THE BOOK OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE THE BOOK OF THE ,,; SPIRITUAL LIFE BY THE LATE LADY DILKE WITH A MEMOIR OF THE AUTHOR BY THE RT. HON. SIR CHARLES W. DILKE, Ex., M.P. WITH PORTRAITS AND ILLUSTRATIONS NEW YORK E. P. BUTTON AND COMPANY 1905 Printed in Great Britain ri PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SOhfS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES. " The path of a good woman is indeed strewn with flowers ; but they rise behind her steps. . . ."— RUSKIN, " Sesame and Lilies." b 2 CONTENTS PAGE MEMOIR I PHE BOOK OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE ... 129 5H0RT STORIES— THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 235 THE LAST HOUR 261 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS TO 'FACE PAGE E. Francis Strong ... ... ... Frontispiece (Fro7n a photograph, 1861. ) E. F. S. Pattison ... ... ... ... ... 24 ' (From a water-colour drawing by [Pauline] LM.dy Trevelyan, 1864.) Thumb-nail Sketch of the Bonne ... ... ... 45 (From a letter.) View from Mrs. P.\ttison'.s Tower at Grasse, 1876-7 51 [From a pe7i-and-ink drawing by herself.) Mrs. Pattison's Dr.aguignan Garden ... ... ... 59 ' (From a pen-and-ink drawing by herself.) A "Boggart."' ("They are made of straw, like this") ... 64 Facsimile of a Pen-and-ink Sketch and Part of a Letter from Mrs. Pattison, dated March 9, 1883 83 " L'Etendard du 3'^ Cuirassier"' ... ... ... 117 ' (Mrs. Pattison s working notes of Detaille's pictttre ; also called " Le Drapeaii.") Lady Dilke ... ... Frontispiece to Second Part (From a photograph by Mr. Thomson, September, 1904.) MEMOIR Lady Dilke was one of several children of an Indian officer, Captain Henry Strong. After his retirement from the Company's service, he was connected with the London and County Bank, and for some time managed the Oxford branch. His father and uncle had been two of the most sturdy among the United Empire Loyalists of Georgia, a state which, in the War of Independence, had at first been divided equally between Whigs and Tories. Lady Dilke was proud of this descent, and glad, in the early days of revived interest in the United Empire Loyalists, to claim admission to their society as the grandchild of Samuel S. Strong, Deput}^ Surveyor-General of Georgia before the war. Sometimes on Dominion Day she would wear their badge. Samuel Strong had been employed by the Crown in Virginia and in South Carolina, as well as in his own province. His name appears among those who signed, along with the Governor, the Oath of Allegiance in 1774 — a document preserved at Savannah by the Historical Society of Georgia. In 1899 Lady Dilke wrote, for the Annual Transac- tions of the United Empire Loyalists Association, an article on the Georgia Loyalists, and told the story of the life of her grandfather and great-uncle. Besides being public officials of the survey service graced by Washington, they had property in Augusta, Georgia, and a Crown grant on which a portion of the city B 2 MEMOIR of Savannah stands. Their connection with the place is said to be preserved in the name "Strong's Bluff." The violent feeling which was evoked by the refusal of Georgia to send representatives to the Congress of 1774 marked out the Strongs for the hostility of the Whigs, and Captain Strong's uncle was tarred and feathered for his loyalty to the British Crown. Lady Dilke, with an acute remembrance of her father's accounts of his father, with an elder sister living who remembered the grandfather himself, and with the portraits of the hunted Loyalists of 1774 hanging by her side, seemed to revive in living force the story of the War of Independence. Captain Strong had heard from his father how he had been allowed to return and dispose of a portion of his lands. To his daughter, Lady Dilke's aunt, Nancy Strong, on her marriage with one of his own way of thinking, Samuel Strong gave his remaining property at Augusta. From that point the history of the Americans sprung from Nancy Strong has been told by her descendant, Colonel Barrett, a veteran of the Confederate Army. Lady Dilke had with her to the last some leaves, in a paper cover marked by her " From the old home at Augusta, Georgia," and these she carried along with the most valued pictures of those she loved. Captain Strong had been an Addiscombe cadet, and had left for his regiment in India in 1809, retiring sixteen years afterwards, and six years before his father's death. There was traceable in Lady Dilke a close personal resemblance to her American grandfather, the indi- viduality of whose head, as depicted in portraits, came out in her in later years. There was also in her character a good deal of the toughness of the fierce colonial defenders of the lost cause of George III., EARLY TASTE FOR DRAWING 3 and, advanced as were her opinions on many subjects at many times, she retained throughout life their unconquerable physical and moral courage and their characteristic virtue of not allowing the largeness of a majority to convince her that she was wrong. The inclination of Lady Dilke towards art was partly hereditary, but mainly personal and natural. Her father painted well for an amateur, and was no doubt pleased to find power of drawing in his child ; but this tendency was not noticed in any other member of a large family, and was pursued as a personal pleasure by this one daughter. Her governess. Miss Bowdich, though a notable teacher, did little to develop it, and indeed would have preferred more time to be given to studies in which she was herself more competent. The art turn was developed at an early age. Francis Strong, as in those days she pre- ferred to be called (after a godfather and favourite friend, a Mr. Francis Whiting, killed at Cawnpore in the Mutiny), signed with her child's autograph, "E. Francis Strong, 185 1," when she was eleven, a book, Sir Charles Bell's " Essays on the Anatomy of Expression in Painting." This, I believe, she had bought herself with her first pocket-money, though by no means cheap, and she gave it to me as her most cherished possession, with the signature, under the other, "Emilia F. S. Dilke, 1885," on our wedding-day. As a child she drew in pen and ink, with much native power of composition, a series of original historical cartoons, and two of them have been thought by critics to be worth preservation and exhibition. She designed, before she first came to London as an art student, some lace patterns. One of these (for Honi- ton Point) afterwards won the Bath and West of England first prize in 1867, and others have recently, after forty-eight to fifty years, been executed in new lace-making schools. 4 MEMOIR Lady Dilke's eldest sister writes that her drawings from the Oxford casts were "shown to Ruskin . . . when he was visiting Dr. Acland, and it was he who determined her to go to South Kensington to study anatomy. Our dear mother strongly objected to her going, but through friends a home near the schools was found." Dr. Ince, now Regius Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford, recalls in a letter to me the precautions taken, in order to please her mother, that Miss Strong "should not be left to walk home unaccompanied " in London. I have in my possession a copy of Tennyson's " Idylls of the King," bought by Dr. Ince to give to the young student in 1859, as an additional reward for the power displayed by her, according to Ruskin, in drawing from the skeleton and from life. Mrs. Hullah, one of her oldest friends, writes of the same days to recall the immense power and unremitting practice of work already displayed by Miss Strong — characteristics constant, indeed, throughout life. Even the holidays were spent, she says, almost entirely in work, and the Sunday afternoons at Little Holland House in conver- sation bearing upon it. Of Mulready, as her master, Mrs. Hullah says, " I seem to see the old man's hand- some but satirical face ripple all over with a welcoming smile as he saw the little figure come trotting in with a portfolio of drawings on her arm, attired in extremely unconventional, but often very picturesque, garments floating behind her. She was good to look at in the freshness of her youth, expressing, as every move- ment did, a boundless delight in mere existence." At Little Holland House G. F. Watts was the chief adviser. He " took a more than ordinary interest in her and her work, of which he had a high opinion." She had made a series of designs for " Elaine," which Watts showed " to Tennyson, who was staying in the house, and came in while Francesca (Miss E. Francis ARTIST FRIENDS 5 Strong) was in the studio." Miss Strong revived also at Little Holland House her acquaintance with Millais, on whose knees she had sat as a child, when she had directed him to draw for her a spirited sketch of a cavalry battle under Stirling Castle. It hangs now in my room at Pyrford Rough alongside her chair, and bears also on its back a portrait by her father. Millais' drawing seems to have been executed for Miss Strong about 1849, when he was working on his Lorenzo, in the year which saw the establishment of that Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, to which reference will be made. But the armoured knights and the pikemen of the reserves show no trace of the prin- ciples of Ford Madox Brown, or of the companionship of Holman Hunt and Rossetti. When she visited her family near Oxford during the vacations, the Aclands and Dr. Ince were friends who continued to take deep interest in her work, together with Goldwin Smith, also an Oxford friend before her marriage. Professors Ince and Goldwin Smith, lifelong friends, remain to mourn her loss. Ruskin wrote to her up to his last years, and with the Acland family also her friendship continued throughout life. The influence which, earlier than that of Mark Pattison, was impressed upon her, was Ruskin's; but from Ruskin, deeply influenced as she was by him, she differed at every point. Writing after her second marriage, Ruskin said, " I thought 3'ou always one of my terriblest, unconquerablest, and antagonisticest . . . powers. . . . When you sat studying Renaissance with me in the Bodleian, I supposed you to intend contradicting everything I had ever said about art-history or social science. . . . My dear child, what have you ever done in my way, or as I bid ? . . . I am really very, very, affection- ately and respectfully yours. — J. Ruskin." Her reply, which was addressed from yG, Sloane Street, S.W., 6 MEMOIR March 23, 1887, to "My dear Master," told him that "so big a person as you ought to understand that others may and must receive from you much which must be dealt with according to " their own character and circumstances. Lady Dilke thought that the "'not doing as one is bid' is often the sincerest and highest form of obedience in things spiritual." Lady Dilke went on to argue that "to live as simply as possible for truth in all things, and to try to deal with all people in love and justice," constituted substantial compliance with Ruskin's teaching, even "if it is not done quite your way." Ruskin was not immediately convinced, and later again, in 1887, he wrote, "To obey me is to love Turner and hate Raphael, to love Goethe and hate Renaissance." All the same, the main influence in her life before 1862 was that of Ruskin's teaching, as the main influence in the early years of her first marriage was the scholarship of Mark Pattison. Although Lady Dilke lived to write of the Re- naissance, and, worse still, some would say, of the academic School of Louis XIV. and of the eighteenth century, yet it was, nevertheless, towards architecture and sculpture, and in the next place towards orna- ment, and the application of the arts in industry, that her mind first turned ; and her studies in painting- followed much later on. To the end of her life it was the philosophy of aesthetics, the history of art and its connection with the history of organized and civilized states, and, in art itself, architecture and sculpture, that roused her most. She travelled to Berlin, to Stockholm, and to other distant places, latterly with me, in order to see pictures, as a duty to herself and to her work ; but she went to see the clays and drawings of a new sculptor — such, for example, as Rodin was till 1880— as she went to cities of archi- tecture like Bordeaux and Nancy, or to treasures of HOURS SPENT IN SKETCHING 7 drawing such as those of Lille, with a more real delight. At Berlin, indeed, though we had journeyed thither to visit again the French eighteenth-century pictures, she spent more time, certainly with more pleasure, in the new room of the Greek sculptures. These she was able to compare with those introduced to her by Sir Charles Newton, and with those which she had visited with me in Greece. Little of the work of her hand survives, except in the form of tiny pencil sketches made while she was standing before statues or pictures in galleries. To the last, when her time was valuable, as the advance of years and medical injunctions as to the need of rest made it uncertain if she would be able to complete the books she had mapped out, she would spend endless hours sketching in pen and ink (without caring even to preserve the result) some noble design of antiquity or of the Renaissance which had struck her fancy. It needed actual theft on my part and on that of her friends to save occasionally the results of all this toil, for toil it seemed to others — of pure enjoyment to herself. After our marriage she began, in accordance with the wishes of Mark Pattison as to the disposal of his money, to set aside a certain fixed proportion of her income for buying books, other than those needed for her daily work. For the fine editions — especially of the Latin and Italian classics — destined, along with the working books, for the Art Library at South Kensington, a book-plate was required. The designs for the stamps, together with some at Oxford for wood-carving and some in metal at our London house, are the few pieces of her own work intended by her for preservation. At Ruskin's suggestion her father had brought her to London in 1858, when I made her acquaintance. We were members of the South Kensington trap-bat club, which played, at that time, in the orchard of 8 MEMOIR Gore House. W. M. Thackeray, whose daughters were members, was often present as a spectator, but was rather my friend than hers. Miss E. F. Strong is shown by the books of the South Kensington Art Schools to have become a regular attendant in March, 1859, the year of my own South Kensington Prize, and to have passed and obtained prizes in two subjects in i860. I have, how- ever, always remembered that we won Queen's Prizes in the same year, and have in my possession a draw- ing of hers, dated 1859, officially stamped as "ex- amined " and " medal awarded," and I have the medal inscribed with her name and the same date, so that the South Kensington books do not appear to be complete. In the same year, 1859, she began to draw from the nude, under the direction of Mulready, and I find, dated from that year, a study from the nude by her, which Mulready pronounced "excellent." When, with a slender purse. Miss Strong worked in London at her art studies, up to February, 1861, she shared with the friend who afterwards became Mrs. Hullah a small room high up in a house under the control of a lady who had the confidence of the families of both. Mrs. Hullah tells me, that they neither of them liked the joint arrangement, but made it " tolerable by drawing a chalk line " across the room, by way of boundary, and compiling a code of minute rules "to maintain our separate rights." Though such intimate and mutually self-respecting friends that they afterwards voluntarily studied to- gether upon the Continent, they each had so strong a love of personal independence as to have little of their spiritual life in common. Lady Dilke has written that she was brought up under a strict High Church training; but it must not be assumed from this statement, true though it is, that she did not go at one time far beyond her PUSEYISM 9 teachers. When she was a child her mother used to take her to great numbers of Church functions, with a strong desire to inculcate a strict Church train- ing, rather than a specially " Puseyite " training, as the epithet of those days went. " Francis," differing in this from all her sisters, developed for herself, when she came to London and was away from the maternal eye and the "chaff" of a large family, an ultra-Puseyism concealed from those at home. Already, in 1854, she had scandalized her family by praying publicly for the success of the Russian arms during the Crimean War, partly, I think, because ever3^body about her was agreed in ferocious anti- Russian opinion, but also partly because she believed that the Russians were a more devoutly Christian people than were their British, French, and Italian, not to mention Turkish, foes. She lived to take a different view in recent times. In 1859, Miss Strong used to horrify her ordinary Church friends by her studies in dissection and anatomy and by her fearless advocacy of the necessity of drawing from the nude ; but, at the same time, still more greatly to shock them by her habit of doing penance for the smallest fault, imaginary or real, by lying for hours on the bare floor or on the stones, with her arms in the attitude of the cross. While she was sharing one room with Mrs. Hullah, and during all the time in 1859 and i860 when I used to be patronized by her, regarding her with the awe of a hobbledehoy of six- teen or seventeen towards a beautiful girl of nineteen or twenty, she used to attend by herself the early Communion at Brompton church. There is no trace whatever, and was not at the time, of any personal influence by any one of the family, of the clergy, or of friends, having led her in this direction, and I think that the same may be said of her later phase of spiritual thought, when, abandoning, as she did for c 10 MEMOIR years, the services of the Church, she threw herself into the Positivist movement. In an article which Lady Dilke published in 1897 under the title "The Idealist Movement and Positive Science : an Experience," she traces her own spiritual development to her early studies in the works of St. Augustine and of the Fathers, a study directed, she said, by the desire to find confirmation and support of her Church principles. She went on to show how, as she mastered the conception of the ecclesiastical polit}^, her religious views gradually assumed less and less of an emotional character ; how she gave up con- fession and penance, but held fast to the ethical system taught by the fathers of the Church ; how she came later to find in the preface to Comte's Catechism a possession enabling her to face the anarchy caused by the shock to her beliefs following upon her marriage with Mark Pattison and her introduction to an in- tellectual society at Oxford not animated b}^ faith in revealed religion. The two books which alone she carried about and read throughout her life — com- panions in her Puseyite, in her Comtist, in her latter, as well as, literally, in her last days — were a Latin " Imitation " and an Italian Dante. The Dante, bound for " E. F. Strong, 1858," is interleaved with her notes, dated "1859," and shows most careful study of the text. To work on Dante she had returned, in 1904, and the posthumous "Book of Life" contains passages which my friend Mr. A. J. Butler, with whom she had sometimes discussed them, has most kindly revised for this volume. She always recognized the duty of self-abnegation, or what she called "the paramount moral obligation of self-sacrifice," and constantly de- clared that the " Imitation " offered to her, of all single books, "the richest nourishment," while admit- ting that so far as the sense of duty to one's self should form part of one's general conception of duty, A GIRLISH PROTEST ii the " Imitation " failed. I write now with complete knowledge of a character as hopeless a mystery to me in 1859 as to all her acquaintance of those days. We were all puzzled by the apparent conflict between the vitality and the impish pranks of the brilliant student, expounding to us the most heterodox of social views, and the "bigotry" which we seemed to discern when we touched her spiritual side. She was the ringleader at South Kensington in a girlish protest against the impertinence, as the students thought it, of a lieutenant of engineers attached for duty at the schools. The distinguished general, as he became, now dead, lived to recall in a most charm- ing letter to her, his real penitence for an offence which he admitted, at the close of his career, to have been his own, not hers, but for which Francis Strong was haled before no less august a body than "the Lord President" and his advisers. The officer of engineers had placed upon the official screen a notice that " the young lady who had taken away " his dog was instantly to return it to the owner. Whether any young lady had taken away his dog I know not ; certainly Miss Strong had not ; but in the indignation that all felt and she alone had the courage, rebelliously, to express, she wrote in a large hand and affixed to the Government official notice board, a bill beginning, "Lost, strayed, or stolen, a sandy haired puppy answering to the name of Lieutenant " ; the cause of the official inquiry in all its solemnity being ordered. When brought before the tribunal, she at once stated that the notice was hers. One of the greatest of her traducers said, "To do her justice, Miss Strong has not disguised her hand ;" on which she merely looked at him. The authorities were as embarrassed as any body of gentlemen would be under the circumstances, and Miss Strong was dismissed with a mild wish, meekly expressed, that nothing of the kind should 12 MEMOIR happen again. Ruskin, writing to her and me in his last years, said that he thought her at Kensington "the sauciest of girls," but he blessed at the same time some pages of "Queens' Gardens" which had been written out by her as an exemplar on their appearance in 1864. Ruskin wrote, " Brantwood. The author is enchanted by the sight of himself in this lovely manuscript, and becomes, on account of it, an extremely happy and Proud Queen's Gardener." Putting together all that any of us know of her life before her marriage, I think there can be no doubt of the existence in Miss Strong of the rare combination of intense vitality, high spirits, and delight in life, with rigid devotion to a spiritual ideal, accompanied by constant self-discipline. In the days of her extreme " Puseyite " practices there was not the faintest trace of the hysterical. Sanity of mind and judgment accompanied the daily practice of forms which in most people and to most people would seem to imply the contrary. To the practice of confession and of penance she came, not by imitation — in defiance rather of all about her and of every influence — but by a strictly logical process, by calm thought, and by historical study. She used to say, and even, with her invariable straightforwardness, often " brutality," of intellect, to write, though most people do not write these things, that she had always been from time to time subject to hallucinations; but the account she gave of these showed that, with the exception of an early belief — not infrequent in childhood — in angel visits, the hallu- cinations were, as with most of us, invariably the result of overwork, and always within the control of will. At the same time, she would never have stored up in her mind for all the years of her life the sketches which she ultimately published in "The Shrine of Death" and "The Shrine of Love," and those she has left behind her, had she not (a little HALLUCINATIONS 13 wilfully, I think) allowed her mind to stray off in fantastic directions. She noted down, with her habitual minute care, all the apparitions of her life, but they were for the most part cases of the calling up of well-known persons, in times when physical weakness was coupled with speculative study. I think it right to give some instances in her own words, inasmuch as they bear on the development of her life and character. " The first ' hallucination ' of which I can give an exact account occurred to me at the age of five or six. I woke, shortly after going to sleep, in a dark room, and saw a patch of brilliant light, and in the light the figures of two or more angels bending towards me. The vision was a delight to me, I being a very devout child. The incredulity with which my account of it was received by my elders I tried to meet by giving details, such as that ' the angels wore blue boots,' which, of course, provoked a ridicule which taught me to keep silence, but such details serve to show that the vision was perfectly distinct in all its parts. " As I grew up, and every now and then made statements as to servants or friends having done things, or having been in places, the truth of which they denied, I was punished for 'lying' or 'inventing,' as I believed unjustly. In the light of later experi- ences I have no doubt that I was frequently the subject of ' hallucinations.' " The first, which I was in a position to recognize as such, occurred during the Indian Mutiny. Several members of our family were in danger; one night on which we had all been talking late of them, after we had gone upstairs to bed, I stood before my dressing- table plaiting my hair, when my attention was arrested by a faint spot in the centre of the mirror. This, to my amazement, gradually enlarged (as a grease spot spreads with heat) until the whole surface was covered. 14 MEMOIR and then, in the centre of this veil, came-through the face of one of the near relatives above mentioned, as plain as might have been his living reflexion. To a moment of spell-bound fascination succeeded frantic terror, and I rushed out of my room ; there was, how- ever, no one I dared tell ; my father would have admonished me not to be a fool : as for my mother, then in delicate health, I could not venture to name such a matter to her, the appearance having been that of her only son. I noted, however, the day and hour, and ascertained, six weeks later, that the relative seen had incurred no sort of danger at that date." In connection with other hallucinations she noted : — " Before I close what I have to say on the subject of these visual hallucinations, I have two other points to mention in this connection : " I. That I have strong visual memory which for years I cultivated to the point of being able, having looked with that intention at pictures, or other works of art, to recall them, by an effort of will, many weeks after, with such distinctness that I could set down from the visualised image full and accurate details of composition and colour. " 2. That I have eyes of different focus. The centre of vision of the right eye deflects to the right. If I am not wearing glasses there is a moment of con- sciousness when I look to the left as the effort is made to bring the two sights together. "Auditory 'hallucinations' have been less frequent in my case than the visual ones. These were occa- sionally voices calling, — always voices I could recog- nize, but more often musical sounds. One example will suffice. I woke in the night, during a period of convalescence after a serious illness, as children say, 'broad awake,' with a curious sense of alert attention. Within half a minute or so I heard a perfectly pure PRAYERS AND MEDITATIONS 15 note in mid-air ; the sound was extremely low at first, but went on swelling by imperceptible degrees until it reached a climax, at which the volume was such that I wondered the house was not roused ; at its full, when it had become almost painful to listen, it snapped off short in ringing stillness. " You ask me to explain what I mean when I say that the will can affect these 'hallucinations.' I do not mean that at the instant of their occurrence the will can do anything beyond keep the brain steady. I have, however (you must take it for what it is worth), an intimate conviction and consciousness that there was a period w^hen physical weakness, coupled with the moral dispositions which accompany a mystic and speculative bias of mind, might have caused me (let me confess further, were near causing me) to take passive satisfaction in my own ' hallucinations ' instead of treating them as matter for investigation. I am conscious that in that state they were tending to become more frequent. " Remember, they have had, always, a powerful, unconscious ally in the strong visual memory, which I cultivated for purposes of my own convenience. " In conclusion, I have to say that for some years I have almost entirely ceased to be disturbed by any such 'apparitions' or auditory 'hallucinations,' and that during these years I have been steadily gaining in health and in what is called 'tone.'" Of the early period there remains in Miss Strong's own hand little except pra^^ers and spiritual medi- tations. One at least of these would be worth giving here, were it not that I cannot be sure that it is her own : all may be translations from the Latin of the Fathers. They are, moreover, replaced by the little work on the Spiritual Life to which this memoir forms a preface. It constitutes, indeed, her final will and testament to all of us, completed as it was by a 1 6 MEMOIR page written for that purpose on one of her six last days. A great deal of light is thrown upon the earl}' years, before marriage, by a correspondence which took place later with George Eliot ; for George Eliot was interested in the earlier religious phase and in the change from Puseyism to Comtism, so that the letters in many points date back before their time and should be dealt with here. In the obituary notices which appeared on the death of Lady Dilke, some of the newspapers allowed themselves to write of her as having suggested the heroine of " Middlemarch." To those who know, Emilia Strong was no more Dorothea Brooke than Pattison was Casaubon ; but it is the case that the religious side of Dorothea Brooke was taken by George Eliot from the letters of Mrs. Pattison, as she had become before the correspondence. A great many both of the more intimate letters which were returned, and of the answers, have been destroyed ; but it is impossible to compare the Prelude and several passages in the first book of " Middlemarch " with passages still existing in the diaries and manu- scripts of Miss Strong, penned before 1862, and not to see whence came George Eliot's knowledge of the religious ideal of her Dorothea Brooke. The state- ment in the Prelude, that "to common eyes" the '' struggles " of modern " Theresas " " seemed mere inconsistency and formlessness," is the very reproach to which the posthumous writing that follows in this volume unintentionally makes reply. It was of Emilia Strong that George Eliot was thinking when she wrote " Dorothea knew many passages of Pascal's 'Pensees' and of Jeremy Taylor by heart," and of her, too, as she was at "the schools" in 1859, praying as " fervidly as if she thought herself living in the time of the Apostles," with " strange whims of fasting like MIDDLEMARCH 17 a Papist, and of sitting up at night to read old theological books." In Lady Dilke's article, " The Idealist Movement and Positive Science : an Expe- rience," and in her posthumous book, which she proposed to call "The Book of the Spiritual Life," we find expressed Dorothea's doctrine of "that spiritual religion, that submergence of self in com- munion with Divine perfection," which is shown by George Eliot's replies to have marked the account given in the earlier letters. If I am to anticipate the next part of this memoir, and to deal once and for all with a subject always distasteful to my wife, Dorothea's defence of her marriage with Casaubon, and Casaubon's account of his marriage to Dorothea in the first book of " Middlemarch," are as a fact given by the novelist almost in Mark Pattison's words. Here the matter ends. The grotesque at- tempt to find a likeness between a mere pedant like George Eliot's Casaubon and a great scholar like Mark Pattison, or between the somewhat babelike Dorothea and the powerful personality of the sup- posed protot3^pe, was never made by any one who knew the Rector of Lincoln and Mrs. Pattison. The subject is named here only because it illustrates the interest attendant on such insight into a human soul as is given in " The Book of the Spiritual Life," which, as she said herself, " I sometimes call ' My Book of Praise ' or ' My Book of Life.' " It is this first part of the life, ending with the marriage to Mark Pattison in 1861, that illustrates the one side of a nature in which there was admittedly the " struggle," though it involved none of the " incon- sistency " disclaimed in George Eliot's " Prelude." In the life of Lady Dilke no influence ever ended. During the first period, Ruskin, in spite of the fiercest differences, had been the influential teacher ; but her reverence for scholarship, in the person of Mark D 1 8 MEMOIR Pattison, put no end to the art interests of Miss Strong. She widened her conception of art by the teaching of the philosopher, and by the study of the literatures to which the schoohng of Mark Pattison admitted her. She saw, too, men and things, travelled largely with him, became mistress of many tongues, and gained, above all, a breath of desire for all human knowledge, destined only to grow with the advance of years. The continuity of work which throughout life, for nearly half a century, knew no intermission, and the studies of a powerful mind which never took a day's whole holiday, made possible a survey of the field of knowledge such as has been given to few people in our time. In September, 1861, Mark Pattison had wedded Miss Strong at the church of Iffley, where her father and mother lived, the service being performed by the Rev. William Tuckwell, her brother-in-law, who, in 1904, read, by my wish, the words of committal in her funeral service at Holy Trinity, Sloane Street. Immediately on her marriage Mrs. Pattison began to work for and with her husband. Italian she already knew. Without discontinuing her art work, she acquired a sufficient grasp of Latin, of German, and of French, to conquer the greatest treasures of those literatures ; and whenever in later life the fancy led her to read, in the original, Greek, Spanish, Portu- guese, Dutch, or Provencal, she was able, by taking pains, at least to make out the essentials. Within the last month of her life she was improving her Swedish and attacking Welsh, and this, not as the serious business of any day, but as little side-paths of her great roadway of work, and as mere additional interests, in a life already — one would have thought — sufficiently well filled. Of all the periods of her life when, to judge by INFLUENCE OF RUSKIN 19 results, she worked with the most Benedictine appli- cation, that of the first years of her marriage with Mark Pattison must be pronounced supreme ; 3^et it was at this very moment that she gave the most care to the social side of life, and created in Oxford some- thing not unlike a " salon." At the same time, also, in order to increase her personal income, she began to write much for publication, and was indeed a considerable contributor to the Saturday Review. The influence of Ruskin continued, even when she was mastering philosophy and tongues. In the second volume of Wright's " History of King Arthur " there is reported, in her hand, one of Ruskin's lectures, delivered after Mrs. Pattison's marriage. This was a favourite book from the day when it was given, by her sister and her sister's husband, January i, 1859, until she was able to purchase for herself in later life the various earlier versions (French and English) of the Legend. She had, no doubt, taken the volume with her to read while she was kept waiting for the beginning of the lecture, and then, being struck with the manner in which Ruskin preached at the students, and, perhaps she might think, specially at her, began to take down his maxims on the fly-leaves and ■ the narrow margins of the unoffending book. From 1 86 1 for many years she signed " E. F. S. Pattison," the " S," which stood for her family name of Strong, being introduced by her to mark her wish for some recognition of the independent existence of the woman, and in some resistance to the old English doctrine of complete merger in the husband. But there was no personal resistance to the influence over her of her husband. His mind and learning deserved the surrender of the educational direction of a young girl, however gifted, to his mental and philosophical control; and he obtained it. Although Full of love of personal liberty, she had an unusually \ i 20 MEMOIR disciplined reverence for Authority as represented by those she thought really competent in ability and learning. She kept, however, an imaginative side and part of life, in which Mark Pattison was hardly allowed to share : to this she alluded as " Off hours of my own time." However hard Mrs. Pattison worked, for him, with him, or under his direction, there was always time for her favourite books, which were no favourites of his, and for the construction in her mind of the stories which long afterwards saw light in "The Shrine of Death" and "The Shrine of Love." The one unchanging habit of her life was that of daily pause for thought, generally accom- panied by some (to her) nearly mechanical occupa- tion, such as " making up " spoiled pages of old books. It was in these quiet times that such work of love as " The Book of the Spiritual Life " took shape. The other persistent habit should also be recalled — she never passed a day in life without at least some work at one of her less-known tongues. She was the first to disclaim scholarship for herself Her reading and her interests were too wide to make it humanly possible to her. After as gallant an attempt as any one ever made in modern times to survey all knowledge, she wrote, "the borders of human knowledge have been too greatly extended for complete mastery." She at least was able, largely through Mark Pattison's direction, to master enough of human knowledge in its principal branches to know the relation of almost every part of it to every other. The lifelong intention and desire in regard to knowledge were expressed in a later letter, which is one of many placed at my disposal by the Bibliotheque Nationale of France, being preserved in the Manu- scripts Department. Mrs. Pattison wrote: "Quelque- fois je pense meme que le plus bel usage que Ton puisse faire de sa propre vie serait de se vouer a tout savoir. MARK PATTISON^S FRIENDS 21 a se rendre maitre — au moins dans sa signification generale — de tout ce que I'esprit liumain a conquis sur tous les terrains : — mais, j'ai quarante ans, et c est trop tard." In another letter on the same subject she added, " To seek is nearly as good as to find, for in seeking one finds also things one did not seek." While such tasks were on foot, the philosophical studies, which Mark Pattison encouraged at the ex- pense of her earlier theology, unsettled the foun- dations of her belief, and threw her for a short time into Comtism as a code sufficient to preserve her previously existing standard of duty. Some of Mark Pattison's friends, who became hers, helped her to resist any too absorbing influence of his actual opinions. She has herself recorded in some biographical notes, written in the French tongue, that Sir Charles Newton — the host of the Pattisons in London — afforded her a safety valve by rigid training given at the British Museum in Hellenic principles of classical art. George Eliot, like Newton, was the Rector of Lincoln's friend, and her influence too was different again, as was, in another order, that of Goldwin Smith. Mrs. Pattison has herself set down in French, which I translate, except where translation spoils the sense, how, " after some years of doubt and moral suffering, revolt became inevitable." Both her earlier and her later training failed, at the time, she wrote, " to allow me d'entrevoir le vrai sens metaphysique des idees religieuses which had been at my very heart, and, for a time, je repoussais, done, avec douleur toute conception surnaturelle : I took refuge in the philo- sophy of Comte, the only one that seemed to me at the moment to offer a method which even pro- fessed to systematize the prevailing anarchy of the times. The moral part of his teaching had so close an analogy with that of the Church, that, on that 2 2 MEMOIR particular side, the transition presented to me no difficulty." We shall see later how, after recognizing the impossibility of regaining a complete view of life and of the universe through the emotions, she found once more in metaphysics the means of present- ing to the developed intelligence a scientific view of those very truths which the intelligence had rejected in their old form, when addressed to it through the emotions by religion. A writing of her earliest times shows that it was a flaw detected in Newman's reasoning through which all doubts came in. His ideal, as gathered from her reading, contained, "as a balance to its renunciations and its asceticism, the set-off of future reward " — called by Mark Pattison "payment by results." The same flaw which she had found in Newman and in the Fathers she was afterwards to believe she had detected in Comtism itself. Mark Pattison had become Rector of Lincoln a short time before his marriage, and he took at least as much interest in the receptions of his wife as she did herself Socially she " was a great success ; " but with- out much private satisfaction, and it was at this time that she wrote one of the stories afterwards published in "The Shrine of Death," of which the secret meaning is the emptiness of life at Oxford. In a notebook of the period I find a passage, also dated from Oxford in the early days, which puts it more plainly. " The worst to me of this life here is the sense of personal degra- dation which accompanies the exercise of what people call 'tact.' I feel more ashamed at small scheming than I should (I think) at a crime. There is some- thing morally lowering about ' management* Once out of it, however, it shakes ofi" like dirt. When days grow weeks, weeks months, months years, it seems as if one sank into the mire past hope, and a despair comes which is only a degree better than hardened LADY TREVELYAN 23 cynicism. Surely one ought to find a way to keep an even freedom of soul under any conditions." At this time there arose a new influence in her life, destined however, unhappily, to be a short one as regards time measured by the 3'ears. Pauline, Lady Trevelyan, has left a considerable name, and a still more considerable correspondence, not 37et available to the world, although Ruskin's letters to her ought one day to see the light. She died early in 1866. Most of Mrs. Pattison's friends in the northern coun- ties were made by her when the Rector of Lincoln was occupying Bamborough, that "castle by the sea" from which she drew the scenes of some of her wildest stories, such as "The Serpent's Head." Mark Patti- son, as one of the Crewe trustees, resided with his wife at the Castle, officially known to them— not in Sir Walter Scott's spelling, but as " Bamburgh " — for three months in 1862, for six weeks in 1863, and in 1864 for nearly as long a time. The arrangement involving periodical residence at the Castle ceased in 1865. Lady Trevelyan was an old acquaintance whom Miss Strong had met at the Aclands' at Oxford in earlier days. My wife has recorded, with regard to Mulready, the fact that "common affection and admiration for Lady Trevelyan (Pauline Jermyn) had made us friends," and that it was Lady Trevelyan who first took her to Mulready's studio before she began to work under him. Lady Dilke's visits to Sir Walter Trevelyan's at Wallington probably pre- ceded, as well as followed, her marriage to Mark Pattison, but until search can be made there for her letters and those of W. B. Scott, all this is doubtful. There is in my possession a most in- teresting early oil portrait of Lady Dilke by Lady Trevelyan, representing her engaged in painting, in the hall at Wallington, a sunflower on a pilaster among the pictures executed there by W. B. Scott. 