<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<hr class="full" />
<p> </p>
<h1>A BOOK OF SIBYLS</h1>
<div class="center">
<table style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="1" summary="title">
<tr><td align="left">MRS BARBAULD</td><td> </td><td align="right">MISS EDGEWORTH</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">MRS OPIE</td><td> </td><td align="right">MISS AUSTEN</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p> </p>
<h4>BY</h4>
<h3>MISS THACKERAY</h3>
<h5>(MRS RICHMOND RITCHIE)</h5>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<h4>LONDON<br/>
SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 WATERLOO PLACE<br/>
1883</h4>
<p> </p>
<div class="center"><p><small>[<i>All rights reserved</i>]<br/>
[<i>Reprinted from the Cornhill Magazine</i>]</small></p>
</div>
<p> </p>
<hr class="narrow" />
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><i>TO<br/><br/>
MRS OLIPHANT</i></p>
</div>
<p><i>My little record would not seem to me in any way complete without your
name, dear Sibyl of our own, and as I write it here, I am grateful to
know that to mine and me it is not only the name of a Sibyl with deep
visions, but of a friend to us all</i></p>
<p class="right">
<i>A. <ins title="original has I.">T.</ins> R.</i></p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="narrow" />
<p> </p>
<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
<p> </p>
<p>Not long ago, a party of friends were sitting at luncheon in a suburb of
London, when one of them happened to make some reference to Maple Grove
and Selina, and to ask in what county of England Maple Grove was
situated. Everybody immediately had a theory. Only one of the company (a
French gentleman, not well acquainted with English) did not recognise
the allusion. A lady sitting by the master of the house (she will, I
hope, forgive me for quoting her words, for no one else has a better
right to speak them) said, 'What a curious sign it is of Jane Austen's
increasing popularity! Here are five out of six people sitting round a
table, nearly a hundred years after her death, who all recognise at once
a chance allusion to an obscure character in one of her books.'</p>
<p>It seemed impossible to leave out Jane Austen's dear household name from
a volume which concerned women writing in the early part of this
century, and although the essay which is called by her name has already
been reprinted, it is added with some alteration in its place with the
others.</p>
<p>Putting together this little book has been a great pleasure and interest
to the compiler, and she wishes once more to thank those who have so
kindly sheltered her during her work, and lent her books and papers and
letters concerning the four writers whose works and manner of being she
has attempted to describe; and she wishes specially to express her
thanks to the Baron and Baroness <span class="smallcaps">von Hügel</span>, to the ladies of Miss
Edgeworth's family, to Mr. <span class="smallcaps">Harrison</span>, of the London Library, to the Miss
<span class="smallcaps">Reids</span>, of Hampstead, to Mrs. <span class="smallcaps">Field</span> and her daughters, of Squire's Mount,
Hampstead, to Lady <span class="smallcaps">Buxton</span>, Mrs. <span class="smallcaps">Brookfield</span>, Miss <span class="smallcaps">Alderson</span>, and Miss
<span class="smallcaps">Shirreff</span>.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="narrow" />
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3><i>CONTENTS</i></h3>
<div class="center">
<table style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="2" summary="Contents">
<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><SPAN href="#MRS_BARBAULD"><i>MRS. BARBAULD.</i></SPAN></td><td>[1743-1825]</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><SPAN href="#MISS_EDGEWORTH"><i>MISS EDGEWORTH.</i></SPAN></td><td>[1767-1849]</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><SPAN href="#MRS_OPIE"><i>MRS OPIE.</i></SPAN></td><td>[1769-1853]</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left" valign="top"><SPAN href="#JANE_AUSTEN"><i>JANE AUSTEN.</i></SPAN></td><td>[1775-1817]</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<h2>A BOOK OF SIBYLS.</h2>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="minimal" />
<p> </p>
<h2><SPAN name="MRS_BARBAULD" id="MRS_BARBAULD"></SPAN><i>MRS. BARBAULD.</i></h2>
<div class="center">
<p>1743-1825.<br/></p>
</div>
<div class="center">
<table style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="2" summary="quote">
<tr><td align="left"><small>'I've heard of the lady, and good words went with her name.'</small></td></tr>
<tr><td align="right"><i><small>Measure for Measure.</small></i></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td align="center"><b>I.</b></td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>'The first poetess I can recollect is Mrs. Barbauld, with
whose works I became acquainted—before those of any
other author, male or female—when I was learning to
spell words of one syllable in her story-books for children.'
So says Hazlitt in his lectures on living poets. He goes
on to call her a very pretty poetess, strewing flowers of
poesy as she goes.</p>
<p>The writer must needs, from the same point of view as
Hazlitt, look upon Mrs. Barbauld with a special interest,
having also first learnt to read out of her little yellow
books, of which the syllables rise up one by one again with
a remembrance of the hand patiently pointing to each in
turn; all this recalled and revived after a lifetime by the
sight of a rusty iron gateway, behind which Mrs. Barbauld
once lived, of some old letters closely covered with a wavery
writing, of a wide prospect that she once delighted to look
upon. Mrs. Barbauld, who loved to share her pleasures,
used to bring her friends to see the great view from the
Hampstead hill-top, and thus records their impressions:—</p>
<p>'I dragged Mrs. A. up as I did you, my dear, to our
Prospect Walk, from whence we have so extensive a view.</p>
<p>'Yes,' said she, 'it is a very fine view indeed for a
flat country.'</p>
<p>'While, on the other hand, Mrs. B. gave us such a
dismal account of the precipices, mountains, and deserts
she encountered, that you would have thought she had
been on the wildest part of the Alps.'</p>
<p>The old Hampstead highroad, starting from the plain,
winds its way resolutely up the steep, and brings you past
red-brick houses and walled-in gardens to this noble outlook;
to the heath, with its fresh, inspiriting breezes, its
lovely distances of far-off waters and gorsy hollows. At
whatever season, at whatever hour you come, you are
pretty sure to find one or two votaries—poets like Mrs.
Barbauld, or commonplace people such as her friends—watching
before this great altar of nature; whether by early
morning rays, or in the blazing sunset, or when the evening
veils and mists with stars come falling, while the lights
of London shine far away in the valley. Years after Mrs.
Barbauld wrote, one man, pre-eminent amongst poets, used
to stand upon this hill-top, and lo! as Turner gazed, a
whole generation gazed with him. For him Italy gleamed
from behind the crimson stems of the fir-trees; the spirit
of loveliest mythology floated upon the clouds, upon the
many changing tints of the plains; and, as the painter
watched the lights upon the distant hills, they sank into
his soul, and he painted them down for us, and poured
his dreams into our awakening hearts.</p>
<p>He was one of that race of giants, mighty men of
humble heart, who have looked from Hampstead and
Highgate Hills. Here Wordsworth trod; here sang
Keats's nightingale; here mused Coleridge; and here came
Carlyle, only yesterday, tramping wearily, in search of
some sign of his old companions. Here, too, stood kind
Walter Scott, under the elms of the Judges' Walk, and
perhaps Joanna Baillie was by his side, coming out from
her pretty old house beyond the trees. Besides all these,
were a whole company of lesser stars following and surrounding
the brighter planets—muses, memoirs, critics,
poets, nymphs, authoresses—coming to drink tea and
to admire the pleasant suburban beauties of this modern
Parnassus. A record of many of their names is still
to be found, appropriately enough, in the catalogue
of the little Hampstead library which still exists, which
was founded at a time when the very hands that wrote the
books may have placed the old volumes upon the shelves.
Present readers can study them at their leisure, to the
clanking of the horses' feet in the courtyard outside, and
the splashing of buckets. A few newspapers lie on the
table—stray sheets of to-day that have fluttered up the
hill, bringing news of this bustling now into a past
serenity. The librarian sits stitching quietly in a window.
An old lady comes in to read the news; but she has forgotten
her spectacles, and soon goes away. Here, instead of
asking for 'Vice Versâ,' or Ouida's last novel, you instinctively
mention 'Plays of the Passions,' Miss Burney's
'Evelina,' or some such novels; and Mrs. Barbauld's works
are also in their place. When I asked for them, two
pretty old Quaker volumes were put into my hands, with
shabby grey bindings, with fine paper and broad margins,
such as Mr. Ruskin would approve. Of all the inhabitants
of this bookshelf Mrs. Barbauld is one of the most appropriate.
It is but a few minutes' walk from the library in
Heath Street to the old corner house in Church Row where
she lived for a time, near a hundred years ago, and all
round about are the scenes of much of her life, of her
friendships and interests. Here lived her friends and
neighbours; here to Church Row came her pupils and
admirers, and, later still, to the pretty old house on Rosslyn
Hill. As for Church Row, as most people know, it is an
avenue of Dutch red-faced houses, leading demurely to the
old church tower, that stands guarding its graves in the
flowery churchyard. As we came up the quiet place, the
sweet windy drone of the organ swelled across the blossoms
of the spring, which were lighting up every shabby corner
and hillside garden. Through this pleasant confusion of
past and present, of spring-time scattering blossoms upon
the graves, of old ivy walks and iron bars imprisoning
past memories, with fragrant fumes of lilac and of elder,
one could picture to oneself, as in a waking dream, two
figures advancing from the corner house with the ivy
walls—distinct, sedate—passing under the old doorway. I
could almost see the lady, carefully dressed in many fine
muslin folds and frills with hooped silk skirts, indeed, but
slight and graceful in her quick advance, with blue eyes,
with delicate sharp features, and a dazzling skin. As for
the gentleman, I pictured him a dapper figure, with dark
eyes, dressed in black, as befitted a minister even of dissenting
views. The lady came forward, looking amused
by my scrutiny, somewhat shy I thought—was she going to
speak? And by the same token it seemed to me the
gentleman was about to interrupt her. But Margaret, my
young companion, laughed and opened an umbrella, or a
cock crew, or some door banged, and the fleeting visions
of fancy disappeared.</p>
<p>Many well-authenticated ghost stories describe the
apparition of bygone persons, and lo! when the figure
vanishes, a letter is left behind! Some such experience
seemed to be mine when, on my return, I found a packet
of letters on the hall table—letters not addressed to me,
but to some unknown Miss Belsham, and signed and sealed
by Mrs. Barbauld's hand. They had been sent for me to
read by the kindness of some ladies now living at Hampstead,
who afterwards showed me the portrait of the lady,
who began the world as Miss Betsy Belsham and who
ended her career as Mrs. Kenrick. It is an oval miniature,
belonging to the times of powder and of puff, representing
not a handsome, but an animated countenance, with
laughter and spirit in the expression; the mouth is large,
the eyes are dark, the nose is short. This was the <i>confidante</i>
of Mrs. Barbauld's early days, the faithful friend of
her latter sorrows. The letters, kept by 'Betsy' with
faithful conscientious care for many years, give the story
of a whole lifetime with unconscious fidelity. The gaiety
of youth, its impatience, its exuberance, and sometimes
bad taste; the wider, quieter feelings of later life; the
courage of sorrowful times; long friendship deepening the
tender and faithful memories of age, when there is so
little left to say, so much to feel—all these things are
there.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>II.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Mrs. Barbauld was a schoolmistress, and a schoolmaster's
wife and daughter. Her father was Dr. John Aikin, D.D.;
her mother was Miss Jane Jennings, of a good Northamptonshire
family—scholastic also. Dr. Aikin brought his wife
home to Knibworth, in Leicestershire, where he opened a
school which became very successful in time. Mrs. Barbauld,
their eldest child, was born here in 1743, and was
christened Anna Lætitia, after some lady of high degree
belonging to her mother's family. Two or three years
later came a son. It was a quiet home, deep hidden in
the secluded rural place; and the little household lived its
own tranquil life far away from the storms and battles and
great events that were stirring the world. Dr. Aikin kept
school; Mrs. Aikin ruled her household with capacity, and
not without some sternness, according to the custom of the
time. It appears that late in life the good lady was distressed
by the backwardness of her grandchildren at four
or five years old. 'I once, indeed, knew a little girl,' so
wrote Mrs. Aikin of her daughter, 'who was as eager to
learn as her instructor could be to teach her, and who at
two years old could read sentences and little stories, in her
<i>wise</i> book, roundly and without spelling, and in half a
year or more could read as well as most women; but I
never knew such another, and I believe I never shall.' It
was fortunate that no great harm came of this premature
forcing, although it is difficult to say what its absence
might not have done for Mrs. Barbauld. One can fancy
the little assiduous girl, industrious, impulsive, interested
in everything—in all life and all nature—drinking in, on
every side, learning, eagerly wondering, listening to all
around with bright and ready wit. There is a pretty
little story told by Mrs. Ellis in her book about Mrs.
Barbauld, how one day, when Dr. Aikin and a friend 'were
conversing on the passions,' the Doctor observes that joy
cannot have place in a state of perfect felicity, since it
supposes an accession of happiness.</p>
<p>'I think you are mistaken, papa,' says a little voice
from the opposite side of the table.</p>
<p>'Why so, my child?' says the Doctor.</p>
<p>'Because in the chapter I read to you this morning,
in the Testament, it is said that "there is more joy in
heaven over one sinner that repenteth than over ninety
and nine just persons that need no repentance."'</p>
<p>Besides her English Testament and her early reading,
the little girl was taught by her mother to do as little
daughters did in those days, to obey a somewhat austere
rule, to drop curtsies in the right place, to make beds, to
preserve fruits. The father, after demur, but surely not
without some paternal pride in her proficiency, taught the
child Latin and French and Italian, and something of
Greek, and gave her an acquaintance with English literature.
One can imagine little Nancy with her fair head
bending over her lessons, or, when playing time had come,
perhaps a little lonely and listening to the distant voices
of the schoolboys at their games. The mother, fearing
she might acquire rough and boisterous manners, strictly
forbade any communication with the schoolboys. Sometimes
in after days, speaking of these early times and of
the constraint of many bygone rules and regulations, Mrs.
Barbauld used to attribute to this early formal training
something of the hesitation and shyness which troubled
her and never entirely wore off. She does not seem to
have been in any great harmony with her mother. One
could imagine a fanciful and high-spirited child, timid
and dutiful, and yet strong-willed, secretly rebelling against
the rigid order of her home, and feeling lonely for want of
liberty and companionship. It was true she had birds
and beasts and plants for her playfellows, but she was of a
gregarious and sociable nature, and she was unconsciously
longing for something more, and perhaps feeling a
want in her early life which no silent company can
supply.</p>
<p>She was about fifteen when a great event took place.
Her father was appointed classical tutor to the Warrington
Academy, and thither the little family removed. We
read that the Warrington Academy was a Dissenting
college started by very eminent and periwigged personages,
whose silhouettes Mrs. Barbauld herself afterwards
cut out in sticking-plaster, and whose names are to this
day remembered and held in just esteem. They were
people of simple living and high thinking, they belonged
to a class holding then a higher place than now in the
world's esteem, that of Dissenting ministers. The Dissenting
ministers were fairly well paid and faithfully
followed by their congregations. The college was started
under the auspices of distinguished members of the
community, Lord Willoughby of Parham, the last
Presbyterian lord, being patron. Among the masters
were to be found the well-known names of Dr. Doddridge;
of Gilbert Wakefield, the reformer and uncompromising
martyr; of Dr. Taylor, of Norwich, the Hebrew scholar;
of Dr. Priestley, the chemical analyst and patriot, and
enterprising theologian, who left England and settled in
America for conscience and liberty's sake.</p>
<p>Many other people, neither students nor professors,
used to come to Warrington, and chief among them
in later years good John Howard with MSS. for his friend
Dr. Aikin to correct for the press. Now for the first time
Mrs. Barbauld (Miss Aikin she was then) saw something
of real life, of men and manners. It was not likely that
she looked back with any lingering regret to Knibworth,
or would have willingly returned thither. A story in one of
her memoirs gives an amusing picture of the manners of
a young country lady of that day. Mr. Haines, a rich
farmer from Knibworth, who had been greatly struck by
Miss Aikin, followed her to Warrington, and 'obtained a
private audience of her father and begged his consent to
be allowed to make her his wife.' The father answered
'that his daughter was there walking in the garden, and
he might go and ask her himself.' 'With what grace the
farmer pleaded his cause I know not,' says her biographer
and niece. 'Out of all patience at his unwelcome importunities,
my aunt ran nimbly up a tree which grew by the
garden wall, and let herself down into the lane beyond.'</p>
<p>The next few years must have been perhaps the
happiest of Mrs. Barbauld's life. Once when it was
nearly over she said to her niece, Mrs. Le Breton, from
whose interesting account I have been quoting, that she
had never been placed in a situation which really suited
her. As one reads her sketches and poems, one is struck
by some sense of this detracting influence of which she
complains: there is a certain incompleteness and slightness
which speaks of intermittent work, of interrupted
trains of thought. At the same time there is a natural
buoyant quality in much of her writing which seems like
a pleasant landscape view seen through the bars of a
window. There may be wider prospects, but her eyes are
bright, and this peep of nature is undoubtedly delightful.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>III.</b></p>
</div>
<p>The letters to Miss Belsham begin somewhere about
1768. The young lady has been paying a visit to Miss
Aikin at Warrington, and is interested in everyone and
everything belonging to the place. Miss Aikin is no less
eager to describe than Miss Belsham to listen, and
accordingly a whole stream of characters and details of
gossip and descriptions in faded ink come flowing across
their pages, together with many expressions of affection
and interest. 'My dear Betsy, I love you for discarding
the word Miss from your vocabulary,' so the packet begins,
and it continues in the same strain of pleasant girlish
chatter, alternating with the history of many bygone
festivities, and stories of friends, neighbours, of beaux and
partners; of the latter genus, and of Miss Aikin's efforts
to make herself agreeable, here is a sample:—'I talked
to him, smiled upon him, gave him my fan to play with,'
says the lively young lady. 'Nothing would do; he was
grave as a philosopher. I tried to raise a conversation:
"'Twas fine weather for dancing." He agreed to my
observation. "We had a tolerable set this time."
Neither did he contradict that. Then we were both
silent—stupid mortal thought I! but unreasonable as he
appeared to the advances that I made him, there was one
object in the room, a sparkling object which seemed to
attract all his attention, on which he seemed to gaze with
transport, and which indeed he hardly took his eyes off
the whole time…. The object that I mean was his
shoebuckle.'</p>
<p>One could imagine Miss Elizabeth Bennett writing in
some such strain to her friend Miss Charlotte Lucas after
one of the evenings at Bingley's hospitable mansion.
And yet Miss Aikin is more impulsive, more romantic
than Elizabeth. 'Wherever you are, fly letter on the
wings of the wind,' she cries, 'and tell my dear Betsy
what?—only that I love her dearly.'</p>
<p>Miss Nancy Aikin (she seems to have been Nancy in
these letters, and to have assumed the more dignified
Lætitia upon her marriage) pours out her lively heart,
laughs, jokes, interests herself in the sentimental affairs
of the whole neighbourhood as well as in her own.
Perhaps few young ladies now-a-days would write to their
<i>confidantes</i> with the announcement that for some time
past a young sprig had been teasing them to have him.
This, however, is among Miss Nancy's confidences. She
also writes poems and <i>jeux d'esprit</i>, and receives poetry
in return from Betsy, who calls herself Camilla, and
pays her friend many compliments, for Miss Aikin in her
reply quotes the well-known lines:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="2" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Who for another's brow entwines the bays,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And where she well might rival stoops to Praise.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Miss Aikin by this time has attained to all the dignity of
a full-blown authoress, and is publishing a successful book
of poems in conjunction with her brother, which little
book created much attention at the time. One day the
Muse thus apostrophises Betsy: 'Shall we ever see her
amongst us again?' says my sister (Mrs. Aikin). My
brother (saucy fellow) says, 'I want to see this girl, I think
(stroking his chin as he walks backwards and forwards in
the room with great gravity). I think we should admire
one another.'</p>
<p>'When you come among us,' continues the warm-hearted
friend, 'we shall set the bells a-ringing, bid adieu
to care and gravity, and sing "O be joyful."' And finally,
after some apologies for her remiss correspondence, 'I left
my brother writing to you instead of Patty, poor soul.
Well, it is a clever thing too, to have a husband to write
one's letters for one. If I had one I would be a much
better correspondent to you. I would order him to write
every week.'</p>
<p>And, indeed, Mrs. Barbauld was as good as her word,
and did not forget the resolutions made by Miss Aikin in
1773. In 1774 comes some eventful news: 'I should
have written to you sooner had it not been for the uncertainty
and suspense in which for a long time I have been
involved; and since my lot has been fixed for many busy
engagements which have left me few moments of leisure.
They hurry me out of my life. It is hardly a month that
I have certainly known I should fix on Norfolk, and now
next Thursday they say I am to be finally, irrevocably
married. Pity me, dear Betsy; for on the day I fancy
when you will read this letter, will the event take place
which is to make so great an era in my life. I feel depressed,
and my courage almost fails me. Yet upon the
whole I have the greatest reason to think I shall be happy.
I shall possess the entire affection of a worthy man, whom
my father and mother now entirely and heartily approve.
The people where we are going, though strangers, have
behaved with the greatest zeal and affection; and I think
we have a fair prospect of being useful and living comfortably
in that state of middling life to which I have been
accustomed, and which I love.'</p>
<p>And then comes a word which must interest all who
have ever cared and felt grateful admiration for the works
of one devoted human being and true Christian hero.
Speaking of her father's friend, John Howard, she says
with an almost audible sigh: 'It was too late, as you say,
or I believe I should have been in love with Mr. Howard.
Seriously, I looked upon him with that sort of reverence and
love which one should have for a guardian angel. God bless
him and preserve his health for the health's sake of thousands.
And now farewell,' she writes in conclusion: 'I
shall write to you no more under this name; but under any
name, in every situation, at any distance of time or place,
I shall love you equally and be always affectionately yours,
tho' <i>not</i> always, <span class="smallcaps">A. Aikin</span>.'</p>
<p> </p>
<p>Poor lady! The future held, indeed, many a sad and
unsuspected hour for her, many a cruel pang, many a dark
and heavy season, that must have seemed intolerably
weary to one of her sprightly and yet somewhat indolent
nature, more easily accepting evil than devising escape
from it. But it also held many blessings of constancy,
friendship, kindly deeds, and useful doings. She had not
devotion to give such as that of the good Howard whom
she revered, but the equable help and sympathy for
others of an open-minded and kindly woman was hers.
Her marriage would seem to have been brought about
by a romantic fancy rather than by a tender affection.
Mr. Barbauld's mind had been once unhinged; his protestations
were passionate and somewhat dramatic. We
are told that when she was warned by a friend, she only
said, 'But surely, if I throw him over, he will become
crazy again;' and from a high-minded sense of pity, she
was faithful, and married him against the wish of her
brother and parents, and not without some misgivings herself.
He was a man perfectly sincere and honourable;
but, from his nervous want of equilibrium, subject all his
life to frantic outbursts of ill-temper. Nobody ever knew
what his wife had to endure in secret; her calm and
restrained manner must have effectually hidden the constant
anxiety of her life; nor had she children to warm
her heart, and brighten up her monotonous existence.
Little Charles, of the Reading-book, who is bid to come
hither, who counted so nicely, who stroked the pussy cat,
and who deserved to listen to the delightful stories he was
told, was not her own son but her brother's child. When
he was born, she wrote to entreat that he might be given
over to her for her own, imploring her brother to spare him
to her, in a pretty and pathetic letter. This was a mother
yearning for a child, not a schoolmistress asking for a
pupil, though perhaps in after times the two were somewhat
combined in her. There is a pretty little description of
Charles making great progress in 'climbing trees and
talking nonsense:' 'I have the honour to tell you that our
Charles is the sweetest boy in the world. He is perfectly
naturalised in his new situation; and if I should make any
blunders in my letter, I must beg you to impute it to his
standing by me and chattering all the time.' And how
pleasant a record exists of Charles's chatter in that most
charming little book written for him and for the babies of
babies to come! There is a sweet instructive grace in it
and appreciation of childhood which cannot fail to strike
those who have to do with children and with Mrs. Barbauld's
books for them: children themselves, those best critics of
all, delight in it.</p>
<p>'Where's Charles?' says a little scholar every morning
to the writer of these few notes.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>IV.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Soon after the marriage, there had been some thought
of a college for young ladies, of which Mrs. Barbauld was
to be the principal; but she shrank from the idea, and in a
letter to Mrs. Montagu she objects to the scheme of higher
education for women away from their natural homes. 'I
should have little hope of cultivating a love of knowledge
in a young lady of fifteen who came to me ignorant and
uncultivated. It is too late then to begin to learn. The
empire of the passions is coming on. Those attachments
begin to be formed which influence the happiness of future
life. The care of a mother alone can give suitable attention
to this important period.' It is true that the rigidness
of her own home had not prevented her from making
a hasty and unsuitable marriage. But it is not this which
is weighing on her mind. 'Perhaps you may think,' she
says, 'that having myself stepped out of the bounds of
female reserve in becoming an author, it is with an ill
grace that I offer these statements.'</p>
<p>Her arguments seem to have been thought conclusive
in those days, and the young ladies' college was finally transmuted
into a school for little boys at Palgrave, in Norfolk,
and thither the worthy couple transported themselves.</p>
<p>One of the letters to Miss Belsham is thus dated:—<i>'The
14th of July, in the village of Palgrave (the
pleasantest village in all England), at ten o'clock, all
alone in my great parlour, Mr. Barbauld being studying
a sermon, do I begin a letter to my dear Betsy.'</i></p>
<p>When she first married, and travelled into Norfolk to
keep school at Palgrave, nothing could have seemed more
tranquil, more contented, more matter-of-fact than her life
as it appears from her letters. Dreams, and fancies, and
gay illusions and excitements have made way for the
somewhat disappointing realisation of Mr. Barbauld with
his neatly turned and friendly postscripts—a husband,
polite, devoted, it is true, but somewhat disappointing all
the same. The next few years seem like years in a hive—storing
honey for the future, and putting away—industrious,
punctual, monotonous. There are children's
lessons to be heard, and school-treats to be devised. She
sets them to act plays and cuts out paper collars for
Henry IV.; she always takes a class of babies entirely her
own. (One of these babies, who always loved her, became
Lord Chancellor Denman; most of the others took less
brilliant, but equally respectable places, in after life.)
She has also household matters and correspondence not to
be neglected. In the holidays, they make excursions to
Norwich, to London, and revisit their old haunts at
Warrington. In one of her early letters, soon after her
marriage, she describes her return to Warrington.</p>
<p>'Dr. Enfield's face,' she declares, 'is grown half a foot
longer since I saw him, with studying mathematics, and
for want of a game of romps; for there are positively
none now at Warrington but grave matrons. I who
have but half assumed the character, was ashamed of the
levity of my behaviour.'</p>
<p>It says well indeed for the natural brightness of the
lady's disposition that with sixteen boarders and a satisfactory
usher to look after, she should be prepared for
a game of romps with Dr. Enfield.</p>
<p>On another occasion, in 1777, she takes little Charles
away with her. 'He has indeed been an excellent traveller,'
she says; 'and though, like his great ancestor, some
natural tears he shed, like him, too, he wiped them soon.
He had a long sound sleep last night, and has been very
busy to-day hunting the puss and the chickens. And
now, my dear brother and sister, let me again thank you
for this precious gift, the value of which we are both more
and more sensible of as we become better acquainted with
his sweet disposition and winning manners.'</p>
<p>She winds up this letter with a postscript:—</p>
<p>'Everybody here asks, "Pray, is Dr. Dodd really to be
executed?" as if we knew the more for having been at
Warrington.'</p>
<p>Dr. Aikin, Mrs. Barbauld's brother, the father of
little Charles and of Lucy Aikin, whose name is well
known in literature, was himself a man of great parts,
industry, and ability, working hard to support his family.
He alternated between medicine and literature all his life.
When his health failed he gave up medicine, and settled
at Stoke Newington, and busied himself with periodic
literature; meanwhile, whatever his own pursuits may
have been, he never ceased to take an interest in his
sister's work and to encourage her in every way.</p>
<p>It is noteworthy that few of Mrs. Barbauld's earlier
productions equalled what she wrote at the very end of
her life. She seems to have been one of those who ripen
with age, growing wider in spirit with increasing years.
Perhaps, too, she may have been influenced by the change
of manners, the reaction against formalism, which was
growing up as her own days were ending. Prim she may
have been in manner, but she was not a formalist by nature;
and even at eighty was ready to learn to submit to accept
the new gospel that Wordsworth and his disciples had
given to the world, and to shake off the stiffness of early
training.</p>
<p>It is idle to speculate on what might have been if
things had happened otherwise; if the daily stress of
anxiety and perplexity which haunted her home had been
removed—difficulties and anxieties which may well have
absorbed all the spare energy and interest that under
happier circumstances might have added to the treasury
of English literature. But if it were only for one ode
written when the distracting cares of over seventy years
were ending, when nothing remained to her but the
essence of a long past, and the inspirations of a still
glowing, still hopeful, and most tender spirit, if it were
only for the ode called 'Life,' which has brought a sense
of ease and comfort to so many, Mrs. Barbauld has indeed
deserved well of her country-people and should be held in
remembrance by them.</p>
<p>Her literary works are, after all, not very voluminous.
She is best known by her hymns for children and her
early lessons, than which nothing more childlike has ever
been devised; and we can agree with her brother, Dr.
Aikin, when he says that it requires true genius to enter
so completely into a child's mind.</p>
<p>After their first volume of verse, the brother and sister
had published a second in prose, called 'Miscellaneous
Pieces,' about which there is an amusing little anecdote in
Rogers's 'Memoirs.' Fox met Dr. Aikin at dinner.</p>
<p>'"I am greatly pleased with your 'Miscellaneous
Pieces,'" said Fox. Aikin bowed. "I particularly admire,"
continued Fox, "your essay 'Against Inconsistency in our
Expectations.'"</p>
<p>'"That," replied Aikin, "is my sister's."</p>
<p>'"I like much," returned Fox, "your essay 'On Monastic
Institutions.'"</p>
<p>'"That," answered Aikin, "is also my sister's."</p>
<p>'Fox thought it best to say no more about the
book.'</p>
<p>These essays were followed by various of the visions
and Eastern pieces then so much in vogue; also by
political verses and pamphlets, which seemed to have
made a great sensation at the time. But Mrs. Barbauld's
turn was on the whole more for domestic than for literary
life, although literary people always seem to have had a
great interest for her.</p>
<p>During one Christmas which they spent in London,
the worthy couple go to see Mrs. Siddons; and Mrs.
Chapone introduces Mrs. Barbauld to Miss Burney. 'A
very unaffected, modest, sweet, and pleasing young lady,'
says Mrs. Barbauld, who is always kind in her descriptions.
Mrs. Barbauld's one complaint in London is of the fatigue
from hairdressers, and the bewildering hurry of the great
city, where she had, notwithstanding her quiet country
life, many ties, and friendships, and acquaintances. Her
poem on 'Corsica' had brought her into some relations
with Boswell; she also knew Goldsmith and Dr. Johnson.
Here is her description of the 'Great Bear:'—</p>
<p>'I do not mean that one which shines in the sky over
your head; but the Bear that shines in London—a great
rough, surly animal. His Christian name is Dr. Johnson.
'Tis a singular creature; but if you stroke him he will
not bite, and though he growls sometimes he is not ill-humoured.'</p>
<p>Johnson describes Mrs. Barbauld as suckling fools and
chronicling small beer. There was not much sympathy
between the two. Characters such as Johnson's harmonise
best with the enthusiastic and easily influenced. Mrs.
Barbauld did not belong to this class; she trusted to her
own judgment, rarely tried to influence others, and took a
matter-of-fact rather than a passionate view of life. She
is as severe to him in her criticism as he was in his judgment
of her: they neither of them did the other justice.
'A Christian and a man-about-town, a philosopher, and a
bigot acknowledging life to be miserable, and making it
more miserable through fear of death.' So she writes of
him, and all this was true; but how much more was also
true of the great and hypochondriacal old man! Some
years afterwards, when she had been reading Boswell's
long-expected 'Life of Johnson,' she wrote of the book:—'It
is like going to Ranelagh; you meet all your acquaintances;
but it is a base and mean thing to bring thus
every idle word into judgment.' In our own day we too
have our Boswell and our Johnson to arouse discussion and
indignation.</p>
<p>'Have you seen Boswell's "Life of Johnson?" He calls
it a Flemish portrait, and so it is—two quartos of a man's
conversation and petty habits. Then the treachery and
meanness of watching a man for years in order to set
down every unguarded and idle word he uttered, is inconceivable.
Yet with all this one cannot help reading a
good deal of it.' This is addressed to the faithful Betsy,
who was also keeping school by that time, and assuming
brevet rank in consequence.</p>
<p>Mrs. Barbauld might well complain of the fatigue from
hairdressers in London. In one of her letters to her
friend she thus describes a lady's dress of the period:—</p>
<p>'Do you know how to dress yourself in Dublin? If
you do not, I will tell you. Your waist must be the circumference
of two oranges, no more. You must erect a
structure on your head gradually ascending to a foot high,
exclusive of feathers, and stretching to a penthouse of most
horrible projection behind, the breadth from wing to
wing considerably broader than your shoulder, and as many
different things in your cap as in Noah's ark. Verily, I
never did see such monsters as the heads now in vogue.
I am a monster, too, but a moderate one.'</p>
<p>She must have been glad to get back to her home, to
her daily work, to Charles, climbing his trees and talking
his nonsense.</p>
<p>In the winter of 1784 her mother died at Palgrave.
It was Christmas week; the old lady had come travelling
four days through the snow in a postchaise with her
maid and her little grandchildren, while her son rode on
horseback. But the cold and the fatigue of the journey,
and the discomfort of the inns, proved too much for Mrs.
