\ "'^v - ^^L ( w^ * f ^- , ^Jlass. '^ \ ! Book_ " ■'■ ^ By bequest of William Lukens Shoemaker ,HU;p*lot,OMONS:^ ' 1 //'/f ^? I %^-^^^^, X MEMOIR CHARLES LAMB / CHARLES LAMB ^ Jlemoir BARRY CORNWALL BOSTON ROBERTS BROTHERS iS66 T7 . W. L. Slu>*maker J S '06 STEREOTYPED AT THE BOSTON STEREOTYPE FOUNDRY, 4 Spring La7ie. Presswork by John Wilson ajjfi Son. PREFACE In my seventy-seventh year, I have been invited to place on record my recollections of Charles Lamb. I am, I believe, nearly the only man now surviving who knew much of the excellent " Elia." Assuredly I knew him more inti- mately than any other existing person, during the last seventeen or eighteen years of his life. In this pi-edicament, and because I am proud to associate my name with his, I shall endeavor to recall former times, and to bring my old friend before the eyes of a new generation. I request the " courteous reader " to accept, for what they are worth, these desultory labors of a lover of letters ; and I hope that the advocate for modern times will try to admit into A (5) 6 PREFACE. the circle of his sympathy my recollections of a fine Genius departed. No harm — possibly some benefit — will ac- crue to any one who may consent to extend his acquaintance to one of the rarest and most delicate of the Humorists of England. B. W. Procter. Afay, 1866. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Page Iwtroduclion. — Biography : Few Events. — One pre- . dominant. — His Devotion to it. — Tendency to Lit- erature. — First Studies, —f Influence of Antique Dwellings, -f— Early Friends. — Humor. — Quali- ties of Biad. — \SympatJiy for neglected Objects.. — A Nonconformist. — Predilections. — Character. — Taste. — Style 11 CHAPTER II. Birth and Parentage. — Christ's Hospital. — South Sea House and India House. — Condition of Fam- ily. — Death of Ifother. — Mary in'AsyUom. — John Lamh. — Charles's Means of Living. — His Home. — Despondency. — Alice W. — Brother and Sister. 31 (7) 61 8 CONTENTS. CHAPTER III. Jem White. — Coleridge. — Lamh's Inspiration. — Early Letters. — Poem published. — Charles Lloyd. — Lilcin,g for Burns, ^c. — Quakerism. — Robert Southey. — Southey and Coleridge. — Antijacobin. — Rosamond Gray. — 'George Dyer. — Manning. — Mary's Illnesses. — 3Iigrations. — Hester Sa- vory CHAPTER IV. {Migrations.') — " John Woodvil." — BlacTcesmoor. — Wordsworth. — RicJcman. — Godwin. — Visit to the Lakes. — 3Iorning Post. — Hazlitt. — Nel- son. — Ode to Tobacco. — Dramatic Specimens, ^c. — Inner Temple Lane. — Reflector. — Hogarth and Sir J. Reynolds, — Leigh Hunt. — Lamb, Hazlitt, and Hunt. — Russell Street and The- atrical Friends 100 CHAPTER V. 3Iy RecollerMons. — Russell Street. — Personal Ap- pearance. — Planner. — Tendency of Mind. — Prej- CONTENTS. 9 udices. — Alleged Excesses. — Mode of Life. — Love of SnioTiing. — His Lodgings. — His Sister. — Costume. — Reading aloud. —^Tastes and Opin- ions. -+ London. — Love of Boohs. — Charity. — Wednesday Parties. — His Companions. — Epi- taph upon them, 142 CHAPTER VI. London Magazine. — Contributors. — Transfer of Magazine. — Monthly Dinners and Visitors. — ColehrooJc Cottage. — Lamb's Walks. — Essays of Mia ; Their Excellence and Cliaracter.. — En- larged Acquaintance. — Visit to Paris. — Miss Isola. — Quarrel with Southey. — Leaves India House. '— Leisure. — Amicus Redivivus. — Ed- ward Irving. 179 CHAPTER VII. Specimen of Lamb's Humor. — Death of Mr. Nor- ris. — Garrick Plays. — Letters to Barton. — Opinions on Boohs. — Breakfast with Mr. N. P. Willis. — Moves to Enfield. — Caricature of Lamb. lO CONTENTS, — ATbwms and Acrostics. — Pains of Leisure. — The Barton Correspondence. — Death of Hazlitt. — Munden's Acting and Quitting the Stage. — Lamb becomes a Boarder. — Moves to Edvno^iton. — Metropolitan Attachments. — Death of Coleridge. — Lamb's Fall and Death. — Death of Mary Lamb 228 POSTSCRIPT. 273 APPENDIX. .279 CHARLES LAMB. CHAPTER I. Introduction. — JBiography : Fexv Events. — One predojninant. — His Devotion to it. — Tendency to Literature. — First Studies. — Influence of Antique Dxvellings. — Early Friends. — Httmor. — ^lalities ofl Mind. — Sympathy for neglected Objects. — A Noit- conformist. — Predilectioizs. — Character. — Taste. — Style. THE biography of Charles Lamb lies with- in a narrow compass. It comprehends only few events. His birth and parentage, and domestic sorrows ; his acquaintance with re- markable men ; his thoughts and habits ; and his migrations from one home to another, — con- stitute the sum and substance of his almost un- 12 ONE OBJECT. eventful history. It is a history with one event, predominant. For this reason, and because I, in common with many others, hold a book needlessly large to be a great evil, it is my intention to confine the present . memoir within moderate limits. My aim is not to write the "Life and Times" of Charles Lamb. Indeed-, Lamb had no in- fluence on his own times. He had little or nothing in common with his generation, which was almost a stranger to him. There was no reciprocity between them. His contemplations were retrospective. He was, when living, the centre of a small social circle ; and I shall therefore deal incidentally with some of its members. In other respects, this memoir will contain only what I recollect and what I have learned from authentic sources of my old friend. The fact that distinguished Charles Lamb from other men was his entire devotion to one grand and tender purpose. There is, probably, a romance involved in every life. In his life it EIS DEVOTION TO IT. 13 exceeded that of others. In gravity, in acute- ness, in his noble battle with a great calamity, it was beyond the rest. Neither pleasure nor toil ever distracted him from his holy purpose. Everything was made subservient to it. He had an insane sister, who, in a moment of uncontrol- lable madness, had unconsciously destroyed her own mother ; and to protect and save this sister — a gentle woman, who had watched like a mother over his own infancy — the whole length of his life was devoted. What he endured, through the space of nearly forty years, from the incessant fear and frequent recurrence of his sister's insanity, can now only be conjectured. In this constant and uncomplaining endurance, and in his steady adherence to a great principle of conduct, his life was heroic. We read of men giving up all their days to a single object — to religion, to vengeance, to some overpowering selfish wish ; of daring acts done to avert death or disgrace, or some oppress- ing misfortune. We read mythical tales of 14 TENDENCY TO LITERATURE. friendship ; but we do not recollect any instance in which a great object has been so unremit- tingly carried out throughout a whole life, in defiance of a thousand difficulties, and of num- berless temptations, straining the good resolution to its utmost, except in the case of our poor clerk of the India House. This was, substantially, his life. His actions, thoughts, and sufferings were all concentred on this one important end. It was what he had to do ; it was in his reach ; and he did it, therefore, manfully, religiously. He did not waste his mind on too many things ; for whatever too much expands the mind weakens it ; nor on vague or multitudinous thoughts and specula- tions ; nor on dreams or things distant or un- attainable. However interesting, they did not absorb him, body and soul, like the safety and welfare of his sister. Subject to this primary unflinching purpose, the tendency of Lamb's mind pointed strongly towards literature. He 'did not seek literature, FIRST STUDIES. 15 however ; and he gained from it nothing except his fame. He worked laboriously at the India House from boyhood to manhood ; for . many years without repining ; although he miist have been conscious of an intellect qualified to shine in other ways than in entering up a trader's books. None of those coveted offices, which bring money and comfort in their train, ever reached Charles Lamb. He w^as never under that bounteous shower which government lead- ers and persons of influence direct towards the heads of their adherents. No Dives ever selected him for his golden bounty. No potent critic ever shouldered him up the hill of fame. In the absence of these old-fashioned helps, he was con- tent that his ovvrn unassisted efforts should gain for him a certificate of capability to the world, and that the choice reputation which he thus earned should, with his own qualities, bring round him the unenvying love of a host of friends. Lamb had always been a studious boy and a 1 6 LOVE OF RE AD IN a. great reader ; and after passing through Christ's Hospital and the South Sea House, and being for some years in the India House, this instinc- tive passion of his mind (for literature) broke out. In this he was, without doubt, influenced by the example and counsel of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, his school-fellow and friend, for whom he entertained a high and most tender respect. The first books which he loved to read were volumes of poetry, and essays on serious and religious themes. The works of all the old poets, the history of Quakers, the biography of Wesley, the conti'oversial papers of Priestley, and other books on devout subjects, sank into his mind. From reading he speedily rose to writ- ing ; from being a reader he became an author. His first writings were entirely serious. These were verses, or letters, wherein religious thoughts and secular- criticisms took their places in turn ; or they were grave dramas, which exhibit and lead to the contemplation of character, and which nourish those moods out of which humor ulti- mately arises. PECULIAR HUMOR. 17 So much has been ah^eady pubHshed, that it is needless to encumber this short narrative with any minute enumeration of the quahties which constitute his station in literature ; but I shall, as a part of my task, venture to refer to some of those which distinguish him from other writers. Lamb's very curious and peculiar humor showed itself early. It was perhaps born of the solitude in which his childhood passed away ; perhaps cherished by the seeds of mad- ness that were in him, that were in his sister, that were in the ancestry from which he sprung. Without doubt, it caught color from the scenes in the midst of which he grew up. Born in the Temple, educated in Christ's Hospital, and passed onwards to the South Sea House, his first visions were necessarily of antiquity. The grave old buildings, tenanted by lawyers and their clerks, wei'e replaced by " the old and awful cloisters " of the School of Edward ; and these in turn gave way to the palace of the 2 1 8 EARLY FRIENDS. famous Bubble, now desolate, with its unpeopled Committee Rooms, its pictures of Governors of Qiieen Anne's time, " its dusty maps of Mexico, dim as dreams, and soundings of the Bay of Panama." These things, if they impressed his mind imperfectly at first, in time formed them- selves into the shape of truths, and assumed sig- nificance and impoi'tance ; as words and things, glanced over hastily in childhood, grow and ripen, and enrich the understanding in after days. Lamb's earliest friends and confidants, with one exception, were singularly void of wit and the love of jesting. His sister was grave ; his father gradually sinking into dotage : Cole- ridge was immersed in religious subtilties and poetic dreams ; and Charles Lloyd, sad and logical and analytical, was the antithesis of all that is lively and humorous. But thoughts and images stole in from other quarters ; and Lamb's mind was essentially quick and pro- ductive. Nothing lay barren in it ; and much QUALITIES OF MIND. " 19 of what was planted there, grew, and spread, and became beautiful. He himself has sown the seeds of humor in many English hearts. His own humor is essentially English. It is addressed to his own countrymen ; to the mea " whose limbs were made in England ; " not to foreign intellects, nor perhaps to the uni- versal mind. Humor, which is the humor of a man (of the writer himself or of his crea- tions), must frequently remain, in its fragrant blossoming state, in the land of its birth. Like some of the most delicate wines and flowers, it will not bear travel. Apart from his humor and other excel- lences, Charles Lamb combined qualities such as are seldom united in one person ; which in- deed seem not easily reconcilable with each other : namely, much prudence, with much generosity ; great tenderness of heart, with a firm will. To these was superadded that racy humor which has served to distinguish him from other men. There is no other writer, 20 SYMPATHY. that I know of, in whom tenderness, and good sense, and humor are so intunately and hap- pily blended ; no one whose view of men and things is so invariably generous, and true, and independent. These qualities made their way slowly and fairly. They were not taken up as a matter of favor or fancy, and then abandoned. They struggled through many years of neglect, and some of contumely, be- fore they took their stand triumphantly, and as things not to be ignored by any one. Lamb pitied all objects which had been neglected or despised. Nevertheless the lens through VN^hich he viewed the objects of his pity, — beggars, and chimney-sweepers, and con- victs, — was always clear : it served him even when their short-comings were to be contem- plated. For he never paltered with truth. He had no weak sensibilities, few tears for imaginary griefs. But his heart opened wide to real distress. He never applauded the fault ; but he pitied the offender. He had a A NONCONFORMIST. 21 word of compassion for the sheep-stealer, who was arrested and lost his ill-acquired sheep, " his first, last, and only hope of a mutton pie ; " and vented his feelings in that sonnet (rejected by the magazines) which he has called " The Gypsey's Malison." Although he was willing to acknowledge merit when it was successful, he preferred it, perhaps, when it was not clothed with prosperity. By education and habit, he was a Unita- rian. Indeed, he was a true Nonconformist in all things. He was not a dissenter by imita- tion, nor from any deep principle or obstinate heresy ; nor was he made servile and obedient by formal logic alone. His reasoning always rose and streamed through the heart. He liked a friend for none of the ordinary rea- sons ; because he was famous, or clever, or powerful, or popular. He at once took issue with the previous verdicts, and examined the matter in his ow^n way. If a man was unfor- tunate, he gave him money. If he was calum- 22 , PBEDILEOTIONS. niated, he accorded him sympathy. He gave freely ; not to merit, but to want. He pursued his own fancies, his own pre- dilections. He did not neglect his own in- stinct (which is always true), and aim at things foreign to his nature. He did not cling to any superior intellect, nor cherish any infe- rior humorist or wit. Perhaps no one ever thought more inde- pendently. He had great enjoyment in the talk of able men, so that it did not savor of form or pretension. He liked the strenuous talk of Hazlitt, who never descended to fine words. He liked the unafl:ected, quiet conver- sation of Manning, the vivacious, excursive talk of Leigh Hunt. He heard with wonder- ing admiration the monologues of Coleridge. Perhaps he liked the simplest talk the best ; expressions of pity or sympathy, or affection for others ; from young people, who thought and said little or nothing about themselves. He had no craving for popularity, nor even TREDILECTIONB. 23 for fame. I d^ not recollect any passage in his writings, nor any expression in his talk, which runs counter to ray opinion. In this respect he aeems to have differed from ^ILLton (who desired feme, like " Blind Thamjris and blind ilaeonides"), and to have rather resem- bled Shakespeare, who w^as indifferent to fame or assured of it ; but perhaps he resembled no one. Lamb had not many personal antipathies, but he had a strong aversion to pretence and false repute. In particular, he resented the adulation of the epitaph-mongers -^'ho endeav- ored to place Garrick, the actor, on a level with Shakespeare. Of that greatest of all po- ets he has said such things as I imagine Shakespeare himself w^ould have liked to hear. He has also uttered brave words in behalf of Shakespeare's contemporary dramatists ; partly because they deser\'ed thern, partly because they were unjustly forgotten. The sentence of oblivion, passed by ignorant ages on the rep- 24 PREDILECTIONS. utation of these fine authors, he has annulled, and forced the world to confess that preced- ing judges were incompetent to entertain the case. I cannot imagine the mind of Charles Lamb, even in early boyhood, to have been weak or childish. In his first letters you see that he was a thinker. He is for a time made som- bre by unhappy reflections. He is a reader of thoughtful books. The witticisms which he coined for sixpence each (for the Morning Chronicle) had, no doubt, less of metallic lustre than those which he afterwards medi- tated ; and which were highly estimated. Effodiuntur opes. His jests were never the mere over-flowings of the animal spirits, but were exercises of the mind. He brought the wisdom of old times and old writers to bear upon the taste and intellect of his day. What was in a manner foreign to his age, he nat- uralized and cherished. And he did this with judgment and great delicacy. His books PBEDILE0TI0N8. 2$ never unhinge or weaken the mind, but bring before it tender and beautiful thoughts, which charm and nourish it as only good books can. No one was ever worse from reading Charles Lamb's writings ; but many have become wiser and better. Sometimes, as he hints, " he affected that dangerous figure, irony ; " and he would sometimes interrupt grave dis- cussion, when he thought it too graye, with some light jest, which nevertheless was " not quite irrelevant." Long talkers, as he con- fesses, " hated him ; " and assuredly he hated long talkers. In his countenance you might sometimes read — what may be occasionally read on al- most all foreheads — the letters and lines of old, unforgotten calamity. Yet there was at the bottom of his nature a buoyant self-sus- taining strength ; for although he encountered frequent seasons of mental distress, his heart recovered itself in the interval, and rose and sounded, like music played to a happy tune. 26 TASTE. Upon fit occasion, his lips could shut in a firm fashion ; but the gentle smile that played about his face showed that he was always ready to relent. His quick eye never had any sullenness : his mouth, tender and trem- ulous, showed that there would be nothing cruel or inflexible in his nature. On referring to his letters, it must be con- fessed that in literature Lamb's taste, like that of all others, was at first imperfect. For taste is a portion of our judgment, and must depend a good deal on our experience, and on our opportunities of comparing the claims of different pretenders. Lamb's affections swayed him at all times. He sympathized deeply with Cowper and his melancholy his- tory, and at first estimated his verse, perhaps, beyond its strict value. He was intimate with Southey, and anticipated that he would rival Milton. Then his taste was at all times peculiar. He seldom worshipped the Idol which the multitude had set up. I was STYLE. 27 never able to prevail on him to admit that "Paradise Lost" was greater than "Paradise Regained ; " I believe, indeed, he liked the last the best. He would not discuss the Po- etiy of Lord Byron or Shelley, with a view of being convinced of their beauties. Apart from a few points like these, his opinions must be allowed to be sound ; almost always ; if not as to the style of the author, then as to the quality of his book or passage which he chose to select. And his own style was always good, from the beginning, in verse as well as in prose. His first sonnets are un- affected, well sustained, and well written. I do not know much of the opinion of others ; but to my thinking the style of Charles Lamb, in his " Elia," and in the letters writ- ten by him in the later (the last twenty) years of his life, is full of grace ; not antiquated, but having a touch of antiquity. It is self- possessed, choice, delicate, penetrating, his words running into the innermost sense of 2S STYLE. things. It is not, indeed, adapted to the meanest capacity, but is racy, and chaste, after his fashion. Perhaps it is sometimes scrip- tural : at all events it is always earnest and sin- cere. He was painfully in earnest in his advo- cacy of Hazlitt and Hunt, and in his pleadings for Hogarth and the old dramatists. Even in his humor, his fictitious (as well as his real) per- sonages have a character of reality about thein which gives them their standard value. They all ring like true coin. In conversation he loved to discuss persons or books, and seldom ventured upon the stormy sea of politics ; his intimates lying on the two opposite shores, Liberal and Tory. Yet, when occasion moved him, he did not refuse to express his liberal opinions. There was little or nothing cloudy or vague about him ; he required that there should be known ground even in fiction. He rejected the poems of Shelley (many of them so consummately beautiful), because they were too exclusively ideal. Their efflorescence, he STYLE. 29 thought, was not natural. He preferred Southey's "Don Roderick" to his "Curse of Kehama ; " of which latter poem he says, " I don't feel that 'firm footing in it that I do in ' Roderick.' My imagination goes sinking and floundering in the vast spaces of unopened systems and faiths. I am put out of the pale of my old sympathies." Charles Lamb had much respect for some of the modern authors. In particular, he ad- mired (to the full extent of his capacity for liking) Coleridge, and Wordsworth, and Burns. But with these exceptions his aflections rested mainly on writers who had lived before him ; on so7ne of them ; for there were " things in books' clothing " from ^vhich he turned away loathing. He was not a worshipper of the customs and manners of old times, so much as of the tangible objects that old times have bequeathed to us ; the volumes tinged with de- cay, the buildings (the Temple, Christ's Hos- pital, &c.) colored and enriched by the hand of age. Apart from these, he clung to the B 30 STYLE. time present ; for if he hated anything in tlie extreme degree, he hated change. He cking to life, although life had bestowed upon him no magnificent gifts ; none, indeed, beyond books, and friends (a " ragged regi- ment"), and an affectionate, contented mind. He had, he confesses, " an intolerable disincli- nation to dying ; " which beset him especially in the winter months. " I am not content to pass away like a weaver's shuttle. Any al- teration in this earth of mine discomposes me. My household gods plant a terrible fixed foot, and are not rooted up without blood." He seems never to have looked into the Fu- ture. His eyes were on the present or (oftener) on the past. It was always thus from his boyhood. His first readings were principally Beaumont and Fletcher, Massinger, Isaac Walton, &c. "I gather myself up " (he writes) "unto the old things." He has in- deed extracted the beauty and innermost value of Antiquity, whenever he "has pressed it into his service. ( 31 ) CHAPTER II. Sirth and Parentage. — Chrisfs Hospital. — South Sea Hotise and India House. — Con- dition of Fainily. — Death of Mother. — Mary in Asylimi. — John Lamb. — Charleses Means of Living. — His Home. — Despond- ency. — Alice W. — Brother and Sister. ^N the south side of Fleet Street, near to where it adjoins Temj^le Bar, lies the In- ner Temple. It extends southward to th© Thames, and contains long ranges of melancholy buildings, in which lawyers (those reputed birds of prey) and their followers congregate. It is a district very memorable. About seven hun- dred years ago, it was the abiding-place of the Knights Templars, who erected there a church, which still uplifts its round tower (its sole relic) for the wonder of modern times. Fifty years since, I remember, you entered the precinct 32 BIRTH AND PARENTAGE. through a lowering archway that opened into a gloomy passage — Inner Temple Lane. On the east side rose the church ; and on the west was a dark line of chambers, since pulled down and rebuilt, and now called Johnson's Buildings. At some distance westward was an open court, in which was a sun-dial, and, in the midst, a solitary fountain, that sent its silvery voice into the air above, the murmur of which, descend- ing, seemed to render the place more lonely. Midway, between the Inner Temple Lane and the Thames, was, and I believe still is, a range qf substantial chambers (overlooking the gar- dens amd the busy river), called Crown Office Row. In one of these chambers, on the i8th day of February, 1775, Charles Lamb was born. He was the son of John and Elizabeth Lamb ; and he and his brother John and his sister Maty (both of whom were considerably older than himself) were the only children of their parents. John was twelve years, and Mar}' (properly BIRTH AND PABENTAGE. 33 Mary Anne) was ten years older than Charles. Their father held the post of clerk to Mr. Samuel Salt, a barrister, one of the benchers of the Inner Temple ; a mild, amiable man, very indolent, very shy, and, as I imagine, not much known in what is called " the pro- fession." Lamb sprang, paternally, from a humble stock, which had its root in the county of Lin- coln. At one time of his life his father appears to have dwelt at Stamford. Li his imaginary ascent from plain Charles Lamb to Pope Inno- cent, one of the gradations is Lord Stamford. His mother's family came from Hertfordshire, where his grandmother was a housekeeper in the Plumer family, and where several of his cousins long resided. He did not attempt to trace his ancestry (of which he wisely made no secret) beyond two or three generations. In an agreeable sonnet, entitled " The Family Name," he speaks of his sire's sire, but no further : " We trace our stream no higher." Then he 3 34 CFIBIST'S I108FITAL. runs into some pleasant conjectures as to his possible pi^ogenitors, of whom he knew nothing. "Perhaps some shepherd on Lincohiiau plains, "► he says, first received the name ; perhaps some martial lord, returned from " holy Salem ;" and then he concludes with a resolve, — «' No deed of mine shall shame thee, gentle Name," which he kept religiously throughout his life. When Charles was between seven and eight years of age, he became a scholar in Christ's Hospital, a presentation having, been given to his father, for the son's benefit. He entered that celebrated .school ©n the 9th of October, 17S2, and remained there until the 23d No- vember, 1789, being then between fourteen and fifteen years old. The records of his boyhood are very scanty. He was always a grave, inquisitive boy. Once, when walking with his sister through some churchyard, he inquired anxiously, "Where do the naughty people lie?" the unqualified panegyrics which CHRIST S HOSPITAL. 35 he encountered on the tombstones doubtless suggesting the inquiry. Mr. Samuel Le Grice (his, schoolfellow) states that he was an amiable, gentle youth, very sensible, and keenly observ- ing ; that " his complexion was clear brown, his countenance mild, his eyes differing in color, and that he had a slow and peculiar walk." He adds that he was never mentioned without the addition of his Christian name, Charles, implying a general feeling of kindness towards him. His delicate frame and difficulty of ut- terance, it is said, unfitted him for joining in any boisterous sports. After he left Christ's Hospital, he returned home, where he had access to the large mis- cellaneous libraiy of Mr. Salt. He and his sister were (to use his own words) " tumbled into a spacious closet of good old English reading, and browsed at will on that fair and wholesome pasturage." This, however, could not have lasted long, for it was the destiny of Charles Lamb to be compelled to labor ahnost 36 CHBIST'S HOSPITAL. from his boyhood. He wa~s able to read Greek, and had acquired great facihty in Latin com- position, when he left the Hospital ; but an unconquerable impediment in his speech de- prived him of an "exhibition" in the school, and, as a consequence, of the benefit of a col- lege education. The state of Christ's Hospital, at the time when Lamb was a scholar there, may be ascer- tained witli tolerable correctness from his two essays, entitled " Recollections of Christ's Hos- pital," and " Christ's Hospital five and thirty years ago." These papers when read together show the different (favorable and unfavorable) points of this great establishment. They leave no doubt as to its extensive utility. Although, strictly speaking, it was a charitable home for the sustenance and education of boys, slenderly provided, or unprovided, with the means of learning, they were neither lifted up beyond their own family nor depressed by mean habits, such as an ordinary charity school is supposed to CHBIST'8 HOSPITAL. 37 generate. They floated onwards towards man- hood in a wholesome middle region, between a too rare ether and the dense and abject atmos- phere of pauperism. The Hospital boy (as Lamb says) never felt himself to be a charity boy. The antiquity and regality of the founda- tion to which he belonged, and the inode or style of his education, sublimated him beyond the heights of the laboring classes. From the " Christ's Hospital five and thirty years ago," it would appear that the comforts enjoyed by Lamb himself exceeded those of his schoolfellows, owing to his friends supplying him with extra delicacies. There is no doubt that great tyranny was then exercised by the older boys (the monitors) over the younger "ones ; that the scholars had an3^thing but choice and ample rations ; and that hunger (" the eld- est, strongest of the passions ") was not a tyrant unknown throusrhout this larsre institution. Lamb remained at Christ's Hospital for seven years ; but on the half-holidays (two in 38 CHRIST'S HOSPITAL. every week) he used to go to his parents' home, in the Temple, and when there would muse on the terrace, or by the lonely fountain, or contemplate the dial, or pore over the books in Mr. Salt's library, until those antiquely- colored thoughts rose up in his mind which in after years he presented to the world. Amongst the advantages which Charles de- rived from his stay at Christ's Hospital, was one which, although accidental, was destined to have great effect on his subsequent life. It happened that he reckoned amongst his school- fellows one who afterwards achieved a very extensive reputation, namely, Samuel Taylor Coleridge. This youth was his- elder by two years ; and his example influenced Lamb ma- terially on many occasions, and ultimately led him into literature. Coleridge's projects, at the outset of life, were vacillating. In this respect Lamb was no follower of his school- fellow, his own career being steady and lui- swervinsf from his entrance into the India CHRIST'S HOSPITAL. 39 House until the day of his freedom from ser- vice — between thirty and forty years. His literary tastes, indeed, took independently al- most the same tone as those of his friend ; and their religious views (for Coleridge in his early years became a Unitarian) were the same. When Coleridge left Christ's Hospital he went to the University — to Jesus College, Cambridge ; but came back occasionally to London, where the intimacy between him and Lamb was cemented. Their meetings at the smoky little public house in the neighborhood of Smithfield, — the "Salutation and Cat," — con- secrated by pipes and tobacco (Orinoco), by egg-hot and Welsh rabbits, and metaphysics and poetry, are exultingly referred to in Lamb's letters. Lamb entertained for Cole- ridge's genius the greatest respect, until death dissolved their friendship. In his earliest verses (so dear to a young poet) he used to submit his thoughts to Coleridge's amendments or critical suggestions ; and on one occasion 40 SOUTH SEA HOUSE. was obliged to cry out, " Spare my ewe lambs : they are the reflected images of my own feelings." It was at a very tender age that Charles Lamb entered the "work-a-day" world. His elder brother, John, had at that time a clerk- ship in the South Sea House, and Charles passed a short time there under his brother's care or control, and must thus have gained some knowledge of figures. The precise nature of his occupation in this deserted place, however (where some forms of busi- ness were kept up, " though the soul be long since fled," and where the directors met mainly "to declare a dead dividend"), is not stated in the charming paper of " The South Sea House." Charles remained in this ofiice only until the 5th April, 1792, when he ob- tained an appointment (through the influence, I believe, of Mr. Salt) as clerk in the Ac- countant's Office of the East India Company. He was then seventeen years of age. CONDITION OF THE FAMILY. 41 About three years after Charles became a clerk in the India House, his family appear to have moved from Crov\^n Office Row into poor lodgings at No. 7 Little Qiieen Street, Holborn. His father at that time had a small pension from Mr. Salt, whose service he had left, being almost fatuous ; his mother was ill and bedridden ; and his sister Mary was tired ovTt, by needle-work all day, and by taking care of her mother throughout the night.. "Of all the people in the world" (Charles says), "she was most thorovxghly devoid of all selfishness." There was also, as a member of the family, an old aunt, who had a trifling .annuity for her life, which she poured into the common fund. John Lamb (Charles's elder brother) lived elsewhere, having occasional intercourse only with his kindred. He continued, how- ever, to visit them, whilst he preserved his " comfortable " clerkship in the South Sea House. It was under this state of things that they 42 DEATH OF MOTHEB. all drifted down to the terrible year 1796. It was a year dark with horror. There was an hereditary taint of insanity in the family, which caused even Charles himself to be placed, for a short time, in Hoxton Lunatic Asylum. " The six weeks that finished last year and began this (1796), your very humble servant spent very agreeably in a madhouse, at Hox- ton." These are his words when writing to Coleridge. Mary Lamb had previously been repeatedly attacked by the same dreadful disorder ; and this now broke out afresh in a sudden burst of acute madness. She had been moody and ill for some little time previously, and the illness came to a crisis on the 23d of September, 1796. On that day, just before dinner, Mary seized a " case-knife " which was lying on the table, pursued a little girl (her appren- tice) round the room, hurled about the din- ner forks, and finally, in a fit of uncontrolla- ble frenzy, stabbed her mother to the heart. FRIENDS OF THE FAMILY. 43 Charles was at hand only in time to snatch the knife out of her grasp, before further hurt could be done. He found his father wounded in the forehead by one of the forks, and his aunt lying insensible, and apparently dying, on the floor of the room. This happened on a Thursday ; and on the following day an inquest was held on the mother's body, and a verdict of Mary's luna- cy was immediately found by the jury. The Lambs had a few friends. Mr. Norris — the friend of Charles's father and of his own childhood — " was very kind to us ; " and Sam. Le Grice " then in town " (Charles writes) " was as a brother to me, and gave up every hour of his time in constant attendance on my father." After the fatal deed, Mary Lamb was deeply afflicted. Her act was in the first instance totally unknown to her. Afterwarcjs, when her consciousness returned and she was in- formed of it, she suflered great grief. And 44 SISTER IN AN ASYLUM. subsequently, when she became " calm and serene," and saw the misfortune in a clearer light, this was " far, very far from an indecent or forgetful serenity," as her brother says. She had no defiant air, no affectation, nor too extravagant a displa}/- of sorrow. She saw her act, as she saw all other things, by the light of her own clear and gentle good sense. She was sad ; but the deed was past recall, and at the time of its commission had been ut- terly beyond either her control or knowledge. After the inquest, Mary Lamb was placed in a lunatic asylum, where, after a short time, she recovered her serenity. A rapid recovery after violent madness is not an unu- sual mark of the disease ; it being in cases of quiet, inveterate insanity, that the return to sound mind (if it ever recur) is more gradual and slow. The recovery, however, was only temporary in her case. She was throughout her life subject to frequent recur- rences of the same disease. At one time LEFT ALONE. 