its having taken sanctuary, almost upon publication, in a great
+library, where it was forgotten. But the others that passed over Mr.
+Ponder's counter in the Poultry,--were they all lost, thumbed and
+dog's-eared out of being? They are gone,--that is all you can say; and
+gone apparently beyond reach of recovery.
+
+These remarks,--which scarcely rise to the dignity of reflections--have
+been suggested by the difficulty which the writer has experienced in
+obtaining particulars as to the earliest form of the _Parent's
+Assistant_. As a matter of course, children's books are more liable to
+disappear than any others. They are sooner torn, soiled, dismembered,
+disintegratedsooner find their way to that mysterious unlocated limbo of
+lost things, which engulfs so much. Yet one scarcely expected that even
+the British Museum would not have possessed a copy of the first issue of
+Miss Edgeworth's book. Such, however, seems to be the case. According to
+the catalogue, there is nothing earlier at Bloomsbury than a portion of
+the second edition; and from the inexplicit and conjectural manner in
+which most of the author's biographers speak of the work, it can
+scarcely--outside private collections--be very easily accessible.
+Fortunately the old _Monthly Review_ for September, 1796, with most
+exemplary forethought for posterity, gives, as a heading to its notice,
+a precise and very categorical account of the first impression. _The
+Parent's Assistant; or, Stories for Children_ was, it appears, published
+in two parts, making three small duodecimo volumes. The price, bound,
+was six shillings. There was no author's name; but it was said to be "by
+E.M." (i.e. Edgeworth, Maria), and the publisher was Cowper's Dissenter
+publisher, Joseph Johnson of No. 72, St. Paul's Churchyard. Part I.
+contained "The Little Dog Trusty; or, The Liar and the Boy of Truth";
+"The Orange Man; or, the Honest Boy and the Thief"; "Lazy Lawrence";
+"Tarleton"; and "The False Key"; Part II., "The Purple Jar," "The
+Bracelets," "Mademoiselle Panache," "The Birthday Present," "Old Poz,"
+and "The Mimic." In the same year, 1796, a second edition appeared,
+apparently with, some supplementary stories, e.g.: "Barring Out," and in
+1800 came a third edition in six volumes. In this the text was increased
+by "Simple Susan," "The Little Merchants," "The Basket Woman," "The
+White Pigeon," "The Orphans," "Waste Not, Want Not," "Forgive and
+Forget," and "Eton Montem." One story, "The Purple Jar" at the beginning
+of Part II. of the first edition, was withdrawn, and afterwards included
+in another series, while the stories entitled respectively "Little Dog
+Trusty" and "The Orange Man" have disappeared from the collection,
+probably for the reason given in one of the first prefaces, namely, that
+they "were written for a much earlier age than any of the others, and
+with such a perfect simplicity of expression as, to many, may appear
+insipid and ridiculous." The six volumes of the third edition came out
+successively on the first day of the first six months of 1800. The
+Monthly Reviewer of the first edition, it may be added, was highly
+laudatory; and his commendations show that the early critics of the
+author were fully alive to her distinctive qualities, "The moral and
+prudential lessons of these volumes," says the writer, "are judiciously
+chosen; and the stories are invented with great ingenuity, and are
+happily contrived to excite curiosity and awaken feeling without the aid
+of improbable fiction or extravagant adventure. The language is varied
+in its degree of simplicity, to suit the pieces to different ages, but
+is throughout neat and correct; and, without the least approach towards
+vulgarity or meanness, it is adapted with peculiar felicity to the
+understandings of children. The author's taste, in this class of
+writing, appears to have been formed on the best models; and the work
+will not discredit a place on the same shelf with Berquin's _Child's
+Friend_, Mrs. Barbauld's _Lessons for Children_, and Dr. Aikin's
+_Evenings at Home_. The story of 'Lazy Lawrence'"--the notice goes
+on--"is one of the best lectures on industry which we have ever read.
+"The _Critical Review_, which also gave a short account of the _Parent's
+Assistant_ in its number for January 1797, does not rehearse the
+contents. But it confirms the title, etc., adding that the price, in
+boards, was 4s. 6d.; and its praise, though brief, is very much to the
+point. "The present production is particularly sensible and judicious;
+the stories are well written, simple, and affecting; calculated, not
+only for moral improvement, but to exercise the best affections of the
+human heart."
+
+With one of the books mentioned by the _Monthly Review_--_Evenings at
+Home_--Miss Edgeworth was fully prepared, at all events as regards
+format, to associate herself. "The stories," she says in a letter to her
+cousin, Miss Sophy Ruxton, "are printed and bound the same size as
+_Evenings at Home_, and I am afraid you will dislike the title." Her
+father had sent the book to press as the _Parent's Friend_, a name no
+doubt suggested by the _Ami des Enfants_ of Berquin; but "Mr. Johnson
+[the publisher]," continues Miss Edgeworth, "has degraded it into _The
+Parent's Assistant_, which I dislike particularly, from association with
+an old book of arithmetic called The _Tutor's Assistant_." The ground of
+objection is not very formidable; but the _Parent's Assistant_ is
+certainly an infelicitous name. From some other of the author's letters
+we are able to trace the gradual growth of the work. Mr. Edgeworth, her
+father, an utilitarian of much restless energy, and many projects, was
+greatly interested in education,--or, as he would have termed it,
+practical education,--and long before this date, as early, indeed, as
+May 1780, he had desired his daughter, while she was still a girl at a
+London school, to write him a tale about the length of a _Spectator_;
+upon the topic of "Generosity," to be taken from history or romance.
+This was her first essay in fiction; and it was pronounced by the judge
+to whom it was submitted,--in competition with a rival production by a
+young gentleman from Oxford,--to be an excellent story, and extremely
+well written, although with this commendation was coupled the somewhat
+damaging inquiry,--"But where's the Generosity?" The question cannot be
+answered now, as the manuscript has not been preserved, though the
+inconvenient query, we are told, became a kind of personal proverb with
+the young author, who was wont to add that this first effort contained
+"a sentence of inextricable confusion between a saddle, a man, and his
+horse." This was a defect from which she must have speedily freed
+herself, since her style, as her first reviewer allowed, is
+conspicuously direct and clear. Accuracy in speaking and writing had,
+indeed, been early impressed upon her. Her father's doctrinaire ally and
+co-disciplinarian, Mr. Thomas Day, later the author of _Sandford and
+Merton_, and apparently the first person of whom it is affirmed that "he
+talked like a book," had been indefatigable in bringing this home to his
+young friend, when she visited him in her London school-days. Not
+content alone to dose her copiously with Bishop Berkeley's Tar
+Water--the chosen beverage of Young and Richardson--he was unwearied in
+ministering to her understanding. "His severe reasoning and
+uncompromising love of truth awakened her powers, and the questions he
+put to her, the necessity of perfect accuracy in her answers, suited the
+bent of her mind. Though such strictness was not always agreeable, she
+even then perceived its advantages, and in after life was deeply
+grateful to Mr. Day."[22]
+
+Note:
+
+[22] _Maria Edgeworth_, by Helen Zimmern, 1888, p. 13.
+
+
+The training she underwent from the inexorable Mr, Day was continued by
+her father when she quitted school, and moved with her family to the
+parental seat at Edgeworthstown in Ireland. Mr. Edgeworth, whose
+principles were as rigorous as those of his friend, devoted himself
+early to initiating her into business habits. He taught her to copy
+letters, to keep accounts, to receive rents, and, in short, to act as
+his agent and factotum. She frequently accompanied him in the many
+disputes and difficulties which arose with his Irish tenantry; and,
+apart from the insight which this must have afforded her into the
+character and idiosyncrasies of the people, she no doubt very early
+acquired that exact knowledge of leases and legacies and dishonest
+factors which is a noticeable feature even of her children's books.[23]
+It is some time, however, before we hear of any successor to
+"Generosity"; but, in 1782, her father, with a view to provide her with
+an occupation for her leisure, proposed to her to prepare a translation
+of the _Adèle et Théodore_ of Madame de Genlis, those letters upon
+education by which that gentle and multifarious moralist acquired--to
+use her own words--at once "the suffrages of the public, and the
+irreconcilable hatred of all the so-called philosophers and their
+partisans." At first there had been no definite thought of print in Mr,
+Edgeworth's mind. But as the work progressed, the idea gathered
+strength; and he began to prepare his daughter's manuscript for the
+press. Then, unhappily, when the first volume was finished, Holcroft's
+complete translation appeared, and made the labour needless. Yet it was
+not without profit. It had been excellent practice in aiding Miss
+Edgeworth's faculty of expression, and increasing her vocabulary--to say
+nothing of the influence which the portraiture of individuals and the
+satire of reigning follies which are the secondary characteristics of
+Madame de Genlis's most well-known work, may have had on her own
+subsequent efforts as a novelist. Meanwhile her mentor, Mr. Day, was
+delighted at the interruption of her task. He possessed, to the full,
+that rooted antipathy to feminine authorship of which we find so many
+traces in Miss Burney's novels and elsewhere; and he wrote to
+congratulate Mr. Edgeworth on having escaped the disgrace of having a
+translating daughter. At this time, as already stated, he himself had
+not become the author of _Sandford and Merton_, which, as a matter of
+fact, owed its inception to the Edgeworths, being at first simply
+intended as a short story to be inserted in the _Harry and Lucy_ Mr.
+Edgeworth wrote in conjunction with his second wife, Honora Sneyd. As
+regards the question of publication, both Maria and her father, although
+sensible of Mr. Day's prejudices, appear to have deferred to his
+arguments. Nor were these even lost to the public, for we are informed
+that, in Miss Edgeworth's first book, ten years later, the _Letters to
+Literary Ladies,_ she employed and embodied much that he had advanced.
+But for the present, she continued to write--though solely for her
+private amusement--essays, little stories, and dramatic sketches. One of
+these last must have been "Old Poz," a pleasant study of a country
+justice and a _gazza ladra_, which appeared in Part II. of the first
+issue of the _Parent's Assistant_, and which, we are told, was acted by
+the Edgeworth children in a little theatre erected in the dining-room
+for the purpose. According to her sisters, it was Miss Edgeworth's
+practice first to write her stories on a slate, and then to read them
+out. If they were approved, she transcribed them fairly. "Her writing
+for children"--says one of her biographers--"was a natural outgrowth of
+a practical study of their wants and fancies; and her constant care of
+the younger children gave her exactly the opportunity required to
+observe the development of mind incident to the age and capacity of
+several little brothers and sisters." According to her own account, her
+first critic was her father. "Whenever I thought of writing anything, I
+always told him [my father] my first rough plans; and always, with the
+instinct of a good critic, he used to fix immediately upon that which
+would best answer the purpose.--'_Sketch that, and shew it to
+me._'--These words, from the experience of his sagacity, never failed to
+inspire me with hope of success. It was then sketched. Sometimes, when I
+was fond of a particular part, I used to dilate on it in the sketch; but
+to this he always objected--'I don't want any of your painting--none of
+your drapery!--I can imagine all that--let me see the bare skeleton.'"
+
+Note:
+
+[23] Cf. "Attorney Case" in the story of "Simple Susan."
+
+
+Of the first issue of the _Parent's Assistant_ in 1796, a sufficient
+account has already been given. In the "Preface" the practical intention
+of several of the stories is explicitly set forth. "Lazy Lawrence," we
+are told, illustrates the advantages of industry, and demonstrates that
+people feel cheerful and happy whilst they are employed; while
+"Tarleton" represents "the danger and the folly of that weakness of
+mind, and that easiness to be led, which too often pass for good
+nature"; "The False Key" points out some of the evils to which a
+well-educated boy, on first going to service, is exposed from the
+profligacy of his fellow-servants; "The Mimic," the drawback of vulgar
+acquaintances; "Barring Out," the errors to which a high spirit and the
+love of party are apt to lead, and so forth. In the final paragraph
+stress is laid upon what every fresh reader must at once recognise as
+the supreme merit of the stories, namely, their dramatic faculty, or (in
+the actual words of the "Preface"), their art of "keeping alive hope and
+fear and curiosity, by some degree of intricacy."[24] The plausibility
+of invention, the amount of ingenious contrivance and of clever
+expedient in these professedly nursery stories, is indeed extraordinary;
+and nothing can exceed the dexterity with which--to use Dr. Johnson's
+words concerning _She Stoops to Conquer_--"the incidents are so prepared
+as not to seem improbable." There is no better example of this than the
+admirable tale of "The Mimic," in which the most unlooked-for
+occurrences succeed each other in the most natural way, while the
+disappearance at the end of the little sweep, who has levanted up the
+chimney in Frederick's new blue coat and buff waistcoat, is a
+master-stroke. Everybody has forgotten everything about him until the
+precise moment when he is needed to supply the fitting surprise of the
+finish,--a surprise which is only to be compared to that other
+revelation in _The Rose and the Ring_ of Thackeray, where the long-lost
+and obnoxious porter at Valoroso's palace, having been turned by the
+Fairy Blackstick into a door knocker for his insolence, is restored to
+the sorrowing Servants' Hall exactly when his services are again
+required in the capacity of Mrs. Gruffanuffs husband. But in Miss
+Edgeworth's little fable there is no fairy agency. "Fairies were not
+much in her line," says Lady Ritchie, Thackeray's daughter, "but
+philanthropic manufacturers, liberal noblemen, and benevolent ladies in
+travelling carriages, do as well and appear in the nick of time to
+distribute rewards or to point a moral."
+
+Note:
+
+[24] The "Preface to Parents"--Miss Emily Lawless suggests to me--was
+probably by Mr. Edgeworth.
+
+
+Although, by their sub-title, these stories are avowedly composed for
+children, they are almost as attractive to grown-up readers. This is
+partly owing to their narrative skill, partly also to the clear
+characterisation, which already betrays the coming author of _Castle
+Rackrent_ and _Belinda_ and _Patronage_--the last, under its first name
+of _The Freeman Family_, being already partly written, although many
+years were still to pass before it saw the light in 1814. Readers, wise
+after the event, might fairly claim to have foreseen from some of the
+personages in the _Parent's Assistant_ that the author, however sedulous
+to describe "such situations only ... as children can easily imagine,"
+was not able entirely to resist tempting specimens of human nature like
+the bibulous Mr. Corkscrew, the burglar butler in "The False Key," or
+Mrs. Pomfret, the housekeeper of the same story, whose prejudices
+against the _Villaintropic_ Society, and its unholy dealing with the
+"_drugs and refuges_" of humanity, are quite in the style of the Mrs.
+Slipslop of a great artist whose works one would scarcely have expected
+to encounter among the paper-backed and grey-boarded volumes which lined
+the shelves at Edgeworthstown. Mrs. Theresa Tattle, again, in "The
+Mimic," is a type which requires but little to fit it for a subordinate
+part in a novel, as is also Lady Diana Sweepstakes in "Waste not, Want
+not." In more than one case, we seem to detect an actual portrait. Mr.
+Somerville of Somerville ("The White Pigeon"), to whom that "little
+town" belonged,--who had done so much "to inspire his tenantry with a
+taste for order and domestic happiness, and took every means in his
+power to encourage industrious, well-behaved people to settle in his
+neighbourhood,"--can certainly be none other than the father of the
+writer of the _Parent's Assistant_, the busy and beneficent, but surely
+eccentric, Mr. Edgeworth of Edgeworthstown.
+
+When, in 1849, the first two volumes of Macaulay's _History_ were
+issued, Miss Edgeworth, then in her eighty-third winter, was greatly
+delighted to find her name, coupled with a compliment to one of her
+characters, enshrined in a note to chap. vi. But her gratification was
+qualified by the fact that she could discover no similar reference to
+her friend, Sir Walter Scott. The generous "twinge of pain," to which
+she confesses, was intelligible. Scott had always admired her genius,
+and she admired his. In the "General Preface" to the _Waverley Novels_,
+twenty years before, he had gone so far as to say that, without hoping
+to emulate "the rich humour, pathetic tenderness, and admirable tact" of
+Miss Edgeworth, he had attempted to do for his own country what she had
+done for hers; and it is clear, from other sources, that this was no
+mere form of words. And he never wavered in his admiration. In his last
+years, not many months before his death, when he had almost forgotten
+her name, he was still talking kindly of her work. Speaking to Mrs. John
+Davy of Miss Austen and Miss Ferrier, he said: "And there's that Irish
+lady, too--but I forget everybody's name now" ... "she's _very_ clever,
+and best in the little touches too. I'm sure in that children's story,
+where the little girl parts with her lamb, and the little boy brings it
+back to her again, there's nothing for it but just to put down the book
+and cry."[25] The reference is to "Simple Susan," the longest and
+prettiest tale in the _Parent's Assistant_.
+
+Note:
+
+[25] Lockhart's _Life of Sir Walter Scott_, ch. lxxxi. _ad finem_.
+
+
+Another anecdote pleasantly connects the same book with a popular work
+of a later writer. Readers of _Cranford_ will recall the feud between
+the Johnson-loving Miss Jenkyns of that story and its _Pickwick_-loving
+Captain Brown. The Captain--as is well-known--met his death by a railway
+accident, just after he had been studying the last monthly "green
+covers" of Dickens. Years later, the assumed narrator of _Cranford_
+visits Miss Jenkyns, then faliing into senility. She still vaunts _The
+Rambler_; still maunders vaguely of the "strange old book, with the
+queer name, poor Captain Brown was killed for reading-that book by Mr.
+Boz, you know--_Old Poz_; when I was a girl--but that's a long time
+ago--I acted Lucy in _Old Poz_." There can be no mistake. Lucy is the
+justice's daughter in Miss Edgeworth's little chamber-drama.
+
+
+
+
+A PLEASANT INVECTIVE AGAINST PRINTING
+
+"Flee fro the PREES, and dwelle with sothfastnesse."--CHAUCER, _Balade
+de Bon Conseil_.
+
+
+The Press is too much with us, small and great:
+We are undone of chatter and _on dit_,
+Report, retort, rejoinder, repartee,
+Mole-hill and mare's nest, fiction up-to-date,
+Babble of booklets, bicker of debate,
+Aspect of A., and attitude of B.--
+A waste of words that drive us like a sea,
+Mere derelict of Ourselves, and helpless freight!