Aikin, who reached her daughter's house only to die. Just
that time three years before Mrs. Barbauld had lost her
father, whom she dearly loved. There is a striking letter
from the widowed mother to her daughter recording the
event. It is almost Spartan in its calmness, but nevertheless
deeply touching. Now she, too, was at rest, and after
Mrs. Aikin's death a cloud of sadness and depression seems
to have fallen upon the household. Mr. Barbauld was
ailing; he was suffering from a nervous irritability
which occasionally quite unfitted him for his work as a
schoolmaster. Already his wife must have had many
things to bear, and very much to try her courage and
cheerfulness; and now her health was also failing. It was
in 1775 that they gave up the academy, which, on the
whole, had greatly flourished. It had been established
eleven years; they were both of them in need of rest and
change. Nevertheless, it was not without reluctance that
they brought themselves to leave their home at Palgrave.
A successor was found only too quickly for Mrs. Barbauld's
wishes; they handed over their pupils to his care, and
went abroad for a year's sunshine and distraction.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>V.</b></p>
</div>
<p>What a contrast to prim, starched scholastic life at
Palgrave must have been the smiling world, and the land
flowing with oil and wine, in which they found themselves
basking! The vintage was so abundant that year that the
country people could not find vessels to contain it. 'The
roads covered with teams of casks, empty or full according
as they were going out or returning, and drawn by oxen
whose strong necks seemed to be bowed unwillingly under
the yoke. Men, women, and children were abroad; some
cutting with a short sickle the bunches of grapes, some
breaking them with a wooden instrument, some carrying
them on their backs from the gatherers to those who
pressed the juice; and, as in our harvest, the gleaners
followed.'</p>
<p>From the vintage they travel to the Alps, 'a sight so
majestic, so totally different from anything I had seen
before, that I am ready to sing <i>nunc dimittis</i>,' she writes.
They travel back by the south of France and reach Paris
in June, where the case of the Diamond Necklace is being
tried. Then they return to England, waiting a day at
Boulogne for a vessel, but crossing from thence in less than
four hours. How pretty is her description of England as
it strikes them after their absence! 'And not without
pleasing emotion did we view again the green swelling
hills covered with large sheep, and the winding road
bordered with the hawthorn hedge, and the English vine
twirled round the tall poles, and the broad Medway covered
with vessels, and at last the gentle yet majestic Thames.'</p>
<p>There were Dissenters at Hampstead in those days, as
there are still, and it was a call from a little Unitarian
congregation on the hillside who invited <ins title="original has Mrs.">Mr.</ins> Barbauld to
become their minister, which decided the worthy couple to
retire to this pleasant suburb. The place seemed promising
enough; they were within reach of Mrs. Barbauld's brother,
Dr. Aikin, now settled in London, and to whom she was
tenderly attached. There were congenial people settled
all about. On the high hill-top were pleasant old houses
to live in. There was occupation for him and literary
interest for her.</p>
<p>They are a sociable and friendly pair, hospitable, glad
to welcome their friends, and the acquaintance, and critics,
and the former pupils who come toiling up the hill to visit
them. Rogers comes to dinner 'at half after three.' They
have another poet for a neighbour, Miss Joanna Baillie;
they are made welcome by all, and in their turn make
others welcome; they do acts of social charity and kindness
wherever they see the occasion. They have a young
Spanish gentleman to board who conceals a taste for
'seguars.' They also go up to town from time to time.
On one occasion Mr. Barbauld repairs to London to choose
a wedding present for Miss Belsham, who is about to be
married to Mr. Kenrick, a widower with daughters. He
chose two slim Wedgwood pots of some late classic
model, which still stand, after many dangers, safely on
either side of Mrs. Kenrick's portrait in Miss Reid's drawing-room
at Hampstead. Wedgwood must have been a
personal friend: he has modelled a lovely head of Mrs.
Barbauld, simple and nymph-like.</p>
<p>Hampstead was no further from London in those days
than it is now, and they seem to have kept up a constant
communication with their friends and relations in the
great city. They go to the play occasionally. 'I have
not indeed seen Mrs. Siddons often, but I think I never saw
her to more advantage,' she writes. 'It is not, however,
seeing a play, it is only seeing one character, for they have
nobody to act with her.'</p>
<p>Another expedition is to Westminster Hall, where
Warren Hastings was then being tried for his life.</p>
<p>'The trial has attracted the notice of most people who
are within reach of it. I have been, and was very much
struck with all the apparatus and pomp of justice, with
the splendour of the assembly which contained everything
distinguished in the nation, with the grand idea that the
equity of the English was to pursue crimes committed at
the other side of the globe, and oppressions exercised
towards the poor Indians who had come to plead their
cause; but all these fine ideas vanish and fade away as one
observes the progress of the cause, and sees it fall into the
summer amusements, and take the place of a rehearsal of
music or an evening at Vauxhall.'</p>
<p>Mrs. Barbauld was a Liberal in feeling and conviction;
she was never afraid to speak her mind, and when the
French Revolution first began, she, in common with many
others, hoped that it was but the dawning of happier
times. She was always keen about public events; she
wrote an address on the opposition to the repeal of the
Test Act in 1791, and she published her poem to Wilberforce
on the rejection of his great bill for abolishing
slavery:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="1" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Friends of the friendless, hail, ye generous band!</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>she cries, in warm enthusiasm for the devoted cause.</p>
<p>Horace Walpole nicknamed her Deborah, called her
the Virago Barbauld, and speaks of her with utter rudeness
and intolerant spite. But whether or not Horace
Walpole approved, it is certain that Mrs. Barbauld possessed
to a full and generous degree a quality which is now less
common than it was in her day.</p>
<p>Not very many years ago I was struck on one occasion
when a noble old lady, now gone to her rest, exclaimed in
my hearing that people of this generation had all sorts of
merits and charitable intentions, but that there was one
thing she missed which had certainly existed in her youth,
and which no longer seemed to be of the same account:
that public spirit which used to animate the young as well
as the old.</p>
<p>It is possible that philanthropy, and the love of the
beautiful, and the gratuitous diffusion of wall-papers may
be the modern rendering of the good old-fashioned sentiment.
Mrs. Barbauld lived in very stirring days, when
private people shared in the excitements and catastrophes
of public affairs. To her the fortunes of England, its
loyalty, its success, were a part of her daily bread. By
her early associations she belonged to a party representing
opposition, and for that very reason she was the more
keenly struck by the differences of the conduct of affairs
and the opinions of those she trusted. Her friend Dr.
Priestley had emigrated to America for his convictions'
sake; Howard was giving his noble life for his work;
Wakefield had gone to prison. Now the very questions
are forgotten for which they struggled and suffered, or the
answers have come while the questions are forgotten,
in this their future which is our present, and to which
some unborn historian may point back with a moral
finger.</p>
<p>Dr. Aikin, whose estimate of his sister was very different
from Horace Walpole's, occasionally reproached her for not
writing more constantly. He wrote a copy of verses on
this theme:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Thus speaks the Muse, and bends her brows severe:</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Did I, Lætitia, lend my choicest lays,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And crown thy youthful head with freshest bays,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">That all the expectance of thy full-grown year,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Should lie inert and fruitless? O revere</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Those sacred gifts whose meed is deathless praise,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Whose potent charm the enraptured soul can raise</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Far from the vapours of this earthly sphere,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Seize, seize the lyre, resume the lofty strain.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>She seems to have willingly left the lyre for Dr. Aikin's
use. A few hymns, some graceful odes, and stanzas, and
<i>jeux d'esprit</i>, a certain number of well-written and original
essays, and several political pamphlets, represent the best
of her work. Her more ambitious poems are those by
which she is the least remembered. It was at Hampstead
that Mrs. Barbauld wrote her contributions to her brother's
volume of 'Evenings at Home,' among which the transmigrations
of Indur may be quoted as a model of style
and delightful matter. One of the best of her <i>jeux d'esprit</i>
is the 'Groans of the Tankard,' which was written in early
days, with much spirit and real humour. It begins with
a classic incantation, and then goes on:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">'Twas at the solemn silent noontide hour</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">When hunger rages with despotic power,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">When the lean student quits his Hebrew roots</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">For the gross nourishment of English fruits,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And throws unfinished airy systems by</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">For solid pudding and substantial pie.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>The tankard now,</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="right">Replenished to the brink,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">With the cool beverage blue-eyed maidens drink,</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>but, accustomed to very different libations, is endowed with
voice and utters its bitter reproaches:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Unblest the day, and luckless was the hour</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Which doomed me to a Presbyterian's power,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Fated to serve a Puritanic race,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Whose slender meal is shorter than their grace.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VI.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Thumbkin, of fairy celebrity, used to mark his way by
flinging crumbs of bread and scattering stones as he went
along; and in like manner authors trace the course of their
life's peregrinations by the pamphlets and articles they cast
down as they go. Sometimes they throw stones, sometimes
they throw bread. In '92 and '93 Mrs. Barbauld must
have been occupied with party polemics and with the political
miseries of the time. A pamphlet on Gilbert Wakefield's
views, and another on 'Sins of the Government and
Sins of the People,' show in what direction her thoughts
were bent. Then came a period of comparative calm again
and of literary work and interest. She seems to have
turned to Akenside and Collins, and each had an essay to
himself. These were followed by certain selections from
the <i>Spectator</i>, <i>Tatler</i>, &c., preceded by one of those
admirable essays for which she is really remarkable. She
also published a memoir of Richardson prefixed to his
correspondence. Sir James Mackintosh, writing at a later
and sadder time of her life, says of her observations on the
moral of Clarissa that they are as fine a piece of mitigated
and rational stoicism as our language can boast of.</p>
<p>In 1802 another congregation seems to have made signs
from Stoke Newington, and Mrs. Barbauld persuaded her
husband to leave his flock at Hampstead and to buy a house
near her brother's at Stoke Newington. This was her last
migration, and here she remained until her death in 1825.
One of her letters to Mrs. Kenrick gives a description of
what might have been a happy home:—'We have a pretty
little back parlour that looks into our little spot of a garden,'
she says, 'and catches every gleam of sunshine. We have
pulled down the ivy, except what covers the coach-house
We have planted a vine and a passion-flower, with abundance
of jessamine against the window, and we have scattered
roses and honeysuckle all over the garden. You may
smile at me for parading so over my house and domains.'
In May she writes a pleasant letter, in good spirits, comparing
her correspondence with her friend to the flower of
an aloe, which sleeps for a hundred years, and on a sudden
pushes out when least expected. 'But take notice, the life
is in the aloe all the while, and sorry should I be if the life
were not in our friendship all the while, though it so rarely
diffuses itself over a sheet of paper.'</p>
<p>She seems to have been no less sociable and friendly at
Stoke Newington than at Hampstead. People used to come
up to see her from London. Her letters, quiet and intimate
as they are, give glimpses of most of the literary people of
the day, not in memoirs then, but alive and drinking tea
at one another's houses, or walking all the way to Stoke
Newington to pay their respects to the old lady.</p>
<p>Charles Lamb used to talk of his two <i>bald</i> authoresses,
Mrs. Barbauld being one and Mrs. Inchbald being the other.
Crabb Robinson and Rogers were two faithful links with the
outer world. 'Crabb Robinson corresponds with Madame
de Staël, is quite intimate,' she writes, 'has received I
don't know how many letters,' she adds, not without some
slight amusement. Miss Lucy Aikin tells a pretty story
of Scott meeting Mrs. Barbauld at dinner, and telling her
that it was to her that he owed his poetic gift. Some
translations of Bürger by Mr. Taylor, of Norwich, which
she had read out at Edinburgh, had struck him so much
that they had determined him to try his own powers in
that line.</p>
<p>She often had inmates under her roof. One of them
was a beautiful and charming young girl, the daughter of
Mrs. Fletcher, of Edinburgh, whose early death is recorded
in her mother's life. Besides company at home, Mrs. Barbauld
went to visit her friends from time to time—the
Estlins at Bristol, the Edgeworths, whose acquaintance Mr.
and Mrs. Barbauld made about this time, and who seem to
have been invaluable friends, bringing as they did a bright
new element of interest and cheerful friendship into her
sad and <ins title="original has dimning">dimming</ins> life. A man must have extraordinarily
good spirits to embark upon four matrimonial ventures as
Mr. Edgeworth did; and as for Miss Edgeworth, appreciative,
effusive, and warm-hearted, she seems to have
more than returned Mrs. Barbauld's sympathy.</p>
<p>Miss Lucy Aikin, Dr. Aikin's daughter, was now also
making her own mark in the literary world, and had
inherited the bright intelligence and interest for which
her family was so remarkable. Much of Miss Aikin's
work is more sustained than her aunt's desultory productions,
but it lacks that touch of nature which has
preserved Mrs. Barbauld's memory where more important
people are forgotten.</p>
<p>Our authoress seems to have had a natural affection
for sister authoresses. Hannah More and Mrs. Montague
were both her friends, so were Madame d'Arblay and Mrs.
Chapone in a different degree; she must have known Mrs.
Opie; she loved Joanna Baillie. The latter is described
by her as the young lady at Hampstead who came to Mr.
Barbauld's meeting with as demure a face as if she had
never written a line. And Miss Aikin, in her memoirs,
describes in Johnsonian language how the two Miss Baillies
came to call one morning upon Mrs. Barbauld:—'My
aunt immediately introduced the topic of the anonymous
tragedies, and gave utterance to her admiration with the
generous delight in the manifestation of kindred genius
which distinguished her.' But it seems that Miss Baillie
sat, nothing moved, and did not betray herself. Mrs.
Barbauld herself gives a pretty description of the sisters
in their home, in that old house on Windmill Hill, which
stands untouched, with its green windows looking out upon
so much of sky and heath and sun, with the wainscoted
parlours where Walter Scott used to come, and the low
wooden staircase leading to the old rooms above. It is in
one of her letters to Mrs. Kenrick that Mrs. Barbauld gives
a pleasant glimpse of the poetess Walter Scott admired.
'I have not been abroad since I was at Norwich, except a
day or two at Hampstead with the Miss Baillies. One
should be, as I was, beneath their roof to know all their
merit. Their house is one of the best ordered I know.
They have all manner of attentions for their friends, and
not only Miss B., but Joanna, is as clever in furnishing a
room or in arranging a party as in writing plays, of which,
by the way, she has a volume ready for the press, but she
will not give it to the public till next winter. The subject
is to be the passion of fear. I do not know what sort of
a hero that passion can afford!' Fear was, indeed, a passion
alien to her nature, and she did not know the meaning of
the word.</p>
<p>Mrs. Barbauld's description of Hannah More and her
sisters living on their special hill-top was written after
Mr. Barbauld's death, and thirty years after Miss More's
verses which are quoted by Mrs. Ellis in her excellent
memoir of Mrs. Barbauld:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Nor, Barbauld, shall my glowing heart refuse</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">A tribute to thy virtues or thy muse;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">This humble merit shall at least be mine,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">The poet's chaplet for thy brows to twine;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">My verse thy talents to the world shall teach,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And praise the graces it despairs to reach.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Then, after philosophically questioning the power of genius
to confer true happiness, she concludes:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Can all the boasted powers of wit and song</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Of life one pang remove, one hour prolong?</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Fallacious hope which daily truths deride—</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">For you, alas! have wept and Garrick died.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Meanwhile, whatever genius might not be able to
achieve, the five Miss Mores had been living on peacefully
together in the very comfortable cottage which had been
raised and thatched by the poetess's earnings.</p>
<p>'Barley Wood is equally the seat of taste and hospitality,'
says Mrs. Barbauld to a friend.</p>
<p>'Nothing could be more friendly than their reception,'
she writes to her brother, 'and nothing more charming
than their situation. An extensive view over the Mendip
Hills is in front of their house, with a pretty view of
Wrington. Their home—cottage, because it is thatched—stands
on the declivity of a rising ground, which they
have planted and made quite a little paradise. The five
sisters, all good old maids, have lived together these fifty
years. Hannah More is a good deal broken, but possesses
fully her powers of conversation, and her vivacity. We
exchanged riddles like the wise men of old; I was given
to understand she was writing something.'</p>
<p>There is another allusion to Mrs. Hannah More in a
sensible letter from Mrs. Barbauld, written to Miss
Edgeworth about this time, declining to join in an alarming
enterprise suggested by the vivacious Mr. Edgeworth,
'a <i>Feminiad</i>, a literary paper to be entirely contributed
to by ladies, and where all articles are to be accepted.'
'There is no bond of union,' Mrs. Barbauld says, 'among
literary women any more than among literary men;
different sentiments and connections separate them much
more than the joint interest of their sex would unite
them. Mrs. Hannah More would not write along with
you or me, and we should possibly hesitate at joining
Miss Hays or—if she were living—Mrs. Godwin.' Then
she suggests the names of Miss Baillie, Mrs. Opie, her
own niece Miss Lucy Aikin, and Mr. S. Rogers, who would
not, she thinks, be averse to joining the scheme.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VII.</b></p>
</div>
<p>How strangely unnatural it seems when Fate's heavy
hand falls upon quiet and common-place lives, changing
the tranquil routine of every day into the solemnities and
excitements of terror and tragedy! It was after their
removal to Stoke Newington that the saddest of all blows
fell upon this true-hearted woman. Her husband's hypochondria
deepened and changed, and the attacks became
so serious that her brother and his family urged her
anxiously to leave him to other care than her own. It
was no longer safe for poor Mr. Barbauld to remain alone
with his wife, and her life, says Mrs. Le Breton, was more
than once in peril. But, at first, she would not hear of
leaving him; although on more than one occasion she had
to fly for protection to her brother close by.</p>
<p>There is something very touching in the patient
fidelity with which Mrs. Barbauld tried to soothe the later
sad disastrous years of her husband's life. She must have
been a woman of singular nerve and courage to endure as
she did the excitement and cruel aberrations of her once
gentle and devoted companion. She only gave in after
long resistance.</p>
<p>'An alienation from me has taken possession of his
mind,' she says, in a letter to Mrs. Kenrick; 'my presence
seems to irritate him, and I must resign myself to a separation
from him who has been for thirty years the partner
of my heart, my faithful friend, my inseparable companion.'
With her habitual reticence, she dwells no
more on that painful topic, but goes on to make plans for
them both, asks her old friend to come and cheer her in
her loneliness; and the faithful Betsy, now a widow with
grown-up step-children, ill herself, troubled by deafness
and other infirmities, responds with a warm heart, and
promises to come, bringing the comfort with her of old
companionship and familiar sympathy. There is something
very affecting in the loyalty of the two aged women
stretching out their hands to each other across a whole
lifetime. After her visit Mrs. Barbauld writes again:—</p>
<p>'He is now at Norwich, and I hear very favourable
accounts of his health and spirits; he seems to enjoy himself
very much amongst his old friends there, and converses
among them with his usual animation. There are no
symptoms of violence or of depression; so far is favourable;
but this cruel alienation from me, in which my
brother is included, still remains deep-rooted, and whether
he will ever change in this point Heaven only knows.
The medical men fear he will not: if so, my dear friend,
what remains for me but to resign myself to the will of
Heaven, and to think with pleasure that every day brings
me nearer a period which naturally cannot be very far off,
and at which this as well as every temporal affliction must
terminate?</p>
<p>'"Anything but this!" is the cry of weak mortals
when afflicted; and sometimes I own I am inclined to
make it mine; but I will check myself.'</p>
<p>But while she was hoping still, a fresh outbreak of the
malady occurred. He, poor soul, weary of his existence,
put an end to his sufferings: he was found lifeless in the
New River. Lucy Aikin quotes a Dirge found among her
aunt's papers after her death:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Pure Spirit, O where art thou now?</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> O whisper to my soul,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">O let some soothening thought of thee</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> This bitter grief control.</td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">'Tis not for thee the tears I shed,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Thy sufferings now are o'er.</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">The sea is calm, the tempest past,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> On that eternal shore.</td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">No more the storms that wrecked thy peace</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Shall tear that gentle breast,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Nor summer's rage, nor winter's cold</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> That poor, poor frame molest.</td></tr>
<tr><td>*<span class="ind3">*</span><span class="ind3">*</span><span class="ind3">*</span></td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Farewell! With honour, peace, and love,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Be that dear memory blest,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Thou hast no tears for me to shed,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> When I too am at rest.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>But her time of rest was not yet come, and she lived for
seventeen years after her husband. She was very brave,
she did not turn from the sympathy of her friends, she
endured her loneliness with courage, she worked to distract
her mind. Here is a touching letter addressed to
Mrs. Taylor, of Norwich, in which she says:—'A thousand
thanks for your kind letter, still more for the very short
visit that preceded it. Though short—too short—it
has left indelible impressions on my mind. My
heart has truly had communion with yours; your
sympathy has been balm to it; and I feel that there is
<i>now</i> no one on earth to whom I could pour out that heart
more readily…. I am now sitting alone again, and feel
like a person who has been sitting by a cheerful fire, not
sensible at the time of the temperature of the air; but
the fire removed, he finds the season is still winter. Day
after day passes, and I do not know what to do with my
time; my mind has no energy nor power of application.'</p>
<p>How much she felt her loneliness appears again and
again from one passage and another. Then she struggled
against discouragement; she took to her pen again. To
Mrs. Kenrick she writes:—'I intend to pay my letter
debts; not much troubling my head whether I have anything
to say or not; yet to you my heart has always
something to say: it always recognises you as among the
dearest of its friends; and while it feels that new impressions
are made with difficulty and early effaced, retains,
and ever will retain, I trust beyond this world, those of our
early and long-tried affection.'</p>
<p>She set to work again, trying to forget her heavy
trials. It was during the first years of her widowhood
that she published her edition of the British novelists in
some fifty volumes. There is an opening chapter to this
edition upon novels and novel-writing, which is an admirable
and most interesting essay upon fiction, beginning
from the very earliest times.</p>
<p>In 1811 she wrote her poem on the King's illness, and
also the longer poem which provoked such indignant comments
at the time. It describes Britain's rise and luxury,
warns her of the dangers of her unbounded ambition and
unjustifiable wars:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Arts, arms, and wealth destroy the fruits they bring;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Commerce, like beauty, knows no second spring.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Her ingenuous youth from Ontario's shore who visits the
ruins of London is one of the many claimants to the
honour of having suggested Lord Macaulay's celebrated
New Zealander:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Pensive and thoughtful shall the wanderers greet</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Each splendid square and still untrodden street,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Or of some crumbling turret, mined by time,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">The broken stairs with perilous step shall climb,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Thence stretch their view the wide horizon round,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">By scattered hamlets trace its ancient bound,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And, choked no more with fleets, fair Thames survey</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Through reeds and sedge pursue his idle way.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>It is impossible not to admire the poem, though it is
stilted and not to the present taste. The description
of Britain as it now is and as it once was is very
ingenious:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Where once Bonduca whirled the scythèd car,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And the fierce matrons raised the shriek of war,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Light forms beneath transparent muslin float,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And tutor'd voices swell the artful note;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Light-leaved acacias, and the shady plane,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And spreading cedars grace the woodland reign.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>The poem is forgotten now, though it was scouted
at the time and violently attacked, Southey himself falling
upon the poor old lady, and devouring her, spectacles and
all. She felt these attacks very much, and could not be
consoled, though Miss Edgeworth wrote a warm-hearted
letter of indignant sympathy. But Mrs. Barbauld had
something in her too genuine to be crushed, even by sarcastic
criticism. She published no more, but it was after
her poem of '1811' that she wrote the beautiful ode by
which she is best known and best remembered,—the ode
that Wordsworth used to repeat and say he envied, that
Tennyson has called 'sweet verses,' of which the lines ring
their tender hopeful chime like sweet church bells on a
summer evening.</p>
<p>Madame d'Arblay, in her old age, told Crabb Robinson
that every night she said the verses over to herself as she
went to her rest. To the writer they are almost sacred.
The hand that patiently pointed out to her, one by one,
the syllables of Mrs. Barbauld's hymns for children, that
tended our childhood, as it had tended our father's,
marked these verses one night, when it blessed us for the
last time.</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Life, we've been long together,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Through pleasant and through cloudy weather;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">'Tis hard to part when friends are dear;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Perhaps 'twill cost a sigh or tear,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Then steal away, give little warning,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Choose thine own time.</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Say not good-night, but in some brighter clime,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Bid me 'Good morning.'</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Mrs. Barbauld was over seventy when she wrote this
ode. A poem, called 'Octogenary Reflections,' is also very
touching:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Say ye, who through this round of eighty years</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Have proved its joys and sorrows, hopes and fears;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Say what is life, ye veterans who have trod,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Step following steps, its flowery thorny road?</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Enough of good to kindle strong desire;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Enough of ill to damp the rising fire;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Enough of love and fancy, joy and hope,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">To fan desire and give the passions scope;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Enough of disappointment, sorrow, pain,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">To seal the wise man's sentence—'All is vain.'</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>There is another fragment of hers in which she likens
herself to a schoolboy left of all the train, who hears no
sound of wheels to bear him to his father's bosom home.
'Thus I look to the hour when I shall follow those that
are at rest before me.' And then at last the time came
for which she longed. Her brother died, her faithful Mrs.
Kenrick died, and Mrs. Taylor, whom she loved most of
all. She had consented to give up her solitary home to
spend the remaining years of her life in the home of her
adopted son Charles, now married, and a father; but it was
while she was on a little visit to her sister-in-law, Mrs.
Aikin, that the summons came, very swiftly and peacefully,
as she sat in her chair one day. Her nephew transcribed
these, the last lines she ever wrote:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="ind2">'Who are you?'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Do you not know me? have you not expected me?'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Whither do you carry me?'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Come with me and you shall know.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'The way is dark.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'It is well trodden.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Yes, in the forward track.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Come along.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Oh! shall I there see my beloved ones? Will they welcome
me, and will they know me? Oh, tell me, tell me; thou
canst tell me.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Yes, but thou must come first.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Stop a little; keep thy hand off till thou hast told me.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'I never wait.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Oh! shall I see the warm sun again in my cold grave?'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Nothing is there that can feel the sun.'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Oh, where then?'</span><br/>
<span class="ind2">'Come, I say.'</span></p>
</blockquote>
<p>One may acknowledge the great progress which people
have made since Mrs. Barbauld's day in the practice of
writing prose and poetry, in the art of expressing upon
paper the thoughts which are in most people's minds. It
is (to use a friend's simile) like playing upon the piano—everybody
now learns to play upon the piano, and it is
certain that the modest performances of the ladies of Mrs.
Barbauld's time would scarcely meet with the attention
now, which they then received. But all the same, the
stock of true feeling, of real poetry, is not increased by
the increased volubility of our pens; and so when something
comes to us that is real, that is complete in pathos
or in wisdom, we still acknowledge the gift, and are
grateful for it.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="minimal" />
<p> </p>
<h2><SPAN name="MISS_EDGEWORTH" id="MISS_EDGEWORTH"></SPAN><i>MISS EDGEWORTH.</i></h2>
<div class="center">
<p>1767-1849.<br/></p>
</div>
<div class="center">
<table style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="2" summary="quote">
<tr><td align="left"><small>'Exceeding wise, fairspoken, and persuading.'—<i>Hen. VIII.</i></small></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td align="center"><span class="smallcaps">Early Days.</span></td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td align="center"><b>I.</b></td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Few authoresses in these days can have enjoyed the
ovations and attentions which seem to have been considered
the due of many of the ladies distinguished at the
end of the last century and the beginning of this one.
To read the accounts of the receptions and compliments
which fell to their lot may well fill later and lesser luminaries
with envy. Crowds opened to admit them, banquets
spread themselves out before them, lights were lighted up
and flowers were scattered at their feet. Dukes, editors,
prime ministers, waited their convenience on their staircases;
whole theatres rose up <i>en masse</i> to greet the gifted
creatures of this and that immortal tragedy. The authoresses
themselves, to do them justice, seem to have been
very little dazzled by all this excitement. Hannah More
contentedly retires with her maiden sisters to the Parnassus
on the Mendip Hills, where they sew and chat and make
tea, and teach the village children. Dear Joanna Baillie,
modest and beloved, lives on to peaceful age in her pretty
old house at Hampstead, looking through tree-tops and
sunshine and clouds towards distant London. 'Out there
where all the storms are,' I heard the children saying
yesterday as they watched the overhanging gloom of smoke
which, veils the city of metropolitan thunders and lightning.
Maria Edgeworth's apparitions as a literary lioness
in the rush of London and of Paris society were but interludes
in her existence, and her real life was one of constant
exertion and industry spent far away in an Irish
home among her own kindred and occupations and interests.
We may realise what these were when we read that Mr.
Edgeworth had no less than four wives, who all left
children, and that Maria was the eldest daughter of the
whole family. Besides this, we must also remember that
the father whom she idolised was himself a man of extraordinary
powers, brilliant in conversation (so I have been
told), full of animation, of interest, of plans for his country,
his family, for education and literature, for mechanics and
scientific discoveries; that he was a gentleman widely connected,
hospitably inclined, with a large estate and many
tenants to overlook, with correspondence and acquaintances
all over the world; and besides all this, with various
schemes in his brain, to be eventually realised by others of
which velocipedes, tramways, and telegraphs were but a
few of the items.</p>
<p>One could imagine that under these circumstances the
hurry and excitement of London life must have sometimes
seemed tranquillity itself compared with the many and
absorbing interests of such a family. What these interests
were may be gathered from the pages of a very interesting
memoir from which the writer of this essay has been
allowed to quote. It is a book privately printed and
written for the use of her children by the widow of
Richard Lovell Edgeworth, and is a record, among other
things, of a faithful and most touching friendship between
Maria and her father's wife—'a friendship lasting for over
fifty years, and unbroken by a single cloud of difference
or mistrust.' Mrs. Edgeworth, who was Miss Beaufort
before her marriage, and about the same age as Miss
Edgeworth, unconsciously reveals her own most charming
and unselfish nature as she tells her stepdaughter's story.</p>
<p>When the writer looks back upon her own childhood,
it seems to her that she lived in company with a delightful
host of little playmates, bright, busy, clever children,
whose cheerful presence remains more vividly in her mind
than that of many of the real little boys and girls who
used to appear and disappear disconnectedly as children
do in childhood, when friendship and companionship
depend almost entirely upon the convenience of grown-up
people. Now and again came little cousins or friends to
share our games, but day by day, constant and unchanging,
ever to be relied upon, smiled our most lovable and
friendly companions—simple Susan, lame Jervas, Talbot,
the dear Little Merchants, Jem the widow's son with his
arms round old Lightfoot's neck, the generous Ben, with
his whipcord and his useful proverb of 'waste not, want
not'—all of these were there in the window corner waiting
our pleasure. After Parents' Assistant, to which
familiar words we attached no meaning whatever, came
Popular Tales in big brown volumes off a shelf in the
lumber-room of an apartment in an old house in Paris,
and as we opened the books, lo! creation widened to our
view. England, Ireland, America, Turkey, the mines of
Golconda, the streets of Bagdad, thieves, travellers,
governesses, natural philosophy, and fashionable life, were
all laid under contribution, and brought interest and
adventure to our humdrum nursery corner. All Mr.
Edgeworth's varied teaching and experience, all his
daughter's genius of observation, came to interest and
delight our play-time, and that of a thousand other little
children in different parts of the world. People justly
praise Miss Edgeworth's admirable stories and novels, but
from prejudice and early association these beloved childish
histories seem unequalled still, and it is chiefly as a writer
for children that we venture to consider her here. Some
of the stories are indeed little idylls in their way. Walter
Scott, who best knew how to write for the young so as to
charm grandfathers as well as Hugh Littlejohn, Esq., and
all the grandchildren, is said to have wiped his kind eyes
as he put down 'Simple Susan.' A child's book, says a
reviewer of those days defining in the 'Quarterly Review,'
should be 'not merely less dry, less difficult, than a book
for grown-up people; but more rich in interest, more true
to nature, more exquisite in art, more abundant in every
quality that replies to childhood's keener and fresher perception.'
Children like facts, they like short vivid
sentences that tell the story: as they listen intently, so
they read; every word has its value for them. It has
been a real surprise to the writer to find, on re-reading
some of these descriptions of scenery and adventure
which she had not looked at since her childhood, that the
details which she had imagined spread over much space
are contained in a few sentences at the beginning of a
page. These sentences, however, show the true art of the
writer.</p>
<p>It would be difficult to imagine anything better suited
to the mind of a very young person than these pleasant
stories, so complete in themselves, so interesting, so varied.
The description of Jervas's escape from the mine where
the miners had plotted his destruction, almost rises to
poetry in its simple diction. Lame Jervas has warned his
master of the miners' plot, and showed him the vein of
ore which they have concealed. The miners have sworn
vengeance against him, and his life is in danger. His
master helps him to get away, and comes into the room
before daybreak, bidding him rise and put on the clothes
which he has brought. 'I followed him out of the house
before anybody else was awake, and he took me across the
fields towards the high road. At this place we waited till
we heard the tinkling of the bells of a team of horses.
"Here comes the waggon," said he, "in which you are to
go. So fare you well, Jervas. I shall hear how you go
on; and I only hope you will serve your next master,
whoever he may be, as faithfully as you have served me."
"I shall never find so good a master," was all I could say
for the soul of me; I was quite overcome by his goodness
and sorrow at parting with him, as I then thought, for
ever.' The description of the journey is very pretty.
'The morning clouds began to clear away; I could see
my master at some distance, and I kept looking after him
as the waggon went on slowly, and he walked fast away
over the fields.' Then the sun begins to rise. The
waggoner goes on whistling, but lame Jervas, to whom
the rising sun was a spectacle wholly surprising, starts up,
exclaiming in wonder and admiration. The waggoner
bursts into a loud laugh. 'Lud a marcy,' says he, 'to
hear un' and look at un' a body would think the oaf had
never seen the sun rise afore;' upon which Jervas
remembers that he is still in Cornwall, and must not
betray himself, and prudently hides behind some parcels,
only just in time, for they meet a party of miners, and he
hears his enemies' voice hailing the waggoner. All the
rest of the day he sits within, and amuses himself by
listening to the bells of the team, which jingle continually.