24 MEMOIR Sir George Trevelyan, who has been kind enough to assist me in a search for dates, is of opinion that the sunflowers were painted at a later visit than one she made in the year of her marriage, and before his return from India in 1864. He believes that he remembers seeing the sunflowers on that occasion for the first time. In the second volume of the autobio- graphical notes of William Bell Scott, published in 1892, I find that he has written: "The decoration of Wallington, however, left room for other artistic labours besides my own, which deserve to be recorded. In one of Lady Trevelyan's letters, . , . she speaks of Holman Hunt's going there to paint a pilaster, and Ruskin's visit to do so has been mentioned. Hunt never managed to do this, but Arthur Hughes and others did, especially Mrs. Mark Pattison, at that time lately married to the Master of Lincoln, and one of the most perfectly lovely women in the world. She is now distinguishing herself in literature, but then she gave proof of great ability in painting. . . ." Lady Trevelyan's health was so bad in 1864 and till her death, that the visits even of intimate friends ceased, and the sunflowers themselves were never finished. She exercised great influence over the mind of her girl friend, who was five or six years younger than herself, and my wife kept her portrait in a locket to the last. The costume in which Mrs. Pattison was painted by Lady Trevel3''an is that of the Venetian colour revival, inaugurated by Dante Rossetti and his friends. Her hair is rightly depicted as of a bright gold, very difl'erent from the duller colour it assumed during the years of her life following on her first great illness, of 1867-8. W. B. Scott, who was present at the sittings in Northumberland, also painted her himself in 1864, as did an unidentified artist, "J. P.," perhaps Portaels the Belgian, in Paris, in the same f/3^/'Z^^^^ li^^/^T?'^- ^ I i THE ARTHURIAN LEGEND 25 3xar. The likeness between these three portraits is distinct, and they are all very diiferent from the portraits before 1862 and after 1874. The massive construction of the head was much more marked in childhood and up to the twenty-first or twenty-second year, and again in age, than it was in the intermediate period. The gold-coloured hair was, however, of course conspicuous in the child portraits, although there it is seen in conjunction with the decided chin and heavy brow, fined away by the Pre-Raphaelites. In this same period the subject of these pictures took up again the Tennyson " Idylls," illustrated by her drawings after the volume had been given to her in 1859, and wrote some laudation, from which, though still a Tennysonian, she would have recoiled in later days. It is not for me to decide between her imma- ture contrast, as it would afterwards have appeared to her, of Tennyson's "Idylls" with "la Morte d'Arthur " and her later views as set forth in her "Book of Life." In 1863 she wrote that Tennyson's "Idylls of the King" had the spirit of Spanish romance rather than of the " Morte d'Arthur." In Spanish romance she thought that valour and gene- rosity were called forth for some object undeservedly troubled or wrongfully oppressed, while in the " Mort Artus " she seemed at that time to discern a simple delight in fighting for its own sake, no matter which side was wrong or right. She detected also "an absence of purity," which was "not general," she thought, "even in Northern romance, certainly not in Norwegian or Icelandic," and the teaching that treachery and deceit were not wrong unless the body were injured by them — in other words, she preferred Tennyson. Later she had a very different view of the teaching, at least of Malory's romance, and there will be found towards the close of her " Book of Life " the nobler conception that she ultimately formed of 26 MEMOIR a legend which all along was one of her choice companions. The summer journeys, among those taken with Mark Pattison, which had the most abiding result upon her subsequent work, were two long visits to Vienna; although she, perhaps, enjoyed more fully at the time the greater freedom of travel in Bohemia and in Hungary. Her work at Vienna was abundant, especially at the Albertina, to which, oddly enough, she was directed, on the occasion of her first visit, by the famous Archduke Albrecht himself. Armed with the proper letters, she had promised to present herself to the curators at a given hour, and, not being able to find the way, walked straight up to three well-dressed and kindly-looking gentlemen who had stopped to talk together in the street. The one to whom she spoke smiled benevolently,"and replied, " The fact is that I am going there myself if you will walk with us," and her astonishment was unbounded when the sentries, as they passed, presented arms. The mass of notes taken by Mrs. Pattison in the rich museums of the Austrian capital show a desire to embrace, by hard study, a complete view of the whole field of art and art-history. Her subsequent specializa- tion for a time in French art was probably caused by the fact that for work in that field there seemed a sufficiently large interested public. She naturally wished to find by publication additional income, especially for the sake of personal independence, to the end, for example, of collecting a personal library of books. Remembering her own early efforts, she was ever anxious to help young girls to a start in useful life. One of her letters to such a beginner, which has been put into my hands, deals, a quarter of a century later, with the Rector of Lincoln's advice on her own work for publication, given about 1863. " It was put before me that if I wished to command FRENCH ART STUDIES 27 respect I must make myself tJie authority on some one subject which interested me. I was told, and it was good counsel, not to take hack-work, and to reject even well-paid things that would lead me off the track." Mrs. Pattison was also drawn to French art by early encouragement, in the first instance, by the Germans who had worked upon French art-history; but she never intended to give up her hold upon classical art, and, except when actually absorbed in writing for publication upon the arts of France, she never did so. When, ultimately, she became known to the French art world as one of the most serious of students, the praise which she most valued was that of the best-trained intellects of France for the completeness or " universality " of her art-know- ledge. The subjects upon which she wrote largely in her early days were in the main philosophical; as, for example, in the Saturday Rcvieiv, in articles " On the Imagination," on " Mind and Matter," and on Voltaire ; but she was also writing in the same period on " Religious Art." For a time she did a large portion of the notes on "Contemporary Literature" for the Westminster Review, and these were mainly upon art ; but in the Saturday Review her contributions con- tinued to be more general. It was not till 1869 that she began to think any of her articles worth keeping. The early ones are marked by evidence of great breadth of study and of knowledge, and by unwilling- ness, almost Benthamite in its obstinacy, to take any- thing for granted. But to real Authority there was through life, as has been shown, a most disciplined obedience. We are apt to think of hypnotism as more modern than the times of which I write ; but it was one of the subjects discussed by Mrs. Pattison in the Saiuj'day Reviezv during the later sixties, and discussed in a fashion which showed a strong turn 28 MEMOIR towards philosophical study. The dominant interest soon came to the front, however, in a series of reviews of German books developing theories of aesthetics. She then settled down to regular art reviewing, both in the Saturday Review and in the Portfolio, while in 1869 she became the principal writer on art of the Academy. Among the theories which Mrs. Pattison developed in her reviews of art books was one treated in the Saturday Reviezv of August 22, 1868, in which she explained, with the utmost politeness towards her author (who was an Oxford man, and whose book had been published by the Delegates of the Clarendon Press), how " an author cannot be lively and amusing " when treating of the object of his life's labours; "he is over-burdened by the very fulness of his know- ledge." The article is one of the most characteristic which ever came from her pen. In it she attacked those who claimed to direct popular art education, for thinking exclusivel}^ of drawing and painting, while they forgot engraving, sculpture, and architecture. Sound works upon these subjects could not, she thought, be rendered fit for the general reader. The evidence of her friend Watts, before the Royal Academy Commission, had been misapprehended. Watts, she wrote, desired the refinement of the aesthetic perception. " In the kingdom of art," she thought, "imagination is not the handmaid, but the mistress of the understanding." She insisted on the doctrine known as " art for its own sake," and objected to the attempt to utilize the artist as a teacher, and, by forcing him to dwell on the moral influence of his subject, to make him suffer loss of the poetic elements and of inspiration. "The story is to the artist as the legend to the poet " : he lets " the dead past suck out the life of his own soul, until it stands before him a new creation." WALTER PATER 29 Although by this time the paths of the Pre-Raphael- ites and of Ruskin had diverged, the article shows the influence of both schools, and ability to combine their teaching. Mrs. Pattison evidently drew from Ruskin's lectures and conversation her fear that pupils would be so trained as to carry "from their study of the school of Giotto the characteristic defects rather than the characteristic excellences — weak draw- ing and constrained action, instead of delicacy of sentiment and purity of tone. . . . The last word of the past should be the first word of the present; its goal should be our starting-point." The article shows the result of profound study of the frescoes of "the Carmine " in Florence, and of the work of Fra Angelico. The knowledge of all forms of art-history and art- philosophy displayed in Mrs. Pattison's surveys of contemporary literature in the Wcsfininster Review, which was at that time a Quarterly taking a line of its own as an organ of philosophic thought, caused much inquiry to be made as to the person of the writer of these articles, which were usually anonymous. Of her signed reviews one of the most severe was that of Pater's "Studies in the History of the Renaissance," in which she thought that the weak- ness of the historical element destroyed all possibility of valuable work. Some years afterwards, I find in one of her letters to an intimate friend, " Pater came and sat with me till dinner-time. We had been talk- ing before that on the exclusive cultivation of the memory in modern teaching as tending to destroy the power of thought, by sacrificing the attitude of medi- tation to that of perpetual apprehension. When the others left we went on talking of the same matter, but on different lines. Thence we came to how it might be possible, under present conditions of belief, to bring people up not as beasts, but as men, by the 30 MEMOIR endeavour to train feeling and impart sentiments, as well as information. He looks for an accession of strength to the Roman Catholic Church, and thinks that if it would abandon its folly in political and social intrigue, and take up the attitude of a purely spiritual power, it would be, if not the best thing that could happen, at any rate better than the selfish vulgarity of the finite aims and ends which stand in place of an ideal in most lives now. He has changed a great deal, as I should think, for the better, and is a stronger man." Later again in life Mrs. Pattison became one of the greatest admirers of Pater's writings in other fields, and he of hers, as the pages of gift books which passed between them reveal. In his Renaissance, however, she showed that Pater fell short, through absence of scientific method and want of real know- ledge of the times of which the art of the Renaissance was an outcome. Pater, she thought, wrote of the Renaissance as if it was an " air-plant, independent of the ordinary sources of nourishment ... a senti- mental revolution having no relation to the conditions of the actual world." While praising his delicacy of touch in matters of sentiment, she thought that he failed to find "the expression of vital changes in human society " which made the sentiment pregnant with meaning. " We miss the sense of the con- nection between art and literature and the other forms of life of which they are the outward expres- sion, and feel as if we were wandering in a world of unsubstantial dreams." While denying the writer's intimate possession of his subject, she admitted the charm of his genius and the beauty of his style, and showed that, with a marvellous power of discrimin- ating delicate differences of sentiment, he could match the shades by words " in the choice of which he is often so brilliantly accurate that they gleam upon the CARICATURISTS 31 paper with the radiance of jewels." It was perhaps in penance for this article, though she did not repent its doctrine, that, after Pater'sdeath, she bound the copy of his Renaissance, which he had presented to her, more beautifully than any other volume in her collection, and reverently placed within it a portrait of the author. In other articles upon very different branches of art, Mrs. Pattison discussed caricature, both of the professional caricaturist, such as Gillray, and of the artist in whom caricature was only occasional ; and showed how the professional could avoid that male- volence into which the amateur caricaturist, who was only a great artist, was sure to fall. In later life Lady Dilke became an admirer of Gavarni, as one of the first of caricaturists, who was also a great draughts- man. Her own executive power in the same sphere is unknown, even to the majority of her friends; as her caricatures were, with one exception, burnt after they had been laughed over, for fear " the male- volence " of the non-professional should be apparent. Once when we were in Paris, and had seen Sarah Bernhardt in a male part, Lady Dilke could not sleep until she had disposed of her impressions and dis- pelled nightmare by a sketch. It, however, survived till the next morning, when a friend, who came to lunch, captured it by main strength and carried it off in triumph to hand to the victim. Mrs. Pattison's health broke down in the winter of 1867-8, as it did again in the winter of 1869-70. In a letter, dated February 19, 1868, she writes from " Iffley ... I am staying with mother. . . . About May 5 I go to the Rawlinsons at Chipping Norton, as it is still considered that for some months I am better out of Oxford and the cares and occupations it entails on me. ... I am still a nervous invalid . . . cannot suffer much external distraction. A stranger or acquaintance is torture to me, and if I force myself to 32 MEMOIR meet the terror, the reaction is serious in its result on sleep." To all appearance she completely recovered from these attacks, and she was able, in the first part of the winter of 1869-70, to nurse her husband. She writes on January 11, 1870, from Lincoln College, saying that the Rector was very ill, and that after being up all night with him for two nights, she had sent for a professional nurse, and was going to take only the day nursing in the future, as she was breaking-down again. It was after these two serious illnesses that Mrs. Pattison did the most work for the Academy and first began to write much with signature. In 1870 she wrote a considerable number of important reviews, in addition to her current work, and dealt, among other subjects, with German art-philosophy, with Ruskin's Oxford lectures, and with Raphael, taking part as well in a Holbein controversy. She also reviewed "Nos Fils," a book by Michelet on general education. Re- viewing Ruskin in a signed article was a formidable undertaking. Fourteen years before the date in 1870 on which the article appeared, he had been the first patron of her studies and designs. Until seven years before the criticism, Ruskin had still been the director of a portion of her work. She had, how- ever, written to one of the six artist members of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, her friend Mr. F. G. Stephens,* that she had resented, in 1859, Ruskin's cruelty to Mulready. " Ruskin," her correspondent answered, "never erred more deeply than about Mulready." Mrs. Pattison's article was, of course, * As I have made several allusions to the P. R. B., it may be well to state that the other artist members were Mr. Holman Hunt, Millais, D. G. Rossetti, Woolner, and James Collinson. The seventh member was Mr. W. M. Rossetti. W. B. Scott and C. A. Collins, a friend of Miss Strong from her childhood, had been closely con- nected wiih the Brotherhood, although they were not members. DIVERGENCE FROM RUSKIN 33 appreciative in a high degree ; but it contained sharp criticism upon many leading heads. Combating Ruskin's doctrines as to art and religious belief, she wrote, " Art is neither religious nor irreligious, moral nor immoral, useful nor useless : if she is interpreted in an}'' one of these senses by the beholder, has she to bear the blame?" Mrs. Pattison's crime was greater than mere criticism, couched, as this was, in respectful language : she showed a slight tendency to make fun of her great teacher, and declaring that his theory that the poor must be well off and sanitary laws be enforced before the arts could flourish, was not susceptible of proof, she expressed a doubt whether the " social -science -association -Arcadia" proposed would be so favourable as Ruskin thought to the production of fine art. On the contrary, she declared (referring doubtless to the Renaissance) that it is at "moments of explosion" that art "catches its most fervid glow of human beauty." The last words of the article formed a protest against being led by the charm of eloquence, or the infection of zeal, on to unsafe ground. It was a good many years before Ruskin forgave the emancipated disciple ; but he ended by completely forgiving her. A review of Herman Grimm has a pathetic interest, inasmuch as it opened with a statement of the two great difficulties with which, throughout the art-studies of her life, Lady Dilke found herself confronted. " The student of classic art finds himself in a deserted ruin ; " the student of modern art, on the other hand, is em- barrassed by the abundance of materials : letters, state documents, and biographies exist in vast number. In the one case the student is on the "shifting sands of hypothesis;" in the other case he has before him "a mass of materials which no one has yet attempted to bring into shape and order." She was grateful to Grimm for contributing, at least in spirit, " something F 34 MEMOIR towards the commencement of the herculean task." It was this "herculean task" which she herself attempted, as regards French art, and in which perhaps, more than in any other effort, she wore out her strength. In 1870 Mrs. Pattison had commenced her articles on Annual Exhibitions, and in 1872 she reviewed, for the Academy, the exhibition of the Royal Academy. The article was signed, and although it dealt "faithfully" with the contributions of another of her teachers, G. F. Watts, it did not prevent that kindest of her friends from accepting, as did also Pater, without the irritability of Ruskin, a criticism which was obvi- ously honest and informed. There is no falling off in the cordiality of the letters from Little Holland House, and their playful signature of "Signor" was never intermitted. Watts and Mrs. Pattison had both, before 1872, taken to the practice of the violin; but Watts was kicked by a horse in 1872, and as a result wrote, " My violin, alas ! is almost wholly neglected, and my progress is a backward one. You, I suppose, are now qualified to play in an orchestra." Her fiddling was, however, stopped for ever as a consequence of the increasing muscular pains from which she began to suffer in 1875. These finally disappeared after her attack of typhoid fever in 1885, but there was even then left a slight stiffness of joint. While it did not prevent her fencing and sculling, it was fatal to the delicacy of touch which the violin requires. It will not be possible to give much of the corre- spondence which the subject of this memoir, from 1870 up to her death, carried on with great art authorities abroad. The correspondence in German with Herman Grimm at Berlin ; in Italian with Berto- lotti, the State Archivist at Rome ; that in French with M. de Pulszky at Pesth ; and, above all, that in German with Thausing, at the Albertina of Vienna, extended over many years, and dealt with many FRENCH CORRESPONDENCE 35 questions. These were the letters which alone she cared to keep and to look over from time to time, and the immense development of her foreign corre- spondence, in connection with her first book on the Renaissance, renders it of much bulk. To her, in what would have been, had she lived, the work of 1906— the popularization of her first book on the Re- naissance — the letters would have been of the highest value, owing to the suggestiveness of the long essays which had been sent her by her eminent friends abroad ; but they are now to be named only, rather than to be given. One quotation shall I allow myself from her own letters in this correspondence. It bears no name, but was no doubt to M. Burty, the French art-critic. "Draguignan, 8 Mars 1879. " Monsieur, " Vous ne savez, done, pas que notre pauvre ami M. Appleton est mort ! 11 etait deja malade il y a un an, et le journal qui etait sa creation se trouvait alors, malheureusement, dans une crise qui menacait serieusement son existence. Notre pauvre ami etait force, s'il ne voulait pas voir perir son oeuvre, de lutter au moment meme ou il avait le plus besoin de repos. Mine par la fievre, epuise par une toux qui ne lui permettait pas de dormir, il deployait une ac- tivite et une energie qui encore une fois mettaient I'affaire sur pied, Mais le surcroit de travail, et cette exaltation nerveuse avec laquelle il poursuivait tou- jours ses projets, I'avaient completement brise. Quand, enfin, il a pu quitter I'Angleterre pour I'lLgypte, c'etait trop tard. II est mort a Luxor le i^' Fevrier. Je le regrette vivement ; c'est une vraie perte pour tous ceux qui ont la conscience de leur metier. "Je suis bien contente. Monsieur, que mon livre vous est tombe entre les mains. Permettez-moi 36 MEMOIR d'appeler votre attention sur la Table Chronologique, qui, par la faute du relieur, se trouve enterree a la fin du second volume. Elle contient des renvois aux sources pour tous les faits cites dans le texte. J'ai soigneusement amasse tout ce que j'ai pu trouver pendant plusieurs annees, et je tiens beaucoup a insister sur ce qu'il y a de vraiment national dans I'art de cette epoque, en dehors de la fausse route Guverte par I'ecole de Fontainebleau. "Je travaille en ce moment sur Le Grand Steele^ et j'essaie de caracteriser la lutte de la Maitrise* expirante contre la tyrannie de I'Academie Royale. " Si vous voulez bien me signaler des lacunes a remplir, ou des corrections a faire dans le livre sur la Renaissance, je vous serai, Monsieur, vraiment reconnaissante. " Les reproductions laissent bien a desirer. Les ouvriers qu'on m'a oblige d'employer manipulent mal les procedes heliographiques. Je sais que vous appreciez la valeur d'Etienne Delaulne. II faut venir voir le livre que j'ai identifie a Oxford, et qui contient presque 6qo dessins de sa main. Si vous aviez quelques jours a nous donner pendant I'ete vous seriez recu a Lincoln College avec grand plaisir. "Agreez, Monsieur, je vous prie, mes meilleurs remerciments et compliments. "E. F. S. Pattison." The allusion in this letter is explained in two, written many years afterwards, which are in the Bibliotheque Nationale. On September 27, 1891, Lady Dilke wrote that Burty had many years pre- viously proposed that he and she should write together a monograph on £tienne Delaulne. For this intended book Mrs. Pattison catalogued the drawings, and names the fact that after Burty's death she had * See " Art in the Modern State," by Lady Dilke. EUGENE MUNTZ 37 given the catalogue to the Bibliotheque de TEcole des Beaux Arts. In 1894 this project was taken up again by Eugene Miintz, who had in his possession the work which Burty had done towards the joint book. One of the most learned of the foreign correspon- dents of my wife, upon art questions, was Miintz, head of the Ecole des Beaux Arts. More than a hundred and fifty of her letters to him are preserved in the manuscript department at the Bibliotheque Nationale, the correspondence extending over a period of twenty-three years. To judge from one of Mrs. Pattison's letters, dated from Oxford in 1879, Muntz seems to have been introduced to her by letters both from Mr. Neubauer and from Renan, and had offered to translate into French her first book. It is a curious fact that joint work, proposed to Mrs. Pattison at various times by Muntz, Burty, Sir Charles Newton, and others, never c^me to anything; Mrs. Pattison having apparently given general assent, but not found herself tempted at the last moment to undertake the difficulties of collaboration. The cor- respondence with Miintz contains man}^ joint letters from the Pattisons between 1879 and 1884. Muntz, like others of her foreign friends, had come to visit the Rector of Lincoln and Mrs. Pattison at Oxford. An intimacy, dating from his stay at the Rector's Lodgings in 1880, and their joint visit to him in Paris in the winter of 1882-3, continued up to Miintz's death. Her letters to him have come to me by the kindness of his brother, also a member of the Institute, though famous in the field of science, not of art. A long and full correspondence with Robert Browning, which had begun before 1867, became most active in 1872. In a New Year's letter, condol- ing with Mrs. Pattison on having been too ill to start for Palermo, he wrote, " Last week, a prize-show 38 MEMOIR American lady — oil-cake fed — observed to me, 'Wal, I never! Here's Mr. So-and-so been calling me a colibri, a humming-bird, fancy ! ' whereto I, as in duty bound, replied, ' Instead of Bird-of-Paradise, as / should have done ' — and was rewarded with an ' Oh, my ! ' which grinned from ear to ear, no inconsiderable distance. 'Yet was not this knight foresworn.' As for news, I have none. We are all reading the ' Life of Dickens' and admiring his sensitiveness at having brushed shoes and trimmed gallipots in his early days, when — did he see with the eyes of certain of his sagest friends — it was the best education imaginable for the like of him. Shall I versify ? " In Dickens, sure, philosophy was lacking, Since of calamities he counts the crowning, That, young, he had too much to do with Blacking : Old, he had not enough to do with B g. R. B." In a letter of March 6, 1872, in reply to one from Mrs. Pattison, in which she reproached him for having in his writings turned against the violet and taken up with new flowers. Browning wrote, " Yes, I prefer the Japanese lil}^ to all the flowers in the world ; for beauty, for odour, for all a flower can possess ; though I may have liked violets well enough in my time : . . . I have such a Japanese lily in my room, with me, at present, that the poor violets you glorify have no chance ! " Later in March, he wrote, giving full news of his son, and saying of himself, " I work in the morn- ings and am just at the end of my lily-perfumed performance." He again asserted his preference over all other things, except his son, "for one leaf of the lily now before me. . . . Do you ever get the American Atlantic Monthly at Oxford ? There is a funny parod}', in the January number, of my things — four parodies of them, indeed, which might amuse you ; an article called 'The Echo Club ' — I should surmise by Lowell." BROWNING AND GEORGE ELIOT 39 In the following year Browning was at work on his version of that rather commonplace "tragedy," in Normandy, the suicide of M. Mellerio, the well- known jeweller of the Rue de la Paix. The poem was composed in "Red Cotton Nightcap Country" itself, and Browning wrote frequently about it, and of Calvados. There is often in his letters an after- thought of a desire to recommend a young painter to a powerful critic. When the critic was unable to do much, other critics are mentioned who had done more. There are constant references of detail to the poems. When Browning first began to write " Aris- tophanes' Apology," he notes, " My poem is pro- gressive, as it pleases the gods and don't please the public." A letter of 1874 deals with the loss of "seven intimates. ... It seems boastful to describe them as 'friends' — for who has so many?" Two are specified, and notes are exchanged as to my replies to letters of condolence, written to me by both of the correspondents. It was after Mrs. Pattison's second serious illness that George Eliot wrote, " It saddens me to think of the trouble and the bodily suffering that you have undergone. Can severe trouble ever be said to have quite passed away ? I think it alters all one's tissues, enlarging life perhaps by bringing new susceptibilities, but often dullmg even the wish for personal pleasure. It is a comfort to think that at last the precious Miss Eleanor Smith came to you." This is a deserved tribute to the constant tenderness of Mrs. Pattison's lifelong friend " Ellen," sister of Professor Henry Smith and hostess at "the Museum." George Eliot went on, " I am so-so. ' An ancient woman ' . . . ready with my laughter in spite of the sorrows that never pass." It was George Eliot who first sent Mrs. Pattison to Burne-Jones, for though she had long been intimate 40 MEMOIR with the most whole-hearted of his admirers, Watts, and with many of his friends, she had not, in her early days, visited his studio. The result of her first day among his drawings was a considerable correspon- dence, to which there will be some allusion later. George Eliot's letters of 1872 give frec[uent news of Congreve and of Deutsch as common friends, contrast "your virtuous industry " with the writer's " idleness," and allude to the commencement of Mrs. Pattison's book on the Renaissance in France. In condolences with regard to work for publication George Eliot says, "All writing seems to me worse in the state of proof than in any other form. In manuscript one's own v/isdom is rather remarkable to one, but in proof it has the effect of one's private furniture repeated in the shop windows." In 1872 Prince Leopold became a frequent corre- sjDondent of Mrs. Pattison, whose services he asked with a view to some art purchases which he wished to make, and to commissions for young artists. The first letter of the young Prince has some political interest. " February 21, 1872. "Dear Mrs. Pattison, " I enclose herewith a copy of Tennyson's *" Epilogue ' to his ' Idylls ' which you said you would like to see ; I fear it is not a very clean copy, but I trust you will overlook its age and accept it. I think one of the best parts in it is that which alludes to our treatment of Canada, and to our spirit of money- making. I hope you will tell me what you think of it. . . . " Believe me, yours very sincerely, " Leopold." Later letters concerned the original suggestion of a commission from Prince Leopold to Legros for BURNE JONES AND WATTS 41 "Death and the Woodcutter." Mrs. Pattison had been one of the first of critics to recognize Legros' talent. English painters were not forgotten, and two commissions were given at the same time to a painter she recommended, in reply to a question, as a "de- serving but struggling" man of talent. The last letter from the Duke of Albany which was kept, dated from Mentone more than ten years later, alluded to "the happy days, now so far off, at Oxford, of our duets and trios." About any use of Burne-Jones's letters there is the difficulty that they are undated, and that, while interesting matters concerning pictures and drawings are discussed, it is not certain to what particular examples of the painter reference is made. One — probably of a very early date — concerns a suggestion which had been made by Mrs. Pattison that Burne- Jones should exhibit in the Paris Salon, rather than in England, those of his pictures and drawings which appealed especially to artists. The beauty of the Burne-Jones drawings, and the constant description of him by Watts and others in whom the British public believed, as " our only painter of genius," a phrase invented by Watts, led, however, to the creation of a special public in London for Burne- Jones. The Grosvenor Gallery became the outward and visible sign of the triumph of a new school. A constant correspondent was Sir Charles New- ton ; but the best of the friendship between Mrs. Pattison and himself lay in their hours together at the British Museum. Before she took up her work upon the Renaissance, and, as regards more than half her working time, "specialized," much against her will, on the arts of France, she had intended to publish a work on classical art. A letter of February, 1873, from Rome, discusses the nature of a proposed handbook to classical art, in which Sir Charles G 42 MEMOIR Newton seemed to wish she should co-operate with him. He told her, however, of a new German work on Greek painting, intended to cover a portion of the ground — not the portion (architecture, sculpture, and medals) most attractive to herself Sir Charles Newton, who was leaving Rome for Ephesus, de- scribed the treasures of the Castellani collection. He was recommending the purchase to the trustees of the British Museum and to the Government, and sounded a note of alarm as to the enterprise of Berlin, of which we have lived to recognize the force. Boehm, too, was a frequent correspondent. In 1873 the sculptor applied to Mrs. Pattison for facts unknown to him as to accurate sculptural costume, and wrote again to thank her for the labour she had bestowed on constructing an exhaustive survey of sources from which his questions could be answered. From the Boehm correspondence we know that, as a result of her second severe illness, and as a warning of the worse attack which was to follow in 1875, Mrs. Pattison had lost the use of her right hand by a stiffening of the wrist, and had learnt to write well, and to sketch in pen and ink sufficiently for the pur- poses of her work, with the left hand. The autumn of 1873 began for Mrs. Pattison with her appointment, at a salary, as art editor of the Academy. She was to give up her regular work for the Westminster Review, but was not compelled to cease to write elsewhere. She was to receive every art book or periodical sent to the Academy, and was to have control over the whole department, without the burden of the picture-gallery toil. The editor wrote, "This I think, as things are, a good offer, or not a bad one." It was accepted, and for some years her work was mainly destined for the Academy or for her books. She found time, however, to undertake a great number of short articles for the " Encyclopaedia WOMAN'S WORK 43 Britannica," and after the partial recovery of her health five years later to take, in addition, other regular and important work. At the time of the death of Lady Dilke, it was noticed that there were two main branches in the labours of her life. Up to the present point her art work, in the widest sense, had been predominant. The other chief demand upon her time was called for by an interest in the life of working women, which it was sometimes incorrectly assumed had only fol- lowed her second marriage. In the opening numbers of the organ of the Women's Protective and Provident League, founded by Mrs. (Emma) Paterson, a working woman, it is recorded that Mrs. Mark Pattison was, from the earliest days, a member of the Council of the League, and had, " from the first, afforded most active and earnest help." She always felt and ex- pressed the duty of what she called " public service," and held that it was damaging, even to the individual, to lead a purely individual life, without setting aside time and thought for objects directly concerned with the industrial life of others. To use her own words, " It is a part of the work which this century calls on us— on all those who know the value of things spiritual — to perform. One has to help the many to feel the connection of their practical interests with great ideas. The work is so immense, and so little can be done in a lifetime, that one ceases to feel hurry." Mrs. Nettleship writes : " In this matter she had, far more than has been generally supposed, the sympathy, and, indeed, the most active assistance of the Rector of Lincoln." This was so, and I am even disposed to think that it was originally the influence of Mark Pattison's diatribes^on the useless- ness of mere monasticism which turned his wife from speculative theology to more human forms of devotion. 44 MEMOIR In the first days of her connection with the League, she shared, as did the earlier "feminists," a view which she afterwards came to think a heres}^ namely, that women workers might be put at a dis- advantage by special protective legislation. But in the seventies, as in the nineties, she taught the necessity for women workers to ally themselves with the men organized in unions, and favoured stringent factory legislation and legislative shortening of hours for both sexes. Mrs, Pattison's labour work was, in its early Oxford days, a phase of her general desire to be useful to young women. As has been seen in a quotation from one of her letters, and will be seen again later in this memoir, she showed throughout life a painstaking care towards all girls, of whatever class, with whom she was brought into contact, it being, she thought, one of the strongest claims upon her to see that they were introduced to the life best suited to their circumstances and capacity. Early in June, 1875, Mrs. Pattison was attacked by gout in the hand, which rapidly developed into arthritis, and she was threatened with complete stiffening of all the joints. In August she was de- spatched to Wildbad in the Black Forest, where a severe course checked the evil. A late autumn season at Aix-les-Bains, and residence in the sheltered part of Nice, away from the sea, for a winter, placed her out of danger, though for some years afterwards her health was the cause of deep anxiety to her friends, her hard work, nevertheless, continuing. The contrast in her appearance between the photographs taken just before the attack of June, 1875, and those taken for many years afterwards, is remarkable, and she never entirely lost during the remainder of her life, except at moments when the face was brightened by a smile, the anxious look which came upon it WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE 45 before the autumn of 1875. By Christmas she had regained her spirits. She writes from Nice to a sister (Mrs. Tuckwell), December 28, " I shall be very glad to see Mrs. Kinglake," but she explains that she is in a poor villa, of which hers is "the shabbiest and smallest apartment." Giving a thumb-nail sketch of the handmaid in question, she praises "the excellent bonne a tout fairer Her sitting-room is, " as Henry Smith remarked yesterday, beautifully furnished with the sun. The ceiling mostly lies on the floor . . . but we have the sun most days, and then I'm allowed out till sunset, which is a great boon." Among her other visitors at Nice were Prince Leopold, and Frank Dicey the painter, for whom she had, as for his mother, a deep affection. I was in frequent correspondence with Mrs. Patti- son during 1875 and 1876, and we were "fighting" most of the time, for it so happened that our views were opposed upon three kinds of parliamentary action taken by me in those years. On " reform of the Royal Academy" I was an extreme Radical, who thought her Toryfied by her surroundings. In University Reform, however, the subject in two sessions of important Government Bills, destined to become in combination a single Act, the positions were reversed, Mrs. Pattison being favourable to endowment of research, while I, with far less com- petence, was an advocate for the college as against the university. Finally we fell out over the women's franchise question, both of us, however, being strong advocates of the political enfranchisement of women. To it I had, indeed, contributed by proposing, in 1869, the restoration to women of the municipal fran- chise (of which they had only finally been deprived 46 MEMOIR by the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835), and by seconding the usual Women's Franchise Bill in 1870, when Mr. Jacob Bright and I succeeded in carrying the second reading. On this occasion I had told the promoters of the measure that I was not really favourable to " the limited Bill," but only, if more than a mere demonstration were intended, to adult suffrage, such as has subsequently been carried in New Zealand and in Australia. Mrs. Pattison was the chief mover for a time in the Oxford branch of the older Women's Suffrage Society. She sat next to Mrs. Grote at the first public meeting held in London on behalf of the cause, and is so portrayed in the illustrated papers of the time. She argued with me by letter as fiercely upon this question as upon the others that I have named, believing, as she then did, that the limited suffrage could be carried, and would be valuable. On this one, however, of the disputed topics, I was able to convert her, and she wrote much later an article intended to show that it could not be expected that the limited form of women's suffrage would be adopted in this country, any more than it had been in any other, and that women should work rather for complete enfran- chisement. While we fought over public ques- tions, I was more able to accept her views on art. She had been the cause of royal commissions being given to Legros and to Dalou, among foreign artists who had come to England, and to Britten among young English painters of talent, and I too, urged by her, gave commissions to the same three men. That by me to Legros produced the only oil por- trait that exists of Gambetta from the life, which is in my possession till it goes to the French National Collection. Another subject on which I had a controversy, in 1877, with Mrs. Pattison, concerned " L'Assommoir." THE NATURALIST SCHOOL 47 We agreed in admiring some of Zola's earlier work as we did afterwards in praising "Germinal." As to the volume, however, that caused, it was said, Mr. Swinburne's withdrawal of his name from the list of contributors to the review in which it appeared, on the ground that the book made him "sick in a corner," we differed absolutely, she rather attacking the form and language of the criticisms upon the work, than defending pages she had not carefully perused. Mrs. Pattison thought that it was childish to attempt to read such books without the guidance of a fixed mental purpose to try to see how Zola had realized or wrought out the heart of the subject which he had chosen. She said that if she had been " reviewing Keats " on the first appearance of some of his poems, she might have put him somewhat low in the scale as "unwholesome reading," but to say this would be a personal impression or "unqualified predilection of the writer." She should feel herself bound to take into consideration the poet's intention, and its successful rendering; his knowledge of and genius for his art. To her, some of what were sup- posed to be the finest of the poems of Keats and Shelley seemed to occupy much the same position that some of Zola's books held with me ; and the fact that on the one side we found "goddesses and peacock's feathers," and on the other side " gin in courts," made "little difference." She threw over Zola's own defence of his books, because a delinea- tion of manners cannot properly be defended as a social or " political polemic." But she thought that we ought to have regard to Zola's choice of subject and his treatment of it, and that whatever might be said about his treatment, his aim appeared to have been to give an accurate " picture of the dangerous classes," and that he seemed in this to have suc- ceeded; that the choice was open to criticism on the 48 MEMOIR question of the degree in which it was susceptible of finished literary treatment, and that my criticism in effect was only this, " Such people are horrid. I do not wish to be told of them. Take them away;" and was "no more criticism" than was "the resent- ment of a child at the sight of a black doll." There is nothing that gives a clearer impression of personality and opinions than such a controversy; an excuse, perhaps, for naming one other. On artistic copyright Mrs. Pattison took, not unnaturally, a view more extreme than that of the politicians. She thought the artists clearly in the right ; " their works are exposed to the risk of misrepresentation in reproduction, by which their reputation may be seriously damaged. Even