+
+"O for a lodge in some vast wilderness!"
+Some region unapproachable of Print,
+Where never cablegram could gain access,
+And telephones were not, nor any hint
+Of tidings new or old, but Man might pipe
+His soul to Nature,--careless of the Type!
+
+
+
+
+TWO MODERN BOOK ILLUSTRATORS
+
+
+I. KATE GREENAWAY
+
+In the world of pictorial recollection there are many territories, the
+natives of which you may recognise by their characteristics as surely as
+Ophelia recognises her true-love by his cockle-hat and sandal shoon.
+There is the land of grave gestures and courteous inclinations, of
+dignified leave-takings and decorous greetings; where the ladies (like
+Richardson's Pamela) don the most charming round-eared caps and frilled
+_négligés_; where the gentlemen sport ruffles and bag-wigs and spotless
+silk stockings, and invariably exhibit shapely calves above their silver
+shoe-buckles; where you may come in St. James's Park upon a portly
+personage with a star, taking an alfresco pinch of snuff after that
+leisurely style in which a pinch of snuff should be taken, so as not to
+endanger a lace cravat or a canary-coloured vest; where you may seat
+yourself on a bench by Rosamond's Pond in company with a tremulous mask
+who is evidently expecting the arrival of a "pretty fellow"; or happen
+suddenly, in a secluded side-walk, upon a damsel in muslin and a dark
+hat, who is hurriedly scrawling a _poulet_, not without obvious signs of
+perturbation. But whatever the denizens of this country are doing, they
+are always elegant and always graceful, always appropriately grouped
+against their fitting background of high-ceiled rooms and striped
+hangings, or among the urns and fish-tanks of their sombre-shrubbed
+gardens. This is the land of STOTHARD.
+
+In the adjoining country there is a larger sense of colour--a fuller
+pulse of life. This is the region of delightful dogs and horses and
+domestic animals of all sorts; of crimson-faced hosts and buxom
+ale-wives; of the most winsome and black-eyed milkmaids and the most
+devoted lovers and their lasses; of the most headlong and horn-blowing
+huntsmen--a land where Madam Blaize forgathers with the impeccable
+worthy who caused the death of the Mad Dog; where John Gilpin takes the
+Babes in the Wood _en croupe_; and the bewitchingest Queen of Hearts
+coquets the Great Panjandrum himself "with the little round button at
+top"--a land, in short, of the most kindly and light-hearted fancies, of
+the freshest and breeziest and healthiest types--which is the land of
+CALDECOTT.
+
+Finally, there is a third country, a country inhabited almost
+exclusively by the sweetest little child-figures that have ever been
+invented, in the quaintest and prettiest costumes, always happy, always
+gravely playful,--and nearly always playing; always set in the most
+attractive framework of flower-knots, or blossoming orchards, or
+red-roofed cottages with dormer windows. Everywhere there are green
+fields, and daisies, and daffodils, and pearly skies of spring, in which
+a kite is often flying. No children are quite like the dwellers in this
+land; they are so gentle, so unaffected in their affectation, so easily
+pleased, so trustful and so confiding. And this is GREENAWAY-land.
+
+It is sixty years since Thomas Stothard died, and only fifteen since
+Randolph Caldecott closed his too brief career.[26] And now Kate
+Greenaway, who loved the art of both, and in her own gentle way
+possessed something of the qualities of each, has herself passed away.
+It will rest with other pens to record her personal characteristics, and
+to relate the story of her life. I who write this was privileged to know
+her a little, and to receive from her frequent presents of her books;
+but I should shrink from anything approaching a description of the
+quiet, unpretentious, almost homely little lady, whom it was always a
+pleasure to meet and to talk with. If I here permit myself to recall one
+or two incidents of our intercourse, it is solely because they bear
+either upon her amiable disposition or her art. I remember that once,
+during a country walk in Sussex, she gave me a long account of her
+childhood, which I wish I could repeat in detail. But I know that she
+told me that she had been brought up in just such a neighbourhood of
+thatched roofs and "grey old gardens" as she depicts in her drawings;
+and that in some of the houses, it was her particular and unfailing
+delight to turn over ancient chests and wardrobes filled with the
+flowered frocks and capes of the Jane Austen period. As is well known,
+she corresponded frequently with Ruskin, and possessed numbers of his
+letters. In his latter years, it had been her practice to write to him
+periodically--I believe she said once a week. He had long ceased,
+probably from ill-health, to answer her letters; but she continued to
+write punctually lest he should miss the little budget of chit-chat to
+which he had grown accustomed. At another time--in a pleasant
+country-house which contained many examples of her art--and where she
+was putting the last touches to a delicately tinted child-angel in the
+margin of a Bible--I ventured to say, "Why do your children always ...?"
+But it is needless to complete the query; the answer alone is important.
+She looked at me reflectively, and said, after a pause, "Because I
+see it so."
+
+Note:
+
+[26] This was written in 1902.
+
+
+Answers not dissimilar have been given before by other artists in like
+case. But it was this rigid fidelity to her individual vision and
+personal conviction which constituted her strength. There are always
+stupid, well-meaning busybodies in the world, who go about making
+question of the sonneteer why he does not attempt something epic and
+homicidal, or worrying the carver of cherry-stones to try his hand at a
+Colossus; but though they disturb and discompose, they luckily do no
+material harm. They did no material harm to Kate Greenaway. She yielded,
+no doubt, to pressure put upon her to try figures on a larger scale; to
+illustrate books, which was not her strong point, as it only put fetters
+upon her fancy; but, in the main, she courageously preserved the even
+tenor of her way, which was to people the artistic demesne she
+administered with the tiny figures which no one else could make more
+captivating, or clothe more adroitly. It may be doubted whether the
+collector will set much store by Bret Harte's _Queen of the Pirate Isle_
+or the _Pied Piper of Hamelin_, suitable at first sight as is the
+latter, with its child-element, to her inventive idiosyncrasy. But he
+will revel in the dainty scenes of "Almanacks" (1883 to 1895, and 1897);
+in the charming Birthday Book of 1880; in _Mother Goose, A Day in a
+Child's Life, Little Ann, Marigold Garden_ and the rest, of which the
+grace is perennial, though the popularity for the moment may have waned.
+
+I have an idea that _Mother Goose; or, the Old Nursery Rhymes_, 1881,
+was one of Miss Greenaway's favourites, although it may have been
+displaced in her own mind by subsequent successes. Nothing can certainly
+be more deftly-tinted than the design of the "old woman who lived under
+a hill," and peeled apples; nothing more seductive, in infantile
+attitude, than the little boy and girl, who, with their arms around each
+other, stand watching the black-cat in the plum-tree. Then there is
+Daffy-down-dilly, who has come up to town, with "a yellow petticoat and
+a green gown," in which attire, aided by a straw hat tied under her
+chin, she manages to look exceedingly attractive, as she passes in front
+of the white house with the pink roof and the red shutters and the green
+palings. One of the most beautiful pictures in this gallery is the dear
+little "Ten-o'-clock Scholar" in his worked smock, as, trailing his
+blue-and-white school-bag behind him, he creeps unwillingly to his
+lessons at the most picturesque timbered cottage you can imagine.
+Another absolutely delightful portrait is that of "Little Tom Tucker,"
+in sky-blue suit and frilled collar, singing, with his hands behind him,
+as if he never could grow old. And there is not one of these little
+compositions that is without its charm of colour and accessory--blue
+plates on the dresser in the background, the parterres of a formal
+garden with old-fashioned flowers, quaint dwellings with their gates and
+grass-work, odd corners of countryside and village street, and all,
+generally, in the clear air or sunlight. For in this favoured
+Greenaway-realm, as in the island-valley of Avilion there
+
+ falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,
+ Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies
+ Deep-meadow'd, happy, fair with orchard-lawns.
+
+To _Mother Goose_ followed _A Day in a Child's Life_, also 1881, and
+_Little Ann_, 1883. The former of these contained various songs set to
+music by Mr. Myles B. Foster, the organist of the Foundling Hospital,
+and accompanied by designs on rather a larger scale than those in
+_Mother Goose_. It also included a larger proportion of the floral
+decorations which were among the artist's chief gifts. Foxgloves and
+buttercups, tulips and roses, are flung about the pages of the book; and
+there are many pictures, notably one of a little green-coated figure
+perched upon a five-barred gate, which repeat the triumphs of its
+predecessor. In _Little Ann and other Poems_, which is dedicated to the
+four children of the artist's friend, the late Frederick Locker-Lampson,
+she illustrated a selection from the verses for "Infant Minds" of Jane
+and Ann Taylor, daughters of that Isaac Taylor of Ongar, who was first a
+line engraver and afterwards an Independent Minister.[27] The
+dedication contains a charming row of tiny portraits of the
+Locker-Lampson family. These illustrations may seem to contradict what
+has been said as to Miss Greenaway's ability to interpret the
+conceptions of others. But this particular task left her perfectly free
+to "go her own gait," and to embroider the text which, in this case, was
+little more than a pretext for her pencil.
+
+Note:
+
+[27] Since this paper was written, the _Original Poems and Others_, of Ann
+and Jane Taylor, with illustrations by F.D. Bedford, and a most interesting
+"Introduction" by Mr. E.V. Lucas, have been issued by Messrs. Wells,
+Gardner, Darton and Co.
+
+
+In _Marigold Garden_, 1885, Miss Greenaway became her own poet; and next
+to _Mother Goose_, this is probably her most important effort. The
+flowers are as entrancing as ever; and the verse makes one wish that the
+writer had written more. The "Genteel Family" and "Little Phillis" are
+excellent nursery pieces; and there is almost a Blake-like note about
+"The Sun Door."
+
+ They saw it rise in the morning,
+ They saw it set at night,
+ And they longed to go and see it,
+ Ah! if they only might.
+
+ The little soft white clouds heard them,
+ And stepped from out of the blue;
+ And each laid a little child softly
+ Upon its bosom of dew.
+
+ And they carried them higher and higher,
+ And they nothing knew any more,
+ Until they were standing waiting,
+ In front of the round gold door.
+
+ And they knocked, and called, and entreated
+ Whoever should be within;
+ But all to no purpose, for no one
+ Would hearken to let them in.
+
+"_La rime n'est pas riche_" nor is the technique thoroughly assured; but
+the thought is poetical. Here is another, "In an Apple-Tree," which
+reads like a child variation of that haunting "Mimnermus in Church" of
+the author of Ionica:--
+
+ In September, when the apples are red,
+ To Belinda I said,
+ "Would you like to go away
+ To Heaven, or stay
+ Here in this orchard full of trees
+ All your life? "And she said," If you please
+ I'll stay here--where I know,
+ And the flowers grow."
+
+In another vein is the bright little "Child's Song":--
+
+ The King and the Queen were riding
+ Upon a Summer's day,
+ And a Blackbird flew above them,
+ To hear what they did say.
+
+ The King said he liked apples,
+ The Queen said she liked pears;
+ And what shall we do to the Blackbird
+ Who listens unawares?
+
+But, as a rule, it must be admitted of her poetry that, while nearly
+always poetic in its impulse, it is often halting and inarticulate in
+its expression. A few words may be added in regard to the mere facts of
+Miss Greenaway's career. She was born at 1 Cavendish Street, Hoxton, on
+the 17th March, 1846, her father being Mr. John Greenaway, a draughtsman
+on wood, who contributed much to the earlier issues of the _Illustrated
+London News_ and _Punch_. Annual visits to a farm-house at Rolleston in
+Nottinghamshire--the country residence already referred to--nourished
+and confirmed her love of nature. Very early she showed a distinct bias
+towards colour and design of an original kind. She studied at different
+places, and at South Kensington. Here both she and Lady Butler "would
+bribe the porter to lock them in when the day's work was done, so that
+they might labour on for some while more." Her master at Kensington was
+Richard Burchett, who, forty years ago, was a prominent figure in the
+art-schools, a well instructed painter, and a teacher exceptionally
+equipped with all the learning of his craft. Mr. Burchett thought highly
+of Miss Greenaway's abilities; and she worked under him for several
+years with exemplary perseverance and industry. She subsequently studied
+in the Slade School under Professor Legros.
+
+Her first essays in the way of design took the form of Christmas cards,
+then beginning their now somewhat flagging career, and she exhibited
+pictures at the Dudley Gallery for some years in succession, beginning
+with 1868. In 1877 she contributed to the Royal Academy a water colour
+entitled "Musing," and in 1889 was elected a member of the Royal
+Institute of Painters in Water Colours.
+
+By this date, as will be gathered from what has preceded, Miss Greenaway
+had made her mark as a producer of children's books, since, in addition
+to the volumes already specially mentioned, she had issued _Under the
+Window_ (her earliest success), _The Language of Flowers, Kate
+Greenaway's Painting Book, The Book of Games, King Pepito_ and other
+works. Her last "Almanack," which was published by Messrs Dent and Co.,
+appeared in 1897. In 1891, the Fine Arts Society exhibited some 150 of
+her original drawings--an exhibition which was deservedly successful,
+and was followed by others.[28] As Slade Professor at Oxford, Ruskin,
+always her fervent admirer, gave her unstinted eulogium; and in France
+her designs aroused the greatest admiration. The _Débats_ had a leading
+article on her death; and the clever author of _L'Art du Rire_, M.
+Arsène Alexandre, who had already written appreciatively of her gifts as
+a "_paysagiste_," and as a "_maîtresse en l'art du sourire, du jolt
+sourire_ _d'enfant inginu et gaiement candide_" devoted a column in the
+_Figaro_ to her merits.
+
+Note:
+
+[28] Among other things these exhibitions revealed the great superiority
+of the original designs to the reproductions with which the public are
+familiar--excellent as these are in their way. Probably, if Miss
+Greenaway's work were now repeated by the latest form of three-colour
+process, she would be less an "inheritor"--in this respect--"of unfulfilled
+renown."
+
+
+It has been noted that, in her later years, Miss Greenaway's popularity
+was scarcely maintained. It would perhaps be more exact to say that it
+somewhat fell off with the fickle crowd who follow a reigning fashion,
+and who unfortunately help to swell the units of a paying community. To
+the last she gave of her best; but it is the misfortune of distinctive
+and original work, that, while the public resents versatility in its
+favourites, it wearies unreasonably of what had pleased it at
+first--especially if the note be made tedious by imitation. Miss
+Greenaway's old vogue was in some measure revived by her too-early death
+on the 6th November 1901; but, in any case, she is sure of attention
+from the connoisseur of the future. Those who collect Stothard and
+Caldecott (and they are many!) cannot afford to neglect either _Marigold
+Garden_ or _Mother Goose_.[29]
+
+Note:
+
+[29] Since the above article appeared in the _Art Journal_, from
+which it is here substantially reproduced, Messrs. M.H, Spieimann and
+G.S. Layard have (1905) devoted a sumptuous and exhaustive volume to
+Miss Greenaway and her art. To this truly beautiful and sympathetic book
+I can but refer those of her admirers who are not yet acquainted
+with it.
+
+
+
+
+A SONG OF THE GREENAWAY CHILD
+
+
+As I went a-walking on _Lavender Hill_,
+O, I met a Darling in frock and frill;
+And she looked at me shyly, with eyes of blue,
+"Are you going a-walking? Then take me too!"
+
+So we strolled to the field where the cowslips grow,
+And we played--and we played, for an hour or so;
+Then we climbed to the top of the old park wall,
+And the Darling she threaded a cowslip ball.
+
+Then we played again, till I said--"My Dear,
+This pain in my side, it has grown severe;
+I ought to have mentioned I'm past three-score,
+And I fear that I scarcely can play any more!"
+
+But the Darling she answered,-"O no! O no!
+You must play--you must play.--I sha'n't let you go!"
+
+--And I woke with a start and a sigh of despair,
+And I found myself safe in my Grandfather's-chair!
+
+
+
+
+TWO MODERN BOOK ILLUSTRATORS
+
+
+II. MR HUGH THOMSON
+
+In virtue of certain gentle and caressing qualities of style, Douglas
+Jerrold conferred on one of his contributors--Miss Eliza Meteyard--the
+pseudonym of "Silverpen." It is in the silver-pensive key that one would
+wish to write of Mr. HUGH THOMSON. There is nothing in his work of
+elemental strife,--of social problem,--of passion torn to tatters. He
+leads you by no _terribile via_,--over no "burning Marle." You cannot
+conceive him as the illustrator of _Paradise Lost_, of Dante's
+_Inferno_--even of Doré's _Wandering Jew_. But when, after turning over
+some dozens of his designs, you take stock of your impressions, you
+discover that your memory is packed with pleasant fancies. You have been
+among "blown fields" and "flowerful closes"; you have passed quaint
+roadside-inns and picturesque cottages; you are familiar with the
+cheery, ever-changing idyll of the highway and the bustle of animal
+life; with horses that really gallop, and dogs that really bark; with
+charming male and female figures in the most attractive old-world
+attire; with happy laughter and artless waggeries; with a hundred
+intimate details of English domesticity that are pushed just far enough
+back to lose the hardness of their outline in a softening haze of
+retrospect. There has been nothing more tragic in your travels than a
+sprained ankle or an interrupted affair of honour; nothing more
+blood-curdling than a dream of a dragoon officer knocked out of his
+saddle by a brickbat. Your flesh has never been made to creep: but the
+cockles of your heart have been warmed. Mechanically, you raise your
+hand to lift away your optimistic spectacles. But they are not there.
+The optimism is in the pictures.
+
+It must be more than a quarter of a century since Mr. Hugh Thomson,
+arriving from Coleraine in all the ardour of one-and-twenty, invaded the
+strongholds of English illustration. He came at a fortunate moment.
+After a few hesitating and tentative attempts upon the newspapers, he
+obtained an introduction to Mr. Comyns Carr, then engaged in
+establishing the _English Illustrated Magazine_ for Messrs. Macmillan.