45 her brother Charles writes, " Poor Mary's disorder so frequently recurring has made us a sort of marked people." At another time he says, " I consider her as perpetually on the brink of madness." And so, indeed, she continued during the remainder of her life; and she lived to the age of eighty-two years. Charles was now left alone in the world. His father was imbecile ; his sister insane ; and his brother afforded no substantial assistance or comfort. He was scarcely out of boyhood when he learned that the world has its dan- gerous places and barren deserts; and that he had to struggle for his living, without "help. He found that he had to take upon himself all the cares of a parent or protector (to his sister) even before he had studied the duties of a man. Sudden as death came down the necessary knowledge : how to live, and how to live well. The terrible event that had fallen upon him 46 MEANS OF LIVING. and his, instead of casting him down, and paralyzing his powers, braced and strung his sinews into preternatural firmness. It is the character of a feeble mind to lie prostrate be- fore the first adversary. In his case it lifted him out of that momentary despair which, always follows a great calamity. It was like extreme cold to the system, which often over- throws the weak and timid, but gives additional strength and power of endurance to the brave and the strong. "My aunt was lying apparently dying" (writes Lamb), "my father with a wound on his poor forehead, and my mother a murdered corpse, in the next room. I felt that I had something else to do than to regret. I had the whole weight of the family zifon me; for my brother — little disposed at any time to take care of old age and infirmity — has now, with his bad leg, exemption from such duties ; and I am now left alone." In about a month after his mother's death BROTHER AND SISTER. ' 47 (3d October), Charles writes, "My poor, dear, deai'est sister, the unhappy and unconscious instrument of the Ahiiighty's judgment on our house, is restored to her senses ; to a dread- ful sense of what has passed ; awful to her mind, but tempered with a religious resigna- tion. She knows how to distinguish between a deed committed in a fit of frenzy and the terrible guilt of a mother's murder." In another place he says, " She bears her situa- tion as one who has no right to complain." He himself visits her and upholds her, and rejoices in her continued reason. For her use he borrows books (" for reading was her daily bread"), and gives up his time and all his thoughts to her comfort. Thus, in their quiet grief, makiftg no show, yet suffering more than could be shown by clamorous sobs or frantic words, the two — brother and sister — enter upon the bleak world together. " Her love," as Mr. Words- worth states in the epitaph on Charles' Lamb, 48 JOHN LAMB. " was as the love of mothers " towards her brother. It may be said that his love for her was the deep life-long love of the tenderest son. In one letter he writes, " It was not a family where I could take Mary with me ; and I am afraid that there is something of dis- honesty in any pleasures I take without her." Many years afterwards (in 1834, ^^^^ very year in which he died) he writes to Miss Fryer, "It is no new thing for me to be left with my sister. When she is not violent, her rambling chat is better to me than the sense aizd sanity of the ivorldT Surely there is great depth of pathos in these unaffected words ; in the love that has outlasted all the troubles of life, and is thus tenderly expressed, almost at his last hour. John Lamb, the elder brother of Charles, held a clerkship, with some considerable sal- ary, in the South Sea House. I do not retain an agreeable impression of him. If not rude, he was sometimes, indeed generally, abrupt JOEN LAMB. 49 and unprepossessing in manner. He was as- suredly deficient in that courtesy which usually springs from a mind at friendship with the v»^orld. Nevertheless, without much reasoning power (apparently), he had much cleverness of character ; except when he had to pur- chase paintings, at which times his judgment Was often at fault. One of his sayings is men- tioned in the (Elia) essay of " My Relations." He seems to have been, on one occasion, con- templating a group of Eton boys at play, when he observed, " What a pity it is to think that these fine ingenuous lads will some day be changed into frivolous members of Parliament?" Like some persons who, although case-hardened at home, overflow with sympathy towards dis- tant objects, he cared less for the feelings of his neighbor close at hand than for the eel out of water or the oyster disturbed in its shell. John Lamb was the favorite of his mother, as the deformed child is frequently the dearest. " She would always love my brother above 4 50 MEANS OF LIVING. Mary," Charles writes in 1796, " although he was not worth one tenth of the affection which Mary had a right to claim. Poor Mary ! my mother never understood her right." In another place (after he had been unburdening his heart to Coleridge), he writes cautiously, " Since this has happened," — the death of his mother, — "he- has been very kind and broth- erly ; but I fear for his mind. He has taken his ease in the world, and is not fit to strug- gle with difficulties. Thank God, I can un- connect myself with him, and shall manage my father's moneys myself, if I take charge of Daddy, which poor John has not hinted a wish at any future time to share with me." Mary herself, when she was recovering, said that " she knew she must go to Bethlehem for life ; that one of her brothers would have it so ; the other would not wish it, but would be obliged to go with the stream." At this time, reckoning up their several means of living, Charles Lamb and his father BBOTEEB AND SISTER. 51 had together an income of one hundred and seventy or one hundred and eighty pounds ; out of which, he says, " we can spare fifty or sixty pounds at least for Mary whilst she stays in an asylum. If I and my father and an old maid-servant can't live, and live comfortably, on t one hundred and thirty or one hundred and twenty pounds a year, we ought to burn by slow fires. I almost would, so that Mary might not go into a hospital." She was then recovering her health ; had become se- rene and cheerful ; and Charles was passion- ately desirous that, after a short residence in" the lunatic establishment wherein she then was, she should return home : " But the sur- viving members of her family " (these are Sir Thomas Talfourd's words), "especially John, who enjoyed a fair income from the South Sea House, opposed ber discharge." Charles, however, ultimately succeeded in his pious desire, upon entering into a solemn under- taking; to take care of his sister thereafter. 52 UNGOMFORTABLE EOME. He provided a lodging for her at Hackney, and spent all his Sundays and holidays with her. I never heard of John Lamb having contributed anything, in money or otherwise, towards the support of his deranged sister, or to assist his young struggling brother. Soon after this time Charles took his sister Maiy to live with himself entirely. Whenever the approach of one of her fits of insanity was announced by some irritability or change of manner, he would take her, under his arm, to Hoxton Asylum. It was very afflicting to en- counter the young brother and his sister walk- ing together (weeping together) on this painful errand ; Mary herself, although sad, very con- scious of the necessity for temporary separation from her only friend. They used to carry a strait jacket with them. In the latter days of his father's life, Charles must have had an uncomfortable home. " I go home at night overwearied, quite faint, and then to cards with my father, who will not let UNGOMFOBTABLE HOME. 53 me enjoy a meal in peace. After repeated games at cribbage" (he is writing to Colei-idge), " I have got my father's leave to write ; with diiSculty got it : for when I expostulated about playing any more, he replied, 'If you won't play with me, you might as well not come home at all.' The argument was unanswer- able, and I set to afresh." Soon after this, the father, who at last had become entirely imbecile, died ; and the pension which he had received from Mr. Salt, the old bencher, ceased. The aunt, who had been taken for a short time to the house of a rich relation, but had been sent back, also died in the following month. "My poor old aunt" (Charles writes), "who was the kindest crea- tui-e to me when I was at school, and used to bring me good things ; when I, schoolboy-like, used to be ashamed to see her come, and open her apron, and bring out her basin with some nice thing which she had saved for me ; the good old creature is now lying on her death-bed. 54 LIMITED BE80URGES. She says, poor thing, she is glad she has come home to die with me. I was always her favor- ite." Thus Charles was left to his own poor resources (scarcely, if at all, exceeding one hundred pounds a year) ; and these remained very small for some considerable time. His writings were not calculated to attract imme- diate popularity, and the increase of his salary at the India House was slow. Even in 1S09 (November), almost fifteen years later, the ad- dition of twenty pounds a year, which comes to him on the resignation of a clerk in the India House, is very important, and is the sub- ject of a joyful remark by his sister Mary. The impression made, in the first instance, on Charles Lamb, by the terrible death of his mother, cannot be explained in any condensed manner. His mind, short of insanity, seems to have been utterly upset. He had been fond of poetry to excess ; almost all his leisure hours seemed to have been devoted to the books of poets and religious writers, to the composition DESPONDENCY. 55 of poetry, and to criticising various writers in verse. But afterwards, in his distress, he re- quests Coleridge to " mention notliing of poetry. I have destroyed every vestige of past vanities of that kind. Never send me a book, I charge you. I am wedded" (he adds) " to the fortunes of my sister and my poor old father." At another time he writes, " On the dreadful day I preserved a tranquillity, not of despair." Some persons coming into the " house of misery," and per- suading him to take some food, he says, " In an agony of emotion, I found my way mechanically into the adjoining room, and fell on my knees by the side of her coffin, asking forgiveness of Heaven, and sometimes of her, for forgetting her so soon." A few days later, he says to his friend, " You are the only correspondent, and, I might add, the only friend I have in the world. I go no- where and see no acquaintance." At this time he gave away all Coleridge's letters, burned all his own poetry, all the numerous poetical 56 ■ ALICE W. extracts he had made, and the little journal of " My foolish passion, which I had a long time kept." Subsequently, when he becomes better, he writes again to his friend, " Corre- spondence with you has iHDUsed me a little from my lethargy, and made me conscious of my existence." Charles was now entirely alone with his sis- ter. She was the only object between him and God, and out of this misery and desolation sprang that wonderful love between brother and sister, which has no parallel in history. Neither would allow any stranger to partake of the close affec- tion that seemed to be solely the other's right. Doubts have existed whether Charles Lamb ever gave up for the sake of Mary the one real attachment of his youth. It has been considered somewhat probable that Alice W. was an im- aginary being — some Celia, or Campaspe, or Lindamira ; that she was in effect one of those visions which float over us when we escape from childhood. But it may have been a real ALICE W. 57 love, driven deeper into the heart, and torn out for another love, more holy and as pure : for he was capable of a grand sacrifice. No one will, perhaps, ever ascertain the truth precisely. It must remain undiscovered — magnified by the mist of uncertainty — like those Hesperian Gardens which inspired the verses of poets, but are still surrounded by fable. For my own part, I am persuaded that the attachment was real. He says that his sister would often " lend an ear to his desponding, love-sick lay." After he himself had been in a lunatic asylum, he writes to Coleridge, that his " head ran upon him, in his madness, as much almost as on another person, w/io was the more hnmediate cause of my frenzy^ Later in the year he burned the " little journal of his foolish passion ; " and, when writing to his friend on the subject of his love sonnets, he says, " It is a passion of which I retain nothing." It is clear, I think, that it was love for a real person, however transient it may have 58 BROTHER AND SISTER. been. But the fact, whether true or false, is inexpressibly unimportant. It could not add to his stature : it could not diminish it. His whole life is acted ; and in it are numerous other things which substantially raise and honor him. The ashes (if ashes there were) are cold. His struggles and pains, and hopes and visions, are over. All lie, diffused, inter- mingled in that vast Space which has No Name ; like the winds and light of yestei'day, which came and gave pleasure for a moment, and now have changed and left us, forever. In contrast with this apocryphal attachment stands out his deep and unalterable love for his sister Mary. " God love her," he says ; " may we two never love • each other less." They never did. Their affection continued throughout life, without interruption ; without a cloud, except such as rose from the fluctua- tions of her health. It is said that a woman rises or falls with the arm on which she leans. In this case, Mary Lamb at all times had a BBOTHEB AND SISTER. 59 safe support; an arm that never shook nor wavered, but kept its elevation, faitliful and firm tlirougliout life. It is difficult to explain fully the great love of Charles for his sister, except in his own words. Whenever her name occurs in the correspondence, the tone is always the same ; always tender ; without abatement, without change. "I am a fool" (he writes) "bereft of her cooperation. I am used to look up to her in the least and biggest perplexities. To say all that I find her, would be more than I think anybody could possibly understand. She is older, wiser, and better than I am ; and all my wretched imperfections I cover to m3^self, by resolutely thinking on her goodness. She would share life and death with me." This (to anticipate) was written in 1805, when she was suflering from one of her attacks of illness. After she became better, he became better also, and opened his heart to the pleasures and ob- jects around him. It was open at all times to 6o BBOTEEB AND 8I8TEB. want, and sickness, and wretchedness, and gen- erally to the friendly voices and homely reali- ties that rose up and surrounded him in his daily walk through life. During all his years he was encircled by groups of loving friends. There were no others habitually round him. It is reported of some person that he had not merit enough to create a foe. In Lamb's case, I suppose, he did not possess that peculiar merit; for he lived and died without an enemy. (6i ) CHAPTER III. yem White. — Coleridge. — LarnVs Inspira- tion. — Early Letters. — Poem published. — Charles Lloyd. — Liking for Burns^ So. — ^lakerism. — Robert Southey. — Southey and Coleridge. — Antijacobiiz. — Rosaitiond Gray. — George Dyer. — Matzning. — Mar^s Illnesses. — Migrations. — Hester Savory. AFTER the pain arising from the deaths of his parents had somewhat subsided, and his sorrow, exhausting itself in the usual manner, had given way to calm, the story of Lamb becomes mainly an account of his uitercourse with society. He was surrounded, during his somewhat monotonous career, by affectionate and admiring friends, who helped to bring out his rare qualities, who stimu- lated his genius, and who are in fact inter- woven with his own history. 62 JEM WHITE. One of the earliest of these was his school- fellow James (familiarly Jem) White. This •youth, who at the beginning of this period was his most frequent companion, had great cleverness and abundant animal spirits, under the influence of which he had produced a small volume, entitled " Original Letters of Sir John Falstaff" , and his Friends." These letters were ingenious imitations of the style and tone of thought of the celebrated Shake- spearian knight and his familiars. Beyond this merit they are, perhaps, not sufficiently full of that enduring matter which is intended for posterity. Nevertheless they contain some good and a few excellent things. The letter of Davy (Justice Shallow's servant) giving an account to his master of the death of poor Abram Slender is very touching. Slender dies from mere love of sWeet Ann Page ; " Master Abram is dead ; gone, your worship. A' sang his soul and body quite away. A' turned like the latter end of a lover's lute." JEM WHITE. 63 Wliite's book was published in 1 796 ; and one of the early copies was sold at the Rox- burgh sale for five guineas. Is it possible • that the imitations could have been mistaken for originals? Afterwards, the little book could be picked up for eighteenpence ; even for sixpence. It was always a great fa- vorite with Lamb. He reviewed it, after White's death, in the JBxa^niner. Lamb's friendship and sympathy in taste with White induced him to attach greater value to this book than it was, perhaps, strictly entitled to ; he even passes some commendation on the frontispiece, which is undoubtedly a very poor specimen of art. It is remarkable how Lamb, who was able to enter so completely into Hogarth's sterling humor, could ever have placed any value upon this counterfeit coin. But Lamb had a great regard for Jem White. They had been boys together, school- fellows in Christ's Hospital ; and these very early friendships seldom undergo any severe 64 JEM WHITE. critical tests. At all events, Lamb thought highly of White's book, which he used often to purchase and give away to his friends, in justification of his own taste and to extend the fame of the author. The copy which he gave me I have still. White, it seems, after leaving Christ's Hospital as a scholar, took some office there ; but eventually left it, and became an agent for newspapers. In one of the Elia essays, "The Praise of Chimney-sweepers," Lamb has set forth some of the merits of his old friend. Un- doubtedly Jem White must have been a thoroughly kind-hearted man, since he could give a dinner every year, on St. Bartholo- mew's day, to the little chimney-sweepers of London ; waiting on them, and cheering them up with his jokes and lively talk ; creating at least one happy day annually in each of their poor lives. ■ At the date of the essay (May, 1823) he had died. In Lamb's words, "James White is extinct ; and with him the suppers COLE BID QE. ^ 65 have long ceased. He carried away with him half the fun of the world when he died — of my world, at least. His old clients look for him among the pens ; and, missing him, reproach the altered feast of St. Bar- tholomew, and the glory of Smithfield de- parted forever." The great friend and Mentor, however, of Charles Lamb's youth, wns (as has frequently been asserted) Samuel Taylor Coleridge, who was a philosopher, and who was considered, almost universally, to be the greater genius of the two. It may be so ; and there is little doubt that in mere capacity, in the power of accumulating and disbursing ideas, and in the extent and variety of his knowl- edge, he exceeded Lamb, and also most of his other contemporaries ; but the mind of Lamb was quite as original, and more com- pact. The two friends were very dissimilar, the one wandering amongst lofty, ill-defined objects, whilst the other " clung to the reali- 5 66 COLERIDGE. ties of life." It is fortunately not necessary to enter into any comparative estimate of these two remarkable persons. Each had his posi- tive qualities and jDeculiarities, by which he was distinguishable from other men ; and by these he may therefore be separately and more safely judged. In his mature age (when I knew him) Coleridge had a full, round face, a fine, broad forehead, rather thick lips, and strange, dreamy eyes, which were often lighted up by eager- ness, but wanted concentration, and were adapted apparently for musing or speculation, rather than for precise or rapid judgment. Yet he was very slirewd, as well as eloquent; was (slightly) addicted to jesting ; and would talk "at sight" upon any subject with ex- treme fluency and much knowledge. " His white hair," in Lamb's words, " slu'ouded a capacious brain." Coleridge had browsed and expatiated over all the rich regions of literature, at home and COLERIDGE. 6^ abroad. In youth his studies had, in the first instance, been mainly in theology, he having selected the " Church " for his profes- sion. Although he was educated in the creed and rites of the Church of England, he be- came for a time a Unitarian preacher, and scattered his eloquent words over many human audiences. He was fond of questions of logic, and of explaining his systems and opinions by means of diagrams ; but his projects were sel- dom consummated ; and his talk (sometimes) and his prose writing (often) were tedious and diffuse. His " Christabel," from which he derived much of his fame, remained, after a lapse of more than thirty years, incomplete at his death. He gained much reputation from the "Ancient Mariner" (which is perhaps his best poem) ; but his translation of Schiller's " Wallenstein " is the only achievement that shows him capable of a great prolonged effort. Lamb used to boast that he supplied one line to his friend in the fourth scene of 68 COLERIDGE. that tragedy, where the description of the Pagan deities occurs. In speaking of Satan, he is figured as "an old man melancholy." " That was my line," Lamb would say, exult- ingly. I forget how it was orignally written, except that it had not the extra (or eleventh) syllable, which it now possesses. There is some beautiful writing in this fourth scene, which may be read after Mr. Words- worth's equally beautiful reference to the Olympian gods and goddesses, in the fourth book of the " Excursion," entitled " Despon- dency Corrected." The last explains more completely than the other the attributes of the deities specially named. The most elaborate (perhaps impartial) sketches of Coleridge — his great talents, com- bined with his great weaknesses — may be found in Hazlitt's Essays, " The Spirit of the Age " and " My First Acquaintance with Po- ets ; " and in the eighth chapter of Mr. Car- lyle's "Life of John Sterling." COLEBIDOE. 69 In Lamb's letters it is easy to perceive that the winter soon became aware of the foibles of his friend. " Cultivate simplicity, Coleridge," is his admonition as early as 1796. In another place his remark is, " You have been straining your faculties to bring together things infinitely distant and unlike." Again, " I grieve from my very soul to observe you in your plans of life veering about from this hope to the other, and settling nowhere." Robert Southey, whose prose style was the perfection of neatness, and who was intimate with Coleridge throughout his life, laments that it is " extraordinary that he should write in so rambling and inconclusive a manner ; " his mind, which was undoubtedly very pliable and subtle, " turning and winding, till you get weary of following his mazy movements." Charles Lamb, however, always sincerely admired and loved his old schoolfellow, and grieved deeply when he died. The recollec- tion of this event, which' happened many 7o COLERIDGE. years afterwards (in 1834), never left Lamb until his own death : he used perpetually to exclaim, " Coleridge is dead, Coleridge is dead," in a low, musing, meditative voice. These exclamations (addressed to no one) were, as Lamb was a most unaffected man, assuredly involuntary, and showed that he could not get rid of the melancholy truth. At this distance of time, many persons (judging by what he has left behind him) wonder at the extent of admiration which possessed some of Coleridge's contemporaries : Charles Lamb accorded to his genius some- thing scarcely short of absolute worship ; Robert Southey considered his capacity as ex- ceeding that of almost all other writei's ; and Leigh Hunt, speaking of Coleridge's pei^sonal appearance, says, " He had a mighty intellect put upon a sensual body." Persons who were intimate with both have suggested that even Wordsworth was indebted to him for some of his philosophy. As late as 181 8, Lamb, when COLERIDGE. 71 dedicating his works to him, says that Cole- ridge " first Ivindled in him, if not tlie power, tlie love, of poetry, and beauty, and kindness." He must be judged, however, by what he has actually done. I am not here as the valuer of Coleridge's merits. I have no pretensions and no desire to assume so delicate an office. His dreams and intentions were undoubtedly good, and, had he been able to carry them out for the benefit of the world, would have entitled him- self to the name of a great poet, a gi^eat genius. His readiness to discuss all subjects, and his ability to talk on most of them with ease, were marvellous. But he was always infirm of purpose, and never did justice to his own capacity. Amongst other men of talent who have sung Coleridge's praises should be named Haz- litt, who knew him in 17985 ^"^^ h'ls enshrined him in the first of his charming papers, en- titled "Winterslow Essays." Hazlitt admits 72 COLERIDGE. his feebleness of purpose, but speaks of his genius, shining upon his own (then) dumb, inarticulate nature, as the sun " upon the pud- dles of the road." Coleridge at that time was a Unitarian minister, and had come to preach, instead of the minister for the time being, at Shrewsbury. Hazlitt rose before daylight (it was in January), and walked from Wem to Shrewsbury, a distance of ten miles, to hear the "celebrated" man, who combined the inspirations of poet and preacher in one person, enlighten a Shropshire congregation. " Never, the longest day, I have to live " (says he), "shall I have such another walk as this cold, raw, comfortless one, in the winter of 1798. When I got there [to the Chapel], the oi'gan was playing the one hundredth Psalm ; and when it was done, Mr. Coleridge rose and gave out his text — ' And he went up into the mountain to pray. Himself Alone.' The preacher then launched into his subject, like an eagle dallying with the wind," &c. LAMB'S INSPIRATION. 73 Coleridge was at that time only five and twen- ty years of age ; yet he seems even then to have been able to decide on many writers in logic and rhetoric, philosophy and poetry. Of course he was familiar with the works of his friend Wordsworth, of whom he cleverly ob- served, in reply to the depreciating opinion of Mackintosh, " He strides on so far before you, that he dwindles in the distance." * It would be very interesting, were it practi- cable, to trace with certainty the sources that supplied Charles Lamb's inspiration. But this must always be impossible. For inspiration, in all cases, proceeds from many sources, al- though there may be one influence predomi- 'nating. It is clear that a great Tragedy mainly determined his conduct through life, * The most convincing evidence of Coleridge's powers is to be foimd in his Table Talk. It appears from it that he was ready to discuss (almost) any subject, and that he was capable of talking ably upon most, and clev- erly upon all. 74 LAMB'S INSPIRATION, and operated, therefore, materially on his thoughts as well as actions. The terrible death of his mother concentrated and strength- ened his mind, and prevented its dissipation into trifling and ignoble thoughts. The regu- larity of the India House labor upheld him. The extent and character of his acquaintance also helped to determine the quality of the things which he produced. Had he seen less, his mind might have become warped and rigid, as from want of space. Had he seen too much, his thoughts might have been split and exhausted upon too many points, and wx>uld thus have been so perplexed and harassed, that the value of his productions, now known and current through all classes, might scarcely have exceeded a negative quantity. Then, in his companions he must be ac- counted fortunate. Coleridge helped to unloose his mind from too precise notions : Southey gave it consistency and cori'cctness : Manning expanded his vision : Hazlitt gave him dar- EARLY LETTERS. *JS ing: perhaps even poor George Dyer, like some unrecognized virtue, may have kept ahve and nourished the pity and tenderness which v\^ere originally sown within him. We must leave the difficulty, as we must leave the great problems of Nature, unexplained, and be content with what is self-evident before us. We know, at all events, that he had an open heart, and that the heart is a fountain which never fails. The earliest productions of Lamb which have come down to us, namely, verses, and criticism, and letters, are all in a grave and thoughtful tone. The letters, at first, are on melancholy subjects, but afterwards stray into criticism or into details of his readings, or an account of his predilections for books and au- thors. At one or two and twenty, he had read and formed opinions on Shakespeare, on Beaumont and Fletcher, on Massinger, Milton, Cowley, Isaac Walton, Burns, Collins, and others ; some of these, be it observed, lying 76 EABLY LETTERS AND POEMS. much out of the ordinary course of a young man's reading. He was also acquainted with the writings of Priestley and Wesley, and Jonathan Edwards ; for the first of whom he entertained the deepest respect. Lamb's verses were always good, steady, and firm, and void of those magniloquent com- monplaces which so clearly betray the imma- ture writer. They were at no time misty nor inconsequent, but contained proof that he had reasoned out his idea. From the age of twenty-one to the age of fift}^-nine, when he died, he hated fine words and flourishes of rhetoric. His imagination (not very lofty, per- haps) is to be discovered less in his verse than in his prose humor, than in his letters and essays. In these it was never trivial, but was always knit together by good sense, or softened by tenderness. Real humor seldom makes its appearance in the first literary ven- tures of 3-oung writers. Accordingly, symp- toms of humor (which, nevertheless, were not EABLY LETTERS AND POEMS. 77 long delayed) are not to be discovered in Charles Lamb's first letters or poems; the latter, when prepared for publication in 1796, being especially grave. They are entitled " Poems by Charles Lamb of the India House," and are inscribed to "Mary Anne Lamb, the author's best friend and sister." After some procrastination, the book contain- ing them was published in 1797? conjointly with other verses by Coleridge and Charles Lloyd. "We came into our first battle" (Charles says in his dedication to Coleridge, in 1818) "under cover of the greater Ajax." In this volume Lloyd's verses took precedence of Lamb's, at Coleridge's suggestion. This suggestion, the reason of which is not very obvious, was very readily acceded to. Lamb having a sincere regard for Lloyd, who (with a fine reasoning mind) was subject to that sad mental disease which was common to both their families. Lamb has addressed some verses to Lloyd at this date, which indicate 78 VISIT TO COLERIDGE. the great respect he felt towards his friend's intellect : — "I'll think less meanly of myself, * That Lloyd will sometimes tliink of me." This joint volume was published without much success. In the same year Lamb and his sister paid a visit to Coleridge, then living at. Stowey, in Somersetshire ; after which Coleridge, for what purpose does not very clearly appear, migrated to Germany. This happened in the year 1798. Charles Lloyd, one of the triumvirate of 1797? was the son of a banker at Birmingham. He was educated as a Quaker, but seceded from that body, and afterwards became "per- plexed in mind," and very desponding. He often took up his residence in London, but did not mingle much with society. An ex- treme melancholy darkened his latter days ; and, as I believe, he died insane. He pub- lished various poems, and translated, fi;pm the Italian into English blank verse, the tragedies CHARLES LLOYD. 79 of Alfieri. His poems are distinguished rather by a remarkable power of intellectual analysis than by the delicacy or fervor of the verse. The last time I saw Charles Lloyd was in company with Hazlitt. We heard that he had taken lodgings at a working brazier's shop in Fetter Lane, and we visited him there, and found him in bed, much depressed, but very willing to discuss certain problems with Haz- litt, who carried on the greater part of the conversation. We understood that he had selected these noisy apartments in order that they might distract his mind from the fears and melancholy thoughts which at that time distressed him. It was soon after the publication of the joint volume that Charles chronicles the different tastes of himself and his friend. " Burns," he says, " is the god of my idolatry, as Bowles of yours." Posterit}^ has universally joined in the preference of Lamb. Burns, indeed, was al- ways one of his greatest favorites. He admired So LIKING FOR BURNS. and sometimes quoted a line or two from the last stanza of the " Lament for James, Earl of Glencairn," "The bridegroom may forget his bride," &c. ; and I have more than once heard him repeat, in a fond, tender voice, when the subject of poets or poetry came under discus- sion, the following beautiful lines from the Epis- tle to Simpson of Ochiltree : "The Muse, nae poet ever fand her, Till by himsel he learn'd to wander, Adown some trotting burn's meander An' no think 't lang." These he would press upon the attention of any one present (chanting tliem aloud), and would bring down the volume of Burns, and open it, in order that the page might be im- pressed on the hearer's memory. Sometimes — in a way scarcely discernible — he would kiss the volume ; as he would also a book by Chap- man or Sir Philip Sidney, or any other which he particularly valued. I have seen him read out a passage from the Holy Dying and the Urn QUAKERISM. 8i Burial, and express in the same way his devo- tion and gratitude. Lamb had been brought up a Unitarian ; but he appears to have been occasionally fluctuating in a matter as to v^hich boys are not apt to en- tertain very rigid opinions. At one time he longed to be with superior thinkers. " I am always longing to be with men more excellent than myself," are his words. At another time he writes, " I have had thoughts of turning Quaker lately." A visit, however, to one of the Quaker meetings in i797» decides him against such conversion : " This cured me of Qtiakerism. I love it in the books of Penn and Woodman ; but I detest the vanity of man, thinking he speaks by the Spirit." A similar story is told of Coleridge. Mr. Justice Cole- ridge's statement is, " He told us a humorous story of his enthusiastic fondness for Qi.Takers when at Cambridge, and his attending one of their meetings, which had entirely cured him." In 1797 Charles Lamb (who had been intro- 6 82 VI8IT TO 80UTHET. duced to Southey by Coleridge two years pre- viously) accompanied Lloyd to a little village near Christchurch, in Hampshire, where Southey was at that time reading. This little holiday (of a fortnight) seems to have converted the acquaintanceship between Southey and Lamb into something like intimacy. He then paid another visit (which he had long meditated) to Coleridge, who was residing at Stowey. It must have been shortly after this first visit (for Lamb went again to Stowey, and met Wordsworth there in 1801) that Coleridge un- dertook the office of minister to a Unitarian congregation at Shrewsbury, and preached there, as detailed by Hazlitt in the manner already set forth. In 1798 he took his departure for Ger- many, and this led to a familiar correspondence between Lamb and Southey. The opening of Lamb's humor may probably be referred to this friendship with a congenial humorist, and one, like himself, taking a strong interest in worldly matters. Coleridge, between whom COLERIDGE AND SOUTHET. 