authors are far less liable to such injury by such means. I remember but one single case, that of Racine, whose enemies brought out a falsified ' Phedre.' To bring about this injury it needed a personal hate, ready to make pecuniary sacrifice in order to wreak itself; whereas, if the work of an artist is of interest, it is a paying thing to reproduce it, anyhow. Any one can judge of the correctness of the text of a modern author ; but how many people can tell whether a print or chromo- lithograph correctly represents the qualities of a painting on which a man had staked his name and credit ? By literary piracy a man may suffer in purse, but rarely, if ever, in reputation : by artistic piracy a man is nearly certain to suffer in reputation as well as in purse." Mrs. Pattison had also her controversies with others. Browning continued to be one of the most constant of her correspondents during her illness of 1875 and after her recovery. One of the letters deals with a mistake in a poem, which in the end he admitted that he had made. He went on to complain of the reviewers for the expression of a belief that his BROWNING AND GEORGE ELIOT 49 classical plays were borrowed from Jowett's con- versation, where they were not directly stolen from Euripides. Referring to an article in the World, Browning wrote, " I have never set eyes on the Master these four years about, not foot in Oxford these six; and suppose that Jowett's notions and mine are wide as the poles apart, if I had the chance of knowing them." In the following year Mrs. Patti- son, writing about Browning to me, said that in fact Browning had had a serious quarrel with Jowett. Browning showed great kindness in sending her full news of the art-world during her enforced winter absences, and took the pains to give her his own accounts, as did his sister hers, of the Winter Exhibi- tions of the Royal Academy. Just as in her Nice season Browning at first argued, and then admitted one error in a poem, so in her second winter abroad, spent at Grasse, he wrote to acknowledge another. Both the errors had been detected by her alone. To one of these letters Browning added a separate set of errata in other poems, and went out of his way to admit "strange faults of rhyme in the poem about the Jews — which are my own blundering — 1 do not know how : I wrote the thing while the earlier sheets were passing through the press, and did not read them a tete repose e." Another regular correspondent in the days of sick- ness was George Eliot. After the autumn at Wildbad and Aix, she wrote to Mrs. Pattison, " I am enough acquainted with bodily suffering to enter with fellow- feeling into your severe trial. ... I am determined to think of you as cheerfully as I can, being too much inclined to despond about my own doings to afford despondency about my friends. . . . But I feel that your long, wearisome endurance of pain which eats itself into every cranny of mind and body may seem to you to deserve the name of agony." George Eliot H 50 MEMOIR named cases of persons with paralyzed limbs or destroyed sight — such as Augustin Thierry, the his- torian, who "made his life precious to himself and others, and was really an enjoying creature." The solitude in which, after the breakdown of her health in 1875, a part of each year had for some time been spent, was the subject of an interesting letter to Eugene Muntz, dated January 5, 1881, in which the effect of such a life on work is discussed. Mrs. Pattison summed up the loss and the gain with argu- ments which were repeated many years afterwards by Lady Dilke as to the life at Pyrford. In regard to the art work, she thought that the chief loss was the risk, in working alone, of spending time on things which conversation with fellow-workers in towns would show had been already done. But the great gain was that in solitude alone was there a chance for "les idees qui relient . . . through which alone one can become really master of one's work." In the summer between Nice and Grasse, George Eliot answers to Mrs. Pattison a letter from the Rector of Lincoln, in which he describes the number of letters which were waiting for his wife on her return to England. Both she and the Rector had mentioned the loving care which had been taken of the former at Wildbad and Aix and Nice, as afterwards at Grasse and at Draguignan, by " Madame " Moreau. This old Burgundian had been employed previously by several of Mrs. Pattison's friends, and had now proved so admirable a support and encouragement to her charge, that the relations between them grew to be those of deep affection. Moreau, who had been, about the time that Mrs. Pattison was born, in service with great families in the South of France ; afterwards, as femme de confiance, with the French dressmaker of the Imperial family at St. Petersburg, and then again a travelling maid, had her savings, and was somewhat ■^ GEORGE ELIOT 51 of a substantial person in all senses of the epithet. In each of Mark Pattison's letters to his wife during her absences abroad, he invariably sends a message to Madame Moreau. She attached herself deepl}'' to Mrs. Pattison, and even when, after our marriage, she saw less of her former charge, their relations by letter remained as close as they had been in the past. At Draguignan the little house where Mrs. Pattison spent some winter months of several years was Moreau's, and after our marriage Moreau continued to live there, letting to a priest the tiny rooms which Mrs. Pattison had occupied. Moreau's niece became Lady Dilke's maid for a long series of the last years of our married life, and she and I were together with her when my wife died. The death of Moreau in 1904, at the age of eighty, was a heavy loss. George Eliot and Mark Pattison had been ex- changing notes as to the extraordinary accuracy of knowledge displayed, in the absence of all books of reference, by Mrs. Pattison in an article written at Nice, for the Academy, on Voltaire. It was followed indeed by a second, penned at Grasse. In the spring of 1877 George Eliot wrote, "Ah, how many nights and days you have had of such acute and disabling pain. . . . Ever since you came to see me with your white face and lips I have been haunted by the sense that the opportunity had been wanting to me of saying or doing anything that expressed how far I felt with you — felt, at least, as one who can only imperfectly imagine what she grieves for. But now your account of yourself is as cheerful as can be in one respect, I mean in the proof it gives that you have kept your mental energy. The loss of that is often the most dreadful part of a bodily suffering which is inter- mittent. As long as severe pain lasts I do not suppose anybody can care about such loss, but to get up from the rack and find one's self half imbecile, the chief 52 MEMOIR sign of any intellect left being the consciousness that one's intellect has almost gone, is a horrible lot. . . . Let us be thankful that your mind is as vivacious as ever. . . . You know quite well how the world is going on here, the Grosvenor Gallery built . . . and everybody darkening counsel by words without know- ledge on the terrible Eastern question." George Eliot also described in this long gossiping letter her troubles about settling in a house, addressing her difficulties to "you who have a genius for getting all these things to your mind." The truth of this last state- ment will appeal to all who know how, throughout her housekeeping life, and especially at " Lincoln," at Headington, and at Pyrford, the subject of this memoir succeeded in creating perfect homes. In July, 1877, Mrs. Pattison, being in better health, came up from Lincoln College specially to attend, as the principal speaker, the annual meeting of the Women's Trade Union League, at that time known by an earlier name. This was, so far as I know, her first public speech, and, to judge from the descriptions of it given by those who were present, it made on the audience exactly the same impression which, up to the end of her life, her labour speeches invariably produced on hearers. In July, 1877, as in Trade Congress week in September, 1904, that which struck the listener was the clearness and directness of language with which strong conviction and persistent purpose were enforced. The tones of pathos, when there was allusion to the suffering of the poor, and especially to the lot of women, were there to touch the working people ; but the knowledge of the subject, the strength and the sanity behind, had an equal effect upon the more cultivated and the more hardened hearer. The most remarkable of the series of speeches which, in the course of many years, she delivered at the London annual meeting of the POLITICAL FRIENDS 53 League, was that made three years later, when, with the support of William Morris, as well as that of Professor Bryce, she advocated a complete system of technical education for women, greatly in advance of its time. Mrs. Pattison had been corresponding with Mr. Chamberlain, for five months previous to the de- livery of the 1880 speech, upon the working of the art schools at Birmingham, and she had also been in communication with her friends at Vienna upon the training of young women. Ten years later she described her correspondence with Mr. Chamberlain, more fully, in an article in the Fortnighily Review, "Art Teaching and Technical Schools ' (February, 1890); repeating doctrines laid down by her in the Pall Mall Gazette^ under the editorship of her old friend Mr. John Morley, in 1879. In her earlier speeches Mrs. Pattison had pointed out, that while the Women's Trade Union League had, at that time, "no rival" in the world, other nations had, and we had not, public professional schools for training women in industrial work. Professor Huxley had advocated technical education, and had produced action by the City guilds; but there had been no recognition of the just claim of working women to have their technical education provided on an equal footing. A branch of the League was established through the efforts of Mrs. Pattison in Oxford. An inaugural meeting was held at Lincoln College, and attended by the Rector, as well as by her friends Professor Nettleship and Dr. Percival, now Bishop of Hereford. The branch still exists, and rightly regards Mrs. Pattison, along with Mrs. (Emma) Paterson, as " founders." In 1878 Mrs. Pattison was elected a member of the Radical Club, which consisted of twenty Members of Parliament, among whom were, at that time, Mr. Chamberlain, Mr. Courtney, and Professor Pawcett, 54 . MEMOIR and of twenty " non-Members," five of them being women, including Miss Helen Taylor. While, how- ever, some of those named here were constant attendants, Mrs. Pattison seldom exceeded the two attendances in the year at dinners of the Club which were necessary to maintain membership. It will be found that she was not pleased with the discussion the first time she was present at the Club. She never but once, according to the books, brought for- ward a subject for discussion, and that was a special subject of her own, " The conditions which should determine the wages of female labour." She was now busily at work on her first book, "The Renaissance of Art in France." As soon as this heavy task was off her hands, even before the actual appearance of the volumes, she began to toil at subjects of another class, treated with her usual thoroughness. The editor of the Annual Register had asked her to review a number of art books, and it was soon settled that, as she was much in France, and was continually visiting Italy, in connection with her work in art and archaeology, she should deal also with the politics and international position of those two countries. She writes from Draguignan to a literary _ and personal friend, one of her chief editors, " I am / in the agonies of the Annual Register, but though, \ as you say, to a certain extent, it does not go with my other work, I think it is a good thing to have to master the Tunis question, and schemes of Army and Navy reform — down to minute points of the construction of battleships. All depends on whether one can keep these things in relation to the whole of life. One cannot write these chapters of modern history with- out trying to form one's own opinion on the questions of the day, and that inspires one with the wish to try at least to find the bond which must exist somewhere between the fine arts themselves and the current of ITALY 55 national life. So it seems to me that even the little bit of work one tries to do one's self must gain in value." The same idea is expressed in a letter to Eugene Muntz of the end of 1881, of which I translate a passage. He had complained of her doing "other work." She replied with some admissions, and went on, " Yet I gain something. Ordinary life widens the horizon for men. Women are walled in behind social conventions. If they climb over, they lose more than they gain. It is therefore necessary to accept the situation as nature and society have made it, and to try to create for one's self a position from which on peut dominer ce qu'on ne peut pas franchir," The result of the interest shown by her in Italian politics during a visit to Rome in 1879 was that a close friendship sprang up between Mrs. Pattison and the Italian statesmen Bonghi and Sella, and that she had access for many years to interesting sources of information in connection with Italian affairs. She continued her regular work for the Annual Register from 1879 to 1884. There is a letter from George Eliot, dated May 29, 1879— a joint letter to the Rector of Lincoln and to Mrs. Pattison — alluding to the journey to Rome that led to the first acquaintance with Bonghi and Sella, and also to the considerable improvement in Mrs. Pattison's health. In the next visit to Rome George Eliot was more sorrowfully remembered. On the back of a letter from a lady who was a friend of the Mark Pattisons, and of George Eliot, describing the final traged}'' of the great novelist's life, Mrs. Pattison made some notes which cannot yet be published. Dr. Bode's new edition of " Burckhardt's Cicerone," which came out in 1879, was annotated by Mrs. Patti- son for her visit to Italy in that year ; but she divided her time at Rome, both in 1879 and 1881 — as her note- books show — between fine art and politics. She had, 56 MEMOIR however, opportunities of combining the two. Bonghi and Minghetti took her to the Forum, and her notes of Minghetti's conversations as to the relations between the State and the Church, come between drawings of pictures in the Colonna and in the Doria galleries. " Minghetti said, ' So far from provisions for the sale of glebe lands being likely to be of a liberalizing tendenc}^ they will detach the priest even more completely from the social conditions of the day. Whenever the priests, as in Liguria, receive only pay from Government, they are Ultramontane; whereas in Piedmont, where they have lands to cultivate, they are, by that fact, linked to the existing order of things. The interests of the priest, as a farmer, are so far those of the people amongst whom he lives.'" It was Sella, the great financier, who, of all Italians, talked to Mrs. Pattison the most at Rome, although Bonghi became her chief correspondent. " Sella infinitely more satisfactory than either Minghetti or Bonghi. Minghetti too official, and Bonghi too facile, to be capable of doing the best sort of work. ... I used to suppose that practical politicians hated ideas ; but it seems to me here that their hatred of facts goes deeper still. One of the Minghetti set, talking in a spirit hostile to Roumanian independence, built an elaborate argument on the ' fact ' that the Roumans were incapable of learning or literature. ... I told him that if he would refer to the transactions of the archaeological societies of Vienna during the past year, he would find most respectful acknowledgment of the services rendered by those actively engaged on their national antiquities at Bucarest. ... I have no doubt that he will make his statement just as confidently on the next opportunity." On another occasion at Rome, in 1879, she noted of Sella, " It is many years since I have felt the ' personal influence ' of another sensibly as a help. . . . Sella, I suppose, looking to the facts ITALIAN STATESMEN 57 of the last ten years, would be described by outsiders as an unsuccessful politician. If it is so, then that is a condemnation of modern political life in Italy." She went on to express a doubt as to whether the " temper in which philosophical consideration of social and political problems is alone possible ... is not a dis- qualification for dealing with practical questions." Mrs. Pattison thought also that, like practical politics, journalism ought, if possible, to be abandoned with growing age and knowledge, unless it was the sole career. " It harms those, even the most gifted, who continue in it after early life. They cannot honestly write the kind of thing required for their public if they are really striving to reach the highest level of thought and work possible to themselves." She considered that, in age, one should look forward to the day on which it might be possible to " resolve never to open a review or journal of any kind. When the lines of serious study are distinctly fixed, the attention is only frittered and disturbed by running over statements which con- tain perhaps, now and again, as if by accident, some suggestion — rarely of importance to one's own work. When once this class of expression has ceased to con- tain any information for one, it can only be of interest to the curiosity if one is occupied with the study of public opinion. If that is not one's work, it is best let alone, and the strength it might absorb reserved for a real purpose." In all her letters from Rome, Mrs. Pattison returned to considerations suggested by Sella, whose character made a deep impression on her. In a letter to myself, having relation to those University Bills on which we had differed, she wrote, " One of the manifestly absurd things said about him in Minghetti's set is that he does not know Latin. I found him steeped in classi- cal literature. ... In connection with this, I may tell you of his showing that he understood the University 58 MEMOIR question, and its importance in relation to the future of a State. How unfortunate it was tliat my first introduction to the Radical Club should have been on the occasion of their discussion of a bill for the Uni- versities commission." For Bonghi, though she thought him inferior to Sella, Mrs. Pattison had a sincere respect. To another correspondent she wrote, " His library aroused my envy. One great division devoted to philology and classical literature ; a second to economy and admini- stration ; a third historical and political ; a fourth philosophical, and so on. He asked Moreau by what train we left, as he was coming to see me off." They had talked of everything and agreed on most things, even on Italian sculpture. Mrs. Pattison returned to Sella in all her letters : " You cannot put him into the same category as any of the others." He was a man who could " help others to grow, . . . quiet, simple, grave — perhaps unpliant. . . . Honesty of soul must loathe petty politicians with their atmosphere of personalities and corruption. I have been asking my- self since I have been here, ' Can an old country come to life again ? ' " She had found a happy augury in the patriotism of Sella, he having grown to be what he was in face of popular apathy. After her first meeting with Bonghi, Barnabei, the archaeologist, had asked her what she thought of the former. She replied that the excessive activity of his intelligence was turned in all directions without a corresponding effort of control. Bonghi's letters, and his subsequent visits to England, were nevertheless valued by Mrs. Pattison, and Lady Dilke had retained, until her death, a much larger number of Bonghi's letters than of those of most of her regular correspon- dents. Letters in French and Italian upon politics and upon art subjects have lost their interest ; and discussions upon Platonic dialogues would suit but a MRS. PATTISON'S DRAGUIONAN GARDKN. {To face p. 59. BONGHI 59 small public. There is, perhaps, a permanent human interest in Bonghi's remark, following a not over- polite account of differences between Depretis and Cairoli, "You may believe me, for they are both of them m}^ political opponents and my personal friends." It so happens that politicians and public questions have been the theme of the pages of this Memoir which deal with the Roman visits, but it must be borne in mind that the subject of this Memoir was even more deeply interested in the romance, the art, and the history of the Italy of the past, with which she had been throughout her previous life familiar. As early as 1876 Mrs. Pattison had begun to write on Caldecott, and he, in addition to those previously named at Nice, was of the guests who at one or another time occupied the biichcr in Madame Moreau's garden at Draguignan, and tasted of the cookery of that wonderful old dame, who, with the assistance of a wild girl, now become middle-aged, was lady's-maid, housemaid, gardener, wine-maker, and cook, as well as landowner and proprietor. In a pilgrimage of December, 1904, I found that the present owner, who purchased the little villa from Madame Moreau when she left to spend her last years in Paris, has kept the old wood-house in the condition in which it was put when, early in Moreau's occupancy, it was turned into a spare bedroom, and the firewood rele- gated to another spot. In this plain, tile-floored, barn-like, but pretty room, grown over at that time with the thornless or "miraculous" roses of St. Francis — now no more there — Caldecott, alone of visitors, except one old French painter, made a long stay. He was very ill, and Madame Moreau "took a fancy to him and nursed him as if he had been her child." A correspondence between Mrs. Pattison and Caldecott followed, which lasted till his death, and in 6o MEMOIR which the letters of both sides were illustrated. Not only did Lady Dilke write specially on Caldecott's work on more than one occasion, but she had so great a personal liking for him that, had she lived to publish a projected book of recollections of her art friends, for which she had prepared material, Caldecott would have occupied a prominent place. Her most complete writing upon this subject appeared in two numbers of the A 7^f Journal as late as 1895. Lady Dilke mentions, in her articles of May and July in that year, that she had known Caldecott when he was modelling under Dalou in 1872, and when he had been working as decorator in 1875. He had stayed with her at Grasse at Christmas, 1876, and had gone with her to see a group at Lorgues by Puget, the famous Provencal sculptor of the time of Louis XIV, In March, 1879, Mrs. Pattison and Moreau had taken Caldecott from Mentone to Rome, and after their return, his illness growing worse, she had seen him in Paris while she was working at her Salon article, and he at his " Babes in the Wood." Mrs. Pattison notes that he introduced himself into the pictures as the dying father, and Moreau as the old nurse. A good many of Caldecott's letters are quoted in her articles ; but there are many of interest which have not been mentioned. In an early one he notes playfully the pretended advice which he obtains by condensing one of Mrs, Pattison's letters to him ; that it was " one's duty" to arrive "at the last stage of exhaustion, in order to be able to put all one's force into one's work. Yet I think I am of too sanguine a tempera- ment to try it." Later letters are concerned with the details of his book-illustration. One of the most interesting contains a criticism on " Breton Folk," to which, in her second article on Caldecott, she gave his reply. The artist had asked Mrs. Pattison to criticize him RANDOLPH CALDECOTT 6i freely, with a view to improving his work. She wrote, December i, 1879 — " My dear Mr. Caldecott, " I have three times sat down with * Breton Folk,' and ' The Babes,' and ' The Mad Dog,' intending to write my 'impressions,' and each time, instead of their helping me to any correct statement of those already received, they have but persisted in making a great many more, and I have found myself so entertained and pleased and interested that I have spent all the hour, meant to be devoted to a letter, in selfish amuse- ment. I like to be told stories, and there is no one who has a greater gift that way than you. In this respect the * Babes ' and the ' Dog ' have an advantage oyer ' Breton Folk,' because they call forth that peculiar gift. The ' Babes ' harrow my feelings so painfully, that I cannot dwell upon the pages in which their pitiful story is recorded. I keep turning back to the happy days when they toddled and ran in the ' pleasaunce ' whilst father and mother sat wrapped in joy side by side under the tree. I am very, very sorry for 'The Dog,' but the coming event does not cast its black shadow over everything, and leaves me free to enjoy all the fun and fuss. The group of running girls is admirable. Power of drawing movement, you know, is another of your precious possessions, and this comes out in many pages of ' Breton Folk,' where there is no story to tell, but only flitting memories to record. I always think that I am a very bad critic, because it is so difficult to me always to find out why I enjoy, and most difficult when I enjoy most. I only know that it is with a wrench that I try to leave off from the passive recep- tion of pleasure, and to begin analyzing how the effects have been produced. A good many of the very slightest sketches — 'caps, etc' — in 'Breton Folk' didn't interest me, didn't seem to be more particularly 62 MEMOIR 'friend Caldecott' than any other one. I'll instance p. 72, not as the special example, because it's not more slight than p. 1 14, but I fancy that I feel the artist in p. 114, and I don't feel him in p. 72. I fancy (but please understand I am speaking most specially under correction, and I'm not one bit sure) that I am caught and delighted either by story (p. 107), by character (pp. 82, 151, 152), by arrangement (winnowing, St. Brieuc) ; or movement — Horse Fair at Le Folgoet ; and again p. 64, If I made a list of all that have given me great pleasure I should fill my letter with the numbers, but I intensely delight in childish character. I think the little ones in the cabbage plants perfectly charming. Page 68, too, is beautifully spaced, and I am inclined to think that in this volume, taken as a whole, you seem more able to put things where you would like to have them, and that your wider expe- rience has enabled you to find ways of doing what you want instead of being forced to have recourse to conventional ways, which are part of the common stock. This is evident, not only in the arrangement — there are some ' Hennebont girls ' coming up and turning round (p. 149) on the way to and from a well which struck me for their detached grouping — but also in the use of colour which it is so difficult to employ, and which obliges one to have recourse to endless fictions of the most embarrassing nature. Page 80, which I take at haphazard, shows these fictions put to an excellent use — made to help ; but in the big leaf opposite to p. 80 you seem to me not to have got what you might from them, or perhaps I should say they seem to have been too much for you still, when taken in conjunction with an interior effect of light and shade. I fancy that this is one of the points on which you might dwell now, but please see if some capable practical opinion is the same as that which I venture to offer. . . . Du Maurier's criticism RENAN 63 may have been caused by work in which you were only ' observing,' not with the purpose of story. That must make a great difference as to emphasis on the t3''pe under treatment. " I was very sorry, too, you could not come to Oxford. The Rector of Lincoln is a great admirer of John Gilpin, and would have been delighted to see you. ' Friend Moreau,' and I too, join in regret that you can't come to us, nor we go to you. . . . " I am very well just now, thank you, and hope I may be back early next year in full force, and that I may find you at least able .to outwalk me, which, alas ! in Rome last spring was out of possibility. Let us hear from you whenever you are inclined, and believe me really and very cordially yours, " E. F. S. Pattison." One of Caldecott's letters from Mentone thanks her " for taking the trouble to really criticize ' Brace- bridge Hall ' illustrations. I will try to mend in the direction which you indicate. Few tell one in a practical way the exact points where amendment should begin." The chief charm of the letters lies in their illustrations ; * and in thumb-nail sketching Mrs. Pattison was not far behind Caldecott himself On her way back from Italy each year, Mrs. Pattison had to make her studies in Paris at the Salon for her annual art reviews for the Academy, which had begun in 1876. On her visit to Paris in 1880, she was welcomed with special interest by the art and literary world, on account of the appearance of her two volumes on the French Renaissance. Renan, who, at the time, had not made Mrs. Pattison's acquaintance, was most friendly to her book, which he presented to the Academic des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres, his report being extraordinarily favourable. Mrs. * See p. 64. 64 MEMOIR Pattison was consequently taken to see Renan and his wife, and from tliis visit commenced an intimate friend- ship between her and Madame Renan. For many years the correspondence with Madame Renan was very close. When she died in 1894 Lady Dilke wrote an obituary notice of great beauty, which contained one of the finest of Madame Renan's letters. In printing it she naturally omitted Madame Renan's invitation to her to continue through life her studies in the same line, advice based upon the ground of a "unique com- bination of imagination, phi- losophy, and erudition." The reviews of the " Re- naissance " afterwards went on increasing in warmth, up to that of the Debats of July 29, which expressed the respect of France for the " learning, research, and genius' displayed in volumes written, unhappily, in a foreign tongue. Of the illustrations of the "Renaissance" some, such as the " Diane," are specimens of the delicacy of Mrs. Pattison's drawing. In a letter (November 3, 1880) to her niece. Miss Gertrude Tuckwell, which begins by describing the arrangements which the Rector had been making for * From a letter from Mrs. Pattison to Caldecott and his wife, — " Did you ever see a Provencal boggart ? They are made of straw, like this." A "boggart."* MRS. EARLE AND LORD ACTON 65 Miss Tuckwell to keep house for him at Lincoln College during her aunt's absence, she goes on, " I enclose a precious autograph for your father. A friend asked M. Renan to give him his note of the little speech which he made on presenting my book to his Academy. Next week I go away for a couple of days to Cannes to stay with Lady de Rothschild and her daughters, but I shall make no other move before the end of February, when I shall, if my funds don't give out, try again for Rome." A few days later in November, she wrote to Mrs. Earle a letter describ- ing the same visit to Cannes, which shows how numerous were Mrs. Pattison's interests, in spite of her ill-health and of her heavy work. " My dear Theresa, " I have been thinking of you incessantly the last ten days, and on going over to Cannes ... I made a visit which has given me a positive reason for writing. I called on Miss Pearson . . . sister of Charles Pearson.* . . . She, from her sick-bed, directs the arrangements made for the nurses who come to Cannes to take bad cases in the season, and was anxious to see me, because the said nurses, and their comrades in London, wished to form a union and to join the League." It was on the occasion of this visit to Cannes that Lord Acton wrote in his published letters, December 14, 1880, that he "was amazed at the knowledge and conversation of a lady, who turned out to be Mrs. Mark Pattison." In addition to Mrs. Pattison's regular work upon * He had left Oxford for Australia on account of his health, and became Minister of Education of Victoria. His writings published after his return will be familiar to readers. K 66 MEMOIR her books, upon the Paris Salon, for the Annual Register articles, upon the Encyclopaedia, and such work as articles on Poynter and J. P. Laurens for the Magazine of Art, and, at his request, on Sir F. Leighton, — the first article in the volume " Modern Artists," — she found time to deliver an address at the Midland Institute at Birmingham, and commence a certain amount of work for the Athencenm. In the last-named journal a learned review of the German Art "Jahrbuch" became annual after 1879. A special turn towards landscape was manifest at this moment. Notes on Fragonard, which had excited a good deal of attention when they appeared in the Academy in 1878, were in part due to residence at Grasse and the unusual opportunity of sight of the famous Fragonard room. About the same time she wrote an article on Poussin from her notes collected in her journeys between 1861 and 1879, while Fromentin was also carefully annotated, Eugene Miintz asked her to write the life of Claude. At his request she undertook this considerable labour, and the visit to Rome of 1881 was connected with its preparation. A letter from M. Emile Michel, the highest French authority of the time on Claude, in a correspondence between himself and another French art writer, describes Mrs. Pattison's Claude book as "a remark- able study, full of value by reason of the profit that all French admirers can draw from so fresh a reve- lation of his talent;" and he adds that "the keeper of the prints at the National Library agrees" with him, and that "this is a general opinion." The Revue des Deux Mondcs accorded to Mrs. Pattison's " Claude " the unusual honour of a long special article, full of the highest praise. Part of the " Claude " appeared in articles, the complete book being published in 1884. The success WRITINGS IN FRENCH 67 was so much more considerable than that of Mrs. Pattison's works in English which preceded or im- mediately followed it, that it was difficult to induce her to write in English, rather than in French, her four volumes on the Eighteenth Century. The advice given to her by her friends, after the triumph of her " Claude," to return to her native tongue, and the comparatively small interest roused by ''Art in the Modern State," made it an uphill task to persuade her, as we did, that she should write mainly in English. I even ventured, in later years, to quote to her (when she was expressing the greater pleasure that she had in writing for La Gazette des Beaux Arts in French, than in her English volumes) the example of Chaucer, who, though justly proud of his French scholarship, wrote for his own English people in their own tongue. Writing at a later date from Paris with reference to the success she had had with French critics, she said, " It does encourage me, but not as to England. It only relieves me from feel- ing that nobody wants my work. I thought when I was looking at Christophe's statue and hearing what he said of it, yesterday, that if you once begin to say nobody wants your work, you very soon do nothing but work that nobody wants." Some interesting passages on the relations of an author of learned work to the public are to be found in her correspondence with Eugene Miintz, which ex- tended over many years. Mrs. Pattison had written to Muntz in 188 1 on his " Raphael," in letters from Siena, Orvieto, and Oxford : two of the latter contain- ing also words of Mark Pattison's for Muntz upon the subject. She had said that the book was perhaps "too full and too complete for that idle and superficial person, ' the public' " Sixteen years afterwards Lady Dilke wrote to Muntz, who had been returning to the same point : " The profound love of study was always 68 MEMOIR scarce. But, formerly, when it was displayed by any one it was easier for others to mark it for themselves and to make it known. Nowadays the truly learned are comme noyes par I'envahissement de la foule im- mense qui se plait dans les connaissances moyennes." After consoling Miintz in this strain, she went on to tell him that his series of books on Italian art must always have a public, inasmuch as at the worst there were the travellers " ayant un peu d'instruction." There are passages on landscape art written by Mrs. Pattison in French for the "Conclusion," and preceding the important appendices of her " Claude," which have been praised by French writers as much as some passages m stories in " The Shrine of Death" and " The Shrine of Love " have been praised by English critics. Personally, I prefer the develop- ment which she has given to her theory of landscape in the notes for what was to have been a chapter of a book left half finished. The doctrine is the same. It is thus expressed by her in her " Claude Lorrain " : " L'amour de I'art et I'amour de la nature, telles sont les deux voies qui conduisent au meme but. L'amour de I'art nous fait voir les mille tresors que la nature derobe aux yeux indifferents ; l'amour de la nature doit nous ouvrir les portes de I'art." In articles in the Academy on Delacroix in September, 1880, and in the Athenceiim on Fromentin in July, 1881, and in the notes and sketches upon which her singularly careful " Salons " were based, it is easy to see a con- tinual growth of sentiment for nature, and for landscape. There is necessarily repetition in the various letters and working notes in which Lady Dilke dealt at different times with landscape art. To print portions of her correspondence on the subject with, for example, a little-known French painter, Victor Pollet, for whose judgment on art she had the highest LANDSCAPE ART 69 veneration, or with Eugene Muntz, or again with that extraordinary person, Hastings, Duke of Bedford, who helped her greatly with her " Claude," would be to run the risk of undue expansion. The Duke of Bedford's letters would tempt one off the path, for they are pleasantly adorned with characteristic epi- gram having little relation to the subject. An allusion, for example, to the drawings at his London house, or at Woburn Abbey, produces the explanation that "in these uncertain times" his collections are unlikely to " long survive the life tenant." There are large notes upon the subject of landscape art to be found scattered throughout a correspondence with M. Andre Michel, which seems to have followed the publication, in 1896, of a volume in which he wrote on Corot, Millet, and on modern landscape. I prefer to make some brief extracts from a half-finished volume, not now to see the light. In it Lady Dilke took up once more, in 1904, her theme of 1863 — the result of her study of Poussin at Vienna. Of Lady Dilke's writings upon Andre Michel, I note only that she thought it the highest praise which could be given to him to state that he stood next to Paul Mantz — " the most sane and admirable critic whom the nineteenth century has produced." The critic of modern landscape, as of all painting, should be supreme, she thought, in the rare qualities of sincerity without brutality, learning without prejudice, freedom from the usual affec- tations. He should look at works bearing the names of distinguished men of the most opposite tenden- cies, with a cool judgment, not excluding delicate sensitiveness to the finest shades, and with honest effort at impartiality in choice. Her studies at Vienna and in the other great collections of the drawings of the landscape painters of all time, had led her to rank Poussin extraordinarily high. She invariably professed herself astounded by 70 MEMOIR his amazing power of composition: "it is purely academic in character, but stands in the highest class of its kind, and, like every great exercise of human intelligence, has its just claim on our accurate appre- ciation." "Such appreciation cannot be won by merely looking at his work. Pencil in hand, we must ourselves reconstruct the systematic base on which the pictorial presentment rests. The laziest of us can be pleased with the witching suggestiveness of Claude's winged flight through illimitable light and distance. Other qualities have made the influence of Poussin a living power, even now, over all those landscape painters who care for the most essential elements of the world of nature, and who attempt to incorporate something of their majesty in design. . . . When we approach the landscape of Poussin, we realize the incalculable value of the severe studies, which gave a pedantic character to much of his other work," She then discussed the bacchanalian Poussins, and showed how in the groups of the early pictures, such as that at Chantilly, "careering after old Silenus, as drunk with the excitement of their mad frolic as their leader is with wine," " although the attendant nymphs betray the tendency to pose, which recalls the heroines of the classic stage, we see the dawn of feeling for the sympathetic union of humanity and nature." To Claude, Lady Dilke thought, belonged the honour of having seen, in the very middle of the seventeenth century, a corner of wild nature. While the great king of France employed his landscape artists to paint the leaves of elm-tree hedges cut out of tin, " Claude plunged into the woods and lost himself in the contemplation of distant horizons." She showed, from the nature of his early work, how Claude had found his inspiration in approach to nature rather than in the teaching of the schools. CLAUDE LORRAIN 71 " He sought that which was stable and harmonious in the fleeting image," and it was for this reason that Claude's work still " possesses — as does all work strongly felt — a certain moral force." This " brings into play — for all who can feel and see with him — a current of appreciation;" but "it is always easier to dream than to think. Thus Poussin . . . has found fewer followers than Claude. Even the best endowed, as, for example, Corot, may begin with this ideal, only to find his way later in le lyrisme, that is to say, on the line traced by Claude." Lady Dilke then went on, in her proposed chapter upon landscape art, to trace the ultimate effect of the third influence which made itself felt in the landscape of the seventeenth century, namely, that of the Dutch Masters. But she soon returned to " the energetic will of Poussin, his abstract tendency, his proud disdain of those capricious effects of light which were the joy of Claude," and pointed out the decline, in all the various schools, of followers and pupils. After analyzing the character of Claude's sense of nature, and that of the other chief landscape painters, as illustrated in their work. Lady Dilke wrote, " This rare and delicate gift — the feeling for life in land- scape — belongs to those alone who have a sense of the Invisible, of the intangible air, the colourless aether, which is everywhere yet nowhere about us." The true landscape painter must " seek in the mirror of nature the vibration of the human soul," and "catch sight of the secret life of nature in moods which inspire his own." Lady Dilke returned at the very last to her final appreciation of landscape in the following words : "After having analyzed every- thing that 1 have ever seen, I am inclined to think it easier to find words for the floods of golden glory, by which Claude indicates to our fancy the enchant- ments of his own, than to procure the recognition 72 MEMOIR by others of the peculiar value of Poussin's art, consisting, as it largely does, in his superb science of construction. The architecture, so to say, of his compositions, always magnificent in proportion and symmetry, is infinitely varied." She had always felt " the beauty of much that he produced," but did not herself understand wherein it lay, until she had worked out for herself, by long and patient study of the drawings, the whole theory of his Art. There is much which bears on landscape in the correspondence with Eugene Miintz, as, for instance, a letter of June 13, 1881, dated from Oxford, in which, after laying down the law to him, she suddenly breaks off with the words, " I fear I am becoming sadly dogmatic." It is not necessary to quote from her letters passages to prove her sentiment of nature and of landscape, for her own pages given in this volume contain a sufficient representation of her imaginative side. During winter visits to Toulon, where I had a house upon the cliffs at Cap Brun, I used sometimes to try my hand by letter in con- tests with Mrs. Pattison, each of us describing the