+His recommendation was a scrap-book of minutely elaborated designs for
+_Vanity Fair_, which he had done (like Reynolds) "out of pure idleness."
+Mr. Carr, then, as always, a discriminating critic, with a keen eye to
+possibilities, was not slow to detect, among much artistic recollection,
+something more than uncertain promise; and although he had already
+Randolph Caldecott and Mr. Harry Furniss on his staff, he at once gave
+Mr. Thomson a commission for the magazine. The earliest picture from his
+hand which appeared was a fancy representation of the Parade at Bath for
+a paper in June, 1884, by the late H. D. Traill; and he also illustrated
+(in part) papers on Drawing Room Dances, on Cricket (by Mr. Andrew
+Lang), and on Covent Garden. But graphic and vividly naturalistic as
+were his pictures of modern life, his native bias towards imaginary
+eighteenth century subjects (perhaps prompted by boyish studies of
+Hogarth in the old Dublin _Penny Magazine_), was already abundantly
+manifest. He promptly drifted into what was eventually to become his
+first illustrated book, a series of compositions from the _Spectator_.
+These were published in 1886 as a little quarto, entitled _Days with Sir
+Roger de Coverley_.
+
+It was a "temerarious" task to attempt to revive the types which, from
+the days of Harrison's _Essayists_, had occupied so many of the earlier
+illustrators. But the attempt was fully justified by its success. One
+has but to glance at the head-piece to the first paper, where Sir Roger
+and "Mr. Spectator" have alighted from the jolting, springless,
+heavy-wheeled old coach as the tired horses toil uphill, to recognise at
+once that here is an artist _en pays de connaissance_, who may fairly be
+trusted, in the best sense, to "illustrate" his subject. Whatever one's
+predilections for previous presentments, it is impossible to resist Sir
+Roger (young, slim, and handsome), carving the perverse widow's name
+upon a tree-trunk; or Sir Roger at bowls, or riding to hounds, or
+listening--with grave courtesy--to Will Wimble's long-winded and
+circumstantial account of the taking of the historic jack. Nor is the
+conception less happy of that amorous fine-gentleman ancestor of the
+Coverleys who first made love by squeezing the hand; or of that other
+Knight of the Shire who so narrowly escaped being killed in the Civil
+Wars because he was sent out of the field upon a private message, the
+day before Cromwell's "crowning mercy,"--the battle of Worcester. But
+the varied embodiments of these, and of Mrs. Betty Arable ("the great
+fortune"), of Ephraim the Quaker, and the rest, are not all. The figures
+are set in their fitting environment; they ride their own horses, hallo
+to their own dogs, and eat and drink in their own dark-panelled rooms
+that look out on the pleached alleys of their ancient gardens. They live
+and move in their own passed-away atmosphere of association; and a
+faithful effort has moreover been made to realise each separate scene
+with strict relation to its text.
+
+All of the "Coverley" series came out in the _English Illustrated_. So
+also did the designs for the next book, the _Coaching Days and Coaching
+Ways_ of Mr. Outram Tristram, 1888. Here Mr. Thomson had a topographical
+collaborator, Mr. Herbert Railton, who did the major part of the very
+effective drawings in this kind. But Mr. Thomson's contributions may
+fairly be said to have exhausted the "romance" of the road. Inns and
+inn-yards, hosts and ostlers and chambermaids, stage-coachmen,
+toll-keepers, mail-coaches struggling in snow-drifts, mail-coaches held
+up by highwaymen, overturns, elopements, cast shoes, snapped poles, lost
+linch-pins,--all the episodes and moving accidents of bygone travel on
+the high road have abundant illustration, till the pages seem almost to
+reek of the stableyard, or ring with the horn.[30] And here it may be
+noted, as a peculiarity of Mr. Thomson's conscientious horse-drawing,
+that he depicts, not the ideal, but the actual animal. His steeds are
+not "faultless monsters" like the Dauphin's palfrey in _Henry the
+Fifth_. They are "all sorts and conditions" of horses; and--if truth
+required it--would disclose as many sand-cracks as Rocinante, or as many
+equine defects (from wind-gall to the bolts) as those imputed to that
+unhappy "Blackberry" sold by the Vicar of Wakefield at Welbridge Fair to
+Mr, Ephraini Jenkinson.
+
+Note:
+
+[30] Sometimes a literary or historical picture creeps into the text.
+Such are "Swift and Bolingbroke at Backlebury" (p. 30); "Charles
+II. recognised by the Ostler" (p. 144), and "Barry Lyndon cracks a
+Bottle" (p. 116). _Barry Lyndon_ with its picaresque note and Irish
+background, would seem an excellent contribution to the "Cranford"
+series. Why does not Mr. Thomson try his hand at it? He has illustrated
+_Esmond_, and the _Great Haggarty Diamond_.
+
+
+The _Vicar of Wakefield_--as it happens--was Mr. Thomson's next
+enterprise; and it is, in many respects, a most memorable one. It came
+out in December, 1890, having occupied him for nearly two years. He took
+exceptional pains to study and realise the several types for himself,
+and to ensure correctness of costume. From the first introductory
+procession of the Primrose family at the head of chapter i. to the
+awkward merriment of the two Miss Flamboroughs at the close, there is
+scarcely a page which has not some stroke of quiet fun, some graceful
+attitude, or some ingenious contrivance in composition. Considering that
+from Wenham's edition of 1780, nearly every illustrator of repute had
+tried his hand at Goldsmith's masterpiece in fiction,--that he had been
+attempted without humour by Stothard, without lightness by
+Mulready,[31]--that he had been made comic by Cruikshank, and vulgarised
+by Rowiandson,--it was certainly to Mr. Thomson's credit that he had
+approached his task with so much refinement, reverence and originality.
+If the book has a blemish, it is to be mentioned only because the
+artist, by his later practice, seems to have recognised it himself. For
+the purposes of process reproduction, the drawings were somewhat loaded
+and overworked.
+
+Note:
+
+[31]: Mulready's illustrations of 1843 are here referred to, net his
+pictures.
+
+
+This was not chargeable against the next volumes to be chronicled. Mrs.
+Gaskell's _Cranford_, 1891, and Miss Mitford's _Our Village_, 1893, are
+still regarded by many as the artist's happiest efforts. I say "still,"
+because Mr. Thomson is only now in what Victor Hugo called the youth of
+old age (as opposed to the old age of youth); and it would be premature
+to assume that a talent so alert to multiply and diversify its efforts,
+had already attained the summit of its achievement. But in these two
+books he had certain unquestionable advantages. One obviously would be,
+that his audience were not already preoccupied by former illustrations;
+and he was consequently free to invent his own personages and follow his
+own fertile fancy, without recalling to that implacable and Gorgonising
+organ, the "Public Eye," any earlier pictorial conceptions. Another
+thing in his favour was, that in either case, the very definite, and not
+very complex types surrendered themselves readily to artistic
+embodiment. "It almost illustrated itself,"--he told an interviewer
+concerning _Cranford_; "the characters were so exquisitely and
+distinctly realised." Every one has known some like them; and the
+delightful Knutsford ladies (for "Cranford" was "Knutsford"), the
+"Boz"--loving Captain Brown and Mr. Holbrook, Peter and his father, and
+even Martha the maid, with their _mise en scène_ of card-tables and
+crackle-china, and pattens and reticules, are part of the memories of
+our childhood. The same may be said of _Our Village_, except that the
+breath of Nature blows more freely through it than through the quiet
+Cheshire market-town; and there is a larger preponderance of those
+"charming glimpses of rural life" of which Lady Ritchie speaks
+admiringly in her sympathetic preface. And with regard to the "bits of
+scenery"--as Mr. Thomson himself calls them--it may be noted that one of
+the Manchester papers, speaking of _Cranford_, praised the artist's
+intimate knowledge of the locality,--a locality he had never seen. Most
+of his backgrounds were from sketches made on Wimbledon Common, near
+which--until he moved for a space to the ancient Cinque Port of Seaford
+in Sussex--he lived for the first years of his London life.
+
+In strict order of time, Mr. Thomson's next important effort should have
+preceded the books of Miss Mitford and Mrs. Gaskell. The novels of Jane
+Austen--to which we now come--if not the artist's high-water mark, are
+certainly remarkable as a _tour de force_. To contrive some forty page
+illustrations for each of Miss Austen's admirable, but--from an
+illustrator's standpoint--not very palpitating productions,--with a
+scene usually confined to the dining-room or parlour,--with next to no
+animals, and with rare opportunities for landscape accessory,--was an
+"adventure"--in Cervantic phrase--which might well have given pause to a
+designer of less fertility and resource. But besides the figures there
+was the furniture; and acute admirers have pointed out that a nice
+discretion is exhibited in graduating the appointments of Longbourn and
+Netherfield Park,--of Rosings and Hunsford. But what is perhaps more
+worthy of remark is the artist's persistent attempt to give
+individuality, as well as grace, to his dramatis persona;. The
+unspeakable Mr. Collins, Mr. Bennet, the horsy Mr. John Thorpe, Mrs.
+Jennings and Mrs. Norris, the Eltons--are all carefully discriminated.
+Nothing can well be better than Mr. Woodhouse, with his "almost
+immaterial legs" drawn securely out of the range of a too-fierce fire,
+chatting placidly to Miss Bates upon the merits of water-gruel; nothing
+more in keeping than the Right Honourable Lady Catherine de Bourgh, "in
+the very torrent, tempest, and whirlwind" of her indignation,
+superciliously pausing to patronise the capabilities of the Longbourn
+reception rooms. Not less happy is the dumbfounded astonishment of Mrs.
+Bennet at her toilet, when she hears--to her stupefaction--that her
+daughter Elizabeth is to be mistress of Pemberley and ten thousand a
+year. This last is a head-piece; and it may be observed, as an
+additional difficulty in this group of novels, that, owing to the
+circumstances of publication, only in one of the books. _Pride and
+Prejudice_, was Mr, Thomson free to decorate the chapters with those
+ingenious _entêtes_ and _culs-de-lampe_ of which he so eminently
+possesses the secret.[32]
+
+Note:
+
+[32] That eloquence of subsidiary detail, which has had so many
+exponents in English art from Hogarth onwards, is one of Mr. Thomson's
+most striking characteristics. The reader will find it exemplified in
+the beautiful book-plate at page 111, which, by the courtesy of its
+owner, Mr. Ernest Brown, I am permitted to reproduce.
+
+
+By this time his reputation had long been firmly established. To the
+Jane Austen volumes succeeded other numbers of the so-called "Cranford"
+series, to which, in 1894, Mr. Thomson had already added, under the
+title of _Coridon's Song and other Verses_, a fresh ingathering of
+old-time minstrelsy from the pages of the _English Illustrated_. Many of
+the drawings for these, though of necessity reduced for publication in
+book form, are in his most delightful and winning manner,--notably
+perhaps (if one must choose!) the martial ballad of that "Captain of
+Militia, Sir Bilberry Diddle," who
+
+ --dreamt, Fame reports, that he cut all the throats
+ Of the French as they landed in flat-bottomed boats
+
+--or rather were going to land any time during the Seven Years' War.
+Excellent, too, are John Gay's ambling _Journey to Exeter_., the
+_Angler's Song_ from Walton (which gives its name to the collection),
+and Fielding's rollicking "A-hunting we will go." Other "Cranford"
+books, which now followed, were James Lane Allen's _Kentucky Cardinal_,
+1901; Fanny Burney's _Evelina_, 1903; Thackeray's _Esmond_, 1905; and
+two of George Eliot's novels--_Scenes of Clerical Life_, 1906, and
+_Silas Marner_, 1907. In 1899 Mr. Thomson had also undertaken another
+book for George Allen, an edition of Reade's _Peg Woffington_,--a task
+in which he took the keenest delight, particularly in the burlesque
+character of Triplet. These were all in the old pen-work; but some of
+the designs for _Silas Marner_ were lightly and tastefully coloured.
+This was a plan the author had adopted, with good effect, not only in a
+special edition of _Cranford_ (1898), but for some of his original
+drawings which came into the market after exhibition. Nothing can be
+more seductive than a Hugh Thomson pen-sketch, when delicately tinted in
+sky-blue, _rose-Du Barry_, and apple-green (the _vert-pomme_ dear--as
+Gautier says--to the soft moderns)--a treatment which lends them a
+subdued but indefinable distinction, as of old china with a pedigree,
+and fully justifies the amiable enthusiasm of the phrase-maker who
+described their inventor as the "Charles Lamb of illustration."
+
+From the above enumeration certain omissions have of necessity been
+made. Besides the books mentioned, Mr. Thomson has contrived to prepare
+for newspapers and magazines many closely-studied sketches of
+contemporary manners. Some of the best of his work in this way is to be
+found in the late Mrs. E.T. Cook's _Highways and Byways of London Life_,
+1902. For the _Highways and Byways_ series, he has also illustrated,
+wholly or in part, volumes on Ireland, North Wales, Devon, Cornwall and
+Yorkshire. The last volume, Kent, 1907, is entirely decorated by
+himself. In this instance, his drawings throughout are in pencil, and he
+is his own topographer. It is a remarkable departure, both in manner and
+theme, though Mr. Thomson's liking for landscape has always been
+pronounced. "I would desire above all things," he told an interviewer,
+"to pass my time in painting landscape. Landscape pictures always
+attract me, and the grand examples, Gainsboroughs, Claudes, Cromes, and
+Turners, to be seen any day in our National Gallery, are a source of
+never-failing yearning and delight." The original drawings for the Kent
+book are of great beauty; and singularly dexterous in the varied methods
+by which the effect is produced. The artist is now at work on the county
+of Surrey. It is earnest of his versatility that, in 1904, he
+illustrated for Messrs. Wells, Darton and Co., with conspicuous success,
+a modernised prose version of certain of Chaucer's _Canterbury Tales_,
+as well as _Tales from Maria Edgeworth_, 1903; and he also executed, in
+1892 and 1895,[33] some charming designs to selections from the verses of
+the present writer, who has long enjoyed the privilege of his friendship.
+
+Personal traits do not come within the province of this paper, or it
+would be pleasant to dwell upon Mr. Thomson's modesty, his untiring
+industry, and his devotion to his art. But in regard to that art, it may
+be observed that to characterise it solely as "packing the memory with
+pleasant fancies" may suffice for an exordium, but is inadequate as a
+final appreciation. Let me therefore note down, as they occur to me,
+some of his more prominent pictorial characteristics. With three of the
+artists mentioned in this and the preceding paper, he has obvious
+affinities, while, in a sense, he includes them all. If he does not
+excel Stothard in the gift of grace, he does in range and variety; and
+he more than rivals him in composition. He has not, like Miss Greenaway,
+endowed the art-world with a special type of childhood; but his children
+are always lifelike and engaging. (Compare, at a venture, the boy
+soldiers whom Frank Castlewood is drilling in chapter xi. of _Esmond_,
+or the delightful little fellow who is throwing up his arms in chapter
+ix. of _Emma_.) As regards dogs and horses and the rest, his colleague,
+Mr, Joseph Pennell, an expert critic, and a most accomplished artist,
+holds that he has "long since surpassed" Randolph Caldecott.[34] I doubt
+whether Mr. Thomson himself would concur with his eulogist in this. But
+he has assuredly followed Caldecott close; and in opulence of
+production, which--as Macaulay insisted--should always count, has
+naturally exceeded that gifted, but shortlived, designer. If, pursuing
+an ancient practice, one were to attempt to label Mr. Thomson with a
+special distinction apart from, and in addition to, his other merits, I
+should be inclined to designate him the "Master of the
+Vignette,"--taking that word in its primary sense as including
+head-pieces, tail-pieces and initial letters. In this department, no
+draughtsman I can call to mind has ever shown greater fertility of
+invention, so much playful fancy, so much grace, so much kindly humour,
+and such a sane and wholesome spirit of fun.
+
+Notes:
+
+[33] _The Ballad of Beau Brocade_, and _The Story of Rosina_.
+
+[34] _Pen-Drawing and Pen-Draughtsmen, 2nd ed. 1894, p. 358._
+
+
+
+
+HORATIAN ODE
+
+ON THE TERCENTENARY OF
+
+"DON QUIXOTE"
+
+_(Published at Madrid, by Francisco de Robles, January 1605)_
+
+"Para mí sola nació don Quixote, y yo para él."--CERVANTES.
+
+
+Advents we greet of great and small;
+ Much we extol that may not live;
+ Yet to the new-born Type we give
+ No care at all!
+
+This year,[35]--three centuries past,--by age
+ More maimed than by LEPANTO'S fight,--
+ This year CERVANTES gave to light
+ His matchless page,
+
+Whence first outrode th' immortal Pair,--
+ The half-crazed Hero and his hind,--
+ To make sad laughter for mankind;
+ And whence they fare
+
+Throughout all Fiction still, where chance
+ Allies Life's dulness with its dreams--
+ Allies what is, with what but seems,--
+ Fact and Romance:--
+
+O Knight of fire and Squire of earth!--
+ O changing give-and-take between
+ The aim too high, the aim too mean,
+ I hail your birth,--
+
+Three centuries past,--in sunburned SPAIN,
+ And hang, on Time's PANTHEON wall,
+ My votive tablet to recall
+ That lasting gain!
+
+Note:
+
+[35] _I.e._ January 1905.
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOKS OF SAMUEL ROGERS
+
+
+One common grave, according to Garrick, covers the actor and his art.
+The same may be said of the raconteur. Oral tradition, or even his own
+writings, may preserve his precise words; but his peculiarities of voice
+or action, his tricks of utterance and intonation,--all the collateral
+details which serve to lend distinction or piquancy to the
+performance--perish irrecoverably. The glorified gramophone of the
+future may perhaps rectify this for a new generation; and give us,
+without mechanical drawback, the authentic accents of speakers dead and
+gone; but it can never perpetuate the dramatic accompaniment of gesture
+and expression. If, as always, there are exceptions to this rule, they
+are necessarily evanescent. Now and then, it may be, some clever mimic
+will recall the manner of a passed-away predecessor; and he may even
+contrive to hand it on, more or less effectually, to a disciple. But the
+reproduction is of brief duration; and it is speedily effaced or
+transformed.