'On our second day's journey, however, I ventured out of
my hiding-place. I walked with the waggoner up and
down the hills, enjoying the fresh air, the singing of the
birds, and the delightful smell of the honeysuckles and
the dog-roses in the hedges. All the wild flowers and
even the weeds on the banks by the wayside were to me
matters of wonder and admiration. At almost every step
I paused to observe something that was new to me, and I
could not help feeling surprised at the insensibility of my
fellow-traveller, who plodded along, and seldom interrupted
his whistling except to cry 'Gee, Blackbird, aw
woa,' or 'How now, Smiler?' Then Jervas is lost in
admiration before a plant 'whose stem was about two feet
high, and which had a round shining purple beautiful
flower,' and the waggoner with a look of scorn exclaims,
'Help thee, lad, dost not thou know 'tis a common thistle?'
After this he looks upon Jervas as very nearly an idiot.
'In truth I believe I was a droll figure, for my hat was
stuck full of weeds and of all sorts of wild flowers, and
both my coat and waistcoat pockets were stuffed out with
pebbles and funguses.' Then comes Plymouth Harbour:
Jervas ventures to ask some questions about the vessels, to
which the waggoner answers 'They be nothing in life but
the boats and ships, man;' so he turned away and went
on chewing a straw, and seemed not a whit more moved
to admiration than he had been at the sight of the thistle.
'I conceived a high admiration of a man who had seen so
much that he could admire nothing,' says Jervas, with a
touch of real humour.</p>
<p>Another most charming little idyll is that of Simple
Susan, who was a real maiden living in the neighbourhood
of Edgeworthstown. The story seems to have been mislaid
for a time in the stirring events of the first Irish rebellion,
and overlooked, like some little daisy by a battlefield.
Few among us will not have shared Mr. Edgeworth's partiality
for the charming little tale. The children fling their
garlands and tie up their violets. Susan bakes her cottage
loaves and gathers marigolds for broth, and tends her
mother to the distant tune of Philip's pipe coming across
the fields. As we read the story again it seems as if we
could almost scent the fragrance of the primroses and the
double violets, and hear the music sounding above the
children's voices, and the bleatings of the lamb, so simply
and delightfully is the whole story constructed. Among
all Miss Edgeworth's characters few are more familiar to the
world than that of Susan's pretty pet lamb.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>II.</b></p>
</div>
<p>No sketch of Maria Edgeworth's life, however slight,
would be complete without a few words about certain persons
coming a generation before her (and belonging still to
the age of periwigs), who were her father's associates and
her own earliest friends. Notwithstanding all that has
been said of Mr. Edgeworth's bewildering versatility of
nature, he seems to have been singularly faithful in his
friendships. He might take up new ties, but he clung
pertinaciously to those which had once existed. His
daughter inherited that same steadiness of affection. In his
life of Erasmus Darwin, his grandfather, Mr. Charles Darwin,
writing of these very people, has said, 'There is, perhaps,
no safer test of a man's real character than that of his long-continued
friendship with good and able men.' He then
goes on to quote an instance of a long-continued affection
and intimacy only broken by death between a certain set
of distinguished friends, giving the names of Keir, Day,
Small, Boulton, Watt, Wedgwood, and Darwin, and adding
to them the names of Edgeworth himself and of the Galtons.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth first came to Lichfield to make Dr.
Darwin's acquaintance. His second visit was to his friend
Mr. Day, the author of 'Sandford and Merton,' who had
taken a house in the valley of Stow, and who invited him
one Christmas on a visit. 'About the year 1765,' says Miss
Seward, 'came to Lichfield, from the neighbourhood of
Reading, the young and gay philosopher, Mr. Edgeworth;
a man of fortune, and recently married to a Miss Elers, of
Oxfordshire. The fame of Dr. Darwin's various talents
allured Mr. E. to the city they graced.' And the lady goes
on to describe Mr. Edgeworth himself:—'Scarcely two-and-twenty,
with an exterior yet more juvenile, having
mathematic science, mechanic ingenuity, and a competent
portion of classical learning, with the possession of the
modern languages…. He danced, he fenced, he winged
his arrows with more than philosophic skill,' continues the
lady, herself a person of no little celebrity in her time and
place. Mr. Edgeworth, in his Memoirs, pays a respectful
tribute to Miss Seward's charms, to her agreeable conversation,
her beauty, her flowing tresses, her sprightliness and
address. Such moderate expressions fail, however, to do
justice to this lady's powers, to her enthusiasm, her poetry,
her partisanship. The portrait prefixed to her letters is
that of a dignified person with an oval face and dark eyes,
the thick brown tresses are twined with pearls, her graceful
figure is robed in the softest furs and draperies of the
period. In her very first letter she thus poetically describes
her surroundings:—'The autumnal glory of this day puts
to shame the summer's sullenness. I sit writing upon this
dear green terrace, feeding at intervals my little golden-breasted
songsters. The embosomed vale of Stow glows
sunny through the Claude-Lorraine tint which is spread
over the scene like the blue mist over a plum.'</p>
<p>In this Claude-Lorraine-plum-tinted valley stood the
house which Mr. Day had taken, and where Mr. Edgeworth
had come on an eventful visit. Miss Seward herself lived
with her parents in the Bishop's palace at Lichfield. There
was also a younger sister, 'Miss Sally,' who died as a girl,
and another very beautiful young lady their friend, by name
Honora Sneyd, placed under Mrs. Seward's care. She was
the heroine of Major André's unhappy romance. He too
lived at Lichfield with his mother, and his hopeless love
gives a tragic reality to this by-gone holiday of youth and
merry-making. As one reads the old letters and memoirs
the echoes of laughter reach us. One can almost see the
young folks all coming together out of the Cathedral Close,
where so much of their time was passed; the beautiful
Honora, surrounded by friends and adorers, chaperoned by
the graceful Muse her senior, also much admired, and much
made of. Thomas Day is perhaps striding after them in
silence with keen critical glances; his long black locks flow
unpowdered down his back. In contrast to him comes his
brilliant and dressy companion, Mr. Edgeworth, who talks
so agreeably. I can imagine little Sabrina, Day's adopted
foundling, of whom so many stories have been told, following
shyly at her guardian's side in her simple dress
and childish beauty, and André's young handsome face
turned towards Miss Sneyd. So they pass on happy and
contented in each other's company, Honora in the midst,
beautiful, stately, reserved: she too was one of those not
destined to be old.</p>
<p>Miss Seward seems to have loved this friend with a
very sincere and admiring affection, and to have bitterly
mourned her early death. Her letters abound in
apostrophes to the lost Honora. But perhaps the poor
Muse expected almost too much from friendship, too
much from life. She expected, as we all do at times, that
her friends should be not themselves but her, that they
should lead not their lives but her own. So much at
least one may gather from the various phases of her style
and correspondence, and her complaints of Honora's
estrangement and subsequent coldness. Perhaps, also,
Miss Seward's many vagaries and sentiments may have
frozen Honora's sympathies. Miss Seward was all
asterisks and notes of exclamation. Honora seems to
have forced feeling down to its most scrupulous expression.
She never lived to be softened by experience, to
suit herself to others by degrees: with great love she also
inspired awe and a sort of surprise. One can imagine her
pointing the moral of the purple jar, as it was told long
afterwards by her stepdaughter, then a little girl playing
at her own mother's knee in her nursery by the river.</p>
<p>People in the days of shilling postage were better
correspondents than they are now when we have to be
content with pennyworths of news and of affectionate intercourse.
Their descriptions and many details bring all
the chief characters vividly before us, and carry us into the
hearts and the pocket-books of the little society at Lichfield
as it then was. The town must have been an agreeable
sojourn in those days for people of some pretension
and small performance. The inhabitants of Lichfield
seem actually to have read each other's verses, and having
done so to have taken the trouble to sit down and write
out their raptures. They were a pleasant lively company
living round about the old cathedral towers, meeting in the
Close or the adjacent gardens or the hospitable Palace
itself. Here the company would sip tea, talk mild literature
of their own and good criticism at second hand,
quoting Dr. Johnson to one another with the familiarity
of townsfolk. From Erasmus Darwin, too, they must
have gained something of vigour and originality.</p>
<p>With all her absurdities Miss Seward had some real
critical power and appreciation; and some of her lines
are very pretty.<SPAN href="#fn1"><sup><small>1</small></sup></SPAN><SPAN name="fn1r" id="fn1r"></SPAN> An 'Ode to the Sun' is only what
might have been expected from this Lichfield Corinne.
Her best known productions are an 'Elegy on Captain
Cook,' a 'Monody on Major André,' whom she had known
from her early youth; and there is a poem, 'Louisa,' of
which she herself speaks very highly. But even more
than her poetry did she pique herself upon her epistolary
correspondence. It must have been well worth while
writing letters when they were not only prized by the
writer and the recipients, but commented on by their
friends in after years. 'Court Dewes, Esq.,' writes, after
five years, for copies of Miss Seward's epistles to Miss
Rogers and Miss Weston, of which the latter begins:—'Soothing
and welcome to me, dear Sophia, is the regret
you express for our separation! Pleasant were the weeks
we have recently passed together in this ancient and embowered
mansion! I had strongly felt the silence and
vacancy of the depriving day on which you vanished.
How prone are our hearts perversely to quarrel with the
friendly coercion of employment at the very instant in
which it is clearing the torpid and injurious mists of unavailing
melancholy!' Then follows a sprightly attack
before which Johnson may have quailed indeed. 'Is the
Fe-fa-fum of literature that snuffs afar the fame of his
brother authors, and thirsts for its destruction, to be
allowed to gallop unmolested over the fields of criticism?
A few pebbles from the well-springs of truth and eloquence
are all that is wanted to bring the might of his
envy low.' This celebrated letter, which may stand as
a specimen of the whole six volumes, concludes with the
following apostrophe:—'Virtuous friendship, how pure, how
sacred are thy delights! Sophia, thy mind is capable of
tasting them in all their poignance: against how many of
life's incidents may that capacity be considered as a
counterpoise!'</p>
<p>There were constant rubs, which are not to be
wondered at, between Miss Seward and Dr. Darwin, who,
though a poet, was also a singularly witty, downright man,
outspoken and humorous. The lady admires his genius,
bitterly resents his sarcasms; of his celebrated work, the
'Botanic Garden,' she says, 'It is a string of poetic
brilliants, and they are of the first water, but the eye will
be apt to want the intersticial black velvet to give effect
to their lustre.' In later days, notwithstanding her
'elegant language,' as Mr. Charles Darwin calls it, she said
several spiteful things of her old friend, but they seem
more prompted by private pique than malice.</p>
<p>If Miss Seward was the Minerva and Dr. Darwin the
Jupiter of the Lichfield society, its philosopher was
Thomas Day, of whom Miss Seward's description is so
good that I cannot help one more quotation:—</p>
<p>'Powder and fine clothes were at that time the appendages
of gentlemen; Mr. Day wore not either. He was
tall and stooped in the shoulders, full made but not corpulent,
and in his meditative and melancholy air a degree
of awkwardness and dignity were blended.' She then
compares him with his guest, Mr. Edgeworth. 'Less
graceful, less amusing, less brilliant than Mr. E., but more
highly imaginative, more classical, and a deeper reasoner;
strict integrity, energetic friendship, open-handed generosity,
and diffusive charity, greatly overbalanced on the
side of virtue, the tincture of misanthropic gloom and proud
contempt of common life society.' Wright, of Derby, painted
a full-length picture of Mr. Day in 1770. 'Mr. Day
looks upward enthusiastically, meditating on the contents
of a book held in his dropped right hand … a flash of
lightning plays in his hair and illuminates the contents
of the volume.' 'Dr. Darwin,' adds Miss Seward, 'sat to
Mr. Wright about the same period—<i>that</i> was a simply
contemplative portrait of the most perfect resemblance.'</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>III.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Maria must have been three years old this eventful
Christmas time when her father, leaving his wife in Berkshire,
came to stay with Mr. Day at Lichfield, and first
made the acquaintance of Miss Seward and her poetic
circle. Mr. Day, who had once already been disappointed
in love, and whose romantic scheme of adopting his foundlings
and of educating one of them to be his wife, has
often been described, had brought one of the maidens to
the house he had taken at Lichfield. This was Sabrina, as
he had called her. Lucretia, having been found troublesome,
had been sent off with a dowry to be apprenticed to
a milliner. Sabrina was a charming little girl of thirteen;
everybody liked her, especially the friendly ladies at the
Palace, who received her with constant kindness, as they
did Mr. Day himself and his visitor. What Miss Seward
thought of Sabrina's education I do not know. The poor
child was to be taught to despise luxury, to ignore fear, to
be superior to pain. She appears, however, to have been
very fond of her benefactor, but to have constantly provoked
him by starting and screaming whenever he fired
uncharged pistols at her skirts, or dropped hot melted
sealing-wax on her bare arms. She is described as lovely
and artless, not fond of books, incapable of understanding
scientific problems, or of keeping the imaginary and terrible
secrets with which her guardian used to try her nerves.
I do not know when it first occurred to him that Honora
Sneyd was all that his dreams could have imagined. One
day he left Sabrina under many restrictions, and returning
unexpectedly found her wearing some garment or handkerchief
of which he did not approve, and discarded her on
the spot and for ever. Poor Sabrina was evidently not meant
to mate and soar with philosophical eagles. After this
episode, she too was despatched, to board with an old lady,
in peace for a time, let us hope, and in tranquil mediocrity.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth approved of this arrangement; he had
never considered that Sabrina was suited to his friend.
But being taken in due time to call at the Palace, he was
charmed with Miss Seward, and still more by all he
saw of Honora; comparing her, alas! in his mind 'with all
other women, and secretly acknowledging her superiority.'
At first, he says, Miss Seward's brilliance overshadowed
Honora, but very soon her merits grew upon the bystanders.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth carefully concealed his feelings except
from his host, who was beginning himself to contemplate a
marriage with Miss Sneyd. Mr. Day presently proposed
formally in writing for the hand of the lovely Honora, and
Mr. Edgeworth was to take the packet and to bring back
the answer; and being married himself, and out of the running,
he appears to have been unselfishly anxious for his
friend's success. In the packet Mr. Day had written down
the conditions to which he should expect his wife to subscribe.
She would have to begin at once by giving up all
luxuries, amenities, and intercourse with the world, and
promise to continue to seclude herself entirely in his company.
Miss Sneyd does not seem to have kept Mr. Edgeworth
waiting long while she wrote her answer decidedly saying
that she could not admit the unqualified control of a husband
over all her actions, nor the necessity for 'seclusion from
society to preserve female virtue.' Finding that Honora
absolutely refused to change her way of life, Mr. Day went
into a fever, for which Dr. Darwin bled him. Nor did he
recover until another Miss Sneyd, Elizabeth by name, made
her appearance in the Close.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth, who was of a lively and active disposition,
had introduced archery among the gentlemen of the
neighbourhood, and he describes a fine summer evening's
entertainment passed in agreeable sports, followed by
dancing and music, in the course of which Honora's sister,
Miss Elizabeth, appeared for the first time on the Lichfield
scene, and immediately joined in the country dance.
There is a vivid description of the two sisters in Mr.
Edgeworth's memoirs, of the beautiful and distinguished
Honora, loving science, serious, eager, reserved; of the
more lovely but less graceful Elizabeth, with less of energy,
more of humour and of social gifts than her sister. Elizabeth
Sneyd was, says Edgeworth, struck by Day's eloquence,
by his unbounded generosity, by his scorn of wealth. His
educating a young girl for his wife seemed to her romantic
and extraordinary; and she seems to have thought it possible
to yield to the evident admiration she had aroused in
him. But, whether in fun or in seriousness, she represented
to him that he could not with justice decry accomplishments
and graces that he had not acquired. She wished
him to go abroad for a time to study to perfect himself in
all that was wanting; on her own part she promised not to
go to Bath, London, or any public place of amusement
until his return, and to read certain books which he
recommended.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Mr. Edgeworth had made no secret of his
own feeling for Honora to Mr. Day, 'who with all the
eloquence of virtue and of friendship' urged him to fly, to
accompany him abroad, and to shun dangers he could not
hope to overcome. Edgeworth consented to this proposal,
and the two friends started for Paris, visiting Rousseau on
their way. They spent the winter at Lyons, as it was a
place where excellent masters of all sorts were to be found;
and here Mr. Day, with excess of zeal—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>put himself (says his friend) to every species of torture, ordinary
and extraordinary, to compel his Antigallican limbs, in spite of
their natural rigidity, to dance and fence, and manage the <i>great
horse</i>. To perform his promise to Miss E. Sneyd honourably,
he gave up seven or eight hours of the day to these exercises,
for which he had not the slightest taste, and for which, except
horsemanship, he manifested the most sovereign contempt. It
was astonishing to behold the energy with which he persevered
in these pursuits. I have seen him stand between two boards
which reached from the ground higher than his knees: these
boards were adjusted with screws so as barely to permit him to
bend his knees, and to rise up and sink down. By these means
Mr. Huise proposed to force Mr. Day's knees outwards; but
screwing was in vain. He succeeded in torturing his patient;
but original formation and inveterate habit resisted all his
endeavours at personal improvement. I could not help pitying
my philosophic friend, pent up in durance vile for hours
together, with his feet in the stocks, a book in his hand, and
contempt in his heart.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth meanwhile lodged himself 'in excellent
and agreeable apartments,' and occupied himself with engineering.
He is certainly curiously outspoken in his
memoirs; and explains that the first Mrs. Edgeworth,
Maria's mother, with many merits, was of a complaining
disposition, and did not make him so happy at home as
a woman of a more lively temper might have succeeded in
doing. He was tempted, he said, to look for happiness
elsewhere than in his home. Perhaps domestic affairs
may have been complicated by a warm-hearted but troublesome
little son, who at Day's suggestion had been brought
up upon the Rousseau system, and was in consequence
quite unmanageable, and a worry to everybody. Poor
Mrs. Edgeworth's complainings were not to last very long.
She joined her husband at Lyons, and after a time, having
a dread of lying-in abroad, returned home to die in her
confinement, leaving four little children. Maria could
remember being taken into her mother's room to see her
for the last time.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth hurried back to England, and was met
by his friend Thomas Day, who had preceded him, and
whose own suit does not seem to have prospered meanwhile.
But though notwithstanding all his efforts Thomas Day
had not been fortunate in securing Elizabeth Sneyd's affections,
he could still feel for his friend. His first words were
to tell Edgeworth that Honora was still free, more beautiful
than ever; while Virtue and Honour commanded it, he
had done all he could to divide them; now he wished to be
the first to promote their meeting. The meeting resulted
in an engagement, and Mr. Edgeworth and Miss Sneyd
were married within four months by the benevolent old
canon in the Lady Chapel of Lichfield Cathedral.</p>
<p>Mrs. Seward wept; Miss Seward, 'notwithstanding
some imaginary dissatisfaction about a bridesmaid,' was
really glad of the marriage, we are told; and the young
couple immediately went over to Ireland.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>IV.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Though her life was so short, Honora Edgeworth seems
to have made the deepest impression on all those she
came across. Over little Maria she had the greatest
influence. There is a pretty description of the child
standing lost in wondering admiration of her stepmother's
beauty, as she watched her soon after her marriage dressing
at her toilet-table. Little Maria's feeling for her stepmother
was very deep and real, and the influence of those
few years lasted for a lifetime. Her own exquisite carefulness
she always ascribed to it, and to this example may
also be attributed her habits of order and self-government,
her life of reason and deliberate judgment.</p>
<p>The seven years of Honora's married life seem to have
been very peaceful and happy. She shared her husband's
pursuits, and wished for nothing outside her own home.
She began with him to write those little books which were
afterwards published. It is just a century ago since she
and Mr. Edgeworth planned the early histories of Harry
and Lucy and Frank; while Mr. Day began his 'Sandford
and Merton,' which at first was intended to appear at the
same time, though eventually the third part was not
published till 1789.</p>
<p>As a girl of seventeen Honora Sneyd had once been
threatened with consumption. After seven years of
married life the cruel malady again declared itself; and
though Dr. Darwin did all that human resource could do,
and though every tender care surrounded her, the poor
young lady rapidly sank. There is a sad, prim, most
affecting letter, addressed to little Maria by the dying
woman shortly before the end; and then comes that one
written by the father, which is to tell her that all is over.</p>
<p>If Mr. Edgeworth was certainly unfortunate in losing
again and again the happiness of his home, he was more
fortunate than most people in being able to rally from his
grief. He does not appear to have been unfaithful in feeling.
Years after, Edgeworth, writing to console Mrs. Day
upon her husband's death, speaks in the most touching way
of all he had suffered when Honora died, and of the struggle
he had made to regain his hold of life. This letter is in
curious contrast to that one written at the time, as he sits
by poor Honora's deathbed; it reads strangely cold and
irrelevant in these days when people are not ashamed of
feeling or of describing what they feel. 'Continue, my
dear daughter'—he writes to Maria, who was then thirteen
years old—'the desire which you feel of becoming amiable,
prudent, and of use. The ornamental parts of a character,
with such an understanding as yours, necessarily ensue;
but true judgment and sagacity in the choice of friends,
and the regulation of your behaviour, can be only had
from reflection, and from being thoroughly convinced of
what experience in general teaches too late, that to be
happy we must be good.'</p>
<p>'Such a letter, written at such a time,' says the kind
biographer, 'made the impression it was intended to
convey; and the wish to act up to the high opinion her
father had formed of her character became an exciting
and controlling power over the whole of Maria's future
life.' On her deathbed, Honora urged her husband to
marry again, and assured him that the woman to suit
him was her sister Elizabeth. Her influence was so great
upon them both that, although Elizabeth was attached to
some one else, and Mr. Edgeworth believed her to be
little suited to himself, they were presently engaged and
married, not without many difficulties. The result proved
how rightly Honora had judged.</p>
<p>It was to her father <ins title="original has hat">that</ins> Maria owed the suggestion of
her first start in literature. Immediately after Honora's
death he tells her to write a tale about the length of a
'Spectator,' on the subject of generosity. 'It must be
taken from history or romance, must be sent the day
se'nnight after you receive this; and I beg you will take
some pains about it.' A young gentleman from Oxford
was also set to work to try his powers on the same subject,
and Mr. William Sneyd, at Lichfield, was to be judge
between the two performances. He gave his verdict for
Maria: 'An excellent story and very well written: but
where's the generosity?' This, we are told, became a
sort of proverb in the Edgeworth family.</p>
<p>The little girl meanwhile had been sent to school to a
certain Mrs. Lataffiere, where she was taught to use her
fingers, to write a lovely delicate hand, to work white satin
waistcoats for her papa. She was then removed to a fashionable
establishment in Upper Wimpole Street, where, says
her stepmother, 'she underwent all the usual tortures of
backboards, iron collars, and dumb-bells, with the unusual
one of being hung by the neck to draw out the muscles and
increase the growth,—a signal failure in her case.' (Miss
Edgeworth was always a very tiny person.) There is a
description given of Maria at this school of hers of the
little maiden absorbed in her book with all the other
children at play, while she sits in her favourite place in
front of a carved oak cabinet, quite unconscious of the
presence of the romping girls all about her.</p>
<p>Hers was a very interesting character as it appears in
the Memoirs—sincere, intelligent, self-contained, and yet
dependent; methodical, observant. Sometimes as one
reads of her in early life one is reminded of some of the
personal characteristics of the writer who perhaps of all
writers least resembles Miss Edgeworth in her art—of
Charlotte Brontë, whose books are essentially of the
modern and passionate school, but whose strangely mixed
character seemed rather to belong to the orderly and
neatly ruled existence of Queen Charlotte's reign. People's
lives as they really are don't perhaps vary very much, but
people's lives as they seem to be assuredly change with
the fashions. Miss Edgeworth and Miss Brontë were
both Irishwomen, who have often, with all their outcome,
the timidity which arises from quick and sensitive feeling.
But the likeness does not go very deep. Maria, whose
diffidence and timidity were personal, but who had a firm
and unalterable belief in family traditions, may have been
saved from some danger of prejudice and limitation by a
most fortunate though trying illness which affected her
eyesight, and which caused her to be removed from her
school with its monstrous elegancies to the care of Mr.
Day, that kindest and sternest of friends.</p>
<p>This philosopher in love had been bitterly mortified
when the lively Elizabeth Sneyd, instead of welcoming
his return, could not conceal her laughter at his uncouth
elegancies, and confessed that, on the whole, she had
liked him better as he was before. He forswore Lichfield
and marriage, and went abroad to forget. He
turned his thoughts to politics; he wrote pamphlets on
public subjects and letters upon slavery. His poem of
the 'Dying Negro' had been very much admired. Miss
Hannah More speaks of it in her Memoirs. The subject
of slavery was much before people's minds, and Day's
influence had not a little to do with the rising indignation.</p>
<p>Among Day's readers and admirers was one person
who was destined to have a most important influence
upon his life. By a strange chance his extraordinary
ideal was destined to be realised; and a young lady, good,
accomplished, rich, devoted, who had read his books, and
sympathised with his generous dreams, was ready not only
to consent to his strange conditions, but to give him her
whole heart and find her best happiness in his society and
in carrying out his experiments and fancies. She was Miss
Esther Milnes, of Yorkshire, an heiress; and though at
first Day hesitated and could not believe in the reality of
her feeling, her constancy and singleness of mind were not
to be resisted, and they were married at Bath in 1778.
We hear of Mr. and Mrs. Day spending the first winter
of their married life at Hampstead, and of Mrs. Day,
thickly shodden, walking with him in a snowstorm on the
common, and ascribing her renewed vigour to her husband's
Spartan advice.</p>
<p>Day and his wife eventually established themselves at
Anningsley, near Chobham. He had insisted upon settling
her fortune upon herself, but Mrs. Day assisted him in
every way, and sympathised in his many schemes and
benevolent ventures. When he neglected to make a
window to the dressing-room he built for her, we hear of her
uncomplainingly lighting her candles; to please him she
worked as a servant in the house, and all their large means
were bestowed in philanthropic and charitable schemes.
Mr. Edgeworth quotes his friend's reproof to Mrs. Day,
who was fond of music: 'Shall we beguile the time with
the strains of a lute while our fellow-creatures are
starving?' 'I am out of pocket every year about 300<i>l</i>.
by the farm I keep,' Day writes his to his friend Edgeworth.
'The soil I have taken in hand, I am convinced, is one of
the most completely barren in England.' He then goes
on to explain his reasons for what he is about. 'It enables
me to employ the poor, and the result of all my speculations
about humanity is that the only way of benefiting
mankind is to give them employment and make them earn
their money.' There is a pretty description of the worthy
couple in their home dispensing help and benefits all
round about, draining, planting, teaching, doctoring—nothing
came amiss to them. Their chief friend and
neighbour was Samuel Cobbett, who understood their
plans, and sympathised in their efforts, which, naturally
enough, were viewed with doubt and mistrust by most of
the people round about. It was at Anningsley that Mr.
Day finished 'Sandford and Merton,' begun many years
before. His death was very sudden, and was brought about
by one of his own benevolent theories. He used to maintain
that kindness alone could tame animals; and he was
killed by a fall from a favourite colt which he was breaking
in. Mrs. Day never recovered the shock. She lived two
years hidden in her home, absolutely inconsolable, and
then died and was laid by her husband's side in the churchyard
at Wargrave by the river.</p>
<p>It was to the care of these worthy people that little
Maria was sent when she was ill, and she was doctored by
them both physically and morally. 'Bishop Berkeley's
tar-water was still considered a specific for all complaints,'
says Mrs. Edgeworth. 'Mr. Day thought it would be of
use to Maria's inflamed eyes, and he used to bring a large
tumbler full of it to her every morning. She dreaded his
"Now, Miss Maria, drink this." But there was, in spite of
his stern voice, something of pity and sympathy in his
countenance. His excellent library was open to her, and
he directed her studies. His severe reasoning and uncompromising
truth of mind awakened all her powers, and the
questions he put to her and the working out of the
answers, the necessity of perfect accuracy in all her words,
suited the natural truth of her mind; and though such
strictness was not agreeable, she even then perceived its
advantage, and in after life was grateful for it.'</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>V.</b></p>
</div>
<p>We have seen how Miss Elizabeth Sneyd, who could
not make up her mind to marry Mr. Day notwithstanding
all he had gone through for her sake, had eventually consented
to become Mr. Edgeworth's third wife. With this
stepmother for many years to come Maria lived in an
affectionate intimacy, only to be exceeded by that most
faithful companionship which existed for fifty years between
her and the lady from whose memoirs I quote.</p>
<p>It was about 1782 that Maria went home to live at
Edgeworthtown with her father and his wife, with the
many young brothers and sisters. The family was a large
one, and already consisted of her own sisters, of Honora
the daughter of Mrs. Honora, and Lovell her son. To
these succeeded many others of the third generation; and
two sisters of Mrs. Edgeworth's, who also made their home
at Edgeworthtown.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Maria had once before been there, "very young, but she was
now old enough to be struck with the difference then so striking
between Ireland and England." The tones and looks, the
melancholy and the gaiety of the people, were so new and extraordinary
to her that the delineations she long afterwards made
of Irish character probably owe their life and truth to the impression
made on her mind at this time as a stranger. Though
it was June when they landed, there was snow on the roses
she ran out to gather, and she felt altogether in a new and
unfamiliar country.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>She herself describes the feelings of the master of a family
returning to an Irish home:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Wherever he turned his eyes, in or out of his home, damp
dilapidation, waste appeared. Painting, glazing, roofing, fencing,
finishing—all were wanting. The backyard and even the front
lawn round the windows of the house were filled with loungers,
followers, and petitioners; tenants, undertenants, drivers, sub-agent
and agent were to have audience; and they all had
grievances and secret informations, accusations, reciprocations,
and quarrels each under each interminable.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Her account of her father's dealings with them is
admirable:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I was with him constantly, and I was amused and interested
in seeing how he made his way through their complaints,
petitions, and grievances with decision and despatch, he all the
time in good humour with the people and they delighted with
him, though he often rated them roundly when they stood before
him perverse in litigation, helpless in procrastination, detected
in cunning or convicted of falsehood. They saw into his
character almost as soon as he understood theirs.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth had in a very remarkable degree that
power of ruling and administering which is one of the
rarest of gifts. He seems to have shown great firmness and
good sense in his conduct in the troubled times in which
he lived. He saw to his own affairs, administered justice,
put down middlemen as far as possible, reorganised the
letting out of the estate. Unlike many of his neighbours,
he was careful not to sacrifice the future to present ease of
mind and of pocket. He put down rack-rents and bribes
of every sort, and did his best to establish things upon a
firm and lasting basis.</p>
<p>But if it was not possible even for Mr. Edgeworth to make
such things all they should have been outside the house,
the sketch given of the family life at home is very pleasant.
The father lives in perfect confidence with his children,
admitting them to his confidence, interesting them in his
experiments, spending his days with them, consulting them.
There are no reservations; he does his business in the
great sitting-room, surrounded by his family. I have
heard it described as a large ground-floor room, with
windows to the garden and with two columns supporting
the further end, by one of which Maria's writing-desk
used to be placed—a desk which her father had devised
for her, which used to be drawn out to the fireside when
she worked. Does not Mr. Edgeworth also mention in
one of his letters a picture of Thomas Day hanging over
a sofa against the wall? Books in plenty there were, we
may be sure, and perhaps models of ingenious machines
and different appliances for scientific work. Sir Henry
Holland and Mr. Ticknor give a curious description of
Mr. Edgeworth's many ingenious inventions. There were
strange locks to the rooms and telegraphic despatches to
the kitchen; clocks at the one side of the house were
wound up by simply opening certain doors at the other
end. It has been remarked that all Miss Edgeworth's
heroes had a smattering of science. Several of her brothers
inherited her father's turn for it. We hear of them raising
steeples and establishing telegraphs in partnership with
him. Maria shared of the family labours and used to
help her father in the business connected with the estate,
to assist him, also, to keep the accounts. She had a special
turn for accounts, and she was pleased with her exquisitely
neat columns and by the accuracy with which her figures
fell into their proper places. Long after her father's death
this knowledge and experience enabled her to manage the
estate for her eldest stepbrother, Mr. Lovell Edgeworth.
She was able, at a time of great national difficulty and
anxious crisis, to meet a storm in which many a larger
fortune was wrecked.</p>
<p>But in 1782 she was a young girl only beginning life.
Storms were not yet, and she was putting out her wings
in the sunshine. Her father set her to translate 'Adèle et
Théodore,' by Madame de Genlis (she had a great facility
for languages, and her French was really remarkable).
Holcroft's version of the book, however, appeared, and the
Edgeworth translation was never completed. Mr. Day
wrote a letter to congratulate Mr. Edgeworth on the
occasion. It seemed horrible to Mr. Day that a woman
should appear in print.</p>
<p>It is possible that the Edgeworth family was no exception
to the rule by which large and clever and animated
families are apt to live in a certain atmosphere of their
own. But, notwithstanding this strong family bias, few
people can have seen more of the world, felt its temper
more justly, or appreciated more fully the interesting
varieties of people to be found in it than Maria Edgeworth.