83 and Lamb there was not much similarity of feeling, beyond their common love for poetry and religious writings, was absent, and Lamb was enticed by the kindred spirit of Southey into the accessible regions of humor. These two friends never arrived at that close friend- ship which had been forming between Coleridge and Lamb ever since their school-days at Christ's Hospital. But they interchanged ideas on poet- ical and humorous topics, and did not perplex themselves with anything speculative or tran- scendental. The first letter to Southey, which has been preserved (July, 179S), announces that Lamb is ready to enter into any jocose contest. It includes a list of queries to be defended by Cole- ridge at Leipsic or Gottingen ; the first of which was, " Whether God loves a lying angel better than a true man ? " Some of these queries, in all probability, had relation to Coleridge's own infirmities : at all events, they were sent over to him in reply to the benediction which he 84 COLERIDGE. had thought proper to bequeath to Charles on leaving England. " Poor Lamb, if he wants any knowledge he may apply to meT I must believe that this message was jocose, otherwise it would have been insolent in the extreme degree. Coleridge's answers to the queries above adverted to are not known ; I believe that the proffered knowledge was not afforded so readily as it was demanded. It has been surmised that there was some interruption of the good feeling between Cole- ridge and Lamb about this period of their lives ; but I cannot discern this in the letters that oc- curred between the two schoolfellows. The message of Coleridge, and the questions in re- ply, occur in 1798 ; and in May, 1800, there is a letter from Lamb to Coleridge, and subsequently two others, in the same year, all couched in the old customary, friendly tone. In addition to this, Charles Lamb, many years afterwards, said that there had been an uninterrupted friendship of fifty years between them. In one COLERIDGE AND SOUTEET. S^ letter of Lamb's, indeed (17th March, 1800), it appears that his early notions of Coleridge be- ing a "very good man" had been traversed by some doubts ; but these " foolish impres- sions " were short-lived, and did not apparently form any check to the continuance of their life-long friendship. It is clear that Lamb's judgment M^as at this time becoming independent. In one of his letters to Coleridge, vs^hen comparing his friend's merits with those of Southey, he says, " Southey has no pretensions to vie with you in the sublime of poetry, but he tells a plain story better." Even to Southey he is equally candid. Writing to him on the subject of a volume of poems which he had lately pub- lished, he remarks, " The Rose is the only 'in- sipid poem in the volume ; it has neither thorns nor sweetness." In 1798 or 1799? Lamb contributed to the Annual Anthology (which Mr. Cottle, a book- seller of Bristol, published), jointly with Cole- 86 ANTIJAGOBIN BE VIEW. ridge and South ey. In 1800 he was introduced by Coleridge to Godwin. It is clear that Charles's intimacy with Coleridge, and Southey, and Lloyd, was not productive of unmitigated pleasure. For the " Antijacobin " made its ap- pearance about this time, and denounced them all in a manner which in the present day would itself be denounced as infamous. Some of these gentlemen (Lamb's friends), in common with many others, augured at first favorably of the actors in the great French Revolution, and this had excited much displeasure in the Tory ranks. Accordingly they were represented as being guilty of blasphemy and slander, and as being adorers of a certain French revolutionist, named Lepaux, of whom Lamb, at all events, was en- tirely ignorant. They were, moreover, the sub- ject of a caricature by Gilray, in which Lamb and Lloj^d were portrayed as toad and frog. I cannot think, with Sir T. Talfourd, that all these libels were excusable, on the ground of the "sportive wit" of the offending parties. ROSAMOND GBAT. 87 Lamb's writings had no reference whatever to poHtical subjects ; they were, on the contrary, as the first writings of a young man generally are, serious, — even religious. Referring to Coleridge, it is stated that he " was dishonored at Cambridge for preaching Deism, and that he had since left his native country, and left his poor children fatherless, and his wife des- titute : " ex his disce Ms friends Lamb and Southey. A scurrilous libel of this stamp would now be rejected by all persons of good feeling or good character. It would be spurned by a decent publication, or, if published, would be consigned to the justice of a jury. The little story of Rosamond Gray was wrought out of the artist's brain in the year 1798, stimulated,, as Lamb confesses, by the old ballad of "An old woman clothed in gray," which he had been reading. It is defective as a regular tale; It wants circumstance and probability, and is slenderly provided with char- acter. There is, moreover, no construction in 88 GEORGE DYEE. the narrative, and little or no progress in the events. Yet it is very daintily told. The mind of the author v^^ells out in the purest streams. Having to deal with one foul incident, the tale is nevertheless without speck or blemish. A virgin ''nymph, born of a lily, could not have unfolded her thoughts more delicately. And, in spite of its improbability, Rosamond Gray is very pathetic. It touches the sensitive points in young hearts ; and it was by no means with- out success — the author's first success. It sold much better than his poems, and added " a few pounds" to his slender income. George Dyer, once a pupil in Christ's Hos- pital, possessing a good reputation as a clas- sical scholar, and who had preceded Lamb in the school, about this time came into the circle of his familiars. Dyer was one of the sim- plest and most inoffensive men in the world : in his heart there existed nothing but what was altogether pure and unsophisticated. He seemed never to have outsfi"own the innocence GEORGE DYER. 89 of childhood ; or rather he appeared to be without those germs or first principles of evil which sometimes begin to show themselves even in childhood itself. He was not only without any of the dark passions himself, but he would not perceive them in others. He looked only on the sunshine. Hazlitt, speak- ing of him in his " Conversation of Authors," says, " He lives amongst the old authors, if he does not enter much into their spirit. He handles the covers, and turns over the pages, and is familiar with the names and dates. He is busy and self-involved. He hangs like a film and cobweb upon letters, or is like the - dust upon the outside of knowledge, which should not too rudely be brushed aside. He follows learning as its shadow, but as such he is respectable. He browses on the husks and leaves of books." And Lamb says, " The gods, by denying him the very faculty of discrimination, have effectually cut off every seed of envy in his bosom." 90 QEOBGE DYEB. Dyer was very thin and short in person, and was extremely near-sighted ; and his mo- tions were often (apparently) spasmodic. His means of living were very scanty ; he sub- sisted mainly by supervising the press, being employed for that purpose by booksellers when they were printing Greek or Latin books. He dwelt in Clifford's Inn, " like a dove in an asp's nest," as Charles Lamb wittily says ; and he might often have been seen with a classical volume in his hand, and another in his pocket, walking slowly along Fleet Street or its neigh- borhood, unconscious of gazers, cogitating over some sentence, the correctness of which it was his duty to determine. You might meet him murmuring to himself in a low voice, and ap- parently tasting the flavor of the words. Dyer's knowledge of the drama (which formed part of the subject of his first publication) may be guessed, by his having read Shake- speare, " an iiTegular genius," and having dipped into Rowe and Otway, but never hav- OEOEGE DYEB. 91 ing heard of any other writers in that class. In absence of mind, he probably exceeded every other living man. Lamb has set forth one instance (which I know to be a fact) of Dyer's forgetfulness, in his " Oxford in the Vacation ; " and to this various others might be added, such as his emptying his snuft-box into the teapot when he was preparing break- fast for a hungry friend, &c. But it is scarcely worth while to chronicle minutely the harm- less foibles of this inoffensive old man. If I had to write his epitaph, I should say that he was neither much respected nor at all hated ; too good to dislike, too inactive to excite great affection ; and that he was as simple as the daisy, which we think we admire, and daily tread imder foot. In 1799 Charles Lamb visited Cambridge, and there, through the introduction of Lloyd, made the important acquaintance of Mr. Thomas Manning, then a mathematical tutor in the university. This soon grew into a close 92 MANNING. intimacy. Charles readily perceived the intel- lectual value of Manning, and seems to have eagerly sought his friendship, which, he says, (December, 1799)? will render the prospect of the approaching century very pleasant. " That century must needs commence auspi- ciously for me" (he adds), "that bring^ with it Manning's friendship as an earnest of its after gifts." At first sight it appears strange that there should be formed a close friendship between a youth, a beginner, or student in poetry (no more), and a professor of science at one of our great seats of learning. But these men had, I suppose, an intuitive percep- tion of each other's excellences. And there sometimes lie behind the outer projections of character a thousand concealed shades which readily intermingle with those of other people. There were amongst Lamb's tender thoughts, and Manning's mathematical tendencies, cer- tain neutral qualities which assimilated with each other, and which eventually served to MANNING. 93 cement that union between them which con- tinued unshaken during the lives of both. . Lamb's correspondence assumed more char- acter, and showed more critical quality, after the intimacy with Manning began. His ac- quaintance with Southey, in the first instance, had the effect of increasing the activity of his mind. Previously to that time, his letters had consisted chiefly of witticisms (clever indeed, but not of surpassing quality), religious thoughts, reminiscences, &c., for the most part iniadorned and simple. Afterwards, especially after the Manning era, they exhibit far greater weight of meaning, more fecundity, original thoughts, and brilliant allusions ; as if the imagination had begun to awaken and enrich the understanding. Manning's solid, scientific mind had, without doubt, the effect of arousing the sleeping vigor of Lamb's in- tellect. A long correspondence took place between them. At first Lamb sent Manninsr his 94 MANNING. opinions only : " Opinion is a species of prop- erty that I am always desirous of sharing with my friends." Then he communicates the fact that George Dyer, " that good-natured poet, is now more than nine months gone with twin volumes of odes." Afterwards he tells him that he is reading Bui^net's History of his own Times — ^"full of scandal, as all true history is." On Manning quitting England for China (1806), the letters become less frequent; they continue, however, during his absence : one of them, surpassing the Elia essay, to " Distant Correspondents," is very remarkable ; and when the Chinese traveller returned to Lon- don, he was very often a guest at Lamb's residence. I have repeatedly met him there. His countenance was that of an intelligent, steady, almost serious man. His journey to the Celestial Empire had not been unfruitful of good ; his talk at all times being full of curi- ous information, including much anecdote, and MANNING. 95 some (not common) speculations on men and things. When he retui'ned, he brought with him a native of China, whom he took one evening to a ball in London, where the for- eigner from Shanghai, or Pekin, inquired with much naivete as to the amount of money which his host had given to the dancers for their evening's performance, and was per- suaded with difficulty that their exertions were entirely gratuitous. Manning had a curious habit of bringing with him (in his waistcoat pocket) some pods of the red pepper, whenever he expected to partake of a meal. His original intention (as I understood) when he set out for China, was to frame and publish a Chinese and Eng- lish dictionary ; yet — although he brought over much material for the purpose — his purpose was never carried into effect. Lamb had great love and admiration for him. In a letter to Coleridge, in after years (1826), he says, "I am glad you esteem Manning ; though you 96 ' MANNING. see but his husk or shrine. He discloses not, save to select worshippers, and will leave the world without any one hardly but me know- ing how stupendous a creature he is." During these years Lamb's correspondence with Coleridge, Wordsworth, Walter Wilson, and Manning (principally with Manning) goes on. It is sometimes critical, sometimes jocose. He discusses the merits of various authors, and more than once expresses his extreme dis- taste for didactic writing. Now, he says, it is too directly instructive. Then he complains that the knowledge, insignificant and vapid as it is, rnust come in the s/ia^e of knowledge. He could not obtain at Newberry's shop any of the old " classics of the Nursery," he says ; whilst " Mrs. Barbauld's and Mrs. Trimmer's nonsense lay in piles about." His own domestic affairs struggle on as usual ; at one time calm and pleasant, at another time troubled and uncomfortable, owing to the frequent recurrence of his sis- MABY'S ILLNESSES. 97 ter's malady. In general he bore these changes with fortitude ; I do not observe more than one occasion on which (being then himself ill) his firmness seemed altogether to give way. In 1798, indeed, he had said, " I consider her perpetually on the brink of mad- ness." But in May, 1800, his old servant Hetty having died, and Mary (sooner than usual) falling ill again, Charles was obliged to remove her to an asylum ; and was left in the house alone with Hetty's dead body. "My heart is quite sick" (he cries), "and I don't know where to look for relief. My head is very bad. I almost wish that Mary were dead." This was the one solitary cry of anguish that he uttered during his long years of anxiety and suffering. At all other times he bowed his head in silence, uncom- plaining. Charles Lamb, with his sister, left Little Qtieen Street on or before 1800; in which year he seems to have migrated, first to 7 98 EE8TEB SAVORY. Chapel Street, Pentonville ; next to South- ampton Buildings, Chancery Lane ; and final- ly to No. 16 Mitre Court Buildings, in the Temple, " a pistol shot off Baron Masere's ; " and here he resided for about nine years. It was during his stay at Pentonville that he " fell in love " w^ith a young Quaker, called Hester Savory. As (he confesses) " I have never spoken to her during my life," it may be safely concluded that the attachment was essentially Platonic. This was the young girl who inspired those verses, now so vddely known and admired. I remember them as being the first lines which I ever saw of Charles Lamb's writing. I remember and ad- mire them still, for their natural, unaffected style; no pretence, no straining" for images and fancies flying too high above the subject, but dealing with thoughts that were near liis affections, in a fit and natural manner. The conclusion of the poem, composed and sent after her death (in February, 1803) to Man- POEM ON EESTER SAVORY'S DEATH. 99 ning, who was then in' Paris, is very sad and tender : — My sprightly neighbor, gone before To that unknown and silent shore, Shall we not meet, as heretofore, Some summer morning? When from thy cheerful eyes a ray Hath struck a bliss upon the day, A bliss that will not go away, A sweet forewarning. i.. vr V/, ( loo ) CHAPTER IV. (^Migrations,') — " yohn Woodvil." — Blackes- moor. — Wordsworth. — Rickjnan. — Godwin. — Visit to the Lakes. — Morning Post. — Uazlitt. — Nelson. — Ode to Tobacco. — Dramatic Specimens., <&c. — Inner Temple Lane. — Rejlector. — Hogarth aizd Sir J. Reynolds. — Leigh Hunt. — Lamb, Uaz- litt, and Hunt. — Russell Street and The- atrical Friends. IT is not always easy to fix Charles Lamb's doings (writings or migrations) to any precise date. The year may generally be ascertained ; but the day or month is often a matter of surmise only. Even the dates of the letters are often derived from the post- marks, or are sometimes conjectured from circumstances.* Occasionally the labors of a * As Lamb's changes of residence were frequent, it may be convenient to chronicle them in order, in this "JOHN WOOBVIL." loi drama or of lyric poems traverse several years, and are not to be referred to any one definite period. Thus "John Woodvil" (his tragedy) was begun in i799? printed in 1800, and sub- mitted to Mr. Kemble (then manager of Driiry Lane Theatre) in the Christmas of that year, but was not published until 1801. After this tragedy had been in Mr. Kemble's hands for about a year, Lamb naturally became urgent to hear his decision upon it. Upon applying for this he found that his play was — place, although the precise date of his moving from one to another can scarcely be specified in a single instance. 1775, Charles Lamb, born in Crown OiSce Row, Temple. 1795, lives at No. 7 Little Queen Street, Holborn. 1800 (early), lives at No. 45 Chapel Street, Pentonville. Same year, lives in Southampton Buildings, Chancery Lane. Same year, removes to No. 16 Mitre Court Buildings, Temple. 1809, removes to No. 4 Inner Temple Lane. 1817, removes to Russell Street, Covent Garden. 1823, removes to Colebrook Row, Islington. 1826, re- moves to Enfield. 1829, removes into lodgings in Enfield. 1830, lodges in Southampton Buildings. 1833, lives at Mrs. Walden's, in Church Street, Edmonton; where he dies on 27th December, 1834. I02 ''JOHN WOODVIL." lost! This was at once acknowledged, and a " courteous request made for another copy, if I had one by me." Luckily, another copy ex- isted. The " first runnings " of a genius were not, therefore, altogether lost, by having been cast, without a care, into the dusty limbo of the theatre. The other copy was at once sup- plied, and the play very speedily rejected. It was afterwards facetiously brought forward in one of the early numbers of the Edinburgh Review, and there noticed as a rude specimen of the earliest age of the drama, " older than yEschylus ! " Lamb met these accidents of fortune man- fully, and did not abstain from exercising his own Shandean humor thereon. It must be confessed that "John Woodvil" is not a tra- gedy likely to bring much success to a play- house. It is such a drama as a young poet, full of love for the Elizabethan writers, and without any knowledge of the requisitions of the stage, would be likely to produce. There SOijTEEY'S OPINION OF " JVOOBVIL." 103 is no plot ; little probability in the story ; which itself is not very scientifically developed. There are some pretty lines, especially some which have often been the subject of quota- tion ; but there is not much merit in the char- acters of the drarma, with the exception of the heroine, who is a heroine of the " purest water." Lamb's friend Southey, in writing to a correspondent, pronounces the following opinion : " Lamb is printing his play, which will please you by the exquisite beauty of its poetry, and provoke you by the exquisite sil- liness of its story." In October, 17995 Lamb went to see the remains of the old house (Gilston) in Hert- fordshire, where his grandmother once lived, and the " old church where the bones of my honored granddame lie." This visit was, in later years, recorded in the charming paper entitled " Blakesmoor in H shire." He found that the house where he had spent his pleasant holidays, when a little boy, had been 1 04 " B LAKES MO OB." demolished ; it was, in fact, taken down for the purpose of reconstruction ; but out of the ruins he conjures up pleasant ghosts, whom he restores and brings before a younger genera- tion. There are few of his papers in which the past years of his life are tnore delightfully revived- The house had been " reduced to an antiquity." But we go with him to the grass plat, were he used to read Cowley ; to the tapestried bedrooms, where the mythologi- cal people of Ovid used to stand forth, half alive ; even to " that haunted bedroom in which old Sarah • Battle died," ancj into which he " used to creep in a passion of fear." These things are all touched with a delicate pen, mixed and incorporated with tender re- flections ; for, " The solitude of childhood " (as he says) " is not so much the motlier of thought as the feeder of love." With him it was both. Lamb became acquainted with Wordsworth when he visited Coleridge, in the summer of ACQUAINTANCE WITH WORDSWOBTH. 105 1800. At that time his old schoolfellow lived at Stowe}^, and the greater poet was his neigh- bor. It is not satisfactorily shown in what manner the poetry of Wordsworth first attracted the notice of Charles Lamb, nor its first effect upon him. Perhaps the verse of Coleridge was not a bad stepping-stone to that elevation which enabled Charles to look into the interior of Wordsworth's mind. The two poets were not unlike in some respects, although Coleridge seldom (except perhaps in the " Ancient Mar- iner") ventured into the plain, downright phra- seology of the other. It is very soon apparent, however, that Lamb was able to admit Words- worth's great merits. In August, 1800 (just after the completion of his visit to Stowey), he writes, " I would pay five and forty thousand carriages" (parcel fares) "to read W^ords- worth's tragedy. Pi'ay give me an order on Longman for the ' Lyrical Ballads.' " And in October, 1800, the two authors must have been on familiar terms with each other ; for in a let- io6 INVITATION FROM WORDSWOBTH. ter addressed by Lamb to Wordsworth, " Dear Wordsworth," it appears that the latter had requested him to advance money for the pur- chase of books, to a considerable amount. This was at a time when Lamb was " not plethorically abounding in cash." The books required an outlay of eight pounds, and Lamb had not the sum then in his possession. " It is a scurvy thing" (he writes) " to cry. Give me the money first ; and I am the first of the Lambs that has done this for many centuries." Shortly afterwards Lamb sent his play to Wordsworth, who (this was previous to 30 January, 1801) appears to have invited Charles to visit him in Cumberland. Our humorist did not accept this invitation, being doubtful whether he could " afford so desperate a journey," and being (he says) "not at all romance-bit about Nature;" the earth, and sea, and sky, being, " when all is said, but a house to live in." It is not part of iny task to adjust the claims of the various writers of verse in this country KEATS AND WORDSWORTH. 107 to their stations in the Temple of Fame. If Keats was by nature the most essentially a poet in the present century, there is little doubt that Wordsworth has left his impress more broadly and more permanently than any other of our later writers upon the literature of England. There are barren, unpeopled wastes in the " Excursion," and in some of the longer poems ; but when his Genius stirs, we find ourselves in rich places which have no parallel in any book since the death of Milton. When his lyrical ballads first appeared, they encountered much opposition and some contempt. Readers had not for many years been accustomed to drink the waters of Helicon pure and undefiled ; and Wordsworth (a prophet of the true faith) had to gird vip his loins, march into the desert, and prepare for battle. He has, indeed, at last achieved a conquest ; but a long course of time, although sure of eventual success, elapsed before he could boast of victory. The battle has been perilous. When the " Excursion " was pub- io8 ADMIRATION OF WOBDBWORTE. lished (in 1814), Lamb wrote a review of it for " The Quarterly Review." Whatever might have been the actual fitness of this performance, it seems to have been hacked to pieces ; more than a third of the substance cut away; the warm expressions converted into cold ones ; and (in Lamb's phrase) " the eyes pulled out and the bleeding sockets left." This mangling (or amendment, as I suppose it was considered) was the work of the late Mr. Gifford. Charles had a great admiration for Wordsworth. It was short of prostration, however. He states that the style of "Peter Bell" does not satisfy him; but " ' Hartleap Well' is the tale for me," are his words in 1819. I have a vivid recollection of Wordsworth, who was a very grave man, with strong features and a deep voice. I met him first at the cham- bers (they were in the Temple) of Mr. Henry Crabb Robinson, one of the most amiable of men. I was a young versifier, and Wordsworth was just emerging out of a cloud of ignorant WOBDSWORTH. 109 contumely into the sunrise of his fame. He was fond (perhaps too fond) of reciting his own poetry before friends and strangers. I' was not attracted by his manner, which was ahuost too solemn, but I was deeply impressed by some of the weighty notes in his voice, when he was delivering out his oracles. I forget whether it was "Dion" or the beautiful poem of " Laodamia " that he read ; but I remembered the reading long afterwards, as one recollects the roll of the spent thunder. I met Wordsworth occasionally, afterwards, at Charles Lamb's, at Mr. Rogers's, and else- where, and once he did me the honor to call upon me. I remember that he had a very gentle aspect when he looked at my children. He took the hand of my dear daughter (who died lately) in his hand, and spoke some words to her, the recollection of which, perhaps, helped, with other things, to incline her to poetry. Haz- litt says that Wordsworth's face, notwithstanding his constitutional gravity, sometimes revealed no JOHN EIOKMAN. indications of dry humor. And once, at a morn- ing visit, I heard him give an account of his Slaving breakfasted in company witli Coleridge, and allowed him to expatiate to the extent of his lungs. " How could you permit him to go on and weary himself? " said Rogers ; " why, you are to meet him at dinner this evening.^' " Yes," replied Wordsworth ; "I know that very well ; but we like to take the sting out of him beforehand." About a year after Lamb's first knowledge of Manning, his small stock of friends was en- larged by the acquisition of Mr. John Rickman, one of the clerks of the House of Commons. "He is a most pleasant hand" (writes Lamb), " a fine rattling fellow, who has gone through life laughing at solemn apes ; himself hugely literate, from matter of fact, to Xenophon and Plato : he can talk Greek with Porson, anA nonsense with me." "He understands you" (he adds) " the first time. You never need speak twice to him. Fullest of matter, with GODWIN. Ill least verbosity." A year or two afterwards, when Rickman went to Ireland, Lamb wrote to Manning, " I have lost by his going what seems to me I never, can recover — a finished niaji. I almost dare pronounce you never saw his equal. His memory will come to me as the brazen serpent to the Israelites." Robert Southey also, when writing to his brother (in 1804), says, "Coleridge and Rickman, with William Taylor, make my Trinity of living greatness." A voluminous correspondence took place between Southey and Rickman, ranging from 1800 to 1839, in the course of which a variety of important subjects — namely, History, Antiquities, Political Economy, Poor Law, and general Politics were deliberately argued be- tween them. From this it appears that Southey, whose reading was very extensive, must have had great trust in the knowledge and judgment of Rickman. Lamb's acquaintance with Godwin, Holcroft, and Clarkson was formed about this time. 112 GODWIN. Godwin had been introduced to Lamb, by Cole- ridge, in 1800. The first interview is made memorable by Godwin's opening question : "And pray, Mr. Lamb, are you toad or frog?" This inquiry, having reference to Gilray's offen- sive caricature, did not afford promise of a very cheerful intimacy. Lamb, however, who ac- corded great respect to Godwin's intellect, did not resent it, but received his approaches fa- vorably, and indeed entertained him at breakfast the next morning. The acquaintance afterwards expanded into familiarity ; but I never observed the appearance of any warm friendship between them. Godwin's precision and extreme cold- ness of manner (perhaps of disposition) pre- vented this ; and Lamb was able, through all his admiration of the other's power, to discern those points in his character which were ob- noxious to his own. Some years previously, Charles had entertained much dislike to the philosopher's opinions, and referred to him as " that Godwin ; " and afterwards, when eulogiz- GODWIN. 113 ing the quick and fine intellect of Rickman, he says, " He does not want explanation, transla- tions, limitations, as Godwin does, when you make an assertion." When Godwin published his " Essay on Sep- ulchres," wherein he professed to erect a wooflen slab ^d a white cross, to be perpetu- ally renewed to the end of time (" to survive the fall of empires," as Miss Lamb says), in order to distinguish the site of every great man's grave. Lamb speaks of the project in these terms : " Godwin has written a pretty absurd book about Sepulchres. He was affronted be- cause I told him that it was better than Hervey, but not so good as Sir Thomas Browne." Suf- ficient intimacy, however, had arisen between them to induce Lamb to write a facetious epi- logue to Godwin's tragedy of " Antonio ; or, the Soldier's Return." This came out in 1800, and was very speedily damned ; although Lamb said that " it had one fine line ; " which indeed he repeated occasionally. Godwin bore this 114 VISIT TO THE LAKE 8. failure, it must be admitted, without being de- pressed by it, although he was a very poor man, and although he was " five hundred pounds ideal money out of pocket by the failure." In 1802 Lamb visited Coleridge, who was then living near Keswick, in Cumberland. For the first time in his life he bHield lakea and mountains ; and the effect upon him was star- tling and unexpected. It was much like the impression made by the first sight of the Alps upon Leigh Hunt, who had theretofore always maintained that those merely great heaps of earth ought to have no effect upon a properly con- stituted mind ; but he freely confessed after- wards, that he had been mistaken. Lamb had been more than once invited to visit the romantic Lake country. He had no desire to inspect the Ural chain, where the malacliite is hidden, nor the silver regions of Potosi ; but he was all at once affected by a desire of " vis- iting remote regions." It was a sudden irrita- bility, which could only be quieted by travel. VISIT TO THE LAKES. 115 Charles and his sister therefore went, without giving any notice to Coleridge, who, however, received them very kindly, and gave up all his time in order to show them the wonders of the neighborhood. The visitors arrived there in a " gorgeous sunset " (the only one that Lamb saw during his stay in the country), and thought that they had got " inta fairy-land." " We entered Coleridge's study " (he writes to Manning, shortly afterwards) "just in the dusk, when the mountains were all dark. Such an impression I never received from objects of sight, nor do I suppose I ever can again. Glori- ous creatures, Skiddaw, &c. I shall never forget how ye lay about that night, like an intrench- ment ; gone to bed, as it seemed, for the night." They went to Coleridge's house, in which " he had a large, antique, ill-shaped room, with an old organ, never played upon, an yEolian harp, and shelves of scattered folios,'' and remained there three weeks, visiting Words- worth's cottage, he himself being absent, and Ii6 BETUBN TO LONDON. meeting the Clarksons (" good, hospitable peo- ple"). They tarried there one night, and met Lloyd. They clambered up to the top of Skiddaw, " and went to Grassmere, Am- bleside, UUswater, and over the middle of Helvellyn." Coleridge then dwelt upon a small hill by the side of Keswick, quite " en- veloped on all sides by a net of mountains." On his return to London, Lamb wrote to his late host, saying, " I feel I shall remember your mountains to the last day of my life. They haunt me perpetually. I am like a man who has been falling in love unknown to himself, which he finds out when he leaves the lady." He soon subsided, however, into his old natural metropolitan happiness. Wordsworth was not in the Lake country when Lamb visited Coleridge ; but after his return the great poet vi&ited Charles in Lon- don, passed some time there, and then de- parted for Yorkshire, where he went in order to be married. ''MORNING POST." 117 At this time Lamb contributed (generally facetiae) to various newspapers, now forgotten. One of them, it was said jocosely, had " two and twenty readers, including the pi'inter, the pressman, and the devil." But he was still very poor ; so poor that ^oleridge offered to supply him with prose translations from the German, in order that he might versify them for the "Morning Post," and thus obtain a little money. In one of his letters Lamb says, " If I got or could but get fifty pounds a year only, in addition to what I have, I should live in affluence." About the time that he is writing this, he is recommending Chapman's "Homer" to Cole- ridge ; is refusing to admit Coleridge's dona jide debt to himself of fifteen pounds ; is com- posing Latin letters ; and in other respects de- porting himself like a " gentleman who lives at home at ease ; " not like a poor clerk, obliged to husband his small means, and to deny himself the cheap luxury of books that he had Ii8 LAMB'S POVERTY. long coveted. "Do you remember" (his sis- ter says to him, in the Essay on " Old China") " the brown suit that grew so threadbare, all because of that folio of Beaumont and Fletcher that you dragged home late at night from Barker's, in Covej;it Garden ; when you set off near ten o'clock, on Saturday night, from Islington, fearing you should be too late ; and when you lugged it home, wishing it was twice as cumbersome,^' &c. These realities of poverty, very imperfectly covered over by words of fiction, are very touching. It is deeply interesting, that Essay, where the rare enjoyments of a poor scholar are brought into contrast and relief with the indifference that grows upon him when his increased income enables him to acquire any objects he pleases. Those things are no longer distinguished as " enjoyments " which are not purchased by a sacrifice. " A pur- chase is but a purchase now. Formerly" it used to be a triumph. A thing was worth WILLIAM HAZLITT. 119 buying when we felt the money that we paid for it." (1804.) The intimacy of that extraordinary man, William Hazlitt, was the great gain of Lamb at this period of his life. If Lamb's youngest and tenderest reverence was given to Coleridge, Hazlitt's intellect must also have commanded his later permanent respect. Without the imagination and extreme facility of Coleridge, he had almost as much subtlety and far more steadfastness of mind. Perhaps this steadfastness remained sometimes until it took the color of obstinacy ; but, as in the case of his constancy to the first Napoleon, it was obstinacy riveted and made firm by some concurring respect. I do not know that Hazlitt had the more affectionate nature of the two ; but assuredly he was less tossed about and his sight less obscured by floating fancies and vast changing projects {inuscce voUtantes) than the other. To the one are ascribed fierce and envious passions ; coarse I20 EAZLITT. thoughts and habits — (he has indeed been crownM by defamation) ; whilst to Coleridge have been awarded reputation and glory, and praise from a thousand tongues. To secure justice we miust wait for unbiassed posterity. I meet, at present, with few persons who recollect much of Hazlitt. Some profess to have heard nothing of him except his preju- dices and violence ; but his prejudices were few, and his violence (if violence he had) was of very rare occurrence. He was ex- tremely patient, indeed, although earnest when discussing points in politics, respecting which he held very strong and decided opinions. But he circulated his thoughts on many other subjects, whereon he ought not to have ex- cited offence or opposition. He wrote (and he wrote well) upon many things lying far beyond the limits of politics. To use his own words, " I have at least glanced over a num- ber of subjects — painting, poetry, prose, plays, politics, parliamentary speakers, metaphysical EAZLITT. 