Provencal weather common to our cottages, though the scenery of Draguignan, where she was living, in the north-east of the Department of the Var, was very different from that of the Mediterranean coast. Her victory over me was, of course, complete. I have one letter in which I had written on a mistral that " to the clear sky it " had " suddenly brought clouds, and over me twisted and tore them into the wool of a negro's head. All was still below — the sea partly lava-coloured and partly steel. Then came a clap of thunder, and our traditional ' three drops of rain,' and then the cold wind, and the stars." She sent it back to me, having written on it in one of the pauses of her work : " Provengal weather — absurd blasts coming from no one knows where — dropping down on you CONTINENTAL IMPRESSIONS 72> and blowing you round and round ; jumping upon your back from the east, and then flying in your face from the west, with pelting rain : then rushing down from the Maumont and shaking the house to its foundations : then turning about and coming in from the south, slapping every shutter to, with angry claps, to open them again as noisily. Over all a white sun and hurrying grey cloud." Mrs. Pattison's letters of 1881 were specially inte- resting, and in one of them she seemed to have found the reason : " Yes, I know that it is good for me to have been at Rome again — good in every way. I get an amount of stimulus, intellectual and moral, from that kind of visit, which is just what I want and can't find the like of anywhere else." She went on to discuss London and Oxford with her correspondent, who knew both, and then declared that while good male society could be found in many places, what was also necessary to a woman was the sympathy of active- minded and intelligent women, which alone could create "an atmosphere, all the pleasanter for its rarity." Her life in Rome among political men and women undoubtedly widened her horizon and caused her to write to other correspondents upon subjects previously shunned as beyond her spheres of interest. She wrote, for example, in the same month as the last two letters quoted, of French politics: "The isolation of Gambetta is the necessary consequence of his being felt to be the stronger. Men resent the sense of strength greater than their own, except when they are in desperate need. ... It is just the same thing that one notes every day in the ordinary commerce of life. The moment people suspect you of being able to form a judgment instead of accepting opinions, those who accept opinions shrink from you until you are strong enough to impose your own. This, unless one is porphyrogenitus, takes time." L 74 MEMOIR To this same year of great intellectual activity — 1 88 1 — belong a good many letters from Leighton dealing with art criticism. The English academician represents throughout the correspondence the ordi- nary view, against opinions, less usual, put forward by Mrs. Pattison, but elsewhere sufficiently expressed by her in her writings. From a visit to Madrid, Leighton seemed to have brought back exactly the ordinary view of Velasquez and of the Spanish school ; and in his treatment of the frescoes of Puvis de Chavannes, also, there is nothing out of the way. The latter was one of the many friends of whom Mrs. Pattison had now begun to see a good deal each year in Paris. After her annual working visit to the Salon, during which she slaved so hard as to exhaust herself, and was unable to permit friends to accompany her, or those who met her to arrest her attention, she used to return to the exhibition with the artists and compare their views, bearing as they did on her articles of the following year, with those which she had despatched to the Academy. There is no trace in her criticisms on either the English or the French painters of her having allowed her friendships to influence her critical judg- ment. With all her admiration for the noble concep- tions of Puvis de Chavannes, she treated him as she had treated Ruskin. Just as she made amends to Pater, after Pater's death, so I never knew her so completely favourable to Puvis de Chavannes as she became at Lyons in a visit which we paid to his frescoes on the staircase of the Museum after the painter was dead. The unique position in the art world of Paris which Mrs. Pattison had secured by 1881, and retained for life, was that which her book on the Renaissance and her annual review of the Salons had won. It was confined to the world of art. The subsequent triumph of her eighteenth-century books introduced her to FRENCH ARTIST FRIENDS 75 a wider public. Among the painters who accom- panied her in her visits to the Salon, her admiration was accorded to " old " Frangais, chief of the water- colour school, and Gustave Moreau, Among sculptors she had more real friends. Gustave Moreau was half mad, and it is possible that respect for his genius made her a little blind to his imperfections. For " old " Frangais she had the veneration that she felt for Christophe among sculptors, and for a few women, such as Madame Renan. It was, as has been said, the intention of Lady Dilke to write a book some day upon her artist friends, and the notes upon Frangois Louis Frangais possess special interest, on account of her enthusiasm for him. After his death she set down roughly, in pencil, ready for "writing," "I last saw M. Frangais when he paid me the compliment of a special visit in reference to the monument which it was proposed to erect to Claude at Nancy. His years — he was then seventy-nine, I think — sat lightly on him ; he had that magnificent air of youthful energy and strength which seemed to lift him above other men. I asked myself, was he taller, broader of build, richer in mind, than they ; or did he only seem so because of the wonderful spring of life that was in^him ? In any company one felt that he was the youngest, the one who could enjoy most keenly, feel most acutely — who had, in fact, the most vitality. I had first met him, at his kind wish, through M. £mile Michel, where indeed I afterwards met him again at lunch. Bright and brilliant were the men who had gathered round the distinguished host ; but I got the same vivid impression of a contrast between the young men who were old and the old man who was young. He possessed, in spite of years, the joy of life, inspired by the passion of his art." But even here there come the signs that Mrs. Pattison's judgment was never lost in admiration. "Not so great a master, in the ie MEMOIR scientific sense of the word, as the great master of all the living landscape men, Harpignies. Not always inspired, sometimes only gravely laborious and patient in endeavour, Fran^ais had his moments of divine fire." There follow notes of his last conversation with her, unfortunately too incomplete for use, in which he reminded her that he had worked under Corot, and was indeed one of " the men of 1830." When Mrs. Pattison reached home in 1881, after her return from her longest stay abroad, which had run on late into the spring, owing to unusually pro- longed visits to Rome and Paris, she worked hard in the practical business of obtaining candidates for membership of the branch of the Women's Trade Society at Oxford. She went round to the women working at the clothing factories and in other trades, and obtained their promises, and she afterwards prepared rules for their organization. Mrs. Nettle- ship writes, " The movement was entirely due to Mrs. Pattison's unflagging energy, and her great personal influence among the women, whom she visited in their homes, besides inviting them to her house. . . . The older members have never forgotten her, and still speak of her with great aff'ection." Allusion has already been made to the constant interest taken by Mrs. Pattison in the early steps in life of young girls, and her constant helpfulness to them, which many of them have recognized in recent letters. It was never exhibited with more pains- taking care than in this same year of 1881. It was in that year that she wrote from her little villa to her favourite niece a letter which is an admirable example of the trouble taken to help young girls in their difficulties, such as they continually, from about chat time to the end of her life, brought to her. LETTERS TO HER NIECE ^^ "Draguignan, January 7, 1881. "Dearest Gee, "... Read M. Renan's ' Souvenirs ' and you will see by what slow steps and with what struggles a mind which has really held convic- tions modifies or changes those convictions ; what years of earnest labour are involved in a real change of attitude towards beliefs which have been truly a part of our mental possessions ; what pro- found meditation is required before we can have a title to deny or to affirm. This is too grave and weighty a matter for me, dear Gee, to do more than call your attention to, but I know that you will at least enjoy the beautiful French of M. Renan and feel the attraction of a noble tone of thought. I am glad you are keeping up your Greek and Latin. . . . The work at making it out is in itself good, and will exercise your powers of concentration." She then offers to receive and correct the Latin, and to ask "the Rector to correct your Greek." A little later she takes the trouble, in an immense press of work and of social engagements in Rome, to write to the same young girl — "February ii, 1881. " My dearest Gertrude, " I am very glad to hear that you will have a week with the Rector. As to work, in so far as it means exercising your brains in acquiring know- ledge, it is the nourishment of thought. As to work in . . . what one can produce, it is a very trifle, and seems, compared to the sum of human activity, a worthless trifle. Yet the desire to do something is a natural, wholesome desire, and a stimulus towards the effort needed for the acquirement of knowledge valuable in itself — valuable, not as a means or tool for 7^ MEMOIR the doing of anything, but as putting us on a high step whence we can command a wider range of thought. " It must be many years before — on a question such as that of religious belief, which involves for its right apprehension by the intellect considerable dis- cipline of the mind in the field of metaphysical specu- lation — any one can form what you call 'opinions.* This need not discourage you, but only help you to bear the unsettled condition in which you turn from one set of crude positive opinions to another. What you ultimately may come to be able to see will depend on the efforts you may meanwhile be making towards the strengthening and disciplining of your own mind, — in the acquisition of knowledge and ordering of the knowledge you may acquire." When Mrs. Pattison was compelled by ill-health to be abroad, sometimes one of her nieces and sometimes one of Mark Pattison's nieces lived at Rector's Lodgings. A niece of hers, while keeping house at Lincoln College, had found herself deficient in some of the qualities needed. After practical advice, her aunt went on, " Don't you feel that one's body and one's heart and one's mind are the means whereby one lives, and that all three claim their proper amount of exercise and nourishment if they are not to perish ? " She protested against a statement which the niece had made, that as regarded the mind it was best to accept the conclusions of others "rather than to try for one's self" In the following year, a niece of hers, who was going to take a paid public post, commenced with Mrs. Pattison a correspondence that soon turned into a discussion as to the extent to which marriage should be the object of any woman's preparation for life. Mrs. Pattison did not strongly take either side, but insisted, as against certain popular views which had THE MARRIAGE QUESTION 79 been quoted to her, " that the woman is an individual, having claims and rights of her own and duties to herself, which she is under a moral responsibility to fulfil. . . . The problem has to be solved both by men and women . . . how to reconcile one's own claims and rights with respect due to the claims and rights of others. . . . The woman's first object should be to make herself in soul and mind and body the best which she sees the possibility of becoming. If she can marry in such a way as to satisfy the requirements of her own nature ; if she and the man she marries are drawn together, not only by love ; if they can also strive together after the same moral and intellectual ideal, then marriage is the greatest bliss that life can offer." The "marriage which is a matter of social convenience" is not "a state greatly to be preferred to that of single life : as a means of subsistence offered to a penniless woman I hold it to be utterly abhorrent. Let us even suppose marriage the object. Even those who say so would agree that it is not undesirable that the woman as well as the man should be a free agent in contracting it, and only a woman who knows that her daily bread is secure can be a free agent. These are the grounds on which I should urge all penniless girls to strive by work to make themselves independent." She then passed on to advise upon various forms of paid work. " Mean- while, learn, read, think, know, all you can : every- thing one can acquire is always a gain and finds a use ultimately in life." Mrs. Pattison was vexed when her young friends showed that they were trying to run before they could walk. To one who had been asking ques- tions which ought to have involved the correct apprehension of metaphysical terms, she wrote, in February, 1882, " I can only guess that you have been reading prematurely books you might have read with 8o MEMOIR profit ten years hence," after having "drudged" in order to obtain " the necessary mental training. The more one studies the growth of the highly com- plicated form of religion in which we have both been brought up . . . the more reverence one feels for the common bond it offers." Passing on to "the origin of its leading ideas," she adds, " On all this, however, I speak entirely as a lay critic. The Rector has most deeply studied the subject, and could help you with an authority I cannot pretend to." To one young correspondent Mrs. Pattison wrote on April 22, 1882, during the stress of work pre- liminary to the opening of the Paris Salon. This girl had expressed the widespread idea that active religion was most suitable to miserable lives. Mrs. Pattison, being in a hurry, compressed all this as follows : " As to the " comfortable and happy " not being religious, a wider experience of life will bring you face to face with many evidences to the contrary. You have yet to apprehend the most elementary facts about what is called 'religion' and the office it has fulfilled in the life and history of the human race." Other letters of some interest on similar subjects are dated from Lincoln College on July 3, 1882, and August 21, 1882. "One of the tests of whether we have rightly used our experience of life is to be found in the width and force of our sympathies for the lives and struggles of others, and in our consequent ability and readiness to help them." In the second letter she rebukes her correspondent, who, in reply to the words quoted above, had suggested that the sympathy was helpful chiefly by its assisting one's own mental comfort. After pointing to unselfish lives around, she went on to appeal to the test of self-examination. This, Mrs. Pattison thought, would generally, or at least " often, give a different answer to the one you put forward." LAST OXFORD YEARS 8i In this letter of August 21 she mentioned that she was starting on that day week from Oxford with the Rector. They were to cross on August 30, and she was then to go for a season to Royat, being once more threatened w^ith stiffening of the limbs. To Royat or to La Bourboule — sometimes to both — she was sent for many years. From Royat she wrote to the niece whose entrance upon salaried public service has been mentioned above, — " Surely it can't be im- possible for you to find the connection between your life in the sorrowful streets and the whole story of our national life. Your effort is puny by itself Taken in the mass of devotion, it is one of the fruitful services which are helping to make the England of the future." However busy Mrs. Pattison was, she always found time to read critical work that bore upon her own subjects. The relatives of a deceased editor have been good enough to send me letters dated from Lincoln College in December, 1882, and written when she was nursing the Rector in an illness which had begun in August. In these a minute point was dis- cussed : she had called the editor's attention to the employment of two different forms for the same thing, and he defended both. In her reply she made her case and ended, " But it was perhaps a piece of hyper- criticism such as Oxford is prone to indulge in, and the habit is as catching as the measles." Just as Cambridge men are apt to see certain superiorities in Oxford, so Mrs. Pattison, with her long Oxford train- ing, was always humble in her attitude towards the supposed exactitude of scholarship opposed by Cam- bridge to Oxford breadth. The year 1883 was, in spite of ill-health, as strenuous a year of work as had been 1881 and 1882. At the beginning of the year Mrs. Pattison was interested in the political topics which the composition of her M 82 MEMOIR Annual Register articles had made prominent in her mind. At an earher date she had written, " I look — if Gambetta's life holds out— for a very whole- some and gradual development of social reforms in a socialistic sense. A great deal more than hitherto will be provided for the member of societ}^ out of common funds produced by common effort, and the nation, like the family, will recognize the obligation of keeping its drones ; " but, she went on, " If Gam- betta dies, and he is not of good constitution . . ." On January 2, 1883, she wrote, " I feel very unhappy about Gambetta's death ; it is a grievous loss. I had written the last paragraph of 'France in 1882' some days ago in fear of it, or that at best there would be a long retirement before him. One could not but recognize that his was the only big personality of which the Republic could boast, and that as long as he was there people wouldn't be so likely in a panic to hunt in other camps for a saviour. . . . What a blank it makes in the prospect of France at this moment : personahty is the great force after all, not knowledge nor wisdom." In the winter of 1882-3 Mrs. Pattison had made an attempt to stay some time in Oxford, but she had broken down in January, 1883, ^^^ had been forced to go away again. In a letter from Draguignan, of 1883, which begins with the sketch of the villa and half its view, given here in facsimile, she writes to Mrs. Earle, " I do wish I could have you here, my dear Theresa. I am . . . free to think and work as I will, and with that have rest for my thoughts. You must not fancy one can ever take such a boon for granted. It is a con- stant reason for work and praise." Mrs. Pattison was at this moment, as is shown in a letter dated five days later, working at double speed, trying to finish her " Claude," and she soon broke down again under the 'Iliju, A-tJUi\\i}0 ~r facsimile: of a pen-and-ink sketch and part of a letter from MRS. PATTISON, dated MARCH 9, 1 883. [To /dec p. 82. MODERN ENGLISH ART S3 eflfort. In April she returned to Oxford, where she spent the greater portion of the year. No sooner had she reached England than the Rector of Lincoln also again fell ill. Mrs. Pattison's account in the Academy of the Burlington House Exhibition of 1883 seems to deserve notice. Reviewing English work as represented by Poynter, Tadema, Orchardson, Millais, Leighton, Watts, Holl, Fildes, Boughton, and Woolner, she discussed the whole system of teaching of the Royal Academy. The part of the article which dealt with sculpture is noteworthy, and in the conclusion de- veloped her chief art-doctrine as to the manner in which the art of each age must change its forms of expression in accordance with the changes in the moral thought of the world. "The aesthetic per- ceptions adjust themselves with sensitive instinct to find the means of translating" the new "moral aspect of things into corresponding aspects of colour and of form. However incomplete and offensive the works of the modern innovators of to-day may seem to us, with their dramas from the drawing-room and their 'tragedies' from the streets, however poor or absurd their methods of work may appear, we cannot ignore the fact that it is possibly to them that the future belongs." It is in this summer that I am inclined to date an account written by her of a visit of "The Brown- ing Society," which "came in force last night. ... It was very funny; a white-headed youth, name un- known, who first came in, fell on me with, ' I fear that you are not an admirer of our great poet.' I asked him how he came by the fear, upon which he retorted with, ' Had you appreciated Browning, I should have supposed that you would have become a member of this Society.' ... A lady then read a bit from ' Balaustion's Adventure,' and made a remark to which 84 MEMOIR no one responded ; she then tried a second, which she addressed to the Chairman, and which he received in dead silence. I turned to D M (Newdigate prizeman) and asked if the discussion was always as flat as this, to which he, ' I was just thinking that I had never been present at so brilliant a discussion since the foundation of the Society ; ' after this I subsided, and felt more than ever sure that I was not good enough for my company." The result of overwork and the struggle to remain in England was a return, at Oxford, at the beginning of October, of spinal neuralgia and nervous break- down. Injections of morphia administered for the spinal pain conduced probably to the facial paralysis and loss of power in the nerve of the eyes which for some time followed. Mrs. Pattison's letters of October and November, 1883, are written either in pencil or by another hand. On October 29, 1883, Mrs. Pattison wrote to a relative — "Rector's Lodgings, Lincoln College, Oxford. " This illness has been very serious. As soon as I can be moved, I am ordered to the South in charge of a nurse. The Rector is very ailing." A niece had arrived to take charge, but " I may not be able to start for about a fortnight." While Mrs. Pattison was abroad Eugene Miintz wrote her a long letter. After saying how unhappy he had been to see her condition, he went on, " May your quiet of mind be restored by quiet of body ! You are called by the precision of your research . . . you are called, I repeat, to exert the most salutary influence on art criticism. ... I treat as a public misfortune all that could suspend or hinder your original work. Let me say more : you have caused MARK PATTISON^S LAST DAYS 85 us Frenchmen to blush by raising to one [Claude] who is a glory of our nation that monument which he had not previously possessed." Mrs, Pattison was soon recalled, ill as she was, from the South, by the Rector's grave illness ; but the great scholar showed his superiority to suffering by many cheerful letters. One to Miss Tuckwell, the favourite niece, dated from Lincoln College, February 17, 1884, has the first page written by Mark Pattison, while the second and third are in Mrs. Pattison's hand, and the letter ends with a postscript by the Rector. Some of the statements in the letter are as critical as was frequent in the case of letters from Lincoln College ; for example the following, " Dean Burgon is a good creature, intensely narrow, full of faithful affection to Oxford." The pen in this part is that of Mrs. Pattison, but the letter is so constructed that it is not easy to be sure who is responsible for the opinion. In the long nursing of her husband during these years, while she was herself ill, Mrs. Pattison came nearer to a settled sadness of spirit than in any other portion of her life. One of the few letters of hers that I have seen which can be said to breathe a spirit of despondency is dated at this time. It contrasts an unhappiness which was " full of pity " with " the young- days under the horse chestnuts at South Kensington, when I loved and trusted life and every living soul, and all seemed to have some good gift for me ... If one life is to give way to the other, 1 feel sure it should be mine ; his is worth much more — it represents much more, of much greater value to the world than mine. I think he is the only truly learned man I know." On February 20, 1884, Mrs. Pattison wrote from "Rector's Lodgings" to Mr. Norman Maccoll, then editor of the Atheitceum, " I shall bring the Rector up to town on March 3. I will send you the address 86 MEMOIR as soon as it is certain. I am in treaty for 33, Gloucester Place . . . My eyes are still weak. ... It will be a long time before the nerves (it is not the sight) get strong again. ... I want all myself to keep going." Even at this moment, however, she tried to keep up her work, though it shows a notable falling off in quantity in 1884. On March 2 she wrote to Miintz a letter which is in the Bibliotheque Nationale, and says the doctors have stopped her newspaper work; and on April 16, that sometimes her courage is failing. During the visit to London, almost the only sign of a fresh art note is the criti- cism which afterwards produced an interesting letter from Watts — "May 6, 1884, " Little Holland House. "My dear Mrs. Mark, " Work done by professional men is, as a matter of course, done for money ; so that while the design in question is a genuine expression of feeling, there was also, behind, the idea, more or less con- scious, that it would enable me to get bread and butter and models and colours and other etceteras. But it is one of two or three which I hope may be hereafter among those things that the world knows as something more than moderately good paintings. I have had the extreme satisfaction of finding that it has power to touch, quite in the manner I wish, the kind of people I most desire to be in accord with, therefore I decide that I will not at present part with it, but go on endeavouring to perfect it, and indeed, if I can afford to do so, eventually leave it to the nation. I do not think you have seen the pendant design which I call ' Love and Life.' Love is leading Life, symbolized by a very youthful fragile female figure, up a rocky steep — up the acclivities of human conditions. WIDOWHOOD 87 I think you will like the design. I am sorry to hear so bad an account of you and of the Rector. " Yours affectionately, " SiGNOR." Sadness continued to be the note of all the letters of this winter and spring that I have seen, including one which rebuked a friendly correspondent who wanted Mrs. Pattison to pay greater attention to her own health, and who had unfortunately committed the unpardonable offence of alluding to "Middle- march : " I am all he has to look to . . . I purposely never read it, but to judge by what you tell me, and what I have heard from all, Mr. Casaubon was much more to be pitied than Dorothea." In May she was sent away for three days by the medical adviser of the Pattisons, and spent them at the house of Mrs. Earle, returning at once to Yorkshire, where the Rector of Lincoln was suffering greatly, but retaining his courage sufficiently to write a joint letter with Mrs. Pattison, as late as June 21, to Eugene Muntz. Mark Pattison died at the end of July, and after the funeral, his widow remained for a time in York- shire, where he had been buried with his people in accordance with minute directions given by him to her. From Harrogate Mrs. Pattison wrote to a dear friend of the Rector's about herself and another watcher, "She and I both want absolute quiet, and my head is very weak from the incessant watching of the last six weeks, after all that went before. ' Three weeks later she wrote from Harrogate to another friend, " My eyes have suffered again, and I do nothing now but live by rule and drive for hours in the hills." She wrote that she was going to leave, and had taken a house on the " top of Headington Hill . . . Mrs. Grant Duff proposes my going out to them later, and that is what I should SS MEMOIR like to do next spring, if I am forced to miss my south of France." In September Mrs. Pattison took from Lincoln College to her new home, Headington Lodge, near Oxford, those of her own things which she afterwards placed at Pyrford, where she died. It was in this year that she made an attempt to found a Drawing Scholarship for women at the Royal Academy, under conditions which her own master, Mulready, had, many years previously, sug- gested to her. After a correspondence, they were found unacceptable by the President. In leaving Oxford Mrs. Pattison lost sight of some old acquaintances. Many were before long removed by death, but some of the friendships she had made at Oxford were destined to last to the end of her life. One of the warmest was that with Mr. J. R. Thursfield, which had begun in 1864, and had grown into close intimacy when his mother came to live with him in Oxford in 1868. Mr. Frank Pattison, brother of the Rector of Lincoln, and Mr. Thursfield, were two of the three who rendered her the most assistance in revising, as she did while at Headington, the volume which contains the earlier part of the memoirs of Mark Pattison. To my friend Mr. Thursfield and to Mr. Frank Pattison I have to express my warm thanks for assistance received by me from them in the preparation of this Memoir. In the spring of 1885, though nothing was to be settled until July or August, we began to look forward to the possibility of happiness together. Late in February Mrs. Pattison left Headington for India, and up to June wrote to me from India that there could be no definite promise and "no tie" ; but there was enough, at all events on my part, to enable me to make some preparatory announcement to one friend and political colleague, while she had made a less definite expres- sion of her feeling to four others. My friend replied SECOND MARRIAGE 89 to her, his letter beginning, " Dilke has told me his great secret." I find with his letter a pencil note of her reply, in which she said that she was proud that he should be really glad at what he called the prospect of happiness which was opening for me. While she was in India in the hills, during the hot weather of 1885, the date of our wedding was fixed for the last week of October. In the Madras hills she was at- tacked by typhoid fever, and her recovery was not complete at a moment when her affection for me caused her to make the public announcement of our engagement. By the circumstances of our marriage, our lives became so closely joined together that, were I to write of her from this point as I have been writing hitherto, I should be telling my own story under guise of telling hers. Our lives were too much one life for it to be possible for me to record it. References to her work are possible, but other matters are too sacred. The day of our wedding was the only day of her life which she asked those we thought likely to survive her to commemorate when death should come. From the wedding-day, too, she wore, no doubt under a secret vow, an emblem chosen by me for her at her wish, which was beside her nineteen years afterwards when she died. Letters came to her at this time, and during the year, which showed how many there were who understood something of her true nature. Among them there was one, from a stranger, so expressive of what my wife intended her life to mean, that she kept it before her to the end. It had something to do with the inspiration of the last little book which will be found next to this memoir, in the present volume. # 90 MEMOIR Lady Dilke's first considerable publication after our marriage — the first of all, indeed, that bore her new name, with the exception of one or two articles in the Fortnightly on the " Consolidation of France," which were part of her work towards the book of 1888, "Art in the Modern State" — was "The Shrine of Death" (1886). Some of the most competent of the admirers of her writings on French art are surprised, and almost indignant, that she preferred her tales, and valued more highly the appreciative criticism which they called forth than the praise lavished on her art volumes. Three things lived inside her own copy of her first book of fantastic stories — the letters of Pater and of Theodore Watts-Dunton, and an unfavourable report from the " taster " of a PYench publisher on the translation which a French admirer, at great expenditure of time and pains, had made.* Pater differed from some of the newspaper critics, who thought the stories overwrought, and wrote that to him their charm was that " the intellectual weight of purpose displayed in" what was to her "a new line of literature, was lightened by simplicity and ease." Mr. Watts-Dunton wrote : " As to the form, there is no doubt that you have a real sympathy with the * Some of the stories appeared in foreign newspapers and maga- zines in translation at later dates. For example, " The Crimson Scarf," published in "The Shrine of Death," appeared, I find, under the title " L'echarpe pourpre," in French, five years later, and there are traces of the publication of several others, but not of the dates or places. It had been my wish to append to this memoir a bibliography, which would have shown in striking form how vast was her production of work. It was found impossible to overcome the difficulties caused by Lady Dilke having failed to keep a full list of her contributions to the Annual Register and the Reviews. ^^THE SHRINE OF DEATH ^^ 91 old cadenced prose which has almost dropped out of our language. Some of your sentences I think very lovely. The only danger in this kind of work is that of pushing the imitation too far and passing into mimicry. In all imaginative literature there should be convincement, and the moment that the air of sincerity is disturbed by manifest exercise of mimic art, convincement dies a natural death. The great master of the art of drawing from antique forms all that can be drawn from them without passing into mimicry, is Coleridge in ' Christabel.' There are a few locutions of yours which struck me as too self- conscious in the imitative way." Those who were daily with Lady Dilke when she was writing stories know that the idea of imitating style was hateful to her, and conscious imitation impossible in her mode of work. But the air of imitation is as much to be avoided as the fact, and from that point of view Mr. Watts-Dunton's criticism was taken to heart when later stories — such as two which I have included in this volume — were written. Since her death Mr. Watts-Dunton has further written to me: "Among the authoresses of our time she held a place that was really unique. She had rare genius, and a personality, of which her work, good as it is, is a most inadequate expression. And then, besides this, her goodness of heart, her untiring bene- volence to people whose only claim upon her was that they needed succour, touched me very deeply, and excited a special admiration of her; for qualities of this kind are not supposed to be frequently associated with the artistic temper." One of the closest of the criticisms on " The Shrine of Death " was contained in a letter from Madame Renan. Writing from the College de France, at the end of 1886, Madame Renan said: "Vous savez que je suis de celles qui ressentent le plus la grace et le 92 MEMOIR charme qui sont en vous. . . . Le don poetique, celui de rendre dans une langue si pure et si harmonieuse des impressions de I'ordre le plus eleve, m'abeaucoup frappee dans cette serie d'histoires ou Tame vit avec une intensite merveilleuse. 'A Vision of Learning' a un sens tres profond. 'The Serpent's Head' est un terrible drame dont la realite fait frissonner." In two pages of preface to the second volume of stories, published under the title "The Shrine of Love," in 1891, Lady Dilke alluded to the nature of the effect produced, in 1886, by "The Shrine of Death." She did not, however, explain what those who saw most of her well know, that she wrote her stories to lay ghosts. When some unpleasant tale began to haunt her, she used to tell us the nature of this " moral hallucination," and to say, " I shan't sleep until I have made a story of it." When the story had been told by her and then written down, that particular night- mare had been killed. In the preface of " The Shrine of Love " she plea- santly complained that her readers seemed to suffer from " the belief that the sadder stories were but a dim and partial revelation of some hidden and myste- rious intent ;" each was, she admitted, a record of the essential facts of some situation which she had known in real life. The critics did not discover that some of the illustrations were her own. The symbolic cross prefixed to " The Shrine of Death " has a background, representing Frejus as seen from the Roman amphi- theatre, while in the other volume the cut prefixed to " The Outcast Spirit " is again my wife's, and repre- sents the view from the garden in which stood her little house at Grasse. A better reproduction from her original sketch is here * introduced. Had the critics unearthed these " suggestive facts," they would have been more than ever certain that the stories * See p. 51. ORIGIN OF HER STORIES 93 were related of, instead of being merely drawn from, personal experience. "A Vision of Learning" un- doubtedly contained some passing knocks at Oxford ; but in the other stories it was only landscape which was local, and the themes were invariably suggested by outside events : the tragedy, for example, related in " The Physician's Wife " was a real one, of which I possess the exact record, and was drawn from a foreign country. "The Triumph of the Cross," in the second volume, was a fanciful treatment of what might have happened when the Saracens were in the Pro- vencal "Mountains of the Moors." "The Crimson Scarf" dealt with the Moors in Spain, and " The Hangman's Daughter " — afterwards illustrated by Mr. Strang's etchings — with that tragedy of the starvation of the Protestants during the siege of La Rochelle, which, all through her life, had impressed the imagi- nation of Lady Dilke. I have a letter, happy throughout its length, dated in the middle of March, 1885, when Mrs. Pattison was on her journey to India — her return from which was to be the prelude to our wedding. It relates the com- position of one of the saddest of all the stories in "The Shrine of Death." After writing it in Paris on her w^ay, she had described it in a letter, to which 1 had replied with playful expressions of sincere hope that it would not prove so " lugubrious " as she said. She answered with words of deprecation : " I am afraid the new story is the most unhappy of all ; but there are things in it which I think you will like." She always maintained, as has already been suggested, that the writing of sad stories formed a safety-valve, and allowed, in fact, her happy nature to have, as a rule, full play. The stories which follow her "Book on the Spiritual Life " in the present volume are two out of three finished ones, which, with two others not completed 94 MEMOIR and five sketches and plans of stories, were pre- parations for a book. The third, which I have not printed, as others like it less than she did, affords, nevertheless, a curious example of the way in which these stories came to be born. During a whole winter my wife was annoyed, in her working-room at Pyrford Rough, which adjoined my own, by a tapping on a window-pane by tier side, supposed to be caused by a large, hard leaf of Irish ivy. She came several times into my room to tell me that the leaf had been troub- lingher again. I made the natural prosaic man's sugges- tion, that I should cut it ; but this she would not allow, because she said she would utilize it in a story, and unless she " let it tap " the story would not be written ; it must be suffered to worry her into writing. She duly wrote the story and laid the ghost, and then the tapping, which continued, no longer mattered to her in the least ; she had " done with it." The offending leaf, however, was glorified in the story, of which it became the hero. It saved the lovers, brought the girl from among her people to the spot where the man lay suffering, and died unrewarded and forgotten. The composition of the stories, to which Lady Dilke stoutly refused to give the name of work, in- volved a curious double concentration. Of all persons that I have met, she exceeded any in power of con- centration of thought upon the object which occupied her at the moment, whether it was work or play. When she was engaged upon what most people would call imaginative work, such as the construction in her mind, without pen or pencil, of a fantastic story like "The Mirror of the Soul," which is given here, she did not sit in her own room, as she did for her ordinary studies, but sat with me. Silently she would work with her hands at the restoration of a binding or of a torn page of a Lyons early-printed edition, or at drawing in decorative design, or at adapting HAPPINESS OF DISPOSITION 95 historic costume to her own dress, for which sketches were invariably made ; and a double absorption took place at the same time — in the imaginative story and in the work of the hand. There is one observation of some importance in its bearing upon character which must be made in con- nection with the stories. They are fantastic ; but they are mostly sad — not only those of "The Shrine of Death," but even those of "The Shrine of Love." So, too, are those which are printed in this volume ; printed only because, as an eminent critic writes, "they are too good to go unprinted." They are not her message which she intended to be given : that message, meant for posthumous publication in her " Book of the Spiritual Life," is not blighted— as are many of her stories about others — by the note of sad- ness, but tells of triumph in the heroic accomplishment of purpose. Lady Dilke, at the very moment when she thought that nothing but happiness lay before her, had been called upon to undergo, for a time, the most poignant suffering of her life, because suffering entirely in and for another. She always maintained, however, that, with the exception of a few years of undue strain already mentioned, hers had been, and was, a most happy life, and laughed at those reviewers of " The Shrine of Death" who insisted that she had become "gloomy-minded." Moral suffering was borne by her as a rule with the same cheerfulness of spirit as was the torture she suffered for fifteen years from arthritic gout. From this physical pain she was set free by the changes caused by the typhoid fever of 1885, although that in turn left consequences from which, nineteen years later, she died. I cannot trust myself to write much of this last period ; but, in order to prevent a mistaken impression of gloominess arising from her tales, I give a few words from those who 96 MEMOIR last heard her tell, three days before her death, of what she termed nineteen years of "unbroken happi- ness." One of them, in sending me an account of the conversation, suggests the very perplexit}^ in v^hich I had already found myself: " How difficult it is to give the impression of her — the wit and gaiety, as well as the depth!" The distinguishing feature of Lady Dilke, in the opinion of all who saw her, was, indeed, her constant gaiety of spirit. Eleanor Smith had written to me, on August i8, 1885, "You must remember-what a different temperament hers is to yours — much more elastic. So long as she is not touched in her deepest con- fidence and affection, she rises, like an indiarubber ball, in the face of trouble." She not only gave con- fidence fully, or, upon proof that it was not merited, withdrew it once for all, but she also inspired confidence in all about her. The result was a double gaiety : her own and that which her confidence evoked around her. It would be interesting to hear the views of her Paris friends, who, in later years, had seen her at her best, on the supposed sadness of her spirit. Men like M. Bonnat in the world of art, or any of her deeply attached private friends, who had never read her sad stories, would be amazed at the attribution to her of gloominess of mind. The impression of bril- liant gaiety was the first which she invariably made, at all events in Paris, on those who had not met her before. One night, at a dinner given in her honour at Christmas, 1903, the lady whom I took in, and whom I had not previously known, said suddenly, but very sweetly to me, " Vous devez bien vous amuser, Monsieur, tous les jours chez vous." Many a similar appreciation of her light-heartedness was addressed to us whenever we went into French society. On