Glass __ r £~. Book HR. FfftL By bequest of William Lukens Shoemaker THE WORKS OF THE RIGHT HON JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE VOLUME I r THE WORKS OF THE RIGHT HONOURABLE JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE IN VERSE AND PROSE VOLUME I MEMOIR BY THE RIGHT HON. SIR BARTLE FRERE .geronb Cbftfon ftebigeb taitfj SCbbitiong NEW YORK A. DENHAM AND CO. LONDON BASIL MONTAGU PICKERING MDCCC LXXIV Gift. W. L. Shoemaker J S '06 EDITORS' PREFACE. N 1867, Mr. Pickering had prepared for republication all of Mr. Hookham Frere's literary remains which he could collect. Some of the works were in type when he applied to the author's family for their aid in making the collection as complete as possible, and also in correcting a biographical sketch which had already been printed. It then appeared that, besides the works acces- sible to Mr. Pickering, there were others of con- siderable length and importance which had never been printed or published. Mr. Pickering thereupon placed the whole of the materials he had collected at the disposal of Mr. Frere, of Roydon Hall, Norfolk, Mr. Hookham Frere's heir, and the present head of the family. At his request, and on his behalf, two of his brothers, who had just then returned from India, undertook to do their best towards carrying out Mr. Pickering's design. Mr. W. E. Frere engaged to collect and prepare for the Press all that could vi PREFA CE. now be recovered of his uncle's Works, and the biographical sketch prefixed to them has been drawn up by Sir Bartle Frere. Both felt that, other deficiencies apart, thirty-five years of active service in the Tropics, chiefly passed at a distance from all literary and political society, and far away from such books, as well as from such men, as were Mr. Hookham Frere's companions, formed but a bad preparation for the task. Time had, however, spared few of those who, by personal knowledge and love for the subject, as well as by similarity of tastes and scholarship, were best fitted for the duty. Of Mr. Hookham Frere's early friends or associates not one remained who could be asked to aid ; and even those who had known him intimately, in the latter years of his comparative retirement at Malta, were rapidly passing away. Under these circumstances, none better qualified being able or willing to undertake the task, the ad- vantage of having passed some time under his roof, and in daily intercourse with him, in 1834, 1 841-4-5-6, may in some degree compensate for the faults of in- sufficient or rusty scholarship ; and it is hoped that the spirit of filial love in which the work has been undertaken, will make up for serious defects which would not have existed had it been entrusted to abler hands. Mr. Frere had, in his latter years, a great dislike to the mechanical task of writing, and much that he had composed found no record save in the memory of the few associates of his retired and almost re- cluse life. Owing to circumstances which need not here be detailed, very few of the letters which he received from his political or literary friends are PREFACE. vii now forthcoming. Some scattered notices remain of remarks or conversations which happen so to have struck the hearer, that they were written down at the time; but shipwreck and other acci- dents have caused the loss of many of these imper- fect records. With such scanty materials at command, it can hardly be hoped that the result will be satisfactory to the few now surviving who were amongst his personal friends ; or who know him by the esti- mation in which he was held by such authorities in politics and literature as Canning and Cornewall Lewis, Coleridge, Southey, and Scott. But the Editors trust that scholars and men of letters may find among the fragmentary additions to the collected works, however imperfectly edited, some ground for rejoicing that even these brief records have not been allowed to perish ; and though the Memoir bears unavoidable traces of the diffi- culty experienced in converting what was begun as a simple family record into a sketch of Mr. Frere's political and literary life, all readers may find some- thing to interest them in these memorials of one who Coleridge thought eminently deserved to be characterized as b xaXoKayaSbg b (piXoKaXog. 1 1 Coleridge's Will. Athenaeum, No. 365. MEMOIR. iOHN HOOKHAM FRERE was born in London on the 21st May, 1769. He came of an ancient stock, long settled in the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. A recent French genealogist, writing of those families whose ancestors accompanied the Conqueror from Normandy, professes to find among them the founders of the family of the Suffolk Freres. He traces them to a certain Richard le Frere and his son John, who followed the banner of Robert, son of William Mallett, one of the great nobles who fought under the Conqueror at Hastings. This Robert founded a priory at Eye in Suffolk, in the records of which mention is said to be made of John Le Frere, as " Vavasseur " and tenant of lands in Eye. On similar evidence the same author identifies with the descendants of this Richard, many of the name of Frere, or Le Frere, who are found men- tioned in ancient charters and deeds connected with grants of land in other of the eastern and midland counties. 1 From John Frere, who lived at Thurston, in Suf- 1 In pedigrees and deeds relating to land in Norfolk and Suffolk, in the 12th and 13th centuries, the name, it is said, is generally written " Le Frere." But in the third year of Ed. B u 2 MEMOIR OF folk, in 1268, there is connected and well-authenti- cated evidence of successive generations who held lands and bore arms in Suffolk, (at Wickham Abbey, Wickham JSkeith, Occold, and Sweffling,) and inter- married with various families of landed gentry in that and the adjoining counties. 1 Many Freres of previous generations had been buried at or near Finningham, in Suffolk, where a farm called the " Green Farm " was purchased by them in 1598, when the manor and advowson, which still belong to the family, were purchased of Mr. Lambe in 1656, and the hall and lands from the III. (a. D. 1330), "John Frere" is recorded by local anti- quaries as having given to the Prior and Brothers of the Carmelites at Synterle (?) in Norfolk, certain lands there for the enlargement of the Manse. Twenty-two years later, " Thos. Frere," described as " Citizen and Fishmonger of London," gave land in the City of London to John Baud, Parson of the Church of St. Nicholas of Colne Abbey. In later times the Suffolk branch of the family dropped the Norman article. Some of these East Anglian Le Freres held lands near Sawbridgeworth as early as 1 197, when it is recorded that, on the day after the feast of St. Mark, in the ninth year of King Richard I., Richard le Frere obtained, on a plea brought before the King's Justices at Westminster from Henstac and others, two virgates of land in Sawbridgeworth, paying there- for \os. sterling; and twenty-three years later Walter le Frere and his wife, with others, sold half a virgate of land in the same township for one marc. About a century later, in 131 3, William le Frere is recorded to have bought a messuage, twenty-one acres of land, and half an acre of pasture in Saw- bridgeworth " for a hawk." This branch of the family, with the name anglicised, held lands in the same parish and its neighbourhood up to the last century. In the records of the 16th and 17th centuries, the name of all branches of the family is variously spelt as Frere, Fryer, and Frier. 1 The family seems to have shared the passion for foreign adventure and travel which possessed so many Englishmen in the days of Elizabeth and her successors. The name of John Frier is found among the original 215 adventurers to whom the first charter constituting the East JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 3 Cottons in 1657, by John Frere. He died in 1679, and for several generations after him his descend- ants lived at Thwait Hall, near Finningham, till his great grandson purchased Roydon Hall, near Diss, in Norfolk. Mr. Hookham Frere's very just estimate of his own obligations to such ancestry may be gathered from his reply to a request, made to him in his later years, that he would write a few lines on his coat-of- arms, of which, as having descended from the time of their first establishment in the county, the family India Company was granted in 1600, and John Fryer, ap- parently the same person, subscribed ^240 towards the funds of the Company. In the next generation Dr. Fryer (whose travels in the East Indies between 1672 and 1681, published in 1698, is still one of the most graphic books of Eastern travel we have) is claimed by the family, though not by the Suffolk branch. The Harleston branch, which divided from the main tree in the 16th century, moved, in the course of the 17th, almost bodily to Barbadoes. In opposition to the politics of the rest of the family, they were strong Parliamentarians. One of them was a member of the Norfolk Committee for Sequestra- tions ; and another, Tobias, is described in some Royalist lampoons still extant as a vehement partisan of the Parlia- ment. He was member of the Barebones Parliament, and was secretary to the Committee of Sequestrations for the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk. To this branch probably belonged James Frere, the propounder in 1653 of a scheme " for transporting vagrants to the foreign plantations." In Nov. 1655, John Frere and others, " Merchant adventurers to Barbadoes," petitioned the Council of State to the effect " that they can procure but 800 firelocks for the 2,000 old musket barrels formerly granted out of the Tower stores for the use of Barbadoes, and pray that they may pass Custom free." On which an order was passed by the Council to Col. Hooper and Captain Tobias Frere to ship the firelocks custom free ; and the same Captain Tobias, Thomas Frere, and others, obtained in the same year, from the Lord Protector, an order for 200 cases of pistols, 372 carbines, and 600 swords to be delivered out of the Tower for the use of Barbadoes. There may still possibly be representatives of the family in Barbadoes, where members of it have, during the last twft centuries, held various offices of honour and responsibility. 4 MEMOIR OF were reasonably proud. The verses were asked for by way of preface to a " Parentalia," intended " to preserve, in the spirit of the family motto, 1 traces of kindred and affinity in the relations of a race, the members of which were becoming numerous and widely dispersed." It was in entire sympathy with this feeling, but with some fear lest future family heralds should be tempted to lay too much store by mere length of descent, unaccompanied by other claims on the gratitude of posterity, that Mr. Frere replied by sending the following verses : — On our Coat of Arms. 2 The Flanches, on our field of Gules, Denote, by known heraldic rules, A race contented and obscure, In mediocrity secure, By sober parsimony thriving, For their retired existence striving ; By well-judged purchases and matches, Far from ambition and debauches ; Such was the life our fathers led ; Their homely leaven, deep inbred In our whole moral composition, Confines us to the like condition. Among the less remote ancestors of Mr. Hook- ham Frere, there were some whose example may be supposed to have had considerable influence on the formation of his literary tastes. His great grand- father Edward, born in 1680, was a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, in Bentley's days, and was 1 " Traditum ab antiquis servare." [The motto " Frere ayme Frere " was also used by the family, but it is to the former motto that reference is made, here, and in the following verses.] * Gules, two leopards' faces between flanches, or. It may save the tyro in heraldry trouble to warn him that he will search the text books in vain for the " known heraldic rules " which the poet, following the example of but too many modern heralds, invented for his own amusement. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 5 probably one of the staunch adherents of the great Master in his disputes with the other members of the College ; for his name is not appended to the petition which was forwarded to the Bishop of Ely on the 6th of February, 17 10, while it appears in the list of thirty-seven Fellows attached to Bentley's reply, which is dated the 13th February in the same year. Edward Frere's son Sheppard, a Fellow Com- moner of Trinity, did not take a degree, but his grandson John, Mr. Hookham Frere's father, went to Caius College, 1 and had the good fortune of contending with Paley for the honours of Senior Wrangler in 1763. The story of the contest is told with characteristic details by Bishop Watson, who was Moderator that year. After recording how, when he took his own degree, he had been placed Second Wrangler, while in justice he ought to have been first, the worthy Bishop relates that when he became Moderator, he prevented such partiality for the future, by introducing the practice of examining rival candidates in the presence of each other, with the happy result which he describes in the following terms : 2 — " The first year I was Moderator, Mr. Paley (after- wards known to the world by many excellent pro- ductions, though there are some ethical and some political principles in his philosophy which I by no means approve), and Mr. Frere, a gentleman of Norfolk, were examined together. A report pre- vailed that Mr. Frere's grandfather" (this was the Trinity Fellow of Bentley's days) " would give him a thousand pounds if he were Senior Wrangler. The other Moderator agreed with me that Mr. 1 Not Trinity, as inadvertently stated in the first edition of this memoir. 