121 lore, books, men, and things." This list, ex- tensive as it is, does not specify very precisely all the subjects on which he wi'ote. His thoughts range over the literature of Elizabeth and James's times, and of the time of Charles II. ; over a large portion of modern literature ; over the distinguishing character of men, their peculiarities of mind and manners ; over the wonders of poetry, the subtleties of metaphysics, and the luminous regions of art. In painting, his criticisms (it is prettily said by Leigh Hunt) cast a light upon the sub- ject like the glory reflected " from a painted wmdow." I myself have, in my library, eighteen volumes of Hazlitt's works, and I do not possess all that he published. Be- sides being an original thinker, Hazlitt ex- celled in conversation. He was, moreover, a very temperate liver : yet his enemies pro- claimed to the world that he was wanting even in sobriety. During the thirteen years that I knew him intimately, and (at certain seasons) 132 EAZLITT. saw him almost every day, I know that he drank nothing stronger than water ; except tea, indeed, in which he indulged in the morning. Had he been as temperate in his political views as in his cups, he would have escaped the slander that pursued him through life. The great intimacy between these two distin- guished writers, Charles Lamb and William Hazlitt (for they had known each other be- fore), seems to have commenced in a singular manner. They were one day at Godwin's, when " a fierce dispute was going on between Holcroft and Coleridge, as to which was best, ' Man as he was, or Man as he is to be.' ' Give me,' says Lamb, ' man as he is not to be.' " " This was the beginning " (Hazlitt says,) "of a friendship which, I believe, still continues." Hazlitt married in 1805, and his wife soon became familiar with Mary Lamb. Indeed, Charles and his sister more than once visited the Hazlitts, who at that time lived at Win- terslow, near Salisbury Plain, and enjoyed EAZLITT. 123 theii* visits greatly, walking from eight to twenty miles a day, and seeing Wilton, Stone- henge, and the other (to them unaccustomed) sights of the country. " The quiet, lazy, de- licious month " passed there is referred to in one of Miss Lamb's pleasant letters. And the acquaintance soon deepened into friend- ship. Whatever good will was exhibited by Hazlitt (and there was much) is repaid by Lamb in his letter to Southey, published in the "London Magazine" (October, 1833), wherein he places on record his pride and admiration of his friend. " So far from being ashamed of the intimacy" (he says), " it is my boast that I was able, for so many years, to have preserved it entire ; and I think I shall go to my grave without finding or expecting to find such another companion." Lamb's respect for men and things did not depend on repute. His fondness for old books seldom (never, perhaps, except in the single case of the Duchess of Newcastle) deluded 124 NELSON. him into a respect for old books which were without merit. He required that excellence should be combined with antiquity. A great name was generally to him simply a great name ; no more. If it had lasted through cen- turies, indeed, as in the case of Michael An- gelo, then he admitted that " a great name implied greatness." He did. not think that greatness lay in the " thews and sinews," or in the bulk alone. When Nelson was walking on the quay at Yarmouth, the mob cried out in derision, " What ! make that little fellow a captain ! " Lamb thought otherwise ; and in regret for the death of that great seaman, he says, " I have followed him ever since I saw him walking in Pall Mall, looking just as a hero should look " (/. e., simply). "He was the only pretence of a great man we had." The large stage blusterer and ostenta- tious drawcansir were never, in Lamb's esti- mation, models for heroes. Li the case of the first Napoleon also, he writes, " He is a ODE TO TOBACCO. 125 fine fellow, as my barber says ; and I should not mind standing bareheaded at his table to' do him service in his fall." This was in Au- gust, 1815. The famous "Ode to Tobacco" was written in 1805, and the pretty stories founded on the ■plays of Shakespeare were composed or trans- lated about the year 1806 ; Lamb taking the tragic, and his sister the other share of the version. These tales were to produce about sixty pounds ; to them a sum which was most important, for he and Mary at that time hailed the addition of twenty pounds to his salary (on the retirement of an elder clerk) as a grand addition to their comforts. Charles was at this period (February, 1806) at work upon a farce, to be called " Mr. H. ; " from which he says, "if it has a 'good run' I shall get two hundred pounds, and I hope one hundred pounds for the copyright." " Mr. H." (which rested solely upon the absurdity of a name, which after all was not ii'resistibly 126 EIS FARCE. absurd) was accepted at the theatre, but un- fortunately it had noi " a good run." It failed, not quite undeservedly perhaps, for (although it has since had some success in America) there was not much probability of its pros- perity in London. It was acted once (loth December, 1806), and was announced for rep- etition on the following evening, but was withdrawn. Lamb's courage and good humor did not fail. He joked about it to Words- worth, said that he had many fears about it, and admitted that "John Bull required solider fare than a bare letter." As he says, in his letter to the poet, " a hundred hisses (hang the word, I write it like kisses) outweigh a thousand claps. The former come more directly from the heart. Well" (he adds), "it is withdrawn, and there's an end." In 1807 were published " Specimens of Dramatic Poets contemporary with Shake- speare ; " and these made Lamb known as a man conversant with our old English litera- DRAMATIC SPECIMENS, ETC. 127 ture, and helped mainly to direct the taste of the public to those fine writers. The book brought repute (perhaps a little money) to him. Soon afterwards he published " The Adventures of Ulysses," which was intended to be an introduction to the reading of " Te- lemachus," always a popular book. These " adventures " were derived from Chapman's " Translation of Homer," of which Lamb says, " Chapman is divine ; and my abridg- ment has not, I hope, quite emptied him of his divinity." In or about 1808 Miss Lamb's pretty little stories called "Mrs. Leicester's School" (to which Charles contributed three tales) v^^ere published ; and soon afterwards a small bo6k entitled " Poetry for Children," being a joint publication by brother and sister, came out. " It was done by me and Mary in the last six months" (January, 1809). It does not appear to what extent, if at all, it added to the poor clerk's means. 128 INNER TEMPLE LANE. In the same year (as Miss Lamb writes in December, 1808), Charles was invited by Tom Sheridan to write some scenes in a speaking Pantomime ; the other parts of which (the eloquence not of words) had been already manufactured by Tom and his more cele- brated father, Richard Brinsley. Lamb and Tom Sheridan had been, it seems, communi- cative over a bottle of claret, when an agree- ment for the above purpose was entered into between them. This was subsequently carried into effect, and a drama was composed. This drama, still extant in the British Museum, in Lamb's own writing, appears to be a species of comic opera, the scene of which is laid in GilDraltar, but is without a name. I have not seen it, but speak upon the report of others. In 1809 Lamb moved once more into the Temple, now to the top story of No. 4 Inner Temple Lane, " where the household gods are slow to come, but where I mean to live and die" (he says). From this place (since TRANSIENT ABSTINENCE. 129 pulled down and rebuilt) he writes to Man- ning, who is in China, " Come, and bi-ing any of your friends the Mandarins with you. My best room commands a court, in which there are trees and a pump, the water of which is excellent cold — with brandy ; and not very insipid without." He sends Man- ning some of his little books, to give him " some idea of European literature." It is in this letter (January, 18 10) that he speaks of Braham and his singing, which I have else- where alluded to ; of Kate with nine stars ********* ("though she is but one"); of his book (for children) "on titles of honor," exemplifying the eleven gradations, by which Mi'. C. Lamb rises in succession to be Baron, Marquis, Duke, and Emperor Lamb, and finally Pope Innocent, and other lively matters fit to solace an English mathematician self-banished to China. In July, 1810, an abstinence from all spirit- vious liquors took place. Lamb says tliat his 9 130 HOGARTH. sister has " taken to water like a hungry- otter," whilst he " limps after her " for virtue's sake ; but he is " full of cramps and rheu- matism, and cold internally, so that fire don't warm him." It is scarcely necessary to state that the period of entire abstinence was very- transient. A quarterly magazine, called " The Reflect- or," was published in the autumn of 18 10, and contained Essays by Charles Lamb and several other writers. Amongst these are some of the best of Lamb's earlier writings — namely, the paper on Hogarth and that on the Tragedies of Shakespeare. It is singular that these two Essays, which are as fine as anything of a similar nature in English criti- cism, should have been almost unnoticed (vni- discovered, except by literary friends) until the year 1818, when Lamb's works were collected and published. The grand passage on " Lear " has caused the Essay on the Shakespeare Tra- gedies to be well known. Less known is EO GARTH AND REYNOLDS. 131 the Essay on Hogarth, although it is more elaborate and critical ; the labor being quite necessary in this case, as »the pretensions of Hogarth to the grand style had been denounced by Sir Joshua Reynolds. In affluence of genius, in variety and exu- berance of thought, there surely can exist little comparison between Reynolds and Ho- garth. Reynolds was, indeed, the finest painter, especially the most superb colorist, of the Eng- lish school. But Hogarth was the greatest inventor, — the greatest discoverer of character, — in the English or any other school. As a painter of manners he is unapproached. In a kindred walk, he traversed all the passions from the lowest mirth to the profoundest mel- ancholy, possessing the tragic element in the most eminent degree. And if grandeur can exist — as I presume it can — in beings who have neither costume nor rank to set off their qualities, then some of the characters of Ho- garth in essential grandeur are far beyond the 132 EOGABTH AND REYNOLDS. conventional figures of many other artists. Pain, and joy, and poverty, and human daring are not to be circu«iscribed by dress and fash- ion. Their seat is deeper (in the soul), and is altogether independent of such trivial accre- tions. In point of expression, I never saw the face of the madman (in the " Rake's Progress") exceeded in any picture, ancient or modern. "It is a face " (Lamb says) " that no one that has seen can easily forget." It is, as he argues, human suffering stretched to its utmost endurance. I cannot forbear directing the attention of the reader to Lamb's bold and excellent defence of Hogarth. He will like both painter and author, I think, better than before. I have, indeed, been in company where young men, professing to be painters, spoke slightingly of Hogarth. To this I might have replied that Hogarth did not paint for the applause of tyros in art, but — for the world ! The "Reflector" was edited by an old LEIGH HUNT. 133 Christ's Hospital boy, Mr. Leigh Hunt, who subsequently became, and during their joint lives remained, one of Lamb's most familiar friends. It was a quarterly magazine, and re- ceived, of coui"se, the contributions of various writers ; amongst whom were Mr. Barnes (of the "Times"), Barron Field, Dr. Aikin, Mr. Landseer (the elder), Charles Lamb, Octavius Gilchrist, Mitchell (the translator of Aristoph- anes), and Leigh Hunt himself. I do not observe Lamb's name appended to any of the articles in the first volume ; but the second comprises the Essays on Hogarth and on Burial Societies, together with a paper on the Custom of Hissing at the Theatres, under the signature of " Semel Damnatus." There is a good deal of humor in this paper (which has not been republished, I believe). It professes to come from one of a club of condemned authors, no person being admissible as a mem- ber until he had been unequivocally damned. I'observe that in the letters, &c., of Lamb, 134 LAMB, HAZLITT, AND HUNT. which were published in 1841, and copiously commented on by Sir Thomas N. Talfourd (the editor), there is not much beyond a bare mention of Leigh Hunt's name, and no letter from Charles Lamb to Mr. Hunt is published. It is now too late to remedy this last defect, my recent endeavors to obtain such letters having resulted in disappointment: otherwise I should have been very glad to record the extent of Lamb's liking for a poor and able man, whom I knew well for at least forty years. I know that at one time Lamb valued him, and that he always thought highly of his intellect, as indeed he has testified in his famous remonstrance to Southey. And in Mr. Hunt's autobiography I find abundant evidence of his admiration for Lamb, in a generous eulogy upon him. Charles Lamb, William Hazlitt, and Leigh Hunt, formed a remarkable trio of men, each of whom was decidedly different from the others. Only one of them (Hunt) cared much LAMB, EAZLITT, AND HUNT. 135 for praise. Hazlitt's sole ambition was to sell his essays, which he rated scarcely beyond their marketable value ; and Lamb saw enough of the manner in which praise and censure were at that time distributed, to place any high value on immediate success. Of posterity neither of them thought. Leigh Hunt, from temperament, was more alive to pleasant in- fluences (sunshine, freedom for work, rural walks, complimentary words) than the others. Hazlitt cared little for these things ; a fierce argument or a well-contested game at rackets was more to his taste ; whilst Lamb's pleasures (except, perhaps, from his pipe) lay amongst the books of the old English writers. His soul delighted in communion with ancient genera- tions, more especially with men who had been unjustly forgotten. Hazlitt's mind at- tached itself to abstract subjects ; Lamb's was more practical, and embraced men. Hunt was somewhat indifferent to persons as well as to things, except in the cases of Shelley 136 LAMB, EAZLITT, AND HUNT. and Keats, and his own family ; yet he liked poetry and poetical subjects. Hazlitt (who was ordinarily very shy) was the best talker of the three. Lamb said the most pithy and brilliant things. Hunt displayed the most inge- nuity. All three sympathized often with the same persons or the same books ; and this, no doubt, cemented the intimacy that existed between them for so many years. Moreover, each of them understood the others, and placed just value on their objections when any difference of opinion (not infrequent) arose between them. Without being debaters, they were accomplished talkers. They did not argue for the sake of conquest, but to strip off the mists and perplexities which sometimes obscure truth. These men — who lived long ago — had a great share of my regard. They were all slandered, chiefly by men who knew little of them, and nothing of their good qual- ities ; or by men who saw them only through the mist of political or religious animosity. LAMB, EAZLITT, AND HUNT. 137 Perhaps it was partly for this reason that they came nearer to my heart. All the three men, Lamb, Hazlitt, and Hunt, were throughout their lives Unitarians, as was also George Dyer ; Coleridge was a Unitarian preacher in his youth, having seceded from the Church of England ; to which, however, he returned, and was in his latter years a strenuous supporter of the national faith. George Dyer once sent a pamphlet to convert Charles to Unitarianism. " Dear blundering soul" (Lamb said), "why, I am as old a One Goddite as himself." To Southey Lamb writes, " Being, as you know, not quite a Churchman, I felt a jealousy at the Church taking to herself the whole deserts of Chris- tianity." His great, and indeed infinite rev- erence, nevertheless, for Christ is shown in his own Christian virtues and in constant ex- pressions of reverence. In Hazlitt's paper of " Persons one would wish to have seen," Lamb is made to refer to Jesus Christ as he 138 MABY LAMB'S ILLNESSES. " who once put on a semblance of mortality," and to say, " If he were to come into the rooin, we should all fall dbwn and kiss the hem of his garment." I do not venture to comment on these delicate matters, where men like Hazlitt, and Lamb, and Coleridge (the latter for a short time only) have enter- tained opinions which differ from those of the generality of their countrymen. During these years, Mary Lamb's illnesses were frequent, as usual. Her relapses were not dependent on the seasons ; they came in hot summers and with the freezing winters. The only remedy seems to have been extreme quiet when any slight symptom of uneasiness was apparent. Charles (poor fellow) had to live, day and night, in the society of a person who was — mad ! If any exciting talk occurred, he had to dismiss his friend with a whisper. If any stupor or extraordinary silence was ob- served, then he had to rouse her instantly. He has been seen to take the kettle from the fire THEATRICAL ACQUAINTANCES. 139 and place it for a moment on her head-dress, in order to startle her into recollection. He lived in a state of constant anxiety ; — and there was no help. Not to neglect Charles Lamb's migrations, it should be noted that he moved his residence from Inner Temple Lane (" w^here he meant to live and die ") into Russell Street, Covent Gar- den, in the latter part of the year 181 7. When there, he became personally acquainted w^ith several members of the theatrical profession ; amongst others, with Munden and Miss Kelly, for both of whom he entertained the highest admiration. One of the (Elia) Essays is written to celebrate Munden's histrionic talent ; and in his letters he speaks of " Fanny Kelly's divine plain face." The Barbara S. of the second (or last) series of essays is, in fact, Miss Kelly her- self. All his friends knew that he was greatly attached to her. He also became acquainted with Miss Burrell — afterwards Mrs. Gould — but who, he says, 140 THEATRICAL ACQUAINTANCES. " remained uncoined." Subsequently he was introduced to Liston and Elliston, each of whom received tokens of his liking. The first was the. subject of an amusing fictitious biography. In Lamb's words, it was " a lying life of Liston," uncontaminated by a particle of truth. Mun- den, he says, had faces innumerable ; Liston had only one; "but what a face!" he adds, admitting it to be beyond all vain description. Perhaps this subject of universal laughter and admiration never received such a compliment, except from Hazlitt, who, after commenting on Hogarth's excellences, his invention, his charac- ter, his satire, &c., concludes by saying, " I have never seen anything in the expression of comic humor equal to Hogarth's humor, except Lis- ton's face." In the course of time, official labor becomes tiresome, and the India House clerk grows splenetic. He complains sadly of his work. Even the incursions of his familiars annoy him, although it annoys him more when they WORKS PUBLISHED. 141 go away. In the midst of this trouble his worlvs are collected and published ; and he emerges at once from the obscure shades of Leadenhall Street into the full blaze of public notice. He wakes from dullness and discontent, and " finds himself famous." ( 142 ) CHAPTER V. My Recollections. — Russell Street. — Person- al Appearance. — Manner. — Tendency of Mind. — Prejudices. — Alleged Excesses. — Mode of Life. — Love of Smoking. — His Lodgiitgs. — His Sister. — Costume. — Read- ing aloud. — Pastes and Opinions. — Lo?i- don. — Love of Books. — Charity. — Wednes- day Parties. — His Compatzions. — Epitaph upon them. N the year 1817 or 1818 I first became per- sonally acquainted with Charles Lamb. This was about the time of his removal from the Temple. It was in the course of the year 181 8 that his works had been first collected and published. They came upon the world by sur- prise ; scarcely any one at that time being aware that a fine genius and humorist existed, within the dull shades of London, whose quality very few of the critics had assayed, and none of them PEBSONAL APPEARANCE. 143 had commended. He was thus thrown (waif- like) amongst the great body of the people ; was at once estimated, and soon rose into renown. Persons who had been in the habit of travers- ing Govent Garden at that time (seven and forty years ago) might, by extending their walk a few yards into Russell Street, have noted a small, spare man, clothed in black, who went out every morning and returned every afternoon, as regularly as the hands of the clock moved towards certain hours. You could not mistake him. He was somewhat stiff in his manner, and almost clerical in dress ; which indicated much wear. He had a long, melancholy face, with keen, penetrating eyes ; and he walked, with a short, resolute step, city-wards. He looked no one in the face for more than a mo- ment, yet contrived to see everything as he went on. No one who ever studied the human features could pass him by without recollecting his coun- tenance : it was full of sensibility, and it came upon you like a new thought, which you could 144 PERSONAL APPEAEANGE. not help dwelling upon afterwards ; it gave rise to meditation, and did you good. This small, half-clerical man was — Charles Lamb. I had known him for a short time previ- ously to 1818, having been introduced to him at Mr. Leigh Kunt's house, where I enjoyed his company once or twice over agreeable suppers ; but I knew him slightly only, and did not see much of him until he and his sister went to occupy the lodgings in Russell Sti'eet, where he invited me to come and see him. They lived in the corner house adjoining Bow Street. This house belonged, at that time, to an ironmonger (or brazier), and was comfort- able and clean, — and a little noisy. Charles Lamb was about forty years of age when I first saw him ; and I knew him inti- mately for the greater part of twenty years. Small and spare in person, and with small legs ("immaterial legs" Hood called them), he had a dark complexion, dark, curling hair, almost black, and a grave look, lightening up PERSONAL APPEARANOE. 145 occasionally, and capable of sudden merriment. His laugh was seldom excited by jokes merely ludicrous ; it was never spiteful ; and his quiet smile was sometimes inexpressibly sweet : per- haps it had a touch of sadness in it. His mouth was well shaped ; his lip tremulbus with expres- sion ; his brown eyes were quick, restless, and glittering ; and he had a grand head, full of thought. Leigh Hunt said that " he had a head worthy of Aristotle." Hazlitt calls it " a fine Titian head, full of dumb eloquence." I knew that, before he had attained the age of twenty years, he had to make his way in the world, and that his lines had not been cast in pleasant places. I had heard, indeed, that his family had at one time consisted of a father and mother and an insane sister ; all helpless and poor, and all huddled togetlier in a small lodg- ing, scarcely large enough to admit of their moving about without restraint. It is difficult to imagine a more disheartening youth. Never- theless, out of this desert, in which no hope 10 146 MANNEB. was visible, he rose up eventually a cheerful man (cheerful w^hen his days w^ere not clouded by his sister's illness); a charming companion, full of ' pleasant and gentle fancies, and the finest hu- morist of his age. Although som'etimes strange in manner, he was thoroughly unaffected ; in serious matters thoroughly sincere. He was, indeed (as he confesses) , terribly shy ; diffident, not awkward in manner ; with occasionally nervous, twitch- ing motions that betrayed this infirmity. He dreaded the criticisms of sen^ants far more than the observations of their masters. To undergo the scrutiny of the first, as he said to me, when we were going to breakfast with Mr. Rogers one morning, was " terrible." His speech was brief and pithy ; not too often hu- morous ; never sententious nor didactic. Al- though he sometimes talked whilst walking up and down the room (at which time he seldom looked at the person with whom he was talk- ing), he very often spoke as if impelled by the TENDENCY OF MIND. 147 necessity of speaking — suddenly, precipitately. If he could have spoken very easily, he might possibly have uttered long sentences, exposi- tions, or orations ; such as some of his friends indulged in, to the titter confusion of their hearers. But he knew the value of silence ; and he knew that even truth may be damaged by too many words. When he did speak, his words had a flavor in them beyond any that I have heard elsewhere. His conversation dwelt upon persons or things within his own recollection, or it opened (with a startling doubt, or a ques- tion, or a piece of quaint humor) the great circle of thought. In temper he was quick, but easily appeased. He never affected that exemption from sensi- bility which has sometimes been mistaken for philosophy, and has conferred reputation upon little men. In a word, he exhibited his emo- tions in a fine, simple, natural manner. Con- trary to the usual habits of wits, no retort oi 148 PREJUDICES. reply by Lamb, however smart in character, ever gave pain. It is clear that ill nature is not w^it, and that there may be sparkling flov\^ers v\^hich are not surrounded by thorns. Lamb's dissent vs^as very intelligible, but never superfluously demonstrative ; often, indeed, ex- pressed by his countenance only ; sometimes merely by silence. He v^as more pleasant to some persons (more pleasant, I confess, to ;;ze) for the few faults or weaknesses that he had. He did not daunt us, nor throw us to a distance, by his formidable virtues. We sympathized with him ; and this sympathy, which is a union between two similitudes, does not exist between perfect and imperfect natures. Like all of us, he had a few prejudices : he did not like French- men ; he shrunk from Scotchmen (excepting, however. Burns) ; he disliked bankrupts ; he hated close bargainers. For the Jewish nation he entertained a mysterious awe : the Jewesses he admired, with trembling: "Jael had those ALLEGED EXCESSES. 149 full, dark, inscrutable eyes," he says. Of Bra- ham's triumphant singing he repeatedly spoke ; there had been nothing like it in his recollec- tion : he considered him equal to Mrs. Siddons. In his letters he characterizes him as " a mixture of the Jew, the gentleman, and the angel." He liked chimney-sweepers — the young ones — the " innocent blacknesses;" and with beggars he had a strong sympathy. He always spoke tenderly of them, and has writ- ten upon them an essay full of beauty. Do not be frightened (he says) at the hard words, im- posture, &c. " Cast thy bread upon the waters : some have unawares entertained angels." Much injustice has been done to Lamb by accusing him of excess in drinking. The truth is, that a small quantity of any strong liquid (wine, &c.) disturbed his speech, which at best was but an eloquent stammer. The distresses of his early life made him ready to resort to any remedy which brought forgetful- ness ; and he himself, frail in body and excitable. 150 MODE OF LIFE. was very speedily affected. During all my inti- macy with him, I never knew him drink im- moderately ; except once, when, having been prevailed upon to abstain altogether from wine and spirits, he resented the vow thus forced upon him by imbibing an extraordinary quan- tity of the "spurious" liquid. When he says, " The waters have gone over me," he speaks in metaphor, not historically. He was never vanquished by water, and seldom by wine. His energy, or mental power, was indeed sub- ject to fluctuation ; no excessive merriment, perhaps, but much depression. "My waking life," he writes, " has much of the confusion, the trouble, and obscure perplexity of an ill dream. In the daytime I stumble upon dark mountains." Lamb's mode of life was temperate, his din- ner consisting of meat, with vegetables and bread only. " We have a sure hot joint on Sun- days," he writes, "and when had we better?" He appears to have had a relish for game, MODE OF LIFE. 151 roast pig, and brawn, &c., roast pig espe- cially, when given to him ; but his poverty first, and afterwards his economical habits, prevented his indulging in such costly luxu- ries. He was himself a small and delicate eater at all times ; and he entertained some- thing like aversion towards great feeders. During a long portion of his life, his means were much straitened. The reader may note his want of money in several of his letters. Speaking of a play, he says, " I am quite aground for a plan-; and / mztst do something for money r He was restless and fond of walking. I do not think that he could ride on horseback; but he could walk during all the day. He had, in that manner, traversed the whole of London and its suburbs (especially the north- ern and north-eastern parts) frequently. " I cannot sit and think," he said. Tired with exercise, he went to bed early, except when friends supped with him ; and he always rose 152 LOVE OF SMOKING. early, from necessity, being obliged to attend at his office, in Leadenhall Street, every day, from ten until four o'clock — sometimes later. It was there that his familiar letters were written. On his return, after a humble meal, he strolled (if it was summer) into the suburbs, or traversed the streets where the old book- shops were to be found. He seldom or never gave dinners. You were admitted at all times to his plain supper, which was sufficiently good when any visitor came ; at other times, it was spare. "We have tried to eat sup- pers," Miss Lamb writes to Mrs. Hazlitt, " but we left our appetites behind us ; and the dry loaf, which offended you, now comes in at night unaccompanied." You were sure of a welcome at his house ; sure of easy, un- fettered talk. After supper you might smoke a pipe with your host, or gossip (upon any subject) with him or his sensible sister. Perhaps the pipe was the only thing in which Lamb really exceeded. He was fond LOVE OF TOBACCO. 153 of it from the very early years when he was accustomed to smoke " Orinooko " at the " Salutation and Cat," with Coleridge, in 1796. He attempted on several occasions to give it up, but his struggles were overcome by counter influences. " Tobacco," he says, " stood in its own light.'.' At last, in 1S05, he was able to conquer and abandon it — for a time. His success, like desertion from a friend, caused some remorse and a great deal of regret. In writing to Coleridge about his house, which was " smoky," he inquires, "Have you cured it? It is hard to cure any-' thing of smoking." Apart from the mere pleasure of smoking, the narcotic soothed his nerves and controlled those perpetual appre- hensions which his sister's frequent illnesses excited. Of Mary Lamb, Hazlitt has said (somewhere) that she was the most rational and wisest woman whom he had ever known. Lamb and his sister had an open party once a week, every Wednesday evening, when his 154 Hia LODGINGS. friends generally went to visit him, without any special invitation. He invited you sud- denly, not pressingly ; but with such hearti- ness that you at once agreed to come. There was usually a game at whist on these even- ings, in which the stakes were very moder- ate, indeed almost nominal. When my thoughts turn backward, as they sometimes do, to these past days, I see my dear old friend again, — "in my mind's eye, Horatio," — with his outstretched hand, and his grave, sweet smile of welcome. It w^s always in a room of moderate size, com- fortably but plainly furnished, that he lived. All old mahogany table was opened out in the middle of the room, round which, and near the walls, were old, high-backed chairs (such as our grandfathers used), and a long, plain bookcase completely filled with old books. These were his " ragged veterans." In one of his letters he says, " My rooms are luxuri- ous, one for prints, and one for books ; a HIS SISTER. 155 summei* and winter parlor." They, however, were not otherwise decorated. I do not re- member ever to have seen a flower or an image in them. He had not been educated into expensive tastes. His extravagances were confined to books. These were all chosen by himself, all old, and all in " admired dis- order ; " yet he could lay his hand on any volume in a moment. " You never saw," he writes, " a bookcase in more true harmony with the contents than what I have nailed up in ray room. Though new, it has more apti- tude for growing old than you shall often see ; as one sometimes gets a friend in the middle of life who becomes an old friend in a short time." Here Charles Lamb sate, when at home, always near the table. At the opposite side was his sister, engaged in some domestic work, knitting or sewing, or poring over a modern novel. " Bridget in some things is behind her years." In fact, although she was 156 HIS sisti:b. ten years older than her brother, she had more sympathy with modern books and with ■youthful fancies than he had. She wore a neat cap, of the fashion of her youth ; an old-fashioned dress. Her face was pale and somewhat square, but very placid, with gray, intelligent eyes. She was very mild in her manner to strangers, and to her brother gen- tle and tender always. She had often an upward look, of peculiar meaning, when di- rected towards him, as though to give him assurance that all was then well with her. His affection for her was somewhat less on the surface, but always present. There was great gratitude intermingled with it. " In the days of weakling infancy," he writes, " I was her tender charge, as I have been her care in foolish manhood since." Then he adds, pathetically, " I wish I could throw into a heap the remainder of our joint existences, that we might share them in equal di- vision." COSTUME. 157 Lamb himself was always dressed in black. " I take it," he says, " to be the proper cos- tume of an author." When this was once objected to, at a wedding, he pleaded the raven's apology in the fable, that " he had no other." His clothes were entirely black ; and he wore long black gaiters, up to the knees. His head was bent a little forward, like one who had been reading; and, if not standing or walking, he generally had in his hand an old book, a pinch of snuff, or, later in the evening, a pipe. He stammered a little, pleasantly, just enough to prevent his making speeches ; just enough to make you listen eagerly for his words, always full of meaning, or charged with a jest ; or referring (but this was I'are) to some line or passage from one of the old Elizabethan writers, which was always ushered in with a smile of tender rev- erence. When he read aloud it was with a slight tone, which I used to think he had caught from Coleridge ; Coleridge's recitation, 158 BEADING ALOUD. however, rising to a chant. Lamb's reading was not generally in books of verse, but in the old lay writers, whose tendency was to- wards religious thoughts. He liked, however, religious verse. " I can read," he writes to Bernard Barton, " the homely old version of the Psalms in our prayer-books, for • an hour or two, without sense of weariness." He avoided manuscripts as much as practicable : " all things read raw to me in manuscript." Lamb wrote much, including many letters ; but his hands were wanting in pliancy (" in- veterate clumsiness" are his words), and his handwriting was therefore never good. It was neither text nor running hand, and the letters did not indicate any fluency ; it was not the handwriting of an old man nor of a young man; yet it had a very peculiar character — stiff, resolute, distinct ; quite unlike all others that I have seen, and easily distinguishable amongst a thousand. No one has described Lamb's manner or SENSIBILITY. 