Within easy reach of Edgeworthtown were different
agreeable and cultivated houses. There was Pakenham
Hall with Lord Longford for its master; one of its
daughters was the future Duchess of Wellington, 'who was
always Kitty Pakenham for her old friends.' There at
Castle Forbes also lived, I take it, more than one of the
well-bred and delightful persons, out of 'Patronage,' and
the 'Absentee,' who may, in real life, have borne the
names of Lady Moira and Lady Granard. Besides, there
were cousins and relations without number—Foxes,
Ruxtons, marriages and intermarriages; and when the
time came for occasional absences and expeditions from
home, the circles seem to have spread incalculably in every
direction. The Edgeworths appear to have been a genuinely
sociable clan, interested in others and certainly interesting
to them.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VI.</b></p>
</div>
<p>The first letter given in the Memoirs from Maria to
her favourite aunt Ruxton is a very sad one, which tells
of the early death of her sister Honora, a beautiful girl of
fifteen, the only daughter of Mrs. Honora Edgeworth, who
died of consumption, as her mother had died. This letter,
written in the dry phraseology of the time, is nevertheless
full of feeling, above all for her father who was, as Maria
says elsewhere, ever since she could think or feel, the first
object and motive of her mind.</p>
<p>Mrs. Edgeworth describes her sister-in-law as follows:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Mrs. Ruxton resembled her brother in the wit and vivacity
of her mind and strong affections; her grace and charm of
manner were such that a gentleman once said of her; 'If I
were to see Mrs. Ruxton in rags as a beggar woman sitting on
the doorstep, I should say "Madam" to her.' 'To write to her
Aunt Ruxton was, as long as she lived, Maria's greatest pleasure
while away from her,' says Mrs. Edgeworth, 'and to be with her
was a happiness she enjoyed with never flagging and supreme
delight. Blackcastle was within a few hours' drive of Edgeworthtown,
and to go to Blackcastle was the holiday of her life.'</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mrs. Edgeworth tells a story of Maria once staying at
Blackcastle and tearing out the title page of 'Belinda,' so
that her aunt, Mrs. Ruxton, read the book without any
suspicion of the author. She was so delighted with it that
she insisted on Maria listening to page after page, exclaiming
'Is not that admirably written?' 'Admirably read,
I think,' said Maria; until her aunt, quite provoked by her
faint acquiescence, says, 'I am sorry to see my little Maria
unable to bear the praises of a rival author;' at which
poor Maria burst into tears, and Mrs. Ruxton could never
bear the book mentioned afterwards.</p>
<p>It was with Mrs. Ruxton that a little boy, born just
after the death of the author of 'Sandford and Merton,'
was left on the occasion of the departure of the Edgeworth
family for Clifton, in 1792, where Mr. Edgeworth spent a
couple of years for the health of one of his sons. In July
the poor little brother dies in Ireland. 'There does
not, now that little Thomas is gone, exist even a person
of the same name as Mr. Day,' says Mr. Edgeworth,
who concludes his letter philosophically, as the father of
twenty children may be allowed to do, by expressing a
hope that to his nurses, Mrs. Ruxton and her daughter,
'the remembrance of their own goodness will soon
obliterate the painful impression of his miserable end.'
During their stay at Clifton Richard Edgeworth, the
eldest son, who had been brought up upon Rousseau's
system, and who seems to have found the Old World too
restricted a sphere for his energies, after going to sea and
disappearing for some years, suddenly paid them a visit
from South Carolina, where he had settled and married.
The young man was gladly welcomed by them all. He
had been long separated from home, and he eventually
died very young in America; but his sister always clung
to him with fond affection, and when he left them to
return home she seems to have felt his departure very
much. 'Last Saturday my poor brother Richard took
leave of us to return to America. He has gone up to
London with my father and mother, and is to sail from
thence. We could not part from him without great pain
and regret, for he made us all extremely fond of him.'</p>
<p>Notwithstanding these melancholy events, Maria Edgeworth
seems to have led a happy busy life all this time
among her friends, her relations, her many interests, her
many fancies and facts, making much of the children, of
whom she writes pleasant descriptions to her aunt.
'Charlotte is very engaging and promises to be handsome.
Sneyd is, and promises everything. Henry will, I think,
through life always do more than he promises. Little
Honora is a sprightly blue-eyed child at nurse with a
woman who is the picture of health and simplicity.
Lovell is perfectly well. Doctor Darwin has paid him
very handsome compliments on his lines on the Barbarini
Vase in the first part of the "Botanic Garden."'</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth, however, found the time long at
Clifton, though, as usual, he at once improved his
opportunities, paid visits to his friends in London and
elsewhere, and renewed many former intimacies and correspondences.</p>
<p>Maria also paid a visit to London, but the time had
not come for her to enjoy society, and the extreme shyness
of which Mrs. Edgeworth speaks made it pain to her to
be in society in those early days. 'Since I have been
away from home,' she writes, 'I have missed the society of
my father, mother, and sisters more than I can express, and
more than beforehand I could have thought possible. I
long to see them all again. Even when I am most amused
I feel a void, and now I understand what an aching void
is perfectly.' Very soon we hear of her at home again,
'scratching away at the Freeman family.' Mr. Edgeworth
is reading aloud Gay's 'Trivia' among other things, which
she recommends to her aunt. 'I had much rather make
a bargain with any one I loved to read the same books with
them at the same hour than to look at the moon like
Rousseau's famous lovers.' There is another book, a new
book for the children, mentioned about this time, 'Evenings
at Home,' which they all admire immensely.</p>
<p>Miss Edgeworth was now about twenty-six, at an age
when a woman's powers have fully ripened; a change comes
over her style; there is a fulness of description in her letters
and a security of expression which show maturity. Her
habit of writing was now established, and she describes
the constant interest her father took and his share in all
she did. Some of the slighter stories she first wrote upon
a slate and read out to her brothers and sisters; others she
sketched for her father's approval, and arranged and altered
as he suggested. The letters for literary ladies were with
the publishers by this time, and these were followed by
various stories and early lessons, portions of 'Parents'
Assistant,' and of popular tales, all of which were sent out
in packets and lent from one member of the family to
another before finally reaching Mr. Johnson, the publisher's,
hands. Maria Edgeworth in some of her letters from
Clifton alludes with some indignation to the story of
Mrs. Hannah More's ungrateful <i>protégée</i> Lactilla, the
literary milkwoman, whose poems Hannah More was at
such pains to bring before the world, and for whom, with
her kind preface and warm commendations and subscription
list, she was able to obtain the large sum of 500<i>l</i>.
The ungrateful Lactilla, who had been starving when
Mrs. More found her out, seems to have lost her head in
this sudden prosperity, and to have accused her benefactress
of wishing to steal a portion of the money. Maria
Edgeworth must have been also interested in some family
marriages which took place about this time. Her own
sister Anna became engaged to Dr. Beddoes, of Clifton,
whose name appears as prescribing for the authors of various
memoirs of that day. He is 'a man of ability, of a great
name in the scientific world,' says Mr. Edgeworth, who
favoured the Doctor's 'declared passion,' as a proposal was
then called, and the marriage accordingly took place on
their return to Ireland. Emmeline, another sister, was
soon after married to Mr. King, a surgeon, also living at
Bristol, and Maria was now left the only remaining
daughter of the first marriage, to be good aunt, sister,
friend to all the younger members of the party. She was
all this, but she herself expressly states that her father would
never allow her to be turned into a nursery drudge; her
share of the family was limited to one special little boy.
Meanwhile her pen-and-ink children are growing up, and
starting out in the world on their own merits.</p>
<p>'I beg, dear Sophy,' she writes to her cousin, 'that
you will not call my little stories by the sublime name of
my works; I shall else be ashamed when the little mouse
comes forth. The stories are printed and bound the same
size as 'Evenings at Home,' but I am afraid you will
dislike the title. My father had sent the 'Parents'
Friend,' but Mr. Johnson has degraded it into 'Parents'
Assistant.'</p>
<p>In 1797, says Miss Beaufort, who was to be so soon
more intimately connected with the Edgeworth family,
Johnson wished to publish more volumes of the 'Parents'
Assistant' on fine paper, with prints, and Mrs. Ruxton
asked me to make some designs for them. These
designs seem to have given great satisfaction to the
Edgeworth party, and especially to a little boy called
William, Mrs. Edgeworth's youngest boy, who grew up to
be a fine young man, but who died young of the cruel
family complaint. Mrs. Edgeworth's health was also
failing all this time—'Though she makes epigrams she is
far from well,' says Maria; but they, none of them seem
seriously alarmed. Mr. Edgeworth, in the intervals of
politics, is absorbed in a telegraph, which, with the help
of his sons, he is trying to establish. It is one which will
act by night as well as by day.</p>
<p>It was a time of change and stir for Ireland, disaffection
growing and put down for a time by the soldiers;
armed bands going about 'defending' the country and
breaking its windows. In 1794 threats of a French invasion
had alarmed everybody, and now again in 1796
came rumours of every description, and Mr. Edgeworth
was very much disappointed that his proposal for establishing
a telegraph across the water to England was rejected
by Government. He also writes to Dr. Darwin
that he had offered himself as a candidate for the county,
and been obliged to relinquish at the last moment; but
these minor disappointments were lost in the trouble
which fell upon the household in the following year—the
death of the mother of the family, who sank rapidly and
died of consumption in 1797.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VII.</b></p>
</div>
<p>When Mr. Edgeworth himself died (not, as we may
be sure, without many active post-mortem wishes and
directions) he left his entertaining Memoirs half finished,
and he desired his daughter Maria in the most emphatic
way to complete them, and to publish them without
changing or altering anything that he had written.
People reading them were surprised by the contents; many
blamed Miss Edgeworth for making them public, not
knowing how solemn and binding these dying commands
of her father's had been, says Mrs. Leadbeater, writing at
the time to Mrs. Trench. Many severe and wounding
reviews appeared, and this may have influenced Miss
Edgeworth in her own objection to having her Memoirs
published by her family.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth's life was most extraordinary, comprising
in fact three or four lives in the place of that one
usually allowed to most people, some of us having to be
moderately content with a half or three-quarters of existence.
But his versatility of mind was no less remarkable than
his tenacity of purpose and strength of affection, though
some measure of sentiment must have certainly been
wanting, and his fourth marriage must have taken most
people by surprise. The writer once expressed her surprise
at the extraordinary influence that Mr. Edgeworth
seems to have had over women and over the many
members of his family who continued to reside in his
home after all the various changes which had taken place
there. Lady S—— to whom she spoke is one who has
seen more of life than most of us, who has for years
past carried help to the far-away and mysterious East, but
whose natural place is at home in the more prosperous and
unattainable West End. This lady said, 'You do not in
the least understand what my Uncle Edgeworth was. I
never knew anything like him. Brilliant, full of energy
and charm, he was something quite extraordinary and
irresistible. If you had known him you would not have
wondered at anything.'</p>
<blockquote>
<p>'I had in the spring of that year (1797) paid my first visit
to Edgeworthtown with my mother and sister,' writes Miss
Beaufort, afterwards Mrs. Edgeworth, the author of the Memoirs.
'My father had long before been there, and had frequently met
Mr. Edgeworth at Mrs. Ruxton's. In 1795 my father was
presented to the living of Collon, in the county of Louth,
where he resided from that time. His vicarage was within five
minutes' walk of the residence of Mr. Foster, then Speaker of
the Irish House of Commons, the dear friend of Mr. Edgeworth,
who came to Collon in the spring of 1798 several times, and at
last offered me his hand, which I accepted.'</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Maria, who was at first very much opposed to the match,
would not have been herself the most devoted and faithful
of daughters if she had not eventually agreed to her
father's wishes, and, as daughters do, come by degrees to
feel with him and to see with his eyes. The influence of
a father over a daughter where real sympathy exists is one
of the very deepest and strongest that can be imagined.
Miss Beaufort herself seems also to have had some special
attraction for Maria. She was about her own age. She
must have been a person of singularly sweet character and
gentle liberality of mind. 'You will come into a new
family, but you will not come as a stranger, dear Miss
Beaufort,' writes generous Maria. 'You will not lead a
new life, but only continue to lead the life you have been
used to in your own happy cultivated family.' And her
stepmother in a few feeling words describes all that Maria
was to her from the very first when she came as a bride to
the home where the sisters and the children of the lately
lost wife were all assembled to meet her.</p>
<p>It gives an unpleasant thrill to read of the newly-married
lady coming along to her home in a postchaise, and
seeing something odd on the side of the road. 'Look to
the other side; don't look at it,' says Mr. Edgeworth; and
when they had passed he tells his bride that it was the
body of a man hung by the rebels between the shafts of a
car.</p>
<p>The family at Edgeworthtown consisted of two ladies,
sisters of the late Mrs. Edgeworth, who made it their
home, and of Maria, the last of the first family. Lovell,
now the eldest son, was away; but there were also four
daughters and three sons at home.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>All agreed in making me feel at once at home and part of
the family; all received me with the most unaffected cordiality;
but from Maria it was something more. She more than fulfilled
the promise of her letter; she made me at once her most
intimate friend, and in every trifle of the day treated me with
the most generous confidence.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Those times were even more serious than they are
now; we hear of Mr. Bond, the High Sheriff, paying 'a
pale visit' to Edgeworthtown. 'I am going on in the old
way, writing stories,' says Maria Edgeworth, writing in
1798. 'I cannot be a captain of dragoons, and sitting
with my hands before me would not make any one of us
one degree safer…. Simple Susan went to Foxhall a few
days ago for Lady Anne to carry her to England.'… 'My
father has made our little rooms so nice for us,' she continues;
'they are all fresh painted and papered. Oh!
rebels, oh! French spare them. We have never injured
you, and all we wish is to see everybody as happy as ourselves.'</p>
<p>On August 29 we find from Miss Edgeworth's letter to
her cousin that the French have got to Castlebar. 'The
Lord-Lieutenant is now at Athlone, and it is supposed it
will be their next object of attack. My father's corps of
yeomanry are extremely attached to him and seem fully in
earnest; but, alas! by some strange negligence, their arms
have not yet arrived from Dublin…. We, who are so
near the scene of action, cannot by any means discover
what <i>number</i> of the French actually landed; some say 800,
some 1,800, some 18,000.'</p>
<p>The family had a narrow escape that day, for two
officers, who were in charge of some ammunition, offered to
take them under their protection as far as Longford. Mr.
Edgeworth most fortunately detained them. 'Half an
hour afterwards, as we were quietly sitting in the portico,
we heard, as we thought close to us, the report of a pistol
or a clap of thunder which shook the house. The officer
soon after returned almost speechless; he could hardly explain
what had happened. The ammunition cart, containing
nearly three barrels of gunpowder, took fire, and burnt
half-way on the road to Longford. The man who drove
the cart was blown to atoms. Nothing of him could be
found. Two of the horses were killed; others were blown
to pieces, and their limbs scattered to a distance. The
head and body of a man were found a hundred and twenty
yards from the spot…. If we had gone with this
ammunition cart, we must have been killed. An hour or
two afterwards we were obliged to fly from Edgeworthtown.
The pikemen, 300 in number, were within a mile
of the town; my mother and Charlotte and I rode; passed
the trunk of the dead man, bloody limbs of horses, and two
dead horses, by the help of men who pulled on our steeds—all
safely lodged now in Mrs. Fallon's inn.' 'Before we
had reached the place where the cart had been blown up,'
says Mrs. Edgeworth, 'Mr. Edgeworth suddenly recollected
that he had left on the table in his study a list of the
yeomanry corps which he feared might endanger the poor
fellows and their families if it fell into the hands of the
rebels. He galloped back for it. It was at the hazard of
his life; but the rebels had not yet appeared. He burned
the paper, and rejoined us safely.' The Memoirs give a
most interesting and spirited account of the next few days.
The rebels spared Mr. Edgeworth's house, although they
broke into it. After a time the family were told that all
was safe for their return, and the account of their coming
home, as it is given in the second volume of Mr. Edgeworth's
life by his daughter, is a model of style and
admirable description.</p>
<p>In 1799 Mr. Edgeworth came into Parliament for the
borough of St. Johnstown. He was a Unionist by conviction,
but he did not think the times were yet ripe for
the Union, and he therefore voted against it. In some of
his letters to Dr. Darwin written at this time, he says that
he was offered 3,000 guineas for his seat for the few
remaining weeks of the session, which, needless to say, he
refused, not thinking it well, as he says, '<i>to quarrel with
myself</i>.' He also adds that Maria continues writing for
children under the persuasion that she cannot be more
serviceably employed; and he sends (with his usual perspicuity)
affectionate messages to the Doctor's 'good
amiable lady and <i>his giant brood</i>.' But this long friendly
correspondence was coming to an end. The Doctor's
letters, so quietly humorous and to the point, Mr. Edgeworth's
answers with all their characteristic and lively
variety, were nearly at an end.</p>
<p>It was in 1800 that Maria had achieved her great
success, and published 'Castle Rackrent,' a book—not for
children this time—which made everybody talk who read,
and those read who had only talked before. This work
was published anonymously, and so great was its reputation
that some one was at the pains to copy out the whole of
the story with erasures and different signs of authenticity,
and assume the authorship.</p>
<p>One very distinctive mark of Maria Edgeworth's mind
is the honest candour and genuine critical faculty which is
hers. Her appreciation of her own work and that of
others is unaffected and really discriminating, whether it
is 'Corinne' or a simple story which she is reading, or
Scott's new novel the 'Pirate,' or one of her own manuscripts
which she estimates justly and reasonably. 'I have
read "Corinne" with my father, and I like it better than he
does. In one word, I am dazzled by the genius, provoked
by the absurdities, and in admiration of the taste and
critical judgment of Italian literature displayed throughout
the whole work: but I will not dilate upon it in a
letter. I could talk for three hours to you and my aunt.'</p>
<p>Elsewhere she speaks with the warmest admiration of
a 'Simple Story.' Jane Austen's books were not yet published;
but another writer, for whom Mr. Edgeworth and
his daughter had a very great regard and admiration, was
Mrs. Barbauld, who in all the heavy trials and sorrows of
her later life found no little help and comfort in the
friendship and constancy of Maria Edgeworth. Mr. and
Mrs. Barbauld, upon Mr. Edgeworth's invitation, paid him
a visit at Clifton, where he was again staying in 1799, and
where the last Mrs. Edgeworth's eldest child was born.
There is a little anecdote of domestic life at this time in
the Memoirs which gives one a glimpse, not of an authoress,
but of a very sympathising and impressionable person.
'Maria took her little sister to bring down to her father,
but when she had descended a few steps a panic seized her,
and she was afraid to go either backwards or forwards.
She sat down on the stairs afraid she should drop the child,
afraid that its head would come off, and afraid that her
father would find her sitting there and laugh at her, till
seeing the footman passing she called "Samuel" in a
terrified voice, and made him walk before her backwards
down the stairs till she safely reached the sitting-room.'
For all these younger children Maria seems to have had a
most tender and motherly regard, as indeed for all her
young brothers and sisters of the different families. Many
of them were the heroines of her various stories, and few
heroines are more charming than some of Miss Edgeworth's.
Rosamund is said by some to have been Maria herself,
impulsive, warm-hearted, timid, and yet full of spirit
and animation.</p>
<p>In his last letter to Mr. Edgeworth Dr. Darwin writes
kindly of the authoress, and sends her a message. The
letter is dated April 17, 1802. 'I am glad to find you
still amuse yourself with mechanism in spite of the troubles
of Ireland;' and the Doctor goes on to ask his friend to
come and pay a visit to the Priory, and describes the
pleasant house with the garden, the ponds full of fish, the
deep umbrageous valley, with the talkative stream running
down it, and Derby tower in the distance. The letter, so
kind, so playful in its tone, was never finished. Dr. Darwin
was writing as he was seized with what seemed a fainting
fit, and he died within an hour. Miss Edgeworth writes
of the shock her father felt when the sad news reached
him; a shock, she says, which must in some degree be
experienced by every person who reads this letter of Dr.
Darwin's.</p>
<p>No wonder this generous outspoken man was esteemed
in his own time. To us, in ours, it has been given still
more to know the noble son of 'that giant brood,' whose
name will be loved and held in honour as long as people
live to honour nobleness, simplicity, and genius; those
things which give life to life itself.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VIII.</b></p>
</div>
<p>'Calais after a rough passage; Brussels, flat country,
tiled houses, trees and ditches, the window shutters
turned out to the street; fishwives' legs, Dunkirk, and
the people looking like wooden toys set in motion;
Bruges and its mingled spires, shipping, and windmills.'
These notes of travel read as if Miss Edgeworth had been
writing down only yesterday a pleasant list of the things
which are to be seen two hours off, to-day no less plainly
than a century ago. She jots it all down from her corner
in the postchaise, where she is propped up with a father,
brother, stepmother, and sister for travelling companions,
and a new book to beguile the way. She is charmed with
her new book. It is the story of 'Mademoiselle de
Clermont,' by Madame de Genlis, and only just out. The
Edgeworths (with many other English people) rejoiced in
the long-looked-for millennium, which had been signed
only the previous autumn, and they now came abroad to
bask in the sunshine of the Continent, which had been so
long denied to our mist-bound islanders. We hear of the
enthusiastic and somewhat premature joy with which this
peace was received by all ranks of people. Not only did
the English rush over to France; foreigners crossed to
England, and one of them, an old friend of Mr. Edgeworth's,
had already reached Edgeworthtown, and inspired
its enterprising master with a desire to see those places and
things once more which he heard described. Mr. Edgeworth
was anxious also to show his young wife the
treasures in the Louvre, and to help her to develop her
taste for art. He had had many troubles of late, lost
friends and children by death and by marriage. One can
imagine that the change must have been welcome to them
all. Besides Maria and Lovell, his eldest son, he took with
him a lovely young daughter, Charlotte Edgeworth, the
daughter of Elizabeth Sneyd. They travelled by Belgium,
stopping on their way at Bruges, at Ghent, and visiting
pictures and churches along the road, as travellers still
like to do. Mrs. Edgeworth was, as we have said, the
artistic member of the party. We do not know what
modern rhapsodists would say to Miss Edgeworth's very
subdued criticisms and descriptions of feeling on this
occasion. 'It is extremely agreeable to me,' she writes,
'to see paintings with those who have excellent taste and
no affectation.' And this remark might perhaps be
thought even more to the point now than in the pre-æsthetic
age in which it was innocently made. The
travellers are finally landed in Paris in a magnificent
hotel in a fine square, 'formerly Place Louis-Quinze,
afterwards Place de la Révolution, now Place de la
Concorde.' And Place de la Concorde it remains, wars
and revolutions notwithstanding, whether lighted by the
flames of the desperate Commune or by the peaceful
sunsets which stream their evening glory across the blood-stained
stones.</p>
<p>The Edgeworths did not come as strangers to Paris;
they brought letters and introductions with them, and
bygone associations and friendships which had only now
to be resumed. The well-known Abbé Morellet, their old
acquaintance, 'answered for them,' says Miss Edgeworth,
and besides all this Mr Edgeworth's name was well known
in scientific circles. Bréguet, Montgolfier, and others
all made him welcome. Lord Henry Petty, as Maria's
friend Lord Lansdowne was then called, was in Paris, and
Rogers the poet, and Kosciusko, cured of his wounds. For
the first time they now made the acquaintance of M.
Dumont, a lifelong friend and correspondent. There were
many others—the Delesserts, of the French Protestant
faction, Madame Suard, to whom the romantic Thomas
Day had paid court some thirty years before, and Madame
Campan, and Madame Récamier, and Madame de Rémusat,
and Madame de Houdetot, now seventy-two years of age,
but Rousseau's Julie still, and Camille Jordan, and the
Chevalier Edelcrantz, from the Court of the King of
Sweden.</p>
<p>The names alone of the Edgeworths' entertainers represent
a delightful and interesting section of the history
of the time. One can imagine that besides all these
pleasant and talkative persons the Faubourg Saint-Germain
itself threw open its great swinging doors to the relations
of the Abbé Edgeworth who risked his life to stand by
his master upon the scaffold and to speak those noble
warm-hearted words, the last that Louis ever heard. One
can picture the family party as it must have appeared
with its pleasant British looks—the agreeable 'ruddy-faced'
father, the gentle Mrs. Edgeworth, who is somewhere
described by her stepdaughter as so orderly, so clean, so
freshly dressed, the child of fifteen, only too beautiful
and delicately lovely, and last of all Maria herself, the
nice little unassuming, Jeannie-Deans-looking body Lord
Byron described, small, homely, perhaps, but with her
gift of French, of charming intercourse, her fresh laurels
of authorship (for 'Belinda' was lately published), her
bright animation, her cultivated mind and power of interesting
all those in her company, to say nothing of her own
kindling interest in every one and every thing round about
her.</p>
<p>Her keen delights and vivid descriptions of all these
new things, faces, voices, ideas, are all to be read in some
long and most charming letters to Ireland, which also
contain the account of a most eventful crisis which this
Paris journey brought about. The letter is dated March
1803, and it concludes as follows:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Here, my dear aunt, I was interrupted in a manner that will
surprise you as much as it surprised me—by the coming of M.
Edelcrantz, a Swedish gentleman whom we have mentioned to
you, of superior understanding and mild manners. He came to
offer me his hand and heart! My heart, you may suppose,
cannot return his attachment, for I have seen but very little of
him, and have not had time to have formed any judgment except
that I think nothing could tempt me to leave my own dear
friends and my own country to live in Sweden.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Maria Edgeworth was now about thirty years of age, at
a time of life when people are apt to realise perhaps almost
more deeply than in early youth the influence of feeling, its
importance, and strange power over events. Hitherto
there are no records in her memoirs of any sentimental
episodes, but it does not follow that a young lady has not
had her own phase of experience because she does not
write it out at length to her various aunts and correspondents.
Miss Edgeworth was not a sentimental person.
She was warmly devoted to her own family, and she seems
to have had a strong idea of her own want of beauty;
perhaps her admiration for her lovely young sisters may
have caused this feeling to be exaggerated by her. But
no romantic, lovely heroine could have inspired a deeper
or more touching admiration than this one which M.
Edelcrantz felt for his English friend; the mild and
superior Swede seems to have been thoroughly in earnest.</p>
<p>So indeed was Miss Edgeworth, but she was not carried
away by the natural impulse of the moment. She realised
the many difficulties and dangers of the unknown; she
looked to the future; she turned to her own home, and
with an affection all the more felt because of the trial to
which it was now exposed. The many lessons of self-control
and self-restraint which she had learnt returned
with instinctive force. Sometimes it happens that people
miss what is perhaps the best for the sake of the next
best, and we see convenience and old habit and expediency,
and a hundred small and insignificant circumstances,
gathering like some avalanche to divide hearts that might
give and receive very much from each. But sentiment is
not the only thing in life. Other duties, ties, and realities
there are; and it is difficult to judge for others in such
matters. Sincerity of heart and truth to themselves are
pretty sure in the end to lead people in the right direction
for their own and for other people's happiness. Only, in
the experience of many women there is the danger that
fixed ideas, and other people's opinion, and the force of
custom may limit lives which might have been complete
in greater things, though perhaps less perfect in the lesser.
People in the abstract are sincere enough in wishing fulness
of experience and of happiness to those dearest and nearest
to them; but we are only human beings, and when the time
comes and the horrible necessity for parting approaches,
our courage goes, our hearts fail, and we think we are
preaching reason and good sense while it is only a most
natural instinct which leads us to cling to that to which
we are used and to those we love.</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth did not attempt to influence Maria.
Mrs. Edgeworth evidently had some misgivings, and certainly
much sympathy for the Chevalier and for her friend
and stepdaughter. She says:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Maria was mistaken as to her own feelings. She refused M.
Edelcrantz, but she felt much more for him than esteem and
admiration; she was extremely in love with him. Mr. Edgeworth
left her to decide for herself; but she saw too plainly
what it would be to us to lose her and what she would feel at
parting with us. She decided rightly for her own future
happiness and for that of her family, but she suffered much
at the time and long afterwards. While we were at Paris I
remember that in a shop, where Charlotte and I were making
purchases, Maria sat apart absorbed in thought, and so deep in
reverie that when her father came in and stood opposite to her
she did not see him till he spoke to her, when she started
and burst into tears…. I do not think she repented of her
refusal or regretted her decision. She was well aware that she
could not have made M. Edelcrantz happy, that she would not
have suited his position at the Court of Stockholm, and that her
want of beauty might have diminished his attachment. It was
perhaps better she should think so, for it calmed her mind;
but from what I saw of M. Edelcrantz I think he was a man
capable of really valuing her. I believe he was much attached
to her, and deeply mortified at her refusal. He continued to
reside in Sweden after the abdication of his master, and was
always distinguished for his high character and great abilities.
He never married. He was, except for his very fine eyes,
remarkably plain.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>So ends the romance of the romancer. There are,
however, many happinesses in life, as there are many
troubles.</p>
<p>Mrs. Edgeworth tells us that after her stepdaughter's
return to Edgeworthtown she occupied herself with various
literary works, correcting some of her former MSS. for
the press, and writing 'Madame de Fleury,' 'Emilie de
Coulanges,' and 'Leonora.' But the high-flown and
romantic style did suit her gift, and she wrote best when
her genuine interest and unaffected glances shone with
bright understanding sympathy upon her immediate surroundings.
When we are told that 'Leonora' was written
in the style the Chevalier Edelcrantz preferred, and that
the idea of what he would think of it was present to
Maria in every page, we begin to realise that for us at all
events it was a most fortunate thing that she decided as
she did. It would have been a loss indeed to the world if
this kindling and delightful spirit of hers had been
choked by the polite thorns, fictions, and platitudes of an
artificial, courtly life and by the well-ordered narrowness
of a limited standard. She never heard what the
Chevalier thought of the book; she never knew that he
ever read it even. It is a satisfaction to hear that he
married no one else, and while she sat writing and not
forgetting in the pleasant library at home, one can
imagine the romantic Chevalier in his distant Court
faithful to the sudden and romantic devotion by which he
is now remembered. Romantic and chivalrous friendship
seems to belong to his country and to his countrymen.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>IX.</b></p>
</div>
<p>There are one or two other episodes less sentimental
than this one recorded of this visit to Paris, not the least
interesting of these being the account given of a call
upon Madame de Genlis. The younger author from her
own standpoint having resolutely turned away from the voice
of the charmer for the sake of that which she is convinced
to be duty and good sense, now somewhat sternly takes the
measure of her elder sister, who has failed in the struggle,
who is alone and friendless, and who has made her fate.</p>
<p>The story is too long to quote at full length. An
isolated page without its setting loses very much; the
previous description of the darkness and uncertainty
through which Maria and her father go wandering, and
asking their way in vain, adds immensely to the sense of
the gloom and isolation which are hiding the close of a
long and brilliant career. At last, after wandering for a
long time seeking for Madame de Genlis, the travellers
compel a reluctant porter to show them the staircase in
the Arsenal, where she is living, and to point out the door
before he goes off with the light.</p>
<p>They wait in darkness. The account of what happens
when the door is opened is so interesting that I cannot
refrain from quoting it at length:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>After ringing the bell we presently heard doors open and
little footsteps approaching nigh. The door was opened by a
girl of about Honora's size, holding an ill set-up, wavering
candle in her hand, the light of which fell full upon her face
and figure. Her face was remarkably intelligent—dark sparkling
eyes, dark hair curled in the most fashionable long corkscrew
ringlets over her eyes and cheeks. She parted the
ringlets to take a full view of us. The dress of her figure by
no means suited the head and elegance of her attitude. What
her nether weeds might be we could not distinctly see, but
they seemed a coarse short petticoat like what Molly Bristow's
children would wear. After surveying us and hearing our
name was Edgeworth she smiled graciously and bid us follow
her, saying, 'Maman est chez elle.' She led the way with the
grace of a young lady who has been taught to dance across two
ante-chambers, miserable-looking; but, miserable or not, no
home in Paris can be without them. The girl, or young lady,
for we were still in doubt which to think her, led into a small
room in which the candles were so well screened by a green tin
screen that we could scarcely distinguish the tall form of a lady
in black who rose from her chair by the fireside; as the door
opened a great puff of smoke came from the huge fireplace at
the same moment. She came forward, and we made our way
towards her as well as we could through a confusion of tables,
chairs, and work-baskets, china, writing-desks and inkstands,
and birdcages, and a harp. She did not speak, and as her back
was now turned to both fire and candle I could not see her face
or anything but the outline of her form and her attitude. Her
form was the remains of a fine form, her attitude that of a
woman used to a better drawing-room.</p>
<p>I being foremost, and she silent, was compelled to speak to
the figure in darkness. 'Madame de Genlis nous a fait l'honneur
de nous mander qu'elle voulait bien nous permettre de lui rendre
visite,' said I, or words to that effect, to which she replied by
taking my hand and saying something in which 'charmée' was
the most intelligible word. While she spoke she looked over
my shoulder at my father, whose bow, I presume, told her he
was a gentleman, for she spoke to him immediately as if she
wished to please and seated us in <i>fauteuils</i> near the fire.</p>
<p>I then had a full view of her face—figure very thin and
melancholy dark eyes, long sallow cheeks, compressed thin lips,
two or three black ringlets on a high forehead, a cap that Mrs.
Grier might wear—altogether in appearance of fallen fortunes,
worn-out health, and excessive but guarded irritability. To
me there was nothing of that engaging, captivating manner
which I had been taught to expect. She seemed to me to be
alive only to literary quarrels and jealousies. The muscles of
her face as she spoke, or as my father spoke to her, quickly and
too easily expressed hatred and anger…. She is now, you
know, <i>dévote acharnée</i>…. Madame de Genlis seems to have
been so much used to being attacked that she has defence and
apologies ready prepared. She spoke of Madame de Staël's
'Delphine' with detestation…. Forgive me, my dear Aunt
Mary; you begged me to see her with favourable eyes, and I
went, after seeing her 'Rosière de Salency,' with the most favourable
disposition, but I could not like her…. And from time
to time I saw, or thought I saw, through the gloom of her
countenance a gleam of coquetry. But my father judges of
her much more favourably than I do. She evidently took
pains to please him, and he says he is sure she is a person over
whose mind he could gain great ascendency.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The 'young and gay philosopher' at fifty is not
unchanged since we knew him first. Maria adds a postscript:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I had almost forgotten to tell you that the little girl who
showed us in is a girl whom she is educating. 'Elle m'appelle
maman, mais elle n'est pas ma fille.' The manner in which
this little girl spoke to Madame de Genlis and looked at her
appeared to me more in her favour than anything else. I
went to look at what the child was writing; she was translating
Darwin's <i>Zoonomia</i>.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Every description one reads by Miss Edgeworth of
actual things and people makes one wish that she had
written more of them. This one is the more interesting
from the contrast of the two women, both so remarkable
and coming to so different a result in their experience of
life.</p>
<p>This eventful visit to Paris is brought to an eventful
termination by several gendarmes, who appear early one
morning in Mr. Edgeworth's bedroom with orders that he
is to get up and to leave Paris immediately. Mr. Edgeworth
had been accused of being brother to the Abbé de
Fermont. When the mitigated circumstances of his being
only a first cousin were put forward by Lord Whitworth,
the English Ambassador, the Edgeworths received permission
to return from the suburb to which they had
retired; but private news hurried their departure, and
they were only in time to escape the general blockade and
detention of English prisoners. After little more than a
year of peace, once more war was declared on May 20, 1803.