2 " Anecdotes of the Life of Bishop Watson of Llandaff," 1 818, vol. i. p. 30. 6 MEMOIR OF Paley was his superior, and we made him Senior Wrangler. Mr. Frere, much to his honour, on an imputation of partiality being thrown on my col- league and myself, publicly acknowledged that he deserved only the second place, a declaration which could never have been made, had they not been examined in the presence of each other." While Paley was slowly working his way to honours far more enduring than any the University Moderator could assign him, his competitor had the good or bad fortune to succeed to his family estate, and thenceforward devoted himself to his duties as a country gentleman. In 1768 he married Jane, the only child of Mr. John Hookham of Beding- ton, a rich London merchant. She brought with her, not only fortune and personal beauty, but rare gifts of intellect x and disposition. Her own read- 1 The large collection of her letters, papers, diaries, and common-place books, still in the possession of various mem- bers of the family, all show her to have been possessed of strong and deep religious feeling, a sound judgment, a pas- sionately affectionate nature, a ready wit, and a vivacious disposition. The following extracts selected from many such, with a view rather to their variety than to their literary merit, may interest some as proofs of her love for metrical composition. Eton Epigram Attempted. " To holy Henry's fame two Statues rise, That bears the Sword, but this the Law supplies, There the rude race an iron rule require, Here polish'd Law restrains to just desire ; Those Tyrants awed, and these revere a King, Yet does this change from his own Eton spring ; And pious Henry through succeeding reigns Spreads that true peace, the Sword's subjection feigns, While this fair age reflects reversed his own, And Science nurtured here supports the throne, So Windsor's Tower on Eton's base shall stand — The honour'd guardian of a grateful land. 2nd Attempt. " See Henry to thy name two Statues rise, Whose differing emblems fix our gazing eyes — JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 7 ing in early life had been directed by Mr. William Stevens, the intimate friend of Bishop Home and of Jones of Nayland, a ripe Greek and Hebrew scholar, and one of the most learned laymen of his day. The catalogue of books which he drew up for the young heiress, and which she seems, from her note-books, to have carefully read 'and studied, would probably astonish the promoters of modern ladies' colleges, by the ponderous though varied nature of the reading prescribed, embracing almost every branch of what an erudite and pious High Churchman of Johnson's days would consider sound divinity and history ; in French as well as in Eng- lish literature. That, a rude race with blazing Falchion awes, This, grants a polish'd age benignant laws, For our blest time requires no stern controul, The yielding passions own the ruling soul ; Health, peace, and joy, the smiling region bless, The Monarch's is the people's happiness — Yet does this change from thy own Eton spring, While Science nurtured here supports the King." Epitaph. " Begun for Mrs. Edwards" " You who perhaps with heedless step and eye Approach the place where these dear reliques lie, Reject not the instructions they impart, But let my precepts warn and warm the heart ; Warn'd by my woes, let not thy mind elate Trust the vain joys of this unstable state — One beaming morn the tenderest hope inspired, The next, deprived of all my soul desired, Saw me, sad victim of relentless fate, A childless Parent and a widow'd Mate." Composed in sleep, when dreaming that she could not sleep. " O come, sweet Sleep, sad nature's soothing nurse, The greatest blessing left her at the Curse, Not in fantastic form, with motley hues ; Come bathe my temple with Lethean dews ; Gently incumbent close my willing eyes, 8 MEMOIR OF Mr. Frere was High Sheriff for Suffolk in 1776, and in 1799 was elected Member of Parliament for Norwich, after a severe contest ; but though a dili- gent magistrate, devoting much time to county business, he did not neglect the favourite studies of his youth. His son used to regret that so few of his father's occasional papers had been preserved And seal my senses, that those busy spies Break not thy stillness with abrupt surprise — The Rich or Poor on thy soft lap reclined, Equal relief and sure Asylum find." In a little book of " Early Efforts " occur the following. To a Friend on Her Marriage. " Length of Days attend my Dear ; Happiness, Friends always near ; Health and Pleasure, Joy and Treasure, Plenty, Peace, Love and Ease, A good Husband, you Caressing, A Hand unseen, you always Blessing ; This is the sincere wish of Me — Whom Gratitude binds fast to Thee." (In this book she says she was careful not to correct any of the imperfections she noted in these early efforts at poetry — as seeing the faults kept her humble.) Description of " Always turning, shifting, changing, From Folly still to Folly ranging, Ever inconstant, roving, unconfined — No rein can guide her, and no ties can bind, Never to be restrain'd by reason's rule, To seem a Wit, she proves herself a Fool." It appears to have been her habit to express in verse, spon- taneously, the thought of the moment : of such are the fol- lowing : — Expectation. ( Waiting for Mr. Frere's return at Roydon.) " Swift ye moments, swifter fly, Restore him to my longing eye, Weary no more my listening ear Attentive the wish'd tread to hear, JOHN HO OKU AM FEE RE. g or published. I have heard my uncle relate with much humour a story of his father's learning, when he was High Sheriff, that a Whig judge, rather a rare phenomenon in those days, was coming on circuit to the Norwich assizes ; whereupon the High Sheriff, though not much addicted to theological composition, sat down and composed a High Tory Or catch the well-known voice ; As the loved sound approaches nigh — • Each Doubt, each Care and Fear shall fly, And I again rejoice — " The same in Town. {Waiting for Mi: Frere to return from the House of Commons.) " While Coaches rattle, knockers play, And Flambeaux cast their glaring ray, Each rolling carriage at its sound, Makes my impatient Heart rebound, With quicken'd pulses throbbing beat ; The various noises of the Street — The Postman's Bell, the Watchman's Cry, Th' attentive Ear does listening try, When first the dubious murmurs rise — And expectation wings surmise." Often little fragments of three or four lines seem rather the expression of an overwhelming feeling than any attempt at poetical composition. Thus on a fragment of paper with the date of her hus- band's death are the lines : — " O Life ! O Love, together are ye flown ! And my heart's treasure thus for ever gone — What now awaits me — wheresoe'er I stray, A desert, and a solitary way." " Out of the Deep have I called unto Thee, O Lord. Lord, hear my voice. O let Thine ears consider well the voice of my complaint." A curious little poem by her great grandmother, preserved amongst her papers {vide infra), proves that she was not the first of her race possessed of a taste for versification. io MEMOIR OF sermon, which he got his chaplain to preach before the judges. It was pronounced, by those of the learned congregation who were not in the secret of its composition, to be " an excellent sermon ; much better than judges usually got from High Sheriffs' Chaplains ;" but whether it did as much to improve the political principles of the Whig judge, as to confirm his Tory brethren in theirs, was more than the real author of the sermon could discover. Another anecdote of his Father, which Mr. Hookham Frere used to relate was, that one day when Bishop Home, attended by his Chaplain Jones of Nayland, was staying at Roydon, they were told that Wesley was to preach at Diss ; both were most anxious to hear him, but both doubted the propriety of their attending — there was however no such objection to their host going, so he went, and on his return wrote down, for their edification, a full report of the sermon he had heard. Mr. Frere was an active member of the Royal Society, and of the principal scientific and anti- quarian associations in London, and occasionally contributed a paper to their transactions, or to the " Gentleman's Magazine," then the usual vehicle for publishing the less formal and elaborate class of scientific or literary compositions. One of these papers, written in 1797, possesses considerable permanent interest. It is an account of some flint implements dug up near Hoxne in Suffolk, and was published in the " Archaeologia." l This is probably the first notice, in any scientific publication, of the remains left by the pre-historic races in this country, which have of late years attracted so much attention. Mr. Frere's only surviving sister, Ellinor, married Sir John Fenn, editor of the well-known " Paston 1 Vol. XIII. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. n Letters," an accomplished and learned antiquary. It is possible that from him, or from some of his an- tiquarian friends, who were always welcome guests at Mr. Frere's house, his son imbibed that taste and appreciation for English ballad literature which he snowed in his early school-boy days, and for which he was remarkable throughout life. Lady Fenn 1 was a woman of strong original understanding and great accomplishment ; though, as she lived at a time when Norfolk was two days' tedious journey from London, her influence was mainly confined to the small country circle in which she moved. Speaking of her in her later years, Mr. Hookham Frere said, " It is difficult to give any one nowadays an idea of the kind of awe which, in my boyhood, a learned old lady like her inspired, down in the country, not only in us, her nephews and nieces, and in those of her own age and rank who could understand her intellectual superiority, but even in the common people around her. " I remember one day, coming from a visit to her, I stopped to learn what some village boys outside her gate were wrangling about — they were disput- ing whether the nation had any reason to be afraid of an invasion by Buonaparte, and one of the dis- putants said, with a conscious air of superior know- ledge — ' I tell ye, ye don't know what a terrible fellow he is : why, he don't care for nobody ! If he was to come here to Dereham, he wouldn't care 1 She was herself an authoress of some repute in her own day, and in her own line. There are many now living who can recollect receiving their first reading-lessons in " Cobwebs to catch Flies," and other books for children, which, under the names of Mrs. Lovechild and Mrs. Teachwell, she wrote for her brother's children and grandchildren, and afterwards published. She shares with Mrs. Trimmer and Mrs. Barbauld the credit of founding that school of fiction for children in which Miss Edgeworth afterwards reigned supreme. 12 MEMOIR OF that,' snapping his fingers ; * no ! not even for Lady Fenn, there !'" Little that is noteworthy has been preserved of Mr. Hookham Frere's early boyhood. The eldest of eleven children 1 (eight sons and three daughters), he shared in the family migrations from London to Roydon in Norfolk, and Bedington in Surrey, between which places his parents usually divided the year. In 1785, he went from a preparatory school at Putney to Eton. The following are extracts from notes made in 1844 of some of his early recollections. He had been speaking of the mistake made by a celebrated head master, who tried to keep the boys of a great public school in order by superior physical energy. This was not the way, he said, to attain what should be the object of every head master — to impress every one about him, tutors as well as boys, with a profound respect for his authority. " Davies," he said, "who was head master in my time, was the very incarnation of authority. We boys never dreamed of his condescending to any physical effort other than flogging us. I never shall forget my surprise when my father took me to place me at Eton, and I saw the way in which Davies treated a man to whom I had seen every one else so deferential. " ' Mr. Frere, I believe ? Well, sir ; is this your son ?' "'Yes.' " ' Well, what can he do ? where has he been ?' "'At Mr. Cormick's, at Putney.' " ' Humph ! not a bad school ; we have had some lads well prepared from him.' And he gave me a passage to read, and away I construed for bare life. Everything about him had the same character, down to his ' Hem !' which might have been heard 1 Two died in early childhood. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 13 at the end of the long walk. He was ordered by his physician, when he got a little infirm, to take carriage exercise. So he had a coach-and-four ; but there was something we boys did not quite like, in his riding, even in a coach-and-four, like an ordi- nary mortal ; and this effect was not lessened by his always using, when the horses were restive, the same phrase, and in the same tone, as he was accustomed to address to the prepostors (of the lower school), ' Can't you keep them quiet, there ?' " When old King George III. came over to Eton, which he used to do very frequently, I remember the jealousy with which we watched Davies, to see that he did not play the courtier too much ; and very well he managed it. The King, too, used quite to understand and humour the kind of feeling we had. " Davies was preceded by, and, I fancy, caught much of the manner of Foster, who, as I have heard Etonians of his day tell, had almost the same kind of weight in London society that old Thurlow possessed. " It was a grand idea to have such a school as Eton close under the wing of the royal castle. I have often wished that some one would hunt up the early charters or statutes to find out whether the position was the result of accident or design, like so many of the things which appear accidental in the foundation of Winchester, but which the statutes show, were all provided for, by the foresight of the founder." At Eton Mr. Hookham Frere formed more than one life-long friendship, and there began his intimacy with Mr. Canning, for whom he cherished a love and admiration, which absence never diminished, and neither age nor death itself could dull. 1 1 In a "Thucydides" formerly belonging to Mr. Frere, now at Roydon, the following words (i. 1 38), summing up the cha- racter of Themistocles, are underlined, and against them he has written " Dear Canning " : — an d all that was good and beneficial to Europe in the settlement of 181 5, was marked out by him before he died. This he did, too, under the deepest discouragement. In failing health, and almost alone ; for, though the nation was with him, his difficulties in Parliament were greater than they had been since he first entered office ; and, with the 76 MEMOIR OF exception of Canning, hardly one of his immediate followers fully entered into all his views." In June, 1807, when there appeared some brief hope that Prussia might be able to maintain an alliance with Russia and England in making head against France, Mr. Frere was appointed by the Portland Ministry Envoy and Minister Plenipo- tentiary to Berlin. But the Treaty of Tilsit in the following month closed the north of Europe against England, and prevented his setting out on that mission. He used frequently in later life to refer to this period as the gloomiest and most critical in our history since England became a first-class European power. Pitt was dead, and so was his great rival. No one had arisen with genius or authority com- parable to Pitt's, or capable of directing the energies of the nation in its great struggle for existence. Canning, whom, as Mr. Frere believed, Pitt had always regarded as his political heir, was still in a comparatively subordinate position, and suffered from the dread with which dull sensible men are apt to regard genius and wit. The short experi- ence of Whig administration had not shown that the ranks of Pitt's old opponents contained the man fitted to take his place in the confidence of the nation. Had it been possible to believe that Napoleon would rest content with the vast empire he had acquired, the people of England would, in 1807 even more than at any other time, have rejoiced to see an end to the war which had so heavily taxed their resources. But his imperial ambition was con- tinually affording fresh proof of the hopelessness of any such termination of the struggle, and with the light which his own correspondence affords, it is now clear that no permanent peace, on terms honour- able to England, would ever have been tolerated by him. The whole continent, it is true, was at his JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 77 feet. From the Atlantic to the Russian frontier not a cannon could be fired without his leave, and so completely had he fascinated the Emperor of Russia, that the partition of the Turkish empire between France and Russia seemed no improbable or remote result of their alliance. But Napoleon knew that the vast fabric of power which he had raised was not safe while England, his nearest neighbour, was really free and independent. His plans for invading and subjugating his insular rival, which had been delayed by the campaign of Aus- terlitz, and for the time frustrated by Trafalgar, had never been absent from his mind, and he resumed their active development directly Jena and Tilsit seemed to have placed Germany finally under his yoke. He believed that he possessed all the means required to reduce England to the level, at least, of Prussia and Austria, except such a navy as would make him, if but for a few days, master of the Channel. Spain alone, of all European nations, offered the means of rendering the fleets at his com- mand superior to those of England, and to Spain he turned with the determination to weld the forces of the Peninsula, and especially its marine, into one with those of the French empire. He had already under the treaty of St. Ildefonso, absolute control over all Spanish fleets and armies ; but he knew that under such a rule as that of Charles IV. the vast natural resources of Spain and her colonies would be ineffectually wasted, and that even the subser- viency of the " Prince of the Peace" was a poor sub- stitute for the vigour with which he could himself act on the administration through a king of his own making, or through his own military commanders. Thus his impatience to apply the power of Spain to further his great purpose of forming an irresistible navy, drove him into what he himself subsequently acknowledged as one of the capital errors of his career. Assured of the connivance of Russia, he 78 MEMOIR OF was led step by step into the secret treaty and con- vention of Fontainbleau (May, 1806, and Oct. 1807) with Charles IV., by which Portugal was to be par- titioned for the benefit of France and Spain — into the seizure of the Spanish frontier fortresses, and into all the treacheries which followed the meeting of the Spanish royal family with Napoleon at Bayonne, the forced abdications of the king and his son Ferdinand — the Bayonne constitution, the bestowal of the Spanish Crown on Joseph Buona- parte, and the French invasion of the peninsula in support of the usurpation. In May and June, 1808, all Europe was startled by the explosion which Mr. Frere had foreseen as imminent in Spain two years before, and which he had then foretold to Lord Malmesbury. 1 It naturally, under the circumstances, took the form of an insur- rection against the foreign invader, and in favour of Ferdinand, who was regarded by the clergy, the common people, and the great bulk of the nobility, as their legitimate Sovereign. In every part of the peninsula, in the remotest villages, and in the almost inaccessible sierras of the distant provinces, as well as in the great cities, the insurrection broke out with a violence, an unanimity, and a suddenness to which neither before nor since has modern Europe seen any parallel. The French garrisons speedily found that they commanded no more than their guns covered. The people everywhere assembled, seized such arms as they could lay hands on, appointed leaders, organized Juntas as a form of local govern- ment, and issued proclamations detailing the wrongs and insults the nation had suffered, and calling on all true Spaniards to join in expelling the invader from their soil. In some cases terrible massacres of the French or their supposed partizans disgraced 1 " Malmesbury Diaries," vol. iv. p. 330, as quoted, anted, p. 68. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 79 the popular cause ; but, in general, the people be- haved with wonderful self-command, and with a dignity which added greatly to the moral effect produced by the insurrection on the rest of Europe. The leading Juntas took prompt and effectual steps to appeal for sympathy and aid to all foreign nations, and especially to England, the only power which had never either succumbed to the force or yielded to the seductions of the Arbiter of Conti- nental Europe. Spain was peculiarly fitted for the part she thus took in an insurrection against the imperial des- potism of France. The people were, as Napoleon's sagacity had before pointed out, " unexhausted by revolutionary passion." Peculiarities of race com- bined with the physical features of the country, and with the history and traditions of the many nations which make up its population, to render the Spaniards a people dwelling apart not only from the rest of Europe, but divided very distinctly among themselves into separate communities inde- pendent of each other ; so that the subjugation or destruction of one province would have little effect in ensuring the submission of its neighbours. The consequent division of interests, feelings, and action, which so often led to subsequent disaster, at first greatly promoted the spread of the insurrection. On a few vital points — their national pride, their devotion to their national religion, their obedience to its ministers, and their indignation at the treat- ment the nation and the royal family had received at the hands of Napoleon — the mass of the popula- tion felt as one man, and all determined to resist the invader. But each city and province took its own measures for organizing resistance ; and, till bitter experience taught them some of the evils of disunion, each acted as if it had been a separate and perfectly independent power. By the end of May, or early in June (1808), the 8o MEMOIR OF Juntas had been organized in most of the provinces; that of Seville had secured the co-operation of the Spanish divisions under Castafios in the south of the peninsula, and through him had opened friendly relations with Sir Hew Dalrymple, the English commander at Gibraltar ; had formally declared war against France, and had issued a manifesto which was accepted by England and other powers of Europe as the national declaration of Spain against Napoleon. By the middle of June the French squadron in Cadiz was captured, and the garrisons of Ferrol and Corunna had already de- clared for the national cause. Before the end of July, Dupont, with 20,000 excellent French troops had been confronted in his march on Cadiz, and forced to lay down his arms to Castafios at Baylen — the first great and decided reverse which had be- fallen the French armies in a fair field since the revolutionary wars began. Joseph Buonaparte upon this hastily quitted Madrid, and the capital was once more left in the sole possession of Spanish troops. Napoleon had clearly foreseen the danger. Writing from Bayonne to Murat at Madrid, in March, 1808, before he had entirely thrown off the mask, he said : — " Never suppose that you are engaged with a disarmed nation, and that you have only to show yourself to insure the submission of Spain. *- * * They have still energy. You have to deal with a virgin people. They already have all the courage, and they will soon have all the enthusiasm which you meet with among men who are not worn out by political passions. " The aristocracy and the clergy are the masters of Spain. If they become seriously alarmed for their privileges and existence, they will rouse the people, and induce an eternal war. At present I have many partizans among them. If I show myself as a conqueror, I shall soon cease to have any." * * * JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 81 After pointing out how effectually England might act on the coast, and discussing all possible plans for governing the country under French dictation, he winds up with the emphatic declaration, — " If war break out, all is lost." In exile at St. Helena, he very truly said : — " It was that unhappy war in Spain which ruined me. It was a real wound, the first cause of the misfortunes of France." When the insurrection did break out, he never underrated its importance, but determined to crush it at once. In his earliest instructions he had charged his generals, "above all, take care to avoid any misfortune in Spain ; its consequences would be incalculable." Dupont's surrender, and Joseph's consequent retreat from the capital, were two misfortunes regarding the gravity of which there could be no mistake. The Emperor well knew that the Assembly of Notables at Bay- onne were no true representatives of the Spanish nation, and that their assent to his usurpation was of little practical value. But he had confidence in his own power to carry out a thoroughly effective military occupation of the peninsula. He ordered his best troops and most trusted marshals to march for Spain. The better to organize operations, he returned to Paris in August. In September he met the Emperor of Russia at Erfurth ; made a favour to Prussia of withdrawing from the military occupa- tion, which had lasted since Jena, the