a different occasion, I remember, almost the identical words were used by an Academician DUG D^AUMALE 97 whom I was sitting near at a dinner given for Lady Dilke to meet some of her old friends of the Academic des Beaux Arts. It is certain that, in the opinion of the best French talkers of the day, she held her own and shone in those circles of the Parisian world in which conversation is still practised as a fine art. Our first visits to Chantilly together had been serious, and are recorded in full notes of the pictures, especially those of the nineteenth century, headed " Ingres," " Decamps," " Delacroix," and " Fromentin " ; but from the date of the Due d'Aumale's first direct letter to Lady Dilke (September 25, 1895), asking us to spend a whole day in going through the books, the relations became of the pleasantest kind. I find in a letter from Lady Dilke to an intimate friend her impression of the first long morning which we spent at Chantilly with the Duke himself: "He knows about his books — and enjoys showing them." The charm, however, of these repeated visits of 1895 and 1896 lay in the fact that books and drawings alike excited historic memory in both the well-filled minds. We used to be with him, as a rule, for four or five hours on each occasion, and during the whole time the sparkle of the conversation never failed. The greatest of the charms of the Due d'Aumale was his store of anecdote, which had come to him through his family, and especially direct from the eighteenth-century Court through his father, who. in the last days, had been, as a boy, one of its ornaments. Those who knew the Due d'Aumale at other people's houses never saw him at his best, for it was the treasures which he had gathered round him in the home of the Condes which alone called forth that biographic his- tory in which he excelled. In 1895 and 1896 we were with the Due d'Aumale at the arrival of the post which brought the mass of his Christmas cards and tele- grams, and as they were opened for him, and the o 98 MEMOIR names announced, whilst we were sitting in the library with the books and drawings, he would break into family anecdote at almost every name. So soon as the anecdotes acquired enough antiquity to become historical, the stores of knowledge were illuminated by wit. At the beginning of May, 1897, the sudden death of the Duke drew forth a little article on him by Lady Dilke. In spite of the sadness of the cir- cumstances of his death, which caused a deep note of pathos in portions of the obituary, the greater part of it is, nevertheless, in the brightest note, inasmuch as it recalled the brightness of their talks. ^ One of Lady Dilke's best friends in France, Madame Emile Ollivier, wrote, May 30, 1897, that she had shown this obituary notice to that old friend of the Due d'Aumale, the Princesse Mathilde (the daughter of Jerome, King of Westphalia), Napoleon's last surviv- ing niece. " Chere amie : Je voulais voir la Princesse avant de vous dire combien j'aime votre article, qui est ce que j'ai lu de meilleur, comme sentiment et comme interet, sur le due d'Aumale. Son Altesse en a juge tout a fait comme moi et me charge de vous dire tous ses remerciments pour votre souvenir et votre sympathie, qui I'ont bien touchee." Madame Ollivier went on to write of the losses which she and Lady Dilke had sustained by that fire at the Charity Bazaar which had indirectly caused the Due d'Aumale's death, through that of the Duchesse d'Alengon, his favourite niece. Another of my wife's dearest friends in France, the Marquise de Sassenay, had escaped, but several of her relations who were with her had died a dreadful death. Lady Dilke used to amuse children and myself — rarely others — by comic work, of which she never but once published any specimen, and that only at my most earnest solicitation. By my strenuous persua- sion a cat story, of excellent humour, written for my HER LIGHT-HEARTED NATURE 99 amusement, was published in 1890 in one of the maga- zines. Even this, however, had a fantastic ending. As a favourable, but puzzled reviewer in one of the news- papers said of the hero, " A psychic mystery is involved in the end of its life, or rather the termination of one of the phases of its existence." The story had also a double meaning, perhaps even a treble meaning, like "The Mirror of the Soul" — a parable with its second interpretation obvious, but contradicted by the title, while the third meaning is to be mastered only by that key. 1 may perhaps, at this distance of time, let out the secret that we omitted in publication an introduction which began, " I once had a cat that talked. Its grandmother had been in the family of the editor of the Spectator." As it is necessary to give here a true picture, I have asked some of Lady Dilke's closest friends how they would describe what I called the "dancing side" of her nature which we knew so well — her habit of chaffing herself, her work, and me ; her constant play- fulness of mind, kept for home, for children, or for her intimate friends. One of the latter reminds me that Lady Dilke once said, when they were half exhausted with fatigue, " Perhaps, after all, we are making the comfortable uncomfortable without making the uncom- fortable any more comfortable." Another answers, " Her capacity for absolute abandonment to pure animal spirits and childish gaiety gave her the power she undoubtedly possessed over all young people, and in England it was only they who knew this side of her — like the sixteen-year-old American girl cousin, who commented on having passed a week alone with her and never having been dull for a moment. In the ' grown-up ' world this side of her was best known to French friends, for in England we do not understand an attitude which she was able to assume with her foreign tongues." loo MEMOIR Those, indeed, who are familiar with several lan- guages, learn instinctively to take the natural manners of the people who are for the moment their com- panions in the world. So it was with Lady Dilke, when she had been for a few days in any country. One faculty possessed by those who are accustomed to speak rather than write foreign tongues was as wanting in her as was tune in her singing, or metrical skill in her poetry — she was wholly unable (on account, I think, of her great concentration) to pass from one language easily to another, and the attempt would cost her absurd mistakes in English as in other tongues. In Paris she was French, with suffi- cient difference to give distinction ; but to translate bright French conversation into English is impossible. Lady Dilke knew better than to make any such attempt. Hence, on this side the Channel, a reserve, which, if not explained, would be added to the sad note of the written stories, and produce a one-sided, if not a false estimate of her nature. Another of her friends writes, '' She had an extra- ordinary attraction for children and for animals, due, I think, as much to the intense power of concen- tration, which enabled her to project herself, when she chose, into the existence of her companion, as to her intense vitality. Instinctively, and without effort, she became the equal of tiny playmates, and won the hearts of little boys, so that when nursery tea was over the door was blocked by their 'arms to prevent her exit. In another case we saw her, to the amazement of the mother, who never previously knew her daughter expansive to a stranger, wander off hand-in-hand, exchanging flowers with a mite of six years old, as grave and round-eyed as the reticent little child herself All animals greeted her as a natural ally and playmate." Our fox-terrier, " Fafner," knew her in her gayest vein, and loved her beyond GREECE loi any other friend, even to this day pursuing with enthusiasm, till close approach brings crestfallen dis- appointment, every distant woman's figure on the roads near Pyrford, in the hope that his beloved mistress has returned at last. Her relations with animals — close in the case of her horses, for, when health would allow, she was an enthusiastic horsewoman — had, however, their sadder side. " Fafner " had had a much-loved father, the dog of our first Pyrford year, of the winter of 1885. My wife had been forced to strike him once for being, in old age, dangerously jealous of his young son. She used to tell me that she could never forgive herself for having done so. Daily she would visit his grave to censure herself for having hurt the old dog's heart. All letters coming to me as I pen this memoir strike this same note, for they are the letters of the intimate friends to whom the happier side of her nature stood revealed. I had written the last sen- tence when there reached me one from Mrs. W. P. Reeves, wife of the Agent-General of New Zealand, and an active member of the Women's Trade Union League : " When I think about her, what I remember is, how happy she was, with all her lovely fun mixed up with her hard, hard work. The thought of her cannot make one sad, but only fonder." Let those, then, who read the fantastic stories remember that in them the sadness of life was written off and laid aside, in order that the joy of life might reign, and life itself be directed to the ends fitly closed by her book that follows. In 1887 we visited Greece and the eastern Mediter- ranean. Between this tour and a visit which we paid to India, late in 1888, Lady Dilke prepared for the press her book on "Art in the Modern State," wrote most of the stories for " The Shrine of Love," as well as some articles for the Fortnightly Review, I02 MEMOIR and continued her survey of German art studies in the annual notices of the "Jahrbuch." Her private notebooks of 1887 are very full, and deal with subjects of much diversity, almost all, however, connected by what may be called a religious bond. Her first entry in the notebook of this time is merely headed " Details, and the Whole," but it is, in fact, a private essay on the effect of mere biography in drawing away the mind from the speculative questions which must be worked out before any basis can be arrived at for historical treatment of a period. The illus- trations which she chose for herself to prove how indispensable political and religious history is to a thorough understanding even of the arts of an}^ time, show this tone, for she traces in the French painters, poets, and playwrights of the seventeenth century, the influence of the ideas of Pascal, and of the Arnaulds, or school of Port Royal. In notes on art administration she turned again, towards the end, to the same theory. " The revolution to correct the seventeenth-century reaction, by which the Renaissance had been turned against itself, is now : it is the duty of all of us to take part in it. It may be pleasant to say with Lucretius — ' ... nil dulcius est, bene quam munita tenere Edita doctrina sapientum templa serena ' ; but all are called upon to aid. When we see the loss of moral temperament which the classical attitude involves one must say, ' This man decided not to be, but only to know.' To experience all things properly involves, however, knowing all things. Short of that, is the contemplative life more perfect than the prac- tical ? Either by itself is but a half-life, and the ideal must be placed in the satisfaction of all the energies." Next comes in this same crowded notebook _ the history of the development of herself, ultimately given INNER LIFE 103 in the article on "The Idealist Movement and Posi- tive Science : an Experience." This led up, in the notebook, to the first sketch of the final book here given, called by her "The Book of the Spiritual Life." It began with a study of the effect upon her of a return to the long service of Good Friday, and ended with the notes which were afterwards to be enlarged into the posthumous book. Alongside of these were notes on subjects seemingly different, but always brought into harmony with one another, and with her whole life, by the development of the same doctrine of duty. For example, when she wrote on Wesley, on account of his connection with Lincoln College, Lady Dilke brought round the story of his career to these words : " It is indeed only when the spiritual life has become in some shape or other a part of our own nature that we are able to appreciate all worldly good, riches, success, and authority, at their true value, as being what we may call things external, and, however desirable, yet not capable of giving that secret strength and satisfaction which we derive from any advance in holiness. Wherever men see a living manifestation of this strength, there we always find them ready to acknowledge a kingship, a right to bear sway over the wills and the affections of others." In the jumble of the notebook, ideas for addresses to women on the formation of their unions come between "Wesley" and jottings of "discussions with Cardinal Manning" about his books; but the bond of union may be discovered even in these cases. Lady Dilke quotes the statement that " Women do not care for causes but only for persons," and replies, " It is well to care for persons if you care for the right things in them. In loving what is right and beautiful in others, we come near to being right and beautiful ourselves." Between the entry "Leo XIII., — St. Thomas Aquinas," and another theological bit — also I04 MEMOIR part of the controversy with Manning — I find what seems to me an equally interesting note, intended for an address to students at an art college: "The high aim, the careful study, the strenuous effort and the sustained labour are a training for victor and van- quished alike." As a natural consequence of my preference for my wife's creative work over her labours of research, I pressed her, as our days grew shorter, to do that which few can do, rather than that which was the result of sustained effort. Lady Dilke always main- tained, on the contrary, that the wide view of art which, with her long years of work behind her, she could form and develop, had more claim on her best hours. The rest must be taken as it came— jotted down when she was in the humour. After the publication, however, of the four volumes on the eighteenth century, she recognized, in 1903, that she should never be able to undertake so considerable a task again, " Now," she said, " I shall be able to do more of the things you like." I liked them all, but, in saying so, gave the turn of the scale in favour of my own opinion, by pointing out that research meant hours of separation, while in contemplative study she was better able to be with those she loved. The discussion with Manning was one into which Lady Dilke was led rather by admiration for his personal charm than by reason of his authority as a theologian. She had seen a good deal of the Cardinal in connection with her trade-union work, concerning which there had been a rumour of re- sistance on the part of some of those with whom he had much influence. Their objection — if it existed — he removed, and he co-operated actively with Lady Dilke in her trade-union work during the last years of his life. Discussions on her earlier Puseyism, later Positivism, and, lastly, her opinions at the time, CARDINAL MANNING 105 followed, and in May, 1887, Cardinal Manning gave her, and asked her to read, his book of 1865 on " The Temporal Mission of the Holy Ghost." She did so, but, after reading, she proceeded to write on the considerations which it aroused in her mind. These exhibit rather the fighting attitude of Lady Dilke than the " Universalism," to use an American term, which she really taught. There was no possibility of agreement on theological questions between two minds so variously constituted as Manning's and my wife's. After contrasting his position with that of St. Thomas Aquinas, who, though quoted by Leo XIII. in an " Encyclical," had not, she showed, really main- tained the same teaching, she summed up in her notebook the logical claim of the Church "over education, over the Press, over life and property, over law " : this she naturally rejected. When the Cardinal died, Lady Dilke wrote an interesting letter to one of his biographers. In dealing with the action of the Cardinal towards the dockers' strike, she jotted down some notes on " the image of the Cardinal's being and doing, in what I think was perhaps the most complete episode in his life. It is the one passage in which we find his immense gift of human sympathy fulfilling itself, uncontradicted by the conditions of the work he had in hand. . . . His first movement was always noble, but it was unreasoning, and he had a painful distrust of 'unreasoned' impulse. His reason was keen, and appreciated at their highest value all the maxims of worldly experience. Sometimes it was as if — in fear of being overcome by his own emotions — he took refuge in the calculation of pure worldly wisdom — in its first expression almost cynical, but always finally clothed in language of a high morality. If his impulses took him counter to strong social prejudices, he instinctively shrank before them." io6 MEMOIR Manning's anguish at human suffering, she said, was developed " in a degree that I have known in hardly any other man. I have heard him speak with a sound in his voice and a light in his eyes which meant depth of restrained passion. * Give all your- self to London ; it is the abomination of desolation.' ' No one knows the depth of the sufferings of women, save the doctor or the priest.' That he was so pained by your pain was the chief of his powers. He never could have been a great doctor of the Church, — a great theologian, — for his metaphysics were of the weakest; but his brilliant understanding and un- rivalled practical instinct, couf)led with this passionate capacity for feeling, made him one of the striking personalities I have known." On the other hand. Lady Dilke noted at the same time, not only that it was true, as had been written, that when he interfered in the dockers' strike he knew little as to the rights of the struggle, but even that "he never came to a clear idea of the broad issues of trade unionism, although he put his name on our committee in 1887, in order, he said, to strengthen my hands in dealing with his girls." With the exception that he wrote once to her in congratulation on my acceptance of the candidature for Dean Forest, in 1891, the Cardinal did not corre- spond with Lady Dilke directly, so far as 1 know, after 1888; but in the great number of letters which he wrote to me about various matters, between February, 1889, and February, 1891, there is always a message for his metaphysical antagonist, and often very touching words intended for her, though generally in the form "you both." When Manning died, his niece, who was a member of the Women's Trade Union League, in writing to Lady Dilke, conveyed to her, in Manning's latest words, his appreciation of her " very great work " for women. INDIA 107 Our Indian journey produced the publication, in the Fortnightly Reviciv, by Lady Dilke, of an article on the missionaries in India as observed by her in her two visits. The actual cause of the article was a con- tribution by Canon Taylor to the number (October, 1888) of the Fortnightly Revieiv which had appeared immediately before we started. In her article Lady Dilke incidentally described her visit to the Golden Temple at Amritsar, in a little passage which is one of her best, and of which an echo will be found in her " Book of the Spiritual Life " contained in this volume. Lady Dilke was attacked by a writer in the Methodist Times because she stated that a missionary and his wife who visited this temple with her had carefully complied with the customary signs of reverence. On this she noted for herself, "To follow contrary courses would be to provoke an Indian rising. Would that advance the causes which my critic had at heart? Apparently he did not shrink even from this awful consequence, . , . ' Christ came not to bring peace but a sword.' " Along with the general notebook, which contains, as has been said, some labour notes. Lady Dilke has left also a women's trade-union notebook in her hand- writing, not held secret like the other, but invariably placed at the disposal of those who worked with her. It was, I believe, familiar to her dear friend and secre- tary, Miss May Abraham, up to the time when that lady was appointed an Assistant Commissioner under the Labour Commission, and, then, an Inspector under the Home Office. It has also been used by my wife's niece, Miss Gertrude Tuckwell, since she took over the duties of Miss Abraham. In these notes there were laid down those principles of dealing with the labour of women working with their hands which have been universally endorsed by all who received them from her. The action of the Women's io8 MEMOIR Trade Union League in later times has in some respects differed from the teaching of the leading members of its committee in its earliest days under its first name ; but the gradual development which has led to close union with the great organizations of men-workers is one which was inevitable from the first. The triumphant success of the Lancashire organization of men and women workers in a single body was the example which has been thus fruitful. In her labour notebooks, Lady Dilke first took up the case of women in unskilled trades. Avoiding a sensationalism which was repulsive to her trained mind, she pointed out that from the dangerous trades, such as those of the white-lead workers and the match- makers, arose the call to all who valued womanhood to take their share in the improvement of conditions. It was impossible " to sit idly by . , . whilst the anguish of our working sisters and their little ones lifts its voice to Heaven. . . . They are crying to us for their redemption. The seal of death is on their lips." Our first long parting after our marriage — indeed, the longest which we ever knew — was during the Indian journey in November, 1888, when, after we had travelled from Karachi to Quetta with the Comman- der-in-Chief, she left me to complete with him his cold-weather tour along the frontier, while she went to Simla to stay with Lady Roberts until we could meet again at Lahore. In the autumn of 1889 there came another parting, which was to be annual from that year. She attended the Trade Congress, and finding that she could be useful there to the cause which she had at heart, she decided to go each year, and in this way to meet those labour leaders who in- cluded women in their unions. For sixteen years she regularly attended the Trade Congress in Sep- tember, up to and including September, 1904 — the TRADE CONGRESS 109 month before her death. As we were almost always together, it is only of Trade Congress week each year that I have Lady Dilke's letters to myself— letters which show that the doctrines of the notebook were well taught, and that the effect produced was that which has been described by Miss Constance Hinton Smith, of the Christian Social Union, and other writers who penned obituary notices of Lady Dilke for the Women's Trade Union Review. In September, 1889, during her visit on this work to Scotland, I had gone to Germany to pay a long-promised visit to Prince Bismarck, still at that time Chancellor, at Friedrichs- ruh. Lady Dilke was ill ; the strain of having to speak in public was always beyond her strength, but she never allowed her suffering to interfere with what she knew was a necessary effort. After her first public meetings at Dundee and elsewhere, she wrote, " The Scotch seem to be a madly enthusiastic people." To judge by the accounts of her speeches in the Scotch papers, it was their power and her charm which pro- duced the enthusiasm that so surprised her. A spectator at one of her meetings wrote as follows : — " Lady Dilke's success in Dundee in touching the hearts of the women of the people was remarkable. The mill lasses trooped to the platform at the con- clusion of a meeting to shake hands with her; they crowded round her to pour their uncouth blessings on her head ; and many toil-worn faces softened and old eyes filled with tears at some heart-touching incident or moving appeal sent home by the magic of a sweet womanly voice winged with earnestness." Lady Dilke's voice was of singular beauty, and re- mained throughout life unchanged in softness and in volume. Her writing was seldom simple, but her speech rested for its effect on simplicity and on charm of voice and utterance. In the spring of 1890 Lady Dilke went to no MEMOIR Newcastle to speak on the white-lead trade, and in this matter, as in that of the match-making industry, her efforts achieved complete success. At Newcastle she was able to quote one of her earliest speeches at Oxford, when she had said, " I look forward to the day when a union shall be the paramount authority in its trade, — able, indeed, to command but willing to help, to educate, to hold enlightened councils, to teach the laws of society and nature, ... to husband the magnificent forces of our workers, women and men." She now pointed to the work that had already been accomplished in fourteen years. At Newcastle she was in the constituency of her lifelong friend Mr. John Morley, who had succeeded my brother in its representation. He was said to have expressed a doubt as to the wisdom of fighting against the inexorable laws of political economy. Lady Dilke pointed out the inapplicability of those " laws," as usually taught, to the situation in the dangerous trades. After describing how things still were at that moment — now happily so no longer — at Newcastle and at Sheffield, she went on, " There are those who tell us that these evils are not for us to touch, that our attempts to hinder them are quackery. . . . If we are indeed to 'leave them' . . . we leave them to be dealt with by a Higher Power at the last — they are left even to the just judgment of God." She appealed to the women : " It is a sacred call. Listen, I beseech you, if not for yourselves, for the sake of your husbands, your children, the little ones yet un- born. You love your babies. Do you wish them to suffer as you have done ? If not, then remember organization is salvation. Stand forth and do battle in the ranks of labour, along with the men who are stretching out their hands to you." During this tour Lady Dilke was criticized by a powerful newspaper, to which she replied, in a letter WOMEN^S TRADE UNIONS m dated from Glasgow on March 8, 1890: "Nothing could be so foreign to my sympathies as to engage in any 'operations' which might tend to a 'war of supremacy between the sexes.' I am of the old- fashioned belief that the ideal place for a woman is her home ; that while the man goes forth to work, her task should be the making of that home holy and blessed to all that dwell with her. But our women to-day must stand to be hired ; we can't stop their working, so it seems to me that, in answer to the men's appeal, it is our duty to see that our sisters work with as much benefit to themselves and as little injury to others as possible." The most difficult piece of management which Lady Dilke had to undertake in connection with her trade-union work was at Belfast, in 1893 and other years. She wrote to me from Belfast on September II, 1893, telling me that we must both be prepared for " further sacrifice," meaning postponement of the date of meeting again at our Pyrford home. " I fear now it must be Thursday before I start. I must work at the organizing committee. Thursday will be my first possible day. I mean to keep all October for Pyrford. The situation here is that some who dis- like trade-union methods contrived cleverly to con- fuse trade unionism and Home Rule in the eyes of a portion of their workpeople, while others played into their hands by holding Sunday meetings. The cry has been 'Trade Unionist equals Home Ruler plus Atheist ' " . . . It is partly, I think, an effect of her conciliatory methods that Irish trade unionists who are Orangemen, and others who are equally ardent members of the Church of the Irish majority, are now able to take part together in labour meetings through- out Ireland, without a trace of religious prejudice being discernible in the proceedings. In a later speech on trade unionism. Lady Dilke 112 MEMOIR struck a note which produced an amazing effect. "The day once was when men took the Cross and went forth from home and all the joys of life, that they might deliver the Sacred City. There is a call to us now to take the Cross and deliver the bodies and souls of our brothers and sisters. This is the object of that new crusade. The name of trade unionist, which once was a name of shame, is the name of soldiers of labour, who are fighting to pre- serve to the nation all that is noble in human life. They are fighting to deliver the sacred city of the spirit from captivity to the heathenish conditions of modern industry. How shall men be men, or women women ; nay, how shall children be children amongst us in this our day, if they be ground down to earth by sorrow ! " At Manchester, later, with the Bishop (Dr. Moor- house) in the chair, and in other places. Lady Dilke appealed to what she called the aristocracy of employers. She pointed out why it was that she blamed well-to-do women if they stood aside from the movement for organization of working women, merely because in their own manufactories, or in their own trade, the conditions of labour were good. " Of course to join us in this work means some self-sacrifice, sacrifice of leisure," at the least. " Can any joy that we may win for ourselves equal the joy of knowing that by our efforts we have brought the feeble, the ignorant, and the lonely to feel that they are not alone?" Lady Dilke invariably preached to those who desired to help her that they first must "learn." " If we try to help without knowledge, all our labour will be vain, and will only bring forth trouble." Quoting, too, in one of her addresses some beautiful words of pity for affliction, she wrote that they "bring before us, as it were, a vision of the perfect life. It would THE CAUSE OF WORKING WOMEN 113 be a bond between us if every member, girl or woman, would try with me just once in the day of worldly labour to call to mind these words." All sound trade unionists, working with the best of the leaders of the great unions, have a horror of resort to strikes ; but lock-outs occur from time to time and strikes may be necessary. When there could be no doubt, and responsible leaders felt that there was no alternative, it was, she thought, the duty of all who could to learn the facts, and the duty of those who knew them to help to the utmost of their power. Those who bore the brunt were " martyrs, without the honours of martyrdom . . . fighting the cause of the unborn who were to come after them, the cause of national greatness, insepa- rably bound up with the power of the people to lead free, and large, and honourable lives." In such cases " people talked of how wide were the channels through which the sympathy of the public flowed . . . the pity of it was how narrow they were : how few seemed to understand what was at stake." The advice of Lady Dilke was often sought, in later years, by those who, in the United States, in Australia, in Germany, and in Austria, desired to take action for the benefit of working women similar to her own. From Berlin and from the United States there visited us devoted women who had " come out" — to use the American phrase — from the pro- fessional classes or from among the capitalists, to devote themselves to the woman's cause. In a series of letters from Berlin addressed to Lady Dilke by two different correspondents, strong testimony is borne, by competent persons, to the international value of her work. The invitation from the Berlin Committee of the International Women's Congress, which was held at Berlin in 1896, after stating their , appreciation of " the known value and width of your Q 114 MEMOIR social work," goes on, "We worship the energy by which you help to lead, through hard difficulty, these organizations." The secretary adds that no one so well as Lady Dilke could show to German ladies how it was possible for a woman of high cultivation to overflow with sympathy towards working women. " You cannot know how precious your presence would be for all German women." Lady Dilke never went to an International Congress, and it was on her motion that the committee of the Women's Trade Union League always deputed one of the other members to represent them. The Berlin Committee answered her refusal by begging leave to be allowed to publish a translation of her letter, and were polite enough to accept the admirable representative of the committee : " We are very glad to get the good, not being able to get the best." Another of these German ladies, who had been over to see Lady Dilke, wrote that she had never forgotten what she had been told, but had observed it in her own life, and was good enough to say that the first and chief thing she had learnt was " the beautiful courage by which you are what we all want to be." Appreciation of Lady Dilke's efforts on behalf of labour was continuous from the representatives of the great trade unions, and she was often called upon to open the Textile Halls, constructed in Lancashire by the efforts of the unions composed of men and women workers. In 1899 she received an address from the American Federation of Labour, signed by the president, the well-known Samuel Gompers, who wrote that the committee had added to their report closing words commending the work of Lady Dilke and "her example to the women of America for emulation." In her labour work, between the early years of our married life and 1892, my wife had the devoted PHILOSOPHY OF TRADE UNIONISM 115 assistance of the first of the secretaries who worked with her, Miss May Abraham. Mrs. H. J. Tennant, as she now is, has let me see a long letter of April 9, 1893, in which Lady Dilke tried to leave her free to make the best choice for her own future working life. " Hardly a day passes in which I do not say, ' If only she were here ! ' Yet I shrink from the possibility of your making the sacrifice of a brilliant and useful career out of tenderness to me. . . . The tie . . . cannot be weakened, even if that decision prevented your coming back to me." Miss May Abraham rightly went to the Home Office, and " the tie " remained in all its strength. Lady Dilke never pretended that, in the distant future, trade unionism would be sufficient to redress all ills, and wrote "not gospel of the future, but salvation at present." In a later visit to Dundee in September, 1896, she explained the idea: "The life of any great movement such as this for the salvation of the worker is like the life of man. It bears in its breast from the very beginning the seed of decay. I expect that by-and-by trade unionism will finish its work, but it is very far from having finished its perfected work." The most interesting of the whole series of her labour speeches was, perhaps, that at Bristol in 1898, which contained this passage : " Emma Paterson was so profoundly convinced of the appalling misery and dumb suffering prevalent in the lives of work- ing women, that she sacrificed all she had to acquire information as to the possibility of trade unions among women. When she had no more to give she gave her life. She died, under our eyes, of the work she did for working women." Then there followed an account of early mistakes on the part of the League, and of their nature, previously described. Lady Dilke went on: "The cause of labour is one; it is suicide to put sex against sex. . . . The men ii6 MEMOIR were afraid that, if they recognized the labour of women and organized it, this would tend to lower the wages of men. . . . Years have brought wisdom. . . . All of us recognize that women are utterly helpless to protect themselves, but are desperately powerful to injure others. . . . We reversed the policy of the League, and called the men to our aid." In her last speech upon the subject, at Leeds, September 7, 1904, at the People's Hall, under the chairman- ship of the President of the Trade Congress, Lady Dilke returned to the same point. Her theme on this occasion was, as it had been for twenty years, "Labour is of no sex, men and women must fight in the same ranks. Whatever may have been the case in the distant past, when the men may have done a wrong, redeemed by their present attitude, the men trade unionists are now our best helpers in this work." All this time Lady Dilke continued to combine her two apparently distinct spheres of activity — distinct only to the public, for there were those who knew that the two lives were one. Between the publi- cation, in 1891, of "The Shrine of Love" and the appearance at the end of 1899 of the first of the four volumes of her great book on the eighteenth century. Lady Dilke published no writings except in the periodic press. She had written on Benefit Societies in the Fortnightly for June, 1889, and two articles on trade unionism, in 1890. These were followed by another for the Fortnightly in May, 1891, and one for the North American Review in 1892. She wrote also an article on the Labour Department of the Board of Trade, and contributed the preface to a book on Woman's Work, which is still in some demand. Her annual review of the Prussian "Jahrbuch," which was to be, in the case of 1904, her last published writing, other than that which appears posthumously in this WORKING NOTES FOR " L'ETENDARD DU 3E CUIRASSIER." [To face p. 117. INGRES 117 volume, of course went on. She also began to publish separate articles which would have formed part of a future book on the French art of the nineteenth century, towards which, indeed, she had been working throughout her life. Her long-continued art studies produced a great mass of working sketches of pictures and sculpture. One example is given in this volume. In the draw- ings of sculpture there would be three little indica- tions of its shape and "movement" taken from three points. As an example of the pains she took I would mention Ingres. So far as I know, she never wrote on Ingres, yet I find notes upon almost every picture by him and on his fresco at Dampierre, with thumb- nail sketches from which the composition can be studied. These stood ready "to be written" when they might be needed, perhaps only for that " last book " which she hardly expected to complete. An article on Detaille, involving criticism also of Meissonier and of De Neuville, appeared in the Cosmopolitan of September, 1891. To the Art Journal she contributed, besides the Caldecott series which has been named, a paper on Christophe, the sculptor, which was a labour of love. From 1898 she began to \yrite regularly for La Gazette des Beaux Arts, and a list of her principal contributions to that valuable review may be found in the obituary notice. It was by M. de Nolhac, the distinguished poet, curator of Versailles, and writer upon Erasmus, upon Petrarch, and upon Marie Antoinette, and appeared in the number bearing date December i, 1904. Several of the principal miscellaneous writings of Lady Dilke, which were published in the later period now reached, have been mentioned ; for example, that on the Idealist movement, and that on the Georgia Loyalists, in the Transactions of the United Empire Loyalists Association for 1899-1900. The article. ii8 MEMOIR "The Idealist Movement and Positive Science: an Experience," the forerunner of the posthumous bool<; which stands next to this Memoir in the present volume, led to a large correspondence with philo- sophers and divines, to whom its pages had appealed. One of Lady Dilke's French friends, writing about her own husband, added of the paper in which "An Experience" was related, that it had come "both from your rare intelligence and also from your great heart." " Cest toujours par la, surtout quand ce coeur a ete meurtri et n'a pas defailli, que nous arri- vons aux choses cachees." The success of Lady Dilke's volumes on the French art of the eighteenth century has been so recent and so considerable that it is unnecessary to do more than chronicle the appearance of the volume on "Painters" in the late autumn of 1899, "Architects and Sculptors " a year later, and " Decoration and Furniture " in December, 1901. The French criticisms in France were as favourable as were the British criticisms on this side of the Channel. A great French official wrote upon the Decoration volume : " Le magnifique monument que vous elevez a I'hon- neur de notre art, s'est eleve d'une assise nouvelle, Ici, vous n'aviez ni devancier ni guide, et I'originalite de vos recherches s'affirme avec une puissance plus grande que jamais. . . . Je vous remercie, comme Frangais, de faire entrer dans la grande histoire I'ceuvre de tant de nos artistes dedaignes par elle." Eugene Muntz had written of the second volume, "Architects and Sculptors," at the end of 1900, "II etait reserve a une etrangere de relever ces etudes, tombees si bas dans notre pays." One result of the triumph of the third volume, " Decoration and Furni- ture," was seen in the increased amount offered to Lady Dilke for her future writings. She was more pleased by this practical appreciation of her success EXEGI MONUMENTUM 119 than she had been pleased by praise. She felt at last that even as regarded England she was not writing "things that people do not want." After contributing an introduction, which appeared in 1903, to the big French and English book on the Wallace collection, she formally communicated to me, with a certain pride, her intention to " put up my prices," and indeed told me the high figure at which she had now set them. The fourth and last volume of the eighteenth-cen- tury book, " Engravers and Draughtsmen," appeared at Christmas, 1902. Many were the congratulations from high authorities which we received on the com- pletion of her eighteenth-century work. They live in my recollection : hardly any of them do I find kept : one from which I quote was retained for another pur- pose, as the letter deals in its latter part with some new drawings, which it was necessary for my wife to see. M. de Nolhac wrote from " Chateau de Versailles, Janvier 7, 1903 : — Que ce mot vous apporte I'expres- sion de mon admiration pour I'oeuvre si considerable et si neuve dont vous dotez la litterature d'art de I'Europe. Ce dernier volume vous permet d'ecrire VExegi vionumentum, et combien peu parmi nous en auront reve un comparable." One of the congratulations on the completion of the book was from Mr, Bodley, whose writing in private letters and in certain articles she had admired long before " France " brought it into fame. He wrote that, after the brilliant accomplishment of what he thought her lasting life-work, she might say with her old friend Renan, under similar circumstances : " Ainsi mon principal devoir est accompli. Tout cela me cause une grande satisfaction interieure ; et voila ce qui m'a fait croire qu'apres avoir paye presque toutes mes dettes, je pouvais bien m'amuser un peu." Lady Dilke's ideas of amusement were like those of Renan, I20 MEMOIR in so far as the holiday she contemplated meant a period of new work in a different line. Although her genius widely differed from that of Renan both in its character and in its expression, she resembled him in two particulars. Lady Dilke had a power of work which, even in a strong man, would merit the epithet of Benedictine, applied to it by me ; while in her social hours she gave the impression of having no other pre- occupation than that of enjoying the pleasant side of life, and of communicating to others her light-hearted- ness. Mr. Bodley, writing after her death, says on the same subject : " She had a remarkable faculty of divesting herself of all trace of her working existence. Notably, her exterior aspect was not that which is popularly associated with the blue-stocking, still less with the feminine orator. One portion only of her laborious studies was reflected in her outward guise. She was the best-dressed Englishwoman I have ever known. In her attire she seemed to impart a remi- niscence of the canvases of Boucher and of Van Loo, which she had celebrated as the types of that Grand Sieclewhen the highest forms of feminine intelligence were not divorced from exterior signs of feminine grace." On our return from our annual visit to Paris, which had been lengthened since I had sold my house at Toulon, my wife set to work on mapping out her future. It was Lady Dilke's intention, in 1903, to give more time to her friends, and, by her medical attendant's direction, to rest. The Indian typhoid fever, when it took away the arthritis of her earlier years, left a tendency to the breaking of blood-vessels in all parts of the body — which was aggravated by cold, heat, or overwork of body or mind. It was not until about the time that she had brought out the fourth and last of the eighteenth-century volumes that she recognized the fact that she had been overworking throughout UNACCOMPLISHED PLANS 121 her life, and that to continue to overtax her strength was dangerous. She decided that in future she would make but two speeches in the year and otherwise conduct her labour work in private. She had taken the chair of the committee of the Women's Trade Union League, and to the duties of that position she would attend, but chiefly by quiet presence and by writing. As regarded the art side of her activity, she determined to obey medical orders by resting twice in every day, and, subject to this arrangement for slower work, to give the first place to the volume on the seventeenth century. Her idea was to popu- larize her favourite among her volumes — "Art in the Modern State." On the seventeenth-century book she was working steadily, and it was half ready when she died. There was also an intention to bring out a fuller and better- illustrated edition of the " Renaissance," and in addi- tion to write on the woodcuts of the early Lyons press. Towards the new volume of stories a good deal had been done. The last book of her lifetime she had meant to be a volume which doubtless would have developed the philosophy of the future relations of democracy to art, as the book on the seventeenth century surveyed the relation of art to the centralized monarchic state. Lady Dilke, however, had grave doubts as to whether she was likely to assert her family longevity, and live to complete her nineteenth- century book. As an alternative, she had from time to time before her the suggestion of a book upon the artists whom she had known, into which she might have woven her nineteenth-century notes. She has left two sets of papers which may have been meant as preface and introduction to the nineteenth-century work. The doctrine taught in them is that the irre- sistible development of democracy is the keystone of the modern situation. To fight against the social R 122 MEMOIR movement, she argued, is irrational, inasmuch as it is but an inevitable historical evolution. The Re- naissance had "transferred art from the service of religion to that of the Prince — an idealized concep- tion of man." It had "formed the bridge needed to cross the gulf between faith in the unknown and service to the known." Democracy "needs service and devotion to the race everywhere, in all time, under all conditions. ... To the Greek, certain types only were worth the full honour of perfect expression. To the modern artist all forms of life are sacred." Our last happy visit to Paris together had been that of December, 1903, when we saw all our old friends of all our Paris circles. Some new friends were made, as, for instance, one lady who had been brought to meet us by M. Charles Ephrussi, on the ground that she had long carried about with her everywhere •" The Shrine of Death " and " The Shrine of Love." The gaiety of the meetings with Gaston Boissier and Bonnat had been as unrestrained as ever, and there had been the usual profit from the study of the prints under the care of M. Henri Bouchot, and of the drawings at the Louvre with M. Carl Dreyfus and the younger men. These have written, "Les visites au Louvre etaient pour nous un veritable plaisir, et nous nous rejouissions a la pensee de la revoir bientot." I ought to name, of a family for which Lady Dilke had much affection, the head, M. Gustave Dreyfus, a high authority on Dona- tello and on the Medallists of the Italian Renaissance, and owner of a beautiful collection, whose constant kindness in performing work for Lady Dilke in Paris is acknowledged by her in the prefaces of the " Painters " and the "Architects and Sculptors." After we had returned to Pyrford in January, 1904, the authorities of the proposed Exposition des Primi- tifs Fran9ais wrote to ask Lady Dilke to work for FINAL LABOURS 123 them, and she decided that she would visit Paris ; thus making an unprecedented absence from London during the session of Parliament. She did so in the spring, but refused to see her friends in Paris, and confined herself to work. At Dockett Eddy, our Thames-side house, in the latter part of August, she was better than she had been in the previous year, and went through, with rather less fatigue than usual, the trying Trade Con- gress week. Miss Constance Hinton Smith, of the Women's Trade Union League, has written in their Review : " Only a few weeks before the end came so suddenly, although . . . compelled by medical orders to lay aside employment and recreation she held dear, she voluntarily incurred the great strain and fatigue of attending at the Leeds Trade Congress. That week's labour was her last blow struck for the work- ing woman's cause." We met again as usual at Speech House, in Dean Forest, for our September stay in West Gloucestershire among my constituents. Our party there consisted of my wife's dear friend. Miss Monck — our constant companion in our rides — my wife's sister, Mrs. Tuckwell, with her husband, their daughter Gertrude, and my secretary, H. K. Hudson.