159 merits so well as Hazlitt : " He always made the best pun and the best remark in the course of the evening. His serious conversation, like his serious writing, is his best. No one ever stammered out such fine piquant, deep, elo- quent things, in half a dozen sentences, as he does. His jests scald like tears ; and he probes a question with a play upon words. There was no fuss or cant about him. He has fur- nished many a text for Coleridge to preach upon." (/. Plahi Speaker?) Charles was frequently merry ; but ever, at the back of his merriment, there reposed a grave depth, in which rich colors and tender lights were inlaid. For his jests sprang from his sensi- bility ; which was as open to pleasure as to pain. This sensibility, if it somewhat impaired his vigor, led him into curious and delicate fancies, and taught him a liking for things of the highest relish, which a mere robust jester never tastes. Large, sounding words, unless embodying i6o TASTES AND OPINIONS. great thoughts (as in the case of Lear), he did not treasure up or repeat. He was an admirer of what was high and good, of what was delicate (especially) ; but he delighted most to saunter along the humbler regions, where kindness of heart and geniality of hu- mor made the way pleasant. His intellect was very quick, piercing into the recondite meaning of things in a moment. His own sentences were compressed and full of mean- ing ;■ his opinions independent and decisive ; no qualifying or doubting. His descriptions were not highly colored ; but, as it were, sharply cut, like a piece of marble, rather than like a picture. He liked and encouraged friendly discussion ; but he hated contentious argument, which leads to quarrel rather than to truth. There was an utter want of parade in every- thing he said and did, in everything about him and his home. • The only ornaments on his walls were a few engravings in black frames : TASTE 8 AND OPINIONS. . i6i one after Leonai'do da Vinci ; one after Titian ; and four, I think, by Hogarth, about whom he has written so well. Images of quaint beaut}^, and all gentle, simple things (things without pretension) pleased him to the fullest extent ; perhaps a little beyond their strict merit. I have heard him express admiration for Leo- nardo da Vinci that he did not accord to Raf- faelle. Raffaelle was too ostentatious of mean- ing ; his merits were too obvious, — too much thrust upon the understanding ; not retired nor involved, so as to need discovery or solution. He preferred even Titian (whose meaning is generally obvious enough) to Raffaelle ; but Leonardo was above both. Without doubt, Lamb's taste on several matters was peculiar ; for instance, there were a few obsolete words, such as arride, agnize., burgeon., &c., which he fancied, and chose to rescue from oblivion. Then he did not care for music. I never heard a song in his house, nor any conversa^ tion on the subject of melody or harmony. 1 62 LONDON. "I have no ear," he says; yet the sentiment, apart from the science of music, gave him great pleasure. He reverenced the fine organ playing of Mr. Novello, and admired the soar- ing singing of his daughter, — " the tuneful daughter of a tuneful sire ; " but he resented the misapplication of the theatres to sacred music. He thought this a profanation of the good old original secular purposes of a play- house. As a comprehension of all delights he loved London ; -with its bustle and its living throngs of men and women ; its shops, its turns and windings ; the cries and noises of trade and life ; beyond all other things. He liked also old buildings and out-of-the-way places ; col- leges ; solemn churchyards, round which the murmuring thousands floated unheeding. In particular he was fond of visiting, in his short vacations, the Universities of Oxford and Cam- bx-idge. Although (he writes) " Mine have been anything but studious hours," he pro- LOVE OF BOOKS. 163 fesses to have received great solace froin those " repositories of ' mouldering ' learning." " What a place to be in is an old library ! " he exclaims, " where the souls of the old vs^riters seem re- posing, as in soixie dormitory or middle state." The odor of the " moth-scented " coverings of the old books is "as fragrant as the blooms of the tree of knowledge which grew in the happy orchard." An ancient manor-house, that Vanbrugh might have built, dwelt like a picture in his memory. " Nothing fills a child's mind like an old mansion," he says. Yet he could feel unaffectedly the simplicity and beauty of a country life. The heartiness of country people went to his heart direct, and remained there forever. The Fields and the Gladmans, with their homely dwellings and hospitality, drew him to them like magnets. There was noth- ing too fine nor too lofty in these friends for his tastes or his affection ; they did not " affront him with their light." His fancy always 164 MODESTY. stooped to moralize ; he hatted the stilted atti- tudes and pretensions of poetasters and self- glorifying artists. He never spoke disparagingly of any person, nor overpraised any one. When it was pro- posed to erect a statue of Clarkson, during his life, he objected to it : " We should be modest," he says, "for a modest man." He was himself eminently modest ; he never put himself forward : he was always sought. He had much to say on many subjects, and he was repeatedly pressed to say this, before he consented to do so. He was almost teased into writing the Elia Essays. These and all his other writings are brief and to the point. He did not exhale in words. It w^s said that Coleridge's talk was worth so many guineas a sheet. Charles Lamb talked but sparingly. He put forth only so much as had complete flavor. I know that high pay and frequent importunity failed to induce him to squander his strength in careless essays : he waited LETTER TO WORDSWORTH. 165 until he eould give tliem their full share of meaning and humor. When I speak of his extreme liking for London, it must not be supposed that he was insensible to great scenery. After his only visit to the Lake country, and beholding Skid- daw^, he writes back to his host, " O ! its fine black head, and the bleak air at the top of it, with a prospect of mountains all about making you giddy. It was a day th^t will stand out like a mountain in my life ; " adding, however, " Fleet Street and the Strand are better places to live in, for good and all. I could not live in Skiddaw. I could spend there two or three years ; but I must have a prospect oft seeing Fleet Street at the end of that time, or I should mope and pine away." He loved even its smoke, and asserted that it suited his vision. A short time previously he had, in a touching letter to Wordsworth (1801), enumerated the objects that he liked so much in London. " These things," he writes, " work i66 LOVE OF BOOKS. • themselves into my mind : the rooms where I 'w^as born ; a bookcase that has followed me about like a faithful dog (only exceeding him in .knowledge) wherever I have moved; old chairs ; old tables ; squares where I have sunned myself; my old school: these are my mistresses. Have I not enough, without your mountains ? I do not envy you ; I should pity you, did I not know that the mind will make friends v^ith anything." Besides his native London, "the centre of busy interests," he had great liking for unpre- tending men, who would come and gossip with him in a friendly, companionable way, or who liked to talk about old authors or old books. In his love of books he was ve%y catholic. " Shaftesbury is not too genteel, nor Jonathan Wild too low. But for books which are no books," such as " scientific treatises, and the histories of Hume, Smollett, and Gibbon," &c., he confesses that he becomes splenetic when he sees them perched up on shelves, " like false CHARITY. 167 saints, who have usurped the true shrmes" of the legitimate occupants. He loved old books and authors, indeed, beyond most other things. He used to say (with Shakespeare), "The Heavens themselves are old." He would rather have acquired an ancient forgotten volume than a modern one, at an equal price ; the very cir- cumstance of its having been neglected and cast disdainTully into the refuse basket of a bookstall gave it value in his eyes. He bought it, and rejoiced in being able thus to remedy the injus- tice of fortune. - • He liked best those who had not thriven with posterity : his reverence for Margaret, Duchess of Newcastle, can only be explained in this way. It must not be forgotten that his pity or gen- eresity towards neglected authors extended also to all whom the goddess of Good Fortune had slighted. In this list were included all who had suffered in purse or in repute. He was ready to defend man or beast, whenever unjustly at- tacked. I remember that, at one of the monthly 1 68 CHARITY. magazine dinners, when John Wilkes was too roughly handled, Lamb quoted the story (not generally known) of his replying, when the blackbirds were reported to have stolen all his cherries, " Poor birds, they are welcome." He said that those impulsive words showed the inner nature of the man more truly than all his political speeches. Lamb's charity extended to all things. I never heard him speak spitefully of any author. He thought that every one should have a clear stage, unobstructed. His heart, young at all times, never grew hard or callous during life. There was always in it a tender spot, which Time was unable to touch. He gave away greatly^ when the amount of his means are taken into consideration ; he gave away moi:iey — even annuities, I believe — to old impoverished friends whose wants were known to him. I remember that once, when we were sauntering together on Pentonville Hill, and he noticed great depression in me, which he attributed to CHARITY. 169 want of money, he said, suddenly, in his stam- mering way, "My dear boy, I — I have a qvxan- tity of useless things. I have now — in my desk, a — a hundred pounds — that I don't — don't know what to do with. Take it." I was much touched ; but I assured him that my depression did not arise from w^ant of money. He was very home-loving ; he loved London as the best of places ; he loved his home as the dearest spot in London : it was the inmost heart of the sanctuary. Whilst at home he had no curiosity for what passed beyond his own terri- tory. His eyes were never truant ; no one ever saw him peering out of window, examining the crowds flowing by ; no one ever surprised him gazing on vacancy. " I lose myself," he says, " in other men's minds. When I am not walk- ing I am reading ; I cannot sit and think ; books think for me." If it was not the time for his pipe, it was always the time for an old play, or for a talk with friends. In the midst of this society his own mind grew green again and lyo HIS COMPANIONS. blossomed ; or, as he would have said, " bur- geoned." In the foregoing desultory account of Charles Lamb I have, vs^ithout doubt, set forth many things that are frequently held as trivial. Noth- ing, however, seems to me unimportant which serves in any way to illustrate a character. The floating straws, it is said, show from what quarter the wind is blowing. So the arching or knitting of the brow is sometimes sufficient to indicate wonder or pride, anger or contempt. On the stage, indeed, it is often the sole naeans of expressing the fluctuation of the passions. I myself have heard of a " Pooh ! " which in- terrupted a long intimacy, when the pander was administering sweet words in too liberal a measure. As with Lamb so with his companions. Each was notable for some individual mark or char- acter. His own words will best describe them : " Not inany persons of science, and few pro- fessed literati^ were of his councils. They were HIS COMPANIONS. 171 for the most part persons of an uncertain for- tune. His intimados were, to confess a truth, in the world's eye, a ragged regiment ; he found them floating on the surface of society, and the color or something else in the weed pleased him. The burrs stuck to him ; but they were good and loving buiTs, for all that." None of Lamb's intimates were persons of title or fashion, or of any political importance. They were reading men, or authors, or old friends who had no name or pretensions. The only tie that held these last and Lamb together was a long-standing mutual friendship — a suffi- cient link. None of them ever forsook him : they loved him, and in return he had a strong regard for them. His affections, indeed, were concentrated on few persons ; not widened (weakened) by too general a philanthropy. When you went to Lamb's rooms on the Wednesday evenings (his "At Home"), you generally found the card table spread out, Lamb himself one of the players. On the corner of 172 WEDNESDAY PARTIES. the table was a snuff-box ; and the game was enlivened by sundry brief ejaculations and pun- gent questions, which kept alive the wits of the party present. It was not " silent whist ! " I do not remember whether, in common with Sarah Battle, Lamb" had a weakness in favor of "Hearts." I suppose that it was at one of these meetings that he made that shrewd re- mark which has since escaped into notoriety : "Martin" (observed he), " if dirt were trumps, what a hand you would hold ! " It is not known what influence Martin's trumps had on the rub- ber then in jDrogress. — When the conversation became general, Lamb's part in it was very effective. His short, clear sentences always produced • effect. He never joined in talk un- less he understood the subject ; then, if the matter in question interested him, he was not slow in showing his earnestness ; but I never heard him argue or talk for argument's sake. If he was indifferent to the question, he was silent. EI8 COMPANIONS. ' 173 The supper of cold meat, on these occasions, was always on the side-table ; not very formal, as may be imagined ; and every one might rise, when it suited him, and cut a slice or take a glass of porter, without reflecting on the absti- nence of the rest of the company. Lamb would, perhaps, call out and bid the hungry guest help himself without ceremony. We learn (from Hazlitt) that Martin Burney's eulogies on books were sometimes intermingled with expressions of his satisfaction with the veal pie which em- ployed him at the sideboard. After the game was won (and lost) the ring of the cheerful glasses announced that pvmch or brandy and water had become the order of the night. It was curious to observe the gradations in Lamb's manner to his various guests, although it was courteous to all. With Hazlitt he talked as though they met the subject in discussion on equal terms ; with Leigh Hunt he exchanged repartees ; to Wordsworth he was almost re- spectful ; with Coleridge he was sometimes 174 ■ MABTIN BURNET. jocose, sometimes deferring ; with Martin Bur- ney fraternally familiar ; with Manning affec- tionate ; with Godwin merely courteous ; or, if friendly, then in a minor degree. The man whom I found at Lamb's house more frequently than any other person was Martin Burney. He is now scarcely known ; yet Lamb dedicated his prose works to him, in 1818, and there described him as " no common judge of books and men ; " and Southey, corresponding with Rickraan, when his "Joan of Arc" was being reprinted, says, " The best omen I have heard of its well- doing is, that Martin Burney likes it." Lamb was very much attached to Martin, who was a sincere and able man, although with a very unprepossessing physiognomy. His face w^as warped by paralysis, which affected one eye and one side of his mouth. He was plain and unaffected in manner, very diffident and retiring, yet pronouncing his opinions, when asked to do so, without apology or hesitation. He was a barrister, and travelled the western MARTIN BURNEY. 175 circuit at the same time as Sir Thomas Wild (afterwards Lord Trm-o), whose briefs he used to read before the other considered them, mark- ing out the principal facts and points for atten- tion. Martin Burney had excellent taste in books ; eschewed the showy and artificial, and looked into the sterling qualities of writing. He frequently accompanied Lamb in his visits to friends, and although very familiar with Charles, he always spoke of him, with respect, as Afr. Lamb. " He is on the top scale of my friendship ladder," Lamb says, " on which an angel or two is still climbing, and some, alas ! descending." The last time I saw Burney was at the corner of a street in London, when he was overflowing on the subject of Raflaelle and Hogarth. After a great and prolonged struggle, he said, he had arrived at the conclusion that Raflaelle was the greater man of the two. Notwithstanding Lamb's somewhat humble description of his friends and familiars, some of them were men well known in literature. 176 LAMB'S LITERARY FRIENDS. Amongst others, I met there Messrs. Cole- ridge, Manning, Hazlitt, Haydon, Wordsworth, Barron Field, Leigh Hunt,' Clarkson, Sheri- dan Knowles, Talfovird, Kenney, Godwin, the Burneys, Payne Collier, and others whose names I need not chronicle. .1 met there, also, on one or two occasions, Liston, and Miss Kelly, and, I believe, Rickman. Politics were rarely discussed amongst them. Anec- dotes, characteristic, showing the strong and weak points of human nature, were frequent enough. But politics (especially party poli- tics) were seldom admitted. Lamb disliked them as a theme for evening talk ; he per- haps did not understand the subject scientifi- cally. And when Hazlitt's impetuosity drove him, as it sometimes did, into fierce expres- sions on public affairs, these were usually re- ceived in silence ; and the matter thus raised up for assent or controversy was allowed to drop. Lamb's old associates are now dead. " They that lived so long," as he says, " and flour- SOCIAL PARTIES. 177 ished so steadily, are all crumbled away," The beauty of these evenings was, that every one was placed upon an easy level. No one out-topped the others. No one — not even Coleridge — was permitted to out-talk the rest. No one was allowed to hector another, or to bring his own grievances too prominently for- ward, so as to disturb the harmony of the night. Every one had a right to speak, and to be heard ; and no one was ever trodden or clamored down (as in some large assemblies) until he had proved that he was not entitled to a hearing, or until he had abused his priv- ilege. I never, in all my life, heard so much unpretending good sense talked, as at Charles Lamb's social parties. Often a piece of spar- kling humor was shot out that illuminated the whole evening. Sometimes there was a flight of high and earnest talk, that took one half way towards the stars. It seems great matter for regret that the thoughts of men like Lamb's associates should 12 178 EEPBOBUCTION OF THOUGHTS. have passed away altogether ; for scarcely any of them, save Wordsw^orth and Coleridge, are nov\r distinctly remember-ed ; and it is, perhaps, not impossible to foretell the duration of i/iei'r fame. All have answ^fered their purpose, I suppose. Each has had his turn, and has given place to a younger thinker, as the father is replaced by the son. Thus Jeremy Taylor and Sir Thomas Bi-ow^ne, and Web- ster, and the old Dramatists, have travelled out of sight, and their thoughts are reproduced by modern writers, the originators of those thoughts often remaining unknown. Perhaps One, out of many thousand authors, survives into an immortality. The manner and the taste change. The armor and falchion of old give place to the new weapons of modern warfare — less weighty, but perhaps as trench- ant. We praise the old authors, but we do not read them. The Soul of Antiquity seems to survive only in its proverbs, which contain the very essence of wisdom. ( 179 ) CHAPTER VI. London Magazine. — Contributors. — TranS' fer of Magazine. — MontJily Dimiers and Visitors. — Colehrook Cottage. — Lamb's Walks. — Essays of Elia : Their Excel- lence and Character. — Enlarged Acquaint- ance. — Visit to Paris. — Miss Isola. — ^ttarrel with Southey. — Leaves Ljzdia House. — Leisure. — Amicus Redivivus. — Edward Irving. THE " London Magazine " was established in January, 1820, the publishers being Messrs. Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, and its editor being Mr. John Scott, who had formerly edited "The Champion" newspaper, and whose profession was exclusively that of a man of letters. At this distance of time it is impossible to specify the authors of all the va- rious papers which gave a tone to the Maga- zine ; but Ji3 this publication forms, in fact, i8o '^ LONDON MAGAZINE." the great foundation of Lamb's fame, I think it well to enter somewhat minutely into its con- stitution and character. Air. John Scott was the writer of the sev- eral articles entitled " The Living Authors ; " of a good many of the earlier criticisms ; of some of the papers on politics ; and of some which may be termed " Controversial." The essays on Sir Walter Scott, Wordsworth, Godwin, and Lord Byron are from his hand. He contributed also the critical papers on the writings of Keats, Shelley, Leigh Hunt, and Hazlitt. Mr. Hazlitt wrote all the articles which appear under the head " Drama ; " the twelve essays entitled " Table Talk ; " and the papers on Fonthill Abbey, and on the Angerstein pictures, and the Elgin marbles. Mr. Charles LamU's papers were the well- known Elia Essays, which first appeared in this Magazine. Mr. Elia (whose name he assumed) was, at one time, a clerk in the CONTBIBUTOBS TO MAGAZINE. i8i India House. He died, however, before the Essays were made public, and was ignorant of Lamb's intention to do honor to his name. Air. Thomas Carlyle was author of the " Life and Writings of Schiller," in the eighth, ninth, and tenth volumes of the Magazine. These papers, although very excellent, appear to be scarcely prophetic of the great fame which their author was afterwards destined, so justly, to achieve. Mr. De ^iiincey^s contributions were the " Confessions of an Opium Eater ; " also vari- ous papers specified as being " by the Opium Eater ; " the essay on Jean Paul Richter, and papers translated from the German, or dealing with German literature. The Reverend Henry Francis Cary (the translator of Dante) wrote the Notices of the Early French poets ; the additions to Orford's " Royal and Noble Authors ; " and, I believe, the continuations of Johnson's " Lives of the Poets." Of these last, however, I am not certain. i82 GONTBIBUTOBS TO MAGAZINE. Mr. Allan Cimnhtghatn (the Scottish poet) "vv^as author of the " Twelve Tales of Lyddal Cross ; " of the series of stories or papers styled " Traditional Literature ; " and of various other contributions in poetry and prose. Mr. yojin Poole contributed the " Beauties of the living Dramatists ; " being burlesque im- itations of modern wi'iters for the stage ; viz., Morton, Dibdin, Reynolds, MoncriefF, &c. Mr. yoJin Hamiltott Reynolds v^rote, I be- lieve, in every number of the periodical, after it came into the hands of Taylor and Hessey, who were his friends. All the papers with the name of Henry Herbert affixed were written by him ; also the descriptive accounts of the Coro- nation, Greenwich Hospital, The Cockpit Royal, The Trial of Thurtell, &c. Mr. TJiomas Hood fleshed his maiden sword here ; and his first poems of length, " Lycus the Centaur" and "The two Peacocks of Bedfont" inay be found in the Magazine. Mr. George Barley (author of " Thomas ^ GONTBIBUTORS TO MAGAZINE 183 Becket," &c.) wrote the several papers entitled " Dramaticles ; " some pieces of verse ; and the Letters addressed to "The Dramatists of the Day." A£r. Richard Ay ton wrote " The Sea Roam- ers," the article on " Hunting," and such papers as are distinguished by the signature " R. A." Mr. Keats (the poet) and Mr. James Mont- gomery contributed verses. Sir John Bowring (I believe) translated into English verse the Spanish poetry, and wrote the several papers which appear under the head of " Spanish Romances." Mr. Henry Southern (editor of " The Retro- spective Review") wrote the " Conversations of Lord Byron," and " The Fanariotes of Constan- tinople," in the tenth volume. Mr. Walter Savage Landor was author of the Imaginary Conversation, between Southey and Porson, in volume eight. Mr. Julius (^Archdeacon) Hare reviewed the works of Landor in the tenth volume. 184 CONTBIBUTOBB TO MAGAZINE. Mr. Elton contributed many translations from Greek and Latin authors ; from the minor poems of Homer, from Catullus, Nonnus, Propertius, &c. Messrs. Hartley Coleridge, John Clare, Cor- nelius Webb, Bernard Barton, and others sent poems ; generally with the indicating name. I myself was amongst the crowd of contribu- tors ; and was author of various pieces, some in verse, and others in prose, now under the pro- tection of that great Power which is called " Oblivion." Finally, the too celebrated Thomas Griffiths Wainewright contributed various fantasies, on Art and Arts ; all or most of which may be recognized by his assumed name of Janus Weathercock. To show the difficulty of specifying the au- thorship of all the articles contributed, — even Mr. Hessey (one of the proprietors) was unable to do so ; and indeed, shortly before his death, applied to me for information on the subject. By the aid of the gentlemen who contributed TRANSFER OF MAGAZINE. 185 — each his quota — to the " London Magazine," it acquired much reputation, and a very consid- erable sale. During its career of five years, it had, *for a certain style of essay, no superior (scarcely an equal) amongst the periodicals of the day. It was perhaps not so widely popular as works directed to the multitude, instead of to the select few, might have been ; for thoughts and words addressed to the cultivated intellect only must always reckon upon limited success. Yet the Magazine was successful to an extent that preserved its proprietors from loss ; perhaps not greatly beyond that point. Readers in those years were insignificant in number, compared with readers of the present time, when almost all men are able to derive benefit from letters, and letters are placed within every one's reach. On the death of Mr. John Scott, the Magazine, in July, 1 82 1, passed into the hands of Messrs. Taylor and Hessey ; the former being the gen- tleman who discovered the identity of Junius with Sir Philip Francis; the latter being sim- i86 MANAGEMENT OF MAGAZINE. ply very courteous to all, and highly respectable and intelligent. John Scott was an able literary man. I do not remember much more of him than that he was a shrewd and I believe a conscientious writer ; that he had ' great industry ; was, gen- erally, well read, and possessed a very fair amount of critical taste ; that, like other per- sons, he had some prejudices, and that he was sometimes, moreover, a little hasty and irritable. Yet he agreed well, as far as I know, with the regiment of mercenai'ies who marched vmder his flag. When Taylor and Hessey assumed the man- agement of the "London Magazine" they en- gaged no editor. They were tolerably liberal paymasters ; the remuneration for each page of prose (not very laborious) being, if the writer were a person of repute or ability, one pound ; and for each page of verse, two pounds. Charles Lamb received (very iitly) for his brief and charming Essays, two or three times MONTHLY DINNERS. 187 the amount of the other writers. When they purchased the Magazine, the proprietors opened a house in Waterloo Place for the better circu- lation of the publication. It was there that the contributors met once a month, over an excellent dinner given by the firm, and consulted and talked on literary mat- ters together. These meetings were very social, all the guests coming with a determination to please and to be pleased. I do not know that many important matters were arranged, for the welfare of the Magazine, at these dinners ; but the hearts of the contributors were opened, and with the expansion of the heart the intellect widened also. If there had been any shades of jealousy amongst them, they faded away before the light of the friendly carousal ; if there was any envy, it died. All the fences and re- straints of authorship were cast off, and the natural human being was disclosed. Amongst others, Charles Lainb came to most of these dinners, always dressed in black (his i88 GUESTS AT TEE FEASTS. old snuff-colored suit having been dismissed for years) ; always kind and genial ; conversational, not talkative, but quick in reply ; eating little, and drinking moderately with the rest. Allan Cunningham, a stalwart man, was generally there ; very Scotch in aspect, but ready to do a good turn to any one. His talk was not too abundant, although he was a voluminous writer in prose. His songs, not unworthy of being compared with even those of Burns, are (as everybody knows) excellent. His -face shone at these festivities. Reynolds came always. His good temper and vivacity were like con- diments at the feast. There also came, once or twice, the Rev. H. F. Gary, the quiet gentleness of whose face almost interfered with its real intelligence. Yet he spoke well, and with readiness, on any subject that he chose to discuss. He was very intimate with Lamb, who latterly often dined with him, and was always punctual. " By Cot's plessing we will not be absent at the . LAMB'S REGARD TOR OART. 189 Grace" (he writes in 1834). Lamb's taste was very homely : he liked tripe and cow-heel, and once, when he was suggesting a particular dish to his friend, he wl'ote, " We were talking of roast shoulder of mutton and onion sauce ; but I scorn to prescribe hospitalities." Charles had great regard for Mr. Gary ; and in his last letter (written on his death-bed) he in- quired for a book, which he was very uneasy about, and which he thought he had left at Mrs. Dyer's. "It is Mr. Gary's book" (he says), " and I would not lose it for the world." Gary was entirely without vanity ; and he, who had traversed the ghastly regions of the Inferno, interchanged little courtesies on equal terms with workers who had never travelled beyond the pages of " The London Magazine." No one (it is said) who has performed any- thing great ever looks big upon it. Thomas Hood was there, almost silent ex- cept when he shot out some irresistible pun, and disturbed the gravity of the company. 190 thOmab hood. Hood's labors were poetic, but his sjDorts were passerine. It is remarkable that he, who was capable of jesting even on his own prejudices and predilections, should not (like Catullus) have brought down the " Sparrow," and en- closed him in an ode. Lamb admired and was very familiar with him. " What a fertile genius he is ! " (Charles Lamb writes to Ber- nard Barton), "and quiet withal." He then expatiates particularly on Hood's sketch of " Very Deaf indeed ! " wherein a footpad has stopped an old gentleman, but cannot make him understand what he wants, although the fellow is faring a pistol into his ear trumpet. " You'd like him very much," he adds. Al- " though Lamb liked him very much, he was a little aiinoyed once by Hood writing a comical essay in imitation of (and so much like) one of his own, that people generally thought that Elia had awakened in an unruly mood. Haz- litt attended once or twice ; but he was a rather silent guest, rising into emphatic talk DE QUINOEY. 191 only when some political discussion (very rare) stimulated him. Mr. De Quincey appeared at only one of these dinners. The expression of his face was intelligent, but cramped and somewhat peevish. He was self-involved, and did not ad-d to the cheerfulness of the meeting. I have con- sulted this gentleman's three essays, of which Charles Lamb is professedly the subject ; but I cannot derive from them anything illustrative of my friend Lamb's character. I have been mainly struck therein by De Quincey's attacks on Hazlitt, to whom the essays had no rela- tion. I am aware that the two authors (Haz- litt and De Qixincey) had a quarrel in 1823, Hazlitt having claimed certain theories or reasonings which th& other had propounded as his own. In reply to Mr. De Qiiincey's claims to have 'had a familiar acquaintance with Charles Lamb (in 1821 and 1823), I have to observe that during these years (when I was almost continually with him) I never 192 GOLEBBOOE COTTAGE. saw Mr. De Quincey at his house, and never heard Lamb speak of him or refer to his writ- ings on any occasion. His visits to Lamb were surely very rare. yohn Clare, a peasant from Northampton- shire, and a better poet than Bloomfield, was one of the visitors. He was thoroughly rustic, dressed in conspicuously country fashion, and was as simple as a daisy. His delight at the wonders of London formed the staple of his talk. This was often stimulated into ex- travagance by the facetious fictions of Reynolds. Poor fellow, he died insane. About this time Lamb determined to leave London ; and in 1823 he moved Into Cole- brook Cottage, Islington, a small, detached white house of six rooms. " The New River, rather elderly by this time" (he says), "runs, if a moderate walking pace can be so termed, close to the foot of the house ; behind is a spacious garden, &c., and the cheerful dining- room is studded all over and rousrh with old LAMB'S WALKS. 193 books : I feel like a great lord ; never having had a house before." Fi-om this place (which a friend of his christened " Petty Venice ") he used often to walk into London, to breakfast or dine with an acquaintance. For walking was always grateful to him. When confined to his room in the India House, he counted it amongst his principal recreations, and even now, with the whole world of leisure before him, it ranked amongst his daily enjoyments. By himself or with an acquaintance, and subsequently with Hood's dog Dash (whose name should have been Rover), he wandered over all the roads and by-paths of the adjoining country. He was a peripatetic, in every way, beyond the followers of Aristotle. Walking occupied his energies ; and when he returned home, he (like Sarah Battle) " unbent his mind over a book." "I cannot sit and think" is his phrase. If he now and then stopped for a minute at a ^3 194 LAMB'S WALKS. rustic public house, tired with the excursive caprices of Dash — beguiled perhaps by the simple attractions of a village sign — I hold him excusable for the glass of porter which sometimes invigorated him in his fatigue. In the course of these walks he traversed all the green regions which lie on the north and north-east of the metropolis. In London he loved to frequent those streets where the old bookshops were, Wardour Street, Princes Street, Seven Dials (where the shop has been long closed) : he loved also Gray's Inn, in the garden of which he met Dodd, just before his death ("with his buffoon mask taken off"); and the Temple, into v/hich you pass from the noise and crowd of Fleet Street, — into the quiet and " ample squares and green re- cesses," where the old Dial, " the garden god of Christian gardens," then told of Time, and where the still living fountain sends up its song into the listening air. "ELI A" ESSAYS. 195 Of the Essays of " Elia," * written original- ly for the London Magazine, I feel it diffi- cult to speak. They are the best amongst the good — his best. I see that they are genial, delicate, terse, full of thought and full of humor ; that they are delightfully personal ; and when he speaks of himself you cannot hear too much ; that they are not imitations, but adoptions. We encounter his likings and fears, his fancies (his nature) in all. The words have an import never known before : the syllables have expanded their meaning, like opened flowers ; the goodness of others is heightened by his own tenderness ; and what is in nature hard and bad is qualified (qualified, not concealed) by the tender light of pity, which always intermingles with his own vision. Gravity and laughter, fact and * The first Essays of Elia were published by Taylor and Hessey under the title "Elia," in 1823. The second Essays were, together with the ' ' Popular Falla- cies," collected and published under the title of " The Last Essays of Elia," by Moxon, in 1833. 196 MODESTY. fiction, are heaped together, leavened in each case by charity and toleration ; and all are marked by a wise humanity. Lamb's humor, I imagine, often reflected (sometimes, I hope, relieved) the load of pain that always weighed on his own heart. The first of the Essays (" The South Sea House ") appeared in the month of August, 1820 ; the last' (" Captain Jackson ") in No- vember, 1824. Lamb's literary prosperity dur- ing this period was ^t the highest ; yet he was always loath to show himself too much before the world. After the first series of Essays had been published (for they are divided into two parts) he feigned that he was dead, and caused the second series to be printed as by " a friend of the late Elia." These were written somewhat reluctantly. His words are, " To say the truth, it is time he [Elia] were gone. The humor of the thing, if ever there were much humor in it, was pretty well exhausted ; and a two BEC0LLEQTI0N8 OF LAMB. 197 years-and-a-half existence has been a tolerable duration for a phantom." It is thus modestly that he speaks of essays which have delighted all cultivated readers. I want a phrase to express the combination of qualities which constitutes Lamb's excel- lence in letters. In the absence of this, I must content myself with referring to some of the papers which live most distinctly in my recollection. I will not transcribe any part of his eulogy on Hogarth ; nor of his fine survey of " Lear," that grandest of all trage- dies. They are well known to students of books. I turn for a moment to the Elia Es- says only. In mere variety of subject (extent in a small space) they surpass almost all other essays. They are full of a witty melancholy. Many of them may be termed autobiographi- cal, which trebles their interest with most readers. Let me recollect : — How he mourns over the ruins of Blakesmoor (once his home on 198 BEG0LLECTI0N8 OF LAIIB. holidays), "reduced to an antiquity" ! How he stalks, ghost-like, through the desolate rooms of the South Sea House, or treads the ave- nues of the Temple, where the benchers (" supposed to have been children once ") are pacing the stony terraces ! Then there is the inimitable Sarah Battle (unconquered even by Chance), arming herself for the war of whist; and the young Africans, "preaching from their chimney-pulpits lessons of patience to mankind." If your appetite is keen, by all means visit Bobo, who invented roast pig: if gay, and disposed to saunter through the pleasant lanes of Hertfordshire, go to Mackery End, where the Gladmans and Brutons will bid you welcome : if grave, let your eyes re- pose on the face of dear old Bridget Elia, " in a season of distress the truest comforter." Should you wish to enlarge your humanity, place a few coins (maravedis) in the palm of one of the beggars (the "blind Tobits") of London, and try to believe his tales, histo- "POPULAR FALLACIES." 