+
+In this way it is, however, that we get our most satisfactory idea of
+the once famous table-talker, Samuel Rogers. Charles Dickens, who sent
+Rogers several of his books; who dedicated _Master Humphrey's Clock_ to
+him; and who frequently assisted at the famous breakfasts in St. James's
+Place, was accustomed--rather cruelly, it may be thought--to take off
+his host's very characteristic way of telling a story; and it is,
+moreover, affirmed by Mr. Percy Fitzgerald[36] that, in the famous
+Readings, "the strangely obtuse and owl-like expression, and the slow,
+husky croak" of Mr. Justice Stareleigh in the "Trial from _Pickwick_"
+were carefully copied from the author of the _Pleasures of Memory_, That
+Dickens used thus to amuse his friends is confirmed by the autobiography
+of the late Frederick Locker,[37] who perfectly remembered the old man,
+to see whom he had been carried, as a boy, by his father. He had also
+heard Dickens repeat one of Rogers's stock anecdotes (it was that of the
+duel in a dark room, where the more considerate combatant, firing up the
+chimney, brings down his adversary);[38]--and he speaks of Dickens as
+mimicking Rogers's "calm, low-pitched, drawling voice and dry biting
+manner very comically."[39] At the same time, it must be remembered that
+these reminiscences relate to Rogers in his old age. He was over seventy
+when Dickens published his first book, _Sketches by Boz_; and, though it
+is possible that Rogers's voice was always rather sepulchral, and his
+enunciation unusually deliberate and monotonous, he had nevertheless, as
+Locker says, "made story-telling a fine art." Continued practice had
+given him the utmost economy of words; and as far as brevity and point
+are concerned, his method left nothing to be desired. Many of his best
+efforts are still to be found in the volume of _Table-Talk_ edited for
+Moxon in 1856 by the Rev. Alexander Dyce; or preferably, as actually
+written down by Rogers himself in the delightful _Recollections_ issued
+three years later by his nephew and executor, William Sharpe.
+
+Notes:
+
+[36] _Recreations of a Literary Man_, 1882, p. 137.
+
+[37] _My Confidences_, by Frederick Locker-Lampson, 1896, pp. 98
+and 325.
+
+[38] The duellists were an Englishman and a Frenchman; and
+Rogers was in the habit of adding as a postscript: "When I tell that in
+Paris, I always put the Englishman up the chimney!"
+
+[39] It may be added that Mr. Percy Fitzgerald, himself no mean
+mime, may be sometimes persuaded to imitate Dickens imitating Rogers.
+
+
+But although the two things are often intimately connected, the "books,"
+and not the "stories" of Rogers, are the subject of the present paper.
+After this, it sounds paradoxical to have to admit that his reputation
+as a connoisseur far overshadowed his reputation as a bibliophile. When,
+in December 1855, he died, his pictures and curios,--his "articles of
+virtue and bigotry" as a modern Malaprop would have styled
+them,--attracted far more attention than the not very numerous volumes
+forming his library.[40] What people flocked to see at the tiny
+treasure-house overlooking the Green Park,[41] which its nonagenarian
+owner had occupied for more than fifty years, were the "Puck" and
+"Strawberry Girl" of Sir Joshua, the Titians, Giorgiones, and Guidos,[42]
+the Poussins and Claudes, the drawings of Raphael and Dürer and Lucas
+van Leyden, the cabinet decorated by Stothard, the chimney-piece carved
+by Flaxman; the miniatures and bronzes and Etruscan vases,--all the
+"infinite riches in a little room," which crowded No. 22 from garret to
+basement. These were the rarities that filled the columns of the papers
+and the voices of the quidnuncs when in 1856 they came to the hammer.
+But although the Press of that day takes careful count of these things,
+it makes little reference to the sale of the "books" of the banker-bard
+who spent some £15,000 on the embellishments of his _Italy_ and his
+_Poems_; and although Dr. Burney says that Rogers's library included
+"the best editions of the best authors in most languages," he had
+clearly no widespread reputation as a book-collector pure and simple.
+Nevertheless he loved his books,--that is, he loved the books he read.
+And, as far as can be ascertained, he anticipated the late Master of
+Balliol, since he read only the books he liked. Nor was he ever diverted
+from his predilections by mere fashion or novelty. "He followed Bacon's
+maxim"--says one who knew him--"to read much, not many things: _multum
+legere, non multa_. He used to say, 'When a new book comes out, I read
+an old one.'"[43]
+
+Notes:
+
+[40] The prices obtained confirm this. Thetotaisum realised was
+£45,188:14:3. Of this the books represented no more than £1415:5.
+
+[41] This--with its triple range of bow-windows, from one of
+which Rogers used to watch his favourite sunsets--is now the residence
+of Lord Northcliffe.
+
+[42] Three of these--the "_Noli me tangere_" of Titian, Giorgione's
+"Knight in Armour," and Guide's "_Ecce Homo_"--are now in the National
+Gallery, to which they were bequeathed by Rogers.
+
+[43] _Edinburgh Review_, vol. civ. p. 105, by Abraham Hayward.
+
+
+The general Rogers-sale at Christie's took place in the spring of 1856,
+and twelve days had been absorbed before the books were reached. Their
+sale took six days more--_i.e._ from May 12 to May 19. As might be
+expected from Rogers's traditional position in the literary world, the
+catalogue contains many presentation copies. What, at first sight, would
+seem the earliest, is the _Works_ of Edward Moore, 1796, 2 vols. But if
+this be the fabulist and editor of the _World_, it can scarcely have
+been received from the writer, since, in 1796, Moore had been dead for
+nearly forty years. With Bloomfield's poems of 1802, l. p., we are on
+surer ground, for Rogers, like Capel Lofft, had been kind to the author
+of _The Farmer's Boy_, and had done his best to obtain him a pension.
+Another early tribute, subsequently followed by the _Tales of the Hall_,
+was Crabbe's Borough, which he sent to Rogers in 1810, in response to
+polite overtures made to him by the poet. This was the beginning of a
+lasting friendship, of no small import to Crabbe, as it at once admitted
+him to Rogers's circle, an advantage of which there are many traces in
+Crabbe's journal. Next comes Madame de Staël's much proscribed _De
+l'Allamagne_ (the Paris edition); and from its date, 1813, it must have
+been presented to Rogers when its irrepressible author was in England.
+She often dined or breakfasted at St. James's Place, where (according to
+Byron), she out-talked Whitbread, confounded Sir Humphry Davy, and was
+herself well "_ironed_"[44] by Sheridan. Rogers considered _Corinne_ to
+be her best novel, and _Delphine_ a terrible falling-off. The Germany he
+found "very fatiguing." "She writes her works four or five times over,
+correcting them only in that way"--he says. "The end of a chapter [is]
+always the most obscure, as she ends with an epigram,"[45] Another early
+presentation copy is the second edition of Bowles's _Missionary_, 1815.
+According to Rogers, who claims to have suggested the poem, it was to
+have been inscribed to him. But somehow or other, the book got dedicated
+to noble lord who--Rogers adds drily--never, either by word or letter,
+made any acknowledgment of the homage.[46] It is not impossible that
+there is some confusion of recollection here, or Rogers is misreported
+by Dyce. The first anonymous edition of the _Missionary_, 1813, had _no_
+dedication; and the second was inscribed to the Marquess of Lansdowne
+because he had been prominent among those who recognised the merit of
+its predecessor.
+
+Notes:
+
+[44] Perhaps a remembrance of Mrs Slipslop's "_ironing_."
+
+[45] Clayden's _Rogers and his Contemporaries_, 1889, i. 225. As
+an epigrammatist himself, Rogers might have been more indulgent to a
+_consoeur_. Here is one of Madame de Staël's "ends of chapters":--"_La
+monotonie, dans la retraite, tranquillise l'âme; la monotonie, dans le
+grand monde, fatigue l'esprit_" (ch. viii.). But he evidently found her
+rather overpowering.
+
+[46] Table-Talk, 1856, p. 258.
+
+
+Several of Scott's poems, with Rogers's autograph, and Scott's card,
+appear in the catalogue; and, in 1812, Byron, who a year after inscribed
+the _Giaour_ to Rogers, sent him the first two cantos of _Childe
+Harold._ In 1838, Moore presents _Lalla Rookh_, with Heath's plates, a
+work which, upon its first appearance, twenty years earlier, had been
+dedicated to Rogers. In 1839 Charles Dickens followed with _Nicholas
+Nickleby_, succeeded a year later by _Master Humphrey's Clock_ (1840-1),
+also dedicated to Rogers in recognition, not only of his poetical merit,
+but of his "active sympathy with the poorest and humblest of his kind."
+Rogers was fond of "Little Nell"; and in the Preface to _Barnaby Rudge_,
+Dickens gracefully acknowledged that "for a beautiful thought" in the
+seventy-second chapter of the _Old Curiosity Shop_, he was indebted to
+Rogers's Ginevra in the _Italy_:--
+
+ And long might'st thou have seen
+ An old man wandering _as in quest of something,_
+ Something he could not find--he knew not what.
+
+The _American Notes_, 1842, was a further offering from Dickens. Among
+other gifts may be noted Wordsworth's _Poems_, 1827-35; Campbell's
+_Pilgrim of Glencoe_, 1842; Longfellow's _Ballads and Voices of the
+Night_, 1840-2; Macaulay's _Lays_ and Tennyson's _Poems_, 1842; and
+lastly, Hazlitt's _Criticisms on Art_, 1844, and Carlyle's _Letters and
+Speeches of Cromwell_, 1846. Brougham's philosophical novel of _Albert
+Lunel; or, the Château of Languedoc_, 3 vols, 1844, figures in the
+catalogue as "withdrawn." It had been suppressed "for private reasons"
+upon the eve of publication; and this particular copy being annotated by
+Rogers (to whom it was inscribed) those concerned were no doubt all the
+more anxious that it should not get abroad. Inspection of the reprint of
+1872 shows, however, that want of interest was its chief error. A
+reviewer of 1858 roundly calls it "feeble" and "commonplace"; and it
+could hardly have increased its writer's reputation. Indeed, by some, it
+was not supposed to be from his Lordship's pen at all. Rogers, it may be
+added, frequently annotated his books. His copies of Pope, Gray and
+Scott had many _marginalia_. Clarke's and Fox's histories of James II.
+were also works which he decorated in this way.
+
+As already hinted, not very many bibliographical curiosities are
+included in the St. James's Place collection; and to look for
+Shakespeare quartos or folios, for example, would be idle. Ordinary
+editions of Shakespeare, such as Johnson's and Theobald's;
+Shakespeariana, such as Mrs. Montagu's _Essay_ and Ayscough's
+_Index_,--these are there of course. If the list also takes in Thomas
+Caldecott's _Hamlet_, and _As you like it_ (1832), that is, first,
+because the volume is a presentation copy; and secondly, because
+Caldecott's colleague in his frustrate enterprise was Crowe, Rogers's
+Miltonic friend, hereafter mentioned. Rogers's own feeling for
+Shakespeare was cold and hypercritical; and he was in the habit of
+endorsing with emphasis Ben Jonson's aspiration that the master had
+blotted a good many of his too-facile lines. Nevertheless, it is
+possible to pick out a few exceptional volumes from Mr. Christie's
+record. Among the earliest comes a copy of Garth's _Dispensary_, 1703,
+which certainly boasts an illustrious pedigree. Pope, who received it
+from the author, had carefully corrected it in several places; and in
+1744 bequeathed it to Warburton. Warburton, in his turn, handed it on to
+Mason, from whom it descended to Lord St. Helens, by whom, again,
+shortly before his death (1815), it was presented to Rogers. To Pope's
+corrections, which Garth adopted, Mason had added a comment. What made
+the volume of further interest was, that it contained Lord Dorchester's
+receipt for his subscription to Pope's _Homer_; and, inserted at the
+end, a full-length portrait of Pope; viz., that engraved in Warton's
+edition of 1797, as sketched in pen-and-ink by William Hoare of Bath.
+Another interesting item is the quarto first edition (the first three
+books) of Spenser's _Faerie Queene_, Ponsonbie, 1590: and a third, the
+_Paradise Lost_ of Milton in ten books, the original text of 1667 (with
+the 1669 title-page and the Argument and Address to the Reader)--both
+bequeathed to Rogers by W, Jackson of Edinburgh. (One of the stock
+exhibits at "Memory Hall"--as 22 St. James's Place was playfully called
+by some of the owner's friends--was Milton's receipt to Symmons the
+printer for the five pounds he received for his epic. This, framed and
+glazeds hung, according to Lady Eastlake, on one of the doors.[47]) A
+fourth rare book was William Bonham's black-letter Chaucer, a folio
+which had been copiously annotated in MS. by Home Tooke, who gave it to
+Rogers. It moreover contained, at folio 221, the record of Tooke's
+arrest at Wimbledon on 16th May, 1794, and subsequent committal on the
+19th to the Tower, for alleged high treason.[48] Further _notabilia_ in
+this category were the Duke of Marlborough's _Hypnerotomachie_ of
+Poliphilus, Paris, 1554, and also the Aldine edition of 1499; the very
+rare 1572 issue of Camoens's _Lusiads_; Holbein's _Dance of Death_, the
+Lyons issues of 1538 and 1547; first editions of Bewick's _Birds_ and
+_Quadrupeds_; Le Sueur's _Life of St. Bruno_, with the autograph of Sir
+Joshua Reynolds, and a rare quarto (1516) of Boccaccio's _Decameron_.
+
+Notes:
+
+[47] It was, no doubt, identical with the "Original Articles of
+Agreement" (Add. MSS. 18,861) between Milton and Samuel Symmons,
+printer, dated 27th April, 1667, presented by Rogers in 1852 to the
+British Museum. Besides the above-mentioned £5 down, there were to be
+three further payments of £5 each on the sale of three editions, each of
+1300 copies. The second edition appeared in 1674, the year of the
+author's death.
+
+[48] He was acquitted. His notes, in pencil, and relating chiefly to his
+_Diversions of Parley_, were actually written in the Tower. Rogers, who
+was present at the trial in November, mentioned, according to Dyce, a
+curious incident bearing upon a now obsolete custom referred to by
+Goldsmith and others. As usual, the prisoner's dock, in view of possible
+jail-fever, was strewn with sweet-smelling herbs-fennel, rosemary and the
+like. Tooke indignantly swept them away. Another of several characteristic
+anecdotes told by Rogers of Tooke is as follows:--Being asked once at
+college what his father was, he replied, "A Turkey Merchant." Tooke _père_
+was a poulterer in Clare Market.
+
+
+But the mere recapitulation of titles readily grows tedious, even to the
+elect; and I turn to some of the volumes with which, from references in
+the _Table-Talk_ and _Recollections_, their owner might seem to be more
+intimately connected. Foremost among these--one would think--should come
+his own productions. Most of these, no doubt, are included under the
+auctioneers' heading of "Works and Illustrations." In the "Library"
+proper, however, there are few traces of them. There is a quarto copy of
+the unfortunate _Columbus_, with Stothard's sketches; and there is the
+choice little _Pleasures of Memory_ of 1810, with Luke Clennell's
+admirable cuts in _facsimile_ from the same artist's pen-and-ink,--a
+volume which, come what may, will always hold its own in the annals of
+book-illustration. That there were more than one of these latter may be
+an accident. Rogers, nevertheless, like many book-lovers, must have
+indulged in duplicates. According to Hayward, once at breakfast, when
+some one quoted Gray's irresponsible outburst concerning the novels of
+Marivaux and Crébillon _le fils_, Rogers asked his guests, three in
+number, whether they were familiar with Marivaux's _Vie de Marianne_, a
+book which he himself confesses to have read through six times, and
+which French critics still hold, on inconclusive evidence, to have been
+the "only begetter" of Richardson's _Pamela_ and the sentimental novel.
+None of the trio knew anything about it. "Then I will lend you each a
+copy," rejoined Rogers; and the volumes were immediately produced,
+doubtless by that faithful and indefatigable factotum, Edmund Paine, of
+whom his master was wont to affirm that he would not only find any book
+_in_ the house, but _out_ of it as well. What is more (unless it be
+assumed that the poet's stock was larger still), one, at least, of the
+three copies must have been returned, since there is a copy in the
+catalogue. As might be expected in the admirer of Marivaux's heroine,
+the list is also rich in Jean-Jacques, whose "_goût vif pour les
+déjeuners_," this Amphitryon often extolled, quoting with approval
+Rousseau's opinion that "_C'est le temps de la journée où nous sommes le
+plus tranquilles, où nous causons le plus à noire aise._" Another of his
+favourite authors was Manzoni, whose _Promessi Sposi_ he was inclined to
+think he would rather have written than all Scott's novels; and he never
+tired of reading Louis Racine's _Mémoires_ of his father, 1747,--that
+"_filon de l'or pur du dix-septième siecle_"--as Villemain calls
+it--"_qui se prolonge dans l'âge suivant._" Some of Rogers's likings
+sound strange enough nowadays. With Campbell, he delighted in Cowper's
+_Homer_, which he assiduously studied, and infinitely preferred to that
+of Pope. Into Chapman's it must be assumed that he had not
+looked--certainly he has left no sonnet on the subject. Milton was
+perhaps his best-loved bard. "When I was travelling in Italy (he says),
+I made two authors my constant study for versification,--Milton _and
+Crowe_" (The italics are ours.) It is an odd collocation; but not
+unintelligible. William Crowe, the now forgotten Public Orator of
+Oxford, and author of _Lewesdon Hill_, was an intimate friend; a writer
+on versification; and, last but not least, a very respectable echo of
+the Miltonic note, as the following, from a passage dealing with the
+loss in 1786 of the _Halsewell_ East Indiaman off the coast of Dorset,
+sufficiently testifies:--
+
+ The richliest-laden ship
+ Of spicy Ternate, or that annual sent
+ To the Philippines o'er the southern main
+ From Acapulco, carrying massy gold,
+ Were poor to this;--freighted with hopeful Youth
+ And Beauty, and high Courage undismay'd
+ By mortal terrors, and paternal Love, etc., etc.