* It was the impression of us all, repeatedly referred to in general conversation by us at the time, that we had never known my wife so bright, so gay. At the end of the Speech House visit Lady Dilke repeatedly told us that she "never had been so happy" in her life, but added — as she did in several letters — that she was in need of rest, and was " going to Pyrford for a long rest." We reached Pyrford on the night of Saturday, October 15. I had asked her to see her medical attendant on that day, as was usual on her * Mr. Hudson is now acting as my wife's executor, with our friend Mr. Reginald McKenna, M.P., who has also helped me greatly with this Memoir. 124 MEMOIR return, but she said, " I can't; he would stop my going up with you on Thursday, and I want to go. I think I ought to be there." This was for a meeting at Chelsea Town Hall, at which I was to make the prin- cipal speech. On Thursday morning, October 20, we travelled up to London, my wife seemingly quite well. In the afternoon, Mrs. Arnold-Forster, who since early girlhood had been an intimate and dear friend, came to see her by appointment, as they had not met for some time. This was the last quiet talk Lady Dilke had with any one but myself, and I have Mrs. Arnold-Forster's leave to use some words which she wrote to me about their conversation. "... You had come to the door of her room and we had talked a little, and then you went back to the other room, and I turned to her to see — as I had so often seen before— the light that lit up her face, the light that your coming in and going out and speaking of you brought to it. She looked so wonderfully and radiantly happy that day. I said to her once or twice while I was with her, ' How happy you are ! ' and she said, 'Oh, things are well with me now.' She had spoken with gladness of your being well, looking stronger. . . . Then she told me of her work in the autumn and spoke of the Women's Trade Union League and of her progress with her book, of what she was going to do for it in Paris, of its illustrations, and she made a rough reckoning of how many weeks would see her ' through the book.' Then she spoke to me of a long talk we had had at Dockett, when I had run to her for a night in August to be rested and helped. . . . Then I said, ' I go away so happy ; it has done me good to see your dear face looking so happy,' and she said again, 'Oh, I am happy, I am happy,' and that was the last. So every memory of that day is happiness, and by degrees it comforts one, and your picture of Sunday is beautiful. I love to THE LAST ILLNESS 125 think of that joy to the end, and nothing to overcloud or to throw a shadow." At Chelsea on the night of Thursday, the 20th, Lady Dilke talked with many of her old acquaintances, and with a few friends, who had come to the meeting only to see her, some of them not being in sympathy with its objects. On the morning of Friday, the 21st, when I went in to her with her maid at the usual time, she said, " I am very ill ; I almost thought I would come in to your room, but just as I was making up m}'' mind to do so you put out your light, and I would not wake you." She insisted, however, on going down to Pyrford, as " in London " she said she " could not rest." Before lunch she got ready in her travelling clothes, and sat gazing into the fire — frightened — the only time. As soon as I was able to start — for she would not let me put off some work — we went to Waterloo, where she had much difficulty in stagger- ing along the platform with my help ; but in the train and at the end of our railway journey she seemed better. On reaching Pyrford she went to bed, and her doctor came. On leaving her he said to me, " Lady Dilke has a good deal of fever ; I will come in to-morrow morning." I begged her to let me send for a nurse, but she would not, though she consented — for the first time in our life together — to let her maid sleep in her room. On the morning of Saturday, October 22, she seemed much better. Dr. Thorne- Thorne then told us both that the examination which he had now been able to make — the fever having subsided — showed that she had broken a small blood- vessel on Thursday night, but he thought that in a week she might be well. On Saturday afternoon Miss Graham, a dear friend, came from Windsor, by an appointment made some days before, to take tea. My wife saw her with me, but was not well enough to talk. Miss Graham 126 MEMOIR writes : '' I stood by the bed holding her hand, and saying I hoped to return and have tea with her the next week. She answered, ' Don't go away, go and have tea with Charles, and then come back and see me.' ... I thought she had a far-off look in her eyes, but it did not then cross my mind that she was in danger. ... I left, feeling rather uneasy, but far from realizing that it was the last sight on earth of one whose friendship I greatly valued, and for whose powers of mind and character I had a true admira- tion." Miss Graham was the last person from outside that my wife saw, and there was no one that she more gladly would have wished to have with her at such a moment, had she known. On Sunday afternoon, October 23, my wife was as bright as possible. She looked at her letters, noticing especially one from the Marquis Ito, from Tokio, which thanked her for what she had been able to do for the Japanese wounded, and widows and orphans. She had with her on her bed two letters which had come from our old friend M. Jusserand, French Am- bassador at Washington, partly about his last book, which I was reading by her bedside. I fetched for her some books of reference relating to tapestry, and pencil and paper, and she jotted down notes on some tapestries which had been shown her by Sir William and Lady Wedderburn at Meredith ten days earlier. The impression of the whole afternoon, while her maid and I sat with her, was that she was on the high road to recovery. On Sunday night at seven she again ceased to be free from all discomfort, but at nine insisted that I should go to bed, and that her maid should lie down in her room. At half-past ten I was called ; she had not spoken since she bade me good night. She had become unconscious, and did not speak again, I sent a groom on horseback for Dr. THE END 127 Thorne-Thorne the moment I was called. It was not till after midnight that we began to believe that there was serious danger, and never at any one moment did we become sure that life was gone. At half-past twelve at night, when Monday, October 24, had just begun, the doctor came, and after some time told us that she was dead. It is a hard task even to chronicle the mere events of so varied a career. I have done my best with a difficult undertaking, for it seemed to me that the memoir could only be written by myself My wife had two sides to her intellectual life, and three diverse kinds of friends. I alone shared both lives and knew all the friends, and thus of necessity the duty has fallen upon me. The " Benedictine," working always and every- where, was understood by a few men in England and by a larger art-world abroad. One of these English- men writes to me, " Every fact was verified, no matter what time and pains it needed." Even these judges were not acquainted with the labour during the last thirty years of her life, accomplished by one who was the practical director of a considerable social move- ment. They knew not the extent to which this second side of her life had been developed, without inter- fering, however, with the activity and completeness of the first. Of the imperfection of the picture drawn by my hand I make no doubt. As the Marquise de Sassenay, in the name of those personal friends who were uncon- nected with either the art studies or the labour work, wrote to me, "Jamais personne ne dira assez ce qu'elle etait : elle avait tout — beaute, bonte de coeur, haute intelligence, simplicite. Comment ne pas cherir cette femme d'elite si absolument complete et unique." 128 MEMOIR The last time my wife was ill enough for it to be known, another of her great friends had written to her, in a letter which till her death 1 had not seen, " Nous autres femmes nous avons tant besoin de forces pour suffire au double fardeau, de notre tache, et de celle de notre mari, Vous vous etes depensee a cette mission plus qu'aucune autre." The writer mentioned also the combination of activity in noble pursuits and courage which never knew fatigue. Throughout the posthumous book which follows will be recognized the two main characteristics of the life — an over- mastering sense of duty, and an unfailing courage, little short of sublime. END OF THE MEMOIR THE BOOK OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE I I'll'iii l/ir hl,<:i Ijlioloilriipll lakTIl Sepl l!H' !■ THE BOOK OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE (ADDITIONS BY THE EDITOR, MOSTLY TAKEN FROM NOTES FOUND WITHIN THE MANUSCRIPT PAGES, ARE MARKED *). AD SAPIENTES QUI SENTIUNT MECUM I have loved to hear my Lord spoken of; and wherever I have seen the print of his shoe in the earth, there I have coveted to set my foot too. * For all that you may know, none will like you the better; but in knowing you must find your own joy — Labour ! * Thy travel here has been with difficulty ; but that will make thy Rest the sweeter. ^33 CONTENTS HAGE TO THE READER OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE 143 OF LOVE AND SORROW 157 OF PRAYER AND PRAISE 171 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING 185 OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS 203 OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS 217 ^35 TO THE READER TO THE READER The lamp of life lights our way to death. The more keenly we pursue our aims, the more swiftly we exhaust the little measure of oil that feeds the flame shining in our darkness. We are free, like the Phenix, but to choose the mate- rials of which we will build our funeral pyre. "Li Fenix," says the fable, "quiert la busche et le sarment par quoi il s'art et giete fors de vie." So, do we carry, with sure approach to the end, the burden of each day's hopes and fears, count- ing the steps by which we have come nearer to the fulfilment of our heart's desire. For most of us, as the years pass, take some definite view of our own lives ; of our relation to the lives of others, and of the objects which seem to us most worthy of accomplishment. 139 T 2 I40 TO THE READER No one has done this with more compre- hensive breadth, with more loving and prudent wisdom, or in more weighty and balanced words, than Chaucer, in that " Balade de bon conseyl," which I here quote, because it sums up the whole faith and belief of the writer of this little book. To be greedy neither of gold nor power ; to beware of the praise of men ; to be patient when wronged, knowing the caprice of fortune ; to accept contrary fates with cheer- ful courage and look beyond this earthly hour in the sure leading of the Spirit, — may bring us sorrow here, but also that deliverance which means peace at the last. Flee fro the prease, and dwelle with soothfastnesse, Suffyce unto thy good though it be small, For horde hath hate and climbing tickelnesse, Prease hath envye, and well is blent over all,* Savour no more than thee behove shall, Rede well thyself, that other folk canst rede, And trouth thee shall deliver, it is no drede. Paine thee not ech crooked to redresse, In trust of her that turneth as a ball, Great reste stant in little businesse. And eek beware to spurne against an awl, * Blind, everywhere. TO THE READER 141 Strive not as doth the crocke with a wall, Daunte thyself that dauntest others deed, And trouth thee shall deliver, it is no drede. That thee is sent receive in buxomnesse, The wrastling of this world asketh a fall. Here is no home, here is but wildernesse, Forth pilgrim, forth ; forth, beast, out of thy stall, Know thy country, looke up, thanke God of all, Hold the hye way, and let thy ghost thee lede, And trouth thee shall deUver, it is no drede. OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE 1 OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE "Omnis perfectio in hac vita quamdam imperfectionem sibi habet annexam; et omnis speculatio nostra quadam caligine non caret." The mediaeval legend of the Atonement bids men see in Christ crucified, the stolen apple of Life restored to the Tree of Knowledge by Death, wherein the Christian mystic has found an image of the path by which he may attain to spiritual knowledge. " O amare, O ire, O sibi perire, O ad Deum pervenire," are the words in which Saint Augustine sums up the supreme object of the Christian life, and they still speak to us of the solitary perfection of its aims and hopes. To love, that is to learn the Divine Charity ; to press forward beyond earthly barriers into the regions that eye hath not seen ; to die to the world so that we may 145 u 146 OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE live to God; — that is to-day, as it was yesterday, the strait way of the spiritual life. The un- tender wisdom of the East gives precept as unyielding : '* There is none in thy time whose friendship thou shouldest covet, nor any in- timate who, when fortune is treacherous, will be faithful. Live then apart, and rely upon no man." Souls, burning with desire of this perfec- tion, in their impatience of worldly conditions have sought death and the desert as the gate of life. Saint Simeon Stylites cries to us — " Three winters that my soul might grow to thee, I hved up there on yonder mountain side, My right leg chained into the crag, I lay Pent in a roofless close of ragged stones ; " Then, that I might be more alone with thee, Three years I lived upon a pillar high Six cubits, and three years on one of twelve ; And twice three years I crouch'd on one that rose Twenty by measure ; last of all I grew || Twice ten long weary, weary years to this, J That numbers forty cubits from the soil." ' The counsel of Chaucer points us to no such deadly isolation. When he bids " Flee fro the prease and dwelle with soothfastnesse " he THE DETACHED LIFE 147 would fain have us seek in life the reconcile- ment of the spirit with the flesh : not by the selfish rejection of human ties and claims, but by the taking of such a course as may lead us on towards their mastery. To this end, he who would keep the direction of his own soul is counselled to avoid the great companies of those who are wholly absorbed by the business and pleasures of the world. Thereby he is told that he may win the governance of his own life in perfect dignity and peace. And this in truth is the strait gate leading to the way of the spiritual life, that a man shall count no sacrifice too great by the which he may purchase the controul of his own mind and take captive his thoughts, as they were prisoners held by him at the forfeit of a royal ransom. For such as they whose feet frequent the street and the market-place, whose desires are wholly towards the kingdoms of this world, the hour of meditation strikes in vain. How should he whose will is to the pursuit of for- tune, the winning of high estate or honour in 148 OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE the eyes of men, whose blood is afire with the lust of conquest, enter into the knowledge of that sacred mood in which he may apprehend the secret influences of things, and set his im- agination free to receive impressions of those truths which cannot be mastered by the mere effort of reason ? Should a man, indeed, desire the leading of the Spirit, he must so number his days that there may be for him great spaces of solitude, in the hushed silences of which he may at least listen for some echo of the eternal voice. The temple of the life spiritual is closed to all such as seek its gates only in moments of dis- tress and danger. It demands from its votaries habitual constancy of service. In no other wise shall they come at that illumination in which they may apprehend regions of the world in- visible. Yet, by these regions and their mys- terious influences we are girt about, as is the land by the unfathomable sea, and the very roots of our being strike deep into the sources of their vital fires. What, indeed, is the life spiritual, but that THE PATH OF RENUNCIATION 149 detached life of thought that brings with it increasing comprehension of the " One life within us and abroad Which meets all motion and becomes its soul." In its highest sense, it is the one means where- by we may come at some revelation of the true significance and mystery of the Christian dog- ma of the Incarnation and behold the triumph of the spirit over the flesh : that sovereign tri- umph not to be won without pain and sorrow and much labour, yet surely to be won by all those who will obey the commandment which Chaucer sums for us in the words — " Hold the hye wey,* and let thy ghost thee lede." This is a commandment not in any wise to be fulfilled save by the path of renunciation. In the clamorous crowd of everyday interests and occupations some moment must be held secure in which thought may take its lonely flight to- wards the unseen. He to whom the Valley of Vision has become as a familiar place knows the ecstasy of those moments in which our sense * Or, otherwise, " ^Veive thy lusts." I50 OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE of the reality of things that are eternal is quick- ened, and the facts of earthly existence and environment fall away and vanish. To such a one is given the mastery, for that which becomes to him true, certain, and sure — that which can enable him to stand free, even under shame, insult, and injury, so that these become of no account — is the clear vision of those things which never pass away. The Christian mystic rejoices in that every- where he is assured of the presence of that Eternal Power whom men name God ; that in all things he sees the working of that Word which is spirit, and the might of the mysteri- ous Word made Flesh. " O Lord God," cries Saint Augustine, "when shall I be wholly one with Thee ? " And if, in the despairing cry after the knowledge of the Life of God, the soul rises to some transient glimpse of the Divine Unity — the Beatific Vision — then, in bonds and chains before the judgment seat, such a one may yet stand free. Free, though perhaps but for an instant ; yet the memory of that instant is a glory, in the light of which all the bitterness THE WAY OF SOCRATES 151 of life is overpast — a revelation, the living consciousness of which no human power can take away. By shame and death, Socrates triumphed over his accusers, making perfect in the tragedy of his fate the pure ideal of his life, " e resta la figura pill originate della storia dello spirito umano."(i-) The crime of his enemies became the sublime test and justification of that life apart with which they had reproached him : the life that he had been called to lead, even in their midst, by the secret promptings of the divine voice. His confident vindication of the free exercise of reason ; his heroic assertion of the right of the human soul to climb the heights and search the depths by which it is encom- passed, these are doctrines that have drawn new life from the virtue of his death. This appeal from the dictates of the prac- tical intelligence to the judgment of pure reason brings with it a necessaryandattendantpenalty, for it lies always under the shadow of political suspicion, which regards it as dangerous to the (I-) See Note A, p. 232. f 152 OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE order of settled society. If those who take a ; way apart need no longer fear the cup of death, J they must at least be ready to accept the pain of isolation — more or less complete in accordance with the sense that their fellows have of their apartness, their independence, their renounce- ment of common ties. The pain of isolation — for isolation must in itself be painful to the soli- tary human heart — reveals to us, in compensa- tion, sources of secret strength. The soul is thus set free to listen to the voice of its desire, and to derive from the divine message that high courage and directness of thought, which, rooted in the profound conviction of personal duty, gives birth to an invincible constancy of spirit. This heroic mood is not to be born of tran- sient emotions. It is the outcome of that original and unflinching purpose which spurs the unwilling flesh to the conquest of the diffi- culties and fears that forbid admittance to the world of those gods " quibus imperium est ani- marum." How, in truth, should it be given to many freely to follow the highest way, and to THE VISION OF PERFECTION 153 know that " whatsoever doth make manifest, is light " ? The imperfections attached to all earthlyaccomplishment weigh down our bravest effort. Yet, even so, even to those whose task in life is of the earth, earthy, and who are by duty pent within the crowded walls of great cities and prisoned by the violent wills of other men, some imperfect vision of things perfect may be won by constancy and faith in the beauty of things unseen. Such a vision has in its gift a magic charm, and confers a secret sense of abiding peace on the days of practical life. Thewaysof the unseen are manifold, having only this in common — they must be sought alone. The perfection of human love, the mys- tic excellence of sorrow, the fulness of know- ledge, yea, even the ecstasy that visits the soul at one with nature, in those moments when it rejoices merely in its hour of being — " I'humble petite chose frdmissante ou passe le grand cou- rant dternel"— joys such as these maybe known in the house, that is, the " place of peace," (i-) (!•) The words are from Ruskin's description of " Home," beginning, " This is the true nature of home . . . ," placed by me X 154 OF THE SPIRITUAL LIFE on the everlasting hills, in the quiet sheltering woods, in the meadows by the running rivers — wherever the spirit makes for itself some space of sacred solitude. Moreover, one may say that the life of medi- tation — although it is commonly regarded as estranged from the impulses and interests in which the practical intelligence finds satisfac- tion — is the life out of which the law goes forth, by which the life of action is ultimately gov- erned. All the great changes that have taken place in the lives of men, all the great changes that have affected the destinies of the race, have had their departure from the secret places of thought : " Geschrieben steht : Im Anfang war das Wort," and the life of the Word is the light of men. Watchman, what of the night? That is the question which, ultimately, the wanderers of the " wilderness " come to ask of him whose eyes are strained to pierce the darkness shrouding the unseen. And to our questioning, he over the door of the house at Pyrford Rough when I built it, and retained by Lady Dilke when she altered the front. — Editor. THE SECRET OF LIFE AND DEATH 155 will make answer, speaking of those things which in the tumult of the world — full of the exclusive claims of life — would otherwise be forgotten. Whether he looks out over the kingdoms of the earth, or seeks the way by prayer and praise, by love and sorrow, or by labour and by learning, he will tell us of things more precious than life itself, he will bid us remember that for great souls the true reasons for living are often identical with the true reasons for dying, and that the way of per- fection, if it does not lead us to the desert, points inevitably to the path whereby we may " flee fro the prease." OF LOVE AND SORROW c J IN PRAISE OF LOVE AND SORROW *' O sovereign power of love ! O grief ! O balm ! " In the land of Provence an old legend is told concerning two maidens who desired to hear their fortunes from the lips of an ancient witch. These two maidens were, it is said, sisters, — daughters of a man of wealth and power ; one was dark, the other fair, and both were beau- tiful. With great gifts in their hands, they set forth on their errand, and, having found her whom they sought, they laid their offerings at her feet and entreated her to fulfil their desire. She, however, was in an evil mood, and casting their gifts from her as if of no account, she rose from the place where she sat in the sun among the lavender bushes on the hillside, and turned 159 i6o OF LOVE AND SORROW about as though she would have gone from them without speech. Then the dark maid, that was the elder of the two, caught her by the sleeve and besought her with tears that she should give answer to her prayer. In the end she prevailed, and the witch, taking her hand in hers, looked upon it for a space and spoke, but her voice was slow and her words bitter. " I see," she said, "no good, but evil only concerning thee. Dark shall be thy days, and scant thy portion. A beggar shalt thou stand without the gates of thy father's house, and the bones of those that are born of thy body shall be cast out over desolate places." At these words, the heart of the maid was troubled, but in a little while she bethought herself, and again made her appeal, saying, " One thing more I will ask of thee, O most wise one ! Tell me this thing only ! Shall he whom I shall love, love me ? " And when the witch answered and said, " Yea, even so, he shall love thee," the girl took heart and rejoiced, for she thought, "If he whom I shall love. THE BLISS OF LOVING i6i love me, then shall no man call my days unblessed." Now, on this, the fair maid, that was the younger of the two, drew near in her turn, and to all her questions she received the like bitter answers. Moreover, at the last, when she repeated her sister's words, asking, " Will he whom I shall love, love me ? " the witch replied, "Nay, no man shall love thee," and, as she said this, she laughed and said, " Have you naught else, O foolish one, that you may desire of me ? " And the girl took thought but for an instant, and cried, " Mother, what more should I desire of thee, or what more should I ask of life, if to love be given unto me ? " The true significance of this legend was clearly indicated by M. Frangois Coppee, when he embodied it in his poem " I'Horoscope," but most of those who read it in his version seem to have missed his point. Some of his critics went absolutely astray. The phrases exchanged between the elder sister and the witch were received for simple sense, but the words of the younger — who learned that whilst 1 62 OF LOVE AND SORROW loving she might never know the joy of being loved — were condemned as unintelligible. The woman who could possibly imagine that the highest bliss might be found in love without return was pronounced an unnatural and ridi- culous creation, bred of indulgence in false and morbid sentiment. Yet this sentiment which was condemned as absurd, as false to nature and to truth, is no other than that which has nourished in all time the noblest forms of human love and devotion. It is the sentiment which inspired with sublime passion the well-known words of Saint Teresa : "Thou drawest me, my God. . . . Thy death agony draws me ; Thy love draws me, so that, should there be no Heaven, I would love Thee. Were there no Hell, I would fear Thee no less. Give me naught in return for this my love to Thee ; for were I not to hope that I long for, then should I love Thee even as I do now." Not until the passion of self-abandonment has touched the point at which the words, " Though He slay me yet will I trust in Him," THE CALL TO THE HIGHER LIFE 163 are the simple and natural expression of pride and joy, is that height of exaltation reached the attainment of which includes the highest possibilities of love and sorrow. For " love's limits are ample and great, and a spacious walk it hath, but with thorns not lightly to be passed over." The call to love, rightly understood, is, in truth, a call to self-renunciation, as indeed is every call to lead the higher life. The soul to whom such a call comes is directly confronted with the necessities of sacrifice, for devotion to another in its highest form leads to the way of the Cross. Only through much suffering may the Saint attain the fulfilment of the promise of the spiritual life and see Him face to face, yet in her triumph she cries, " Give me naught in return for this my love to Thee!" In a like spirit, the girl of the Provencal legend says, " What more shall I ask of life, if to love be given unto me ? " The possible unworthi- ness of the object of devotion such as this, casts no blemish on its beauty, and the lesson of its faithfulness shows as a human shadow 1 64 OF LOVE AND SORROW of the divine mystery of the sacrifice, having power to blot out evil in others by the virtue of its own selfless passion. For in human love we daily see that the first thing sought must be the full bestowal of that confidence on the part of the one loved that cannot be shown except as in the mirror of itself: so the soul desiring this priceless gift of another must itself be free from every personal impulse which may check or hinder the purity of another's truth. The answer to the call to love must be, '' Here I am, O Lord, do with me as Thou wilt." To attain such extremity of passion, the one thing needful— whether we seek the love of God or man — is unfaltering courage, that quality which alone places great things within our reach. Something of this splendid and tem- pered strength shows itself in the fine Pagan stoicism of the greater figures of the eighteenth century. The calm with which many of these men, having a clear-eyed vision of their life's tragedy, met calamity and death self-controlled and set above the momentary horror by a THE LITERATURE OF SENTIMENT 165 steadfast resoluteness of purpose, was often little less than heroic. Under the tyranny of the Napoleonic Empire the human spirit developed a significant weakness of moral fibre. No more typical example can be named than Chateaubriand. His magnificent attitude fails to mask the tawdry poverty of his self-pity, or the weakness of a nature unable to trust in its own power without claiming the incessant, re- assuring suffrages of others. The same feeble temper shows itself in the later verse of Madame Desbordes-Valmore — a less notorious but a delicate and a sincere soul. Her cry is always, " Moi, je suis tombde ! " or, " Mon cceur est plein de larmes ! " Tears are the incessant refrain of her verse, and in her letters she insists solely on the deep sources of sorrow lying within us, which leave us no choice but to fall on our knees in acquiescence. This solemn note of grief is not only called out by grave events of death and sorrow : it per- vades the whole view of life — " j'aurais adore I'dtude," she writes, " des pontes et de la podsie ; il a fallu me contenter d'y r^ver, comme i66 OF LOVE AND SORROW a tous les biens de ce monde ; " and she turns for comfort to the Imitation — " ce livre d'dternel amour qu'il faut toujours porter sur son coeur." The voice of the Imitation has indeed an alluring charm for the souls that shrink from strife. Its constant cry of" Come. Come and talk of thyself with God ! " has the all-potent attraction of the confessional. The disciple sees before him, in compensation for any loss of earthly pleasures, infinite possibilities of present satisfaction in the perpetual contem- plation of himself illumined by the vision of eternal bliss. Well may he cry with Saint Augustine, " Quod magni sunt fructus con- fessionis." For, as the voice repeats, " This is the highest wisdom, through contempt of the world to reach towards the Kingdom of Heaven ! " The perfection of this precept is, however, flawed by those calculations of gain and loss which, as was seen by Saint Teresa, needs must vitiate the integrity of the spiritual life. In later days, from a different intellectual SELFLESS PASSION 167 standpoint, Auguste Comte saw just as clearly the strength to be won through the rejection of all selfish inducements to follow the way, and deliberately stripped it bare from every hope. The feeble soul that may be lured to love and service by the promise of reward is, indeed, unworthy to be enrolled in the regiment of Heaven. We needs must follow with assent the w^ords in which the Saint disclaims with poignant ardour all thought of personal ad- vantage, the desire of Heaven and the fear of Hell being alike blotted out in the burning radiance of devotion : " Thou drawest me, my God. . . . Thy death agony draws me ; Thy love draws me, so that, should there be no Heaven, I would love Thee. Were there no Hell, I would fear Thee." To reach this majestic height of selfless passion, the soul must first have descended into Hell — must have known the infinite depths of sorrow. Without such experience, how should a man wholly give himself up to the service of others, how should the Saint fully love Christ and suffer this agony with i68 OF LOVE AND SORROW Him? The office in which the hours of Gethsemane are commemorated by the Church is, indeed, a mere formal ceremony to the worshipper who is without the knowledge of spiritual love — that love of which human love may be the teacher only if it has taken the lover to stand at the foot of the Cross. There, and there alone, when his conception of the Divine passion has been vivified by his own anguish, a man may find the sublime strength that will enable him to take up his ordained burden — not in fear and trembling as some- thing too heavy to be borne, but with triumph- ant joy — the joy of the lover whose soul burns upward to his point of bliss. What more, indeed, should he ask of life, if to love be given unto him ? To such a spirit as this there may haply come the revelation that a great sorrow — like any other great possession — is a great trust. The very magnitude of a great calamity or grief confers in itself the privilege of exception, and, in the measure in which it brings " de- tachment," it brings that true mastery of self COMPLETING POWER OF SORROW 169 without which — no matter how much else we may attain — our lives must be incomplete. With some such catastrophe, involving the apparent ruin of his life, and bringing with it his betrayal by those in whom he trusted, Jacques Rutebeuf seems to have been face to face when he wrote — " Que sont mi ami devenu Que j'avoie si pr^s tenu Et tant ame ? Je cuit li vens les a ost^ ; L'amor est morte. Ce sont ami que venz emporte Et 11 ventoit devant ma porte." This, however, is not the language of him who has won freedom in the loss of things earthly, and to whom — though the favourable answer sought with prayer and bitter tears has been denied — the gates of Heaven itself have been unlocked. It is the complaint of one who dreads the unkindness of the blast and the sharp sting of trust and love betrayed. The high courage which can embrace the Cross without fear, the courage which rises victorious over death and shame, is known onlv I70 OF LOVE AND SORROW to the soul whose source of strength is within itself. In the experience of the supreme moment when the great agony and the great joy become one, the moment which combines the perfect- ing of self-realization and self-renunciation, we have the full significance of the old Provencal legend revealed. After its own fashion, it teaches the lesson which the philosopher and the mystic unweariedly repeat. It says that there are those who are privileged to drink of that fount and spring of life and healing which no worldly accident can trouble, and whose patient eyes are visited by the unfading glories known to those only who have found the House of Peace through the way of the spiritual life. OF PRAYER AND PRAISE i OF PRAYER AND PRAISE (') O, Gioia, O ineffabile allegrezza ! O, vita intera d'amor e di pace ! (2.) When a man leaveth his closet after prayer, his soul should be at peace with God and in charity with men. This is a simple statement of the prize to be won by the faithful exercise of prayer, — the spiritual manifestation of de- sire ; but the superstitions which obscure the true conception of its efficacy have drawn nourishment from every chance coincidence, so that the beautiful and sacred change of (I.) Lady Dilke first showed me this chapter at Pyrford on the first Sunday after we arrived there last autumn, exactly a week before she died. It had, she said, passages which, though clear to her, would be obscure to others, but, " now, I shall have time, as I am to rest, and to go more slowly with the other books." This one was always intended to appear only after her death, or in the retirement of her old age. — Editor. (2.) See Note B, p. 232. 