veteran troops he needed in Spain ; did his best to overawe Austria, already showing signs of impatience under his yoke ; and, having confirmed his influence over Alexander, attempted, with the help of Russia, to negotiate with England, and to neutralize her hostility that he might deal with Spain single- handed. But England had already determined to make common cause with the Spaniards. The deputies from the Asturian Junta had arrived in London early in June, and each successive post G 82 MEMOIR OF brought news of the spread of the insurrection. The general enthusiasm of the Spaniards left no room for doubting that it was a really national and popular movement, essentially different in its origin, character, and extent, from anything which had previously occurred on the Continent to check the uninterrupted success of Napoleon's career. Sheri- dan vied with Canning in eulogizing the conduct of the Spanish patriots, and the Opposition cor- dially supported the Ministry when they declared their intention of sending British troops to aid the Spaniards in asserting their independence. There are few portions of modern history with which Englishmen are better acquainted than with the details of the contest on which England thus entered. The story has been told in the stately periods of South ey, and by the burning eloquence of Napier. In the two wonderful series of volumes more lately published, containing the correspond- ence of the great soldiers who directed the armies of England and France, Wellington and Napoleon have themselves recorded for posterity the minutest details of their own plans, and much criticism of their opponents. In this short biographical sketch it is only necessary that I should very briefly allude to those events of this well-known history with which Mr. Frere was officially connected. His previous services in Spain, his warm sym- pathy with all the nobler traits of Spanish character, his intimate acquaintance with the Spanish lan- guage and manners, and, above all, the esteem and respect in which he was held by all the best among the leaders in the Spanish national cause, to many of whom he was personally known, pointed him out as eminently fitted to represent England in Spain at a juncture of such importance, and on the 4th of October, 1808, he was accredited as British Minister Plenipotentiary to Ferdinand VII., then represented by the Central Junta, at whose place of JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 83 assembly Mr. Frere had instructions to take up his residence. He had already been partly instrumental in re- storing to the armies of Spain a very important reinforcement. The story of the mode in which a Spanish division under the Marquis de Romana was released from Denmark and transferred to Spain has been repeatedly told ; but Mr. Frere's connexion with the enterprise will justify a recapi- tulation of some of its romantic details. It had been a part of Napoleon's policy in Spain, as in most other countries which he occupied, to weaken the national power of resistance to his encroach- ments, by transferring the flower of the regular army to distant foreign service ; and one of the first uses he made of the control he acquired over the Spanish armies in 1807 was to march Romana's division of about 14,000 men to Hamburg and thence into Denmark, where it was destined to join the Franco-Danish army which Marshal Bernadotte was collecting for the invasion of Sweden. Here they were closely watched and cut off from all intercourse with Spain. In March, 1808, the Spanish division had commenced crossing the Belts, when their movement was interrupted by the ap- pearance of British cruisers, which captured a Da- nish ship of the line, and for more than three months prevented the transit of the invading force to the shores of Sweden. The oath of allegiance to Joseph Buonaparte and to the Napoleonic consti- tution in Spain had previously been tendered to the Spanish troops ; but their suspicions were aroused by the circumstance that no private or other letters accompanied the public despatch for- warding the oath of allegiance, and that no intelli- gence was allowed to reach Spaniards in Denmark except through the French press, or through chan- nels controlled by the French Government. Some of them, however, took the oath without much 84 MEMOIR OF demur. Others, including the troops nearest Ro- mana's head quarters, took it conditionally, with a proviso that their oath should be null unless the Revolution were confirmed by the general consent of the Spanish nation ; and two regiments- abso- lutely refused the oath, rose on their French com- mandant, and planting their colours knelt round them and swore to be faithful to their country. When the insurrection against the intrusive government in Spain spread to the army under Castafios, it was one of his first requests to Sir Hew Dalrymple, at Gibraltar, that the Spanish troops in the Baltic might be apprised of the turn affairs had taken in their native country, and that the English would open communication with Ro- mana. But watched as the Spaniards were by the French, and in Denmark, with which we were then at war, this was a matter of the utmost difficulty and danger. The task was undertaken by a priest named Robertson, an accomplished linguist ; and, as it was impossible to risk the danger attaching to written credentials, he was instructed to use, as his passport to Romana's confidence, a verse from the Gests of the Cid. Mr. Frere, when at Madrid some years before, had suggested to Romana a conjec- tural emendation in a verse, 1 the mention of which, as it could only be known to the two friends, would satisfy Romana that Robertson had communicated with Mr. Frere, and that his intelligence might be relied on. Robertson started for Heligoland with Mr. Mac- kenzie, who was charged to aid him in landing on the continent. Throughout the war the little island was used as a rendezvous for our cruisers and an entrepot for the British commerce, which was ex- 1 " Aun vea el hora que vos merezca dos tanto," v. 2348, where Mr. Frere proposed to read merezcades, an emendation of which Romana at once perceived the propriety. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 85 eluded by the decrees of Napoleon from direct admission to any continental port. On their ar- rival, the Governor placed an embargo on all the shipping there, and Robertson started in a boat to the nearest shore ; but it was found impossible for any one unprovided with a passport to elude the vigilance of the French and Danish officials, and after three days he returned without effecting a landing. Mackenzie, however, found the master of a captured Bremen vessel, who promised, if his vessel were released, to land Robertson in safety and provide him with a passport. The Bremener had a near relation among the city officials, with whose help he fulfilled his engagement. Robert- son, in the character of a German schoolmaster, made his way to Romana's presence ; and having accredited himself by his verse from the Cid, de- tailed to him in Latin the course which events had taken in the Peninsula. Romana at once resolved to effect his escape from Denmark, with his whole force, provided he could obtain the assistance of the British naval and military commanders, who were then in the Baltic supporting the Swedes in their resistance to the threatened French invasion. Robertson returned to Heligoland with this assur- ance, and with a request that Mackenzie would communicate with Sir John Moore, who then com- manded the British Auxiliaries in Sweden, and procure his aid in covering the retreat and embarca- tion of the Spaniards. The requisite orders were issued by the British Government, and within a week Mackenzie received letters for Sir John Moore, which he determined to carry himself to Gottenburg. But when he arrived on the Swedish coast, the British troops had already sailed for England. Returning to Heligoland, the packet in which he sailed was driven by a gale on to the Danish coast. There he fell in with a Danish pri- vateer of greatly superior force, and after a running 86 MEMOIR OF fight of four hours, escaped with difficulty back to Gottenburg. He then determined to communi- cate with Sir James Saumerez, the British Admiral in the Baltic. This he at length accomplished. Sir James at once determined to effect the release of the Spaniards. Under his orders Sir Richard Keats had commenced the necessary arrangements, when Sir James received despatches from his own government suggesting the course he had already adopted ; and a Spanish courier brought from Lon- don letters from the Junta of Gallicia and others in Spain, for Romana and his second in command. To convey these to the Spanish camp, and when all was arranged with the leaders to keep the con- templated movements secret ; to concentrate and embark the scattered Spanish troops from an enemy's country and in the presence of the hostile forces of France and Denmark, was still an opera- tion of the greatest difficulty. The Spanish regi- ments were quartered, widely apart, in various towns on the mainland of Jutland, and in several islands in the Baltic. A young Spanish officer crossing from one island to the other was taken prisoner by the British squadron, enlisted in the cause, and sent on with letters for Romana. But the fact that he had communicated with the British squadron was discovered by the French Command- ant, whose suspicions had been already aroused, and Romana resolved to prevent interruption from the Danes by seizing Nyborg. This was effected with Admiral Keats' help, after a determined re- sistance on the part of some of the Danish officers, who, faithful to their French allies, refused to aid the Spaniards. The captured gunboats and coast- ing craft afforded the means of collecting and em- barking such of the Spanish regiments as could reach the coast near Admiral Keats' squadron. One regiment marched eighty miles in twenty-one hours, and all made incredible exertions to rejoin JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 87 their countrymen. Many hair-breadth escapes and romantic incidents occurred while the Spaniards and their English naval allies were engaged in this perilous service. At length nine thousand men, besides followers, were landed on the Swedish shore, and there first learnt the details of the won- derful success which had attended the early efforts of their countrymen to eject the French invaders. By the end of August transports arrived from Eng- land to embark them, and they sailed for Spain. Romana, on his way to Corunna, visited England to confer with the Ministry, and learn their views regarding the future conduct of the war, and did not reach Spain till later in the year. The British Government meanwhile had not been idle. They had from the first resolved to support the insurrection vigorously. Mr. Canning and Lord Castlereagh at this time held the seals of the Fo- reign and the War Departments in the Duke of Portland's Ministry. When the news of the Spa- nish insurrection first arrived in England, an expedi- tion of about 10,000 men, organized by the preced- ing administration, was about to sail from Cork for South America. It was determined to divert to Portugal this force under command of Sir Arthur Wellesley ; and Sir John Moore, who had been sent to Sweden to assist in repelling the French and Russian invasion, and whose aid had been de- clined by the King of Sweden, was recalled and directed to sail for the Peninsula. Sir Arthur Wellesley's expedition left Cork on the 12th July, 1808. The General himself reached Corunna on the 20th, and learning there that the Junta of Gal- licia did not wish for the aid of his troops, he sup- plied them with arms and money and proceeded to Portugal, the liberation of which was the first object of his instructions. Off Mondego Bay he learnt that he was to be superseded as soon as Sir Harry Burrard should arrive, and that Burrard again was SS MEMOIR OF to give place to Sir Hew Dalrymple as soon as he could come round from Gibraltar. But hearing at the same time of the surrender of Dupon's army to Castanos, and seeing the opportunity, if no time were lost, for striking an effective blow against the French under Junot at Lisbon, Wellesley landed on the 1st of August with less than 10,000 men to face the 25,000 French soldiers, who then garrisoned Portugal. Being opportunely reinforced by General Spencer, who had anticipated his orders to join him from the south of Spain, Wellesley, undeterred by the delays of the Portuguese, pushed on to attack Junot. On the 1 5 th of August the first British blood was shed in a skirmish with the French advanced guard. At Rolica, on the 17th, Sir Arthur gained his first victory in the Peninsula, and captured three guns. Junot advanced from Lisbon with all his disposable force to meet him, and Wellesley, who had been reinforced by further arrivals from Eng- land, ordered a movement to cut off Junot from the capital. But the reinforcements brought also a senior officer, Sir Harry Burrard, who, before he landed, forbade the move as attended with too much risk. Meantime Junot had attacked Welles- ley