+
+It is not improbable that Rogers caught the mould of his blank verse
+from the copy rather than from the model. In the matter of style--as
+Flaubert has said--the second-bests are often the better teachers. More
+is to be learned from La Fontaine and Gautier than from Molière and
+Victor Hugo.
+
+Many art-books, many books addressed specially to the connoisseur, as
+well as most of those invaluable volumes no gentleman's library should
+be without, found their places on Rogers's hospitable shelves. Of such,
+it is needless to speak; nor, in this place, is it necessary to deal
+with his finished and amiable, but not very vigorous or vital poetry. A
+parting word may, however, be devoted to the poet himself. Although,
+during his lifetime, and particularly towards its close, his weak voice
+and singularly blanched appearance exposed him perpetually to a kind of
+brutal personality now happily tabooed, it cannot be pretended that,
+either in age or youth, he was an attractive-looking man. In these
+cases, as in that of Goldsmith, a measure of burlesque sometimes
+provides a surer criterion than academic portraiture. The bust of the
+sculptor-caricaturist, Danton, is of course what even Hogarth would have
+classed as _outré_[49]; but there is reason for believing that Maclise's
+sketch in _Fraser_ of the obtrusively bald, cadaverous and wizened
+figure in its arm-chair, which gave such a shudder of premonition to
+Goethe, and which Maginn, reflecting the popular voice, declared to be a
+mortal likeness--"painted to the very death"--was more like the original
+than his pictures by Lawrence and Hoppner. One can comprehend, too, that
+the person whom nature had so ungenerously endowed, might be perfectly
+capable of retorting to rudeness, or the still-smarting recollection of
+rudeness, with those weapons of mordant wit and acrid epigram which are
+not unfrequently the protective compensation of physical shortcomings.
+But this conceded, there are numberless anecdotes which testify to
+Rogers's cultivated taste and real good breeding, to his genuine
+benevolence, to his almost sentimental craving for appreciation and
+affection. In a paper on his books, it is permissible to end with
+a bookish anecdote. One of his favourite memories, much repeated in his
+latter days, was that of Cowley's laconic Will,--"I give my body to the
+earth, and my soul to my Maker." Lady Eastlake shall tell the
+rest:--"This ... proved on one occasion too much for one of the party,
+and in an incautious moment a flippant young lady exclaimed, 'But, Mr.
+Rogers, what of Cowley's _property_?' An ominous silence ensued, broken
+only by a _sotto voce_ from the late Mrs. Procter: 'Well, my dear, you
+have put your foot in it; no more invitations for you in a hurry,' But
+she did the kind old man, then above ninety, wrong. The culprit
+continued to receive the same invitations and the same welcome."[50]
+
+Note:
+
+[49] Rogers's own copy of this, which (it may be added), he held
+in horror, now belongs to Mr. Edmund Gosse. Lord Londonderry has a
+number of Danton's busts.
+
+[50] _Quarterly Review_, vol. 167, p. 512.
+
+
+
+
+PEPYS' "DIARY"
+
+To One who asked why he wrote it.
+
+
+You ask me what was his intent?
+ In truth, I'm not a German;
+'Tis plain though that he neither meant
+ A Lecture nor a Sermon.
+
+But there it is,--the thing's a Fact.
+ I find no other reason
+But that some scribbling itch attacked
+ Him in and out of season,
+
+To write what no one else should read,
+ With this for second meaning,
+To "cleanse his bosom" (and indeed
+ It sometimes wanted cleaning);
+
+To speak, as 'twere, his private mind,
+ Unhindered by repression,
+To make his motley life a kind,
+ Of Midas' ears confession;
+
+And thus outgrew this work _per se_,--
+ This queer, kaleidoscopic,
+Delightful, blabbing, vivid, free
+ Hotch-pot of daily topic.
+
+So artless in its vanity,
+ So fleeting, so eternal,
+So packed with "poor Humanity"--
+ We know as Pepys' his journal.[51]
+
+Note:
+
+[51] Written for the Pepys' Dinner at Magdalene College, Cambridge,
+February 23rd, 1905.
+
+
+
+
+A FRENCH CRITIC ON BATH
+
+
+Among other pleasant premonitions of the present _entente cordiale_
+between France and England is the increased attention which, for some
+time past, our friends of Outre Manche have been devoting to our
+literature. That this is wholly of recent growth, is not, of course, to
+be inferred. It must be nearly five-and-forty years since M. Hippolyte
+Taine issued his logical and orderly _Histoire de la Littérature
+Anglaise_; while other isolated efforts of insight and importance--such
+as the _Laurence Sterne_ of M. Paul Stapfer, and the excellent _Le
+Public et les Hommes de Lettres en Angleterre au XVIII^e Siècle_ of the
+late M. Alexandre Beljame of the Sorbonne--are already of distant date.
+But during the last two decades the appearance of similar productions
+has been more recurrent and more marked. From one eminent writer
+alone--M. J.-J. Jusserand--we have received an entire series of studies
+of exceptional charm, variety, and accomplishment. M. Felix Rabbe has
+given us a sympathetic analysis of Shelley; M. Auguste
+Angellier,--himself a poet of individuality and distinction,--what has
+been rightly described as a "splendid work" on Burns;[52] while M. Émile
+Legouis, in a minute examination of "The Prelude," has contrasted and
+compared the orthodox Wordsworth of maturity with the juvenile
+semi-atheist of Coleridge. Travelling farther afield, M. W. Thomas has
+devoted an exhaustive volume to Young of the _Night Thoughts_; M. Léon
+Morel, another to Thomson; and, incidentally, a flood of fresh light has
+been thrown upon the birth and growth of the English Novel by the
+admirable _Jean-Jacques Rousseau et les Origines du Cosmopolitisme
+Littéraire_ of the late Joseph Texte--an investigation unquestionably of
+the ripest scholarship, and the most extended research. And now once
+more there are signs that French lucidity and French precision are about
+to enter upon other conquests; and we have M. Barbeau's study of a
+famous old English watering-place[53]--appropriately dedicated, as is
+another of the books already mentioned, to M. Beljame.[54]
+
+Notes:
+
+[52] A volume of _Pages Choisies de Auguste Angellier, Prose et
+Vers_, with an Introduction by M. Legouis, has recently (1908) been
+issued by the Clarendon Press. It contains lengthy extracts from M.
+Angellier's study of Burns.
+
+[53:]_Une Ville d'Eaux anglaise au XVIIIe Siècle, La Société Elegante
+et Littéraire à Bath sous la Reine Anne et sous les Georges_. Par A.
+Barbeau. Paris, Picard, 1904.
+
+[54] The list grows apace. To the above, among others, must now
+be added M. René Huchon's brilliant little essay on Mrs. Montagu, and
+his elaborate study of Crabbe, to say nothing of M. Jules Derocquigny's
+Lamb, M. Jules Douady's Hazlitt, and M. Joseph Aynard's Coleridge.
+
+
+At first sight, topography, even when combined with social sketches, may
+seem less suited to a foreigner and an outsider than it would be to a
+resident and a native. In the attitude of the latter to the land in
+which he lives or has been born, there is always an inherent something
+of the soil for which even trained powers of comparison, and a special
+perceptive faculty, are but imperfect substitutes. On the other hand,
+the visitor from over-sea is, in many respects, better placed for
+observation than the inhabitant. He enjoys not a little--it has been
+often said--of the position of posterity. He takes in more at a glance;
+he leaves out less; he is disturbed by no apprehensions of explaining
+what is obvious, or discovering what is known. As a consequence, he sets
+down much which, from long familiarity, an indigenous critic would be
+disposed to discard, although it might not be, in itself, either
+uninteresting or superfluous. And if, instead of dealing with the
+present and actual, his concern is with history and the past, his
+external standpoint becomes a strength rather than a weakness. He can
+survey his subject with a detachment which is wholly favourable to his
+project; and he can give it, with less difficulty than another, the
+advantages of scientific treatment and an artistic setting. Finally, if
+his theme have definite limits--as for instance an appreciable
+beginning, middle, and end--he must be held to be exceptionally
+fortunate. And this, either from happy guessing, or sheer good luck, is
+M. Barbeau's case. All these conditions are present in the annals of the
+once popular pleasure-resort of which he has elected to tell the story.
+It arose gradually; it grew through a century of unexampled prosperity;
+it sank again to the level of a county-town. If it should ever arise
+again,--and it is by no means a _ville morte_,--it will be in an
+entirely different way. The particular Bath of the eighteenth
+century--the Bath of Queen Anne and the Georges, of Nash and Fielding
+and Sheridan, of Anstey and Mrs. Siddons, of Wesley and Lady Huntingdon,
+of Quin and Gainsborough and Lawrence and a hundred others--is no more.
+It is a case of _Fuit Ilium_. It has gone for ever; and can never be
+revived in the old circumstances. To borrow an apposite expression from
+M. Texte, it is an organism whose evolution has accomplished its course.
+
+M. Barbeau's task, then, is very definitely mapped-out and
+circumscribed. But he is far too good a craftsman to do no more than
+give a mere panorama of that daily Bath programme which King Nash and
+his dynasty ordained and established. He goes back to the origins; to
+the legend of King Lear's leper-father; to the _Diary_ of the
+too-much-neglected Celia Fiennes; to Pepys[55] and Grammont's Memoirs; to
+the days when hapless Catherine of Braganza, with the baleful "_belle_
+Stewart" in her train, made fruitless pilgrimage to Bladud's spring as a
+remedy against sterility. He sketches, with due acknowledgments to
+Goldsmith's unique little book, the biography of that archquack,
+_poseur_, and very clever organiser, Mr. Richard Nash, the first real
+Master of the Ceremonies; and he gives a full account of his followers
+and successors. He also minutely relates the story of Sheridan's
+marriage to his beautiful "St. Cecilia," Elizabeth Ann Linley. A
+separate and very interesting chapter is allotted to Lady Huntingdon and
+the Methodists, not without levies from the remarkable _Spiritual
+Quixote_ of that Rev. Richard Graves of Claverton, of whom an excellent
+account was given not long since in Mr. W. H. Hutton's suggestive
+_Burford Papers_. Other chapters are occupied with Bath and its _belles
+lettres_; with "Squire Allworthy" of Prior Park and his literary guests,
+Pope, Warburton, Fielding and his sister, etc.; with the historic
+Frascati vase of Lady Miller at Batheaston, which stirred the ridicule
+of Horace Walpole, and is still, it is said, to be seen in a local park.
+The dosing pages treat of Bath--musical, artistic, scientific--of its
+gradual transformation as a health resort--of its eventual and
+foredoomed decline and fall as the one fashionable watering-place,
+supreme and single, for Great Britain and Ireland.
+
+Note:
+
+[55] Oddly enough--if M. Barbeau's index is to be trusted, and
+it is an unusually good one,--he makes no reference to Evelyn's visit to
+Bath. But Evelyn went there in June, 1654, bathed in the Cross Bath,
+criticised the "_facciata_" of the Abbey Church, complained of the
+"narrow, uneven and unpleasant streets," and inter-visited with the
+company frequenting the place for health. "Among the rest of the idle
+diversions of the town," he says, "one musician was famous for acting a
+changeling [idiot or half-wit], which indeed he personated strangely."
+(_Diary_, Globe edn., 1908, p. 174.)
+
+
+But it is needless to prolong analysis. One's only wonder--as usual
+after the event--is that what has been done so well had never been
+thought of before. For while M. Barbeau is to be congratulated upon the
+happy task he has undertaken, we may also congratulate ourselves that he
+has performed it so effectively. His material is admirably arranged. He
+has supported it by copious notes; and he has backed it up by an
+impressive bibliography of authorities ancient and modern. This is
+something; but it is not all[56]. He has done much more than this. He has
+contrived that, in his picturesque and learned pages, the old "Queen of
+the West" shall live again, with its circling terraces, its grey stone
+houses and ill-paved streets, its crush of chairs and chariots, its
+throng of smirking, self-satisfied prom-enaders.
+
+Note:
+
+[56] To the English version (Heinemann, 1904) an eighteenth-century map
+of Bath, and a number of interesting views and portraits have been added.
+
+
+One seems to see the clumsy stage-coaches depositing their touzled and
+tumbled inmates, in their rough rocklows and quaint travelling headgear,
+at the "Bear" or the "White Hart," after a jolting two or three days'
+journey from Oxford or London, not without the usual experiences, real
+and imaginary, of suspicious-looking horsemen at Hounslow, or masked
+"gentlemen of the pad" on Claverton Down. One hears the peal of
+five-and-twenty bells which greets the arrival of visitors of
+importance; and notes the obsequious and venal town-waits who follow
+them to their lodgings in Gay Street or Milsom Street or the
+Parades,--where they will, no doubt, be promptly attended by the Master
+of the Ceremonies, "as fine as fivepence," and a very pretty,
+sweet-smelling gentleman, to be sure, whether his name be Wade or
+Derrick. Next day will probably discover them in chip hats and flannel,
+duly equipped with wooden bowls and bouquets, at the King's Bath, where,
+through a steaming atmosphere, you may survey their artless manoeuvres
+(as does Lydia Melford in _Humphry Clinker_) from the windows of the
+Pump Room, to which rallying-place they will presently repair to drink
+the waters, in a medley of notables and notorieties, members of
+Parliament, chaplains and led-captains, Noblemen with ribbons and stars,
+dove-coloured Quakers, Duchesses, quacks, fortune-hunters, lackeys,
+lank-haired Methodists, Bishops, and boarding-school misses. Ferdinand
+Count Fathom will be there, as well as my Lord Ogleby; Lady Bellaston
+(and Mr. Thomas Jones); Geoffry Wildgoose and Tugwell the cobbler;
+Lismahago and Tabitha Bramble; the caustic Mrs. Selwyn and the blushing
+Miss Anville. Be certain, too, that, sooner or later, you will encounter
+Mrs, Candour and Lady Sneerwell, Sir Benjamin Backbite and his uncle,
+Mr. Crabtree, for this is their main haunt and region--in fact, they
+were born here. You may follow this worshipful and piebald procession to
+the Public Breakfasts in the Spring Gardens, to the Toy-shops behind the
+Church, to the Coffee-houses in Westgate Street, to the Reading Rooms on
+the Walks, where, in Mr. James Leake's parlour at the back--if you are
+lucky--you may behold the celebrated Mr. Ralph Allen of Prior Park,
+talking either to Mr. Henry Fielding or to Mr. Leake's brother-in-law,
+Mr. Samuel Richardson, but never--if we are correctly informed--to both
+of them together. Or you may run against Mr. Christopher Anstey of the
+over-praised _Guide_, walking arm-in-arm with another Bathonian, Mr.
+Melmoth, whose version of Pliny was once held to surpass its original.
+At the Abbey--where there are daily morning services--you shall listen
+to the silver periods of Bishop Kurd, whom his admirers call fondly "the
+Beauty of Holiness"; at St. James's you can attend the full-blown
+lectures, "more unctuous than ever he preached," of Bishop Beilby
+Porteus; or you may succeed in procuring a card for a select hearing, at
+Edgar Buildings, of Lady Huntingdon's eloquent chaplain, Mr. Whitefield.
+With the gathering shades of even, you may pass, if so minded, to
+Palmer's Theatre in Orchard Street, and follow Mrs. Siddons acting
+Belvidera in Otway's _Venice Preserv'd_ to the Pierre of that forgotten
+Mr. Lee whom Fanny Burney put next to Garrick; or you may join the
+enraptured audience whom Mrs. Jordan is delighting with her favourite
+part of Priscilla Tomboy in _The Romp_. You may assist at the concerts
+of Signer Venanzio Rauzzini and Monsieur La Motte; you may take part in
+a long minuet or country dance at the Upper or Lower Assembly Rooms,
+which Bunbury will caricature; you may even lose a few pieces at the
+green tables; and, should you return home late enough, may watch a
+couple of stout chairmen at the door of the "Three Tuns" in Stall
+Street, hoisting that seasoned toper, Mr. James Quin, into a sedan after
+his evening's quantum of claret. What you do to-day, you will do
+to-morrow, if the bad air of the Pump Room has not given you a headache,
+or the waters a touch of vertigo; and you will continue to do it for a
+month or six weeks, when the lumbering vehicle with the leathern straps
+and crane-necked springs will carry you back again over the deplorable
+roads ("so _sidelum_ and _jumblum_," one traveller calls them) to your
+town-house, or your country-box, or your city-shop or chambers, as the
+case may be. Here, in due course, you will begin to meditate upon your
+next excursion to THE BATH, provided always that you have not dipped
+your estate at "E.O.", or been ruined by milliners' bills;--that your
+son has not gone northwards with a sham Scotch heiress, or your daughter
+been married at Charicombe, by private license, to a pinchbeck Irish
+peer. For all these things--however painful the admission--were,
+according to the most credible chroniclers, the by-no-means infrequent
+accompaniment or sequel of an unguarded sojourn at the old jigging,
+card-playing, scandal-loving, pleasure-seeking city in the loop of "the
+soft-flowing Avon."
+
+It is an inordinate paragraph, outraging all known rules of composition!
+But then--How seductive a subject is eighteenth-century Bath!--and how
+rich in memories is M. Barbeau's book!
+
+
+
+
+A WELCOME FROM THE "JOHNSON CLUB"
+
+To William John Courthope, _March 12, 1903_
+
+
+When Pope came back from Trojan wars once more,
+He found a Bard, to meet him on the shore,
+And hail his advent with a strain as clear
+As e'er was sung by BYRON or by FRERE.[57]
+
+You, SIR, have travelled from no distant clime,
+Yet would JOHN GAY could welcome you in rhyme;
+And by some fable not too coldly penned,
+Teach how with judgment one may praise a Friend.
+
+There is no need that I should tell in words
+Your prowess from _The Paradise of Birds_;[58]
+No need to show how surely you have traced
+The Life in Poetry, the Law in Taste;[59]
+Or mark with what unwearied strength you wear
+The weight that WARTON found too great to bear.[60]
+There Is no need for this or that. My plan
+Is less to laud the Matter than the Man.