173 174 OF PRAYER AND PRAISE spirit that is within its gift has been travestied into a mere ignoble process of exchange and barter: ''Qu'un matelot ait fait sa pri^re de- vant la figure de Sainte-Barbe, il n'a plus de dangers a craindre. II y a meme des Saints qu'on invoque pour obtenir des richesses ; tel est Saint-Erasme ; " and Brantdme's trooper, cheating at the dice, invokes God Himself to cover his hazard, with " Pais quatorze, Dieu ! ou tu perds une ame chrdtienne ! " Examples of the efficacy of prayer for others, if not so blasphemous, are more gro- tesque. Once, we are told, there was a Pope, who, when he had come to his last days, asked his chaplain, a proper and devout man, by what means he would succour him in his agony. The chaplain replied, "In every possible way." " Then," said the Pope, " I ask of thee no other help than that, when thou shalt see me in the passage of death, thou shalt say for me Our Lords prayer three times over." This the chaplain promised to do in all diligence and devotion. As it had been required of him so he did. The Pope died, and, after his death, HOW TO PRAY 175 showed himself to the chaplain in glory, thank- ing him and saying that he had been freed from the body without suffering. " For," said he, " at the first Pater, Jesus Christ — showing His Bloody Sweat to the Father — drove away all pain ; after the second, He atoned for my sins by the bitterness of His Passion — and they flew away like a cloud ; after the third. He opened Heaven to me by His charity and led me to eternal bliss." It is true that the story of the Pope's three Paternosters dates back from the early days of the sixteenth century, when it was told for the encouragement of "une femme seculi^re," in the sure belief that even the vicarious re- petition of this prayer would act as a charm. Threefold repetition, she is told, would deliver us from our enemies, procure the pardon of our sins, and open to us the gates of heaven ! But, without slipping to the level of the trooper or the Pope, the devout may still come very far short of the efficient practice of prayer directed to the attainment of its proper ends. And, firstly, prayer, like praise, is a weapon 176 OF PRAYER AND PRAISE in the soul's armoury that must be kept bright by constant exercise ; not reserved for special occasions. Signal and disastrous failure in this world has always been held to justify retirement from it. When men will have no more of our service, the hour has come to transfer it with prayers and fasting to the House of God. Yet here, as in other direc- tions, the laws of the life spiritual are at one with the wisdom of this world ; none can deny the power of prayer to create an atmosphere, and the power of an atmosphere to foster the conditions that may bring fulfilment of the desires expressed in prayer. Its use, therefore, in the secular life — insomuch as, if honestly practised, it may largely modify our relations to those about us — is even more important than in the religious life, in which we are fenced about and guarded from the immediate influence of others. Nevertheless, the misconception of the proper use of prayer and of the benefits it confers is such, that by far the larger number of those who pray are satisfied to formulate a THE SIGNIFICANCE OF PRAYER 177 demand for some gift or grace, which they expect to receive promptly and in the sense in which they have demanded it. Some may get as far as " Da mihi hoc semper desiderare et velle quod tibi magis acceptum est et carius placet " ; but even this has only the accent of gentle acquiescence without any of the superb courage of the divine prayer upon the Mount. Instances there are, not a few, which show us daily how immense is the lapse from the true spiritual conception of the office of prayer — whether employed in the service of others or on our own behalf— the moment we materialize it. To materialize the objects of prayer does in fact destroy its highest significance and force. These are to be sought in the ennobling and purifying of our views and desires, whether for others or ourselves. The habit of fixing the mind on given objects clears our vision, and the desire of the hour is seen in its deep relation to the past and coming years. And even so, the effort to desire good for others, even for those at whose hands we may have suffered wrong, may possibly bring us to a 2 A 178 OF PRAYER AND PRAISE kinder view of their character and acts. These, if they cannot be harmonized with the standard of our own life, we may at least regard with some measure of charity. It is, perhaps, easier to feel as one ought about the bitterest enemy than to live perfectly with a friend. Great wrongs are rare, and have generally some exciting elements which call forth in the injured a greater magnanimity, but to obtain such virtue, its source and spring must have been strengthened by previous habit. The resource of prayer must be sought not only in great emergencies, for the character of our de- cisions in emergencies will be determined by the habit of right-willing built up out of the trivial opportunities of life. Then the critical decision of an occasion that appeals to the imagination and the emotions is taken as it were involuntarily— free from the petty ob- stacles potent enough to hinder unselfish resolve in the ordinary day. This, too, is one of the chief uses of prayer, that it should give direction to the courses of our being. The vision cleared by daily effort THE OPEN VISION 179 to behold those things that have place in our immediate purpose will soon command a com- plete view of the object of life, and the attempt made to draw our thoughts about one special point of desire will be illuminating as to the quality and nature of our desires generally. For persistence in this office should not lead us into cowardly subjection to the difficulties and crises of our days, but should arouse rather the spirit of conquest and the power of praise — training us to a high courage. To such a spirit, calamity, grief, and defeat even of high and cherished hopes will come not as afflictions to be suffered, but as opportunities for proof of strength. The note of praise once reached, its office is, even humanly speaking, no less serviceable. It is the attitude of mind that gives courage for the attack of things difficult. The healthy soul cannot accept the view, taken by many of the devout, that our mortal state is so sunk and wretched that, should we look closely into it, we must remain for ever inconsolable. By no man have such as these been reproached more i8o OF PRAYER AND PRAISE than by Dante, who had had himself much cause for sadness. To the sorrowful he assigns the shades of the fourth circle of hell, and out of their darkness they cry unto him — " Tristi fummo Nel aer dolce che dal sol s'allegra, Portando dentro accidioso fummo ; Or ci attristiam nella belletta negra." (i-) The very spring and source of noble living is surely to be found in the pure joy of life. The instinctive pleasures of movement which make glad the heart of the child, and conduct the flight and poise of the bird on the wing through the sky or the green labyrinth of the woods ; that simple sense of physical delight which comes to us in a thousand ways at all times and places; the ecstasy which the rain and the wind bring to the body that may battle against them ; the mysterious consciousness of union with life universal which may visit any one of us : — the gifts of life that stir the pulses to praise are not to be numbered. Yet the un- gracious spirit has been known to declare that (I.) See Note C, p. 232, THE JOY OF LIFE i8i nature offers nothing better to mortal men than the sense of relief from pain — " O natura cortese, Son questi i doni tuoi, Questi i diletti sono^ Che tu porgi ai mortali. Uscir di pena E diletto fra noi."(i-) The description of calm after storm which Leopardi closed with these words actually con- tains a thousand suggestions of pleasure — the glorious sweep of the clouds clearing from the mountains; the rejoicing voices of the birds ; the river shiningcrystal clearin the valleyas the light breaks on it from the west; thesungilding anewthe little hamlets nestling in the hills ; the song of the workman taking up his interrupted toil ; the laughter of the women going forth to seek water at springs fed by the freshly fallen rain ;— all these things are there, but the glad- ness of every heart has failed to bring to the poet any vision of the spirit of delight ; to him these lovely sights and sounds are but " Gioia vana, ch'^ frutto del passato timore."(2.) {!•) See Note D, p. 232. (2.) See Note E, p. 232. 1 82 OF PRAYER AND PRAISE The supreme expression of this temper of mind is to be found in the opening lines of the " Chorus of the Dead," the sombre beauty of which must appeal even to unwilling ears — " Sola nel mondo eterno, a cui si volve Ogni creata cosa, In te morte si posa Nostra ignuda natura Lieta no, ma sicura Dell' antico dolor . . . "(i) A majestic chaunt, but one which unnerves the spirit with the ghostly oppression of a fatal doom. The energy which should carry us on to the conquest of things visible and invisible is sapped by the persistent will to dwell only on the tragic and terrible aspects of nature. The accents of praise are silenced. In contrast with this deathly quiet as of the tomb, the cry of Maecenas, " vita dum superest bene est," has a reassuring echo of the divine harmony of praise. O golden sands of life that slip noiselessly through our reluctant fingers, are there any words whereby your gift may not be praised ? (I.) See Note F, p. 232. BENEDICITE i8 In our joy of the storm, of the wind and rain, in our worship of the blessed sun, in our awe of the wrath and splendour of the sea, in our acknowledgment of all the fruitful glories of the earth, do we not praise ? And may we not, by the true and faithful use of praise and prayer, bring to the service of our souls such balance of wisdom and charity that our spiritual life, harboured in love and peace, shall inspire us with joy ineffable ? OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING " Let any one of you having a loaf of bread, sell half and buy with it the flowers of the narcissus ; for as bread nourisheth the body, so do the flowers of the narcissus nourish the soul." " Learning and Labour," said Folly, " have slipped into the world like the other plagues of human life. No one knew anything about them in the Golden Age: men then — without method, without rules, without instruction — lived happy under the guidance of nature." The Golden Age has vanished, but to know nothing either about labour or learning is still the healthy ambition of the majority of man- kind. Folly, when she denounces Learning for as great a plague as Labour, comes far nearer the true opinion of men than Dante, who opens his " Convivio " with the audacious assertion that " all men naturally desire Learning : " 187 2 B 2 1 88 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING *'Tutti gli huomini naturalmente desideranno di sapere " — a statement to which any school- master can give the lie. The sentiments which are placed by Eras- mus in the mouth of Folly may often be heard on the lips of many who cannot express them so well. All that is to be said on her side has been said in the " Moriae Encomium " not only with convincing wit, but with inimitable grace and delicacy. Even the necessary effort by means of which the real wants of life are, in general, easily supplied, is to most of us distasteful. Those very activities, the in- stinctive exercise of which is in itself a joy, become irksome when imposed as the necessary means to an end, however de- sirable. Yet the eyes of the wise have seen no evil in labour. They have, it is true, regretted, with John Woolman, the irregular distribution of its profitable exercise and the sufferings of all those oppressed by too great a strain upon their strength. The difficulty which distressed the simple Quaker — whose writings Charles THE USE OF KNOWLEDGE 189 Lamb advises us " to get by heart " — has troubled many who are not so sure as he that " if more men were usefully employed, and fewer ate bread as a reward for doing that which is not useful, food and raiment would, on a reasonable estimate, be more in proportion to labour than they are at present." Hateful, though, as may be the enforced effort by which the needs of the body and its pleasures also are supplied, it is not so repug- nant to human weakness as that which must be made before we come within sight of the pro- vision needed for the nourishment of the soul. The desire of learning and of learning for its own sake is, in truth, a very rare desire — " Non se de' chiamar letterato chi acquista lettere per fare denari."(iO By learning we mean that labour by which we acquire the strength to conquer those mental positions from which we may embrace wider and yet wider possi- bilities of sight. For true learning aims not so much at the furnishing of the mind with varied knowledge, as at producing the conditions (I-) See Note G, p. 232. I90 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING under which things may be known in their fullest significance. Knowledge of facts has, in itself, little value, — it makes no differ- ence whether a thousand or a hundred facts are in our possession, unless we have learnt to see for ourselves the relation in which they stand to each other. Without this habit and this power of thought the facts of which a man may have knowledge are no more to him than the signs of a language the meaning of which is hidden. With those who are the slaves, more or less unwilling, to such service of the body or the mind, we have naught to do ; our business is rather with those who love both labour and learning; and seek not only bread, but also the flowers of the narcissus. Of such as belong to this choice company who desire w^ith a single heart the riches of the full assurance of understanding, those there are, not the least worthy, who have left no shining record of their living. Some are content to fix their ambition on the perfect achievement of a single end, and these invariably make a braver show THE JUDGMENT OF THE CROWD 191 in the eye of the world than those whose energies are spent in divers not obviously consenting ways. Thus it comes to pass, that when the pub- lic appoints a day of judgment for the writer with his books, or for the painter with his posthumous exhibition, he who produces the greatest impression on the crowd, he who seems to be represented by the most complete and corporate whole, is not always he who has lived out his life and fulfilled his powders the most completely. Take, for example, one who held a most distinguished place amongst those painters who were drawn by the first movement of Western curiosity towards the East. Eugene Fromentin was a painter by temperament, yet he had hesitated for years before making choice of his profession. No doubt he felt, instinc- tively, that he needed other means to obtain for himself complete expression. It was, in fact, impossible to see in the group of paintings brought together at the Ecole des Beaux Arts after his death anything like a coherent body 192 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING of work. In order to appreciate and estimate the genius of the man — whose personality had so great a charm for his contemporaries — one had to keep in mind, as one stood before the varied crowd of sketches and paintings hang- ing on the walls, that other work, the brilliance of which showed that its author received im- pressions which he knew it was impossible to render except by his pen. The exquisite pages of '' Un 6t6 dans le Sahara " and " Une annde dans le Sahel " were needed to complete Fromentin's message to us concerning the East, to which he gave his whole-souled devotion. In the notes of the Journal written on the Nile, when he went in the train of the Empress to the opening of the Suez Canal, we have an even more vivid reflection of things seen. There are brief passages which recall, as no sketch can do, the vast solitude, the immense monotony of the waste of waters enamelled with fleeting hues of mysterious colour, trembling and changing in the fierce play of blinding midday light, or tempered and transfused by the magic THE WRITER AND THE PAINTER 193 haze of sunset. The pages of the Journal are an epitome of impressions which could not be transferred to canvas, yet no less vividly felt than those which would have lent themselves to shapes of colour and light. And again, before we can see Fromen- tin clearly we must recognize that wealth of sympathetic appreciation which enabled him to view with delight the beauty of work utterly unlike his own, whether in style or object. This charms us by its genial inspiration in his *' Maitres d autrefois," whilst in " Dominique " — that early novel which won the eulogy of George Sand, and which was in some respects connected with the actual experiences of his youth — we are allowed to touch the most secret chords of his being, and to know, in a parable, something of those things the reality of which a man hides from his nearest friends. Puzzled by the twin manifestations of an activity, neither of which was in itself complete, though both possessed original value, one seeks for some dominant note which may give unity to the appearance of scattered effort. One finds 2 c 194 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING it, I think, in Fromentin's distinguished sense of style. The rare sense of style which pervades all his work, and which brought to him instant recognition from those who were themselves masters of style, is the clue to the secret ambi- tion which dignified Fromentin's life and work. He defines it when he closes his sketch of various experiences with the words — " Mais depuis, j'ai compris qu'entre ce monde et I'autre L'Art humain doit servir d'interprbte et d'apotre." Lines such as these were evidently written, not by one of the robust sort who fight their way to the heart's desire through blood and tears, but by one of those who are attuned to the vibration of the most delicate harmonies. Of such are those who belong to that band by whom the doing of what the world calls a great work is voluntarily foregone in order that they may accomplish the full expression of an ideal. On this wise, the obvious outcome of a man's life may appear but a poor achievement, whilst his life itself may gain in beauty and complete- ness, since it has been consistent even in its SELF-RENUNCIATION IN WORK 195 inconsistencies. For to the perfect accom- plishment of a great work that the world can recognize to be such, a man the more often must sacrifice some of the fulness of his secret life : " Quand on veut faire surgir une idee les moyens s'imposent." This is true, not only of the necessities of a great labour, but of the necessities of a great experience. It is not the monk alone who must forego even the innocent joys of life in order that his whole strength may be directed into the one channel ; and the injunction, " he that loveth father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me," which fixes the cardinal point of Christian living, denotes equally the cardinal point of all life uncompromisingly devoted to the fulfilment of a single purpose. Life in its highest sense — the life which is based on labour and on learning, and seeks not bread alone but also the flowers of the nar- cissus — is of robust growth, and pays no heed to let or hindrance in the pursuit of its end. He who has his nation to honour or defend, his service to pay to science or his name to 196 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING illustrate, must keep his aim ever before him. All other interests and ties must be held in sub- jection to his purpose— choice for him there is little or none. Neither can he who seeks to know the fulness of life decide through what vicissitudes of experience he will be made free. Those ignorant ones are but the approved of folly who would prevent knowledge by the fear of sin. They discern but dimly the nature of the tests that may have to be encountered by him who seeks the way of his own perfection. Sin, however grievous it may appear in itself, is no final bar to growth in life : the one hopeless state is death, for deadness is incapacity to feel. Slips by the way cannot count against the pro- gress made towards the high and ultimate goal. A great captain profits, we are told, by the mis- takes of his enemy ; he is yet greater who can profit fearlessly by his own. The magnificent robustness of conscience necessary to this end is a feature which distin- guishes all great pictures of life, nor is it in any more marked than in the mystical romance of THE HOLY GRAIL 197 " La Mort d'Arthure." Scenes of high cere- monial, of royal pomp, of statecraft, of battle, murder, rapine, deadly wrong, and sins un- nameable, are woven into the vast web of the story. Now and again are heard the chaunt of nuns and the voice of priests, or a horn an- nounces the coming of the queen, accompanied by her knights and ladies. But, on a sudden, whilst men dream their dreams of earthly joy and earthly love, a sound is heard as of wings, every voice is hushed, and the white dove ap- pears that heralds the mysterious vision of the Sancgreall ; in her bill there seems a little censer of gold, and therewithal is such a savour as though all the spicery of the Avorld had been there, and each man in that mystic presence eats and drinks the thing that he loves best. Distinct from all the company of kings and nobles swayed by the conflict of human passions with knightly ideals, stand out the heroic figure of that " noble clerke and holy man," the Arch- bishop of Canterbury, and those of the great queen and great knight — who was " come out of the eighth degree from our Lord Jesus 198 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING Christ " — sinning out their sin, advancing step by step, fatally drawn onward to thefinal tragedy. Then, when brought to bay with consequences — erect, unshaken in the ruin and disaster of the state, they two reckon these things over as one might the pawns lost or won at the game of chess. Even in her penitence, the queen stands out as ruler and abbess of the religious house in which she has taken refuge, assuming privi- lege not so much as proper to her rank as of the right belonging to her heroic mould. Calling ladies and gentlewomen about her, " as sinfull creatures as ever was I," says she, " are Saints in Heaven." And on the same high level Lancelotbears his witness, and, standing before her, declares, " Sithence, yee have taken you unto perfection, I must needes take me unto perfection of right. For I take record of God in you have I had mine earthly joy. And if I had found you so disposed now, I had cast mee for to have had you into mine owne realme and countrey." But Guenever, the queen, dominant and strong as when she brought him to for- swear himself after his solemn oath taken before LANCELOT AND GUENEVER 199 the Sancgreall, denies him even a parting kiss. " I pray you kiss me once," says Lancelot, " and never more." " ' Nay,' said the queene, ' that shall I never doe, but abstaine you from such things,' and soe they departed." There is no question in these closing scenes of a passion that has exhausted its strength. We are told of the parting between the queen and her lover that there was " never so hard a hearted man but hee would have wept to see the sorrow that they made ; for there was a lamen- tation as though they had beene stungen with speares, and many times they sowned," but there is no hint of flinching, no hesitation as to the instant acceptance of the due penalty. They part, they suffer, they die in bitterest anguish, with the same superb and royal resolution that they had brought to the encounter of all the vicissitudes of their ill-fated love. The forceful determination with which, not Lancelot and Guenever alone, but every one who comes upon the scene, follows his or her appointed adventure, the calm with which the most tragic fates are faced, speaks to us at least 200 OF LABOUR AND OF LEARNING of the high-souled temper in which alone great things can be accomplished. This is, indeed, the temper which must above all things be his who — in singleness of heart — seeks by labour and by learning to know the fulness of life. In the highest development of this ideal, learning itself becomes not an object but an experience ; it becomes, as does labour, a means to an end, that end being the perfection of body and soul. The discipline involved in training the body to physical excellence ; the lessoning of the heart in the single affections that may carry us onward to the conception of a god-like charity ; the schooling of the mind until per- sistence in the effort of apprehension brings the universe itself within its view; — all thesethings are within the compass of the labour and the learning of man. Furthermore, the daily exer- cise, by which all the forces of our being are brought to bear not only on the varied wisdom of the ages, but on the great spaces of human thought, will bring to us finally the balance and serenity of poise which place the soul's content beyond the clamour of the idle or the BREAD THAT PERISHETH 201 foolish tongues of men. Even bread, that is the staff of life, is a thing of no account in the eyes of him who desires, with a whole heart, the possession of the flowers of the nar- cissus. 2 D OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS ^ IN PRAISE OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS " Che fa I'aria infinita, e quel profondo Infinite seren ? Che vuol dir questa Solitudine immensa ? Ed io che sono ? " (i-) In the opening chapter of the fifth volume (2.) of " Modern Painters," there is a lovely passage in which Mr. Ruskin tells us that he has often felt as if nature must have sorrowed in the days when men knew no delight in her beauties. He draws a picture of the trees putting forth their tender buds, and grieving all the while because the country was disturbed by armed men, and because, instead of being free to spread them- selves over the fields and rejoice with all things in the joy of spring, those who should have (I.) See Note H, p. 232. (2.) Given her by her father, in i860, as had been another volume, by Ruskin himself, in 1859. — Editor. 205 2o6 OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS been trooping out to admire God's handiwork in the blossoming and renewing of the earth were shut within the towns for safety. Think- ing over his eloquent words, I began to wonder whether there ever was a time when men did not love nature. When I called to mind certain very old words, — certain bits of landscape that the Romans had painted and the fair meadows in which early Italian painters had often placed the Madonna and her Holy Child, I asked myself whether it was not possible that — even when they said the least about it — they wor- shipped her truly in their hearts ! Perhaps the great difference between their time and oursiVes in this, that we have now learnt to express our- selves very readily and unrestrainedly about everything ; we have learnt to talk about art and about nature ; about our own experiences and about those of others ; about things high and holy, and about things low and foul, with equal unreserve and fluency and irreverence. This freedom of expression ; this want of reti- cence which is in some ways one of the worst features of our day, at least gives us the chance THE LOVE OF NATURE 207 of knowing a great deal about our own ways and interests ; and thus we have outspoken evidence of that indwelling passion for nature of which so little was heard when men talked of their sensations and impressions less freely. One thing, however, may be noticed in which we can certainly be shown to love nature, if not more, at least very differently from the way in which our forefathers loved her. We are much bolder in our loves than they were. The painters of four hundred years ago painted most carefully the little flowers of the fore- ground, the blessed daisy shining in the grass, the white rose in its silver pallor, or the scarlet blossom in the flush of its glory. They never seemed to care much about the far-off mountains and their ice and snow. Now, I confess that I share this spirit, and that I am oppressed by the great mountains, but I also acknowledge that this is not the modern spirit, and that, just as the present cen- tury has resolved to leave nothing unsaid, even so it has resolved to leave nothing unclimbed. Yet on the other hand, I ask myself sometimes, 2o8 OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS whether the dwellers in those lands are not of my way of thinking. Is not the freedom of their life confined, as it were, by a certain awe and shrinking before the majestic and towering heights which rise cloud-capped above them everywhere ? Take Switzerland, for example ; to me there is nothingmore amazing, after the extraordinary character of the scenery, than the very ordinary character of everything else. It would seem as if the inhabitants had been so appalled by the grandeur of the hills that they sought refuge from their terrors in arts of the most domestic type,- — in the making of watches and carven baubles, and of buildings that might be painted wooden toys. Thus, one begins to realize that these glorious mountains, which are the pride of Switzerland, do indeed make of that land a place to visit, a place to bring marvellous memories from, but not a place to live in, — for those at least who would strive to keep in sight of those peaks which rise higher than any earthly mountains, and which can only be reached by the flight of the spirit. MOUNTAIN AND VALLEY 209 It is, however, just this strange contrast of character which makes Switzerland so admir- able a playground for the rest of Europe ; the travellerwho has spent hisbreathand exhausted his capacity for enjoyment on the giant Alps, can turn from their inaccessible glories to the reposeful valleys where the little chalets are nestling and to the friendly towns of simple architecture, with their dormer windows and the careful sheltering eaves which seem to welcome him to the contented homeliness of the quiet fireside. They speak to him of that world of human service and human life which he has but quitted for awhile, and remind him, even when he is seeking refuge in the solitudes of the hills from the myriad claims which fetter the will of him who dwells in cities, that these claims, too, are sacred, — not lightly to be foregone of any child of man. The way of the spiritual life has, in truth, been ever the same ; ever apart from the crowd ; for the constant surge and wash of the seething ocean of human life, whilst bringing us a thou- sand suggestions daily, gives no pause for the 2 E 2IO OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS long endeavour of thought. " Learn," cries the teacher, " to despise things external, and give thyself over to those things that be within, so shalt thou see the Kingdom of God enter into thy soul." Solitude, silence, apartness, these are as the breath of his nostrils to him that would divine the mysteries of that school of sorrow redeemed and sanctified by love, which we call life ; yet how shall one come by these things whose feet are ever in the ways of men ? The walls of the ancient city have fallen, it is true, before the teeming thousands of to-day, and each great town rejoices as she sees her multitudes overlap all bounds ; but as the bar- riers set by human hands fall and disappear, the walls of that invisible prison, in which the spirit of man is taken captive by the day of small things, rise higher and higher. How shall a man think on that which belongs to his peace, if he yields himself wholly a servant to those things which be without ; and how shall he carry any message to others, who cannot hearken to the voice of his own soul ? Surely such an one, having a great desire THE STRENGTH OF THE HILLS 211 towards things unseen and a craving after that perfection — the growth of which is checked and hindered by the tumult of the market-place — may well lift up his eyes unto the hills, and in the beholding them, though but for a little space, find that help which cometh of the Lord ! And it is well, perchance, that in so beholding them, he should be recalled, by the habitations of the pleasant valleys, to thoughts of those from whose midst he has gone forth. The voice of the Snow-maiden, like the voice of the Siren, has beguiled not a few to their destruction : the man who, for any cause, utterly forsakes the paths of his fellow-men, is by them given up as lost, and becomes as one of no account, being reckoned a dreamer of idle dreams. Therefore, let him beware who hears that call — be it never so alluring — which bids a man separate him- self from his company, lest in the following after its strange music he should become a castaway. Aubanel, in "La Sereno," his suggestive version of the wise old myth, bids us, indeed, remember that it is not given to all to see the 2 12 OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS beauty of the enchantress nor to hear her voice ! The ship, heavy laden with human souls, sails by in the summer seas, all unheeding the song of the Siren that is raised from off the rocks — a song to hear at least, if not to obey ; yet none give ear to her words save one, and he hearkens unto his own death — " Quau vbu, dis, estre moun page,* E lou mbstre d'aquipage : Hou ! crido, un ome h. la mar ! " " A man overboard ! " that is the requiem to be chaunted over him whose desires are not after the pattern of his own day ! To me, in truth, the snowy glories of the high mountains have never brought the sense of perfect freedom which not only gives joy in the fulness of life, but a vision of that which is beyond. The message of the plains is to some, perhaps, more mighty than the message of the hills, and these love the broad plains of the earth. They love the shores of the tranquil inland sea which lies beneath the majestic vault of that burning heaven which, in the autumn * "Say ! who will be my servitor?" THE PLAIN OF LOMBARDY 213 season, overhangs the vast Hungarian puszta ; for there, too, they may dwell for a while, as it were, in great spaces of silence — unbroken save for the flying echoes which betray the passing of the wild steeds whose swift feet haunt those sandy wastes. Nor less, for such as these, the charm that breathes in the magic sleep of the fair Lombard country, dreaming beneath her August suns. Line after line, the waves of the enchanted land tremble through silvery veils of vapour and fade beyond sight in the grave serenity of the southern sky. Yet the hush of all things is stirred with movings of secret life : the still air is thick with visions of the past, the voice of the waters sings to us with a sound as of much weeping, and the grapes of the vineyards are red as from the blood of the slain whose graves are under our feet. By all those, indeed, who seek not so much for solitude as for that august silence out of which may be most clearly heard the voice of the spirit, those lands are ever held most dear which leave the dreaming fancy free to build. 214 OF THE HILLS AND PLAINS beyond the reach of human hands, a temple for the soul. Thus it comes to pass that when they tread the glittering region of the everlasting snows — flushing scarlet where the sunlight floods the crested Himalayas — these lovers of the hidden life turn them from the high ways that they may gaze where in a thousand curves the great watercourses enlace with silver fret- work the myriad cities of the plain. And, be- hold, the empire of the East in all its glory is below them ! Out of the night of time have come the chariots of her conquerors, but in vain have these laid low her people and trodden her harvests underfoot ; the ashes of death have but urged the bounty of the soil to richer uses, and given to its rulers a more fabulous wealth. Wide are the waving fields of grain, living waters rise beneath the dark feathers of the slender palms, a mist of domes and towers proclaims the ancient palaces of kings, the golden shrines of a million worshippers ! Girt about with endless distance, the great plains stretch from between the shining gates of dawn THE PUNJAB FROM THE HIMALAYA 215 to those far shores where the mighty Indus meets the Arabian sea. And, as the watcher looks forth at nightfall, he sees from afar the slow approach of that floating cloud of purple mystery which, like a close-drawn curtain, comes to shroud the sleep of the imperial land. Of a truth, the majesty of the hills and the dreamland of the plains are alike within the dominion of the soul. Only let him who hath his delight in their beauty take heed lest he lay down the burden of life at the song of the Siren. Should such an one come out from the midst of men, that he may stand for a while in the presence of the Eternal Spirit, then let him look to it that he return again to their tents — even as Moses from the heights of Sinai — bearing in his hands the Tables of the Law. For in vain shall the seer see his appointed vision, in vain shall the prophet receive his inspired message, if he forget the service of his people. OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS " Scriptorum chorus omnis amat nemus et fugit urbes." In the opening lines of the Inferno, Dante describes the terrors of the wood in which he found himself when astray from the right path. The words tremble on his lips as he speaks of the slow fear creeping over one irrecoverably lost. In place of the quiet shades, and the kindly shelter, beloved of the poets, there looms before us a dark haunt of mystery — the se/va selvaggia which harbours death and despair. The passage through its impenetrable shadows is full of deadly terror, and to recall the unseen horrors of its gloom is to revive an agony little less bitter than death. For Dante, as for others of his age, the forest conjured shapes of fear and dreadful awe. It may be remembered that Poliphile, 219 2 F 2 2 20 OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS when he sets forth on his search for Polia in the Hypnerotomachia, finds himself also in the depths of a forest so vast and dark that no ray of the blessed sun could pass through the thick network of leaves and branches overhead. In this forest, too, he is seized with fright that sets his pulses beating to a mad measure and blanches his cheek with terror ; for he fears lest he be devoured by wild beasts or be swallowed up in some unfathomable abyss. The wood appeared to men in those days as a haunt of horror and fear from which the wanderer, snared by clinging brambles and shaken by the men- ace of the unseen, could only hope to be de- livered through supernatural aid. The savage wildness of unmitigated nature could not fail to thrill with dread all those dwellers within walled cities. If the wood is to attract their reluctant feet, there must be no mystery of tangled forest paths, but a way made straight and plain as that to the boschetto, placed by Boccaccio not far from the hospit- able palace of the Decameron. Walking with slow steps through the meadows — in which THE BOSCHETTO 221 the little flowers had but just begun to lift their dewy heads beneath the dawn — the com- pany could follow their guide, Emilia, in con- fidence and safety. No terrible wild beasts could have their lair in so friendly a covert ; and even goats and stags and other animals undisturbed by the pursuit of hunters — since the plague then reigned in Florence — came out from beneath the oaks, the leaves of which furnished chaplets for the holiday-makers, and being without fear, gambolled before them, playing now with one and now with another. Under the shades of even as hospitable a wood— tall, leafy and thick — where " Un ruisseau tres cler pour mettre paix Entre le bois et le prd se mettoit," the Marguerite des Marguerites encountered those three ladies whose amorous casuistry as developed in "La Coche" always offers a stumbling-block to such as are unfamiliar with the innumerable hairsplitting disputes, dia- logues, and allegories which it was the fashion of the day to weave round the question, " Che cosa e I'amore ? " 222 OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS It was in the hour of dawn — the hour in which the sky changes from its deeper azure to pale blue— that Emilia set out with her com- panions over the meadows. Queen Margaret tells us that it was in the evening that, sick at heart, she quitted those who were about her, and wandering in the fields, found herself in a place favoured by heaven — " Par sa douceur et par sa temperance A la verdeur du pre plein d'espe'rance, Environne de ses courtines vertes, Oil mille fleurs k faces descouvertes Leur grandes beaut^s descouvrirent au Soleil Qui se couchant k I'heure, estoit vermeil." Woods such as these, that harbour by meadows studded with a thousand flowers and threaded by crystal waters, hold no place for visions of death and dreadful night, but rather enshrine the joy of life made manifest ! The same surroundings were the fitting setting in which to tell tales of amorous adventure or argue of nice points concerning the " bellis- sime regole d'Amore." Love triumphant or pathetic, in all its various categories, was the constant theme of discourse in those green MAY TIME 223 fields which lay close to the pleasant woods, whither sorrowful ladies, like Queen Margaret, might carry a heavy heart for consolation, or Boccaccio w^ould send wandering the lingering feet of his happy lovers. In the woods and fields, too, beside West- minster, that great lover. Queen Guenever, rode on maying in the lusty month of May. Early in the morning she sets forth, followed by her knights, all clothed in green ; and as each had a lady behind him, "I will," she said, "that ye be all well horsed." At this point, it is a significant thing that Malory, who usually confines himself strictly to pure narrative, not wanting now and again in an admirable but simple dignity, suddenly waxes eloquent, and writes of love one of the most beautiful pas- sages in the English language. " The Moneth of May," he says, " was come, when every lusty heart beginneth toblossome and to bring foorth fruit ; for like as herbes and trees bring foorth fruit and flourish in May, in like wise every lusty heart that is in any manner a lover, springeth and flourisheth in lusty deeds. For 2 24 OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS it giveth unto all lovers courage that lusty moneth of May in some thing, more in that moneth of May than in any other moneth, for divers causes ; for then all herbs and trees renew a man and a woman. And in like wise lovers call againe to mind old gentlenesse and old service and many kind deeds that were forgotten by negligence ; for like as winter rasure doth alway rase and defacegreen summer, so fareth it by unstable love in a man and in a woman, for in many persons there is no stabilitie. For we may see all day a little blast of winter's rasure, anon we shall deface and put away true love for little or naught that cost much thing ; this is no wisdom nor stabilitie, but it is feeblenessie of nature and great dis- worship whosoever useth this. Therefore like as May moneth floureth and flourisheth in many gardens, so in likewise let every man of worship flourish his hart in this world, first unto God, and next unto the joy of them that he promiseth his faith unto." Few indeed are they in whom wisdom and stability have taken up their lodging, and who THE SOLITUDE OF THE WOODS 225 have learnt that the bonds wherewith a man hath bound his soul shall stand. The devout lover, the great captain, the active servant of men, the man of worship that flourisheth his heart in this world, seek, as does the Phenix, the wood and the kindling for their funeral pyre ; they are free only to choose by what manner of interests and desires their life shall find its end. The fever of pursuit may indeed hide from their eyes the slow accomplishment of the inevitable tragedy, but how fares it with him who obeys the injunction to " flee fro the prease, and dwelle with soothfastnesse " ? Should such an one desire to make his dwell- ing apart from the ways of men, he will seek, like Michel d'Amboise, for some secret place — '*le plus sou vent ou personne n'estoit." He will not set his face toward the trackless forests whose shadowy depths affright the spirit, nor turn for pleasure to the delightful groves bordered by meadows, rich in the scent of a thousand flowers and dear to the feet of holiday-makers; he will rather betake himself to the hidden solitudes that may yet remain not far from the very heart 2 G 2 26 OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS of life: some such "place of peace "(i) as was in the thought of the poet when he wrote — " En ce vert bois doncques m'acheminay Et cy et la, seullet, me pourmenay Dessoubz rameaux et branches verdelettes; Me pourmenant, pensoys mille chosettes." Leaving the city, a man may still find forest ways in which he may be alone, yet not alone. He may dwell in a peopled solitude. On the paths that lead into the eternal verdure of the woods, his footfall is hushed by a caressing silence full of delicate pleasure to the ear. For the silence of the woods is compact of sound ; it is the silence, not of death, but of life. Even in the snowy winter days, there is always the movement of hidden growth ; the sap will be rising in the trees, and the little mosses at their feet will be weaving their carpet over the bare spaces of the earth, or a ray of sunlight will stir the air with myriad invisible forms of life. To walk hither and thither, alone under the boughs and the green branches, thinking of a thousand things, — that is the paradise not only (I.) See footnote, "the place of peace," on p. 153. i THE PEACE OF THE WOODS 227 of the dreamer of dreams, but of every one who wouldfain listen to thepulseof his own thoughts and take the measure of his day of strength. The dweller in the town, incessantly disturbed by the passions and desires of men, can make for himself no such secure and tranquil abiding- place. To follow the secret purposes of thought requires absolute freedom for its perfect exer- cise : a single thread that is foreign to its nature will wholly change or destroy the texture of its delicate web. If it would seek its own issues, the centre of thought must be itself; then, and not till then, may a man hope to come at the knowledge of the mysterious harmonies of life. Then, too, he cannot help but hear the tragic measure by which he may reckon his own steps towards the appointed end. " Less than half of me," wrote Michael Angelo, "has come back to Rome, for truly there is no peace except among the woods." Beneath the branches, under the sheltering shades, almost within sight of the towers of Westminster, we may even to-day find such a refuge, instinct with life, as undisturbed by any 228 OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS threat of an unfriendly presence as was that fabled by Boccaccio to have existed when the plague had set its impassable barrier between the forest of Schifanoia and the gates of Flo- rence. The trees are there standing in spacious ranks, through which birds may take their up- ward flight, or the sun send down his friendly shafts, dappling the earth with messages direct from heaven. There, when the song of the morning birds is silent, one may hear the mid- day cry of the jay, the laughter of the yaffle, the purring and clapping of the night-jar after sunset. Should one here desire some wider circuit of sight, he may look beyond the forest paths over the plain where row on row stand in dis- tant line those trees of the field that are man's life, and mark the watercourses shrouded by sheets of vapour withdrawn at the last to reveal the outlines of the