Lovell, the eldest son, who was absent at the time and
travelling from Switzerland, was not able to escape in time;
nor for twelve years to come was the young man able to
return to his own home and family.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>X.</b></p>
</div>
<p>'Belinda,' 'Castle Rackrent,' the 'Parents' Assistant,'
the 'Essays on Practical Education,' had all made their
mark. The new series of popular tales was also welcomed.
There were other books on the way; Miss Edgeworth had
several MSS. in hand in various stages, stories to correct
for the press. There was also a long novel, first begun by her
father and taken up and carried on by her. The 'Essays
on Practical Education,' which were first published in 1798,
continued to be read. M. Pictet had translated the book
into French the year before; a third edition was published
some ten years later, in 1811, in the preface of which the
authors say, 'It is due to the public to state that twelve
years' additional experience in a numerous family, and
careful attention to the results of other modes of education,
have given the authors no reason to retract what they have
advanced in these volumes.'</p>
<p>In Mr. Edgeworth's Memoirs, however, his daughter
states that he modified his opinions in one or two particulars;
allowing more and more liberty to the children,
and at the same time conceding greater importance to the
habit of early though mechanical efforts of memory. The
essays seem in every way in advance of their time; many
of the hints contained in them most certainly apply to
the little children of to-day no less than to their small
grandparents. A lady whose own name is high in
the annals of education was telling me that she had
been greatly struck by the resemblance between the
Edgeworth system and that of Froebel's Kindergarten
method, which is now gaining more and more ground in
people's estimation, the object of both being not so
much to cram instruction into early youth as to
draw out each child's powers of observation and attention.</p>
<p>The first series of tales of fashionable life came out in
1809, and contained among other stories 'Ennui,' one of
the most remarkable of Miss Edgeworth's works. The
second series included the 'Absentee,' that delightful
story of which the lesson should be impressed upon us even
more than in the year 1812. The 'Absentee' was at first
only an episode in the longer novel of 'Patronage;' but
the public was impatient, so were the publishers, and
fortunately for every one the 'Absentee' was printed as a
separate tale.</p>
<p>'Patronage' had been begun by Mr. Edgeworth to
amuse his wife, who was recovering from illness; it was
originally called the 'Fortunes of the Freeman Family,'
and it is a history with a moral. Morals were more in
fashion then than they are now, but this one is obvious
without any commentary upon it. It is tolerably certain
that clever, industrious, well-conducted people will
succeed, where idle, scheming, and untrustworthy persons
will eventually fail to get on, even with powerful friends
to back them. But the novel has yet to be written that
will prove that, where merits are more equal, a little
patronage is not of a great deal of use, or that people's
positions in life are exactly proportioned to their merit.
Mrs. Barbauld's pretty essay on the 'Inconsistency of Human
Expectations' contains the best possible answer to the
problem of what people's deserts should be. Let us hope
that personal advancement is only one of the many things
people try for in life, and that there are other prizes as
well worth having. Miss Edgeworth herself somewhere
speaks with warm admiration of this very essay. Of the
novel itself she says (writing to Mrs. Barbauld), 'It is so
vast a subject that it flounders about in my hands and
quite overpowers me.'</p>
<p>It is in this same letter that Miss Edgeworth mentions
another circumstance which interested her at this time, and
which was one of those events occurring now and again
which do equal credit to all concerned.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I have written a preface and notes [she says]—for I too
would be an editor—for a little book which a very worthy
countrywoman of mine is going to publish: Mrs. Leadbeater,
granddaughter to Burke's first preceptor. She is poor. She
has behaved most handsomely about some letters of Burke's to
her grandfather and herself. It would have been advantageous
to her to publish them; but, as Mrs. Burke<SPAN href="#fn2"><sup><small>2</small></sup></SPAN><SPAN name="fn2r" id="fn2r"></SPAN>—Heaven knows
why—objected, she desisted.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Mrs. Leadbeater was an Irish Quaker lady whose
simple and spirited annals of Ballitore delighted Carlyle
in his later days, and whose 'Cottage Dialogues' greatly
struck Mr. Edgeworth at the time; and the kind
Edgeworths, finding her quite unused to public transactions,
exerted themselves in every way to help her. Mr.
Edgeworth took the MSS. out of the hands of an Irish
publisher, and, says Maria, 'our excellent friend's worthy
successor in St. Paul's Churchyard has, on our recommendation,
agreed to publish it for her.' Mr. Edgeworth's
own letter to Mrs. Leadbeater gives the history of his
good-natured offices and their satisfactory results.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>From R. L. Edgeworth, July 5, 1810.<br/>
Miss Edgeworth desires me as a man of business to write
to Mrs. Leadbeater relative to the publication of 'Cottage
Dialogues.' Miss Edgeworth has written an advertisement, and
will, with Mrs. Leadbeater's permission, write notes for an
English edition. The scheme which I propose is of two parts—to
sell the English copyright to the house of Johnson in
London, where we dispose of our own works, and to publish a
very large and cheap edition for Ireland for schools…. I can
probably introduce the book into many places. Our family
takes 300 copies, Lady Longford 50, Dr. Beaufort 20, &c….
I think Johnson & Co. will give 50<i>l</i>. for the English copyright.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>After the transaction Mr. Edgeworth wrote to the
publishers as follows:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="right">May 31, 1811: Edgeworthtown.<br/>
My sixty-eighth birthday.</p>
<p>My dear Gentlemen,—I have just heard your letter to
Mrs. Leadbeater read by one who dropped tears of pleasure
from a sense of your generous and handsome conduct. I take
great pleasure in speaking of you to the rest of the world as
you deserve, and I cannot refrain from expressing to yourselves
the genuine esteem that I feel for you. I know that this direct
praise is scarcely allowable, but my advanced age and my close
connection with you must be my excuse.—Yours sincerely,</p>
<p class="signature">R. L. E.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Tears seem equivalent to something more than the
estimated value of Mrs. Leadbeater's labours. The
charming and well-known Mrs. Trench who was also Mary
Leadbeater's friend, writes warmly praising the notes.
'Miss Edgeworth's notes on your Dialogues have as much
spirit and originality as if she had never before explored
the mine which many thought she had exhausted.'</p>
<p>All these are pleasant specimens of the Edgeworth
correspondence, which, however (following the course of
most correspondence), does not seem to have been always
equally agreeable. There are some letters (among others
which I have been allowed to see) written by Maria about
this time to an unfortunate young man who seems to have
annoyed her greatly by his excited importunities.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>I thank you [she says] for your friendly zeal in defence of
my powers of pathos and sublimity; but I think it carries you
much too far when it leads you to imagine that I refrain, from
principle or virtue, from displaying powers that I really do not
possess. I assure you that I am not in the least capable of
writing a dithyrambic ode, or any other kind of ode.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>One is reminded by this suggestion of Jane Austen also
declining to write 'an historical novel illustrative of the
august House of Coburg.'</p>
<p>The young man himself seems to have had some wild
aspirations after authorship, but to have feared criticism.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The advantage of the art of printing [says his friendly
Minerva] is that the mistakes of individuals in reasoning and
writing will be corrected in time by the public, so that the
cause of truth cannot suffer; and I presume you are too much
of a philosopher to mind the trifling mortification that the
detection of a mistake might occasion. You know that some
sensible person has observed that acknowledging a mistake is
saying, only in other words, that we are wiser to-day than we
were yesterday.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>He seems at last to have passed the bounds of reasonable
correspondence, and she writes as follows:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Your last letter, dated in June, was many months before it
reached me. In answer to all your reproaches at my silence I
can only assure you that it was not caused by any change in
my opinions or good wishes; but I do not carry on what is
called a regular correspondence with anybody except with one
or two of my very nearest relations; and it is best to tell the
plain truth that my father particularly dislikes my writing
letters, so I write as few as I possibly can.</p>
</blockquote>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>XI.</b></p>
</div>
<p>While Maria Edgeworth was at work in her Irish
home, successfully producing her admirable delineations,
another woman, born some eight years later, and living in
the quiet Hampshire village where the elm trees spread so
greenly, was also at work, also writing books that were
destined to influence many a generation, but which were
meanwhile waiting unknown, unnoticed. Do we not all
know the story of the brown paper parcel lying unopened
for years on the publisher's shelf and containing Henry
Tilney and all his capes, Catherine Morland and all her
romance, and the great John Thorpe himself, uttering those
valuable literary criticisms which Lord Macaulay, writing
to his little sisters at home, used to quote to them? 'Oh,
Lord!' says John Thorpe, 'I never read novels; I have other
things to do.'</p>
<p>A friend reminds us of Miss Austen's own indignant
outburst. 'Only a novel! only "Cecilia," or "Camilla,"
or "Belinda;" or, in short, only some work in which the
greatest powers of the mind are displayed, the most
thorough knowledge of human nature, the happiest
delineation of its varieties, the liveliest effusions of wit
and humour, are conveyed to the world in the best-chosen
language.' If the great historian, who loved novels himself,
had not assured us that we owe Miss Austen and Miss
Edgeworth to the early influence of the author of
'Evelina,' one might grudge 'Belinda' to such company
as that of 'Cecilia' and 'Camilla.'</p>
<p>'Pride and Prejudice' and 'Northanger Abbey' were
published about the same time as 'Patronage' and 'Tales
of Fashionable Life.' Their two authors illustrate, curiously
enough, the difference between the national characteristics
of English and Irish—the breadth, the versatility, the
innate wit and gaiety of an Irish mind; the comparative
narrowness of range of an English nature; where, however,
we are more likely to get humour and its never-failing
charm. Long afterwards Jane Austen sent one of her
novels to Miss Edgeworth, who appreciated it indeed, as
such a mind as hers could not fail to do, but it was with no
such enthusiasm as that which she felt for other more
ambitious works, with more of incident, power, knowledge
of the world, in the place of that one subtle quality
of humour which for some persons outweighs almost every
other. Something, some indefinite sentiment, tells people
where they amalgamate and with whom they are intellectually
akin; and by some such process of criticism the
writer feels that in this little memoir of Miss Edgeworth
she has but sketched the outer likeness of this remarkable
woman's life and genius; and that she has scarcely done
justice to very much in Miss Edgeworth, which so many
of the foremost men of her day could appreciate—a power,
a versatility, an interest in subjects for their own sakes,
not for the sakes of those who are interested in them,
which was essentially hers.</p>
<p>It is always characteristic to watch a writer's progress
in the estimation of critics and reviewers. In 1809 Miss
Edgeworth is moderately and respectfully noticed. 'As a
writer of novels and tales she has a marked peculiarity,
that of venturing to dispense common sense to her readers
and to bring them within the precincts of real life. Without
excluding love from her pages she knows how to assign
to it its true limits.' In 1812 the reviewer, more used to
hear the author's praises on all sides, now starts from a
higher key, and, as far as truth to nature and delineation
of character are concerned, does not allow a rival except
'Don Quixote' and 'Gil Blas.' The following criticism
is just and more to the point:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>To this power of masterly and minute delineation of character
Miss Edgeworth adds another which has rarely been
combined with the former, that of interweaving the peculiarities
of her persons with the conduct of her piece, and making them,
without forgetting for a moment their personal consistency,
conduce to the general lesson…. Her virtue and vice,
though copied exactly from nature, lead with perfect ease to a
moral conclusion, and are finally punished or rewarded by
means which (rare as a retribution in this world is) appear for
the most part neither inconsistent nor unnatural.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Then follows a review of 'Vivian' and of the 'Absentee,'
which is perhaps the most admirable of her works. We
may all remember how Macaulay once pronounced that
the scene in the 'Absentee' where Lord Colambre discovers
himself to his tenantry was the best thing of the
sort since the opening of the twenty-second book of the
'Odyssey.'</p>
<p>An article by Lord Dudley, which is still to be quoted,
appeared in the 'Quarterly Review' in 1814. What he
says of her works applies no less to Miss Edgeworth's own
life than to the principles which she inculcates.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The old rule was for heroes and heroines to fall suddenly
and irretrievably in love. If they fell in love with the right
person so much the better; if not, it could not be helped, and
the novel ended unhappily. And, above all, it was held quite
irregular for the most reasonable people to make any use whatever
of their reason on the most important occasion of their
lives. Miss Edgeworth has presumed to treat this mighty
power with far less reverence. She has analysed it and found
it does not consist of one simple element, but that several
common ingredients enter into its composition—habit, esteem,
a belief of some corresponding sentiment and of suitableness in
the character and circumstances of the party. She has pronounced
that reason, timely and vigorously applied, is almost a
specific, and, following up this bold empirical line of practice,
she has actually produced cases of the entire cure of persons
who had laboured under its operation. Her favourite qualities
are prudence, firmness, temper, and that active, vigilant good
sense which, without checking the course of our kind affections,
exercises its influence at every moment and surveys deliberately
the motives and consequences of every action. Utility is her
object, reason and experience her means.</p>
</blockquote>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>XII.</b></p>
</div>
<p>This review of Lord Dudley's must have come out
after a visit from the Edgeworth family to London in
1813, which seems to have been a most brilliant and
amusing campaign. 'I know the homage that was paid
you,' wrote Mrs. Barbauld, speaking of the event, 'and I
exulted in it for your sake and for my sex's sake.' Miss
Edgeworth was at the height of her popularity, in good
spirits and good health. Mr. Edgeworth was seventy, but
he looked years younger, and was still in undiminished
health and vigour. The party was welcomed, fêted,
sought after everywhere. Except that they miss seeing
Madame d'Arblay and leave London before the arrival of
Madame de Staël, they seem to have come in for everything
that was brilliant, fashionable, and entertaining.
They breakfast with poets, they sup with marquises, they
call upon duchesses and scientific men. Maria's old friend
the Duchess of Wellington is not less her friend than she
was in County Longford. Every one likes them and comes
knocking at their lodging-house door, while Maria upstairs
is writing a letter, standing at a chest of drawers.
'Miss Edgeworth is delightful,' says Tom Moore, 'not
from display, but from repose and unaffectedness, the
least pretending person.' Even Lord <ins title="original has Bryon">Byron</ins> writes warmly
of the authoress whose company is so grateful, and who
goes her simple, pleasant way cheerful and bringing kind
cheer, and making friends with the children as well as
with the elders. Many of these children in their lives
fully justified her interest, children whom we in turn have
known and looked up to as distinguished greyheaded men.</p>
<p>Some one asked Miss Edgeworth how she came to
understand children as she did, what charm she used to
win them. 'I don't know,' she said kindly; 'I lie down
and let them crawl over me.' She was greatly pleased on
one occasion when at a crowded party a little girl suddenly
started forth, looked at her hard, and said, 'I like simple
Susan best,' and rushed away overwhelmed at her own
audacity. The same lady who was present on this occasion
asked her a question which we must all be grateful to have
solved for us—how it happened that the respective places
of Laura and Rosamond came to be transposed in
'Patronage,' Laura having been the wiser elder sister in
the 'Purple Jar,' and appearing suddenly as the younger
in the novel. Miss Edgeworth laughed and said that
Laura had been so preternaturally wise and thoughtful as
a child, she could never have kept her up to the mark, and
so she thought it best to change the character altogether.</p>
<p>During one of her visits to London Miss Edgeworth
went to dine at the house of Mr. Marshall; and his
daughter, Lady Monteagle, tells a little story which gives
an impression, and a kind one, of the celebrated guest.
Everything had been prepared in her honour, the lights
lighted, the viands were cooked. Dinner was announced,
and some important person was brought forward to hand
Miss Edgeworth down, when it was discovered that she
had vanished. For a moment the company and the dinner
were all at a standstill. She was a small person, but
diligent search was made. Miss Edgeworth had last been
seen with the children of the house, and she was eventually
found in the back kitchen, escorted by the said children,
who, having confided their private affairs to her sympathetic
ear, had finally invited her to come with them
and see some rabbits which they were rearing down below.
A lady who used to live at Clifton as a little girl, and to
be sometimes prescribed for by Dr. King, was once brought
up as a child to Miss Edgeworth, and she told me how very
much puzzled she felt when the bright old lady, taking her
by the hand, said, 'Well, my dear, how do you do, and how
is my excellent brother-in-law?' One can imagine what a
vague sort of being an 'excellent brother-in-law' would
seem to a very young child.</p>
<p>We read in Miss Edgeworth's memoir of her father
that Mr. Edgeworth recovered from his serious illness in
1814 to enjoy a few more years of life among his friends,
his children, and his experiments. His good humour and
good spirits were undiminished, and he used to quote an
old friend's praise of 'the privileges and convenience of
old age.' He was past seventy, but he seems to have
continued his own education to the end of life. 'Without
affecting to be young, he exerted himself to prevent any of
his faculties from sinking into the indolent state which
portends their decay,' and his daughter says that he went
on learning to the last, correcting his faults and practising
his memory by various devices, so that it even improved
with age.</p>
<p>In one of his last letters to Mrs. Beaufort, his wife's
mother, he speaks with no little paternal pleasure of his
home and his children: 'Such excellent principles, such
just views of human life and manners, such cultivated
understandings, such charming tempers make a little
Paradise about me;' while with regard to his daughter's
works he adds concerning the book which was about to
appear, 'If Maria's tales fail with the public, you will hear
of my hanging myself.'</p>
<p>Mr. Edgeworth died in the summer of 1817, at home,
surrounded by his family, grateful, as he says, to Providence
for allowing his body to perish before his mind.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>During the melancholy months which succeeded her father's
death Maria hardly wrote any letters; her sight was in a most
alarming state. The tears, she said, felt in her eyes like the
cutting of a knife. She had overworked them all the previous
winter, sitting up at night and struggling with her grief as she
wrote 'Ormond.' She was now unable to use them without
pain…. Edgeworthtown now belonged to Lovell, the eldest
surviving brother, but he wished it to continue the home of the
family. Maria set to work to complete her father's memoirs
and to fulfil his last wish.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>It was not without great hesitation and anxiety that
she determined to finish writing her father's Life. There is
a touching appeal in a letter to her aunt Ruxton. 'I felt
the happiness of my life was at stake. Even if all the rest
of the world had praised it and you had been dissatisfied,
how miserable should I have been!' And there is another
sentence written at Bowood, very sad and full of remembrance:
'I feel as if I had lived a hundred years and
was left alive after everybody else.' The book came out,
and many things were said about it, not all praise. The
'Quarterly' was so spiteful and intolerant that it seemed
almost personal in its violence. It certainly would have
been a great loss to the world had this curious and
interesting memoir never been published, but at the
time the absence of certain phrases and expressions of
opinions which Mr. Edgeworth had never specially professed
seemed greatly to offend the reviewers.</p>
<p>The worst of these attacks Miss Edgeworth never read,
and the task finished, the sad months over, the poor eyes
recovered, she crossed to England.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>XIII.</b></p>
</div>
<p>One is glad to hear of her away and at Bowood reviving
in good company, in all senses of the word. Her old friend
Lord Henry Petty, now Lord Lansdowne, was still her
friend and full of kindness. Outside the house spread a
green deer-park to rest her tired eyes, within were pleasant
and delightful companions to cheer her soul. Sir Samuel
Romilly was there, of whom she speaks with affectionate
admiration, as she does of her kind host and hostess. 'I
much enjoy the sight of Lady Lansdowne's happiness with
her husband and her children. Beauty, fortune, cultivated
society all united—in short, everything that the most
reasonable or unreasonable could wish. She is so amiable
and desirous to make others happy.'</p>
<p>Miss Edgeworth's power of making other people see
things as she does is very remarkable in all these letters;
with a little imagination one could almost feel as if one
might be able to travel back into the pleasant society in
which she lived. When she goes abroad soon after with
her two younger sisters (Fanny, the baby whose head so
nearly came off in her arms, and Harriet, who have both
grown up by this time to be pretty and elegant young
ladies), the sisters are made welcome everywhere. In
Paris, as in London, troops of acquaintance came forward
to receive 'Madame Maria et mesdemoiselles ses sœurs,'
as they used to be announced. Most of their old friends
were there still; only the children had grown up and were
now new friends to be greeted. It is a confusion of names
in visionary succession, comprising English people no less
than French. Miss Edgeworth notes it all with a sure
hand and true pen; it is as one of the sketch-books of a
great painter, where whole pictures are indicated in a few
just lines. Here is a peep at the Abbaye aux Bois in
1820:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>We went to Madame Récamier in her convent, l'Abbaye
aux Bois, up seventy-eight steps. All came in with asthma.
Elegant room; she as elegant as ever. Matthieu de Montmorenci,
the ex-Queen of Sweden, Madame de Boigne, a charming
woman, and Madame la Maréchale de ——, a battered
beauty, smelling of garlic and screeching in vain to pass as a
wit…. Madame Récamier has no more taken the veil than
I have, and is as little likely to do it. She is quite beautiful;
she dresses herself and her little room with elegant simplicity,
and lives in a convent only because it is cheap and respectable.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>One sees it all, the convent, the company, the last
refrain of former triumphs, the faithful romantic Matthieu
de Montmorenci, and above all the poor Maréchale, who
will screech for ever in her garlic. Let us turn the page,
we find another picture from these not long past days:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Breakfast at Camille Jordan's; it was half-past twelve
before the company assembled, and we had an hour's delightful
conversation with Camille Jordan and his wife in her spotless
white muslin and little cap, sitting at her husband's feet as he
lay on the sofa; as clean, as nice, as fresh, as thoughtless of
herself as my mother. At this breakfast we saw three of the
most distinguished of that party who call themselves 'les
Doctrinaires' and say they are more attached to measures than
to men.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Here is another portrait of a portrait and its painter:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Princess Potemkin is a Russian, but she has all the grace,
softness, winning manner of the Polish ladies. Oval face, pale,
with the finest, softest, most expressive chestnut dark eyes.
She has a sort of politeness which pleases peculiarly, a mixture
of the ease of high rank and early habit with something that is
sentimental without affectation. Madame le Brun is painting
her picture. Madame le Brun is sixty-six, with great vivacity
as well as genius, and better worth seeing than her pictures,
for though they are speaking she speaks.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Another visit the sisters paid, which will interest the
readers of Madame de la Rochejaquelin's memoirs of the
war in the Vendée:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>In a small bedroom, well furnished, with a fire just lighted,
we found Madame de la Rochejaquelin on the sofa; her two
daughters at work, one spinning with a distaff, the other
embroidering muslin. Madame is a fat woman with a broad,
round, fair face and a most benevolent expression, her hair cut
short and perfectly grey as seen under her cap; the rest of the
face much too young for such grey locks; and though her face
and bundled form all squashed on to a sofa did not at first
promise much of gentility, you could not hear her speak or
hear her for three minutes without perceiving that she was
well-born and well-bred.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Madame de la Rochejaquelin seems to have confided in
Miss Edgeworth.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>'I am always sorry when any stranger sees me, <i>parce que
je sais que je détruis toute illusion. Je sais que je devrais
avoir l'air d'une héroïne.</i>' She is much better than a heroine;
she is benevolence and truth itself.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>We must not forget the scientific world where Madame
Maria was no less at home than in fashionable literary
cliques. The sisters saw something of Cuvier at Paris; in
Switzerland they travelled with the Aragos. They were on
their way to the Marcets at Geneva when they stopped at
Coppet, where Miss Edgeworth was always specially happy
in the society of Madame Auguste de Staël and Madame
de Broglie. But Switzerland is not one of the places
where human beings only are in the ascendant; other
influences there are almost stronger than human ones. 'I
did not conceive it possible that I should feel so much
pleasure from the beauties of nature as I have done since I
came to this country. The first moment when I saw Mont
Blanc will remain an era in my life—a new idea, a new
feeling standing alone in the mind.' Miss Edgeworth presently
comes down from her mountain heights and, full of
interest, throws herself into the talk of her friends at
Coppet and Geneva, from which she quotes as it occurs to
her. Here is Rocca's indignant speech to Lord Byron, who
was abusing the stupidity of the Genevese. 'Eh! milord,
pourquoi venir vous fourrer parmi ces honnêtes gens?'
There is Arago's curious anecdote of Napoleon, who sent
for him after the battle of Waterloo, offering him a large
sum of money to accompany him to America. The
Emperor had formed a project for founding a scientific
colony in the New World. Arago was so indignant with
him for abandoning his troops that he would have nothing
to say to the plan. A far more touching story is Dr.
Marcet's account of Josephine. 'Poor Josephine! Do you
remember Dr. Marcet's telling us that when he breakfasted
with her she said, pointing to her flowers, "These are my
subjects. I try to make them happy"?'</p>
<p>Among other expeditions they made a pilgrimage to the
home of the author of a work for which Miss Edgeworth
seems to have entertained a mysterious enthusiasm. The
novel was called 'Caroline de Lichfield,' and was so much
admired at the time that Miss Seward mentions a gentleman
who wrote from abroad to propose for the hand of the
authoress, and who, more fortunate than the poor Chevalier
Edelcrantz, was not refused by the lady. Perhaps some
similarity of experience may have led Maria Edgeworth to
wish for her acquaintance. Happily the time was past for
Miss Edgeworth to look back; her life was now shaped and
moulded in its own groove; the consideration, the variety,
the difficulties of unmarried life were hers, its agreeable
change, its monotony of feeling and of unselfish happiness,
compared with the necessary regularity, the more personal
felicity, the less liberal interests of the married. Her life
seems to have been full to overflowing of practical occupation
and consideration for others. What changing scenes
and colours, what a number of voices, what a crowd of outstretched
hands, what interesting processions of people pass
across her path! There is something of her father's
optimism and simplicity of nature in her unceasing brightness
and activity, in her resolutions to improve as time goes
on. Her young brothers and sisters grow to be men and
women; with her sisters' marriages new interests touch her
warm heart. Between her and the brothers of the younger
generation who did not turn to her as a sort of mother
there may have been too great a difference of age for that
companionship to continue which often exists between a
child and a grown-up person. So at least one is led to
believe was the case as regards one of them, mentioned in a
memoir which has recently appeared. But to her sisters
she could be friend, protector, chaperon, sympathising
companion, and elder sister to the end of her days. We
hear of them all at Bowood again on their way back to
Ireland, and then we find them all at home settling down
to the old life, 'Maria reading Sévigné,' of whom she
never tires.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>XIV.</b></p>
</div>
<p>One of the prettiest and most sympathetic incidents
in Maria Edgeworth's life was a subsequent expedition to
Abbotsford and the pleasure she gave to its master. They
first met in Edinburgh, and her short account conjures up
the whole scene before us:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Ten o'clock struck as I read this note. We were tired, we
were not fit to be seen, but I thought it right to accept Walter
Scott's cordial invitation, sent for a hackney coach, and just as
we were, without dressing, we went. As the coach stopped we
saw the hall lighted, and the moment the door opened heard the
joyous sounds of loud singing. Three servants' 'The Miss
Edgeworths!' sounded from hall to landing-place, and as I
paused for a moment in the anteroom I heard the first sound of
Walter Scott's voice—'The Miss Edgeworths <i>come</i>!' The
room was lighted by only one globe lamp; a circle were singing
loud and beating time: all stopped in an instant.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Is not this picture complete? Scott himself she
describes as 'full of genius without the slightest effort at
expression, delightfully natural, more lame but not so
unwieldy as she expected.' Lady Scott she goes on to
sketch in some half-dozen words—'French, large dark
eyes, civil and good-natured.'</p>
<blockquote>
<p>When we wakened the next morning the whole scene of the
preceding night seemed like a dream [she continues]; however
at twelve came the real Lady Scott, and we called for Scott at
the Parliament House, who came out of the Courts with joyous
face, as if he had nothing on earth to do or to think of but to
show us Edinburgh.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>In her quick, discriminating way she looks round and
notes them all one by one.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Mr. Lockhart is reserved and silent, but he appears to have
much sensibility under this reserve. Mrs. Lockhart is very
pleasing—a slight, elegant figure and graceful simplicity of
manner, perfectly natural. There is something most winning
in her affectionate manner to her father. He dotes upon her.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>A serious illness intervened for poor Maria before she
and her devoted young nurses could reach Abbotsford
itself. There she began to recover, and Lady Scott
watched over her and prescribed for her with the most
tender care and kindness. 'Lady Scott felt the attention
and respect Maria showed to her, perceiving that she
valued her and treated her as a friend,' says Mrs. Edgeworth;
'not, as too many of Sir Walter's guests did, with
neglect.' This is Miss Edgeworth's description of the
Abbotsford family life:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>It is quite delightful to see Scott and his family in the
country; breakfast, dinner, supper, the same flow of kindness,
fondness, and genius, far, far surpassing his works, his letters,
and all my hopes and imagination. His Castle of Abbotsford
is magnificent, but I forget it in thinking of him.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The return visit, when Scotland visited Ireland, was
no less successful. Mrs. Edgeworth writes:—</p>
<p>Maria and my daughter Harriet accompanied Sir Walter
and Miss Scott, Mr. Lockhart, and Captain and Mrs. Scott
to Killarney. They travelled in an open calèche of Sir
Walter's….</p>
<p>Sir Walter was, like Maria, never put out by discomforts on
a journey, but always ready to make the best of everything and
to find amusement in every incident. He was delighted with
Maria's eagerness for everybody's comfort, and diverted himself
with her admiration of a green baize-covered door at the inn at
Killarney. 'Miss Edgeworth, you are so mightily pleased with
that door, I think you will carry it away with you to Edgeworthtown.'</p>
<p>Miss Edgeworth's friendships were certainly very remarkable,
and comprise almost all the interesting people
of her day in France as well as in England.<SPAN href="#fn3"><sup><small>3</small></sup></SPAN><SPAN name="fn3r" id="fn3r"></SPAN> She was
liked, trusted, surrounded, and she appears to have had
the art of winning to her all the great men. We know
the Duke of Wellington addressed verses to her; there
are pleasant intimations of her acquaintance with Sir
James Mackintosh, Romilly, Moore, and Rogers, and that
most delightful of human beings, Sydney Smith, whom
she thoroughly appreciated and admired. Describing her
brother Frank, she says, somewhere, 'I am much inclined
to think that he has a natural genius for happiness; in
other words, as Sydney Smith would say, <i>great hereditary
constitutional joy</i>.' 'To attempt to Boswell Sydney
Smith's conversation would be to outboswell Boswell,' she
writes in another letter home; but in Lady Holland's
memoir of her father there is a pleasant little account of
Miss Edgeworth herself, 'delightful, clever, and sensible,'
listening to Sydney Smith. She seems to have gone the
round of his parish with him while he scolded, doctored,
joked his poor people according to their needs.</p>
<p>'During her visit she saw much of my father,' says
Lady Holland; 'and her talents as well as her thorough
knowledge and love of Ireland made her conversation
peculiarly agreeable to him.' On her side Maria writes
warmly desiring that some Irish bishopric might be forced
upon Sydney Smith, which 'his own sense of natural
charity and humanity would forbid him refuse…. In
the twinkling of an eye—such an eye as his—he would
see all our manifold grievances up and down the country.
One word, one <i>bon mot</i> of his, would do more for us, I
guess, than ——'s four hundred pages and all the like
with which we have been bored.'</p>
<p>The two knew how to make good company for one
another; the quiet-Jeanie-Deans body could listen as well
as give out. We are told that it was not so much that
she said brilliant things, but that a general perfume of
wit ran through her conversation, and she most certainly
had the gift of appreciating the good things of others.
Whether in that 'scene of simplicity, truth, and nature'
a London rout, or in some quiet Hampstead parlour talking
to an old friend, or in her own home among books and
relations and interests of every sort, Miss Edgeworth
seems to have been constantly the same, with presence of
mind and presence of heart too, ready to respond to everything.
I think her warmth of heart shines even brighter
than her wit at times. 'I could not bear the idea that
you suspected me of being so weak, so vain, so senseless,'
she once wrote to Mrs. Barbauld, 'as to have my head
turned by a little fashionable flattery.' If her head was
not turned it must have been because her spirit was stout
enough to withstand the world's almost irresistible
influence.</p>
<p>Not only the great men but the women too are among
her friends. She writes prettily of Mrs. Somerville, with
her smiling eyes and pink colour, her soft voice, strong,
well-bred Scotch accent, timid, not disqualifying timid,
but naturally modest. 'While her head is among the
stars her feet are firm upon the earth.' She is 'delighted'
with a criticism of Madame de Staël's upon herself, in a
letter to M. Dumont. 'Vraiment elle était digne de l'enthousiasme,
mais elle se perd dans votre triste utilité.' It
is difficult to understand why this should have given Miss
Edgeworth so much pleasure; and here finally is a little
vision conjured up for us of her meeting with Mrs. Fry
among her prisoners:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Little doors, and thick doors, and doors of all sorts were
unbolted and unlocked, and on we went through dreary but
clean passages till we came to a room where rows of empty
benches fronted us, a table on which lay a large Bible. Several
ladies and gentlemen entered, took their seats on benches at
either side of the table in silence. Enter Mrs. Fry in a drab-coloured
silk cloak and a plain, borderless Quaker cap, a most
benevolent countenance, calm, benign. 'I must make an
inquiry. Is Maria Edgeworth here?' And when I went
forward she bade me come and sit beside her. Her first smile
as she looked upon me I can never forget. The prisoners came
in in an orderly manner and ranged themselves upon the
benches.</p>
</blockquote>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>XV.</b></p>
</div>
<p>'In this my sixtieth year, to commence in a few days,'
says Miss Edgeworth, writing to her cousin Margaret
Ruxton, 'I am resolved to make great progress.' 'Rosamond
at sixty,' says Miss Ruxton, touched and amused.