at Vimiero on the 21st August, and was beaten, with the loss of thirteen guns and 400 prisoners. The victory would have been still more complete had Wellesley been allowed to follow it up. He was, however, superseded on the field by Sir Harry Burrard, who ordered a halt ; and Junot, by a forced march, regained the capital unmolested. On the 22nd August, Burrard was himself superseded by Dalrymple. The next day further operations were suspended by a French flag of truce. The Conven- tion of Cintra ensued, and the French army evacu- ated Portugal, including the strong frontier for- tresses of Elvas and Almeida. By the middle of October not a French soldier remained, and the Russian fleet in the Tasois had been surrendered to JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 89 English custody. These were great results. They might, however, no doubt have been greater, had Wellesley been left in undisturbed command, to carry out his own plans either before or after the battle of Vimiero. The English nation was pro- foundly dissatisfied, and directed its anger not against the Minister who sent three Generals to supersede one another on the same field, but against the Generals who signed the Convention. They were all summoned to England to defend their conduct before a Court of Enquiry, and Wellesley was thus prevented from having any chance of test- ing his opinion that, within a month after the Con- vention, he could have been at Madrid with 20,000 men. 1 In judging of these operations, as well as of all others that followed them in the Peninsula, it should be borne in mind that Wellesley's difficul- ties from deficiency of information, of carriage, of roads, of regular supplies, and of cavalry — from un- certain, over-confident, or half-hearted friends, and from concealed enemies, and above all from nume- rical inferiority of trained soldiers, were the same in kind, and hardly less in degree, than those which he and Moore and every other English general in Spain experienced up to the end of the war. We may thus appreciate the qualities which enabled him from the first to understand the real conditions on which alone he could hope to war successfully in such a country, and the cautious boldness with which he pressed on, till he finally expelled the French from Spain. Dalrymple, Burrard, and Wellesley, having left or been superseded, Sir John Moore, who had ar- rived in Portugal some time before, was appointed a to command a force of 30,000 infantry and 5,000 1 Gurwood's "Wellington Dispatches," vol. iv. p. 121. 2 Vide Letter from Lord Castlereagh to Sir J. Moore, dated 25th Sept. 1808. go MEMOIR OF cavalry, to be employed in the north of Spain, to co-operate with the Spaniards in the expulsion of the French; and of this force about 15,000 men, expected from England, under Sir David Baird, were to land at Corunna and to join him. Moore's instructions directed that his army was not to be partially committed against the enemy. He was to consider the points in Gallicia or on the borders of Leon, where it could be most advantageously equipped and concentrated, and the routes by which it was to be assembled were left to his discretion. He was to open communications with the Spanish authorities, and to frame a plan of the campaign. On receipt of these instructions, Moore divided his forces to facilitate their movements, going himself direct to Salamanca, which he reached on the 13th November, and sending the reserves and most of the artillery by a more circuitous route. Baird had landed at Corunna on the 13th October, but was still four marches from Salamanca on the 20th November. A Central Junta for Spain had been installed at Aranjuez about the end of September. The prac- tical incapacity of most of its members, their irre- concileable jealousies and divisions, and other inhe- rent faults of its constitution, rendered it from the first, incapable of anything like efficient administra- tion. Spain, in fact, up to the end of the Peninsular War, had barely the semblance of an effective cen- tral government. This was, however, the body to which Mr. Frere was accredited as British Envoy and Plenipotentiary. He arrived at Corunna on the 20th October, accom- panied by Romana, whose troops, released from Denmark, had already been disembarked. Mr. Crabb Robinson, who had gone out to Corunna as Correspondent to the " Times," after an account of the landing of Baird's troops on the 13th October, 1808, and their march to the interior on the ex- JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 91 pedition which he " understood was ill-planned," says : l — "On the 20th there was an arrival which, more than that of the English, ought to have gratified the Spaniards. I witnessed a procession from the coast to the Town Hall, of which the two leading figures were the Spanish General Romana and the English Minister Mr. Frere. Few incidents in the great war against Napoleon can be referred to as rivalling in romantic interest the escape of the Spanish soldiers under General Romana from the North of Germany." He was disappointed in Romana's appearance, but adds : — " I received a favourable impression from the per- son and address of Mr. Frere ; and when, in a few months, the public voice in England was raised against him as the injudicious counsellor who im- perilled the British army by advising their advance on Madrid my own feeling was that he was unjustly treated." Napoleon's meeting with the Emperor Alexander at Erfurth, already referred to, had arranged what was in effect a virtual division of the supremacy of Europe. Russia was to get undisturbed possession of Finland, Moldavia, and Wallachia, with great prospects in Poland and Asia, so as to threaten the British Indian Empire. Napoleon obtained Russia's recognition of his conquests in Italy, the Peninsula, and Germany. The severity of his grasp on Prussia was to be relaxed in the interests of Russia. Alexander, on the other hand, was to aid France, should Austria prove troublesome. Regarding Turkey only they failed to agree. Neither Em- peror could consent to see the other master of Con- stantinople. Thus secured for a time against diversions on his 1 " Crabb Robinson's Diary," vol. i. p. 275. 92 MEMOIR OF other frontier, Napoleon returned to Bayonne, No- vember 3rd, determined to devote his whole power to crush Spain and Portugal, and to drive the Eng- lish out of the Peninsula. He had already drawn to the frontier, from France, Germany, and Italy, 300,000 men, the flower of his veteran army. About 180,000, con- centrated under his own eye, were ready for opera- tions west of the Ebro. To these the Spaniards could oppose less than 75,000, most of them untrained recruits, widely divided, ill-organized, imperfectly armed, under inexperienced and almost independent comman- ders. Their British allies, coming up to their aid, were marching on Salamanca by several lines wide apart, and all far in the rear of the Spanish armies. Early in November, Napoleon let loose " the hur- ricane of war" which he had so carefully designed. In the course of that month, his Marshals had met and utterly defeated the Spaniards in three decisive battles, driven their divided armies still further asunder, carried the formidable Somosierra pass, and by the 4th of December the Emperor was in possession of Madrid. Thus, before the end of November, it had become clear that the English were too late and too few to support the Spaniards in holding the line of the Ebro against Napoleon's overwhelming advance. Moore saw the possibility and great political ad- vantages of an advance on Madrid to support the Spaniards in their defence of their capital. But this movement was one of great risk. His own judgment inclined to a retreat and re-embarcation in Portugal, and a renewal of operations in support of the Spanish armies in Southern Spain. Under these circumstances he, on the 27th No- vember, asked the British Envoy's opinion as to which of these two courses he thought best, with JOHN HOOK II AM FRERE. 93 reference to the Spanish nation's power of resist- ance, and to the probable wishes of the English Cabinet and people, could they know all the cir- cumstances. Mr. Frere replied on the 30th November, recom- mending a retreat on Gallicia, or on the strong country about Astorga, as preferable to a retreat on Portugal, if retreat were inevitable. With regard to the temper of the Spanish people, he urged that the spirit of resistance was much stronger in almost every other province than in the open plains of Leon and in Castile. Recognizing the greater hazard of the forward move, he spoke decidedly of the good spirit of the Spanish people, and hopefully of the Government, adding, " I cannot but think, therefore, that consi- derations both of policy and generosity call upon us for an immediate effort. " If, however, this view of the subject should not appear to you sufficiently clear or conclusive to induce you to take a step which would, I am well convinced (since you do me the honour to refer to me on the subject), meet with the approbation of His Majesty's Government, I would venture to re- commend retaining the position of Astorga. A retreat from that place to Corunna would (as far as an unmilitary man may be allowed to judge of a country which he has travelled over) be less difficult than through Portugal to Lisbon ; and we ought, in that position, to wait for the reinforcements of cavalry from England, which would enable the army to act in the flat country which opens imme- diately from that point, and extends through the whole of Leon and Old Castile. My political rea- sons on this head I have already troubled you with. " I mention this, however, merely as in my humble opinion the least objectionable of the two modes of retreat. Our first object, as it appears to me, ought to be to collect a force capable of repuls- 94 MEMOIR OF ing the French before they receive their reinforce- ments. " The covering and protecting Madrid is surely a point of great moment for effect in Spain, and still more in France, and in the West of Europe. It would be a point of the utmost importance for Buonaparte to be able to publish a decree, or to date a letter from Madrid. " The people of that town are full of resolution, and determined to defend it, in spite of its situation, which is judged to be an unfavourable one. This determination ought surely to be encouraged by some show of support. "The siege of Madrid by a Pretender to the throne would be a circumstance decisive against the claim, even if in other respects it were a legitimate one." On the 3rd of December, Mr. Frere wrote again from Talavera, detailing the reports he had received of the spirit of resistance evinced by the populace at Madrid, and strongly urging the necessity of supporting the determination of the Spanish people by all the means in his power. This letter reached Sir John Moore on the 5th. Baird, on the 29th of November had, in obedience to Moore's orders, commenced a retrograde move- ment to Villa Franca. Moore now ordered him to stand fast, and to prepare to return to Astorga. The next day he repeated his orders to return to Astorga, adding, " What is passing at Madrid may be decisive of the fate of Spain, and we must be at hand to aid, and to take advantage of whatever happens. The wishes of our country and our duty demand this of us, with whatever risk it may be attended. I mean to proceed bridle in hand, for if the bubble burst and Madrid fall, we shall have a run for it ;" and in view to such a contingency, he desired Baird to continue his preparations for retreat on Corunna. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 95 On the 9th of December, he received certain in- formation that the French had possession of the suburbs of Madrid, but hopes were still held out that the city would resist. On the 13th, Moore advanced towards Valladolid to join Baird. But learning on the 14th that Madrid had already fallen, he determined to strike a blow against Soult, who in the valley of the Carrion covered the right flank of Napoleon's communica- tions, and then to retreat on Gallicia. On the 20th, he effected a junction with Baird's force at Mayorga, and the next day the British cavalry under Lord Paget surprised the French cavalry, who believed the British to be far off, and in full retreat to their ships. Two colonels and 160 men were made prisoners ; and the French, though greatly superior in force, were utterly routed. This advance completely paralyzed the south- ward movements of the French armies. Every other important operation was immediately sus- pended, and 50,000 men, the flower of the French troops, were ordered, under the Emperor in person, to check the progress of the British. Urging his men, by his own example, in the teeth of a violent wintry hurricane over the Guadarrama Pass, Napo- leon, on the 26th of December, established his head quarters at Tordesillas. Ney meantime was moving from Zamora north- wards to cut off Moore's retreat first on Portugal and then on Gallicia ; but Moore had suspended his advance on the 23rd of December, and retiring, reached Benevente before the enemy. There he halted for rest, behind the Esla, swollen and im- passable from wintry rains. On the first of January (1809), the Emperor had united at Astorga 70,000 men and 100 pieces of cannon under Soult and Ney. In ten days he had brought 50,000 men 200 miles from Madrid, over mountain ranges and rivers almost impassable, in the depth of winter; but 95 MEMOIR OF before arriving at Astorga he was arrested by the news of Austria having joined the confederacy against him ; and believing that he had now virtu- ally performed his threat of driving the English into the sea, he left Soult and Ney with 60,000 men to continue the pursuit, and returned with his guards, to meet what he deemed the more pressing dangers threatening him in Germany. The English continued their retreat, hard pressed by their active and numerous enemies, and suffering almost as much from relaxed discipline as from the terrible severity of the march through inhospitable mountains in the depth of a severe winter. But whenever battle was offered, the old spirit revived. Corunna was reached on the nth of January. On the 1 6th, Soult with 20,000 French, and strong in artillery, attacked the British force, reduced to 14,000, weak in artillery, and not advantageously posted. The attack was repulsed with great loss to the enemy, and the British remained masters of the field. But Sir John Moore was mortally wounded in the moment of victory ; Baird also was severely hurt, and the command devolved on General Hope, under whom the troops were embarked without further molestation, and sailed for England. Co- runna and Ferrol, with seven sail of the line and great naval stores, surrendered to the French a few days afterwards. Such, in brief, were the events of the first Penin- sular campaign. The army under Sir John Moore was the strongest and most complete which Eng- land had ever been able to land on the Continent since the Revolutionary wars began. The public in England, with a very inadequate notion of the task before it, had formed the most extravagant expec- tations of what that army was to do ; and their dis- appointment and anger knew no bounds when the remnant returned home, — so toil-worn and disor- ganized by exposure and privation, that almost JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 97 every corps required complete renewal before it was fit for further active service. A victim was required to appease popular dis- content. The General who commanded had died a hero's death on the field of victory, and of those who took part in the events connected with the campaign, the next most prominent actor was the British Minister whose opinions throughout these operations had been frequently opposed to those of the General. It was not to be expected that the Government or their supporters would admit that the blame of failure was fairly attributable to any fault in their plans or administration. Contempo- rary hostile criticism of the General, or his proceed- ings, was virtually precluded by his death. So upon the Envoy was cast, by the public and the press, a share of blame which, under the circumstances, could hardly fail to be far in excess of what was deserved. When Parliament met, a motion was brought forward by Mr. Ponsonby in the House of Com- mons (February 24, 1809) "that it is indispensably necessary that this House should inquire into the causes, conduct, and events of the late campaign in Spain." The debate was long remembered as having been interrupted by the news that Drury Lane Theatre was on fire, and by a discussion whether the House should proceed with business when so much property, in which members and their constituents were interested, was in jeopardy. The motion for inquiry was resisted by the Minis- ters, and after much debate finally rejected on a division by a majority of 93 in a House of 347. The Government, however, so far yielded to the popular feeling of the day, that they determined to recall Mr. Frere. The appearance of censure was technically avoided by selecting as his successor the Marquis Wellesley, fresh from the glories of his Indian administration, and by appointing him (on the 29th H 98 MEMOIR OF April, 1 809,) Ambassador to the Court of the King of Spain, a grade higher than that of Envoy, which was the rank Mr. Frere held. But the supersession was regarded as an unmistakeable censure, which Mr. Frere felt he had not deserved. He thenceforward renounced public life, and when it was proposed to send him as Ambassador to St. Petersburg, and, twice in after years, to raise him to the Peerage, he declined both offers. It was natural he should feel that what he had deserved from the Government, if they approved his conduct, was support and approbation when he was unjustly attacked ; and that no subsequent honours or promotion could compensate for his having been left a mark for public obloquy, when he had under most trying circumstances performed an important service to his country. It would perhaps have been hardly reasonable to expect from their cotemporaries a perfectly im- partial apportionment of praise or blame to the chief actors in these events. It is possible, how- ever, for this generation with a much fuller know- ledge of facts than was then accessible to the English public, and after the lapse of sixty years has miti- gated personal and party animosities, to form a more dispassionate judgment. It is now clear from Napoleon's correspondence that, in his opinion, the results of the campaign were far more important to the final issue of the great continental struggle, than most of Moore's countrymen at the time believed ; and, what is more, that this opinion of the Emperor's was so well founded, that those results would have justified almost any sacrifice which the British forces employed could have made. With the more complete evidence now available, we are better able to judge whether the Envoy or the General was right where they differed, and to decide how far the Envoy was answerable for the results of the campaign not having been yet more considerable, JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 99 or for the cost of attaining those results having been so great. What was the object aimed at in sending a British army to Spain ? It was not merely to secure the independence of Spain or Portugal. The expulsion of the French from the Peninsula would have been but one step towards attaining that security for the independence of every separate state in Europe, which had for years been the avowed purpose of all our efforts against Napoleon. This was well understood in Austria and Prussia. Germany watched the Penin- sular contest with the conviction that her immediate prospects of freedom from the foreign thraldom under which she had so long groaned, depended on the results of the Spanish insurrection. The gigantic preparations made by Napoleon to crush all oppo- sition in the Peninsula, sensibly diminished his powers of repression in Germany ; and whatever prolonged the necessity for engaging the attention of the Emperor himself and of the flower of his armies in Spain, became nearly as important to the general cause of freedom in Europe, as any repe- tition of such a demoralizing defeat as Baylen could have been. In no part of the wide area of the European con- test could the power of England be used to so great advantage as in Spain. It was a true instinct which directed thither the scattered expeditions previously detached in various directions towards America, Sweden, and to different points in Europe. But the English Government and people were still tiros in such a struggle as that in the Peninsula. They had made a greater effort than in any of our previous continental enterprises to equip the army entrusted to Sir John Moore ; but it was wholly inadequate to cope single-handed with the vast hosts of France, concentrated under the Emperor in person. LOFC. ioo MEMOIR OF What, then, might reasonably have been expected of Moore and his army ? His instructions indicated concentration in the north of Spain, at some point in Gallicia or on the borders of Leon : after which he was to act on such a plan of campaign as he might concert with the Spanish authorities, and he had the most ample discretion left him to make the best use he could of the forces placed at his disposal. Subsequent events proved that it would have been difficult to give any better instructions to the British General than to leave him thus free to devise his own plan of operations for aiding the Spaniards to expel the French. Moore's campaign, as far as it was in accordance with these instructions, was a decided success. It saved Portugal and the south of Spain from being- overrun. It inflicted great loss on the French armies, by forcing them to act on a vast scale in the most unfavourable season, and in a country where their movements cost the heaviest sacrifices of men and resources. Above all, it occupied Napoleon's personal attention till the critical mo- ment arrived when the action of Austria obliged him to turn to Germany, and to leave to other hands the task of crushing the Spanish nation ; an undertaking in which nothing short of his own genius had a chance of success. The campaign has been criticised on various grounds, some military, some political, and some of a mixed character ; partly military and partly political. Into the purely military questions it would be out of place here to enter. Whether Moore should have moved from Portugal by one line, or, as he did, by several; — whether he might not have concentrated, and moved from Salamanca more rapidly, or done more, by previous preparation, to facilitate his own re- treat on Corunna, and to impede the advance of JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 101 his pursuers ; — these, as far as they are military- points, may be left to military critics. 1 But the questions on which he differed from the Envoy were, in the main, political, and though few, most of them were of vital importance. The Envoy thought that the General should, by an earlier move forwards, have attempted to save Madrid, or at least to delay its falling into the hands of Napoleon. Whether this would at any time during the cam- paign have been possible, is, and must ever remain, matter of opinion. It is vain now to speculate whether the populace of Madrid, if they had been led by a Palafox and not by a Morla, would or would not have emulated their brethren at Sara- gossa ; or how far Napoleon would have been suc- cessful in overcoming a form of national resistance which elsewhere baffled the ablest of his lieutenants. This at least is certain, that with all his genius, and all the force at his command, the Emperor found it a matter of extreme difficulty to obtain possession of Madrid without a siege ; and that he might have failed had he not been aided by the treachery and cowardice of those to whom the populace looked as leaders. But there can be no doubt of the importance, at .such a juncture, of delaying by even a few days Napoleon's occupation of Madrid, and of making it clear to all the civilized world that the submission of the Spanish capital was the result of force, and not of national preference. Nor was there ever any reason to believe the 1 Vide Napier, book iv. chap. vi. ; Alison, chap. 1. p. 805, note, and p. 857 of vol. vi. edit. 1837 ; " Castlereagh Cor- respondence," vol. vi. ; " Life of Sir David Baird," vol. ii. ; Lord Londonderry's " Narrative of the War in Spain and Portugal," 1829, vol. i. pp. 149 to 289 ; Col. Sorell, " Notes on the Campaign of 1808-9," 1828. 102 MEMOIR OF difficulty or risk of an attempt to support any effort of the Spaniards to defend Madrid would have been so great as to put it out of question as a possible move, which a military commander in Moore's posi- tion might prudently attempt, and which, therefore, it would have been the duty of the British Minister to urge on him, as most desirable on political grounds. Not to insist on the opinion of the Duke of Wellington that it was possible for the force to which Junot surrendered at Lisbon to have been at Madrid in a month from the convention of Cintra, it is clear that Moore himself, up to the 27th of November 1 (1808), five days before Napoleon sum- moned Madrid to surrender, did not consider it a hopeless enterprise " to march upon Madrid, to throw himself into the heart of Spain, and thus to* run all risks, and share the fortunes of the Spanish nation." He then considered such a move, though of " greater hazard " than a retreat on Lisbon,. *' perhaps worthy of risk, if the Government and people of Spain are thought to have still sufficient energy and means to recover from their defeats,"' and he formally asked the Envoy's opinion as to which of the two courses before the General, he, the Envoy, considered, on political grounds, the more eligible ? Even, then, if it be admitted that it never was in Moore's power to save Madrid, it cannot be said that the Envoy was wrong in pressing on him the importance of the attempt up to the time when the question was settled by Napoleon's masterly occu- pation of the capital — an operation which, even, in his biography, stands conspicuous as an instance of the wonderful success of " a judicious mixture of force and policy." The next important point on which the General and Envoy differed was, whether, in the event of its. 1 Vide his letter to Mr. Frere of that date. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 103 being impossible to save Madrid, the retreat of the British army should be by Gallicia on Corunna, or through Portugal on Lisbon ? The General, up to the 27th Nov. preferred the latter, the Envoy strenuously urged the former, not merely on the military grounds of its being the shorter, the safer, and the more defensible, the less liable to interrup- tion from the enemy, and the more threatening to his communications ; but on the political grounds that it enabled us to keep our hold on a most important province of Spain, to avoid even the appearance of deserting the Spanish cause, and afforded means of obtaining supplies and reinforce- ments to any extent by sea from England, and of issuing forth in renewed strength to resume the contest whenever opportunity offered. It is un- necessary to examine at length the reasons each gave for his opinion, since ultimately the line which the Envoy preferred was adopted by the General, and was an essential part of a movement which, as the event proved, saved the south of Spain, had the most important bearing on the final issue of the great continental struggle, and won from Napoleon himself the tribute of unqualified approval, as the only move which could have arrested the southward progress of the French armies, and for the time, to use his own phrase, " given the lock-jaw " to their other movements in Spain. It was in the discussion on this point that most fault was found with the Envoy, both as regarded the advice he gave, and the terms in which that advice was given. If, however, as is now clear, the advice itself was, in the main, so sound that the course recommended was ultimately adopted by the General, in opposi- tion to his own previously expressed decision, and if the course so adopted proved most successful at an important crisis in a great contest, some passion- ate eagerness of expression might be forgiven in 104 MEMOIR OF urging that course, on the part of one who clearly foresaw both the magnitude of the interests at stake, and the only mode to secure them. But in truth, in now reading the correspondence, it is not easy to select expressions to which fair exception might be taken, though at the time, no doubt, some natural irritation must have been felt, not the less keenly when it became apparent that the arguments used had such strength of reason as to carry conviction. Up to the 5th December, Moore had adhered to the opinion he had expressed to Mr. Frere, that a retreat on Portugal, with a view to ulterior opera- tions in the south of Spain, was the only alternative open to him, if an advance on Madrid should prove too dangerous to be attempted. Mr. Frere had, in reply to the General's request for his opinion, very strongly urged, in a letter already quoted, 1 the superior political advantages of adhering to the original scheme laid down by the British Govern- ment of operating in the north of Spain. As the French armies advanced, every day brought some fresh confirmation of the soundness of the latter view, and at length, on the 5th December, Moore's own opinion underwent a change, and he deter- mined to give up his previous plan of a retreat on Portugal, to advance against Soult on the Carrion, and as soon as he had effected the diversion of the enemy's forces, which he knew must ensue in order to avert the danger threatened to their communica- tions, he prepared to retreat on Gallicia. This was precisely the course the necessity and advantages of which Mr. Frere had been pressing on the General's notice. 2 The determination to 1 Vide pages 93-94. 2 This appears to have been in accordance not only with the views of the Envoy, but of Baird and of other officers about him, who had every claim to the General's confidence. Vide " Baird's Life," vol. ii. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 105 adopt it was taken at Salamanca on the 5th December, but intimation of the change of plan had not reached Mr. Frere at Truxillo, when on the 8th December he despatched a letter by Mr. Stuart (afterwards Lord Stuart de Rothsay), whom he commissioned to press on Sir John Moore the arguments used in his letter, pointing out, in the strongest terms, the ruin to the Spanish cause, and the disgrace to the British arms, which must follow a retreat on Portugal without any attempt to arrest or divert the French advance, or to defend Gallicia. This letter reached Sir John Moore at Toro on the 1 6th, when he had already adopted the course which had always been advocated by the minister. Read by the English public after Moore's death, the strong terms in which the letter was expressed doubtless appeared unnecessarily harsh and severe. But it is only just to the British minister to bear in mind that the letter is but one of a series, all urging the adoption of the same course, and that, had the retreat on Portugal not been abandoned (a timely change of purpose of which Mr. Frere was not aware when he wrote), the terms used in the letter would not have been at all too severe to characterise a movement which, as the event proved, would have been as fatal a mistake in a military as in a political point of view. The channel through which this letter was con- veyed was not open to objection, as Mr. Stuart was a personal friend of Sir John Moore's, and like all his friends warmly attached to him ; but Sir John Moore had felt much hurt at a former communica- tion on the same subject having been sent him by a French emigrant officer in the English service, whose employment by the minister on so con- fidential a mission, was described at the time, and after Sir John Moore's death, as not only an act of extreme imprudence, but as an intentional insult to the British general. 106 MEMOIR OF So much blame has been attributed to Mr. Frere in this matter that the transaction may be described in greater detail than would be otherwise neces- sary. Colonel de Charmilly, a French Royalist, naturalised in England, married to the sister of a British nobleman, 1 and holding a British commis- sion as Colonel in a colonial corps, had gone to- Spain with the avowed intention of raising a Spanish regiment, for service against Napoleon ; having, like many other French Royalists of that day, devoted his whole life to oppose the Revolu- tion, and Napoleon as the embodiment of revolu- tionary ideas. On his way to Madrid he was introduced to Sir David Baird and Sir John Moore, stayed some days at their head-quarters, and seems to have had more than casual communications re- garding his plans with them both. Though not previously acquainted with either general, his in- troductions left no ground for mistrust. A nephew of his wife's was an officer in Sir John Moore's own regiment, favourably known to the General, and present at the time with his regiment at head- quarters. Reaching Madrid the 28th November, and find- ing the city carelessly lulled in the belief that the French were still at Burgos, de Charmilly went to Aranjuez, to present his letters of introduction to the British Envoy, to whom he was personally un- known ; and there heard for the first time that the French, having forced the Somosierra Pass, threat- ened Madrid ; and that the Supreme Junta had determined to retire to Toledo. Returning to Madrid, for his arms and baggage which he had left there, de Charmilly found the capital, not, as might have been expected, cowed or panic-stricken by the unexpected apparition of the Great Emperor 1 Dorcas, sister of Sir James Blackwood, Bart., Baron Dufferin and Clandeboye. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 107 with such overwhelming force, but in a ferment of popular and patriotic enthusiasm, reminding him strongly of the scenes he had witnessed at Paris in the first fervour of the Revolution of 1789. The mob, hearing he was a British officer, led him through barricaded streets and a populace working by torchlight at works of defence, to the palace where the Junta of defence organized that day, and the Spanish commander-in-chief, were in confe- rence. The Duke of Infantado, as president of the Junta, received him, described their means of re- sistance, expressed in the strongest terms their determination to use them to the last extremity, and urged him to communicate to Moore his con- viction of the paramount importance of the English army manoeuvring to divert the attention of the French and allow time to organize the defence of Madrid. Finally the Duke gave the Colonel a passport for the express purpose of his going to Salamanca to communicate to Moore the state of affairs of which he was an eye-witness. On his way by the circuitous route indicated to him as the only one safe from the patrols of the French cavalry, he met the peasantry flocking to the capital with such arms as they had, and found the people and the Junta at Toledo equally enthusiastic in the national cause. At Talavera he, on the 3rd December, accidentally learnt that the British Envoy, in fol- lowing the movements of the Supreme Junta, had just arrived there, and waiting on him to pay his respects, de Charmilly found that the Envoy had not heard of the popular rising at Madrid, nor of the establishment of the new Junta of defence, with the Duke del Infantado, a nobleman believed to be a real patriot and sincere friend of the British, as president. Colonel de Charmilly's intelligence was so unexpected and important that Mr. Frere hoped it would satisfy Sir John Moore that there was yet a chance of directing the British army to some 108 MEMOIR OF better purpose than a retreat on Portugal ; and he made de Charmilly the bearer of letters strongly- expressing this view, and representing the necessity of supporting the determination of the Spanish people by all the means which had been entrusted to the British General for the purpose, adding that he considered the fate of Spain as depending abso- lutely, for the present, upon the decision which Moore might adopt. The intelligence thus conveyed reached Moore on the 5 th December, and decided him to recall Baird, who was already moving on Corunna, to change his own line of retreat, falling back through Gallicia instead of on Portugal ; and meantime to advance towards Soult on the Carrion, and thus threaten the French line of communications. Had Mr. Frere's dispatches been confined to the letter given to Moore on the 5th, no offence appa- rently would have been taken at the employment of Colonel de Charmilly as the bearer of the com- munication. He was better known to the General and his officers than to the Envoy, and any suspi- cions Moore may have previously entertained had been removed. The intelligence he brought indi- cated a turning-point in the conduct of the Spanish people and Government ; of the accuracy of his in- formation there could be no doubt ; and it impressed the General, as it had the Envoy, with a conviction that it justified and required an entire change in the plan of operations. But Mr. Frere had entrusted to de Charmilly a second letter, to be delivered only in the event of the General persevering in his determination to re- treat on Portugal, after he had received the first dispatch, and heard de Charmilly's account of the popular rising at Madrid. This second letter, de Charmilly, ignorant of the effect which the first had produced on the General's mind, and the conse- quent alterations in his plans, presented the next JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 109 day. In it Mr. Frere requested that if the General adhered to his determination to retire, Colonel de Charmilly might be examined before a council of war. Under the circumstances there can be no doubt that this must have appeared to Moore a very un- necessary interference with his functions as a mili- tary commander, personally and solely responsible for the movements of his army ; and it is not sur- prising that he should have felt and expressed much indignation at what must have appeared to him a most unwarrantable proceeding, and that it was thus represented by his friends after his death. But unfortunately for all parties, the General's natural indignation at what he imagined to be an intentional act of disrespect did not permit him to hear the explanation which Colonel de Charmilly could have given. 