far-off hills — faintly seen within the clouds. On turning back, nearer to the ways of men, he may again follow the great waves of heather and gorse, of broom and bracken, rolling onwards till they break against THE PLACE OF PEACE 229 the close curtains of a regiment of firs standing straight against the sky. Here, too, there comes from afar, to him who will listen, the murmur of the town, whilst the lark rises at his feet — " Ele, guindee de zeffire, Sublime, an I'er vire et revire Et declique un joli cri Qui rit, guerit et tire I'ire Des espriz, mieux que je n'dcri." The day of labour in this place of peace should bring the harmonious accomplishment of perfect life. The haunting rhythm of the hours in their sacred progress, which may fall unheeded on the ears of those who are busied with " the wrastling of this world," is hushed, but not silenced, by the echoes of the woods. To their solemn music, the fateful years unroll the great chart in which we may trace the hidden mysteries of the days, and behold those fore- shadowings of things to come towards which we know ourselves to be carried by inevitable steps — not gladly, indeed, but with that full and determined consent with which the brave 230 OF THE WOODS AND FIELDS accept unflinchingly the fulfilment of law and fate. " For God hath not given us the spirit of fear ; but of power, and of love, and of a sound mind." (i-) (I.) This last passage was written at Pyrford Rough, October, 1904, by EmiUa F, S. Dilke, who died there, peacefully and un- consciously, in that month and year. I repeat here, as a fitting close, one of the pieces in my wife's hand, already given at the place in which it stood (Editor) : — " Thy travel here has been with difficulty ; but that will make thy rest the sweeter." ( 232 ) NOTES A, p. 151. — "And remains the figure of greatest originality in the history of the human spirit." B, p. 173. — "O joy ! O unspeakable gladness ! O life unalloyed of love and peace ! " C, p. 180. — " Fretful were we in the sweet air which is glad- dened by the sun, bearing within us a smoke of Accidie ; now we are fretting ourselves in the black mire." D, p. 181. — "O kindly Nature, these are thy gifts; these are the delights that thou extendest to mortals. To escape from pain is among us delight." E, p. 181. — " Empty joy, that is the fruit of past fear." F, p. 182. — "O alone eternal in the world, to whom every created thing turns back, in thee, Death, reposes our naked nature ; joying not, but secure from its pain of old." G, p. 189. — "He must not be called a man of letters who acquires letters in order to make money." H, p. 205. — "What does the boundless air, and that deep boundless sky ? What means this immeasurable solitude ? And what am I ? " TWO STORIES CHOSEN FROM AMONG SEVERAL THAT HAD BEEN INTENDED FOR A NEW VOLUME SIMILAR TO "THE SHRINE OF DEATH" AND *'THE SHRINE OF LOVE" 2 H THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL In a cleft between two mountains, a castle was set on high, at the gates of the East, so that all the travellers of the earth needs must pass it ; and within its walls was great store of such things as are desired of men, and it was a house of pleasure. The voice of fountains was heard in the rose thickets of the gardens ; the scent of violets and of jasmine was within its courts, ' and the doors were ever open to those that were fain to enter. On a certain day, that was fixed for her bridal, the woman that dwelt in this castle rose early and betook herself to a secret chamber, and, having come there, she sat and looked on the face of her mirror, and, as she looked, she sang, and she sang asonerejoicingin her beauty. And, when she had ceased singing, she said, 237 238 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL " May I find grace in the eyes of my lord, for he is a man of men." And she sangyet a second time, and, at the second time, her song was of the coming of Love. Now, the mirror before which she sat had been given to her by her mother, who was a great enchantress, and every day the woman renewed her beauty in its shining, and its shining was as the shining of the sun. For the crystal balls that were on the frame were filled with many-coloured light, and the story of Life and Death was written along the borders with seed of rubies and of pearls, and the woman held the mirror more dear than all else she had ; and she possessed great riches. So when her song had its end, she looked once more on the image of her beauty, making the holy sign as she did so, and she drew an azure veil, wrought with many threads of silver, over the face of the mirror. This she did that so it might be de- fended from stain or hurt, for she feared lest the spirits of the air, passing that way, should be- hold themselves therein and trouble the depths of its shining. Then the woman went forth THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 239 from that chamber, and, calling her maidens to her, put on the robes that had been made ready to her bridal; but when they would have placed the crown above her veil, she denied them, say- ing, " Nay, but my lord himself shall do that." Even then, they heard the sound of music in the air, and, looking forth from the windows, they beheld where the mists that hung upon the crest of the hills had parted at that sound, and, in the parting, they saw the coming of a troop of horsemen, and their spears were as shafts of silver gleamingthrough the mist. And two, the foremost of that company, rode with trumpets uplifted, and, as they came onwards, they sent forth a challenge of joy and gladness to the whole earth. And, as the echoes of that second blast died away, the mists altogether followed them, and the woman beheld her lord all glorious in armour that was of silver and of gold, and she knew the scarlet plumes of his helmet and the scarves of his following, and she turned herself about that she might make ready to meet him. So she went down into the outer courts of the castle, for she desired to await 240 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL him at the gate ; and when he was come, she would have knelt, but he prevented her ; and taking from her the crown that was in her hands, he put it on her head and he kissed her. Then she made him great cheer, and wel- comed all his following graciously ; and when they were come within her gates and he had put off his armour, she showed him all the treasures of her house : there was not anything that she kept back from him, and she brought him to her secret chamber, and she unveiled her mirror before him. And the man esteemed the mirror greatly, and beheld himself therein gladly. It seemed to him that he had never known himself as he was therein revealed ; and they two had great joy of each other. Now, every year, in that country, when the summer was at its full, men went out in the woods that were about the castle, that they might honour the blossoming of the pome- granate. For, like as the budding of the may, in its dewy freshness, is held sacred to the delight of youths and maidens in the spring- tide, even so, in the full heat of summer, should THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 241 the flower of the pomegranate be held in rever- ence, for it is the flower of passion, and from its heart springs that liking that the man, in his manhood, hath towards the woman. Few, indeed, there be that honour this flower with a whole heart, for this is a matter of great virtue, but if any possess the secret, to him are all mysteries revealed ; death and time are the slaves of its servants, neither can any shame or fear overtake them that worship this flower rightly. Therefore, when the day came for the gather- ing of the flower, the woman made a stately festival, remembering the love she had to her lord, and his constant duty and service. And she bid all that were willing to the castle, that they might bear her company, and bring back the flower to her walls in triumph. And it so happened that many came from afar at her request, and amongst these was one, a stranger, who journeyed in great state ; and at her arrival all eyes were drawn to her, for the canopy of her litter was of blue and silver, and it was borne by four men, that were her 2 I 242 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL slaves ; and they were Ethiopians. Now this woman was the daughter of a mighty chief, whose lands lay to the north, and there was a feud of long standing between that chief and the man that was husband to the woman that dwelt in the castle. And though, in those days, there was no open strife between them, yet was their quarrel unappeased, and like a fire smouldering, the which, if but a gentle breeze do stir the embers, shall send forth great flames. Nor had that chief been willing to see his daughter depart on this her journey ; but she would not be gainsaid. For she was angered by the fame of the beauty of the woman and of the great desire that her lord had unto her, and she hated her for all that drew to her the hearts of men, and her mind was set to divine the secret of the woman's power so that she might take her lord from her ; and she knew that she could do this, were she but once within their walls, for she was skilled in all false magic. When the baskets, that had been borne with great ceremony into the woods, were full of the gathering, they that carried them took them THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 243 back to the castle, and they were set before the woman, in the garden hall, that she might dis- tribute the scarlet blossoms to her guests. It was then that she, seeing the stranger woman that was amongstthem, and being herself a lady of a noble courtesy, took thought to honour her; and she sent to her a branch of many blossoms by the hand of her lord. And the stranger, who was as one lying in wait, looking on it, made fitting thanks ; and the man, in the name of his lady, bid her welcome under their roof; and she stayed there, with all her following, many days. And when she had learnt the secret of the mirror she went her way. The winter months now were come, and during the time of snows, when scarcely might any one venture without the castle walls, word came that the mighty chief of the north had overpassed his borders with a great following, and was carrying fire and the sword throughout the land. This he had done at the prompting of his daughter ; for after her return from the festival of the pomegranate, she had not ceased to upbraid him ; and she said, " Are you 244 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL dreaming or asleep that you sit idle ? Now, even now, you may surely take vengeance on your enemy. He has sheathed his sword and has changed his spear for a woman's distaff." So her father called together all that would ride with him, and they were a mighty company. They had thought thus to take that lord un- awares, but his defences were sure, for he was a great captain. Men joined themselves to his banner willingly ; and the snows had scarcely melted, before the camp in the plain beneath the castle walls was full of those who had espoused his quarrel ; and he himself, having made ready to ride with them, took his leave of the woman in her secret chamber. Together they looked upon the face of the mirror ; and the man's spirit was strengthened by that which he beheld with- in its shining depths, for the love that was be- tween these two was even as a rock that cannot be moved, should the waves beat upon it never so violently, for the foundations thereof are beyond sight. So the man rode on his way rejoicing, but the woman veiled her mirror with a heavy heart. THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 245 And she looked forth, and called to mind that May morning, when it had seemed to her that all the earth had hearkened with her for the echo of his voice, and he had placed upon her head the crown of life ; and she comforted her- self, saying, " He shall doubtless return, in the strength of his manhood, before the flower of the may is set for blossom." But it was not so, for the war, of which he had thought soon to make an end, drew itself out day by day. And, when the summer was fully come, she had no heart for the accustomed festival, but it so hap- pened that, on that day, news was brought to her by which she was somewhat comforted. For a certain troop of horse, the best that were in the ranks of the enemy, had deserted to the army of her lord, and they reported great dissensions amongst the men of the north, so that the vic- tory over them was assured. This, however, they did in obedience to the daughter of their chief and in fulfilment of her hidden purpose. For when certain amongst the followers of her father found that the man, their enemy, was swift to overtake, ready of wit, and more to be 246 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL feared in battle than he had been in the days of his youth, they reproached her, and they said, "Where is thy magic and thy skill to read the thoughts of men ? She that dwells at the gates of the East is mightier than thou." Then she made answer to them softly, and, when she had wrought them to her mind, she plotted with them how they might take the man prisoner by treachery, and she said, " Should he be de- livered into my hands alive, it shall be well with you ; " and that company, which was called the company of the Black Spears, agreed with her for a great reward. And her schemes found the easier favour with them because they knew themselves to be in straits ; for the man had so taken up his quarters that the way by which they would have returned to their strongholds in the hills was blocked by his forces. Now, when that company had come into the camp, they sought their opportunity long time in vain, but, at the last, an evil fortune delivered the man into their hands. For those of the north, being brave men and desperate, rejected the peacethatwas proffered them, and, gathering THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 247 all their strength, attacked their enemies, trust- ing by the suddenness of their onslaught to have forced a way of escape. But the man and his followers met them in the plain, and he said, " Since they will have no peace, let it be war to the death." And he bid his people give no quarter. So they fought from early morning till the dews began to fall ; and, in that hour, the man, seeing that the moment had come when his foes might be utterly destroyed, called on those near him with a great cry and pressed for- ward, and the company of the Black Spears rode with him. And the ranks of the army of the north trembled at his voice, and their line broke, and they fled before the charge of his horsemen, and he pursued them in his wrath. Late into the darkness of the night, the men of the east pursued their flying foes, and great was the slaughter before any rested from pursuing, and being overtaken by the night, they did not return to their camp, but rested as they might upon the field. On the morrow, when the clouds of night had rolled away, the men of that army knew 248 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL their victory, but their hearts were heavy, for they knew also that the lord, their leader, had been betrayed into the hands of his enemies. For the company of the Black Spears, that had been with him in his last charge, when they had come up with a largebody of the northern horse- men that had forced their way towards the hills, gave the signal, and on the instant the lord was surrounded. All theythatwould have defended him were slain, and he was borne down by num- bers and carried off the field. These things they learnt from the trumpeter who had ridden by his side, and was found, by them that made search at dawn, still breathing, but not far from death. And he died, saying, '',God help our lady in the East ! " for he had ridden, also, to her bridal. Not many days after, as that lady sat alone in the hall of mourning, there was a step on the threshold, and, looking up, she saw, standing before her, over against a pillar of white marble, one of the Ethiop slaves that had carried the blue and silver litter of the stranger at the fes- tival of the pomegranate ; and, when he saw THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 249 that her eyes were on him, he made reverence to her with much humility, and said, " Oh, Lady, may I speak ? " and she made answer, " Speak." So he spoke, saying, " My mistress greets thee by me, and sayeth, * The battle is thine and the victory is with thy people ; but this advan- tage thou hast gained to thy hurt;' and, further, she sayeth, ' What wilt thou give me, that thy lord may go free ? ' " At this saying, the bitterness of death over- flowed her soul, for she knew that her mirror was demanded of her, but she made answer and said, " Go back to her whom thou obeyest, and say to her in my name, * Lo, I am thy servant ; ' " and the slave replied, " Lady, I will do thy bid- ding, and, in seven days, I will be here again, that I may receive from thy hands the ransom of thy lord ;" and, so saying, he went forth from the hall. Then the woman, clapping her hands, called in those that were without ; and she said, "How came it that you let pass unquestioned that slave that was here even now, so that he came in unto me without authority ? " And they said, 2 K 2 50 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL " We have seen no slave ; " and she dismissed them, and they were all much troubled, for they thought, " Surely, she is distraught with much sorrow." She, however, knew that the powers of darkness were upon her. So, rising from the place where she sat, she took her way to her secret chamber, and as she entered she saw the brilliant shining of her mirror even through the veil that lay above it. And, withdrawing the veil from its face, she gazed upon it in the anguish of her soul, for she knew that should she give the mirror to her by whom it was demanded, all that great beauty wherewith she was clothed would pass away with it, so that the eyes of her lord should be turned from her and that her place should know her no more. And, as she thought these things, the sorrow of them was heavier than the parting of soul and body ; and she cried out, " Is there no help, none ? " And, so crying, she looked up to the cleft in the hills, through which she had seen him riding to their bridal ; and the might of the love she bore him uplifted her spirit on wings stronger than the wings of the eagle; and THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 251 she had joy of her giving, and said, " If it be well with him, it shall be well with me ! " And so, when the appointed hour was come, the woman gave her mirror into the hands of the slave that he might bear it to his mistress, and received from him the pledge of her faith. Hardly had she done this when a sound was heard, from the plains below, as of the comingof a great company in triumph, and the woman, standing on the castle walls, beheld afar off the standard of her lord and the gleaming of his golden armour ; and she put her hands before her eyes, for, at his right, she saw one riding, and the trappings of her mule were of scarlet and of silver. At that sight the woman went heavily, as one in slumber, and she left that place, and going down into the courts below, she stood before her lord as he entered at her gates ; but he knew her not, neither was she known by them of her own household, for their eyes were holden . But the stranger that rode upon his right hand looked upon her to do her evil, and she saw that the glory of her beauty was departed, yet she feared her; so, calling to her them that had 252 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL charge of the gate, she said, " How comes it that ye suffer such an one to trouble my sight in this day of rejoicing ? " And she bid them cast the woman out. And they cast her out, but they marvelled greatly at this command, and said, "This is the first time that these gates have been shut against the desolate." As the days grew to months and the months to years, the fortunes of the lord of the castle were as his wife would have had them be ; for in all that country was no man so great in riches and in power. There was peace in all his borders, the chiefs of the north paid him tribute, and the fame of his justice, his honour, and his courtesy was as a fable in the mouths of men. Yet, though all things prospered with him, his spirit, at times, was clouded ; and though he bore his part in the great festivals that were duly kept within his walls, he moved in them as one who dreamed a dream. And his followers, who loved him, lamented the days of his captivity, believing that his thoughts went back to them, and that their memory was bitter. But the burden that lay upon his spirit was not theirs THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 253 to judge, for as the days went by, it seemed to him that when he entered the secret chamber and looked, with the one at his side, into the mirror'sshiningdepths, somethingwas missing that had been revealed to him, therein, of old. And, in the perfect loyalty of his love and faith, he took shame to himself, and his heart was sore within him. Then she, the stranger, seeing that he was ill at ease, strove by all her skill to dis- cover his mind, but she could not, for her magic could not master the things of the spirit. Now it came to pass, that as she watched him, she gave less heed to her own ways ; and one morning, as she stood before the mirror, seeing him in close converse with one unknown to her, she made haste to join them that she might learn their business, and leaving that chamber quickly, she carried with her, in her hand, the veil that should have defended the face of the mirror from the spirits of the air. And hardly had she descended the stair before they came, rejoicing that they might behold themselves therein. So, on the morrow, when she would have restored the covering to its 254 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL place, she found the silver shining of the mirror defiled with grievous stains and rust. And hearing the footstep, at that moment, of the man upon the stair, she made as though she would have hidden it, but he coming behind her, swiftly, withdrew the veil. And he gazed long on the tarnished glory of the mirror, and as he gazed, the trouble of his brain grew ; for after a while the clouds, that overhung its depths, parted for a little space, and he saw his wife wearing the robes that she had to her bridal, and the scarlet flowers of the pomegranate were in her hands, but she lay upon her bier, and the crown, wherewith he had crowned her on that day, was at her feet. Then, as the vision faded, the echo, as it were, of many voices chaunting, passed him in the air. And he would have spoken ; but the words failed him, and, of a sudden, looking strangely on her who stood beside him, he rent the veil, that he had taken from her, and casting the pieces on the floor between them, went out from the chamber as one pursued. She, then, put forth all her enchantments, THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 255 but they could avail her nothing, nor could she by any means restore the shining of the mirror, nor make whole the veil that had been rent in twain. And, during all that time, the man sat silent, and he was as one fighting for his life ; but on the morning of the fifth day, when she would have renewed her arts by a more power- ful magic, the mirror vanished, and, at this, she was in fear, for she knew that the end of her power was come. Even in that moment, the man against whom she had practised all this evil came to himself, and he knew her treachery, and remembered him of the woman that had been cast out from those her gates. And in this memory all things became clear to him, and he saw the cheat that had been put upon him, and knew that she who had been his wife had paid the price of his freedom with that which was dearer to her than life. Anguish, now, laid hold of his soul, and love, swifter to over- take than vengeance, drove him forth to seek her whom he had lost. So, leaving that false mistress to be dealt with by those that were his servants, he took his way thence towards 256 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL that quarter in which he believed she should be found, for he called to mind that sound of chaunting and the direction from which it had been carried to his ears. And, as he went on his way, he refused his captains, who would have ridden with him, saying, " This errand is for me alone." But they watched him until he passed through the cleft in the hills above and was hidden from their sight. Now, as he rode, grief and pity and love bore him company ; and on the breeze from time to time there was carried to him the sound of that solemn music by which he was drawn on- ward. It led him ever farther from the haunts of men, and at nightfall he lay by the wayside waiting only for the dawn, that he might pur- sue his journey, for sleep was far from his eyes. And, as he followed the voices, his path went upwards, till at the last he came to a slope on the hillside so steep and slippery that his horse could serve him no longer, so, dismounting, he continued his way on foot. As he turned the shoulder of the hill towards evening, he came to the outskirts of a thick wood, and beingabout THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 257 to enter, he paused and listened once more for those sounds that had been very clear that day in the dawning, but now were again lost to his ears. As he listened, he looked towards the setting sun, and, so looking, he beheld the great plain beneath him, and he saw, far below at his feet, the cleft through which he had ridden and the walls of the castle that had been his dwelling-place. Even as he looked, the sun set, and he made haste to follow his path ; but the wood was thick, nor had he gone far before the darkness of the night came upon him ; so he set himself down against a tree that he might await the rising of the moon, which was then at the full. So waiting, the man, being sore wearied, fell asleep ; but his sleep was troubled, for, ever and again, it seemed to him that he heard the tolling of a bell, and then the chaunting of the voices that he had taken for his guide. At last, the moon being up, her light fell on his face through the branches, and, on a sudden, he awoke. And when he awoke he knew not where he was, for, whereas in the darkness he had 2 L 258 THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL perceived naught but the thickness of the wood, the moonlight now showed him the path, wind- ing through a little glade in the forest, and the path led towards an open space, wherein stood a white chapel, the windows of which were of stained glass, and in the windows were lights shining, and all round that space the trunks of the fir trees showed like silver columns in the shadows. And, as the man looked, that solemn music for which he had listened came nearer to him, and he saw, walking together down the path towards the chapel, a company of nuns. Their white robes were shadowed in black, and as they walked they chaunted that solemn measure ; and when they had come up with him, he heard the words of their chaunt — " The fairest flow'r of Love On Earth may perfect prove, And yet in Heav'n be known. With us, it grows to height, But blossoms in the Ught Of our Lord Christ's White Throne. Oh, winged and godlike gift ! Love can our hearts uplift, Until they meet His own." As the nuns passed the man, one turned THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL 259 and, sighing deeply, beckoned him that he should follow, and he rose and followed them ; but when they had come to the chapel, they parted from him, going towards the gate of the convent that stood hard by. But before they parted, she who had bidden him join himself to their company made a sign to him that he should leave them and enter the chapel ; and he did so, and went up to the door. As the man laid his hand on the lock his knees trembled, and his strength forsook him. He waited, as one in fear, till the sound of the chaunting had died away. Then, liftingthe iron latch, he pushed open the door ; and when it closed behind him he found himself, alone, with his dead. The woman lay on her bier, as he had seen her in his vision, clothed in the robes of her bridal, her hands filled with the scarlet blossoms she had loved ; the crown of life was at her feet, but at her head the shining of her mirror made agreatlightofundimmed radiance. At this sight a storm of passion and wrath swept the man's soul ; and he cried aloud in the agony of his spirit, and it seemed to him, in his 26o THE MIRROR OF THE SOUL madness, that the gates of death must open to his hand. But the silence of the night gave back no answer to his voice, and the still shining, that was as the glory of a blessed saint about the woman's head, seemed to withdraw her from his arm. And, as the night wore on, wrath slept, and all that passion that had challenged fate fell prostrate, and the man cast himself upon his knees, and he stretched forth his hands as one that prayed for mercy. And, as he did so, the light above the bier became like the sun in its glory, and, within its secret fires, she, the Holy Mother of Sorrows, in her infinite compassion, revealed herself to his weary eyes, and her face was as the face of the woman whom he had loved. When the morning dawned, the bearers came that should bear the woman to her burial ; and the man, by whom the night watch had been kept, followed them with bowed head. And, when they had buried her, he took his way back to the world of men. THE LAST HOUR THE LAST HOUR(^) A WOMAN, weary with long wandering in the ways of the world, came at last to the gate of the grave, and drew near to the steps that led up to it. And, seeing that it was close shut, she waited there for the Angel of Death, in whose hands is the giving of rest ; and as she waited she turned herself about a little that she might look once more upon the glory of the earth. The clouds of heaven were mirrored in the clear pool that was before the gate, and round about the pool were palms and aloes in blossom; and between their shafts and spires the woman, as she sat, beheld all the great beauty of the world. For a vast plain lay before her, stretch- ing from the skirts of the high mountains, whose (I.) Written at La Sainte Campagne, Cap Brun, Toulon, the winter panorama from which is described. 263 264 THE LAST HOUR peakswere clad with ice and snow, even to where the southern seas were spread, glittering be- neath the proud barriers of the earth. And the woman looked awhile on the majesty of the cliff that reared itself from the waters — rose-hued, purple- veined, tempest-riven, wearing the dark shadows of the woods as a crest uplifted against the infinite space of light and air. And she beheld the ships that were upon those waters, both those that went down to the great deeps for merchandise, and those that men had made ready for battle. And from the waves of the sea, even as from the lands of the plain, there came to her ears the voice of life. And, looking over the plain, she beheld the path of armies ; the strong defences of the hills ; the feet of the huntsmen that were towards the forests ; the labours of the husbandman in the vineyard ; and the presses running with wine and oil that were by the threshing-floors within his courts. And in the centre of the plain, above the blue vapour wherewith the evening, draw- ing nearer from the distant slopes, had begun THE LAST HOUR 265 to veil the earth, the woman saw a strong castle set on a little hill, and the walls and towers of that castle were shining in the last rays of the sun, and she knew from afar off the place that had been the place of her birth. Beholding these things as she sat there alone, the woman remembered her of all the days of her life ; and she said in the bitterness of her soul, *' The spirit of man is even as a swift arrow that has missed the mark. For at his birth many are the gifts that are given unto him. He rejoices in the glory of his strength, and the eyes of men are made glad when they look upon him. The edge of his wit is as a sharp sword cleaving asunder things great and small, nor is there aught beneath the sun too wide for the compass of it. As his wit is, even so are his desires— strong in their flight as the wings of a young eagle. Yet nothing shall remain to him of all his striving, nor shall his strength have matched the height of his desires." And the woman said furthermore, " Short are the days of life, and the strength of the 2 M 2 66 THE LAST HOUR body is a false servant to the spirit of man. Should his gifts be many or few, a bar is set that he may not overpass it. Lo ! I am come to the gate of the grave, and are not these hands empty wherewith I would have handled all things ? Surely, had I had my will, but one of all those of my desires, then had the infinite hunger of my soul been stayed ! " As the woman thought on these things, the shades of night drew on. The smoke that went up from the stations of the charcoal burners in the forests on the hillsides was blotted out. The white-winged vessels drew towards the harbour fires; the purple rocks, that were over against the sea, flushed scarlet as the sun sank beneath the waters, and all the murmur of the dwellers in the plain was hushed. Then the Lord of the Spirit opened her eyes, and she saw as in a vision the souls of them that go down into the pit. And, looking on them, she was aware of the great multitude of such as had striven for mastery : amongst these she looked upon the company of those by whom Wisdom had been beloved beyond measure, THE LAST HOUR 267 and who had sacrificed to her possession all the joys of life ; and there were those who had gathered to their own uses the hidden treasures of the earth and sea ; and the luxurious ones, who had gone softly, and all those famous ones who had walked in triumph ; — the armed men whose feet were dyed in blood. And, as she beheld them in that hour, they seemed to the woman as they had been possessed of madness, and it was as the madness of a House of Fools. Then, said she, " It is well for me. Nor shall any deem himself as poor of profit, who hath tasted of the fulness of life in the sight of the Lord thereof." And, with this saying, she bowed her head in worship ; for the Angel of Death stood before her, and the darkness of the night compassed them about even as with a shroud. The gates of the grave also were open. So she arose from the place where she had sat and placed her hand in his, and silently they drew within the tomb. INDEX OF NAMES Abraham, Miss. See Tennant, Mrs. H.J. Academic des Beaux Arts, 97 Academic des Inscriptions et Belles Lettrcs, 63 Academy, Royal, 34, 45, 49, 83, 88 Academy, The, 28, 32, 34, 42, 51, 63, 66, 68, 74, 83 Acland, Dr. (afterwards Sir Henry), 4, 5.23 Acton, Lord, 65 Aix-lcs-Bains, 44, 49, 50 Albany, H.R.H. the Duke of, 40, 41, 45 Albertina, The, 26, 34 Albrecht, The Archduke, 26 Alen9on, S. A. R., La Duchesse d', 98 Alma-Tadema, Sir L., R.A., 83 Amboise, Michel d', 225 American ancestry. See Georgia American Federation of Labour, 114 Amritsar, 107 Annual Register, 54, 55, 65, 82, 90 Appleton, Founder of the Academy, 35 ; and see Academy Arnaulds, The, 102 Arnold-Forster, Mrs, H. O., 124 "Art in the Modern State," 36,67, 90, loi, 121 Art Journal, The, 60, 117 Athencsum, The, 66, 68, 85 Atlantic Monthly, The, 38 Aubancl, 211 Augusta, Georgia, i, 2 Augustine, Saint, 145, 150, 166 Aumale, Due d', 97, 98 Australia, 113 Austria, 113 B Bamborough Castle, 23 Barnabei, 58 Barrett, Colonel (C. S. A.), 2 Beaux Arts, Academic des, 97 Beaux Arts, Ecole des, 37, 191 Bedford, Hastings, Duke of, 69 Belfast, III Berlin, 6, 7, 34,42, 113 Bernhardt, Sarah, 31 Bertolotti, 34 Bibliotheque Nationale, La, 20, 36, 86 Birmingham, 53, 66 Bismarck, Prince, 109 Boccaccio, 220, 223, 228 Bode, Dr., 55 Bodley, J. E. C, 119, 120 Boehm, Sir Edgar, R.A., 42 I Boissier, Gaston, 122 69 270 INDEX OF NAMES Bonghi, 55, 56, 58, 59 Bonnat, Leon, 96, 122 Bordeaux, 6 Bouchot, Henri, 122 Boughton, George H., R.A., 83 Bourboule, La, 81 Bowdich, Miss, 3 Brantome, 174 Bright, Jacob, M.P., 46 Bristol, 115 British Museum, The, 21, 41 Britten, W. E. F., 46 Brown, Ford Madox, 5 Browning, Robert, 37, 38, 39, 48, 49, 83 Browning Society, The, 83 Bryce, The Rt, Hon. James, M.P., 53 Bucarest, 56 Budapesth, 34 Burckhardt, 55 Burgon, Dean, 85 Burne- Jones, Sir Edward, 39, 41 Burty, 35, 36 Butler, A, J., 10 Cairoli, 59 Caldecott, Randolph, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 117 Canada, 40 Cannes, 65 Cap Brun, 72, 120, 263 Carolina, South, i Castellani collection, 42 Cawnpore, 3 Chamberlain, The Rt. Hon. Joseph, M.P., 53 Chantilly, 70, 97 Chateaubriand, 165 Chaucer, 67, 140, 146, 149 Chelsea, 124, 125 Christian Social Union, 109 Christophe, 67, 75, 117 Claude Lorrain, 66, 67, 68, 70, 71, 75, 82,85 Coleridge, 91 Collins, C. A., 32 Collinson, James, 32 Colonna Gallery, 56 Comte, 10, 21, 167 Comtism, 21 Congreve (the Positivist), 40 Coppee, Fran9ois, 161 Corot, 69, 71, 76 CosindJ)olitan, The, 117 Courtney, The Rt. Hon. Leonard, 53 Crewe Trust, The, 23 D Dalou, 46, 60 Dampierre, 117 Dante, 10, i8o, 187, 219 Dean Forest, io6, 123 Dibats, Journal des, 64 Decamps, 97 Delacroix, 68, 97 Delaulne, Etienne, 36 Depretis, 59 Desbordes-Valmore, Mme., 165 Detaille, 117 Deutsch, 40 Dicey, Frank, 45 Dickens, Charles, 38 Dockett Eddy, 123, 124 Donatello, 122 Doria Gallery, 56 Draguignan, 35, 50, 51, 54, 59, 72, 77, 82 Dreyfus, Carl, 122 Dreyfus, Gustave, 122 INDEX OF NAMES 271 Duff, Mrs, Grant, 87 Dundee, 109, 115 E Earle, Mrs., 65, 82, 87 Ecole des Beaux Arts, 37, 191 51iot, George, 16, 17, 21, 39, 40, 49, 50, SI, 52, 55 ' Encyclopeedia Britannica," 43, 66 iphesus, 42 iphrussi, Charles, 122 Erasmus, 188 Cugenie, The Empress, 192 'awcett, The Rt. Hon. H., M.P., 53 'ederation of Labour, American, 114 'ildes, Luke, R.A., 83 'lorence, 29, 221, 228 'ontainebleau, 36 "orest of Dean, 106, 123 wtnightly Review, 53, 90, loi, 107, 116 "ragonard, 66 'rancais, Francois Louis, 75, 76 'ranchise, Women's, 45, 46 rejus, 92 French Architects and Sculptors of the Eighteenth Century," 116, 118, 122 French Decoration and Furniture in the Eighteenth Century, 116, 118 French Engravers and Draughtsmen of the Eighteenth Century," 116, 119 French Painters of the Eighteenth Century," Il6, 118, 122 riedrichsruh, 109 romentin, 66, 68, 97, 191-194 Gambetta, 46, 73, 82 Gavarni, 31 Gazette des Beaux Arts, La, 67, 117 Georgia, i, 2, 117 Georgia, Loyalists of, 117 Germany, 109, 113 Gillray, 31 Giotto, 29 Glasgow, III Gloucester Place, 86 Goethe, 6 Gompers, Samuel, 114 Gore House, 8 Graham, Miss, 125, 126 Grasse, 49, 50, 51, 60, 66, 93 Greece, 7, 10 1 Grimm, Herman, 33, 34 Grosvenor Gallery, 41, 52 Grote, Mrs., 46 H Harpignies, 76 Harrogate, 87 Headington, 52, 87, 88 Hereford, Bishop of, 53 Holl, Frank, R.A., 83 Holman Hunt, 5, 24, 32 Hudson, H. K., 123 Hughes, Arthur, 24 Hullah, Mrs., 4, 8, 9 Huxley, Professor, 53 Iffley, 18, 31 Ince, Dr., 4, 5 272 INDEX OF NAMES India, 88, 93, 107, 108 Ingres, 97, 117 I to, The Marquis, 126 "Jahrbuch," German Art, 66, 102, 116 Jerome, King of Westphalia, 98 Jowett, 49 Jusserand, J. J,, 126 K Karachi, 108 Keats, 47, 159 La Bourboule, 81 Labour Department of Board of Trade, 116 Lahore, 108 Lamb, Charles, 189 La Rochelle, 93 Laurens, J.P., 66 Leeds, 116, 123 Legros, 40, 41, 46 Leighton, Lord, 66, 74, 83 Leopardi, 181 Leopold, H.R.H, Prince, itv Albany, Duke of Liguria, 56 Lille, 7 Lincoln College, passim Lorgues, 60 Lowell, 38 Lucretius, 102 M Maccoll, N,, 85 Madrid, 74 Maecenas, 182 Magazifte of Art, The, 66 Malory, Sir Thomas, 25, 223 Manchester, ri2 Manchester, Bishop of, 112 Manning, Cardinal, 103, 104, 105, 106 Mantz, Paul, 69 Mathilde, S.A.I., Princesse, 98 Maumont, The, 73 McKenna, Reginald, M.P., 123 Meissonier, 117 Mellerio, See "Red Cotton Nightcap Country " Mentone, 41, 60 Methodist Times, The, 107 Michael Angelo, 227 Michel, Andre, 69 Michel, Emile, 66, 75 Michelet, 32 "Middlemarch," 16, 17, 87 Midland Institute, 66 Millais, Sir John, 5, 32, 83 Millet, 69 Minghetti, 56, 57 « Monck, Miss, 123 Moorhouse, Dr., 112 Moreau, Gustave, 75 Moreau, Mme., 50, 51, 58, 50, 60 Morley, The Rt. Hon. John, M.P., 53, no Morris, William, 53 Morte d' Arthur, La, 25, 197 Mulready, 4, 8, 23, 32, 88 Municipal Corporations Act, 46 Miintz, Eugene, 37, 50, 55, 66, 67, 68, 69, 72, 84, 86, 118 INDEX OF NAMES 273 N Nancy, 6, 75 Neale, Mrs,, 2, 4 Nettleship, Mrs,, 43, 76 Nettleship, Professor, 53 Neubauer, 37 Neuville, De, 117 Newcastle-on-Tyne, no Newman, Cardinal, 22 Newton, Sir Charles, 7, 21, 37, 41, 42 Nice, 44, 49, 50, 51, 59 Nolhac, P. de, 117, 119 North American Rez'iew, The, 116 O OUivier, Emile, 98 Ollivier, Mme. 6mile, 98 Orchardson, W, Q,, R,A,, 83 Orvieto, 67 Oxford, passim Paler .10, 37 Pall Mall Gazette, The, 53 Paris, 60, 76, 93, 122, 123, 124 Pascal, 16, 102 Pater, Walter, 29, 30, 31, 34, 74, 90^ Paterson, Mrs, (Emma), 43, 53, 115 Pattison, Frank, 88 Pattison, Rev, Mark, Rector of Lin- coln College, 5 et seq. Pearson, Charles, 65 Pearson, Miss, 65 Percival, Dr,, 53 Pesth, 34 Piedmont, 56 " Poliphile, Songe de," 219 Pollet, Victor, 68 Portfolio, The, 28 Port Royal, 102 Poussin, 66, 69, 70, 71, 72 Poynter, Sir Edward J„ R,A,, 66, 83 Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, 5, 29, 32 Puget, 60 Pulszky, 34 Puvis de Chavannes, 74 Pyrford Rough, 5, 50, 52, 88, 94, loi, III, 122, 123, 125, 154, 173, 230 "Queens' Gardens" (Ruskin), 12, 226 Quetta, 108 R Racine, 48 Radical Club, 53, 54, $8 Raphael, 6 Rawlinson, Canon, and family, 31 "Red Cotton Nightcap Country," 39 Reeves, Mrs. W. P., loi " Renaissance of Art in France," The, 54, 64, 74, 121 Renan, 37, 63, 65, 77, 119, 120 Renan, Mme,, 64, 75, 91 Revue des Deux Mondes, 66 Roberts, F, M., The Earl, 108 Roberts, Lady, 108 Rochelle, La, 93 Rodin, 6 Rome, 34, 41, 55, 59, 60, 65, 73, 76 Rossetti, Dante Gabriel, 5, 24, 32 Rossetti, W. M., 32 2 N 274 INDEX OF NAMES Rothschild, Ladyde, 65 Roumania, 56 Royat, 81 Ruskin, John, 4, 5, 6, 7, 12, 17, 19, 24, 29. 32. 33. 34> 74. 153. 205, 226 Rutebeuf, Jacques, 169 Sainte Campagne, La. See Toulon 1 Salon, 41, 65, 68, 74, 75, 80 Sand, George, 193 Sassenay, la Marquise de, 98, 127 Saturday Revinv, The, 19, 27, 28 Savannah, Georgia, i, 2 Scotland, 109 Scott, William Bell, 23, 24, 32 Sella, 55, 56, 57, 58 Sheffield, iio Shelley, 47 "Shrine of Death, "The, 12, 20, 22,68, 90, 91, 92, 95, 122 "Shrine of Love," The, 12, 20, 68, 92, 95, lOI, 116, 122 Siena, 67 Simla, 108 Smith, Miss Constance Hint on, 109, 123 Smith, Miss Eleanor, 39, 96 Smith, Professor Gold win, 5, 21 Smith, Professor Henry, 39, 45 Socrates, 151 South Kensington, 7, 8, II, 85 South Kensington — Art Library, 7 5 Art Schools, 8, il Spectator, The, 99 Speech House, 123 Stephens, F. G., 32 Stockholm, 6 Strang, W., 93 Strong, Captain Henry, i, 2, 5 Strong, Nancy, 2 Strong, Samuel S. (Deputy Surveyor- General of Georgia), i , 2 Swinburne, 47 Taylor, Canon, 107 Taylor, Miss Helen, 54 Tennant, Mrs. H. J., 107, 115 Tennyson, 4, 25, 40 Teresa, Saint, 16, 162, 166 Thackeray, W. M., 8 Thausing, 34 Thierry, Augustin, 50 Thursfield, J. R., 88 Tokio, 126 Toulon, 72, 120, 263 Trade Congress, The, 52, 108, 109, ili, 116, 123 Trevelyan (Pauline), Lady, 23, 24 Trevelyan, Rt. Hon Sir George, Bart., 24 Trevelyan, Sir Walter, Bart,, 23 Tuckwell, Miss Gertrude, 64, 77, 85, 107, 123 Tuckwell, Mrs,, 45, 123 Tuckwell, Rev. W,, 18, 123 Tunis, 54 Turner, 6 U United Empire Loyalists, i, 117 United States, 113 University Bills, 57 Var, Department of the, 72 Velasquez, 74 INDEX OF NAMES 275 Versailles, 117, 119 Vienna, 26, 34, 53, 56, 69 Virginia, i Voltaire, 27, 51 W Wallace Collection, 119 Wallington, 23, 24 Washington, General, i Watts, G. F., R.A„ 4, 28, 34, 40, 41, 83, 86, 87 Watts-Dunton, Theodore, 90, 91 Wedderburn, Lady, 126 Wedderburn, Sir William, 126 Wesley, 103 IVestminster Rez'iew, The, 27, 29, 42 Whiting, Francis, 3 Wildbad, 44, 49, 50 Woburn Abbey, 69 Women's Congress, International, 113 Women's Protective and Provident League. See Women's Trade Union League W^omen's Trade Society, Oxford, 76 Women's Trade Union League, 43, 44, 52, 53, loi, 106, 108, 109, 114, lis, 116, 121, 123, 124 IFome/i's Trade Union Review, 109, 123 Woolman, John, 188 Woolner, 32, 83 World, The, 49 Yorkshire, 87 Zola, 46, 47 THE END PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED, LONDON AND BECCLES. 314-77-4 Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. Neutralizing agent: Magnesium Oxide Treatment Date: IVlarch 2009 PreservationTechnologies A WORLD LEADER IN COLLECTIONS PRESERVATION 111 Ttiomson Park Drive Cranberry Township, PA 16066 (724) 779-2111