Her resolutions were not idle.</p>
<p>'The universal difficulties of the money market in the
year 1826 were felt by us,' says Mrs. Edgeworth in her
memoir, 'and Maria, who since her father's death had
given up rent-receiving, now resumed it; undertook the
management of her brother Lovell's affairs, which she conducted
with consummate skill and perseverance, and
weathered the storm that swamped so many in this financial
crisis.' We also hear of an opportune windfall in the
shape of some valuable diamonds, which an old lady, a
distant relation, left in her will to Miss Edgeworth, who
sold them and built a market-house for Edgeworthtown
with the proceeds.</p>
<blockquote>
<p><i>April</i> 8, 1827.—I am quite well and in high good humour
and good spirits, in consequence of having received the whole of
Lovell's half-year's rents in full, with pleasure to the tenants and
without the least fatigue or anxiety to myself.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>It was about this time her novel of 'Helen' was written,
the last of her books, the only one that her father had not
revised. There is a vivid account given by one of her
brothers of the family assembled in the library to hear the
manuscript read out, of their anxiety and their pleasure as
they realised how good it was, how spirited, how well
equal to her standard. Tickner, in his account of Miss
Edgeworth, says that the talk of Lady Davenant in
'Helen' is very like Miss Edgeworth's own manner. His
visit to Edgeworthtown was not long after the publication
of the book. His description, if only for her mention of
her father, is worth quoting:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>As we drove to the door Miss Edgeworth came out to meet
us, a small, short, spare body of about sixty-seven, with extremely
frank and kind manners, but who always looks straight into
your face with a pair of mild deep grey eyes whenever she speaks
to you. With characteristic directness she did not take us into
the library until she had told us that we should find there Mrs.
Alison, of Edinburgh, and her aunt, Miss Sneyd, a person very
old and infirm, and that the only other persons constituting the
family were Mrs. Edgeworth, Miss Honora Edgeworth, and Dr.
Alison, a physician…. Miss Edgeworth's conversation was
always ready, as full of vivacity and variety as I can imagine….
She was disposed to defend everybody, even Lady Morgan, as
far as she could. And in her intercourse with her family she
was quite delightful, referring constantly to Mrs. Edgeworth,
who seems to be the authority in all matters of fact, and most
kindly repeating jokes to her infirm aunt, Miss Sneyd, who
cannot hear them, and who seems to have for her the most unbounded
affection and admiration…. About herself as an
author she seems to have no reserve or secrets. She spoke with
great kindness and pleasure of a letter I brought to her from
Mr. Peabody, explaining some passage in his review of 'Helen'
which had troubled her from its allusion to her father. 'But,'
she added, 'no one can know what I owe to my father. He
advised and directed me in everything. I never could have
done anything without him. There are things I cannot be mistaken
about, though other people can. I know them.' As she
said this the tears stood in her eyes, and her whole person was
moved…. It was, therefore, something of a trial to talk so
brilliantly and variously as she did from nine in the morning
to past eleven at night.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>She was unfeignedly glad to see good company. Here
is her account of another visitor:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Sept</i>. 26.—The day before yesterday we were amusing ourselves
by telling who among literary and scientific people we
should wish to come here next. Francis said Coleridge; I said
Herschell. Yesterday morning, as I was returning from my
morning walk at half-past eight, I saw a bonnetless maid in the
walk, with a letter in her hand, in search of me. When I
opened the letter I found it was from Mr. Herschell, and that
he was waiting for an answer at Mr. Briggs's inn. I have
seldom been so agreeably surprised, and now that he is gone and
that he has spent twenty-four hours here, if the fairy were to
ask me the question again I should still more eagerly say, 'Mr.
Herschell, ma'am, if you please.'</p>
</blockquote>
<p>She still came over to England from time to time,
visiting at her sisters' houses. Honora was now Lady
Beaufort; another sister, Fanny, the object of her closest
and most tender affection, was Mrs. Lestock Wilson. Age
brought no change in her mode of life. Time passes with
tranquil steps, for her not hasting unduly. 'I am perfect,'
she writes at the age of seventy-three to her stepmother
of seventy-two, 'so no more about it, and thank you from
my heart and every component part of my precious self
for all the care, and successful care, you have taken of me,
your old petted nurseling.'</p>
<p>Alas! it is sad to realise that quite late in life fresh
sorrows fell upon this warm-hearted woman. Troubles
gather; young sisters fade away in their beauty and
happiness. But in sad times and good times the old
home is still unchanged, and remains for those that are
left to turn to for shelter, for help, and consolation. To
the very last Miss Edgeworth kept up her reading, her
correspondence, her energy. All along we have heard of
her active habits—out in the early morning in her
garden, coming in to the nine o'clock breakfast with her
hands full of roses, sitting by and talking and reading her
letters while the others ate. Her last letter to her old
friend Sir Henry Holland was after reading the first
volume of Lord Macaulay's History. Sir Henry took the
letter to Lord Macaulay, who was so much struck by its
discrimination that he asked leave to keep it.</p>
<p>She was now eighty-two years of age, and we find her
laughing kindly at the anxiety of her sister and brother-in-law,
who had heard of her climbing a ladder to wind up
an old clock at Edgeworthtown. 'I am heartily obliged
and delighted by your being such a goose and Richard
such a gander,' she says 'as to be frightened out of your
wits by my climbing a ladder to take off the top of the
clock.' She had not felt that there was anything to fear
as once again she set the time that was so nearly at an
end for her. Her share of life's hours had been well spent
and well enjoyed; with a peaceful and steady hand and
tranquil heart she might mark the dial for others whose
hours were still to come.</p>
<p>Mrs. Edgeworth's own words tell all that remains to be
told.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>It was on the morning of May 22, 1849, that she was
taken suddenly ill with pain in the region of the heart, and
after a few hours breathed her last in my arms. She had
always wished to die quickly, at home, and that I should be
with her. All her wishes were fulfilled. She was gone, and
nothing like her again can we see in this world.</p>
</blockquote>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="minimal" />
<p> </p>
<h2><SPAN name="MRS_OPIE" id="MRS_OPIE"></SPAN><i>MRS OPIE.</i></h2>
<div class="center">
<p>1769-1853.<br/></p>
</div>
<div class="center">
<table style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="2" summary="quote">
<tr><td align="left"><i><small>'Your gentleness shall force more than your force move us to gentleness.'</small></i>—</td></tr>
<tr><td align="right"><i><small>As You Like It</small></i>.</td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td align="center"><b>I.</b></td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>It is not very long since some articles appeared in the
'Cornhill Magazine' which were begun under the influence
of certain ancient bookshelves with so pleasant a flavour
of the old world that it seemed at the time as if yesterday
not to-day was the all-important hour, and one gladly submitted
to the subtle charm of the past—its silent veils, its
quiet incantations of dust and healing cobweb. The phase
is but a passing one with most of us, and we must soon
feel that to dwell at length upon each one of the pretty
old fancies and folios of the writers and explorers who were
born towards the end of the last century would be an impossible
affectation; and yet a postscript seems wanting to
the sketches which have already appeared of Mrs. Barbauld
and Miss Edgeworth, and the names of their contemporaries
should not be quite passed over.</p>
<p>In a hundred charming types and prints and portraits
we recognise the well-known names as they used to appear
in the garb of life. Grand ladies in broad loops and
feathers, or graceful and charming as nymphs in muslin
folds, with hanging clouds of hair; or again, in modest
coiffes such as dear Jane Austen loved and wore even in her
youth. Hannah More only took to coiffes and wimples in
later life; in early days she was fond of splendour, and,
as we read, had herself painted in emerald earrings. How
many others besides her are there to admire! Who does
not know the prim, sweet, amply frilled portraits of Mrs.
Trimmer and Joanna Baillie? Only yesterday a friend
showed me a sprightly, dark-eyed miniature of Felicia
Hemans. Perhaps most beautiful among all her sister
muses smiles the lovely head of Amelia Opie, as she was
represented by her husband with luxuriant chestnut hair
piled up Romney fashion in careless loops, with the radiant
yet dreaming eyes which are an inheritance for some
members of her family.</p>
<p>The authoresses of that day had the pre-eminence in
looks, in gracious dress and bearing; but they were rather
literary women than anything else, and had but little in common
with the noble and brilliant writers who were to follow
them in our own more natural and outspoken times; whose
wise, sweet, passionate voices are already passing away into
the distance; of whom so few remain to us.<SPAN href="#fn4"><sup><small>4</small></sup></SPAN><SPAN name="fn4r" id="fn4r"></SPAN> The secret
of being real is no very profound one, and yet how rare it
is, how long it was before the readers and writers of this
century found it out! It is like the secret of singing in
perfect tune, or of playing the violin as Joachim can play
upon it. In literature, as in music, there is at times a
certain indescribable tone of absolute reality which carries
the reader away and for the moment absorbs him into the
mind of the writer. Some metempsychosis takes place.
It is no longer a man or a woman turning the pages of a
book, it is a human being suddenly absorbed by the book
itself, living the very life which it records, breathing the
spirit and soul of the writer. Such books are events, not
books to us, new conditions of existence, new selves suddenly
revealed through the experience of other more vivid
personalities than our own. The actual experience of other
lives is not for us, but this link of simple reality of feeling
is one all independent of events; it is like the miracle of
the loaves and fishes repeated and multiplied—one man
comes with his fishes and lo! the multitude is filled.</p>
<p>But this simple discovery, that of reality, that of
speaking from the heart, was one of the last to be made
by women. In France Madame de Sévigné and Madame de
La Fayette were not afraid to be themselves, but in England
the majority of authoresses kept their readers carefully at
pen's length, and seemed for the most part to be so conscious
of their surprising achievements in the way of literature
as never to forget for a single instant that they were
in print. With the exception of Jane Austen and Maria
Edgeworth, the women writers of the early part of this
century were, as I have just said, rather literary women
than actual creators of literature. It is still a mystery how
they attained to their great successes. Frances Burney
charms great Burke and mighty Johnson and wise Macaulay
in later times. Mrs. Opie draws compliments from Mackintosh,
and compliments from the Duchess of Saxe-Coburg,
and Sydney Smith, and above all tears from Walter Scott.</p>
<p>Perhaps many of the flattering things addressed to Mrs.
Opie may have said not less for her own charm and sweetness
of nature than for the merit of her unassuming productions;
she must have been a bright, merry, and fascinating
person, and compliments were certainly more in her
line than the tributes of tears which she records.</p>
<p>The authoresses of heroines are often more interesting
than the heroines themselves, and Amelia Opie was
certainly no exception to this somewhat general statement.
A pleasant, sprightly authoress, beaming bright
glances on her friends, confident, intelligent, full of interest
in life, carried along in turn by one and by another
influence, she comes before us a young and charming
figure, with all the spires of Norwich for a background,
and the sound of its bells, and the stir of its assizes, as she
issues from her peaceful home in her father's tranquil old
house, where the good physician lives widowed, tending his
poor and his sick, and devotedly spoiling his only child.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>II.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Amelia Opie was born in 1769 in the old city of
Norwich, within reach of the invigorating breezes of the
great North Sea. Her youth must have been somewhat
solitary; she was the only child of a kind and cultivated
physician, Doctor James Alderson, whose younger brother,
a barrister, also living in Norwich, became the father of
Baron Alderson. Her mother died in her early youth.
From her father, however, little Amelia seems to have
had the love and indulgence of over half a century, a
tender and admiring love which she returned with all her
heart's devotion. She was the pride and darling of his
home, and throughout her long life her father's approbation
was the one chief motive of her existence. Spoiling
is a vexed question, but as a rule people get so much
stern justice from all the rest of the world that it seems
well that their parents should love and comfort them in
youth for the many disgraces and difficulties yet to come.</p>
<p>Her mother is described as a delicate, high-minded
woman, 'somewhat of a disciplinarian,' says Mrs. Opie's
excellent biographer, Miss Brightwell, but she died too
soon to carry her theories into practice. Miss Brightwell
suggests that 'Mrs. Opie might have been more demure
and decorous had her mother lived, but perhaps less
charming.' There are some verses addressed to her
mother in Mrs. Opie's papers in which it must be confessed
that the remembrance of her admonition plays a
most important part—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Hark! clearer still thy voice I hear.</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Again reproof in accents mild,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Seems whispering in my conscious ear,</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>and so on.</p>
<p>Some of Mrs. Alderson's attempts at discipline seemed
unusual and experimental; the little girl was timid,
afraid of black people, of black beetles, and of human
skeletons. She was given the skeleton to play with, and
the beetles to hold in her hand. One feels more sympathy
with the way in which she was gently reconciled to
the poor negro with the frightening black face—by being
told the story of his wrongs. But with the poor mother's
untimely death all this maternal supervision came to an
end. 'Amelia, your mother is gone; may you never have
reason to blush when you remember her!' her father said
as he clasped his little orphan to his heart; and all her
life long Amelia remembered those words.</p>
<p>There is a pretty reminiscence of her childhood from a
beginning of the memoir which was never written:—'One
of my earliest recollections is of gazing on the
bright blue sky as I lay in my little bed before my hour
of rising came, listening with delighted attention to the
ringing of a peal of bells. I had heard that heaven was
beyond those blue skies, and I had been taught that <i>there</i>
was the home of the good, and I fancied that those sweet
bells were ringing in heaven.' The bells were ringing for
the Norwich Assizes, which played an important part in
our little heroine's life, and which must have been associated
with many of her early memories.</p>
<p>The little girl seems to have been allowed more liberty
than is usually given to children. 'As soon as I was old
enough to enjoy a procession,' she says, 'I was taken to
see the Judges come in. Youthful pages in pretty dresses
ran by the side of the High Sheriff's carriage, in which the
Judges sat, while the coaches drove slowly and with a
solemnity becoming the high and awful office of those
whom they contained…. With reverence ever did I
behold the Judges' wigs, the scarlet robes they wore, and
even the white wand of the Sheriff.'</p>
<p>There is a description which in after years might have
made a pretty picture for her husband's pencil of the little
maiden wandering into the court one day, and called by a
kind old Judge to sit beside him upon the bench. She goes
on to recount how next day she was there again; and when
some attendant of the court wanted her to leave the place,
saying not unnaturally, 'Go, Miss, this is no place for
you; be advised,' the Judge again interfered, and ordered
the enterprising little girl to be brought to her old place
upon the cushion by his side. The story gives one a
curious impression of a child's life and education. She
seems to have come and gone alone, capable, intelligent,
unabashed, interested in all the events and humours of
the place.</p>
<p>Children have among other things a very vivid sense of
citizenship and public spirit, somewhat put out in later
life by the rush of personal feeling, but in childhood the
personal events are so few and so irresponsible that public
affairs become an actual part of life and of experience.
While their elders are still discussing the news and weighing
its importance, it is already a part of the children's
life. Little Amelia Alderson must have been a happy
child, free, affectionate, independent; grateful, as a child
should be, towards those who befriended her. One of her
teachers was a French dancing-master called Christian, for
whom she had a warm regard. She relates that long afterwards
she came with her husband and a friend to visit the
Dutch church at Norwich. 'The two gentlemen were
engaged in looking round and making their observations,
and I, finding myself somewhat cold, began to hop and
dance upon the spot where I stood, when my eyes chanced
to fall upon the pavement below, and I started at beholding
the well-known name of Christian graved upon the slab; I
stopped in dismay, shocked to find that I had actually
been dancing upon the grave of my old master—he who
first taught me to dance.'</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>III.</b></p>
</div>
<p>After her mother's death, Amelia Alderson, who was
barely fifteen at the time, began to take her place in
society. She kept her father's house, received his friends,
made his home bright with her presence. The lawyers
came round in due season: Sir James Mackintosh came,
the town was full of life, of talk, of music, and poetry, and
prejudice.</p>
<p>Harriet Martineau, in her memoir of Mrs. Opie, gives
a delightful and humorous account of the Norwich of that
day—rivalling Lichfield and its literary coterie, only with
less sentimentality and some additional peculiarities of its
own. One can almost see the Tory gentlemen, as Miss
Martineau describes them, setting a watch upon the Cathedral,
lest the Dissenters should burn it as a beacon for
Boney; whereas good Bishop Bathurst, with more faith in
human nature, goes on resolutely touching his hat to the
leading Nonconformists. 'The French taught in schools,'
says Miss Martineau, 'was found to be unintelligible when
the peace at length arrived, taught as it was by an aged
powdered Monsieur and an elderly flowered Madame, who
had taught their pupils' Norfolk pronunciation. But it was
beginning to be known,' she continues, 'that there was such
a language as German, and in due time there was a young
man who had actually been in Germany, and was translating
"Nathan the Wise." When William Taylor became
eminent as almost the only German scholar in England,
old Norwich was very proud and grew, to say the truth,
excessively conceited. She was (and she might be) proud
of her Sayers, she boasted of her intellectual supper-parties,
and finally called herself the "Athens of England."'</p>
<p>In this wholesome, cheerful Athens, blown by the
invigorating Northern breezes, little Amelia bloomed and
developed into a lovely and happy girl. She was fortunate,
indeed, in her friends. One near at hand must have been
an invaluable adviser for a motherless, impressionable girl.
Mrs. John Taylor was so loved that she is still remembered.
Mrs. Barbauld prized and valued her affection
beyond all others. 'I know the value of your letters,'
says Sir James Mackintosh, writing from Bombay; 'they
rouse my mind on subjects which interest us in common—children,
literature, and life. I ought to be made permanently
better by contemplating a mind like yours.' And
he still has Mrs. Taylor in his mind when he concludes with
a little disquisition on the contrast between the barren
sensibility, the indolent folly of some, the useful kindness
of others, 'the industrious benevolence which requires a
vigorous understanding and a decisive character.'</p>
<p>Some of Mrs. Opie's family have shown me a photograph
of her in her Quaker dress, in old age, dim, and
changed, and sunken, from which it is very difficult to
realise all the brightness, and life, and animation which
must have belonged to the earlier part of her life. The
delightful portrait of her engraved in the 'Mirror' shows
the animated beaming countenance, the soft expressive eyes,
the abundant auburn waves of hair, of which we read. The
picture is more like some charming allegorical being than
a real live young lady—some Belinda of the 'Rape of the
Lock' (and one would as soon have expected Belinda to
turn Quakeress). Music, poetry, dancing, elves, graces and
flirtations, cupids, seem to attend her steps. She delights
in admiration, friendship, companionship, and gaiety, and
yet with it all we realise a warm-hearted sincerity, and
appreciation of good and high-minded things, a truth of
feeling passing out of the realms of fancy altogether into
one of the best realities of life. She had a thousand links
with life: she was musical, artistic; she was literary; she
had a certain amount of social influence; she had a voice,
a harp, a charming person, mind and manner. Admiring
monarchs in later days applauded her performance; devoted
subjects were her friends and correspondents, and her sphere
in due time extended beyond the approving Norwich-Athenian
coterie of old friends who had known her from
her childhood, to London itself, where she seems to have
been made welcome by many, and to have captivated more
than her share of victims.</p>
<p>In some letters of hers written to Mrs. Taylor and
quoted by her biographer we get glimpses of some of
these early experiences. The bright and happy excitable
girl comes up from Norwich to London to be made more
happy still, and more satisfied with the delight of life
as it unfolds. Besides her fancy for lawyers, literary
people had a great attraction for Amelia, and Godwin
seems to have played an important part in her earlier
experience. A saying of Mrs. Inchbald's is quoted by her
on her return home as to the report of the world being
that Mr. Holcroft was in love with Mrs. Inchbald, Mrs.
Inchbald with Mr. Godwin, Mr. Godwin with Miss
Alderson, and Miss Alderson with Mr. Holcroft!</p>
<p>The following account of Somers Town, and a
philosopher's costume in those days, is written to her
father in 1794:—</p>
<blockquote><p>After a most delightful ride through some of the richest
country I ever beheld, we arrived about one o'clock at the
philosopher's house; we found him with his hair <i>bien poudré</i>,
and in a pair of new sharp-toed red morocco slippers, not to
mention his green coat and crimson under-waistcoat.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>From Godwin's by the city they come to Marlborough
Street, and find Mrs. Siddons nursing her little baby, and
as handsome and charming as ever. They see Charles
Kemble there, and they wind up their day by calling on
Mrs. Inchbald in her pleasant lodgings, with two hundred
pounds just come in from Sheridan for a farce of sixty
pages. Godwin's attentions seem to have amused and
pleased the fair, merry Amelia, who is not a little proud
of her arch influence over various rugged and apparently
inaccessible persons. Mrs. Inchbald seems to have been
as jealous of Miss Alderson at the time as she afterwards
was of Mary Wollstonecraft. 'Will you give me nothing
to keep for your sake?' says Godwin, parting from Amelia.
'Not even your slipper? I had it once in my possession.'
'This was true,' adds Miss Amelia; 'my shoe had come
off and he picked it up and put it in his pocket.' Elsewhere
she tells her friend Mrs. Taylor that Mr. Holcroft
would like to come forward, but that he had no chance.</p>
<p>That some one person had a chance, and a very good
one, is plain enough from the context of a letter, but
there is nothing in Mrs. Opie's life to show why fate was
contrary in this, while yielding so bountiful a share of all
other good things to the happy country girl.</p>
<p>Among other people, she seems to have charmed
various French refugees, one of whom was the Duc
d'Aiguillon, come over to England with some seven
thousand others, waiting here for happier times, and
hiding their sorrows among our friendly mists. Godwin
was married when Miss Alderson revisited her London
friends and admirers in 1797—an eventful visit, when she
met Opie for the first time.</p>
<p>The account of their first meeting is amusingly given
in Miss Brightwell's memoirs. It was at an evening
party. Some of those present were eagerly expecting
the arrival of Miss Alderson, but the evening was wearing
away and still she did not appear; 'at length the door was
flung open, and she entered bright and smiling, dressed
in a robe of blue, her neck and arms bare, and on her
head a small bonnet placed in somewhat coquettish style
sideways and surmounted by a plume of three white
feathers. Her beautiful hair hung in waving tresses over
her shoulders; her face was kindling with pleasure at the
sight of her old friends, and her whole appearance was
animated and glowing. At the time she came in Mr.
Opie was sitting on a sofa beside Mr. F., who had been
saying from time to time, 'Amelia is coming; Amelia will
surely come. Why is she not here?' and whose eyes were
turned in her direction. He was interrupted by <ins title="original has her">his</ins> companion
eagerly exclaiming, 'Who is that—who is that?'
and hastily rising Opie pressed forward to be introduced
to the fair object whose sudden appearance had so
impressed him.' With all her love of excitement, of
change, of variety, one cannot but feel, as I have said,
that there was also in Amelia Alderson's cheerful life a
vein of deep and very serious feeling, and the bracing
influence of the upright and high-minded people among
whom she had been brought up did not count for nothing
in her nature. She could show her genuine respect for
what was generous and good and true, even though she
did not always find strength to carry out the dream of an
excitable and warm-hearted nature.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>IV.</b></p>
</div>
<p>There is something very interesting in the impression
one receives of the 'Inspired Peasant,' as Alan Cunningham
calls John Opie—the man who did not paint to live so
much as live to paint. He was a simple, high-minded
Cornishman, whose natural directness and honesty were
unspoiled by favour, unembittered by failure. Opie's gift,
like some deep-rooted seed living buried in arid soil, ever
aspired upwards towards the light. His ideal was high;
his performance fell far short of his life-long dream, and
he knew it. But his heart never turned from its life's
aim, and he loved beauty and Art with that true and unfailing
devotion which makes a man great, even though his
achievements do not show all he should have been.</p>
<p>The old village carpenter, his father, who meant him
to succeed to the business, was often angry, and loudly
railed at the boy when good white-washed walls and clean
boards were spoiled by scrawls of lamp-black and charcoal.
John worked in the shop and obeyed his father, but when his
day's task was over he turned again to his darling pursuits.
At twelve years old he had mastered Euclid, and could also
rival 'Mark Oaks,' the village phenomenon, in painting a
butterfly; by the time John was sixteen he could earn as
much as 7<i>s</i>. 6<i>d</i>. for a portrait. It was in this year that
there came to Truro an accomplished and various man
Dr. Wolcott—sometimes a parson, sometimes a doctor of
medicine, sometimes as Peter Pindar, a critic and literary
man. This gentleman was interested by young Opie and
his performances, and he asked him on one occasion how
he liked painting. 'Better than bread-and-butter,' says
the boy. Wolcott finally brought his <i>protégé</i> to London,
where the Doctor's influence and Opie's own undoubted
merit brought him success; and to Opie's own amazement
he suddenly found himself the fashion. His street was
crowded with carriages; long processions of ladies and
gentlemen came to sit to him; he was able to furnish a
house 'in Orange Court, by Leicester Fields;' he was
beginning to put by money when, as suddenly as he had
been taken up, he was forgotten again. The carriages
drove off in some other direction, and Opie found himself
abandoned by the odd, fanciful world of fashions, which
would not be fashions if they did not change day by day.
It might have proved a heart-breaking phase of life for a
man whose aim had been less single. But Opie was of too
generous a nature to value popularity beyond achievement.
He seems to have borne this freak of fortune with great
equanimity, and when he was sometimes overwhelmed, it
was not by the praise or dispraise of others, but by his own
consciousness of failure, of inadequate performance.
Troubles even more serious than loss of patronage and employment
befell him later. He had married, unhappily for
himself, a beautiful, unworthy woman, whose picture he
has painted many times. She was a faithless as well as a
weak and erring wife, and finally abandoned him. When
Opie was free to marry again he was thirty-six, a serious,
downright man of undoubted power and influence, of
sincerity and tenderness of feeling, of rugged and unusual
manners. He had not many friends, nor did he wish for
many, but those who knew him valued him at his worth.
His second wife showed what was in her by her appreciation
of his noble qualities, though one can hardly realise
a greater contrast than that of these two, so unlike in
character, in training, and disposition. They were married
in London, at Marylebone Church, in that dismal year of
'98, which is still remembered. Opie loved his wife deeply
and passionately; he did not charm her, though she
charmed him, but for his qualities she had true respect
and admiration.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>V.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Opie must be forgiven if he was one-idead, if he erred
from too much zeal. All his wife's bright gaiety of nature,
her love for her fellow-creatures, her interest in the world,
her many-sidedness, this uncompromising husband would
gladly have kept for himself. For him his wife and his
home were the whole world; his Art was his whole life.</p>
<p>The young couple settled down in London after their
marriage, where, notwithstanding fogs and smoke and dull
monotony of brick and smut, so many beautiful things are
created; where Turner's rainbow lights were first reflected,
where Tennyson's 'Princess' sprang from the fog. It was
a modest and quiet installation, but among the pretty things
which Amelia brought to brighten her new home we read
of blue feathers and gold gauze bonnets, tiaras, and spencers,
scarlet ribbons, buff net, and cambric flounces, all of which
give one a pleasant impression of her intention to amuse
herself, and to enjoy the society of her fellows, and to bring
her own pleasant contributions to their enjoyment.</p>
<p>Opie sat working at his easel, painting portraits to
earn money for his wife's use and comfort, and encouraging
her to write, for he had faith in work. He himself would
never intermit his work for a single day. He would have
gladly kept her always in his sight. 'If I would stay at
home for ever, I believe my husband would be merry from
morning to night—a lover more than a husband,' Amelia
writes to Mrs. Taylor. He seemed to have some feeling
that time for him was not to be long—that life was passing
quickly by, almost too quickly to give him time to realise
his new home happiness, to give him strength to grasp
his work. He was no rapid painter, instinctively feeling
his light and colour and action, and seizing the moment's
suggestion, but anxious, laborious, and involved in that
sad struggle in which some people pass their lives, for
ever disappointed. Opie's portraits seem to have been
superior to his compositions, which were well painted,
'but unimaginative and commonplace,' says a painter of
our own time, whose own work quickens with that
mysterious soul which some pictures (as indeed some
human beings) seem to be entirely without.</p>
<p>'During the nine years that I was his wife,' says Mrs.
Opie, 'I never saw him satisfied with any one of his productions.
Often, very often, he has entered my sitting-room,
and, throwing himself down in an agony of despondence
upon the sofa, exclaimed, "I shall never be a
painter!"'</p>
<p>He was a wise and feeling critic, however great his
shortcomings as a painter may have been. His lectures
are admirable; full of real thought and good judgment.
Sir James Mackintosh places them beyond Reynolds's in
some ways.</p>
<p>'If there were no difficulties every one would be a
painter,' says Opie, and he goes on to point out what a
painter's object should be—'the discovery or conception
of perfect ideas of things; nature in its purest and most
essential form rising from the species to the genus, the
highest and ultimate exertion of human genius.' For
him it was no grievance that a painter's life should be one
long and serious effort. 'If you are wanting to yourselves,
rule may be multiplied upon rule and precept upon
precept in vain.' Some of his remarks might be thought
still to apply in many cases, no less than they did a
hundred years ago, when he complained of those green-sick
lovers of chalk, brick-dust, charcoal and old tapestry,
who are so ready to decry the merits of colouring and to
set it down as a kind of superfluity. It is curious to
contrast Opie's style in literature with that of his wife,
who belongs to the entirely past generation which she
reflected, whereas he wrote from his own original impressions,
saying those things which struck him as forcibly
then as they strike us now. 'Father and Daughter' was
Mrs. Opie's first acknowledged book. It was published in
1801, and the author writes modestly of all her apprehensions.
'Mr. Opie has no patience with me; he consoles
me by averring that fear makes me overrate others and
underrate myself.' The book was reviewed in the 'Edinburgh.'
We hear of one gentleman who lies awake all
night after reading it; and Mrs. Inchbald promises a
candid opinion, which, however, we do not get. Besides
stories and novels, Mrs. Opie was the author of several
poems and verses which were much admired. There was
an impromptu to Sir James Mackintosh, which brought a
long letter in return, and one of her songs was quoted by
Sydney Smith in a lecture at the Royal Institution. Mrs.
Opie was present, and she used to tell in after times 'how
unexpectedly the compliment came upon her, and how she
shrunk down upon her seat in order to screen herself from
observation.'</p>
<p>The lines are indeed charming:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Go, youth, beloved in distant glades,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> New friends, new hopes, new joys to find,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Yet sometimes deign 'midst fairer maids</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> To think on her thou leav'st behind.</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Thy love, thy fate, dear youth to share</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Must never be my happy lot;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">But thou may'st grant this humble prayer,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Forget me not, forget me not.</td></tr>
<tr><td> </td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Yet should the thought of my distress</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Too painful to thy feelings be,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Heed not the wish I now express,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Nor ever deign to think of me;</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">But oh! if grief thy steps attend,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> If want, if sickness be thy lot,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">And thou require a soothing friend,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left"> Forget me not, forget me not.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VI.</b></p>
</div>
<p>The little household was a modest one, but we read of
a certain amount of friendly hospitality. Country neighbours
from Norfolk appear upon the scene; we find
Northcote dining and praising the toasted cheese. Mrs.
Opie's heart never for an instant ceased to warm to her
old friends and companions. She writes an amusing
account to Mrs. Taylor of her London home, her interests
and visitors, 'her happy and delightful life.' She worked,
she amused herself, she received her friends at home and
went to look for them abroad. Among other visits, Mrs.
Opie speaks of one to an old friend who has 'grown
plump,' and of a second to 'Betsy Fry' who, notwithstanding
her comfortable home and prosperous circumstances, has
grown lean. It would be difficult to recognise under this
familiar cognomen and description the noble and dignified
woman whose name and work are still remembered with
affectionate respect and wonder by a not less hard-working,
but less convinced and convincing generation. This
friendship was of great moment to Amelia Opie in after
days, at a time when her heart was low and her life very
sad and solitary; but meanwhile, as I have said, there
were happy times for her; youth and youthful spirits and
faithful companionship were all hers, and troubles had
not yet come.</p>
<p>One day Mrs. Opie gives a characteristic account of a
visit from Mrs. Taylor's two sons. '"John," said I, "will
you take a letter from me to your mother?" "Certainly,"
replied John, "for then I shall be sure of being welcome."
"Fy," returned I. "Mr. Courtier, you know you want
nothing to add to the heartiness of the welcome you will
receive at home." "No, indeed," said Richard, "and if Mrs.
Opie sends her letter by you it will be one way of making
it less valued and attended to than it would otherwise be."
To the truth of this speech I subscribed and wrote not.
I have heard in later days a pretty description of the
simple home in which all these handsome, cultivated, and
remarkable young people grew up round their noble-minded
mother.' One of Mrs. John Taylor's daughters
became Mrs. Reeve, the mother of Mr. Henry Reeve,
another was Mrs. Austin, the mother of Lady Duff Gordon.</p>
<p>Those lean kine we read of in the Bible are not
peculiar to Egypt and to the days of Joseph and his
brethren. The unwelcome creatures are apt to make
their appearance in many a country and many a household,
and in default of their natural food to devour
all sorts of long-cherished fancies, hopes, and schemes.
Some time after his marriage, Opie suddenly, and for no
reason, found himself without employment, and the severest
trial they experienced during their married life, says his
wife, was during this period of anxiety. She, however,
cheered him womanfully, would not acknowledge her own
dismay, and Opie, gloomy and desponding though he was,
continued to paint as regularly as before. Presently
orders began to flow in again, and did not cease until his
death.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VII.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Their affairs being once more prosperous, a long-hoped-for
dream became a reality, and they started on an expedition
to Paris, a solemn event in those days and not
lightly to be passed over by a biographer. One long war
was ended, another had not yet begun. The Continent
was a promised land, fondly dreamt of though unknown.