+
+This is my brief. We recognise in you
+The mind judicial, the untroubled view;
+The critic who, without pedantic pose,
+Takes his firm foothold on the thing he knows;
+Who, free alike from passion or pretence,
+Holds the good rule of calm and common sense;
+And be the subject or perplexed or plain,--
+Clear or confusing,--is throughout urbane,
+Patient, persuasive, logical, precise,
+And only hard to vanity and vice.
+
+More I could add, but brevity is best;--
+These are our claims to honour you as Guest.
+
+Notes:
+
+[57] _Alexander Pope: his Safe Return from Troy. A Congratulatory Poem
+on his Completing his Translation of Homer's Iliad._ (In _ottava rima_.)
+By Mr. Gay, 1720(?). Frere's burlesque, _Monks and Giants_--it will be
+remembered--set the tune to Byron's _Beppo_.
+
+[58] _The Paradise of Birds_, 1870.
+
+[59] _Life in Poetry, Law in Taste_, two series of Lectures
+delivered in Oxford, 1895-1900. 1901.
+
+[60] _A History of English Poetry_. 1895 (in progress).
+
+
+
+
+THACKERY'S "ESMOND"
+
+
+At this date, Thackeray's _Esmond_ has passed from the domain of
+criticism into that securer region where the classics, if they do not
+actually "slumber out their immortality," are at least preserved from
+profane intrusion. This "noble story"[61]--as it was called by one of its
+earliest admirers--is no longer, in any sense, a book "under review."
+The painful student of the past may still, indeed, with tape and
+compass, question its details and proportions; or the quick-fingered
+professor of paradox, jauntily turning it upside-down, rejoice in the
+results of his perverse dexterity; but certain things are now
+established in regard to it, which cannot be gainsaid, even by those who
+assume the superfluous office of anatomising the accepted. In the first
+place, if _Esmond_ be not the author's greatest work (and there are
+those who, like the late Anthony Trollope, would willingly give it that
+rank), it is unquestionably his greatest work in its particular kind,
+for its sequel, _The Virginians_, however admirable in detached
+passages, is desultory and invertebrate, while _Denis Duval_, of which
+the promise was "great, remains unfinished. With _Vanity Fair_, the
+author's masterpiece in another manner, _Esmond_ cannot properly be
+compared, because an imitation of the past can never compete in
+verisimilitude or on any satisfactory terms with a contemporary picture.
+Nevertheless, in its successful reproduction of the tone of a bygone
+epoch, lies _Esmond's_ second and incontestable claim to length of days.
+Athough fifty years and more have passed since it was published, it is
+still unrivalled as the typical example of that class of historical
+fiction, which, dealing indiscriminately with characters real and
+feigned, develops them both with equal familiarity, treating them each
+from within, and investing them impartially with a common atmosphere of
+illusion. No modern novel has done this in the same way, nor with the
+same good fortune, as Esmond; and there is nothing more to be said on
+this score. Even if--as always--later researches should have revised our
+conception of certain of the real personages, the value of the book as
+an imaginative _tour de force_ is unimpaired. Little remains therefore
+for the gleaner of to-day save bibliographical jottings, and neglected
+notes on its first appearance.
+
+Note:
+
+[61] "Never could I have believed that Thackeray, great as his abilities
+are, could have written so noble a story as _Esmond_."--WALTER SAVAGE
+LANDOR, August 1856.
+
+
+In Thackeray's work, the place of _The History of Henry Esmond, Esq., a
+Colonel in the Service of Her Majesty Q. Anne. Written by Himself_--lies
+midway between his four other principal books, _Vanity Fair, Pendennis,
+The Newcomes_, and _The Virginians_; and its position serves, in a
+measure, to explain its origin. In 1848, after much tentative and
+miscellaneous production, of which the value had been but imperfectly
+appreciated, the author found his fame with the yellow numbers of
+_Vanity Fair_. Two years later, adopting the same serial form, came
+_Pendennis_. _Vanity Fair_ had been the condensation of a life's
+experience; and excellent as _Pendennis_ would have seemed from any
+inferior hand, its readers could not disguise from themselves that,
+though showing no falling off in other respects, it drew to some extent
+upon the old material. No one was readier than Thackeray to listen to a
+whisper of this kind, or more willing to believe that--as he afterwards
+told his friend Elwin concerning _The Newcomes_--"he had exhausted all
+the types of character with which he was familiar." Accordingly he
+began, for the time, to turn his thoughts in fresh directions; and in
+the year that followed the publication of _Pendennis_, prepared and
+delivered in England and Scotland a series of _Lectures upon the English
+Humourists of the Eighteenth Century_. With the success of these came
+the prompting for a new work of fiction,--not to be contemporary, and
+not to be issued in parts. His studies for the _Humourists_ had
+saturated him with the spirit of a time to which--witness his novelette
+of _Barry Lyndon_--he had always been attracted; and when Mr. George
+Smith called on him with a proposal that he should write a new story for
+£1000, he was already well in hand with _Esmond_,--an effort in which,
+if it were not possible to invent new puppets, it was at least possible
+to provide fresh costumes and a change of background. Begun in 1851,
+_Esmond_ progressed rapidly, and by the end of May 1852 it was
+completed. Owing to the limited stock of old-cut type in which it was
+set up, its three volumes passed but slowly through the press; and it
+was eventually issued at the end of the following October, upon the eve
+of the author's departure to lecture in America. In fact, he was waiting
+on the pier for the tender which was to convey him to the steamer, when
+he received his bound copies from the publisher.
+
+Mr. Eyre Crowe, A.R.A., who accompanied Thackeray to the United States,
+and had for some time previously been acting as his "factotum and
+amanuensis," has recorded several interesting details with regard to the
+writing of _Esmond_, To most readers it will be matter of surprise, and
+it is certainly a noteworthy testimony to the author's powers, that this
+attempt to revive the language and atmosphere of a vanished era was in
+great part dictated. It has even been said that, like _Pendennis_, it
+was _all_ dictated; but this it seems is a mistake, for, as we shall see
+presently, part of the manuscript was prepared by the author himself. As
+he warmed to his work, however, he often reverted to the method of oral
+composition which had always been most congenial to him, and which
+explains the easy colloquialism of his style. Much of the "copy" was
+taken down by Mr. Crowe in a first-floor bedroom of No. 16 Young Street,
+Kensington, the still-existent house where Vanity Fair had been written;
+at the Bedford Hotel in Covent Garden; at the round table in the
+Athenasum library, and elsewhere. "I write better anywhere than at
+home,"--Thackeray told Elwin,--"and I write less at home than anywhere."
+Sometimes author and scribe would betake themselves to the British
+Museum, to look up points in connection with Marlborough's battles, or
+to rummage Jacob Tonson's Gazettes for the official accounts of
+Wynendael and Oudenarde. The British Museum, indeed, was another of
+_Esmond's_ birthplaces. By favour of Sir Antonio Panizzi, Thackeray and
+his assistant, surrounded by their authorities, were accommodated in one
+of the secluded galleries. "I sat down,"--says Mr. Crowe--"and wrote to
+dictation the scathing sentences about the great Marlborough, the
+denouncing of Cadogan, etc., etc. As a curious instance of literary
+contagion, it may be here stated that I got quite bitten, with the
+expressed anger at their misdeeds against General Webb, Thackeray's
+kinsman and ancestor; and that I then looked upon Secretary Cardonnel's
+conduct with perfect loathing. I was quite delighted to find his
+meannesses justly pilloried in _Esmond's_ pages." What rendered the
+situation more piquant,--Mr. Crowe adds,--all this took place on the
+site of old Montague House, where, as Steele's "Prue" says to St. John
+in the novel," you wretches go and fight duels."[62]
+
+Note:
+
+[62] _With Thackeray in America_, 1893, p. 4.
+
+
+Those who are willing to make a pilgrimage to Cambridge, may, if they
+please, inspect the very passages which aroused the enthusiam of
+Thackeray's secretary. In a special case in the Library of Trinity
+College, not far from those which enclose the manuscripts of Tennyson
+and Milton, is the original and only manuscript of _Esmond_, being in
+fact the identical "copy" which was despatched to the press of Messrs.
+Bradbury and Evans at Whitefriars. It makes two large quarto volumes,
+and was presented to the College (Esmond's College!) in 1888 by the
+author's son-in-law, the late Sir Leslie Stephen. It still bears in
+pencil the names of the different compositors who set up the type. Much
+of it is in Thackeray's own small, slightly-slanted, but oftener upright
+hand, and many pages have hardly any corrections.[63] His custom was to
+write on half-sheets of a rather large notepaper, and some idea may be
+gathered of the neat, minute, and regular script, when it is added that
+the lines usually contain twelve to fifteen words, and that there are
+frequently as many as thirty-three of these lines to a page. Some of the
+rest of the "copy" is in the handwriting of the author's daughter, now
+Lady Ritchie; but a considerable portion was penned by Mr. Eyre Crowe.
+The oft-quoted passage in book ii. chap. vi. about "bringing your
+sheaves with you," was written by Thackeray himself almost as it stands;
+so was the sham _Spectator_, hereafter mentioned, and most of the
+chapter headed "General Webb wins the Battle of Wynendael." But the
+splendid closing scene,--"August 1st, 1714,"--is almost wholly in the
+hand of Mr. Crowe. It is certainly a remarkable fact that work at this
+level should have been thus improvised, and that nothing, as we are
+credibly informed, should have been before committed to paper.[64]
+
+When _Esmond_ first made its appearance in October 1852, it was not
+without distinguished and even formidable competitors. _Bleak House_ had
+reached its eighth number; and Bulwer was running _My Novel in
+Blackwood_. In _Fraser_, Kingsley was bringing out _Hypatia_; and Whyte
+Melville was preluding with _Digby Grand_. Charlotte Brontë must have
+been getting ready _Villette_ for the press; and Tennyson--undeterred by
+the fact that his hero had already been "dirged" by the indefatigable
+Tupper--was busy with his _Ode on the Death of the Duke of
+Wellington_.[65] The critics of the time were possibly embarrassed with
+this wealth of talent, for they were not, at the outset, immoderately
+enthusiastic over the new arrival. The _Athenaeum_ was by no means
+laudatory. _Esmond_ "harped upon the same string"; "wanted vital heat";
+"touched no fresh fount of thought"; "introduced no novel forms of
+life"; and so forth. But the _Spectator_, in a charming greeting from
+George Brimley (since included in his _Essays_), placed the book, as a
+work of art, even above _Vanity Fair_ and _Pendennis_; the "serious and
+orthodox" _Examiner_, then under John Forster, was politely judicial;
+the _Daily News_ friendly; and the _Morning Advertiser_ enraptured. The
+book, this last declared, was the "beau-ideal of historical romance." On
+December 4 a second edition was announced. Then, on the 22nd, came the
+_Times_. Whether the _Times_ remembered and resented a certain
+delightfully contemptuous "Essay on Thunder and Small Beer," with which
+Thackeray retorted to its notice of _The Kickkburys on the Rhine_ (a
+thing hard to believe!) or whether it did not,--its report of _Esmond_
+was distinctly hostile. In three columns, it commended little but the
+character of Marlborough, and the writer's "incomparably easy and
+unforced style." Thackeray thought that it had "absolutely stopped" the
+sale. But this seems inconsistent with the fact that the publisher sent
+him a supplementary cheque for £250 on account of _Esmond's_ success.
+
+Notes:
+
+[63] One is reminded of the accounts of Scott's "copy." "Page
+after page the writing runs on exactly as you read it in print"--says
+Mr. Mowbray Morris. "I was looking not long ago at the manuscript of
+_Kenilworth_ in the British Museum, and examined the end with particular
+care, thinking that the wonderful scene of Amy Robsart's death must
+surely have cost him some labour. They were the cleanest pages in the
+volume: I do not think there was a sentence altered or added in the
+whole chapter" (Lecture at Eton, _Macmillan's Magazine_ (1889), lx.
+pp. 158-9).
+
+[64] "The sentences"--Mr. Crowe told a member of the Athenaeum,
+when speaking of his task--"came out glibly as he [Thackeray] paced the
+room." This is the more singular when contrasted with the slow
+elaboration of the Balzac and Flaubert school. No doubt Thackeray must
+often have arranged in his mind precisely much that he meant to say.
+Such seems indeed to have been his habit. The late Mr. Lockcer-Lampson
+informed the writer of this paper that once, when he met the author of
+Esmond in the Green Park, Thackeray gently begged to be allowed to walk
+alone, as he had some verses In his head which he was finishing. They
+were those which afterwards appeared in the _Cornhill_ for January 1867,
+under the title of _Mrs. Katherine's Lantern_.
+
+[65] The Duke died 14th Sept. 1852.
+
+
+Another reason which may have tended to slacken--not to stop--the sale,
+is also suggested by the author himself. This was the growing popularity
+of _My Novel_ and _Villette_. And Miss Brontë's book calls to mind the
+fact that she was among the earliest readers of _Esmond_, the first two
+volumes of which were sent to her in manuscript by George Smith, She
+read it, she tells him, with "as much ire and sorrow as gratitude and
+admiration," marvelling at its mastery of reconstruction,--hating its
+satire,--its injustice to women. How could Lady Castlewood peep through
+a keyhole, listen at a door, and be jealous of a boy and a milkmaid!
+There was too much political and religious intrigue--she thought.
+Nevertheless she said (this was in February 1852, speaking of vol. i.)
+the author might "yet make it the best he had ever written." In March
+she had seen the second volume. The character of Marlborough (here she
+anticipated the _Times_) was a "masterly piece of writing." But there
+was "too little story." The final volume, by her own request, she
+received in print. It possessed, in her opinion, the "most sparkle,
+impetus, and interest." "I hold," she wrote to Mr. Smith, "that a work
+of fiction ought to be a work of creation: that the _real_ should be
+sparingly introduced in pages dedicated to the _ideal_" In a later
+letter she gives high praise to the complex conception of Beatrix,
+traversing incidentally the absurd accusation of one of the papers that
+she resembled. Blanche Amory [the _Athenaeum_ and _Examiner_, it may be
+noted, regarded her as "another Becky"]. "To me," Miss Bronte exclaims,
+"they are about as identical as a weasel and a royal tigress of Bengal;
+both the latter are quadrupeds, both the former women." These frank
+comments of a fervent but thoroughly honest admirer, are of genuine
+interest. When the book was published, Thackeray himself sent her a copy
+with his "grateful regards," and it must have been of this that she
+wrote to Mr. Smith on November 3,--"Colonel Henry Esmond is just
+arrived. He looks very antique and distinguished in his Queen Anne's
+garb; the periwig, sword, lace, and ruffles are very well represented by
+the old _Spectator_ type."[66]
+
+Note:
+
+[66] Mr. Clement Shorter's _Charlotte Brontë and her Circle_,
+1896, p. 403; and Gaskell's _Life of Charlotte Brontë_, 1900, pp. 561
+et seq.
+
+
+One of the points on which Miss Brontë does not touch,--at all events
+does not touch in those portions of her correspondence which have been
+printed,--is the marriage with which _Esmond_ closes. Upon this event it
+would have been highly instructive to have had her views, especially as
+it appears to have greatly exercised her contemporaries, the first
+reviewers. It was the gravamen of the _Times_ indictment; to the critic
+of _Fraser_ it was highly objectionable; and the _Examiner_ regarded it
+as "incredible." Why it was "incredible" that a man should marry a woman
+seven years older than himself, to whom he had already proposed once in
+vol. ii., and of whose youthful appearance we are continually reminded
+("she looks the sister of her daughter" says the old Dowager at
+Chelsea), is certainly not superficially obvious. Nor was it obvious to
+Lady Castlewood's children, "Mother's in love with you,--yes, I think
+mother's in love with you," says downright Frank Esmond; the only
+impediment in his eyes being the bar sinister, as yet unremoved. And
+Miss Beatrix herself, in vol. iii., is even more roundly explicit. "As
+for you," she tells Esmond, "you want a woman to bring your slippers and
+cap, and to sit at your feet, and cry 'O caro! O bravo!' whilst you read
+your Shakespeares, and Miltons, and stuff" [which shows that she herself
+had read Swift's _Grand Question Debated_]. "Mamma would have been the
+wife for you, had you been a little older, though you look ten years
+older than she does," "You do, you glum-faced, blue-bearded, little old
+man!" adds this very imperious and free-spoken young lady. The situation
+is, no doubt, at times extremely difficult, and naturally requires
+consummate skill in the treatment. But if these things and others
+signify anything to an intelligent reader, they signify that the author,
+if he had not his end steadily in view, knew perfectly well that his
+story was tending in one direction. There will probably always be some
+diversity of opinion in the matter; but the majority of us have accepted
+Thackeray's solution, and have dropped out of sight that hint of
+undesirable rivalry, which so troubled the precisians of the early
+Victorian age. To those who read _Esmond_ now, noting carefully the
+almost imperceptible transformation of the motives on either side, as
+developed by the evolution of the story, the union of the hero and
+heroine at the end must appear not only credible but preordained. And
+that the gradual progress towards this foregone conclusion is handled
+with unfailing tact and skill, there can surely be no question.[67]
+
+Note:
+
+[67} Thackeray's own explanation was more characteristic than
+convincing. "Why did you"--said once to him impetuous Mrs. John Brown of
+Edinburgh--"Why did you make Esmond marry that old woman?" "My dear
+lady," he replied, "it was not I who married them. They married
+themselves." (Dr. _John Brmon_, by the late John Taylor Brown, 1903,
+pp. 96-7.)