199 ries or fables, as though they were the veri- table stories (told by night) on the banks of the famous Tigris. Do not despise the poorest of the poor — even the writer of val- entines : " All valentines are not foolish," as you may read in Elia's words ; and " All fools' day" may cheer you, as the fool in " Lear " may make you wise and tolerant. I could go on for many pages — to the poor relations, and the old books, and the old actors ; to Dodd, who " dying put on the weeds of Dominic ; " and to Mrs. Jordan and Dickey Suet (both whom I well re- member) ; to Elliston, always on the stage ; to Munden, with features ever changing; and to Liston, with only one face : " But what a face ! " I forbear. I pass also over Comberbatch (Coleridge), borrower of books, and Captain Jackson, and Barbara S. (Miss Kelly), and go to the rest of my little history. The " Popular Fallacies," which in course of time followed, and were eventually added 200 "POPULAR FALLACIES." to the second series and re-published, are in manner essays also on a small scale, brief and dealing with abstract subjects more than the " Elia." It may be interesting to know that Lamb's two favorites were " That home is home, though it is never so homely," and " That we should rise with the lark." In the fii'st of these he enters into all the dis- comforts and terrible distractions of a poor man's home ; in the second he descants on the luxuries of bed, and the nutritious value of dreams : " The busy part of mankind," he says, " are content to swallow their sleep by wholesale : we choose to linger in bed and digest our dreams." The last "Fallacy" is remarkable for a sentence which seems to refer to Alice W. : " We were never much in the world," he says; "disappointment early struck a dark veil between us and its dazzling illusions : " he then concludes with, "We once tl^ought life to be something; but it has unaccountably fallen from us be- LAMB'S STUDIES. 201 fore its time. The sun has no purposes of ours to light us to. Why should we gel up ?" It will be observed by the sagacious stu- dent of the entire Essays, that however quaint or familiar, or (rarely, however) sprinkled with classical allusions, they are never vul- gar, nor commonplace, nor pedantic. They are " natural with a self-pleasing quaintness." The phrases are not affected, but are de- rived from our ancestors, now gone to another country ; they are brought back from the land of shadows, and made denizens of Eng- land, in modern times. Lamb's studies were the lives and characters of men ; his humors and tragic meditations were generally dug out of his own heart: there are in them earnestness, and pity, and generosity, and truth ; and there Is not a mean or base thought to be found throughout all. In reading over these old essays, some of them affect me with a grave pleasure, amount- 302 LAMB'S STUDIES. ing to •pain. I seem to import into them the very feeling with which he wrote them ; his looks and movements are transfigured, and communicated to me by the poor art of the printer. His voice, so sincere and earnest, rings in my ear again. He was no Feignwell : apart from his joke, never was a man so real, and free from pretence. No one, as I believe, will ever taste the flavor of certain writers as he has done. He was the last true lover of Antiquity. Although he admitted a few of the beauties of modern times, yet in his stronger love he soared back- wards to old acclivities, and loved to rest there. His essays, like his sonnets, are (as I have said) reflections of his own feelings. And so, I think, should essays generally be. . A history or sketch of science, or a logical effort, may help the reader some way up the ladder of learning; but they do not link themselves with his affections. I myself pre- fer the affections to the sciences. The story ENLARGED ACQUAINTANCE. 203 of the heart is the deepest of all histories ; and Shakespeare is profounder and longer lived than Maclaurin, or Malthus, or Ricardo. Lamb's career throughout his later years was marked by an enlarged intercourse with society (it had never been confined to persons of his own way of thinking), by more frequent ab- sences in the country and elsewhere, and by the reception of a somewhat wider body of acquaintance into his own house. He visited the Universities, in which he much delighted : he fraternized with many of the contributors to the " London Magazine." He« received the let- ters and calls of his admirers — strangers _aiid others. These were now much extended in number, by the publication of the Essays of Elia. I was in the habit of seemg him very frequently at his home : I met him also at Mr. Gary's, at Leigh Hunt's, at Novello's, at Hay- don's, once at Hazlitt's, and elsewhere. It must haye been about this time that one of his visits (which always took place when the students 204 VISIT TO OXFORD. were absent) was made to Oxford, where he met George Dyer, dreaming amongst the quad- rangles, as he has described in his pleasant paper called " Oxford in the Vacation." Lamb's letters to correspondents are perhaps not quite so frequent now as formerly. He writes occasionally to his old friends ; to Words- worth, and Southey, and Coleridge ; also to Manning, who is still in China, and to whom in December, 1815, he had sent one of his best and most characteristic letters, describing the (imaginary) death and decrepitude of his corre- spondent's friends in England ; although he takes care (the next day) to tell him that his first was a " lying letter." Indeed, that letter itself, hu- morous as it is, is so obviously manufactured in the fabulous district of hyperbole, that it requires no disavowal. Manning, however, re- turns to England not long afterwards ; and then the correspondence, if less humorous, is also less built up of improbabilities. He corresponds also with Mr. Barron Field, who is relegated VISIT TO PARIS. 205 to the Judicial Bench in New South Wales. Of him he inquires about " The Land of Thieves ; " he wants to know if their poets be not plagiarists ; and suggests that half the truth which his letters contain " will be converted into lies " before they reach his correspondent. Mr. Field is the gentleman to whom the pleas- ant paper on " Distant Correspondents " is ad- dressed. In 1822 Charles Lamb and his sister travelled as far as Paris, neither of them understanding a word of the French language. What tempted them to undertake this expedition I never knew. Perhaps, as he formerly said, when journeying to the Lakes, it was merely a daring ambition to see " remote regions." The French jouraey seems to have been almost barren of good. He brought nothing back in his memory, and there is no account whatever of his adventures there. It has been stated that Mary Lamb was taken ill on the road ; but I do not know this with certauity. From a short letter to Barron Field, 2o6 LETTER TO BABBON FIELD. it appears, indeed, that he thought Paris " a glorious picturesque old city," to which London looked " mean and new," although the former had " no Saint Paul's or Westminster Abbey." " I and sister," he writes, " are just returned from Paris. We have eaten frogs ! It has been such a treat ! Nicest little delicate things ; like Lilliputian rabbits. But this is all. His Reminiscences, whatever they were, do not en- rich his correspondence. In conversation he used to tell how he had once intended to ask the waiter for an egg (oeuf), but called, in his ig- norance, for Eau de vie, and that the mistake produced so pleasant a result, that his inquiries afterwards for Eau de vie were very frequent. In his travels to Cambridge, which began to be frequent about this time, his gains were greater. For there he first became acquainted with Miss Emma Isola, for whom, as I can testify, he at all times exhibited the greatest parental regard. When he and Mary Lamb first knew her, she was a little orphan girl, at school. MISS IS OLA. 207 They invited her to spend her holidays with them ; and she went accordingly : the liking became mutual, and gradually deepened into great affection. The visit once made and so much relished, became habitual ; and Miss Isola's holidays were afterwards regularly spent at the Lambs' house. She used to take long walks with Charles, when his sister was too old and infirm to accompany him. Ultimately she was looked upon in the light of a child ; and Charles Lamb, when speaking of her (and he did this always tenderly), used invariably to call her " Our Emma." To show how deep his regard was, he at one time was invited to engage in some profitable engagement (1830) whilst Miss Isola was in bad health ; but he at once replied, " Whilst she is in danger, and till she is out of it, I feel that I have no spirits for an engagement of any kind." Some years after- wards, when she became well, and was about to be married, Lamb writes, " I am about to lose my only walk companion," whose mirthful spmts 2o8 MISS IS OLA. (as he prettily terms it) were " the youth of our house." " With my perfect approval, and more than concurrence," as he states, she was to be married to Mr. Moxon. Miss Emma Isola, who was, in Charles Lamb's phrase, " a very dear friend of ours," remained his friend till death, and became eventually his principal legatee. After her marriage, Charles, writing to her husband (November, 1833), says, "Tell Emma I every day love her more, and miss her less. Tell her so, from her loving Uncle, as she has let me call myself." It was, as I believe, a very deep paternal affection. The particulars disclosed by the letters of 1823 and 1824 are so generally unimportant, that it is unnecessary to refer to them. Lamb, indeed, became acquainted with the author of "Virginius" (Sheridan Knowles), with Mr. Macready, and with the writers in the " Lon- don Magazine " (which then had not been long established). And he appears gradually to dis- cover that his work at the India House is wea- LETTER TO W0BD8W0ETH. 209 risome, and complains of it in bitter terms : " Thirty years have I served the Philistines " (he writes to Wordsw^orth), "and my neck is not subdued to the yoke." He confesses that he had once hoped to have a pension on " this side of absolute incapacity and infirmity," and to have walked out in the " fine Isaac Walton mornings, careless as a beggar, and walking, walking, and dying walking ; " but he says, " the hope is gone. I sit like Philomel all day (but not singing) , with my breast against this thorn of a desk." The character of his letters at this time is not generally lively ; there is, he says, " a certain deadness to everything, which I think I may date from poor John's (his brother's) loss. Deaths overset one. Then there's Cap- tain Burney gone. What fun has whist now?" He proceeds, " I am made up of queer points. My theory is to enjoy life ; but my practice is against it." The only hope he has, he says, is, "that some pulmonary affection may H 2IO QUABBEL WITH SOUTHET. relieve me." The success which attended the " Elia " Essays did not comfort him, nor the (pecuniary) temptations of tlie bookseller to renew them. " The spirit of the thing in my own mind is gone" (he writes). "Some brains," as Ben Jonson says, " will endure but one skimmmg." Notwithstanding his melan- choly hvunor, however, there is Hope in the distance, which he does not see, and Freedom is not far off. It was during this period of Lamb's life (1833) that the quarrel between him and his old friend Robert Southey took place. Southey had long been (as was well known) one of the most constant and efficient contributors to the " Qtiarterly Review ; " and Lamb assigned to him the authorship of one of the Review ar- ticles, in which he himself was scantily com- plimented, and his friends Hazlitt and Leigh Hunt denounced. Sir T. Talfourd thinks that Mr. Southey was not the author of the offend- ing essay. Be that as it may, Lamb was then . LETTER TO SOUTHEY. 211 of opinion that his old Tory friend was the enemy. In a letter to Bernard Barton (July, 1823) he writes, " Southey has attacked ' Elia' on the score of infidelity. He might have spared an old friend. I hate his' Review, and his being a Reviewer ; " but he adds, " I love and respect Southey, and will not retort." However, in the end, irritated by the calumny, or (which is more probable) resenting compli- ments bestowed on himself at the expense of his friends, he sat down and penned his famous " Letter of Elia to Robert Southey, Esq.," which appeai"ed in the " London Mag- azine" for October, 1823, and which was afterwards published amongst his collected let- ters. This letter, I remember, produced a strong sensation in literary circles ; and Mr. South- ey's acquaintances smiled, and his enemies rejoiced at it. Indeed, the letter itself is a remarkable document. With much of Lamb's peculiar phraseology, it is argumentative, and 212 INTIMACY WITH SOUTHEY RENEWED. defends the imaginary weaknesses or faults, against which (as he guesses) the "Q_uarterly" reproofs had been levelled. The occasion hav- ing gone by, this letter has been dismissed from most minds, except that part of it which exhibits Lamb's championship on behalf of Hunt and Ha.zlitt, and which is more touch- ing than anything to be found in controversial literature. Lamb's letter was unknown to his sister until after it appeared in the Magazine, it be- ing his practice to write his letters in Leaden- hall Street. It caused her a good deal of annoyance when she saw it in print. It is pleasant to think, however, that it was the means of restoring the old intimacy between Southey and Lamb, and also of strengthening the friendship between Lamb and Hazlitt, which some misunderstanding, at that time, had a little loosened. When I was married (October, 1824), Lamb sent me a congratulatory letter, which, as it was LETTER TO PROCTER. 213 not published by Sir T. Talfourd, and is, more- over, characteristic, I insert here, from the MS. " My Dear Procter : I do agnize a shame in not having been to pay my congrat- ulations to Mrs. Pi'octer and your happy self; but on Sunday (my only morning) I was en- gaged to a country w^alk ; and in virtue of the hypostatical union between us, when Mary calls, it is understood that I call too, we being univocal. " But indeed I am ill at these ceremonious inductions. I fancy I was not born with a call on my head, though I have brought one down upon it with a vengeance. I love not to pluck that sort of frail crude, but to stay its ripening into visits. In probability Mary will be at Southampton Row this morning, and something of that kind be matured between you ; but in any case not many hours shall elapse before I shake you by the hand. " Meantime give my kindest felicitations to 314 LETTER TO PROCTER. Mrs. Procter, and assure her I look forward with the greatest dehght to our acquaintance. By the way, the deuce a bit of cake has come to hand, which hath an inauspicious 190k at first ; but I comfort myself that that Mysterious Service hath the property of Sac- ramental Bread, which mice _ cannot nibble, nor time moulder. "I am married myself — to a severe step- wife — who keeps me, not at bed and board, but at desk and board, and is jealous of my morning aberrations. I cannot slijD out to congratulate kinder unions. It is well she leaves me alone o' nights — the d — d Day-hag Business. She is even now peeping over me to see I am writing no Love Letters. I come, my dear — Where is the Indigo Sale Book? " Twenty adieus, my dear friends, till we meet. " Yours most truly, "C. Lamb. '-'' Leadenhall., Nov. 11th, '24." LEAVES INDIA HOUSE. 215 The necessity for labor continued for some short time longer. - At last (in the beginning of the year 1S25) deliverance came. Charles had previously intimated his wish to resign. The Directors of the East India House call him into their private room, and after compli- menting him on his long and meritorious ser- vices, they suggest that his health does not appear to be good ; that a little ease is expe- dient at his time of life, and they then con- clude their conversation by suddenly intimat- ing their intention of granting him a pension, for his life, of two thirds of the amount of his salary ; "a magnificent offer," as he terms it. He is from that moment emancipated ; let loose from all ties of labor, free to fly v^heresoever he will. At the commencement of the talk Charles had had misgivings, for he was summoned into the " formidable back parlor," he says, and thought that the Direc- tors were about to intimate that they had no further occasion for his services. The whole 2i6 ANNUITY. scene seems like one of the summer sunsets, jpreceded by threatenings of tempest, when the dark piles of clouds are separated and disap- pear, lost and swallowed by the radiance which fills the whole length and breadth of the sky, and looks as if it would be eternal. " I don't know what I answered," Lamb says, "between surprise and gratitude ; btit it was understood that I accepted their proposal, and I was told that I was free from that hour to leave their service. I stammered out a bow, and, at just ten minutes after eight, I went home — for- ever." At this time Lamb's salary was six hundred pounds per annum. The amount of two thirds of this sum, therefore, would be an annuity of four hundred pounds. But an annual provision was also made for his sister, in case she should survive him ; and this occasioned a small dim- inution. In exact figures, he was'to receive three hundred and ninety-one pounds a year during the remainder of his life, and then an annuity LEISURE. . 217 was to become payable to Mary Lamb. His sensations, first of stupefaction, and afterwards of measureless delight, will be seen by reference to his exulting letters of this period. First he writes to Wordsworth of " the good that has befallen me." These are his words : " I came home — forever — on Tuesday last. The incom- prehensibleness of my condition overwhelmed me. It was like passing from Time into Eter- nity." * * * " Mary wakes every morning with an obscure feeling that some good has happened to us." — To Bernard Bai'ton his words are, "I have scarce steadiness of head to compose a let- ter. I am free, B. B. ; free as air. I will live another fifty years." * * « "Would I could sell you some of my leisure ! Positively the best thing a man can have to do is — Nothing : and next to that, perhaps. Good Works." — To Miss Hutchinson he writes, " I would not go back to my prison for seven years longer for ten thousand pounds a year. For some days I was staggered, and could not comprehend the 2i8 "NOTHING TO DO." magnitude of my deliverance — was confused, giddy. But these giddy feelings have gone avray, and my weather-glass stands at a degree or two above ' Content.' All being holidays, I feel as if I had hone ; as they do in heaven, where 'tis all Red Letter days." Lamb's discharge or relief was timely and graciously bestowed. It opened a bright vista through which he beheld (in hope) many years of enjoyment ; scenes in which his spirit, res- cued from painful work, had only to disport itself in endless delights. He had well earned his discharge. He had labored without cessa- tion for thirty-three years ; had been diligent, and trusted — a laborer worthy of his hire. And the consciousness of this long and good service must have mingled with his reward and sweetened it. It is a great thing to have earned your meal — your rest, — whatever may be the payment in full for your deserts. You have not to force up gratitude from oblivious depths, day by day, for undeserved bounty. In Lamb's case "NOTHING TO DO." 219 it happened, unfortunately, that the activity of mind which had procured his repose, tended afterwards to disquaHfy him from enjoying it. The leisure, that he had once reckoned on so much, exceeded, when it came, the pains of the old counting-house travail. It is only the imbecile, or those brought up in complete lazi- hood, who can encounter successfully the mo- notony of " nothing to do," and can slumber away their lives unharmed amongst the dumb weeds and flowers. In the course of a short time it appeared that he was unable to enjoy, so perfectly as he had anticipated, his golden time of " Nothing to do," his Liberia. .He therefore took long walks into the country. He also acquired the companion- ship of the large dog Dash, much given to wandering, to whose erratic propensities (Lamb walking at the rate of fourteen miles a day) he eventually became a slave. The ram.bling, in- constant dog rendered the clear, serene day of leisure almost turbid ; and he was ultimately 220 FONDNESS FOB WALKING. (in order to preserve for Charles some little remaining enjoyment) bestowed upon another master. Lamb was always (as I have said) fond of walking, and he had some vague liking, I suppose, for free air and green pastures ; al- though he had no great relish specially for the flowers and ornaments of the country. I have often walked with him in the neighborhood of our great city ; and I do not think that he ever treasured up in his memory the violets (or other flowers), the songs of birds, or the pictures of sheep or kine dotting the meadows. Neither his conversation nor writings afforded evidence that he had done so. It is not easy, therefore, to determine what the special attractions were that drew him out of London, which he loved, into the adjoining country, where his walks oftenest lay. At the time of Lamb's deliverance from office labor, he was living in Colebrook Row. It was there that George Dyer, whose blindness and absence of mind rendered it almost dangrerous DTEB. 221 for him to wander unaccompanied about the suburbs of London, came to visit him on one occasion. By accident, instead of entering the house door, Dyer's aqueous instincts led him towards the water, and in a moment he had plunged overhead in the New River. I hap- pened to go to Lamb's house, about an hour after his rescue and restoration to dry land, and met Miss Lamb in the passage, in a state of great alarm : she was whunpering, and could only utter, " Poor Mr. Dyer ! Poor Mr. Dyer ! " in treinulous tones. I went up stairs, aghast, and found that the involuntary diver had been placed in bed, and that Miss Lamb had admin- istered brandy and water, as a well-established preventive against cold. Dyer, unaccustomed to anything stronger than the " crystal spring," was sitting upright in the bed, perfectly deliri- ous. His hair had been rubbed up, and stood out like so many needles of iron gray. He did not (like FalstafF) " babble of green fields," but of the " watery Neptune." " I soon found out 222 '' AMICUS EEDIVIVUB." where I was," he cried out to me, laughing; and then he went wandering on, his words taking flight into regions where no one could follow. Charles Lamb has commemorated this immersion of his old friend, in his (Elia) essay of " Amicus Redivivus." In the summer of 1826 Lamb published, in " Blackwood's Magazine," a little drama in one act, entitled "The Wife's Trial." It was founded on Crabbe's poetical tale of " The Confidant ; " and contains the germ of a plot, which undoubtedly might have been worked out with more effect, if Lamb had devoted sufficient labor to that object. . Amongst the remarkable persons whom Charles became acquainted with, in these years, was Edward Irving. Lamb used to meet him at Coleridge's house at Highgate, and elsewhere ; and he came to the conclusion that he was (as indeed he was) a fine, sin- cere, spirited man, terribly slandered. Edward Irving, who issued, like a sudden light, from IRVINO. . 223 the obscure little town of Annan, in Scotland, acquired, in the year 1822, a wide reputation in London. He was a minister of the Scotch Church, and before he came to England had acted as an assistant preacher to Dr. Chal- mers. In one of Charles's letters (in 1835) to Bernard Barton (who had evidently been measuring Irving by a low Qiiaker standard), he takes the opportunity of speaking of the great respect that he entertained for the Scotch minister. " Let me adjure you " (writes Charles), "have no doubt of Irving. Let Mr. [?] drop his disrespect." "Irving has prefixed a dedication, of a missionary character, to Coleridge — most beautiful, cor- dial, and sincere. He there acknowledges his obligations to S. T. C, at whose Gama- liel feet he sits weekly, rather than to all men living." Again he writes, " Some friend said to Irving, ' This will do you no good ' (no good in worldly repute). ''That is a reason for doing it,' quoth Irving. . I am 224 IRVING. thoroughly pleased with him. He is firm, out-speaking, intrepid, and docile as a pupil of Pythagoras." In April, 1825, Lamb writes to Wordsworth to the same effect. " Have you read the noble dedication of Irving's Missionary Sermons ? " he inquires ; and then he repeats Irving's fine answer to the sug- gested impolicy of publishing his book with its sincere prefix. Poor Edward Irving ! whom I always deeply respected, and knew intimately for some years, and who was one of the best and truest men whom it has been my good for- tune to meet in life ! He entered London amidst the shouts of his admirers, and he de- parted in the midst of contumely ; sick, and sad, and maligned, and misunderstood ; going back to his dear native Scotland only to die. The time has long passed for discussing the truths or errors of Edward Irving's peculiar creed ; but there can be no doubt that he himself was true and faithful till death, and IRVING. 225 that he preached only what he entirely be- lieved. And what can man do more? If he was wrong, his errors arose from his extreme modesty, his extreme veneration for the sub- . ject to which he raised his thoughts. In the last year of Edward Irving's life (1834), he was counselled by his physician to pass the next winter in a milder climate — that " it was the only safe thing for him." Prevented from ministering in his own church, where " he had become an embarrassment," he travels into the rural places, subdued and chastened by his weakness, — to the Wye and the Severn — to the fine mountains and pleasant places of Wales. Sometimes he thinks himself better. He quits London (for- evei") in the early part of September, and on the 23d of that month he writes to his wife that he is " surely better, for his pulse has come to be tmder 100." He passes by Cader Idris, and Snowdon — by Bedgclert to Ban- gor, " a place of repose ; " but gets wet whilst 15 226 IBVING. viewing the Menai Bridge, and had " a fevered night ; " yet he is able to droop on to Liver- pool. Thence (the love of his native land drawing him on) he goes northwards, instead of to the south. He reaches Glasgow, where " he thinks of organizing a church ; " although Dr. Darling " decidedly says that he cannot humanly live over the winter." Yet he still goes on with his holy task ; he writes " pasto- ral letters," and preaches, and prays, and offers kind advice. His friends, from Kirk- caldy and elsewhere, come to see him, where, " for a few weeks still, he is visible, about Glasgow. In the sunshine — in a lonely street, his gaunt, gigantic figure rises feebly against the light." At last he lies down on " the bed from which he is never to rise ; " his mind wanders, and his articulation becomes indis- tinct ; but he is occasionally understood, and is heard murmuring (in Hebrew) parts of the 23d Psalm, " The Lord is my Shepherd : He leadeth me beside the still waters." And IRVING. 227 thus gradually sinking, at the close of a gloomy Sunday night in December, he dies. Mr. Thomas Carlyle, his friend (the friend of his youth), has written an eloquent epi- taph upon him ; not partial, for they differed in opinion — but eloquent, and very touching. I read it over once or twice in every year. Edward Irving's last words, according to his statement, were, " In life and in death I am the Lord's." Carlyle then adds, " But for Irving, I had never known what the com- munion of man with man means. He was the freest, brotherliest, bravest human soul mine ever came in contact with ; the best man I have ever (after trial enough) found in this world, or now hope to find." So Edward Irving went to the true and brave enthusiasts who have gone before him. He died on his final Sabbath (7th December, 1834), ^^^ ^^^^ the world and all its troubles behind him. ( 228 ) CHAPTER VII. Specimen of JLamFs Humor. — Death oj" Mr. Nor r is. — Gar rick Plays. — Letters to Barton. — Opinions on Books. — Breakfast with Mr. N. P. Willis. — Moves to En- Jield. — Caricature of Lamb. — Albtuns and Acrostics. — '■ Pains of Leistire. — The Bar- ton Correspondence. — Death of Hazlitt. — Mttnden^s Acting and Quitting" the Stage. — Lamb becomes a Boarder. — Moves to Edmo7tton. — Metropolitan At- tachjnents. — Death of Coleridge. — LamVs Fall and Death. — Death of Mary Lamb. — POSTS CRLPT. "ITH the expiration of the " London Magazine," Lamb's literary career terminated. A few trifling contributions to the " New Monthly," and other periodicals, are scarcely sufficient to qualify this statement. It may be convenient, in this place, to specify some of those examples of humor LAMB'S HUMOR. 329 and of jocose speech for which Charles Lamb in his lifetime was well known. These (not his best thoughts) can be separated from the rest, and may attract the notice of the reader, here and there, and relieve the tameness of a not very eventful narrative. It is possible to define wit (which, as Mr. Coleridge says, is "impersonal"), and hu- mor also ; but it is not easy to distinguish the humor of one man from that of all other humorists, so as to bring his special quality clearly before the apprehension of the reader. Perhaps the best (if not the most scientific) way might be to produce specimens of each. In Charles Lamb's case, instances of his humor are to be found in his essays, in his sayings (already partially reported), and throughout his letters, where they are very frequent. They are often of the composite order, in which humor, and wit, and (sometimes) pathos are intermingled. Sometimes they merely ex- hibit the character of the man. 230 LAMB'S SAYINGS. He once said of himself that his biography " would go into an epigram." His sayings require gi^eater space. Some of those which have been circulated are apocryphal. The following are taken chiefly from his letters, and from my own recollections. In his exultation on being released from his thirty-four years of labor at the India House, he says, " Had I a little son, I would christen him ' Nothing to do.' " (This is in the " Su- perannuated Man.") Speaking of Don Quixote, he calls him " the errant Star of Knighthood, made more tender by eclipse." On being asked by a schoolmistress for some sign indicative of her calling, he recommended " The Murder of the Innocents." I once said something in his presence which I thought possessed smartness. He commended me with a stammer: "Very well, my dear boy, very well ; Ben (taking a pinch LAMB'S SAYINGS. 231 of snufF), Ben Jonson has said worse things than that — and b — ^b — ^better." * His young chimney-sweepers, " from their little pulpits (the tops of chimneys) in the nipping air of a December morning, preach a lesson of patience to mankind." His saying to Martin Burney has been often repeated — " O Martin, if dirt were trumps, what a hand you would hold ! " To Coleridge : " Bless you, old sophist, who next to human nature taught me all the cor- ruption I was capable of knowing." To Mr. Gilman, a surgeon (" query Kill- man?"), he writes, "Coleridge is very bad, but he wonderfully picks up, and his face, when he repeats his verses, hath its ancient glory — an archangel a little damaged." To Wordsworth (who was superfluously solemn) he writes, " Some d — d people have * This, -with a small variation, is given in Mr. Thomas Moore's autobiography. I suppose I must have repeated it to him, and that he forgot the precise words. 232 LAMB'S SAYINGS. come in, and I must finish abruptly. By d — d, I only mean deuced." The second son of George the Second, it was said, had a very cold and ungenial man- ner. Laixib stammered out in his defence that " this was very natural in the Duke of Cu-Cum-ber-land." To Bernard Barton, of a person of repute : " There must be something in him. Such great names imply greatness. Which of us has seen Michael Angelo's things? yet which of us disbelieves his greatness?" To Mrs. H., of a person eccentric : " Why does not his guardian angel look to him? He deserves one — may be he has tired him out." " Charles," said Coleridge to Lamb, " I think you have heard me preach?" "I n — n — never heard you do anything else," replied Lamb. One evening Coleridge had consumed the whole time in talking of some " regenerated " orthodoxy. Leigh Hunt, who was one of the listeners, on leaving the house, expressed his LAMB'S SAYINGS. 233 surprise at the prodigality and intensity of Coleridge's religious expressions. Lamb tran- quillized him by " Ne — ne — never mind what Coleridge says ; he's full of fun." There were, &c., &c., " and at the top of all, Hunger (eldest, strongest of the Passions), predominant, breaking down the stony fences of shame." The Bank, the India House, and other rich traders look insultingly on the old deserted South Sea House, as on " their poor neighbor out of business." To a Frenchman, setting up Voltaire's char- acter in opposition to that of Christ, Lamb asserted that " Voltaire was a very good Je- sus Christ — Jvr tJie French" Of a Scotchman : " His understanding is always at its meridian. Between the affirma- tive and the negative there is no border land with him. You cannot hover with him on the confines of truth." On a book of Coleridge's nephew he writes. 234 LAMB'S SAYINGS. " I confess he has more of the Sterne about him than the Sternhold. But he saddens into excellent sense before the conclusion." As to a monument being erected for Clark- son, in his lifetime, he opposes it, and argues, " Goodness blows no trumpet, nor desires to have it blown. We should be modest for a modest man." "M. B. is on the top scale of my friend- ship's ladder, which an angel or two is still climbing ; and some, alas ! descending." A fine sonnet of his (The Gipsy's Malison) being refused publication, he exclaimed, " Hang the age ! I will write for Antiquity." Once, whilst waiting in the Highgate stage, a woman came to the door, and inquired in a stern voice, "Are you quite full inside?" " Yes, ma'am," said Charles, in meek reply, "quite; that plateful of Mrs. Gilman's pud- ding has quite filled us." Mrs. K., after expressing her love for her young children, added, tenderly, " And how LAMB'S SAYINGS. 