'At last in Paris; at last in the city which she had so
longed to see!' Mrs. Opie's description of her arrival
reads <ins title="original lacks like">like</ins> a comment upon history. As they drive into the
town, everywhere chalked up upon the walls and the
houses are inscriptions concerning 'L'Indivisibilité de la
République.' How many subsequent writings upon the
wall did Mrs. Opie live to see! The English party find
rooms at a hotel facing the Place de la Concorde, where the
guillotine, that token of order and tranquillity, was then
perpetually standing. The young wife's feelings may be
imagined when within an hour of their arrival Opie, who
had rushed off straight to the Louvre, returned with a
face of consternation to say that they must leave Paris at
once. The Louvre was shut; and, moreover, the whiteness
of everything, the houses, the ground they stood on, all
dazzled and blinded him. He was a lost man if he remained!
By some happy interposition they succeed in
getting admission to the Louvre, and as the painter
wonders and admires his nervous terrors leave him. The
picture left by Miss Edgeworth of Paris Society in the
early years of the century is more brilliant, but not more
interesting than Mrs. Opie's reminiscences of the fleeting
scene, gaining so much in brilliancy from the shadows all
round about. There is the shadow of the ghastly
guillotine upon the Place de la Concorde, the shadows of
wars but lately over and yet to come, the echo in the air
of arms and discord; meanwhile a brilliant, agreeable,
flashing Paris streams with sunlight, is piled with treasures
and trophies of victory, and crowded with well-known
characters. We read of Kosciusko's nut-brown wig concealing
his honourable scars; Masséna's earrings flash in
the sun; one can picture it all, and the animated inrush
of tourists, and the eager life stirring round about the
walls of the old Louvre.</p>
<p>It was at this time that they saw Talma perform, and
years after, in her little rooms in Lady's Field at Norwich,
Mrs. Opie, in her Quaker dress, used to give an imitation
of the great actor and utter a deep 'Cain, Cain, where art
thou?' To which Cain replies in sepulchral tones.</p>
<p>We get among other things an interesting glimpse of
Fox standing in the Louvre Gallery opposite the picture
of St. Jerome by Domenichino, a picture which, as it is
said, he enthusiastically admired. Opie, who happened to
be introduced to him, then and there dissented from this
opinion. 'You must be a better judge on such points
than I am,' says Fox; and Mrs. Opie proudly writes of
the two passing on together discussing and comparing the
pictures. She describes them next standing before the
'Transfiguration' of Raphael. The Louvre in those days
must have been for a painter a wonder palace indeed. The
'Venus de' Medici' was on her way; it was a time of
miracles, as Fox said. Meanwhile Mrs. Opie hears someone
saying that the First Consul is on his way from the
Senate, and she hurries to a window to look out. 'Bonaparte
seems very fond of state and show for a Republican,' says
Mrs. Fox. Fox himself half turns to the window, then
looks back to the pictures again. As for Opie, one may be
sure his attention never wandered for one instant.</p>
<p>They saw the First Consul more than once. The
Pacificator, as he was then called, was at the height of his
popularity; on one occasion they met Fox with his wife on
his arm crossing the Carrousel to the Tuìlerìes, where they
are also admitted to a ground-floor room, from whence they
look upon a marble staircase and see several officers ascending,
'one of whom, with a helmet which seemed entirely
of gold, was Eugène de Beauharnais. A few minutes
afterwards,' she says, 'there was a rush of officers down
the stairs, and among them I saw a short pale man with
his hat in his hand, who, as I thought, resembled Lord
Erskine in profile….' This of course is Bonaparte,
unadorned amidst all this studied splendour, and wearing
only a little tricoloured cockade. Maria Cosway, the
painter, who was also in Paris at the time, took them to
call at the house of Madame Bonaparte <i>mère</i>, where they
were received by 'a blooming, courteous ecclesiastic,
powdered and with purple stockings and gold buckles, and
a costly crucifix. This is Cardinal Fesch, the uncle of
Bonaparte. It is said that when Fox was introduced to
the First Consul he was warmly welcomed by him, and
was made to listen to a grand harangue upon the advantages
of peace, to which he answered scarcely a word;
though he was charmed to talk with Madame Bonaparte,
and to discuss with her the flowers of which she was so
fond.' The Opies met Fox again in England some years
after, when he sat to Opie for one of his finest portraits.
It is now at Holker, and there is a characteristic description
of poor Opie, made nervous by the criticism of the many
friends, and Fox, impatient but encouraging, and again
whispering, 'Don't attend to them; you must know best.'</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>VIII.</b></p>
</div>
<p>'Adeline Mowbray; or, Mother and Daughter,' was
published by Mrs. Opie after this visit to the Continent.
It is a melancholy and curious story, which seems to have
been partly suggested by that of poor Mary Wollstonecraft,
whose prejudices the heroine shares and expiates by a fate
hardly less pathetic than that of Mary herself. The book
reminds one of a very touching letter from Godwin's wife
to Amelia Alderson, written a few weeks before her death,
in which she speaks of her 'contempt for the forms of a
world she should have bade a long good-night to had she
not been a mother.' Justice has at length been done to
this mistaken but noble and devoted woman, and her story
has lately been written from a wider point of view than
Mrs. Opie's, though she indeed was no ungenerous advocate.
Her novel seems to have given satisfaction; 'a beautiful
story, the most natural in its pathos of any fictitious
narrative in the language,' says the 'Edinburgh,' writing
with more leniency than authors now expect. Another
reviewer, speaking with discriminating criticism, says of
Mrs. Opie: 'She does not reason well, but she has, like
most accomplished women, the talent of perceiving truth
without the process of reasoning. Her language is often
inaccurate, but it is always graceful and harmonious. She
can do nothing well that requires to be done with formality;
to make amends, however, she represents admirably everything
that is amiable, generous, and gentle.'</p>
<p>Adeline Mowbray dies of a broken heart, with the following
somewhat discursive farewell to her child: 'There
are two ways in which a mother can be of use to her
daughter; the one is by instilling into her mind virtuous
principles, and by setting her a virtuous example, the other
is by being to her, in her own person, an awful warning!'</p>
<p> </p>
<p>One or two of Opie's letters to his wife are given in
the memoir. They ring with truth and tender feeling.
The two went to Norwich together on one occasion, when
Opie painted Dr. Sayers, the scholar, who, in return for
his portrait, applied an elegant Greek distich to the
painter. Mrs. Opie remained with her father, and her
husband soon returned to his studio in London. When
she delayed, he wrote to complain. 'My dearest Life, I
cannot be sorry that you do not stay longer, though, as I
said, on your father's account, I would consent to it.
Pray, Love, forgive me, and make yourself easy. I did
not suspect, till my last letter was posted, that it might
be too strong. I had been counting almost the hours till
your arrival for some time. As to coming down again
I cannot think of it, for though I could perhaps better
spare the time at present from painting than I could at
any part of the last month, I find I must now go hard to
work to finish my lectures, as the law says they must be
delivered the second year after the election.'</p>
<p>The Academy had appointed Opie Professor of Painting
in the place of Fuseli, and he was now trying his hand
at a new form of composition, and not without well-deserved
success. But the strain was too great for this
eager mind. Opie painted all day; of an evening he
worked at his lectures on painting. From September to
February he allowed himself no rest. He was not a man
who worked with ease; all he did cost him much effort
and struggle. After delivering his first lecture, he complained
that he could not sleep. It had been a great
success; his colleagues had complimented him, and accompanied
him to his house. He was able to complete the
course, but immediately afterwards he sickened. No one
could discover what was amiss; the languor and fever
increased day by day.</p>
<p>His wife nursed him devotedly, and a favourite sister
of his came to help her. Afterwards it was of consolation
to the widow to remember that no hired nurse had been by
his bedside, and that they had been able to do everything
for him themselves. One thing troubled him as he lay
dying; it was the thought of a picture which he had not
been able to complete in time for the exhibition. A friend
and former pupil finished it, and brought it to his bedside.
He said with a smile, 'Take it away, it will do now.'</p>
<p>To the last he imagined that he was painting upon
this picture, and he moved his arms as though he were at
work. His illness was inflammation of the brain. He
was only forty-five when he died, and he was buried in
St. Paul's, and laid by Sir Joshua, his great master.</p>
<p>The portrait of Opie, as it is engraved in Alan
Cunningham's Life, is that of a simple, noble-looking
man, with a good thoughtful face and a fine head. Northcote,
Nollekens, Horne Tooke, all his friends spoke warmly
of him. 'A man of powerful understanding and ready
apprehension,' says one. 'Mr. Opie crowds more wisdom
into a few words than almost anybody I ever saw,' says
another. 'I do not say that he was always right,' says
Northcote; 'but he always put your thoughts into a new
track that was worth following.' Some two years after
his death the lectures which had cost so much were
published, with a memoir by Mrs. Opie. Sir James
Mackintosh has written one of his delightful criticisms
upon the book:—</p>
<blockquote>
<p>The cultivation of every science and the practice of every
art are in fact a species of action, and require ardent zeal and
unshaken courage…. Originality can hardly exist without
vigour of character…. The discoverer or inventor may
indeed be most eminently wanting in decision in the general
concerns of life, but he must possess it in those pursuits in
which he is successful. Opie is a remarkable instance of the
natural union of these superior qualities, both of which he
possesses in a high degree…. He is inferior in elegance to
Sir Joshua, but he is superior in strength; he strikes more,
though he charms less…. Opie is by turns an advocate, a
controvertist, a panegyrist, a critic; Sir Joshua more uniformly
fixes his mind on general and permanent principles, and certainly
approaches more nearly to the elevation and tranquillity
which seem to characterise the philosophic teacher of an elegant
art.</p>
</blockquote>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>IX.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Mrs. Opie went back, soon after her husband's death,
to Norwich, to her early home, her father's house; nor
was she a widow indeed while she still had this tender
love and protection.</p>
<p>That which strikes one most as one reads the accounts
of Mrs. Opie is the artlessness and perfect simplicity of
her nature. The deepest feeling of her life was her
tender love for her father, and if she remained younger
than most women do, it may have been partly from the
great blessing which was hers so long, that of a father's
home. Time passed, and by degrees she resumed her old
life, and came out and about among her friends. Sorrow
does not change a nature, it expresses certain qualities which
have been there all along.</p>
<p>So Mrs. Opie came up to London once more, and
welcomed and was made welcome by many interesting
people. Lord Erskine is her friend always; she visits
Madame de Staël; she is constantly in company with
Sydney Smith, the ever-welcome as she calls him. Lord
<ins title="original has Bryon">Byron</ins>, Sheridan, Lord Dudley, all appear upon her scene.
There is a pretty story of her singing her best to Lady
Sarah Napier, old, blind, and saddened, but still happy in
that she had her sons to guide and to protect her steps.
Among her many entertainments, Mrs. Opie amusingly
describes a dinner at Sir James Mackintosh's, to which
most of the guests had been asked at different hours,
varying from six to half-past seven, when Baron William
von Humboldt arrives. He writes to her next day, calling
her Mademoiselle Opie, 'no doubt from my juvenile
appearance,' she adds, writing to her father. It is indeed
remarkable to read of her spirits long after middle life, her
interest and capacity for amusement. She pays 4<i>l</i>. for
a ticket to a ball given to the Duke of Wellington; she
describes this and many other masquerades and gaieties,
and the blue ball, and the pink ball, and the twenty-seven
carriages at her door, and her sight of the Emperor of
Russia in her hotel. When the rest of the ladies crowd
round, eager to touch his clothes, Mrs. Opie, carried away
by the general craze, encircles his wrist with her finger
and thumb. Apart from these passing fancies, she is in
delightful society.</p>
<p>Baron Alderson, her cousin and friend, was always kind
and affectionate to her. The pretty little story is well
known of his taking her home in her Quaker dress in the
Judges' state-coach at Norwich, saying, 'Come, Brother
Opie,' as he offered her his arm to lead her to the carriage.
She used to stay at his house in London, and almost the
last visit she ever paid was to him.</p>
<p>One of the most interesting of her descriptions is that
of her meeting with Sir Walter Scott and with Wordsworth
at a breakfast in Mount Street, and of Sir Walter's delightful
talk and animated stories. One can imagine him
laughing and describing a Cockney's terrors in the Highlands,
when the whole hunt goes galloping down the crags,
as is their North-country fashion. 'The gifted man,'
says Mrs. Opie, with her old-fashioned adjectives, 'condescended
to speak to me of my "Father and Daughter."
He then went on faithfully to praise his old friend Joanna
Baillie and her tragedies, and to describe a tragedy he
once thought of writing himself. He should have had
no love in it. His hero should have been the uncle
of his heroine, a sort of misanthrope, with only one
affection in his heart, love for his niece, like a solitary
gleam of sunshine lighting the dark tower of some ruined
and lonely dwelling.'</p>
<p>'It might perhaps be a weakness,' says the Friend,
long after recalling this event, 'but I must confess how
greatly I was pleased at the time.' No wonder she was
pleased that the great wizard should have liked her novel.</p>
<p>It would be impossible to attempt a serious critique of
Mrs. Opie's stories. They are artless, graceful, written
with an innocent good faith which disarms criticism.
That Southey, Sydney Smith, and Mackintosh should also
have read them and praised them may, as I have said,
prove as much for the personal charm of the writer, and
her warm sunshine of pleasant companionship, as for the
books themselves. They seem to have run through many
editions, and to have received no little encouragement.
Morality and sensation alternate in her pages. Monsters
abound there. They hire young men to act base parts, to
hold villainous conversations which the husbands are
intended to overhear. They plot and scheme to ruin the
fair fame and domestic happiness of the charming heroines,
but they are justly punished, and their plots are defeated.
One villain, on his way to an appointment with a married
woman, receives so severe a blow upon the head from her
brother, that he dies in agonies of fruitless remorse.
Another, who incautiously boasts aloud his deep-laid
scheme against Constantia's reputation in the dark recesses
of a stage-coach, is unexpectedly seized by the arm. A
stranger in the corner, whom he had not noticed, was no
other than the baronet whom Constantia has loved all
along. The dawn breaks in brightly, shining on the
stranger's face: baffled, disgraced, the wicked schemer
leaves the coach at the very next stage, and Constantia's
happiness is ensured by a brilliant marriage with the man
she loves. 'Lucy is the dark sky,' cries another lovely
heroine, 'but you, my lord, and my smiling children,
these are the rainbow that illumines it; and who would
look at the gloom that see the many tinted Iris? not I,
indeed.' 'Valentine's Eve,' from which this is quoted,
was published after John Opie's death. So was a novel
called 'Temper,' and the 'Tales of Real Life.' Mrs. Opie,
however, gave up writing novels when she joined the
Society of Friends.</p>
<p>For some years past, Mrs. Opie had been thrown more
and more in the company of a very noble and remarkable
race of men and women living quietly in their beautiful
homes in the neighbourhood of Norwich, but of an influence
daily growing—handsome people, prosperous, generous,
with a sort of natural Priesthood belonging to them.
Scorning to live for themselves alone, the Gurneys were
the dispensers and originators of a hundred useful and
benevolent enterprises in Norwich and elsewhere. They
were Quakers, and merchants, and bankers. How much
of their strength lay in their wealth and prosperity, how
much in their enthusiasm, their high spirits, voluntarily
curbed, their natural instinct both to lead and to protect,
it would be idle to discuss. It is always difficult for
people who believe in the all-importance of the present to
judge of others, whose firm creed is that the present is
nothing as compared to the future. Chief among this
remarkable family was Elizabeth Gurney, the wife of
Josiah Fry, the mother of many children, and the good
angel, indeed, of the unhappy captives of those barbarous
days, prisoners, to whose utter gloom and misery she brought
some rays of hope. There are few figures more striking than
that of the noble Quaker lady starting on her generous
mission, comforting the children, easing the chains of the
captives. No domineering Jellyby, but a motherly, deep-hearted
woman; shy, and yet from her very timidity gaining
an influence, which less sensitive natures often fail to
win. One likes to imagine the dignified sweet face coming
in—the comforting Friend in the quiet garb of the Quaker
woman standing at the gates of those terrible places, bidding
the despairing prisoners be of good hope.</p>
<p>Elizabeth Fry's whole life was a mission of love and
help to others; her brothers and her many relations
heartily joined and assisted her in many plans and efforts.</p>
<p>For Joseph John Gurney, the head of the Norwich
family, Mrs. Opie is said to have had a feeling amounting
to more than friendship. Be this as it may, it is no wonder
that so warm-hearted and impressionable a woman should
have been influenced by the calm goodness of the friends
with whom she was now thrown. It is evident enough,
nor does she attempt to conceal the fact, that the admiration
and interest she feels for John Joseph Gurney are very
deep motive powers. There comes a time in most lives,
especially in the lives of women, when all the habits and
certainties of youth have passed away, when life has to be
built up again upon the foundations indeed of the past, the
friendships, the memories, the habits of early life, but with
new places and things to absorb and to interest, new hearts
to love. And one day people wake up to find that the
friends of their choice have become their home. People
are stranded perhaps seeking their share in life's allowance,
and suddenly they come upon something, with all the
charm which belongs to deliberate choice, as well as that of
natural affinity. How well one can realise the extraordinary
comfort that Amelia Opie must have found in the kind
friends and neighbours with whom she was now thrown!
Her father was a very old man, dying slowly by inches.
Her own life of struggle, animation, intelligence, was
over, as she imagined, for ever. No wonder if for a time
she was carried away, if she forgot her own nature, her
own imperative necessities, in sympathy with this new
revelation. Here was a new existence, here was a Living
Church ready to draw her within its saving walls. John
Joseph Gurney must have been a man of extraordinary
personal influence. For a long time past he had been
writing to her seriously. At last, to the surprise of the
world, though not without long deliberation and her
father's full approval, she joined the Society of Friends,
put on their dress, and adopted their peculiar phraseology.
People were surprised at the time, but I think it would
have been still more surprising if she had not joined them.
J. J. Gurney, in one of his letters, somewhat magnificently
describes Mrs. Opie as offering up her many talents and
accomplishments a brilliant sacrifice to her new-found persuasions.
'Illustrations of Lying,' moral anecdotes on the
borderland of imagination, are all that she is henceforth
allowed. 'I am bound in a degree not to invent a story,
because when I became a Friend it was required of me not
to do so,' she writes to Miss Mitford, who had asked her to
contribute to an annual. Miss Mitford's description of
Mrs. Opie, 'Quakerised all over, and calling Mr. Haydon
'Friend Benjamin,' is amusing enough; and so also is the
account of the visiting card she had printed after she became
a Quaker, with 'Amelia Opie,' without any prefix, as is the
Quaker way; also, as is not their way, with a wreath of
embossed pink roses surrounding the name. There is
an account of Mrs. Opie published in the 'Edinburgh
Review,' in a delightful article entitled the 'Worthies of
Norwich,' which brings one almost into her very presence.</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Amelia Opie at the end of the last century and Amelia
Opie in the garb and with the speech of a member of the
Society of Friends sounds like two separate personages, but no
one who recollects the gay little songs which at seventy she
used to sing with lively gesture, the fragments of drama to
which, with the zest of an innate actress, she occasionally
treated her young friends, or the elaborate faultlessness of her
appearance—the shining folds and long train of her pale satin
draperies, the high, transparent cap, the crisp fichu crossed
over the breast, which set off to advantage the charming little
plump figure with its rounded lines—could fail to recognise the
same characteristics which sparkled about the wearer of the
pink calico domino in which she frolicked incognito 'till she
was tired' at a ball given by the Duke of Wellington in 1814,
or of the eight blue feathers which crowned the waving tresses
of her flaxen hair as a bride.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Doctor Alderson died in October 1825, and Mrs. Opie was
left alone. She was very forlorn when her father died.
She had no close ties to carry her on peacefully from middle
age to the end of life. The great break had come; she was
miserable, and, as mourners do, she falls upon herself and
beats her breast. All through these sad years her friends
at Northrepps and at Earlham were her chief help and
consolation. As time passed her deep sorrow was calmed,
when peaceful memories had succeeded to the keen anguish
of her good old father's loss. She must have suffered
deeply; she tried hard to be brave, but her courage failed
her at times: she tried hard to do her duty; and her
kindness and charity were unfailing, for she was herself
still, although so unhappy. Her journals are pathetic in
their humility and self-reproaches for imaginary omissions.
She is lonely; out of heart, out of hope. 'I am so dissatisfied
with myself that I hardly dare ask or expect a
blessing upon my labours,' she says; and long lists of kind
and fatiguing offices, of visits to sick people and poor people,
to workhouses and prisons, are interspersed with expressions
of self-blame.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>The writer can remember as a child speculating as she
watched the straight-cut figure of a Quaker lady standing
in the deep window of an old mansion that overlooked the
Luxembourg Gardens at Paris, with all their perfume and
blooming scent of lilac and sweet echoes of children, while
the quiet figure stood looking down upon it all from—to a
child—such an immeasurable distance. As one grows older
one becomes more used to garbs of different fashions and
cut, and one can believe in present sunlight and the scent
of flowering trees and the happy sound of children's voices
going straight to living hearts beneath their several disguises,
and Mrs. Opie, notwithstanding her Quaker dress,
loved bright colours and gay sunlight. She was one of those
who gladly made life happy for others, who naturally turned
to bright and happy things herself. When at last she began
to recover from the blow which had fallen so heavily upon
her she went from Norwich to the Lakes and Fells for refreshment,
and then to Cornwall, and among its green seas
and softly clothed cliffs she found good friends (as most
people do who go to that kind and hospitable county), and
her husband's relations, who welcomed her kindly. As she
recovered by degrees she began to see something of her old
companions. She went to London to attend the May meetings
of the Society, and I heard an anecdote not long ago
which must have occurred on some one of these later visits
there.</p>
<p>One day when some people were sitting at breakfast at
Samuel Rogers's, and talking as people do who belong to
the agreeable classes, the conversation happened to turn
upon the affection of a father for his only child, when an
elderly lady who had been sitting at the table, and who
was remarkable for her Quaker dress, her frills and spotless
folds, her calm and striking appearance, started up suddenly,
burst into a passion of tears, and had to be led sobbing
out of the room. She did not return, and the lady who
remembers the incident, herself a young bride at the time,
told me it made all the more impression upon her at the time
because she was told that the Quaker lady was Mrs. Opie.
My friend was just beginning her life. Mrs. Opie must
have been ending hers. It is not often that women, when
youth is long past, shed sudden and passionate tears of mere
emotion, nor perhaps would a Quaker, trained from early
childhood to calm moods and calm expressions, have been
so suddenly overpoweringly affected; but Mrs. Opie was no
born daughter of the community, she was excitable and
impulsive to the last. I have heard a lady who knew her
well describe her, late in life, laughing heartily and impetuously
thrusting a somewhat starched-up Friend into a deep
arm-chair exclaiming, 'I will hurl thee into the bottomless
pit.'</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>X.</b></p>
</div>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">At sight of thee, O Tricolor,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">I seem to feel youth's hours return,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">The loved, the lost!</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>So writes Mrs. Opie at the age of sixty, reviving,
delighting, as she catches sight of her beloved Paris once
more, and breathes its clear and life-giving air, and looks
out across its gardens and glittering gables and spires, and
again meets her French acquaintances, and throws herself
into their arms and into their interests with all her old
warmth and excitability. The little grey bonnet only gives
certain incongruous piquancy to her pleasant, kind-hearted
exuberance. She returns to England, but far-away echoes
reach her soon of changes and revolutions concerning all
the people for whom her regard is so warm. In August,
1830, came the news of a new revolution—'The Chamber
of Deputies dissolved for ever; the liberty of the press
abolished; king, ministers, court, and ambassadors flying
from Paris to Vincennes; cannon planted against the city;
5,000 people killed, and the Rue de Rivoli running with
blood.' No wonder such rumours stirred and overwhelmed
the staunch but excitable lady. 'You will readily believe
how anxious, interested, and excited I feel,' she says; and
then she goes on to speak of Lafayette, 'miraculously preserved
through two revolutions, and in chains and in a
dungeon, now the leading mind in another conflict, and
lifting not only an armed but a restraining hand in a third
revolution.'</p>
<p>Her heart was with her French friends and intimates,
and though she kept silence she was not the less determined
to follow its leading, and, without announcing her
intention, she started off from Norwich and, after travelling
without intermission, once more arrived in her
beloved city. But what was become of the Revolution?
'Paris seemed as bright and peaceful as I had seen it
thirteen months ago! The people, the busy people
passing to and fro, and soldiers, omnibuses, cabriolets,
citadenes, carts, horsemen hurrying along the Rue de
Rivoli, while foot passengers were crossing the gardens, or
loungers were sitting on its benches to enjoy the beauty
of the May-November.' She describes two men crossing
the Place Royale singing a national song, the result of the
Revolution:—</p>
<div class="center">
<table class="sm" style="margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="poem">
<tr><td align="left">Pour briser leurs masses profondes,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">Qui conduit nos drapeaux sanglants,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">C'est la Liberté de deux mondes,</td></tr>
<tr><td align="left">C'est Lafayette en cheveux blancs.</td></tr>
</table></div>
<p>Mrs. Opie was full of enthusiasm for noble Lafayette
surveying his court of turbulent intrigue and shifting
politics; for Cuvier in his own realm, among more
tranquil laws, less mutable decrees. She should have
been born a Frenchwoman, to play a real and brilliant
part among all these scenes and people, instead of only
looking on. Something stirred in her veins too eager and
bubbling for an Englishwoman's scant share of life and
outward events. No wonder that her friends at Norwich
were anxious, and urged her to return. They heard of
her living in the midst of excitement, of admiration, and
with persons of a different religion and way of thinking to
themselves. Their warning admonitions carried their
weight; that little Quaker bonnet which she took so much
care of was a talisman, drawing the most friendly of
Friends away from the place of her adoption. But she
came back unchanged to her home, to her quiet associations;
she had lost none of her spirits, none, of her cheerful
interest in her natural surroundings. As life burnt on
her kind soul seemed to shine more and more brightly.
Every one came to see her, to be cheered and warmed by
her genial spirit. She loved flowers, of which her room
was full. She had a sort of passion for prisms, says her
biographer; she had several set in a frame and mounted
like a screen, and the colour flew about the little room.
She kept up a great correspondence; she was never tired
of writing, though the letters on other people's business
were apt to prove a serious burden at times. But she lives
on only to be of use. 'Take care of indulging in little
selfishnesses,' she writes in her diary; 'learn to consider
others in trifles: the mind so disciplined will find it easier
to fulfil the greater duties, and the character will not
exhibit that trying inconsistency which one sees in great
and often in pious persons.' Her health fails, but not her
courage. She goes up to London for the last time to her
cousin's house. She is interested in all the people she
meets, in their wants and necessities, in the events of the
time. She returns home, contented with all; with the
house which she feels so 'desirable to die in,' with her
window through which she can view the woods and rising
ground of Thorpe. 'My prisms to-day are quite in their
glory,' she writes; 'the atmosphere must be very clear,
for the radiance is brighter than ever I saw it before;' and
then she wonders whether the mansions in heaven will be
draped in such brightness; and so to the last the gentle,
bright, <i>rainbow </i>lady remained surrounded by kind and
smiling faces, by pictures, by flowers, and with the light
of her favourite prismatic colours shining round about the
couch on which she lay.</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="minimal" />
<p> </p>
<h2><SPAN name="JANE_AUSTEN" id="JANE_AUSTEN"></SPAN><i>JANE AUSTEN.</i></h2>
<div class="center">
<p>1775-1817.<br/></p>
</div>
<blockquote>
<p>'A mesure qu'on a plus d'esprit on trouve qu'il y a plus d'hommes
originaux. Les gens du commun ne trouvent pas de différence entre
les hommes.'—<span class="smallcaps">Pascal.</span></p>
</blockquote>
<div class="center">
<p><b>I.</b></p>
</div>
<p>'I did not know that you were a studier of character,'
says Bingley to Elizabeth. 'It must be an amusing study.'</p>
<p>'Yes, but intricate characters are the most amusing.
They have at least that advantage.'</p>
<p>'The country,' said Darcy, 'can in general supply but
few subjects for such a study. In a country neighbourhood
you move in a very confined and unvarying society.'</p>
<p>'But people themselves alter so much,' Elizabeth
answers, 'that there is something new to be observed in
them for ever.'</p>
<p>'Yes, indeed,' cried Mrs. Bennet, offended by Darcy's
manner of mentioning a country neighbourhood; 'I assure
you that we have quite as much of <i>that</i> going on in the
country as in town.'</p>
<p>'Everybody was surprised, and Darcy, after looking at
her for a moment, turned silently away. Mrs. Bennet, who
fancied she had gained a complete victory over him, continued
her triumph.'</p>
<p>These people belong to a whole world of familiar
acquaintances, who are, notwithstanding their old-fashioned
dresses and quaint expressions, more alive to us than
a great many of the people among whom we live. We
know so much more about them to begin with. Notwithstanding
a certain reticence and self-control which seems
to belong to their age, and with all their quaint dresses,
and ceremonies, and manners, the ladies and gentlemen in
'Pride and Prejudice' and its companion novels seem like
living people out of our own acquaintance transported
bodily into a bygone age, represented in the half-dozen
books that contain Jane Austen's works. Dear books!
bright, sparkling with wit and animation, in which the
homely heroines charm, the dull hours fly, and the very
bores are enchanting.</p>
<p>Could we but study our own bores as Miss Austen must
have studied hers in her country village, what a delightful
world this might be!—a world of Norris's economical great
walkers, with dining-room tables to dispose of; of Lady
Bertrams on sofas, with their placid 'Do not act anything
improper, my dears; Sir Thomas would not like it;' of
Bennets, Goddards, Bates's; of Mr. Collins's; of Rushbrooks,
with two-and-forty speeches apiece—a world of
Mrs. Eltons…. Inimitable woman! she must be alive
at this very moment, if we but knew where to find her,
her basket on her arm, her nods and all-importance, with
Maple Grove and the Sucklings in the background. She
would be much excited were she aware how she is esteemed
by a late Chancellor of the Exchequer, who is well acquainted
with Maple Grove and Selina too. It might
console her for Mr. Knightly's shabby marriage.</p>
<p>All these people nearly start out of the pages, so natural
and unaffected are they, and yet they never lived except in
the imagination of one lady with bright eyes, who sat
down some seventy years ago to an old mahogany desk in
a quiet country parlour, and evoked them for us. One
seems to see the picture of the unknown friend who has
charmed us so long—charmed away dull hours, created
neighbours and companions for us in lonely places, conferring
happiness and harmless mirth upon generations
to come. One can picture her as she sits erect, with her
long and graceful figure, her full round face, her bright
eyes cast down,—Jane Austen, 'the woman of whom
England is justly proud'—whose method generous
Macaulay has placed near Shakespeare. She is writing
in secret, putting away her work when visitors come
in, unconscious, modest, hidden at home in heart, as
she was in her sweet and womanly life, with the wisdom
of the serpent indeed and the harmlessness of a
dove.</p>
<p>Some one said just now that many people seem to be so
proud of seeing a joke at all, that they impress it upon you
until you are perfectly wearied by it. Jane Austen was not
of these; her humour flows gentle and spontaneous; it is
no elaborate mechanism nor artificial fountain, but a bright
natural stream, rippling and trickling over every stone and
sparkling in the sunshine. We should be surprised now-a-days
to hear a young lady announce herself as a studier of
character. From her quiet home in the country lane this
one reads to us a real page from the absorbing pathetic
humorous book of human nature—a book that we can
most of us understand when it is translated into plain
English; but of which the quaint and illegible characters
are often difficult to decipher for ourselves. It is a study
which, with all respect for Darcy's opinion, must require
something of country-like calm and concentration and
freedom of mind. It is difficult, for instance, for a too
impulsive student not to attribute something of his own
moods to his specimens instead of dispassionately contemplating
them from a critical distance.</p>
<p>Besides the natural fun and wit and life of her
characters, 'all perfectly discriminated,' as Macaulay says,
Jane Austen has the gift of telling a story in a way that
has never been surpassed. She rules her places, times,
characters, and marshals them with unerring precision.
In her special gift for organisation she seems almost unequalled.
Her picnics are models for all future and past
picnics; her combinations of feelings, of conversation, of
gentlemen and ladies, are so natural and lifelike that reading
to criticise is impossible to some of us—the scene carries
us away, and we forget to look for the art by which it is
recorded. Her machinery is simple but complete; events
group themselves so vividly and naturally in her mind
that, in describing imaginary scenes, we seem not only to
read them, but to live them, to see the people coming and
going: the gentlemen courteous and in top-boots, the
ladies demure and piquant; we can almost hear them
talking to one another. No retrospects; no abrupt flights;
as in real life days and events follow one another. Last
Tuesday does not suddenly start into existence all out of
place; nor does 1790 appear upon the scene when we are
well on in '21. Countries and continents do not fly from
hero to hero, nor do long and divergent adventures happen
to unimportant members of the company. With Jane
Austen days, hours, minutes succeed each other like clockwork,
one central figure is always present on the scene, that
figure is always prepared for company. Miss Edwards's
curl-papers are almost the only approach to dishabille in
her stories. There are postchaises in readiness to convey
the characters from Bath or Lyme to Uppercross, to
Fullerton, from Gracechurch Street to Meryton, as their
business takes them. Mr. Knightly rides from Brunswick
Square to Hartfield, by a road that Miss Austen herself
must have travelled in the curricle with her brother, driving
to London on a summer's day. It was a wet ride for Mr.
Knightly, followed by that never-to-be-forgotten afternoon
in the shrubbery, when the wind had changed into a
softer quarter, the clouds were carried off, and Emma,
walking in the sunshine, with spirits freshened and
thoughts a little relieved, and thinking of Mr. Knightly
as sixteen miles away, meets him at the garden door; and
everybody, I think, must be the happier, for the happiness
and certainty that one half-hour gave to Emma and her
'indifferent' lover.</p>
<p>There is a little extract from one of Miss Austen's
letters to a niece, which shows that all this successful
organisation was not brought about by chance alone, but
came from careful workmanship.</p>
<p>'Your aunt C.,' she says, 'does not like desultory
novels, and is rather fearful that yours will be too much
so—that there will be too frequent a change from one set
of people to another, and that circumstances will be sometimes
introduced of apparent consequence, which will lead
to nothing. It will not be so great an objection to me.