+
+
+Of the historical portraits in the book, the interest has, perhaps, at
+this date, a little paled. Not that they are one whit less vigorously
+alive than when the author first put them in motion; but they have
+suffered from the very attention which _Esmond_ and _The Humourists_
+have directed to the study of the originals. The picture of Marlborough
+is still as effective as when it was first proclaimed to be good enough
+for the brush of Saint-Simon. But Thackeray himself confessed to a
+family prejudice against the hero of Blenheim, and later artists have
+considerably readjusted the likeness. Nor in all probability would the
+latest biographer of Bolingbroke endorse _that_ presentment. In the
+purely literary figures, Thackeray naturally followed the _Lectures_,
+and is consequently open to the same criticisms as have been offered on
+those performances. The Swift of _The Humourists_, modelled on Macaulay,
+was never accepted from the first; and it has not been accepted in the
+novel, or by subsequent writers from Forster onwards.[68] Addison has
+been less studied; and his likeness has consequently been less
+questioned. Concerning Steele there has been rather more discussion.
+That Thackeray's sketch is very vivid, very human, and in most
+essentials, hard to disprove, must be granted. But it is obviously
+conceived under the domination of the "poor Dick" of Addison, and dwells
+far too persistently upon Steele's frailer and more fallible aspect. No
+one would believe that the flushed personage in the full-bottomed
+periwig, who hiccups Addison's _Campaign_ in the Haymarket garret, or
+the fuddled victim of "Prue's" curtain lecture at Hampton, ranked, at
+the date of the story, far higher than Addison as a writer, and that he
+was, in spite of his faults, not only a kindly gentleman and scholar,
+but a philanthropist, a staunch patriot, and a consistent politician.
+Probably the author of _Esmond_ considered that, in a mixed character,
+to be introduced incidentally, and exhibited naturally "in the quotidian
+undress and relaxation of his mind" (as Lamb says), anything like
+biographical big drum should be deprecated. This is, at least, the
+impression left on us by an anecdote told by Elwin. He says that
+Thackeray, talking to him once about _The Virginians_, which was then
+appearing, announced that he meant, among other people, to bring in
+Goldsmith, "representing him as he really was, a little, shabby, mean,
+shuffling Irishman." These are given as Thackeray's actual words. If so,
+they do not show the side of Goldsmith which is shown in the last
+lecture of _The Humourists._[69]
+
+Notes:
+
+[68] Thackeray heartily disliked Swift, and said so. "As for
+Swift, you haven't made me alter my opinion"--he replied to Hannay's
+remonstrances. This feeling was intensified by the belief that Swift, as
+a clergyman, was insincere. "Of course,"--he wrote in September, 1851,
+in a letter now in the British Museum,--"any man is welcome to believe
+as he likes for me _except_ a parson; and I can't help looking upon
+Swift and Sterne as a couple of traitors and renegades ... with a
+scornful pity for them in spite of all their genius and greatness."
+
+[69] _Some XVIII. Century Men of Letters_, 1902, i. 187. The
+intention was never carried out. In _The King over the Water_, 1908,
+Miss A. Shield and Mr. Andrew Lang have recently examined another
+portrait in _Esmond_,--that of the Chevalier de St. George,--not without
+injury to its historical veracity. In these matters, Mr. Lang--like Rob
+Roy--is on his native heath; and it is only necessary to refer the
+reader to this highly interesting study.
+
+
+But although, with our rectified information, we may except against the
+picture of Steele as a man, we can scarcely cavil at the reproduction of
+his manner as a writer. Even when Thackeray was a boy at Charterhouse,
+his imitative faculty had been exceptional; and he displayed it
+triumphantly in his maturity by those _Novels by Eminent Hands_ in which
+the authors chosen are at once caricatured and criticised. The thing is
+more than the gift of parody; it amounts (as Mr. Frederic Harrison has
+rightly said) to positive forgery. It is present in all his works, in
+stray letters and detached passages.
+
+In its simplest form it is to be found in the stiff, circumstantial
+report of the seconds in the duel at Boulogne in _Denis Duval_; and in
+the missive in barbarous French of the Dowager Viscountess
+Castlewood[70]--a letter which only requires the sprawling, childish
+script to make it an exact facsimile of one of the epistolary efforts of
+that "baby-faced" Caroline beauty who was accustomed to sign herself "L
+duchesse de Portsmout." It is better still in the letter from Walpole to
+General Conway in chap. xl. of _The Virginians_, which is perfect, even
+to the indifferent pun of sleepy (and overrated) George Selwyn. But the
+crown and top of these _pastiches_ is certainly the delightful paper,
+which pretends to be No. 341 of the _Spectator_ for All Fools' Day,
+1712, in which Colonel Esmond treats "Mistress Jocasta-Beatrix," to
+what, in the parlance of the time, was decidedly a "bite."[71] Here
+Thackeray has borrowed not only Steele's voice, but his very trick of
+speech. It is, however, a fresh instance of the "tangled web we weave,
+When first we practise to deceive," that although this
+pseudo-_Spectator_ is stated to have been printed "exactly as those
+famous journals were printed" for eighteenth-century breakfast-tables,
+it could hardly, owing to one microscopic detail, have deceived the
+contemporary elect. For Mr, Esmond, to his very apposite Latin epigraph,
+unluckily appended an English translation,--a concession to the country
+gentlemen from which both Addison and Steele deliberately abstained,
+holding that their distinctive mottoes were (in Addison's own phrase)
+"words to the wise," of no concern to unlearned persons.[72]
+
+Notes:
+
+[70] _Esmond_, Book ii, chap, ii.
+
+[71] _Ib_. Book iii, chap, iii.
+
+[72] _Spectator_, No. 221, November 13, 1711.
+
+
+This very minute trifle emphasises the pitfalls of would-be perfect
+imitation. But it also serves to bring us finally to the vocabulary of
+_Esmond_. As to this, extravagant pretensions have sometimes been
+advanced. It has been asserted, for instance, by a high journalistic
+authority, that "no man, woman, or child in _Esmond_, ever says anything
+that he or she might not have said in the reign of Queen Anne." This is
+one of those extreme utterances in which enthusiasm, losing its head,
+invites contradiction. Thackeray professedly "copied the language of
+Queen Anne,"--he says so in his dedication to Lord Ashburton; but he
+himself would certainly never have put forward so comprehensive a claim
+as the above. There is no doubt a story that he challenged Mr. Lowell
+(who was his fellow-passenger to America on the _Canada_) to point out
+in _Esmond_ a word which had not been used in the early eighteenth
+century; and that the author of _The Biglow Papers_ promptly discovered
+such a word. But even if the anecdote be not well-invented, the
+invitation must have been more jest than earnest. For none knew better
+than Thackeray that these barren triumphs of wording belong to ingenuity
+rather than genius, being exercises altogether in the taste of the
+Persian poet who left out all the A's (as well as the poetry) in his
+verses, or of that other French funambulist whose sonnet in honour of
+Anne de Montaut was an acrostic, a mesostic, a St. Andrew's Cross, a
+lozenge,--everything, in short, but a sonnet. What Thackeray endeavoured
+after when "copying the language of Queen Anne," and succeeded in
+attaining, was the spirit and tone of the time. It was not pedantic
+philology at which he aimed, though he did not disdain occasional
+picturesque archaisms, such as "yatches" for "yachts," or despise the
+artful aid of terminal k's, long s's, and old-cut type. Consequently, as
+was years ago pointed out by Fitzedward Hall (whose manifest prejudice
+against Thackeray as a writer should not blind us in a matter of fact),
+it is not difficult to detect many expressions in the memoirs of Queen
+Anne's Colonel which could never have been employed until Her Majesty
+had long been "quietly inurned." What is more,--if we mistake not,--the
+author of _Esmond_ sometimes refrained from using an actual
+eighteenth-century word, even in a quotation, when his instinct told him
+it was not expedient to do so. In the original of that well-known
+anecdote of Steele beside his father's coffin, In _Tatler_ No. 181,
+reproduced in book i. chap. vi. of the novel, Steele says, "My mother
+catched me in her arms." "Catched" is good enough eighteenth-century for
+Johnson and Walpole. But Thackeray made it "caught," and "caught" it
+remains to this day both in _Esmond_ and _The Humourists_.
+
+
+
+
+A MILTONIC EXERCISE
+
+(TERCENTENARY, 1608-1908)
+
+"Stops of various Quills."--LYCIDAS.
+
+
+ What need of votive Verse
+ To strew thy _Laureat Herse_
+With that mix'd _Flora_ of th' _Aonian Hill_?
+ Or _Mincian_ vocall Reed,
+ That _Cam_ and _Isis_ breed,
+When thine own Words are burning in us still?
+
+ _Bard, Prophet, Archimage!_
+ In this Cash-cradled Age,
+We grate our scrannel Musick, and we dote:
+ Where is the Strain unknown,
+ Through Bronze or Silver blown,
+That thrill'd the Welkin with thy woven Note?
+
+ Yes,--"we are selfish Men":
+ Yet would we once again
+Might see _Sabrina_ braid her amber Tire;
+
+ Or watch the _Comus_ Crew
+ Sweep down the Glade; or view
+Strange-streamer'd Craft from _Javan_ or _Gadire_!
+
+ Or could we catch once more,
+ High up, the Clang and Roar
+Of Angel Conflict,--Angel Overthrow;
+ Or, with a World begun,
+ Behold the young-ray'd Sun
+Flame in the Groves where the _Four Rivers_ go!
+
+ Ay me, I fondly dream!
+ Only the Storm-bird's Scream
+Foretells of Tempest in the Days to come;
+ Nowhere is heard up-climb
+ The lofty lyric Rhyme,
+And the "God-gifted Organ-voice" is dumb.[73]
+
+Note:
+
+[73] Written, by request, for the celebration at Christ's College,
+Cambridge, July 10, 1908.
+
+
+
+
+FRESH FACTS ABOUT FIELDING
+
+
+The general reader, as a rule, is but moderately interested in minor
+rectifications. Secure in a conventional preference of the spirit to the
+letter, he professes to be indifferent whether the grandmother of an
+exalted personage was a "Hugginson" or a "Blenkinsop"; and he is equally
+careless as to the correct Christian names of his cousins and his aunts.
+In the main, the general reader is wise in his generation. But with the
+painful biographer, toiling in the immeasurable sand of thankless
+research, often foot-sore and dry of throat, these trivialities assume
+exaggerated proportions; and to those who remind him--as in a cynical
+age he is sure to be reminded--of the infinitesimal value of his
+hard-gotten grains of information, he can only reply mournfully, if
+unconvincingly, that fact is fact--even in matters of mustard-seed. With
+this prelude, I propose to set down one or two minute points concerning
+Henry Fielding, not yet comprised in any existing records of his
+career.[74]
+
+Note:
+
+[74] Since this was published in April 1907, they have been
+embodied in an Appendix to my "Men of Letters" _Fielding_; and used, to
+some extent, for a fresh edition of the _Journal of a Voyage to Lisbon_
+("World's Classics").
+
+
+The first relates to the exact period of his residence at Leyden
+University. His earliest biographer, Arthur Murphy, writing in 1762, is
+more explicit than usual on this topic. "He [Fielding]," says Murphy,
+"went from Eton to Leyden, and there continued to show an eager thirst
+for knowledge, and to study the civilians with a remarkable application
+for about two years, when, remittances failing, he was obliged to return
+to London, not then quite twenty years old" [_i.e._ before 22nd April,
+1727]. In 1883, like my predecessors, I adopted this statement, for the
+sufficient reason that I had nothing better to put in its place. And
+Murphy should have been well-informed. He had known Fielding personally;
+he was employed by Fielding's publisher; and he could, one would
+imagine, have readily obtained accurate data from Fielding's surviving
+sister, Sarah, who was only three years younger than her brother, of
+whose short life (he died at forty-eight) she could scarcely have
+forgotten the particulars. Murphy's story, moreover, exactly fitted in
+with the fact, only definitely made known in June 1883, that Fielding,
+as a youth of eighteen, had endeavoured, in November 1725, to abduct or
+carry off his first love, Miss Sarah Andrew of Lyme Regis. Although the
+lady was promptly married to a son of one of her fluttered guardians,
+nothing seemed more reasonable than to assume that the disappointed
+lover (one is sure he was never an heiress-hunter!) was despatched to
+the Dutch University to keep him out of mischief.[75] But in once more
+examining Mr. Keightley's posthumous papers, kindly placed at my
+disposal by his nephew, Mr. Alfred C. Lyster, I found a reference to an
+un-noted article in the _Cornhill Magazine_ for November, 1863 (from
+internal evidence I believe it to have been written by James Hannay),
+entitled "A Scotchman in Holland." Visiting Leyden, the writer was
+permitted to inspect the University Album; and he found, under 1728, the
+following:--"_Henricus Fielding, Anglus, Ann. 20. Stud. Lit._", coupled
+with the further detail that he "was living at the 'Hotel of Antwerp.'"
+Except in the item of "_Stud. Lit._", this did not seem to conflict
+materially with Murphy's account, as Fielding was nominally twenty from
+1727 to 1728, and small discrepancies must be allowed for.
+
+Note:
+
+[75] "Men of Letters" _Fielding_, 1907, Appendix I.
+
+
+Twenty years later, a fresh version of the record came to light. At
+their tercentenary festival in 1875, tne Leyden University printed a
+list of their students from their foundation to that year. From this Mr.
+Edward Peacock, F.S.A., compiled in 1883, for the Index Society, an
+_Index to English-Speaking Students who have graduated at Leyden
+University_; and at p. 35 appears _Fielding, Henricus, Anglus_, 16
+Mart. 1728, 915 (the last being the column number of the list). This
+added a month-date, and made Fielding a graduate. Then, two years ago,
+came yet a third rendering. Mr. A.E.H. Swaen, writing in _The Modern
+Language Review_ for July 1906, printed the inscription in the Album as
+follows; "Febr. 16. 1728: Rectore Johanne Wesselio, Henricus Fielding,
+Anglus. 20, L." Mr. Swaen construed this to mean that, on the date named
+(which, it may be observed, is not Mr. Peacock's date), Fielding, "aged
+twenty, was _entered_ as _litterarum studiosus_ at Leyden." In this case
+it would follow that his residence in Holland should have come after
+February 16th, 1728; and Mr. Swaen went on to conjecture that, "as his
+[Fielding's] first play, _Love in Several Masques_, was staged at Drury
+Lane in February, 1728, and his next play, _The Temple Beau_, was
+produced in January, 1730, it is not improbable that his residence in
+Holland filled up the interval or part of it. Did the profits of the
+play [he proceeded] perhaps cover part of his travelling expenses?"
+
+The new complications imported into the question by this fresh aspect of
+it, will be at once apparent. Up to 1875 there had been but one Fielding
+on the Leyden books; so that all these differing accounts were
+variations from a single source. In this difficulty, I was fortunate
+enough to enlist the sympathy of Mr. Frederic Harrison, who most kindly
+undertook to make inquiries on my behalf at Leyden University itself. In
+reply to certain definite queries drawn up by me, he obtained from the
+distinguished scholar and Professor of History, Dr. Pieter Blok, the
+following authoritative particulars. The exact words in the original
+_Album Academicum_ are:--"16 Martii 1728 Henricus Fielding, Anglus,
+annor. 20 Litt. Stud." He was then staying at the "Casteel van
+Antwerpen"--as related by "A Scotchman in Holland." His name only occurs
+again in the yearly _recensiones_ under February 22nd, 1729, as
+"Henricus Fieldingh," when he was domiciled with one Jan Oson. He must
+consequently have left Leyden before February 8th, 1730, February 8th
+being the birthday of the University, after which all students have to
+be annually registered. The entry in the Album (as Mr. Swaen affirmed)
+is an _admission_ entry; there are no leaving entries. As regards
+"studying the civilians," Fielding might, in those days, Dr. Blok
+explains, have had private lessons from the professors; but he could not
+have studied in the University without being on the books. To sum up:
+After producing _Love in Several Masques_ at Drury Lane, probably on
+February 12th, I728,[76] Fielding was admitted a "Litt. Stud." at Leyden
+University on March 16th; was still there in February 1729; and left
+before February 8th, 1730. Murphy is therefore at fault in almost every
+particular. Fielding did _not_ go from Eton to Leyden; he did _not_ make
+any recognised study of the civilians, "with remarkable application" or
+otherwise; and he did _not_ return to London before he was twenty. But
+it is by no means improbable that the _causa causans_ or main reason for
+his coming home was the failure of remittances.
+
+Note:
+
+[76] _Genest_, iii. 209.
+
+
+Another recently established fact is also more or less connected with
+"Mur.--" as Johnson called him. In his "Essay" of 1762, he gave a
+highly-coloured account of Fielding's first marriage, and of the
+promptitude with which, assisted by yellow liveries and a pack of
+hounds, he managed to make duck and drake of his wife's little fortune.
+This account has now been "simply riddled in its details" (as Mr.
+Saintsbury puts it) by successive biographers, the last destructive
+critic being the late Sir Leslie Stephen, who plausibly suggested that
+the "yellow liveries" (not the family liveries, be it noted!) were
+simply a confused recollection of the fantastic pranks of that other and
+earlier Beau Fielding (Steele's "Orlando the Fair"), who married the
+Duchess of Cleveland in 1705, and was also a Justice of the Peace for
+Westminster. One thing was wanting to the readjustment of the narrative,
+and that was the precise date of Fielding's marriage to the beautiful
+Miss Cradock of Salisbury, the original both of Sophia Western and
+Amelia Booth. By good fortune this has now been ascertained. Lawrence
+gave the date as 1735; and Keightley suggested the spring of that year.
+This, as Swift would say, was near the mark, although confirmation has
+been slow in coming. In June 1906, Mr. Thomas S. Bush, of Bath,
+announced in _The Bath Chronicle_ that the desired information was to be
+found (not in the Salisbury registers which had been fruitlessly
+consulted, but) at the tiny church of St. Mary, Charlcombe, a secluded
+parish about one and a half miles north of Bath. Here is the
+record:--"November y'e 28, 1734. Henry Fielding of y'e Parish of St.
+James in Bath, Esq., and Charlotte Cradock, of y'e same Parish,
+spinster, were married by virtue of a licence from y'e Court of Wells."