235 do yozi like babies, Mr. Lamb?" His answer, immediate, almost precipitate, was " Boi-boi- boiled, ma'am." Hood, tempting Lamb to dine with him, said, " We have a hare." " And many- friends ? " inquired Lamb. It being suggested that he would not sit down to a meal with the Italian witnesses at the Queen's trial. Lamb rejected the imputa- tion, asserting that he would sit with anything except a hen or a tailor. Of a man too pi"odigal of lampoons and verbal jokes, Lamb said, threateningly, " I'll Lamb-pun him." On two Prussians of the same name being accused of the same crime, it was remarked as curious that they were not in any way related to each other. " A mistake," said he ; " they are cozens german." An old lady, fond of her dissenting minister, wearied Lamb by the length of her praises. " I speak, because I k7zow him well," said she. 336 LAMB'S PUNS. "Well, I don't;" replied Lamb; "I don't; but d n him, at a ' venture.' " The Scotch, whom he did not like, ought, he said, to have double punishment ; and to have fire without brimstone. Southey, in 1799? showed him a dull poem on a rose. Lamb's criticism was, " Your rose is insipid : it has neither thorns nor sweetness." A person sending an unnecessarily large sum with a lawyer's brief. Lamb said " it was ' a fee simple.' " Mr. H. C. Robinson, just called to the bar, tells him, exultingly, that he is retained in a cause in the King's Bench. " Ah " (said Lamb), " the great first cause, least understood." Of a pun. Lamb says it is a " noble thing per se. It is entire. It fills the mind ; it is as perfect as a sonnet ; better. It limps ashamed, in the train and retinue of humor." * * I fear that I have not, in all the foregoing instances, set forth with sufficient precision the grounds or premises upon which the jests were founded. There were, more- over, various other sayings of Lamb, which do not come LAMB'S PUNS. 237 Lamb's puns, as far as I recollect, were not frequent ; and, except in the case of a pun, it is difficult to divest a good saying of the facts sur- rounding it without impoverishing the saying into the above catalogue; as where — when enjoying a pipe with Dr. Parr, that Divine inquired how he came to acquire the love of smoking so much, he replied, " I toiled after it as some people do after virtue." — When Godwin was expatiating on the benefit of unlimited freedom of thought, especially in matters of religion. Lamb, who did not like this, interrupted him by humming the little child's song of " Old Father Longlegs won't say his prayers," adding, violently, " Throw him down stairs ! " — He con- soles Mr. Crabbe Robinson, suffering under tedious rheu- matism, by writing, " Your doctor seems to keep you under the long cure." — To Wordsworth, in order to explain that his friend A was in good health, he writes, " A is well ; he is proof against weather, ingratitude, meat underdone, and every weapon of fate." The story of Lamb replying to some one, who insisted very strenuously on some uninter- esting circumstances being " a, matter of fact," by saying that he was " a matter of lie " man, is like Leigh Hunt, who, in opposing the frequent confessions of "I'm in love," as- serted, in a series of verses, that he was " In hate." — Charles hated noise, and fuss, and fine words, but never hated any person. Once, when he had said, "I hate Z," some one present remonstrated with him : " Why, you have never seen him." "No," replied Lamb, "certainly not; I never could hate any man that I have once seen." — Being 238 LAMB' 8 PUNS. itself. Lamb's humor is generally imbedded in the surrounding sense, and cannot often be dis- elitangled without injury. I have said that the proprietorship of the asked how he felt when amongst the lakes and mountains of Cumberland, he replied that he was obliged to think of the Ham and Beef shop near Saint Martin's Lane ; this was in order to bring down his thoughts from their almost too painful elevation to the sober regions of every-day life. In the foregoing little history, I have set forth such facts as tend, in my opinion, to illustrate my friend's character. One anecdote I have omitted, and it should not be forgotten. Lamb, one day, encountered a small urchin loaded with a too heavy package of grocery. It caused him to tremble and stop. Charles inquired where he was going, took (although weak) the load upon his own shoulder, and managed to carry it to Islington, the place of destination. Finding that the purchaser of the grocery was a female, he went with the urchin before her, and expressed a hope that she would intercede with the poor boy's master, in order to prevent his being overweighted in future. " Sir," said the dame, after the manner of Tisiphone, frowning upon him, "I buy my sugar, and have nothing to do with the man's manner of sending it." Lamb at once perceived the character of the purchaser, and taking off his hat, said, humbly, "Then I hope, ma'am, you'll give me a drink of small beer." This was of course refused. He afterwards called upon the grocer, on the boy's behalf — with what eiFect I do not know. DEATH OF MB. N ORRIS. 239 " London Magazine," in the year 1821, became vested in Messrs. Taylor and Hessey, under whom it became a social centre for the ineeting of many literary men. The publication, how- ever, seems to have interfered with the ordinary calling of the booksellers ; and the sale was not therefore (I suppose) sufficiently important to remunerate them for the disturbance of their general trade. At all events, it was sold to Mr. Henry Southern, the editor of " The Retrospec- tive Review," at the expiration of 1825, after having been in existence during five entire years. In Mr. Southern's hands, under a dif- ferent system of management, it speedily ceased. In 1826 (January) Charles Lamb suffered great grief from the loss of a very old friend, Mr. Norris. It may be remembered that he was one of the two persons who went to com- fort Lamb when his mother so suddenly died. Mr. Norris had been one of the officers of the Inner Temple or Christ's Hospital, and had been intimate with the Lambs for many years ; 240 THE OABBICK PLAYS. and Charles, when young, used always to spend his Christmases with him, " He was my friend and my father's friend," Lamb writes, " all the life I can remember. I seem to have made foolish friendships ever since. Old as I am, in his eyes I was still the child he first knew me. To the last he called me ' Charley.' I have none to call me Charley now. He was the last link that bound me to the Temple." It was after his death that Lamb once more resorted to the Bi'itish Museum, which he had been in the habit of frequenting formerly, when his first " Dramatic Specimens" were published. Now he went there to make other extracts from the old plays. These were entitled " The Gar- rick Plays," and were bestowed upon Mr. Hone, who was poor, and were by him published in his " Every Day Book." Subsequently they were collected by Charles himself, and formed a supplement to the earlier " Specimens." Lamb's labors in this task were by no means trivial. " I am now going through a course of LETTER TO BARTON. 241 reading" (of old plays), he writes; "I have two thousand to go through." Lamb's correspondence with his Quaker friend, Bernard Barton (" the busy B," as Hood called him), whose knowledge of the English drama was confined to Shakespeare and Miss Baillie, went on constantly. His let- ters to this gentleman comprised a variety of subjects, on most of which Charles offers him good advice. Sometimes they are less personal, as where he tells him that " six hundred have been sold of Hood's book, while Sion's songs do not disperse so quickly ; " and where he enters (very ably) into the defects and merits of Martin's pictures, Belshazzar and Joshua, and ventures an opinion as to what Art should and should not be. He is strenuous in advis- ing him not to forsake the Bank (where he is a clerk), and throw himself on what the chance of employ by booksellers would afford. " Throw yourself, rather, from the steep Tarpeian rock, headlong upon the iron spikes. Keep to your 16 342 OPINIONS ON BOOKS. bank, and your bank will keep you. Trust not to the Public," he says. Then, referring to his own previous complaints of official toil, he adds, " I retract all my fond complaints. Look on them as lovers' quarrels. I was but half in earnest. Welcome, dead timber of a desk that gives me life. A little grumbling is wholesome for the spleen ; but in my inner heart I do ap- prove and embrace this our close but unharass- ing wa}^ of life." Lamb's opinions on books, as well as on con- duct, making some deduction for his preference of old writers, is almost always sound. When he is writing to Mr. Walter Wilson, who is editing De Foe, he says of the famous author of "Robinson Crusoe," — " In appearance of truth his works exceed any works of fiction that I am acquainted with. It is perfect illusion. It is like reading evi- dence in a court of justice. There is all the minute detail of a log-book in it. Facts are repeated in varying phrases till you cannot OPINIONS ON BOOKS. 243 choose but believe them." His liking for books (rather than his criticism on them) is shown frequently in his letters. " O ! to forget Field- ing, Steele, &c., and to read 'em new" he says. Of De Foe, " His style is everywhere beautiful, but plain and homely." Again, he speaks of "Fielding, Smollett, Sterne, — great Nature's stereotypes." "Milton," he says, "almost re- quires a solemn service of music to be played before you enter upon him." Of Shenstone he speaks as " the dear author of the Schoolmis- tress ; " and so on from time to time, as occasion prompts, of Bunyan, Isaac Walton, and Jeremy Taylor, and Fuller, and Sir Philip Sidney, and others, in affectionate terms. These always re- late to English authors. Lramb, although a good Latinist, had not much of tliat which ordinarily passes under the name of Learning. He had little knowledge of languages, living or dead. Of French, German, Italian, &c., he knew nothing ; and in Greek his acquirements were very moderate. These children of the 244 BREAKFAST WITH MB. WILLIS. tongues were never adopted by him ; but in his own Saxon English he was a competent scholar, a lover, nice, discriminative, and critical. The most graphic account of Lamb at a somewhat later period of his life appears in Mr. N. P. Willis's " Pencillings by the Way." He had been invited by a gentleman in the Temple, Mr. R (Robinson?), to meet Charles Lamb and his sister at breakfast. The Lambs lived at that time " a little way out of London, and were not quite punctual. At last they enter — "the gentleman in black small-clothes and gaiters, short and veiy slight in person, his head set on his shoul- ders with a thoughtful forward bent, his hair just sprinkled with gray, a beautiful deep-set eye, an aquiline nose, and a very indescri- bable mouth. Whether it expressed most humor or feeling, good nature or a kind of whimsical peevishness, or twenty other things which passed over it by turns, I cannot in the least be certain." BREAKFAST WITH MR. WILLIS. 345 This is Mr. Willis's excellent picture of Lamb at that period. The guest places a large arm-chair for Mary Lamb ; Charles pulls it away, saying gravely, "Mary, don't take it; it looks as if you were going to have a tooth drawn." Miss Lamb was at that time very hard of hearing, and Charles took advantage of her temporary deafness to impute various improbabilities to her, which, however, were so obvious as to render any denial or expla- nation unnecessary. Willis told Charles that he had bought a copy of the " Elia " in America, in order to give to a friend. " What did you give for it?" asked Lamb. "About seven and sixpence." " Permit me to pay you that," said Lamb, counting out the money with earnestness on the table ; "I never yet wrote anything that could sell. I am the publisher's ruin. My last poem won't sell, — not a copy. Have you seen it?" No; Willis had not. " If s only eighteenpence, and I'll give you sixpence towards it," said 246 MOVES TO ENFIELD. Lamb ; and he described where Wilhs would find it, " sticking up in a shop window in the Strand." Lamb ate nothing, but in- quired anxiously for some potted fish, which Mr. R used to procure for him. There was none in the house ; he therefore asked to see the cover of the pot which had contained it ; he thought it would do him good. It was brought, and on it was a picture of the fish. Lamb kissed it, and then left the table, and began to wander about the room, with an uncertain step, &c. This visit must have taken place, I suppose, at or after the time when Lamb was living at Colebrook Cottage ; and the breakfast took place probably in Mr. Henry Crabbe Robin- son's chambers in the Temple, where I fixst met Wordsworth. In the year 1827 Lamb moved into a small house at Enfield, a "gamboge-colored house," he calls it, where I and other friends went to dme with him ; but it was too far from CABICATUBE OF LAMB. 247 London, except for rare visits. — It was rather before that time that a very clever caricature of him had been designed and engraved (" scratched on copper," as the artist termed it) by Mr, Brook Pulham. It is still extant; and although somewhat ludicrous and hyper- bolical in the countenance and outline, it certainly renders a likeness of Charles Lamb. The nose is monstrous, and the limbs are dwarfed and attenuated. Lamb himself, in a letter to Bernard Barton (loth August, 1827), adverts to it in these terms : " 'Tis a little sixpenny thing — too like by half — in which the draughtsman has done his best to avoid flattery." Charles's hatred for annuals and albums was continually breaking out : "I die of albophobia." " I detest to appear in an annual," he writes ; " I hate the paper, the type, the gloss, the dandy plates." " Cole- ridge is too deep," again he says, " among the prophets, the gentleman annuals." " If I take the wings of the morning, and fly to 248 ACROSTICS. the uttermost parts of the earth, there will albums be." To Southey he writes about this time, "I have gone lately into the acrostic line. I find genius declines with me ; but I get clever." The reader readily appreciates the distinction which the humorist thus cleverly (more than cleverly) makes. In proof of his subdued quality, however, under the acrostical tyranny, I quote two little un- published specimens addressed to the Misses Locke, whom he had never seen. To M. L. [Mary Locke.] Must I write with pen unwilling, And describe those graces killing, Rightly, which I never saw ? Yes — it is the olbum's law. Let me then invention strain, On your excelling grace to feign. Cold is fiction. I believe it Kindly as I did receive it ; Even as I. F.'s tongue did weave it. PAINS OF LEISURE. . 249 To S. L. [Sarah Locke.] Shall I praise a face unseen, And extol a fancied mien, Kave on visionary charm, And from shadows take alarm ? Hatred hates without a cause, Love may love without applause, Or, without a reason given. Charmed be with unknown heaven. Keep the secret, though unmocked. Ever in your bosom Locked. After the transfer to Mr. Southern of the " London Magazine," Lamb was prevailed upon to allow some short papers to be pub- lished in the " New Monthly Magazine." They were entitled " Popular Fallacies," and were subsequently published conjointly with the " Elia Essays." He also sent brief con- tributions to the "AthencEum" and the "Eng- lishman," and wrote some election squibs for Serjeant Wilde, during his then contest for " Newark." But his animal spirits were not so elastic as formerly, when his time was 250 PAINS OF LEISURE. divided between official work and companion- able leisure ; the latter acting as a wholesome relief to his mind when wearied by labor. On this subject hear him speaking to Ber- nard Barton, to whom, as to others, he had formerly complained of his harassing duties at the India House, and of his delightful pros- pect of leisure. Now he writes, " Deadly long are the days, with but half an hour's candle-light and no fire-light. The streets, the shops remain, but old friends are gone." " I assure you " (he goes on) " no work is worse than overwork. The mind preys on itself — the most unwholesome food. I have ceased to care almost for anybody." To remedy this tedium, he tries visiting ; for the houses of his old friends were always open to him, and he had a welcome everywhere. But this visiting will not revive him. His spii"its de- scended to zero — below it. He is convinced that happiness is not to be found abroad. It is better to go " to my hole at Enfield, and PAINS OF LEISURE. 251 hide like a sick cat in my corner." Again he says, " Home, I have none. Never did the waters of heaven pour down on a forlorner head. What I can do, and overdo, is to walk. I am a sanguinary murderer of time. But the snake is vital. Your forlorn — C. L." These are his meditations in 1829, four years only after he had rushed abroad, full of exal- tation and delight, from the prison of a " work- a-day" life, into the happy gardens of bound- less leisure. Time, which was once his friend, had become his enemy. His letters, which were always full of goodness, generally full of cheerful humor, sink into discontent. " I have killed an hour or two with this poor scrawl," he writes. It is unnecessary to inflict upon the reader all the points of the obvious moral that obtrudes itself at this period of Charles Lamb's history. It is clear that the Otiosa Eternitas was pressing upon his days, and he did not know how to find relief. Al- though a good Latin scholar, — indeed, fond 252 THE BARTON COBBESPONDENCE. of writing letters in Latin, — he did not at this period resort to classical literature. I heard him indeed once (and once only) quote the well-known Latin verse from the Georgics, " O Fortunatos," &c., but generally he showed himself careless about Greeks and Romans ; and when (as Mr. Moxon states) " a traveller brought him some acorns from an ilex that grew over the tomb of Virgil, he valued them so little that he threw them at the hackney coachmen as they passed by his window." I have been much impressed by Lamb's letters to Bernard Barton, which are numer- ous, and which, taken altogether, are equal to any which he has written. The letters to Coleridge do not exhibit so much care or thought ; nor those to Wordsworth or Man- ning, nor to any others of his intellectual equals. These correspondents could think and speculate for themselves, and they were accord- ingly left to their own resources. " The Vol- DEATH OF HAZLITT. 253 sees have much corn." But Bernard Barton was in a different condition ; he was poor. His education had been inferior, his range of reading and thinking had been very confined, his knowledge of the English drama being limited to Shakespeare apd Miss Baillie. He seems, how^ever, to have been an amiable man, desirous of cultivating the power, such as it was, which he possessed ; and Lamb there- fore lavished upon him — the poor Quaker clerk of a Suffolk banker — all that his wants or ambition required ; excellent worldly coun- sel, sound thoughts upon literature and art, critical advice on his own verses, letters which in their actual value surpass the wealth of many more celebrated collections. Lamb's correspondence with Barton, whom he had first known in 1822, continued until his death. In 1830 (September i8th) Hazlitt died. It is unnecessary to enter into any enumeration of his remarkable qualities. They were known to all his friends, and to some of his enemies. 254 LAMB'S DEPBESSION. In Sir Edward Lytton's words, " He went down to the dust without having won the crown for which he so bravely struggled. He who had done so much for the propagation of thought, left no stir upon the surface when he sank." I will nqj in this place attempt to weave the moral which nevertheless lies hid in his unrequited life. At that time the num- ber of Lamb's old intimates was gradually diminished. The eternally recurring madness of his sister was more frequent. The hope- lessness of it — if hope indeed ever existed — was more palpable, more depressing. His own spring of mind was fast losing its pow- er of rebound. He felt the decay of the ac- tive principle, and now confined his efforts to morsels of criticism, to verses for albums, and small contributions to periodicals, which (ex- cepting only the "Popular Fallacies") it has not been thought important enough to reprint. To the editor of the " Athensum," indeed, he laments sincerely over the death of Munden. MUNDEN. 255 This was in February, 1832, and was a mat- ter that touched his afiections. " He was not an actor" (he writes), "but something better." To a reader of the present day — even to a contemporary of Lamb himself — there was something ahiiost amounting to extravagance * in the terms of his admiration. Yet Munden was, in his way, a remarkable man ; and al- though he was an actor in farce, he often stood aloof and beyond the farce itself. The play was a thing merely on which to hang_ his own conceptions. These did not arise from the drama, but were elsewhere cogi- tated, and were interleaved, as it were, with the farce or comedy which served as an ex- cuse for their display. The actor was to all intents and pm'poses suz generis. To speak of my own impressions, Munden did not afiect me much in some of his earlier performances ; for then he depended on the play. Afterwards, when he took the matter into his own hands, and created personages 256 MUNDEN. who owed little or nothing to the playwright, then he became an inventor. He rose with the occasion. Sic ivit ad astra. In the dra- ma of " Modern Antiques," especially, space was allowed him for his movements. The words were nothing. The pi'osperity of the piece depended exclusively on the genius of the * actor. Munden enacted the part of an old man credulous beyond ordinary credulity ; and when he came upon the stage there was in him an almost sublime look of wonder, passing over the scene and people around him, and settling apparently somewhere beyond the moon. What he believed in, improbable as it was to mere terrestrial visions, you at once conceived to be quite possible, — to be true. The sceptical idiots of the play pretend to give him a phial nearly full of water. He is assured that this contains Cleopatra's tear. Well; who can disprove it? Munden evi- dently recognized it. " What a large tear ! " he exclaimed. Then they place in his hands MUNDEN. 257 a druidical harp, which to vulgar eyes might resemble a modern gridiron. He touches the chords gently ; " pipes to the spirit ditties of no tone ; " and you imagine ^olian strains. At last "William Tell's cap is produced. The people -who affect to cheat him, apparently cut the rim from a modern hat, and place the skull-cap in his hands ; and then begins the almost finest piece of acting that I ever wit- nessed. Munden accepts the accredited cap of Tell with confusion and reverence. He places it slowly and solemnly on his head, growing taller in the act of crowning him- self. Soon he swells into the " heroic size, — a great archer, — and enters upon his dreadful task. He weighs the arrow carefully; he tries the tension of the bow, the elasticity of the string ; and finally, after a most deliberate aim, he permits the arrow to fly, and looks forward at the same time with intense anxiety. You hear the twang, you see the hero's knitted forehead, his eagerness ; you tremble : 17 258 MUNDEN. at last you mark his calmer brow, his relax- ing smile, and are satisfied that the son is saved ! It is difficult to paint in words this extraordinaiy performance, which I have sev- eral times seen ; but you feel that it is tran- scendent. You think of Sagittarius, in the broad circle of the Zodiac.; you recollect that archery is as old as Genesis ; you are reminded that Ishmael, the son of Hagar, wandered about the Judffian deserts, and became an archer. The old actor is now dead ; but on his last performance, when he was to act Sir Robert Bramble, on the night of his taking final leave of the stage. Lamb greatly desired to be pres- ent. He had always loved the actors, espe- cially the old actors, from his youth ; and this was the last of the Romans. Accordingly Lamb and his sister went to the Drury Lane ; but there being no room in the ordinary parts of the house (boxes or pit), Munden obtained places for his two visitors in the orchestra, MUNDEN. 259 close to the stage. He saw them carefully ushered in, and well posted ; then acted with his usual vigor, and no doubt enjoyed the plaudits wrung from a thousand hands. After- wards, in the interval between the comedy and the farce, he was seen to appear cau- tiously, diffidently, at the low door of the orchestra (where the musicians enter), and beckon to his friends, who then perceived that he was armed with a mighty pot of porter, for their refreshment. Lamb, grateful for the generous liquid, drank heartily, but not os- tentatiously, and returned the pot of beer to Munden, who had waited to remove it from fastidious eyes. He then retreated into the farce ; and then he retired — forever. After Munden's retirevnent Lamb almost entirely forsook the theatre ; and his habits became more solitary. He had not relin- quished society, nor professedly narrowed the circle of his friends. But insensibly his vis- itors became fewer in number, and came less 26o LAMB BECOMES A BOABDEE. frequently. Some had died ; some had grown old ; some had increased occupation to care for. His old Wednesday evenings had ceased, and he had placed several miles of road be- tween London (the residence of their families) and his own home. The weight of years, in- deed, had its effect in jjressing down his strength and buoyancy ; his spirit no longer possessed its old power of rebound. Even the care of housekeeping (not very onerous, one would suppose) troubled Charles and his sister so much, that they determined to aban- don it. This occurred in 1829. Then they became boarders and • lodgers, with an old person (T. W.), who was their next-door neighbor at Enfield ; and of him Lamb has given an elaborate description. T. W., his new landlord or housekeeper, he says, is seventy years old ; "he has something under a competence ; " he has one joke, and forty pounds a year, upon which he retires in a green old age : he laughs when he hears a LETTER TO WOBDSWOBTH. 261 joke, and when (which is much oftener) he hears it not. Having served the greater parish offices, Lamb and his sister become greater, being his lodgers, than they wei"e when sub- stantial householders. The children of the village venerate him for his gentility, but wonder also at him for a gentle indorsation of the person, not amounting to a hump, or, if one, then like that of the buffalo, and coronative of as mild qualities. Writing to Wordsworth (and speaking as a great landed proprietor), he says, "We have ridded ourselves of the dirty acres ; settled down into poor boarders and lodgers ; con- fiding ravens." The distasteful country, how- ever, still remains, and the clouds still hang over it. " Let not the lying poets be believed, who entice men from the cheerful streets," he writes. The country, he thinks, does well enough when he is amongst his books, by the fire and with candle-light ; but day and the green fields return and restore his natural 263 MOVES' TO EDMONTON: antipathies ; then he says, " In a calenture I phinge into St. Giles's." So Lamb and his sister leave their comfortable little house, and subside into the rooms of the Humpback. Their chairs, and tables, and beds also retreat ; all except the ancient bookcase, full of his " ragged veterans." This I saw, years after Charles Lamb's death, in the possession of his sister, Mary. " All our furniture has faded," he writes, " under the auctioneer's hammer ; going for nothing, like the tarnished frippery of the prodigal." Four years afterwards (in 1833) Lamb moves to his last home, in Church Street, Edmonton, where he is some- what nearer to his London friends. Very curious was the antipathy of Charles to objects that are generally so pleasant to other men. It was not a passing humor, but a life-long dislike. He admired the trees, and the meadows, and murmuring streams in poetry. I have heard him repeat some of Keats's beautiful lines in the Ode to the METROPOLITAN ATTACHMENT. 263 Nightingale, about the " pastoral eglantine," with great delight. But that was another thing : that was an object in its proper place : that was a piece of art. Long ago he had admitted that the mountains of Cum- berland were grand objects " to look at ; " but (as he said) "the houses in streets were the places to live in." I imagine that he would no more have received the former as an equivalent for his own modest home, than he would have accepted a portrait as a substitute for a friend. He was, beyond all other men whom I have met, essentially met- ropolitan. He loved " the sweet security of streets," as he says : "I would set up my tabernacle there." In the spring of 1834, Coleridge's health began to decline. Charles had written to him (in reply) on the 14th April, at which time his friend had been evidently unwell ; for Lamb says that he is glad to see that he could write so long a letter. He was indeed 264 DEATH OF COLEBIDQE. very ill ; and no further personal intercourse (I believe) took place between Charles and his old schoolfellow. Coleridge lay ill for months ; but his faculties seem to have sur- vived his bodily decay. He died on the 25th July, 1834; yet on the 5th of that month he was able to discourse with his nephew on Dryden and Barrow, on Lord Brook, and Fielding, and Richardson, without any ap- parent diminution of judgment. Even on the loth (a fortnight only before his death) there was no symptom of speedy dissolution : he then said, " The scenes of my early life have stolen "into my mind like breezes blown from the Spice Islands." Charles's sorrow- was unceasing. " He was my fifty years' old friend " (he says) " without a dissension. I cannot think without an ineffectual reference to him." Lamb's frequent exclamations, " Coleridge is dead ! Coleridge is dead ! " have been already noticed. And now the figures of other old friends of LAMB'S OLD FRIENDS. _ 265 Charles Lamb, gradually (one by one), slip out of sight. Still, in his later letters are to be found glimpses of Wordsworth and Southey, of Rogers and Hood, of Gary (with whom his intimacy increases) ; especially may be noted Miss Isola, whom he tenderly regarded, and after whose marriage (then left more alone) he retreats to his last retreat, in Church Street, Edmonton. From details let us escape into a more general narrative. The latest facts need not be painfully enumerated. There is little left, indeed, to particularize. Mary's health fluctu- ates, perhaps, more frequently than heretofore. At one time she is well and happy ; at another her mind becomes turbid, and she is then sheltered, as usual, under her brother's care. The last Essays of Elia are published ; — friends visit him ; — and he occasionally visits them in London. He dines with Tal- fourd and Cary. The sparks which are brought out are as bright as ever, although 266 LETTER TO BOGEBS. the splendor is not so frequent. Apparently the bodily strength, never great, but sufficient to move him pleasantly throughout life, seemed to flag a little. Yet he v^alks as usual. He and his sister " scramble through the Inferno : " (as he says to Gary), "Mary's chief pride in it was, that she should some day brag of it to you." Then he and Mary became veiy poorly. He vs^rites, "We have had a sick child, sleeping, or not sleeping, next to me, vs^ith a pasteboard partition between, who killed my sleep. My bedfellows are Cough and Cramp : we sleep three in a bed. Don't come yet to this house of jDest and age." This is in 1833. -^^ ^^^^^ ^^^'^ ^^ ^^^^ year (in December) he writes (once more humorously) to Rogers, expressing, amongst other things, his love for that fine artist, Stothard : "I met the dear old man, and it was sublime to see him sit, deaf, and enjoy all that was going on mirthful with the company. He reposed upon the many graceful and many LAMB '8 FALL. 267 fantastic images he had created." His last letter, written to Mrs. Dyer on the day after his fall, was an effort to recover a book of Mr. Gary, which had been mislaid or lost, so anxious was he always that every man should have his own. In December, 1834, the history of Charles Lamb comes suddenly to a close. He had all along had a troubled day : now came the night. His spirits had previously been toler- ably cheerful ; reading and conversing, as heretofore, with his friends, on subjects that ■were familiar to him. There was little mani- fest alteration or falling off in his condition of mind or body. He took his morning walks as usual. One day he stumbled against a stone, and fell. His face was slightly "wounded ; but no fatal (or even alarming) consequence was foreboded. Erysipelas, how- ever, followed the wound, and his strength (never robust) was not sufficient to enable him to combat successfully that inflammatory 268 HIS DEATH. and exhausting disease. He suffered no pain (I believe) ; and when the presence of a clergyman was suggested to him, he made no remark, but understood that his life was in danger ; he was quite calm and collected, quite resigned. At last his voice began to fail, his perceptions became confused, and he sank gradually, very gradually, until the 27th of December, 1834; ^^^ then — he died! It was the fading away or disappearance of life, rather than a violent transit into another world. He died at Edmonton ; not, as has been sup- posed, at Enfield, to which place he never re- turned as to a place of residence, after he had once quitted it. It is not true that he was ever deranged, or subjected to any restraint, shortly before his death. There never was the least symptom of mental disturbance in him after the time (1795-6) when he was placed for a few weeks in Hoxton Asylum, to allay a little nervous LAMB'S AGE. 269 imtation. If it were necessary to confirm this assertion, which is known to me from personal observation and other incontrovertible evidence, I would adduce ten of his published letters (in 1833) and several in 1834; ^^^ °^ them bear- ing date only four days before his death. All these documents afford ample testimony of his clear good sense and kind heart, some of them, indeed, being tinged with his usual humor. Charles Lamb was fifty-nine years old at his death ; of the same age as Ci"omwell, between whom and himself there was of course no other similitude. A few years before, when he was about to be released from his wearisome toil at the India House, he said exultingly, that he was passing out of Time into Eternity. But now came the true Eternity ; the old Eternity, — without change or limit ; in which all men surrender their leisure, as well as their labor ; when their sensations and infirmities (some- times harassing enough) cease and are at rest. No more anxiety for the debtor ; no more toil 270 LAMB'S ECONOMY. for the worker. The rich man's ambition, the poor man's pains, at last are over. Ilic jacet. That "forlorn" inscription is the universal epitaph. What a world of moral, what spec- ulations, what pathetic wishes, and what ter- rible dreams, lie enshrouded in that one final issue, which we call — Death. To him who never gave pain to a human being, whose genius yielded nothing but in- struction and delight, was awarded a calm and easy death. No man, it is my belief, was ever loved or lamented more sincerely than Charles Lamb, His sister (his elder by a decade) sur- vived him for the space of thirteen years. By strict economy, without meanness ; with much unpretending hospitality ; with frequent gifts and lendings, and without any borrowing, — he accumulated, during his thirty-three years of constant labor, the moderate sum of two thousand pounds. No more. That was the sum, I believe, which was eventually shared amongst his legatees. His other riches were LAMB'S WILL. 271 gathered together and deposited elsewhere ; in the memory of those who loved him, — and there were many of them, — or amongst others of our Anglo-Saxofi race, whose minds he has helped to enrich and soften. The property of Charles Lamb, or so much as might be wanted for the purpose, was by his will directed to be applied towards the main- tenance and comfort of his sister ; and, subject to this primary object, it was vested in trustees for the benefit of Miss Isola — Mrs. Moxon. Mary Lamb's comforts were supplied, with anxiety and tenderness, throughout the thirteen years during which she survived her brother. I went to see her, after her brother's death ; but her frequent illnesses did not render visits at all times welcome or feasible. She then re- sided in Alpha Road, Saint John's Wood, under the care of an experienced nurse. There was a twilight of consciousness in her, — scarcely more, — at times ; so that perhaps the mercy of God saved her from full knowledge of her 272 DEATH OF MARY LAMB. great loss. Charles, who had given up all his days for her protection and benefit, — who had fought the great battle of life so nobly, — left her " for that unknown and silent shore," where, it is hoped, the brother and sister will renew the love which once united them on earth, and made their lives holy. Mary Lamb died on the 20th May, 1847 ; and the brother and sister now lie near each other (in the sajne grave) in the churchyard of Edmonton, in Mid- dlesex. ( 273 ) POSTSCRIPT. I HAVE thus told, as far as my ability per- mits, the story of the life of Charles Lamb. I have not ventured to deduce any formidable moral from it. Like Lamb himself, I have great dislike to ostentatious precepts and impertinent lessons. Facts themselves should disclose their own virtues. A man w^ho is able to benefit by a lesson will, no doubt, discover it, under any husk or disguise, before it is stripped and laid bare — to the kernel. Besides, too much teaching may disagree with the reader. It is apt to harden the heart, wearying the attention, and mortifying the self-love. Svich disturbances of the system in- terfere with the digestion of a truth. Even Gulliver is sometimes too m^anifestly i8 274 POBTSQBIPT. didactic. His adventures, simply told, would have emitted spontaneously a luminous atmos- phere, and need not have been distilled into brilliant or pungent drops. No history is barren of good. Even from the foregoing narrative some benefit may be gleaned, some sympathy may be excited, w^hich naturally forms itself into a lesson. Let us look at it cursorily. Charles Lamb was born almost in penury, and he was taught by charity. Even when a boy he was forced to labor for his bread. In the first opening of manhood a terrible calamity fell upon him, in magnitude fit to form the mystery or centre of an antique drama. He had to dwell, all his days, with a person in- curably mad. From poverty he passed at once to unpleasant toil a,nd perpetual fear. These were the sole changes in his fortune. Yet he gained friends, respect, a position, and great sympathy from all ; showing what one poor man of genius, under grievous misfortune. POSTSCRIPT. 