I allow much more latitude than she does, and think nature
and spirit cover many sins of a wandering story….'</p>
<p>But, though the sins of a wandering story may be
covered, the virtues of a well-told one make themselves
felt unconsciously, and without an effort. Some books
and people are delightful, we can scarce tell why; they are
not so clever as others that weary and fatigue us. It is a
certain effort to read a story, however touching, that is
disconnected and badly related. It is like an ill-drawn
picture, of which the colouring is good. Jane Austen
possessed both gifts of colour and of drawing. She could
see human nature as it was; with near-sighted eyes, it is
true; but having seen, she could combine her picture by
her art, and colour it from life. How delightful the people
are who play at cards, and pay their addresses to one
another, and sup, and discuss each other's affairs! Take
Mr. Bennet's reception of his sons-in-law. Take Sir
Walter Elliot compassionating the navy and Admiral
Baldwin—'nine grey hairs of a side, and nothing but a
dab of powder at top—a wretched example of what a seafaring
life can do, for men who are exposed to every climate
and weather until they are not fit to be seen. It is a pity
they are not knocked on the head at once, before they
reach Admiral Baldwin's age….' Or shall we quote the
scene of Fanny Price's return when she comes to visit
her family at Portsmouth; in all daughterly agitation and
excitement, and the brother's and father's and sister's reception
of her…. 'A stare or two at Fanny was all the
voluntary notice that her brother bestowed, but he made
no objection to her kissing him, though still entirely
engaged in detailing further particulars of the "Thrush's"
going out of harbour, in which he had a strong right of
interest, being about to commence his career of seamanship
in her at this very time. After the mother and daughter
have received her, Fanny's seafaring father comes in, and
does not notice her at first in his excitement. "Captain
Walsh thinks you will certainly have a cruise to the westward
with the 'Elephant' by —— I wish you may. But
old Scholey was saying just now that he thought you would
be sent first to the 'Texel.' Well, well, we are ready whatever
happens. But by —— you lost a fine sight by not
being here in the morning to see the 'Thrush' go out of
harbour. I would not have been out of the way for a
thousand pounds. Old Scholey ran in at breakfast time to
say she had slipped her moorings and was coming out. I
jumped up and made but two steps to the platform. If
ever there was a perfect beauty afloat she is one; and
there she lies at Spithead, and anybody in England would
take her for an eight-and-twenty. I was upon the platform
for two hours this afternoon looking at her. She lies
close to the 'Endymion,' between her and the 'Cleopatra,'
just to the eastward of the sheer hulk."'</p>
<p>'"Ha!" cried William, "<i>that's</i> just where I should
have put her myself. It's the best berth in Spithead. But
here is my sister, sir; here is Fanny, turning and leading
her forward—it is so dark you do not see her."'</p>
<p>'With an acknowledgment that he had quite forgot
her, Mr. Price now received his daughter, and having given
her a cordial hug and observed that she was grown into a
woman and he supposed would be wanting a husband soon,
seemed very much inclined to forget her again.'</p>
<p>How admirably it is all told! how we hear them all
talking!</p>
<p>From her own brothers Jane Austen learned her
accurate knowledge of ships and seafaring things, from
her own observation she must have gathered her delightful
droll science of men and women and their ways and various
destinations. Who will not recognise Mrs. Norris in that
master-touch by which she removes the curtain to save Sir
Thomas's feelings, that curtain which had been prepared
for the private theatricals he so greatly disapproved of?
Mrs. Norris thoughtfully carries it off to her cottage, where
she happened to be particularly in want of green baize.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>II.</b></p>
</div>
<p>The charm of friends of pen-and-ink is their unchangeableness.
We go to them when we want them. We
know where to seek them; we know what to expect from
them. They are never preoccupied; they are always
'at home;' they never turn their backs nor walk away as
people do in real life, nor let their houses and leave the
neighbourhood, and disappear for weeks together; they
are never taken up with strange people, nor suddenly
absorbed into some more genteel society, or by some
nearer fancy. Even the most volatile among them is to
be counted upon. We may have neglected them, and yet
when we meet again there are the familiar old friends,
and we seem to find our own old selves again in their
company. For us time has, perhaps, passed away; feelings
have swept by, leaving interests and recollections in their
place; but at all ages there must be days that belong to
our youth, hours that will recur so long as men forbear
and women remember, and life itself exists. Perhaps the
most fashionable marriage on the <i>tapis</i> no longer excites
us very much, but the sentiment of an Emma or an Anne
Elliot comes home to some of us as vividly as ever. It is
something to have such old friends who are so young. An
Emma, blooming, without a wrinkle or a grey hair, after
twenty years' acquaintance; an Elizabeth Bennet, sprightly
and charming ever….</p>
<p>In the 'Roundabout Papers' there is a passage about
the pen-and-ink friends my father loved:—</p>
<p>'They used to call the good Sir Walter the "Wizard of
the North." What if some writer should appear who can
write so <i>enchantingly</i> that he shall be able to call into
actual life the people whom he invents? What if Mignon,
and Margaret, and Goetz von Berlichingen are alive now
(though I don't say they are visible), and Dugald Dalgetty
and Ivanhoe were to step in at that open window by the
little garden yonder? Suppose Uncas and our noble old
Leather Stocking were to glide in silent? Suppose Athos,
Porthos, and Aramis should enter, with a noiseless swagger,
curling their moustaches? And dearest Amelia Booth, on
Uncle Toby's arm; and Tittlebat Titmouse with his hair
dyed green; and all the Crummles company of comedians,
with the Gil Blas troop; and Sir Roger de Coverley; and
the greatest of all crazy gentlemen, the Knight of La
Mancha, with his blessed squire? I say to you, I look
rather wistfully towards the window, musing upon these
people. Were any of them to enter, I think I should not
be very much frightened….'</p>
<p>Are not such friends as these, and others unnamed here,
but who will come unannounced to join the goodly company,
creations that, like some people, do actually make part of
our existence, and make us the better for theirs? To
express some vague feelings is to stamp them. Have we
any one of us a friend in a Knight of La Mancha, a
Colonel Newcome, a Sir Roger de Coverley? They live
for us even though they may have never lived. They are,
and do actually make part of our lives, one of the best and
noblest parts. To love them is like a direct communication
with the great and generous minds that conceived
them.</p>
<p> </p>
<p>It is difficult, reading the novels of succeeding generations,
to determine how much each book reflects of the
time in which it was written; how much of its character
depends upon the mind and the mood of the writer. The
greatest minds, the most original, have the least stamp of
the age, the most of that dominant natural reality which
belongs to all great minds. We know how a landscape
changes as the day goes on, and how the scene brightens
and gains in beauty as the shadows begin to lengthen.
The clearest eyes must see by the light of their own hour.
Jane Austen's literary hour must have been a midday hour:
bright, unsuggestive, with objects standing clear, without
much shadow or elaborate artistic effect. Our own age
is more essentially an age of strained emotion, little
remains to us of starch, or powder, or courtly reserve.
What we have lost in calm, in happiness, in tranquillity,
we have gained in emphasis. Our danger is now, not of
expressing and feeling too little, but of expressing more
than we feel.</p>
<p>The living writers of to-day lead us into distant realms
and worlds undreamt of in the placid and easily contented
gigot age. Our characters travel by rail and are no longer
confined to postchaises. There is certainly a wide difference
between Miss Austen's heroines and, let us say, a
Maggie Tulliver. One would be curious to know whether,
between the human beings who read Jane Austen's books
to-day and those who read them fifty years ago, there is as
great a contrast. One reason may be, perhaps, that characters
in novels are certainly more intimate with us and
on less ceremonious terms than in Jane Austen's days,
when heroines never gave up a certain gentle self-respect
and humour and hardness of heart in which some modern
types are a little wanting. Whatever happens they
could for the most part speak of quietly and without
bitterness. Love with them does not mean a passion so
much as an interest, deep, silent, not quite incompatible
with a secondary flirtation. Marianne Dashwood's tears
are evidently meant to be dried. Jane Bennet smiles, sighs
and makes excuses for Bingley's neglect. Emma passes
one disagreeable morning making up her mind to the
unnatural alliance between Mr. Knightly and Harriet
Smith. It was the spirit of the age, and, perhaps, one
not to be unenvied. It was not that Jane Austen herself
was incapable of understanding a deeper feeling. In the
last written page of her last written book, there is an
expression of the deepest and truest experience. Annie
Elliot's talk with Captain Benfield is the touching utterance
of a good woman's feelings. They are speaking of
men and of women's affections. 'You are always labouring
and toiling,' she says, 'exposed to every risk and hardship.
Your home, country, friends, all united; neither
time nor life to be called your own. It would be too hard,
indeed (with a faltering voice), if a woman's feelings were
to be added to all this.'</p>
<p>Further on she says, eagerly: 'I hope I do justice to
all that is felt by you, and by those who resemble you.
God forbid that I should undervalue the warm and faithful
feelings of any of my fellow-creatures. I should
deserve utter contempt if I dared to suppose that true
attachment and constancy were known only by woman.
No! I believe you capable of everything good and great
in your married lives. I believe you equal to every
important exertion, and to every domestic forbearance so
long as—if I may be allowed the expression—so long as you
have an object; I mean while the woman you love lives
and lives for you. <i>All the privilege I claim for my own
sex (it is not a very enviable one, you need not court it)
is that of loving longest when existence or when hope is
gone.</i>'</p>
<p>She could not immediately have uttered another
sentence—her heart was too full, her breath too much
oppressed.</p>
<p>Dear Anne Elliot!—sweet, impulsive, womanly, tender-hearted—one
can almost hear her voice, pleading the
cause of all true women. In those days when, perhaps,
people's nerves were stronger than they are now, sentiment
may have existed in a less degree, or have been more ruled
by judgment, it may have been calmer and more matter-of-fact;
and yet Jane Austen, at the very end of her life,
wrote thus. Her words seem to ring in our ears after
they have been spoken. Anne Elliot must have been
Jane Austen herself, speaking for the last time. There is
something so true, so womanly about her, that it is impossible
not to love her most of all. She is the bright-eyed
heroine of the earlier novels, matured, softened,
cultivated, to whom fidelity has brought only greater depth
and sweetness instead of bitterness and pain.</p>
<p>What a difficult thing it would be to sit down and try to
enumerate the different influences by which our lives have
been affected—influences of other lives, of art, of nature, of
place and circumstance,—of beautiful sights passing before
our eyes, or painful ones: seasons following in their
course—hills rising on our horizons—scenes of ruin and
desolation—crowded thoroughfares—sounds in our ears,
jarring or harmonious—the voices of friends, calling,
warning, encouraging—of preachers preaching—of people
in the street below, complaining, and asking our pity!
What long processions of human beings are passing before
us! What trains of thought go sweeping through our
brains! Man seems a strange and ill-kept record of many
and bewildering experiences. Looking at oneself—not as
oneself, but as an abstract human being—one is lost in
wonder at the vast complexities which have been brought
to bear upon it; lost in wonder, and in disappointment
perhaps, at the discordant result of so great a harmony.
Only we know that the whole diapason is beyond our
grasp: one man cannot hear the note of the grasshoppers,
another is deaf when the cannon sounds. Waiting among
these many echoes and mysteries of every kind, and light
and darkness, and life and death, we seize a note or two of
the great symphony, and try to sing; and because these
notes happen to jar, we think all is discordant hopelessness.
Then come pressing onward in the crowd of life,
voices with some of the notes that are wanting to our
own part—voices tuned to the same key as our own, or to
an accordant one; making harmony for us as they pass us
by. Perhaps this is in life the happiest of all experience,
and to few of us there exists any more complete
ideal.</p>
<p>And so now and then in our lives, when we learn to
love a sweet and noble character, we all feel happier and
better for the goodness and charity which is not ours, and
yet which seems to belong to us while we are near it.
Just as some people and states of mind affect us uncomfortably,
so we seem to be true to ourselves with a
truthful person, generous-minded with a generous nature;
life seems less disappointing and self-seeking when we
think of the just and sweet and unselfish spirits, moving
untroubled among dinning and distracting influences.
These are our friends in the best and noblest sense. We
are the happier for their existence,—it is so much gain
to us. They may have lived at some distant time, we
may never have met face to face, or we may have known
them and been blessed by their love; but their light
shines from afar, their life is for us and with us in
its generous example; their song is for our ears, and we
hear it and love it still, though the singer may be lying
dead.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>III.</b></p>
</div>
<p>A little book, written by one of Jane Austen's nephews,
tells with a touching directness and simplicity the story
of this good and gifted woman, whose name has long
been a household word among us, but of whose history
nothing was known until this little volume appeared.
It is but the story of a country lady, of quiet days following
quiet days of seasons in their course of common events;
and yet the history is deeply interesting to those who
loved the writer of whom it is written; and as we turn
from the story of Jane Austen's life to her books again, we
feel more than ever that she, too, was one of those true
friends who belong to us inalienably—simple, wise, contented,
living in others, one of those whom we seem to
have a right to love. Such people belong to all humankind
by the very right of their wide and generous sympathies,
of their gentle wisdom and loveableness. Jane
Austen's life, as it is told by Mr. Austen Legh, is very
touching, sweet, and peaceful. It is a country landscape,
where the cattle are grazing, the boughs of the great elm-tree
rocking in the wind: sometimes, as we read, they
come falling with a crash into the sweep; birds are flying
about the old house, homely in its simple rule. The
rafters cross the whitewashed ceilings, the beams project
into the room below. We can see it all: the parlour with
the horsehair sofa, the scant, quaint furniture, the old-fashioned
garden outside, with its flowers and vegetables
combined, and along the south side of the garden the
green terrace sloping away.</p>
<p>There is a pretty description of the sisters' devotion to
one another (when Cassandra went to school little Jane
accompanied her, the sisters could not be parted), of the
family party, of the old place, 'where there are hedgerows
winding, with green shady footpaths within the copse;
where the earliest primroses and hyacinths are found.'
There is the wood-walk, with its rustic seats, leading to
the meadows; the church-walk leading to the church,
'which is far from the hum of the village, and within
sight of no habitation, except a glimpse of the grey manor-house
through its circling screen of sycamores. Sweet
violets, both purple and white, grow in abundance beneath
its south wall. Large elms protrude their rough branches,
old hawthorns shed their blossoms over the graves, and
the hollow yew-tree must be at least coëval with the
church.'</p>
<p>One may read the account of Catherine Morland's
home with new interest, from the hint which is given of
its likeness to the old house at Steventon, where dwelt the
unknown friend whose voice we seem to hear at last, and
whose face we seem to recognise, her bright eyes and
brown curly hair, her quick and graceful figure. One can
picture the children who are playing at the door of the
old parsonage, and calling for Aunt Jane. One can
imagine her pretty ways with them, her sympathy for the
active, their games and imaginations. There is Cassandra.
She is older than her sister, more critical, more beautiful,
more reserved. There is the mother of the family, with
her keen wit and clear mind; the handsome father—'the
handsome proctor,' as he was called; the five brothers,
driving up the lane. Tranquil summer passes by, the
winter days go by; the young lady still sits writing at
the old mahogany desk, and smiling, perhaps, at her own
fancies, and hiding them away with her papers at the
sound of coming steps. Now, the modest papers, printed
and reprinted, lie in every hand, the fancies disport
themselves at their will in the wisest brains and the most
foolish.</p>
<p>It must have been at Steventon—Jane Austen's earliest
home—that Mr. Collins first made his appearance (Lady
Catherine not objecting, as we know, to his occasional
absence on a Sunday, provided another clergyman was
engaged to do the duty of the day), and here, conversing
with Miss Jane, that he must have made many of his profoundest
observations upon human nature; remarking,
among other things, that resignation is never so perfect
as when the blessing denied begins to lose somewhat of its
value in our estimation, and propounding his celebrated
theory about the usual practice of elegant females. It
must have been here, too, that poor Mrs. Bennet declared,
with some justice, that once estates are entailed, one can
never tell how they will go; here, too, that Mrs. Allen's
sprigged muslin and John Thorpe's rodomontades were
woven; that his gig was built, 'curricle-hung lamps,
seat, trunk, sword-case, splashboard, silver moulding, all,
you see, complete. The ironwork as good as new, or
better. He asked fifty guineas…. I closed with
him directly, threw down the money, and the carriage was
mine.'</p>
<p>'And I am sure,' said Catherine, 'I know so little of
such things, that I cannot judge whether it was cheap or
dear.'</p>
<p>'Neither the one nor the other,' says John Thorpe.</p>
<p>Mrs. Palmer was also born at Steventon—that good-humoured
lady in 'Sense and Sensibility,' who thinks it
so ridiculous that her husband never hears her when she
speaks to him. We are told that Marianne and Ellinor
have been supposed to represent Cassandra and Jane
Austen; but Mr. Austen Legh says that he can trace no
resemblance. Jane Austen is not twenty when this book
is written, and only twenty-one when 'Pride and Prejudice'
is first devised.</p>
<p>Cousins presently come on the scene, and amongst
them the romantic figure of a young, widowed Comtesse
de Feuillade, flying from the Revolution to her uncle's
home. She is described as a clever and accomplished
woman, interested in her young cousins, teaching them
French (both Jane and Cassandra knew French), helping
in their various schemes, in their theatricals in the barn.
She eventually marries her cousin, Henry Austen. The
simple family annals are not without their romance; but
there is a cruel one for poor Cassandra, whose lover dies
abroad, and his death saddens the whole family-party. Jane,
too, 'receives the addresses' (do such things as addresses
exist nowadays?) 'of a gentleman possessed of good character
and fortune, and of everything, in short, except the
subtle power of touching her heart.' One cannot help
wondering whether this was a Henry Crawford or an Elton
or a Mr. Elliot, or had Jane already seen the person
that even Cassandra thought good enough for her sister?</p>
<p>Here, too, is another sorrowful story. The sisters' fate
(there is a sad coincidence and similarity in it) was to be
undivided; their life, their experience was the same. Some
one without a name takes leave of Jane one day, promising
to come back. He never comes back: long afterwards
they hear of his death. The story seems even sadder than
Cassandra's in its silence and uncertainty, for silence and
uncertainty are death in life to some people….</p>
<p>There is little trace of such a tragedy in Jane Austen's
books—not one morbid word is to be found, not one vain
regret. Hers was not a nature to fall crushed by the
overthrow of one phase of her manifold life. She seems
to have had a natural genius for life, if I may so speak;
too vivid and genuinely unselfish to fail her in her need.
She could gather every flower, every brightness along her
road. Good spirit, content, all the interests of a happy
and observant nature were hers. Her gentle humour and
wit and interest cannot have failed.</p>
<p>It is impossible to calculate the difference of the grasp
by which one or another human being realises existence
and the things relating to it, nor how much more vivid life
seems to some than to others. Jane Austen, while her
existence lasted, realised it, and made the best use of the
gifts that were hers. Yet, when her life was ending, then
it was given to her to understand the change that was at
hand; as willingly as she had lived, she died. Some
people seem scarcely to rise up to their own work, to their
own ideal. Jane Austen's life, as it is told by her nephew,
is beyond her work, which only contained one phase of
that sweet and wise nature—the creative, observant, outward
phase. For her home, for her sister, for her friends,
she kept the depth and tenderness of her bright and
gentle sympathy. She is described as busy with her neat
and clever fingers sewing for the poor, working fanciful
keepsakes for her friends. There is the cup and ball that
she never failed to catch; the spillikens lie in an even
ring where she had thrown them; there are her letters,
straightly and neatly folded, and fitting smoothly in their
creases. There is something sweet, orderly, and consistent
in her character and all her tastes—in her fondness for
Crabbe and Cowper, in her little joke that she ought to
be a Mrs. Crabbe. She sings of an evening old ballads to
old-fashioned tunes with a low sweet voice.</p>
<p>Further on we have a glimpse of Jane and her sister in
their mobcaps, young still, but dressed soberly beyond
their years. One can imagine 'Aunt Jane,' with her
brother's children round her knee, telling her delightful
stories or listening to theirs, with never-failing sympathy.
One can fancy Cassandra, who does not like desultory
novels, more prudent and more reserved, and somewhat
less of a playfellow, looking down upon the group with
elder sister's eyes.</p>
<p>Here is an extract from a letter written at Steventon
in 1800:—</p>
<p>'I have two messages: let me get rid of them, and
then my paper will be my own. Mary fully intended
writing by Mr. Charles's frank, and only happened entirely
to forget it, but will write soon; and my father wishes
Edward to send him a memorandum of the price of hops.</p>
<p class="right"><i>Sunday Evening.</i></p>
<p>'We have had a dreadful storm of wind in the forepart
of the day, which has done a great deal of mischief
among our trees. I was sitting alone in the drawing-room
when an odd kind of crash startled me. In a moment
afterwards it was repeated. I then went to the window.
I reached it just in time to see the last of our two highly
valued elms descend into the sweep!!!</p>
<p>'The other, which had fallen, I suppose, in the first
crash, and which was nearest to the pond, taking a more
easterly direction, sank among our screen of chestnuts and
firs, knocking down one spruce-fir, breaking off the head
of another, and stripping the two corner chestnuts of
several branches in its fall. This is not all: the maple
bearing the weathercock was broken in two, and what I
regret more than all the rest is, that all the three elms that
grew in Hall's Meadow, and gave such ornament to it, are
gone.'</p>
<p>A certain Mrs. Stent comes into one of these letters
'ejaculating some wonder about the cocks and hens.' Mrs.
Stent seems to have tried their patience, and will be known
henceforward as having bored Jane Austen.</p>
<p>They leave Steventon when Jane is about twenty-five
years of age and go to Bath, from whence a couple of
pleasant letters are given us. Jane is writing to her sister.
She has visited Miss A., who, like all other young ladies,
is considerably genteeler than her parents. She is heartily
glad that Cassandra speaks so comfortably of her health
and looks: could travelling fifty miles produce such an
immediate change? 'You were looking poorly when you
were here, and everybody seemed sensible of it.' Is there
any charm in a hack postchaise? But if there were, Mrs.
Craven's carriage might have undone it all. Then Mrs.
Stent appears again. 'Poor Mrs. Stent, it has been her
lot to be always in the way; but we must be merciful, for
perhaps in time we may come to be Mrs. Stents ourselves,
unequal to anything and unwelcome to everybody.' Elsewhere
she writes, upon Mrs. ——'s mentioning that she
had sent the 'Rejected Addresses' to Mr. H., 'I began
talking to her a little about them, and expressed my hope
of their having amused her. Her answer was, "Oh dear,
yes, very much; very droll indeed; the opening of the
house and the striking up of the fiddles!" What she
meant, poor woman, who shall say?'</p>
<p>But there is no malice in Jane Austen. Hers is the
charity of all clear minds, it is only the muddled who are
intolerant. All who love Emma and Mr. Knightly must
remember the touching little scene in which he reproves
her for her thoughtless impatience of poor Miss Bates's
volubility.</p>
<p>'You, whom she had known from an infant, whom she
had seen grow up from a period when her notice was an
honour, to have you now, in thoughtless spirits and in the
pride of the moment, laugh at her, humble her…. This
is not pleasant to you, Emma, and it is very far from
pleasant to me, but I must, I will, I will tell you truths
while I am satisfied with proving myself your friend by
very faithful counsel, and trusting that you will some time
or other do me greater justice than you can do me
now.'</p>
<p>'While they talked they were advancing towards the
carriage: it was ready, and before she could speak again
he had handed her in. He had misinterpreted the feeling
which kept her face averted and her tongue motionless.'
Mr. Knightly's little sermon, in its old-fashioned English,
is as applicable now as it was when it was spoken. We
know that he was an especial favourite with Jane Austen.</p>
<p> </p>
<div class="center">
<p><b>IV.</b></p>
</div>
<p>Mr. Austen died at Bath, and his family removed to
Southampton. In 1811, Mrs. Austen, her daughters, and
her niece, settled finally at Chawton, a house belonging to
Jane's brother, Mr. Knight (he was adopted by an uncle,
whose name he took), and from Chawton all her literary
work was given to the world. 'Sense and Sensibility,'
'Pride and Prejudice,' were already written; but in the
next five years, from thirty-five to forty, she set to work
seriously, and wrote 'Mansfield Park,' 'Emma,' and 'Persuasion.'
Any one who has written a book will know what
an amount of labour this represents…. One can picture
to oneself the little family scene which Jane describes
to Cassandra. 'Pride and Prejudice' just come down in a
parcel from town; the unsuspicious Miss B. to dinner;
and Jane and her mother setting to in the evening and
reading aloud half the first volume of a new novel sent down
by the brother. Unsuspicious Miss B. is delighted. Jane
complains of her mother's too rapid way of getting on;
'though she perfectly understands the characters herself,
she cannot speak as they ought. Upon the whole, however,'
she says, 'I am quite vain enough and well-satisfied
enough.' This is her own criticism of 'Pride and Prejudice':—'The
work is rather too light, and bright, and
sparkling. It wants shade. It wants to be stretched out
here and there with a long chapter of sense, if it could be
had; if not, of solemn specious nonsense about something
unconnected with the story—an essay on writing, a critique
on Walter Scott or the "History of Bonaparte."'</p>
<p>And so Jane Austen lives quietly working at her labour
of love, interested in her 'own darling children's' success;
'the light of the home,' one of the real living children
says afterwards, speaking in the days when she was no
longer there. She goes to London once or twice. Once
she lives for some months in Hans Place, nursing a brother
through an illness. Here it was that she received some
little compliments and messages from the Prince Regent,
to whom she dedicated 'Emma.' He thanks her and acknowledges
the handsome volumes, and she laughs and
tells her publisher that at all events his share of the
offering is appreciated, whatever hers may be! We are
also favoured with some valuable suggestions from Mr.
Clarke, the Royal librarian, respecting a very remarkable
clergyman. He is anxious that Miss Austen should delineate
one who 'should pass his time between the metropolis
and the country, something like Beattie's minstrel,
entirely engaged in literature, and no man's enemy but
his own.' Failing to impress this character upon the
authoress, he makes a fresh suggestion, and proposes that
she should write a romance illustrative of the august house
of Coburg. 'It would be interesting,' he says, 'and very
properly dedicated to Prince Leopold.'</p>
<p>To which the authoress replies: 'I could no more
write a romance than an epic poem. I could not seriously
sit down to write a romance under any other motive than
to save my life; and if it were indispensable for me to
keep it up, and never relax into laughing at myself or
other people, I am sure I should be hung before the first
chapter.'</p>
<p>There is a delightful collection of friends' suggestions
which she has put together, but which is too long to be
quoted here. She calls it, 'Plan of a Novel, as suggested
by various Friends.'</p>
<p>All this time, while her fame is slowly growing, life
passes in the same way as in the old cottage at Chawton.
Aunt Jane, with her young face and her mob-cap, makes
play-houses for the children, helps them to dress up,
invents imaginary conversations for them, supposing that
they are all grown up, the day after a ball. One can
imagine how delightful a game that must have seemed to
the little girls. She built her nest, did this good woman,
happily weaving it out of shreds, and ends, and scraps of
daily duty, patiently put together; and it was from this
nest that she sang the song, bright and brilliant, with
quaint thrills and unexpected cadences, that reaches us
even here through near a century. The lesson her life
seems to teach us is this: Don't let us despise our nests—life
is as much made of minutes as of years; let us
complete the daily duties; let us patiently gather the
twigs and the little scraps of moss, of dried grass together,
and see the result!—a whole, completed and coherent,
beautiful even without the song.</p>
<p>We come too soon to the story of her death. And yet
did it come too soon? A sweet life is not the sweeter for
being long. Jane Austen lived years enough to fulfil her
mission. She lived long enough to write six books that
were masterpieces in their way—to make a world the
happier for her industry.</p>
<p>One cannot read the story of her latter days, of her
patience, her sweetness, and gratitude, without emotion.
There is family trouble, we are not told of what nature.
She falls ill. Her nieces find her in her dressing-gown,
like an invalid, in an arm-chair in her bedroom; but she
gets up and greets them, and, pointing to seats which had
been arranged for them by the fire, says: 'There is a
chair for the married lady, and a little stool for you,
Caroline.' But she is too weak to talk, and Cassandra
takes them away.</p>
<p>At last they persuade her to go to Winchester, to a
well-known doctor there.</p>
<p>'It distressed me,' she says, in one of her last, dying
letters, 'to see Uncle Henry and William Knight, who
kindly attended us, riding in the rain almost the whole
way. We expect a visit from them to-morrow, and hope
they will stay the night; and on Thursday, which is a
confirmation and a holiday, we hope to get Charles out to
breakfast. We have had but one visit from <i>him</i>, poor
fellow, as he is in the sick room…. God bless you,
dear E.; if ever you are ill, may you be as tenderly nursed
as I have been….'</p>
<p>But nursing does not cure her, nor can the doctor save
her to them all, and she sinks from day to day. To the
end she is full of concern for others.</p>
<p>'As for my dearest sister, my tender, watchful, indefatigable
nurse has not been made ill by her exertions,'
she writes. 'As to what I owe her, and the anxious
affection of all my beloved family on this occasion, I can
only cry over it, and pray God to bless them more and
more.'</p>
<p>One can hardly read this last sentence with dry eyes.
It is her parting blessing and farewell to those she had
blessed all her life by her presence and her love—that
love which is beyond death; and of which the benediction
remains, not only spoken in words, but by the ever-present
signs and the tokens of those lifetimes which do not end
for us as long as we ourselves exist.</p>
<p>They asked her when she was near her end if there
was anything she wanted.</p>
<p>'Nothing but death,' she said. Those were her last
words. She died on the 18th of July, 1817, and was
buried in Winchester Cathedral, where she lies not unremembered.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="minimal" />
<p> </p>
<h3>FOOTNOTES</h3>
<p class="revind"><SPAN name="fn1" id="fn1"></SPAN><SPAN href="#fn1r">1</SPAN>: In a notice of Miss Seward in the <i>Annual Register</i>, just after her
death in 1809, the writer, who seems to have known her, says:—'Conscious
of ability, she freely displayed herself in a manner equally remote from
annoyance and affectation…. Her errors arose from a glowing
imagination joined to an excessive sensibility, cherished instead of
repressed by early habits. It is understood that she has left the whole
of her works to Mr. Scott, the northern poet, with a view to their publication
with her life and posthumous pieces.'</p>
<p class="revind"><SPAN name="fn2" id="fn2"></SPAN><SPAN href="#fn2r">2</SPAN>: Mrs. Burke, hearing more of the circumstances, afterwards sent
permission; but Mrs. Leadbeater being a Quakeress, and having once
<i>promised</i> not to publish, could not take it upon herself to break her
covenant.</p>
<p class="revind"><SPAN name="fn3" id="fn3"></SPAN><SPAN href="#fn3r">3</SPAN>: A touching illustration of her abiding influence is to be found cited
in an article in the <i>Daily News</i> of September 7, 1883, published as these
proofs are going to press, by 'One Who Knew' Ivan Turguéneff, that
great Russian whom we might almost claim if love and admiration gave
one a right to count citizenship with the great men of our time. An
elder brother of his knew Miss Edgeworth, perhaps at Abbotsford, for
he visited Walter Scott there, or at Coppet with Madame de Staël.
This man, wise and cultivated in all European literature, 'came to the
conclusion that Maria Edgeworth had struck on a vein from which
most of the great novelists of the future would exclusively work. She
took the world as she found it, and selected from it the materials that
she thought would be interesting to write about, in a clear and natural
style. It was Ivan Turguéneff himself who told me this, says the writer of
the article, and he modestly said that he was an unconscious disciple of
Miss Edgeworth in setting out on his literary career. He had not the
advantage of knowing English; but as a youth he used to hear his
brother translate to visitors at his country house in the Uralian Hills
passages from <i>Irish Tales and Sketches</i>, which he thought superior to
her three-volume novels. Turguéneff also said to me,"It is possible, nay
probable, that if Maria Edgeworth had not written about the poor Irish
of the co. Longford and the squires and squirees, that it would not have
occurred to me to give a literary form to my impressions about the classes
parallel to them in Russia. My brother used, in pointing out the
beauties of her unambitious works, to call attention to their extreme
simplicity and to the distinction with which she treated the simple
ones of the earth."'</p>
<p class="revind"><SPAN name="fn4" id="fn4"></SPAN><SPAN href="#fn4r">4</SPAN>: And yet as I write I remember one indeed who is among us, whose
portrait a Reynolds or an Opie might have been glad to paint for the
generations who will love her works.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="narrow" />
<p> </p>
<table class="sm" border="0" style="background-color: #E6F6FA; margin: 0 auto" cellpadding="10" summary="NOTES">
<tr>
<td colspan="2">
<div class="center">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</div>
<p class="noindent" style="background-color: #E6F6FA">
Two instances of Bryon for <i>Byron</i> have been corrected.
The following additional changes have been made and can be identified
in the body of the text by a grey dotted underline:</p>
</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left" valign="top">A. I. R. (in dedication)</td>
<td align="left" valign="top">A. <i>T.</i> R.</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left" valign="top">her sad and dimning life</td>
<td align="left" valign="top">her sad and <i>dimming</i> life</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left" valign="top">it was to her father hat</td>
<td align="left" valign="top">it was to her father <i>that</i></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left" valign="top">who invited Mrs. Barbauld to become their minister</td>
<td align="left" valign="top">who invited <i>Mr.</i> Barbauld to become their minister</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left" valign="top">He was interrupted by her companion</td>
<td align="left" valign="top">He was interrupted by <i>his</i> companion</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td align="left" valign="top">Mrs. Opie's description of her arrival reads a comment upon history.</td>
<td align="left" valign="top">Mrs. Opie's description of her arrival reads <i>like</i> a comment upon history.</td>
</tr>
</table>
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