+All lovers of Fielding owe a debt of gratitude to Mr. Bush, whose
+researches, in addition, disclosed the fact that Sarah Fielding, the
+novelist's third sister (as we shall see presently), was buried, not in
+Bath Abbey, where Dr. John Hoadly raised a memorial to her, but "in y'e
+entrance of the Chancel [of Charlcombe Church] close to y'e Rector's
+seat," April 14th, 1768.[77] Mr. Bush's revelation, it may be added, was
+made in connection with another record of the visits of the novelist to
+the old Queen of the West, a tablet erected in June 1906 to Fielding and
+his sister on the wall of Yew Cottage, now renovated as Widcombe Lodge,
+Widcombe, Bath, where they once resided.
+
+Note:
+
+[77] Sarah Fielding's epitaph in Bath Abbey is often said to have been
+written by Bishop Benjamin Hoadly. In this case, it must have been
+anticipatory (like Dr. Primrose's on his Deborah), for the Bishop died
+in 1761.
+
+
+In the last case I have to mention, it is but fair to Murphy to admit
+that he seems to have been better informed than those who have succeeded
+him. Richardson writes of being "well acquainted" with four of
+Fielding's sisters, and both Lawrence and Keightley refer to a Catherine
+and an Ursula, of whom Keightley, after prolonged enquiries, could
+obtain no tidings. With the help of Colonel W.F. Prideaux, and the kind
+offices of Mr. Samuel Martin of the Hammersmith Free Library, this
+matter has now been set at rest. In 1887 Sir Leslie Stephen had
+suggested to me that Catherine and Ursula were most probably born at
+Sharpham Park, before the Fieldings moved to East Stour. This must have
+been the case, though Keightley had failed to establish it. At all
+events, Catherine and Ursula must have existed, for they both died in
+1750, The Hammersmith Registers at Fulham record the following
+burials:--
+
+1750 July 9th, Mrs. Catherine Feilding (_sic_)
+1750 Nov. 12th, Mrs. Ursula Fielding
+1750 [--1] Feb'y. 24th, Mrs. Beatrice Fielding
+1753 May 10th, Louisa, d. of Henry Fielding, Esq.
+
+The first three, with Sarah, make up the "Four Worthy Sisters" of the
+reprehensible author of that "truly coarse-titled _Tom Jones_"
+concerning which Richardson wrote shudderingly in August 1749 to his
+young friends, Astraea and Minerva Hill. The final entry relating to
+Fielding's little daughter, Louisa, born December 3rd, 1752, makes it
+probable that, in May, 1753, he was staying in the house at Hammersmith,
+then occupied by his sole surviving sister, Sarah. In the following year
+(October 8th) he himself died at Lisbon. There is no better short
+appreciation of his work than Lowell's lapidary lines for the Shire Hall
+at Taunton,--the epigraph to the bust by Miss Margaret Thomas:
+
+ He looked on naked nature unashamed,
+ And saw the Sphinx, now bestial, now divine,
+ In change and re-change; he nor praised nor blamed,
+ But drew her as he saw with fearless line.
+ Did he good service? God must judge, not we!
+ Manly he was, and generous and sincere;
+ English in all, of genius blithely free:
+ Who loves a Man may see his image here.
+
+
+
+
+THE HAPPY PRINTER
+
+"_Hoc est vivere._"--MARTIAL.
+
+
+The Printer's is a happy lot:
+ Alone of all professions,
+No fateful smudges ever blot
+ His earliest "impressions."
+
+The outgrowth of his youthful ken
+ No cold obstruction fetters;
+He quickly learns the "types" of men,
+ And all the world of "letters."
+
+With "forms" he scorns to compromise;
+ For him no "rule" has terrors;
+The "slips" he makes he can "revise"--
+ They are but "printers' errors."
+
+From doubtful questions of the "Press"
+ He wisely holds aloof;
+In all polemics, more or less,
+ His argument is "proof."
+
+Save in their "case," with High and Low,
+ Small need has he to grapple!
+Without dissent he still can go
+ To his accustomed "Chapel,"[78]
+
+From ills that others scape or shirk,
+ He rarely fails to rally;
+For him, his most "composing" work
+ Is labour of the "galley."
+
+Though ways be foul, and days are dim,
+ He makes no lamentation;
+The primal "fount" of woe to him
+ Is--want of occupation:
+
+And when, at last, Time finds him grey
+ With over-close attention,
+He solves the problem of the day,
+ And gets an Old Age pension.
+
+Note:
+
+[78] This, derived, it is said, from Caxton's connection with
+Westminster Abbey, is the name given to the meetings held by printers to
+consider trade affairs, appeals, etc, (Printers' Vocabulary).
+
+
+
+
+
+CROSS READINGS--AND CALEB WHITEFOORD
+
+Towards the close of the year 1766--not many months after the
+publication of the Vicat of Wakefield--there appeared in Mr. Henry
+Sampson Woodfall's _Public Advertiser_, and other newspapers, a letter
+addressed "To the Printer," and signed "PAPYRIUS CURSOR." The name was a
+real Roman name; but in its burlesque applicability to the theme of the
+communication, it was as felicitous as Thackeray's "MANLIUS
+PENNIALINUS," or that "APOLLONIUS CURIUS" from whom Hood fabled to have
+borrowed the legend of "Lycus the Centaur." The writer of the letter
+lamented--as others have done before and since--the barren fertility of
+the news sheets of his day. There was, he contended, some diversion and
+diversity in card-playing. But as for the papers, the unconnected
+occurrences and miscellaneous advertisements, the abrupt transitions
+from article to article, without the slightest connection between one
+paragraph and another--so overburdened and confused the memory that when
+one was questioned, it was impossible to give even a tolerable account
+of what one had read. The mind became a jumble of "politics, religion,
+picking of pockets, puffs, casualties, deaths, marriages, bankruptcies,
+preferments, resignations, executions, lottery tickets, India bonds,
+Scotch pebbles, Canada bills, French chicken gloves, auctioneers, and
+quack doctors," of all of which, particularly as the pages contained
+three columns, the bewildered reader could retain little or nothing.
+(One may perhaps pause for a moment to wonder, seeing that Papyrius
+could contrive to extract so much mental perplexity from Cowper's "folio
+of four pages"--he speaks specifically of this form,--what he would have
+done with _Lloyd's_, or a modern American Sunday paper!) Coming later to
+the point of his epistle, he goes on to explain that he has hit upon a
+method (as to which, be it added, he was not, as he thought, the
+originator[79]) of making this heterogeneous mass afford, like cards, a
+"_variety_ of entertainment."
+
+Note:
+
+[79] As a matter of fact, he had been anticipated by a paper, No. 49 of
+"little Harrison's" spurious _Tatler_, vol. v., where the writer reads a
+newspaper "in a direct Line" ... "without Regard to the Distinction of
+Columns,"--which is precisely the proposal of Papyrius.
+
+
+By reading the afore-mentioned three columns horizontally and _onwards_,
+instead of vertically and _downwards_ "in the old trite vulgar way," it
+was contended that much mirth might observingly be distilled from the
+most unhopeful material, as "_blind Chance_" frequently brought about the
+oddest conjunctions, and not seldom compelled _sub juga aenea_ persons
+and things the most dissimilar and discordant. He then went on to give a
+number of examples in point, of which we select a few. This was the
+artless humour of it:--
+
+ "Yesterday Dr. Jones preached at St. James's,
+and performed it with ease in less than 16 Minutes."
+ "Their R.H. the Dukes of York and Gloucester
+were bound over to their good behaviour."
+ "At noon her R.H. the Princess Dowager was
+married to Mr. Jenkins, an eminent Taylor."
+ "Friday a poor blind man fell into a saw-pit,
+to which he was conducted by Sir Clement Cottrell."[80]
+ "A certain Commoner will be created a Peer.
+N.B.--No greater reward will be offered."
+ "John Wilkes, Esq., set out for France,
+being charged with returning from transportation."
+ "Last night a most terrible fire broke out,
+and the evening concluded with the utmost Festivity."
+ "Yesterday the new Lord Mayor was sworn in,
+and afterwards toss'd and gored several Persons."
+ "On Tuesday an address was presented;
+it happily miss'd fire, and the villain made off,
+when the honour of knighthood was conferred on him
+to the great joy of that noble family."
+ "Escaped from the New Gaol, Terence M'Dermot.
+If he will return, he will be kindly received."
+ "Colds caught at this season are
+The Companion to the Playhouse."
+ "Ready to sail to the West Indies,
+the Canterbury Flying Machine in one day."
+ "To be sold to the best Bidder,
+My Seat in Parliament being vacated."
+ "I have long laboured under a complaint
+For ready money only,"
+ "Notice is hereby given,
+and no Notice taken."
+
+Note:
+
+[80] Master of the Ceremonies.]
+
+
+And so forth, fully justifying the writer's motto from Cicero, _De
+Finibus_: "_Fortuitu Concursu hoc fieri, mirum est._" It may seem that
+the mirthful element is not overpowering. But "gentle Dulness ever loves
+a joke"; and in 1766 this one, in modern parlance, "caught on." "Cross
+readings" had, moreover, one popular advantage: like the Limericks of
+Edward Lear, they were easily imitated. What is not so intelligible is,
+that they seem to have fascinated many people who were assuredly not
+dull. Even Johnson condescended to commend the aptness of the pseudonym,
+and to speak of the performance as "ingenious and diverting." Horace
+Walpole, writing to Montagu in December 1766, professes to have laughed
+over them till he cried. It was "the newest piece of humour," he
+declared, "except the _Bath Guide_ [Anstey's], that he had seen of many
+years"; and Goldsmith--Goldsmith, who has been charged with want of
+sympathy for rival humourists--is reported by Northcote to have even
+gone so far as to say, in a transport of enthusiasm, that "it would have
+given him more pleasure to have been the author of them than of all the
+works he had ever published of his own,"--which, of course, must be
+classed with "Dr. Minor's" unconsidered speeches.
+
+"_Bien heureux_"--to use Voltaire's phrase--is he who can laugh much at
+these things now. As Goldsmith himself would have agreed, the jests of
+one age are not the jests of another. But it is a little curious that,
+by one of those freaks of circumstance, or "fortuitous concourses,"
+there is to-day generally included among the very works of Goldsmith
+above referred to something which, in the opinion of many, is
+conjectured to have been really the production of the ingenious compiler
+of the "Cross Readings." That compiler was one Caleb Whitefoord, a
+well-educated Scotch wine-merchant and picture-buyer, whose portrait
+figures in Wilkie's "Letter of Introduction." The friend of Benjamin
+Franklin, who had been his next-door neighbour at Craven Street, he
+became, in later years, something of a diplomatist, since in 1782-83 he
+was employed by the Shelburne administration in the Paris negotiation
+for the Treaty of Versailles. But at the date of the "Cross Readings" he
+was mainly what Burke, speaking contemptuously of his status as a
+plenipotentiary, styled a "_diseur de bons mots_"; and he was for this
+reason included among those "most distinguished Wits of the Metropolis,"
+who, following Garrick's lead in 1774, diverted themselves at the St.
+James's Coffee-house by composing the epitaphs on Goldsmith which gave
+rise to the incomparable gallery entitled _Retaliation_. In the first
+four editions of that posthumous poem there is no mention of Whitefoord,
+who, either at, or soon after the first meeting above referred to, had
+written an epitaph on Goldsmith, two-thirds of which are declared to be
+"unfit for publication."[81] But when the fourth edition of _Retaliation_
+had been printed, an epitaph on Whitefoord was forwarded to the
+publisher, George Kearsly, by "a friend of the late Doctor Goldsmith,"
+with an intimation that it was a transcript of an original in "the
+Doctor's own handwriting." "It is a striking proof of Doctor Goldsmith's
+good-nature," said the sender, glancing, we may suppose, at Whitefoord's
+performance. "I saw this sheet of paper in the Doctor's room, five or
+six days before he died; and, as I had got all the other Epitaphs, I
+asked him if I might take it. "_In truth you may, my Boy_ (replied he),
+_for it will be of no use to me where I am going_."
+
+Note:
+
+[81] Hewins's _Whitefoord Papers_, 1898, p. xxvii. ff., where the first
+four lines of twelve are given. They run--
+
+ Noll Goldsmith lies here, as famous for writing
+ As his namesake old Noll was for praying and fighting,
+ In friends he was rich, tho' not loaded with Pelf;
+ He spoke well of them, and thought well of himself.
+
+
+The lines--there are twenty-eight of them--speak of Whitefoord as, among
+other things, a
+
+ Rare compound of oddity, frolic and fun!
+ Who relish'd a joke, and rejoic'd in a pun;[82]
+ Whose temper was generous, open, sincere;
+ A stranger to flatt'ry, a stranger to fear;
+ Who scatter'd around wit and humour at will,
+ Whose daily _bons mots_ half a column would fill;
+ A Scotchman, from pride and from prejudice free,
+ A scholar, yet surely no pedant was he.
+
+ What pity, alas! that so lib'ral a mind
+ Should so long be to news-paper-essays confin'd!
+ Who perhaps to the summit of science could soar,
+ Yet content "if the table he set on a roar";
+ Whose talents to fill any station were fit,
+ Yet happy if _Woodfall_ confess'd him a wit.
+
+Note:
+
+[82] "Mr, W."--says a note to the fifth edition--"is so notorious a
+punster, that Doctor Goldsmith used to say, it was impossible to keep
+him company, without being infected with the _itch_ of _punning_." Yet
+Johnson endured him, and apparently liked him, though he had the
+additional disqualification of being a North Briton.
+
+
+The "servile herd" of "tame imitators"--the "news-paper witlings" and
+"pert scribbling folks"--were further requested to visit his tomb--
+
+ To deck it, bring with you festoons of the vine,
+ And copious libations bestow on his shrine;
+ Then strew all around it (you can do no less)
+ _Cross-readings, Ship-news_, and _Mistakes_ of the _Press_.
+
+It is not recorded that Kearsly ever saw this in Goldsmith's "own
+handwriting"; the sender's name has never been made known; and--as above
+observed--it has been more than suspected that Whitefoord concocted it
+himself, or procured its concoction. As J.T. Smith points out in
+_Nollekens and his Times_, 1828, i, 337-8, Whitefoord was scarcely
+important enough to deserve a far longer epitaph than those bestowed on
+Burke and Reynolds; and Goldsmith, it may be added--as we know In the
+case of Beattie and Voltaire--was not in the habit of confusing small
+men with great. Moreover, the lines would (as intimated by the person
+who sent them to Kearsly) be an extraordinarily generous return for an
+epitaph "unfit for publication," by which, it is stated, Goldsmith had
+been greatly disturbed. Prior had his misgivings, particularly in
+respect to the words attributed to Goldsmith on his death-bed; and
+Forster allows that to him the story of the so-called "Postscript" has
+"a somewhat doubtful look." To which we unhesitatingly say--ditto.
+
+Whitefoord, it seems, was in the habit of printing his "Cross Readings"
+on small single sheets, and circulating them among his friends.
+"Rainy-Day Smith" had a specimen of these. In one of Whitefoord's
+letters he professes to claim that his _jeux d'esprit_ contained more
+than met the eye. "I have always," he wrote, "endeavour'd to make such
+changes [of Ministry] a matter of _Laughter_ [rather] than of serious
+concern to the People, by turning them into horse Races, Ship News, &c,
+and these Pieces have generally succeeded beyond my most sanguine
+Expectations, altho' they were not season'd with private Scandal or
+personal Abuse, of which our good neighbours of South Britain are realy
+too fond." In Debrett's _New Foundling Hospital for Wit_, new edition,
+1784, there are several of his productions, including a letter to
+Woodfall "On the Errors of the Press," of which the following may serve
+as a sample: "I have known you turn a matter of hearsay, into a matter
+of heresy; Damon into a daemon; a delicious girl, into a delirious girl;
+the comic muse, into a comic mouse; a Jewish Rabbi, into a Jewish
+Rabbit; and when a correspondent, lamenting the corruption of the times,
+exclaimed 'O Mores!' you made him cry, 'O Moses!'" And here is an
+extract from another paper which explains the aforegoing reference to
+"horse Races": "1763--Spring Meeting... Mr. Wilkes's horse, LIBERTY,
+rode by himself, took the lead at starting; but being pushed hard by Mr.
+Bishop's black gelding, PRIVILEGE, fell down at the Devil's Ditch, and
+was no where." The "Ship News" is on the same pattern. "_August_ 25
+[1765] We hear that his Majesty's Ship _Newcastle_ will soon have a new
+figure-head, the old one being almost worn out."
+
+
+
+
+THE LAST PROOF
+
+
+AN EPILOGUE TO ANY BOOK
+
+"_Hic Finis chartaeque viaeque._"
+
+"FINIS at last--the end, the End, the END!
+No more of paragraphs to prune or mend;
+No more blue pencil, with its ruthless line,
+To blot the phrase 'particularly fine';
+No more of 'slips,' and 'galleys,' and 'revises,'
+Of words 'transmogrified,' and 'wild surmises';
+No more of _n_'s that masquerade as _u_'s,
+No nice perplexities of _p_'s and _q_'s;
+No more mishaps of _ante_ and of _post_,
+That most mislead when they should help the most;
+No more of 'friend' as 'fiend,' and 'warm' as 'worm';
+No more negations where we would affirm;
+No more of those mysterious freaks of fate
+That make us bless when we should execrate;
+No more of those last blunders that remain
+Where we no more can set them right again;
+
+No more apologies for doubtful data;
+No more fresh facts that figure as Errata;
+No more, in short, O TYPE, of wayward lore
+From thy most _un_-Pierian fount--NO MORE!"
+
+So spoke PAPYRIUS. Yet his hand meanwhile
+Went vaguely seeking for the vacant file,
+Late stored with long array of notes, but now
+Bare-wired and barren as a leafless bough;--
+And even as he spoke, his mind began
+Again to scheme, to purpose and to plan.
+
+There is no end to Labour 'neath the sun;
+There is no end of labouring--but One;
+And though we "twitch (or not) our Mantle blue,"
+"To-morrow to fresh Woods, and Pastures new."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's De Libris: Prose and Verse, by Austin Dobson
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DE LIBRIS: PROSE AND VERSE ***
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