275 may do, if he be courageous and faithful to the end. Charles Lamb never preached nor prescribed, but let his own actions tell their tale and pro- duce their natural effects ; neither did he deal out little apothegms or scraps of wisdom, derived from other minds. But he succeeded ; and in every success there must be a mainstay of right or truth to support it ; otherwise it will eventually fail. It is true that in his essays and numerous letters many of his sincere thoughts -and opinions are written down. These, however, are written down simply, and just as they occur, without any special design. Some per- sons exhibit only their ingenuity, or learning. It is not every one who is able, like the licen- tiate Pedro Garcias, to deposit his wealth of soul by the road-side. Like all persons of great intellectual sensi- bility, Lamb responded to all impressions. To sympathize with Tragedy or Comedy only, 276 POSTSCRIPT. argues a limited capacity. The mind thus coAstructed is partially lame or torpid. One hemisphere has never been reached. It should not be forgotten that Lamb pos- sessed one great advantage. He lived and died amongst Ms equals. This was w^hat enabled him to exercise his natural strength, as neither a parasite nor a patron can. It is marvellous how freedom of thought operates ; what strength it gives to the system ; with what lightness and freshness it endues the spirit. Then, he was made stronger by trouble ; made wiser by grief. I have not attempted to fix the precise spot in which Charles Lamb is to shine hereafter in the firmament of letters. I am not of sufficient magnitude to determine his astral elevation — where he is to dwell — between the sun Shake- speare and the twinkling Zoilus. That must be left to time. Even the fixed stars at first waver and coruscate, and require long seasons for their consummation and final settlement. Whenever he differs with us in opinion (as POSTSCRIPT. 277 he does occasionally), let us not hastily pro- nounce him to be wrong. It is wise, as well as modest, not to show too much eagerness to adjust the ideas of all other thinkers to the (sometimes low) level of our own. ( 279 ) APPENDIX. TN the following pages will be found the •*- opinions of several distinguished authors on the subject of Charles Lamb's genius and character, and also a contribution (by himself) to the Athenceum^ made in January, 1835. All the writers were contemporaiy with Lamb, and were personally intimate with him. The ex- tracts may be accepted as corroborative, in some degree, of the opinions set forth in the forego- ing Memoir. HAZLITT. \_From Hazlitfs ^'•Spirit of the Age." Title, " Blia."'] Mr. Lamb has the very soul of an antiquarian, as this implies a reflecting humanity. The film of the past hovers forever before him. He is shy, sensitive, the reverse of everything coarse. 28o APPENDIX. vulgar, obtrusive, and commonplace. His spirit clothes itself in the garb of elder time ; homelier, but more durable. He is borne along with no pompous paradoxes, shines in no glittering tinsel of a fashionable phraseology, is neither fop nor sophist. He has none of the turbulence or froth of new-fangled opinions. His style runs pure and clear, though it may often take an under- ground course, or be conveyed through old- fashioned conduits. . . . There is a fine tone of chiaro-scuro, a moral perspective in his writings. He delights to dwell on that which is fresh to the eye of memor}^ ; he yearns after and covets what soothes the frailty of human nature. That touches him most nearly which is withdrawn to a certain distance, which verges on the borders of oblivion ; that piques and provokes his fancy most which is hid from a superficial glance. That which, though gone by, is still remembered, is in his view more genuine, and has given more signs that it will live, than a thing of yesterday, which may be forgotten to-morrow. Death has in this sense the spirit of life in it ; and the shadowy has to our author something substantial. Mr. Lamb has a distaste to new faces, to new books, to new buildings, to new customs. He is shy of all imposing appearances, of all assump- tions of self-importance, of all adventitious orna- ments, of all mechanical advantages, even to a APPENDIX. 281 nervous excess. It is not merely that he does not rely upon, or ordinarily avail himself of them ; he holds them in abhorrence : he utterly abjures and discards them. He disdains all the vulgar artifices of authorship, all the cant of criticism and helps of notoriety. His affections revert to and settle on the past ; but then even this must have something per- sonal and local in it to interest him deeply and thoroughly. He pitches his tent in the suburbs of existing manners, and brings down his ac- count of character to the few straggling remains of the last generation. No one makes the tour of our southern metropolis, or describes the man- ners of the last age, so well as Mr. Lamb, — with so fine, and yet so formal an air. How ad- mirably he has sketched the former inmates of the South Saa House ; what " fine fretwork he makes of their double and single entries ! " With what a firm yet subtle -pencil he has em- bodied Mrs. Battle's opinions on Whist ! With what well-disguised humor he introduces us to his relations, and how freely he serves up his friends ! The streets of London are his fairy-land, teem- ing with wonder, with life and interest to his retrospective glance, as it did to the eager eye of childhood : he has contrived to weave its tritest traditions into a bright and endless romance. 282 APPENDIX. \_From Hazlitfs " Table Talk," Vol. II.] Mr. Lamb' is the only imitator of old English style I can read with pleasure ; and he is so thoroughly imbued with the spirit of his authors, that the idea of imitation is almost done away. There is an inward unction, a marrowy vein both in the thought and feeling, an intuition, deep and lively, of his subject, that carries off any quaint- ness or awkwardness arising from an antiquated style and dress. The matter is completely his own, though the manner is assumed. Perhaps his ideas are altogether so marked and individual, as to require their point and pungency to be neu- tralized by the affectation of a singular but tradi- tional form of conveyance. Tricked out in the prevailing costume, they would probably seem more startling and out of the way. The old English authors. Burton, Fuller, Coryate, Sir Thomas Browne,, are a kind of mediators between us and the more eccentric and whimsical modern, reconciling us to his peculiarities. I must con- fess that what I like best of his papers under the signature of Elia (still I do not presume, amidst such excellence, to decide what is most excel- lent) is the account of Mrs. Battle's '' Opinions on Whist," which is also the most free from ob- solete allusions and turns of exjDression, — " A well of native English undefiled." APPENDIX. '283 To those acquainted with his admired proto- types, these Essays of the ingenious and Iiighly gifted autlior have the same sort of charm and rehsh that Erasmus's " Colloquies," or a fine piece of modern Latin, have to the classical scholar. — '■'•On Familiar Style." IHazlitfs ''Plain Speaker," Vol. I. p. 62.] At Lamb's we used to have lively skirmishes at their Thursday evening parties. I doubt whether the Small Coal-man's musical parties could exceed them. O for the pen of John Buncle to consecrate a petit souvenir to their memory ! There was Lamb himself, the most delightful, the most provoking, the most witty and sensible of men. He always made the best pun and the best remark in the course of the evening. His serious qpnversation, like his seri- ous writing, is his best. No one ever stammered out such fine, piqviant, deep^ eloquent things, in half a dozen sentences, as he does. His jests scald like tears, and he probes a question with a play upon words. What a keen, laughing, hair- brained vein of homefelt truth ! What choice venom ! How often did we cut into the haunch of letters ! How we skimmed the cream of crit- icism ! How we picked out the marrow of au- thors ! Need I go over the names ? They were 284 APPENDIX. but the old, everlasting set — Milton and Shakes- peare, Pope and Dryden, Steele and Addison, Swift and Gay, Fielding, Smollett, Sterne, Rich- ardson, Hogarth's prints, Claude's landscapes, the Cartoons at Hampton Court, and all those things that, having once been, must ever be. The Scotch Novels had not then been heard of: so v^e said nothing about them. In general we were hard upon the moderns. The author of the " Rambler" was only tolerated in Boswell's Life of him ; and it was as much as any one could do to edge in a word for Junius. Lamb could not bear Gil Bias: this was a fault. I remember the greatest triumph I ever had was in persuad- ing him, after'some years' difficulty, that Fielding was better than Smollett. On one occasion he was for making out a list of persons famous in history that one would wish to see again, at the head of whom were Pontius Pilate, Sir Thomas Browne, and Dr. Faustus ; but we black-balled most of his list ! But with what a gusto would he describe his favorite authors, Donne or Sir Philip Sidney, and call their most crabbed passages delicious! He tried them on his palate, as epicures taste olives, and his observations had a smack in them, like a rougliness on the tongue. With what dis- crimination he hinted a defect in what he admired most, — as in saying the display of the sumptuous banquet, in " Paradise Regained," was not in true APPENDIX. 285 keeping, as the simplest fare was all that was necessary to tempt the extremity of hunger ; and stating that Adam and Eve in " Paradise Lost" were too much like married people. He has furnished many a text for Coleridge to preach upon. There was no fuss or cant about him ; nor were his sweets or sours ever diluted with one particle of affectation. — "O;? i/ie Conversation of Authors." \_From '■^Atitohiography of Leigh Hunt" pp. 250-253O Let me take this opportunity of recording my recollections in general of my friend Lamb ; of all the world's friend, particularly of his oldest friends, Coleridge and Southey ; for I think he never modified or withheld any opinion (in pri- vate or bookwards) except in consideration of what he thought they might not like. Charles Lamb had a head worthy of Aristotle, with as fine a heart as ever beat in human bosom, and limbs very fragile to sustain it. There was a caricature of him sold in the shops, which pretended to be a likeness. Procter went into the shop in a passion, and asked the man what he meant by putting forth such a libel. The man apologized, and said that the artist meant no offence. There never was a true portrait of 286 APFENlhx. Lamb. His features were strongly yet delicately cut ; he had a fine eye as well as forehead ; and no face carried in it greater marks of thought and feeling. It resembled that of Bacon, with less worldly vigor and more sensibility. As his frame, so was his genius. It was as fit for thought as could be, and equally as unfit for action ; and this rendered him melancholy, ap- prehensive, humorous, and willing to make the best of everything as it was, both from tenderness of heart and abhorrence of alteration. His un- derstanding was too great to admit an absurdity ; his frame was not strong enough to deliver it from a fear. His sensibility to strong contrasts was the foundation of his humor, which was that of a wit at once nielancholy and willing to be pleased. . . . His puns were admirable, and often contained as deep things as the wisdom of some who have greater names ; such a man, for instance, as Nicole, the Frenchman, who was a baby to him. Lamb would have cracked a score of jokes at Nicole, worth his whole book of sentences ; pelted his head with pearls. Nicole would not have understood him, but Rochefou- cault would, and Pascal too ; and some of our old Englishmen would have understood, him still bettpr. He would have been worthy of hearing Shakespeare read one of his scenes to him, hot from the brain. Commonplace found a great APPENDIX. 287 comfortei' in him, as long as it was good-natured ; it was to the ill-natured or the dictatorial only that he was startling. Willing to see society go on as it did, because he despaired of seeing it otherwise, but not at all agreeing in his interior with the common notions of crime and punish- ment, he " dimifounded" a long tirade against vice one evening, by taking the pipe out of his mouth, and asking the speaker, "Whether he meant to say that a thief was not a good man?" To a person abusing Voltaire, and indiscreetly opposing his character to that of Jesus Christ, he said admirably well (though he by no means over- rated Voltaire, nor wanted reverence in the other quarter), that "Voltaire was a very good Jesus Christ ybr the French" He liked to see the church-goers continue to go to church, and wrote a tale in his sister's admirable little book {^Mrs. Leicester' s School) to encourage the rising gen- eration to do so ; but to a conscientious deist he had nothing to object ; and if an atheist had found every other door shut against him, he v^^ould assuredly not have found his. I believe he would have had the world remain precisely as it was, provided it .innovated no further ; but this spirit in him was anything but a worldly one, or for his own interest. He hardly contemplated with patience the new buildings in the Regent's Park ; and, privately speaking, he had a grudge 288 APPENDIX. against official heaven-expounders, or clergymen. He would rather, however, have been with a crowd that he disliked, than felt himself alone. He said to me one day, with a face of great solemnity, " What must have been that man's feelings, who thought himself the jirst deist?" . . . He knew how many false conclusions and pretensions are made by men who profess to be guided by facts only, as if facts could not be misconceived, or figments taken for them ; and therefore, one day, when somebody was speak- ing of a person who valued himself on being a matter-of-fact man, " Now," said he, " I value myself on being a raatter-of-lie man." This did not hinder his being a man of the greatest ve- racity, in the ordinary sense of the word ; but " truth," he said, " was precious, and not to be wasted on everybody." Those vdio w^ish to have a genuine taste of him, and an insight into his modes of life, should read his essays on Hogarth and King Lear^ his Letters^ his article on the London Streets^ on Whist- Play iizg^ which he loves, and on Saying Grace before Meat., which he thinks a strange rnoment to select for being grateful. He said once to a brother whist-player, whose hand was more clever than clean, and who had enough in him to afibrd the joke, " M., if dirt were trumps, what hands you would hold ! " APPENDIX. 289 FORSTER. \_From Mr. yohn Forsters Contribution to the New Monthly Magazine., 1835. Title, " Charles L,atnb."~\ Charles Lamb's first -appearance in literature was by the side of Samuel Taylor Coleridge. He came into his first battle, as he tells us (litera- ture is a sort of warfare), under cover of that greater Ajax. We should like to see this remarkable friend- ship (remarkable in all respects and in all its circvuTistances) between two of the most original geniuses in an age of no common genius, worthily recorded. It would outvalue, in the view of pos- terity, many centuries of literary quarrels. Lamb never faii'ly recovered the death of Cole- ridge. He thought of little else (his sister was but another poi"tion of himself) until his own great spirit joined his friend's. He had a habit of venting his melancholy in a sort of mirth. He would, with nothing graver than a pun, " cleanse his bosom of the. perilous stuff that weighed " upon it. In a jest, or a few light phrases, he would lay open the recesses of his heart. So in respect of the death of Coleridge. Some old friends of his saw him tv^^o or three weeks ago, 19 290 APPENDIX. and remarked the constant turning and reference of his mind. He interrupted himself and them almost every instant with some play of affected wonder or humorous melancholy on the words " Coleridge is dead." Nothing could divert him from that, for the thought of it never left him. About the same time, we had written to him to request a few lines for the literary albuin of a gentleman who entertained a fitting admiration of his genius. It was the last request we were to make, and the last kindness we were to receive. He wrote in Mr. 's volume, and wrote of Coleridge. This, we believe, w^as the last pro- duction of his pen. A strange and not 'Un- enviable chance, which saw him at the end of his literary pilgrimage, as he had been at the be- ginning, — in that iinmortal company. We are indebted, with the reader, to the kindness of our friend for permission to print the whole of what was written. It would be impertinence to offer a remark on it. Once read, its noble and affec- tionate tenderness will be remembered foi'ever. " When I heard of the death of Coleridge, it was without grief. It seemed to me that he long had been on the confines of the next world, — that he had a hunger for eternity. I grieved then that I could not grieve. But since, I feel how great a part he was of me. His great and dear spirit haunts me. I cannot tbLiK a thought, I APPENDIX. 291 cannot make a criticism on men or books, with- out an ineffectual tvu'ning and reference to him. He was the proof and touchstone of all my cogi- tations. He was a Grecian (or in the first form) at Chi'ist's Hospital, where I was deputy Grecian ; and the same subordination and deference to him I have preserved through a life-long acquaint- ance. Great in his writings, he was greatest in his conversation. In him was disproved that old maxim, that we should allow every one his share of talk. He would talk from morn to dewy eve, nor cease till far n:iidnight ; yet who ever would interrupt him, — who would obstruct that con- tinuous flow^ of converse, fetched from Helicon or Zion? He had the tact of making the unintel- ligible seem plain. Many who read the abstruser parts of his "Friend" would complain that his works did not answer to his spoken wisdom. They were identical. But he had a tone in oral delivery, which seemed to convey sense to those who were otherwise imperfect recipients. He was my fifty years old friend without a dissension. Never saw I his likeness, nor probably the world can see again. I seem to love the house he died at more passionately than when he lived. I love the faithful Gilmans more than while they exer- cised their virtues towards him living. What was his mansion is consecrated to me a chapel. " Chas. Lamb. "Edmonton, November 21, 1834." 392 APPENDIX. Within five weeks. of this date Charles Lamb died. A sliglil: accident brought on an attack of erysipelas, which proved fatal ; his system was not strong enough for resistance. It is some con- solation to add, that, during his illness, which lasted four days, he suffered no pain, and that his faculties remained with him to the last. A few words spoken by him the day before he died showed with what quiet collectedness he was prepared to meet death. As an Essayist, Charles Lamb will be re- membered, in years to come, with Rabelais and Montaigne, with Sir Thomas Browne, with Steele, and with Addison. He unites many of the finest characteristics of these several writers. He has wisdom and wit of the highest order, exquisite humor, a genuine and cordial vein of pleasantry, and the most heart-touching pathos. In the largest acceptation of the word he is a humanist. No one of the great family of authors past or present has shown in matters the most important or the most trivial so delicate and extreme a sense of all that is human. It is the prevalence of this characteristic in his writings which has subjected him to occasional charges of want of imagination. This, however, is but half-criticism ; for the matter of reproach may in fact be said to be his triumph. It was with a deep relish of Mr. Lamb's faculty that a friend APPENDIX. 293 of his once said, " He makes the majesties of imagination seem famihar." It is precisely thus with his own imagination. It eludes the observa- tion of the ordinary reader in the modesty of its truth, in its social and familiar air. His fancy as an Essayist is distinguished by singular delicacy and tenderness ; and even his conceits will generally be found to be, as those of his favorite Fuller often are, steeped in human feeling and passion. The fondness he entertained for Fuller, for the author of the "Anatomy of Melancholy," and for other writers of that class, was a pure matter of temperament. His thoughts were al- ways his own. Even when his words seem cast in the very mould of others, the perfect origi- nality of his thinking is felt and acknowledged ; we may add, in its superior wisdom, manliness, and unaffected sweetness. Every sentence in those Essays may be proved to be crammed full of thinking. The two volumes will be multiplied, we have no doubt, in the course of a few years, into as many hundreds ; for they contain a stock of matter which must be ever suggestive to more active minds, and will surely revisit the world in new shapes — an everlasting succession and va- riety of ideas. The past to him was not mere dry antiquity ; it involved a most extensive and touching association of feelings and tnoughts, re- minding him of what we have been and may be, 294 AFPENDIX. and seeming to afford a surer ground for resting on than the things which are here to-day and may- be gone to-morrow. We know of no inquisition more curious, no speculation more lofty, than may be found in the Essays of Charles Lamb. We know no place where conventional absurdi- ties receive so little quarter ; where stale evasions are so plainly exposed ; where the barriers be- tween names and things are at times so coinpletely flung down. And how, indeed, could it be other- w^ise? For it is truth that plays upon his writ- ings like a genial and divine atmosphere. No need for them to prove what they would be at by any formal or logical analysis ; no need for him to tell the world that this institution is wrong and that doctrine right ; the world may gather from those writings their surest guide to judgment in these and all other cases — a general and honest appreciation of the humane and true. Mr. Lamb's personal appearance was remarka- ble. It quite realized the expectations of those who tliink that an author and a wit should have a distinct air, a separate costume, a particular cloth, something positive and singular about him. Such unquestionably had Mr. Lamb. Once he rejoiced in snuff-color, but latterly his costume was inveterately black — with gaiters which seemed longing for somethmg more substantial to close in. His legs were remarkably slight ; APPENDIX. 295 so indeed was his whole body, which was of short stature, but surmounted by a head of amaz- ing fineness. His face was deeply marked and full of noble lines — traces of sensibility, imagi- nation, sufiering, and much thought. His wit was in his eye, luminous, quick, and restless. The smile that played about his mouth was ever cordial and good-hvimored ; and the most cordial and delightful of its smiles were those with which he accompanied his affectionate talk with his sister, or his jokes against her. TALFOURD. [^From Talfourd^s '•'• Memorials of C. Lamb" PP- 337-8' 342-3-] Except to the few who were acquainted with the tragical occurrences of Lamb's early life, some of his peculiarities seemed strange, — to be forgiven, indeed, to the excellences of his nature and the delicacy of his genius, — but still, in themselves, as much to be wondered at as de- plored. The sweetness of his character, breathed through his wi'itings, was felt even by strangers ; but its heroic aspect was unguessed even by many of his friends. Let them now consider it, and ask if the annals of self-sacrifice can show 296 APPENDIX. anything in human action and endurance more lovely than its self-devotion exhibits ! It was not merely that he saw through the ensanguined cloud of misfoii;une which had fallen upon his family, the unstained excellence of his sister, whose madness had caused it ; that he was ready to take her to his own home with reverential affection, and cherish her through life ; that he gave up, for her sake, all meaner and more selfish love, and all the hopes which youth blends with the passion which disturbs and ennobles it ; not even that he did all this cheerfully, and with- out pluming himself upon his brotherly nobleness as a virtue, or seeking to repay himself (as some uneasy martyrs do) by small instalments of long repining, — but that he can'ied the spirit of the hour in which he first knew and took his course, to his last. So far from thinking that his sacri- fice of youth and love to his sister gave him a license to follow his own caprice at the expense of her feelings, even in the lightest matters, he always wrote and spoke of her as his wiser self, his generous benefactress, of whose protecting care he was scarcely worthy. How liis pen al- most grew wanton in her praise, even when she was a prisoner in the Asylum after the fatal attack of lur;acy, his letters of the time to Cole- ridge show ; but that might have been a mere temporary exaltation — thfe attendant feiTor of APPENDIX. 297 a great exigency and a great resolution. It was not so. Nervous, tremulous, as lie seemed — so light of frame that he looked only fit for the most placid foilune — when the dismal emergencies which checkered his life arose, he acted with as much promptitude and vigor as if he had never penned a stanza nor taken a glass too much, or was strung with herculean sinews. None of those temptations, in which misery is the most potent, to hazard a lavish expenditure for an en- joyment to be secured against fate and fortune, ever tempted him to exceed his income, when scantiest, by a sliilling. He had always a reserve for poor Marys periods of seclusion, and some- thing in hand besides for a friend in need ; and on his retirement from the India House, he had amassed, by annual savings, a sufficient sum (in- vested, after the prudent and classical taste of Lord Stowell, in " the elegant simplicity of the Three per Cents.") to secure comfort to Miss Lamb, when his pension should ceas.e with him, even if the India Company, his great employers, had not acted nobly by the memory of their in- spired clerk — as they did — and gave her the annuity to which a wife would have been enti- tled — but of which he could not feel assured. Living among literary men, some less dis- tinguished and less discreet than those whom 298 APPENDIX. we have mentioned, he was constantly impor- tuned to relieve distresses which an improvident speculation in literature produces, and which the recklessness attendant on the empty vanity of self-exaggerated talent renders desperate and merciless — and to the importunities of such hope- less petitioners he gave too largely — though he used sometimes to express a painful sense that he was diminishing his own store without conferring any real benefit. " Heaven," he used to say, " does not owe me sixpence for all I have given, or lent (as they call it) to such importunity ; I only gave it because I could not bear to refuse it ; and I have done good by my weakness." \^B. W. P. '■'■ Aihenceum" January 24, 1835.] I was acquainted with Mr. Lamb for about seventeen or eighteen years. I saw him first (I think., for my recollection is here imperfect) at one of Hazlitt's lectures, or at one of Coleridge's dissertations on Shakespeare, where the meta- physician sucked oranges and said a hundred wonderful things. They were all three extraor- dinary men. Hazlitt had more of the specula- tive and philosophical faculty, and more observa- tion (c2>cz^;;zspection) than Lamb ; whilst Cole- ridge was more subtle and ingenious than either. APPENDIX. 299 Lamb's qualities were a sincere, generous, and tender nature, wit (at command), humor, fancy, and — if the creation of character be a test of imagination, as I apprehend it is — imagination also. Some of his phantasms — the people of the South Sea House, Mrs. Battle, the Benchers of the Middle Temple, &c. (all of them ideal), might be grouped into comedies. His sketches are always (to quote his own eulogy on Marvell) full of "a witty delicacy," and, if properly brought out and marshalled, would do honor to the stage. When I first became acquainted with Mr. Lamb, he lived, I think, in the Temple ; but I did not visit him then, and could scarcely, there- fore, be said to know him, until he took up his residence in Russell Street, Covent Garden. He had a first floor there, over a brazier's shop, — since converted into a booksellei"'s, — wherein he frequently entertained his friends. On certain evenings (Thursdays) one might reckon upon encountering at his rooms from six to a dozen unaffected people, including two or three men of letters. A game at whist and a cold supper, fol- lowed by a cheerful glass (glasses !) and " good talk," were the standing dishes upon those oc- casions. If you came late, you encountered a perfume of the " great plant." The pipe, hid in smoke (the violet amongst its leaves) , — a 300 APPENDIX. squadron of tumblers, fuming with various odors, and a score of quick intelligent glances, saluted you. There you might see Godwin, Hazlitt, Leigh Hunt, Coleridge (though rarely), Mr. Robinson, Serjeant Talfourd, Mr. Ayrton, Mr. Alsager, Mr. Manning, — sometimes Miss Kelly, or Liston, — Admiral Burney, Charles Lloyd, Mr. Alsop, and various others ; and if Words- worth was in town, you might stumble upon him also. Our friend's brother, John Lamb, was oc- casionally there ; and his sister (his excellent sister) invariably presided. The room in which he lived was plainly and almost carelessly furnished. Let us enter it for a moment. Its ornaments, you see, are princi- pally several long shelves of ancient books ; (those are his " ragged veterans.") Some of Hogarth's prints, two after Leonardo da Vinci and Titian, and a portrait of Pope, enrich the walls. At the table sits an elderly lady (in spectacles) reading ; whilst from an old-fashioned chair by the fire springs up a little spare man in black, with a countenance pi"egnant with ex- pression, deep lines in his forehead, quick, lumi- nous, restless eyes, and a smile as sweet as ever threw sunshine upon the human face. You see that you are welcome. He speaks: "Well, boys, how are you? What's the news with you? What will you take?" You are com- APPENDIX. 301 fortable in a moment. Reader ! it is Charles Lamb who is before you — the critic, the essay- ist, the poet, the wit, the large-minded human being, whose apprehension could grasp, without effort, the loftiest subject, and descend in gentle- ness upon the humblest ; who sympathized with all classes and conditions of men, as readily with the sufferings of the tattered beggar and the poor chimney-sweeper's boy as with the starry con- templations of Hamlet " the Dane," or the eagle- flighted madness of Lear. The books that I have adverted to, as filling his shelves, were mainly English books — the poets, dramatists, divines, essayists, &c., — ranging from the commencement of the Elizabeth period down to the time of Addison and Steele. B.e- sides these, of the earliest writers, Chaucer was there ; and, amongst the moderns, Wordsworth, Coleridge, and a few others, whom he loved. He had more real knowledge of old English literature than any man whom I ever knew. He was not an antiquarian. He neither hunted after commas, nor scribbled notes which confounded his text. The Spirit of the author descended upon him ; and he felt it ! With Burton and Fuller, Jeremy Taylor and Sir Thomas Browne, he was an intimate. The ancient poets — chiefly the dramatic poets — were his especial friends. He knew every point and turn of their wit, all 303 APPENDIX. the beauty of their characters ; loving each for some one distinguishing particular, and despising none. For absolute contempt is a quality of youth and ignorance — a foppery which a wise man rejects, and he rejected it accordingly. If he contemned anything, it was contempt itself. He saw that every one bore some sign or mark (God's gift) for which he ought to be valued by his fellows, and esteemed a man. He could pick out a merit from each author in his turn. He liked Heywood for his simplicity and pathos ; Web- ster for his deep insight into the heart ; Ben Jon- son for his humor ; Marlow for his " mighty line ; " Fletcher for his wit and flowing sweet- ness ; and Shakespeare for his combination of wonders. He loved Donne too, and Qiiarles, and Marvell, and Sir Philip Sidney, and a long list besides. No one will love the old English writers again as he did. Others may have a leaning towards them — a respect — an admiration — a sort of young" man's love : but the ti'ue relishing is over ; the close familiar friendship is dissolved. He who went back into dim antiquity, and sought them out, and proclaimed their worth to the world — abandoning the gaudy rhetoric of popu- lar authors for their sake, is now translated into the shadowy regions of the friends he worshipped. He who was once separated from them by a APPENDIX. 303 hundred lustres, hath surmounted that great in- terval of time and space, and is now, in a man- ner, THEIR Contemporary ! * * * * .* The wit of Mr. Lamb was known to most per- sons conversant with existing literature. It was said that his friends bestowed moi'e than due praise upon it. It is clear that his enemies did it injustice. Such as it was, it was at all events Ms own. He did not "get up" his conversa- tions, nor explore the hoards of other wits, nor rake up the ashes of former fires. Right or wrong, he set to work unassisted ; and by dint of his own strong capacity and fine apprehension, he struck out as many substantially new ideas as any man of his time. The quality of his humor was essentially different from that of other men. It was not simply a tissue of jests or conceits, broad, far-fetched, or elaborate ; but it was a combination of humor with pathos — a sweet stream of thought, bubbling and sparkling with witty fancies ; such as I do not remember to have elsewhere met with, except in Shakespeare. There is occasionally a mingling of the serious and the comic in " Don Juan," and in other writers ; but they difler, after all, materially from Lamb in humor : — whether they are better or worse, is unimportant. His delicate and irrita- ble genius, influenced by his early studies, and 304 APPENDIX. fettered by old associations, moved within a lim- ited circle. Yet this was not without its advan- tages ; for, whilst it stopped him from many bold (and many idle) speculations and theories, it gave to his writings their peculiar charm, their indi- viduality, their sincerity, their pure, gentle origi- nal character. Wit, which is " impersonal," and, for that very reason perhaps, is nine times out of ten a mere heartless matter, in him assumed a new shape and texture. It was no longer simply malicious, but was colored by a hundred gentle feelings. It bore the rose as well as the thorn. His heart warmed the jests and conceits with which his brain was busy, and turned them into flowers. Every one who knew Mr. Lamb, knew that his humor was not affected. It was a style — a habit ; generated by reading and loving the an- cient writers, but adopted in perfect sincerity, and used towards all persons and upon all occasions. He was the same in 18 10 as in 1834 — v^hen he died. A man cannot go on " affecting" for five and twenty years. He must be sometimes sin- cere. Now, Lamb was always the same. I never knew a man upon whom Time wrought so little. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS m 014 494 4513 J