1 Had he been allowed to state the circumstances and instructions under which the second letter was entrusted to him, Sir John Moore would have learnt that, whatever might be thought of the course adopted, Mr. Frere's object had been misunderstood. The Envoy knew that a retreat on Portugal had been ordered, and he could not know that the order had been recalled. But he believed that if the General were unwilling to incur the responsibility of recalling that order, a council of war might facilitate the adoption of the only course which the Envoy believed, and which the result proved, could ensure the honour and safety of the army. The step was one which, according to the ordi- nary rules of official intercourse, nothing short of a most clear and urgent necessity could excuse. Any justification of it must rest on the momentous 1 Vide De Charmilly's Narrative, 3rd edit. 18 10, pp. 42 to 52. no MEMOIR OF character of the interests at stake ; and judged by this light there can be no doubt that the occasion was one of importance sufficient to justify almost any infraction of the limits which custom and reason prescribe to such advice as the representa- tive of the Sovereign may offer to a General com- manding that Sovereign's forces in the field. Under ordinary circumstances it would, of course, have been out of the question to employ, in an office of such importance and delicacy, a compara- tive stranger, and a foreigner. They, however, who have insisted on Colonel de Charmilly's disqualifica- tions in these respects appear to forget that the Envoy, unexpectedly met by him during a hurried retreat, had, in the absence of all other trustworthy means of conveyance, absolutely no choice but either to leave the General in ignorance of the rising of Madrid, the most important intelligence he could receive, and which was certain to influence all his operations, or to send him the information through Colonel de Charmilly. Moreover, the whole im- portance of the despatch was derived from the news which the Colonel himself had brought, of its truth and momentous import there could be no doubt ; it was imperative to send it across plains scoured by hostile cavalry ; hence the necessity for providing against risk of the despatches having to be de- stroyed, to prevent their falling into the enemy's hands, will explain the reason for Mr. Frere reading them over to Colonel de Charmilly, and making him acquainted with the view he had himself taken of the important news which the Colonel had been the first to convey. That he should unnecessarily have wounded the feelings of a brave and devoted soldier was a subject of the deepest regret ; but nothing could have ex- cused the Envoy had he at so grave a crisis omitted any possible precaution for ensuring the fullest consideration for facts on which he believed that JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. m the honour and existence of the British army de- pended. Upon the whole, posterity will probably be in- clined, in the matter of these letters sent by Colonel de Charmilly, to join in the opinion which appears to have been formed at the time on the subject by Sir David Baird, and which is very clearly expressed by the late Lord Londonderry, that while the advice given was sound and salutary, and while the Envoy was not only justified, but in duty bound to have tendered it, the proposal to examine de Charmilly before a council of war was one to which the General could under no circumstances have acceded, and which he naturally resented. 1 1 Vide "Life of Sir David Baird," by Theodore Hook, 1833, vol. ii. pp. 214 to 288; Lord Londonderry's "Narrative of the War in Spain and Portugal," 1829, vol. i. pp. 149 to 289. Hook says of Mr. Frere's first letter by de Charmilly, that the tone and style assumed appeared to many officers on the spot, fully competent to form an opinion, " not exactly suited to his official situation ;" and that the second letter by de Charmilly " naturally irritated " the General ; but of the change of purpose to which the letters contributed, Baird seems fully to have approved. Lord Londonderry says : " Mr. Frere was doubtless fully justified in writing in this strain ; as minister from the court of England he was perfectly authorized to give advice respect- ing the course to be pursued by the English general, even if that officer had abstained from requesting it. But Sir John Moore having repeatedly solicited his opinion as to the pru- dence or imprudence of schemes in agitation, his right to speak or write strongly became increased fourfold. " Mr. Frere, however, in my humble judgment, erred in desiring Col. Charmilly should be examined before a council of war prior to any movement being made. . . . It would have been not only insulting to the commander of the forces to have the judgment of a non-official emigrant set up in opposition to his own, but the consequences might have been every way ruinous. " Sir John Moore dismissed that person with marks of dis- satisfaction ; and I think I should have done the same. " In spite of all this, however, and in spite of the excessive timidity of the Supreme Junta . . . only one opinion can, I 112 MEMOIR OF It is not, however, by isolated acts or expressions that such a controversy can be decided. The question was, what a powerful army of a great nation might do or ought to attempt ; and the parties to the controversy must be judged by what may ultimately prove to be the intrinsic soundness of the views each advocated. It was not thus, how- ever, that contemporaries could judge. They could not but feel that the General, whose views and acts were criticized, had subsequently fallen in his country's cause ; and opinions which, if the fate of the correspondents had been reversed, would have been regarded as inspirations of prophetic states- manship and of the truest patriotism, were often misread at the time as intentional insults to a dying hero. Have, then, subsequent events shown that the Envoy expected too much from the British army under Moore, or urged him to undertake impossi- bilities ? If we look only to the experience of Moore's campaign it is clear that, as far as the General was swayed by the Envoy's advice to advance so as to threaten the French communica- tions, and then to retreat on Gallicia rather than on conceive, be formed as to the soundness of the views taken by- Mr. Frere on this occasion." Southey, who alone of the contemporary historians does full justice to Mr. Frere's services in the Peninsula, seems to except from the general commendation of his views and conduct, his desire that de Charmilly should be examined before a council of war. — " Peninsular War," vol. ii. chap. xxi. p. 279. Some writers at the time wrote of de Charmilly as a creature of Morla's, employed to decoy the British army to destruction, with a view to obtain favour for Morla from Napoleon. De Charmilly appears completely to have cleared himself of all suspicion of any communication whatever with Morla ; and there is abundant evidence to prove that the information he conveyed as to the state of affairs in Madrid was strictly accurate. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 113 Portugal, the campaign was a great success, and the cost, heavy as it was, not out of proportion to the results. 1 It was no fault of the Envoy's that the loss was not further reduced by earlier and more complete preparations on the line of retreat to Corunna, 2 or the results enhanced by the transports, which subsequently embarked the army, being sent to reinforce it instead of to bring it away from Spain. 3 Still clearer is the testimony which the later cam- paigns in the Peninsula bear to the general sound- ness of Mr. Frere's views on the principal points regarding which he had the misfortune to differ from Sir John Moore. 1 " Notwithstanding the clamour with which this campaign has been assailed, as if no army had ever yet suffered such misfortunes, the nominal loss was small, and the real loss smaller, sinking to nothing when compared with the advantage gained." — Napier, bk. iv. ch. vi. p. 356, 8vo. ed. of 1851. 2 Ibid. p. 358. 3 Thirteen thousand men, intended as reinforcements for the army in Spain, were actually re-landed in England, after being shipped, and the transports sent out empty. There can be no doubt that the ministry were prepared to reinforce Moore ; and there were means at hand, as the Duke of York showed, of raising the force in Spain to a strength of 60,000 rank and file. But Moore did not see any paramount necessity for augmenting the force in Spain. As late as the 13th November, writing to Lord William Bentinck, who had been acting as British Envoy up to the time of Mr. Frere's arrival, he said : " I have no objection to you or Mr. Frere representing the necessity of as many more British troops as you think proper." But he differed from the view they had taken, and which subsequent experience proved to be correct, that on the English, and not on the Spanish armies, must fall the main burden of the task to be executed. " I differ," he said, " only with you in one point. When you say the chief and great obstacle, and resistance to the French, will be afforded by the English army. If that be so, Spain is lost." And after ex- pressing his conviction that the salvation of Spain depended mainly on the Spaniards, he added : " I am, therefore, much more anxious to see exertion and energy in the Government than to have my force augmented." — Vide " Moore's Narra- tive," p. 24. I 114 MEMOIR OF I do not, of course, refer to any comparison either in conduct or results between the one campaign which it was Moore's fortune to conduct, and the series of campaigns under Wellington. Napoleon's absence from among Wellington's immediate ad- versaries in Spain, would alone render any such comparison impossible. I refer simply to those characteristic and peculiar local difficulties in carry- ing on the war in the Peninsula, which appeared to Moore so great as to render any efficient action by his army almost hopeless ; and which it has been said by many historians of high character as well as by party writers of the day, that Mr. Frere failed either to see or to estimate at their proper value. The list extends to nearly all the shortcomings and failings of the Spaniards as a nation, and even the deficiencies of their country in roads or resources. One of the complaints most frequently implied as well as directly urged, is the omission to supply the accurate intelligence on which so much of the suc- cess of military operations depended. It is unnecessary to dwell on the obvious fact that no Envoy could get from the Junta more than they knew, and that they were generally as ill- informed as their allies regarding what was really going on in other parts of Spain. Perhaps, now that the Spaniards and their peculiarities are better understood by their neighbours than they were a generation ago, our surprise at this national charac- teristic of their public life may be less than was felt by our forefathers. At any rate, it is clear that then, as now, he who would possess accurate in- formation regarding political affairs in Spain, must gather his facts for himself, and not trust to the Government for them — and for such a task the General had as great facilities as the Envoy. The latter had only landed at Corunna towards the end of October, and did not reach Aranjuez, where the Junta was assembled, for several weeks afterwards. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 115 The General, on the other hand, had been in the Peninsula since the latter end of the previous Au- gust, and in supreme command of the British forces during the greater part of the time. He had halted at Salamanca from the 13th November to the 12th December, and had there better opportunities than the Envoy could possess at Aranjuez, of learning for himself everything essential to the conduct of the war. But as regards this and all other difficulties aris- ing from local peculiarities, whether of national character or of a political or physical nature, it is obvious that they were not less obstacles to the later than to the earlier campaigns ; why then were they not found as formidable by Wellington as they appeared to Moore ? The difference clearly was not merely or mainly in the genius or temperament of the two com- manders. It was greatly due to their previous training and experience. For an English general with British troops to conduct active operations in Spain, at the beginning of this century, meant to carry on war in a country with the language and manners of which few of the soldiers, or even of the best educated and accom- plished of the officers, had the slightest acquaint- ance — to disarm the hostility of a proud, jealous, sensitive, and high-spirited race — to avoid affront- ing the prejudices of an uneducated populace, or the bigotry of a fanatical and all-powerful priest- hood — to draw supplies of money and food from a country where internal commerce was nearly ex- tinct, and which was almost destitute of roads pass- able by wheeled carriages — to depend on a maritime base of operations many hundreds of miles distant, and to use as auxiliaries the armies of a people possessed indeed of many soldierlike qualities, but unaccustomed to united and systematic subordina- tion ; and who required, in order to turn them to Ii6 MEMOIR OF the best account, sometimes to be provided with an independent field of action for themselves, under their own commanders; and sometimes to be assimi- lated to our own troops, under British discipline and officers. Most of the superior officers in Napoleon's army had acquired, more or less, by long experience in foreign war, the art of performing some portions of such a task as this; but it is no exaggeration to say that, at the commencement of the Peninsular War, it was impossible for any English general, with merely European experience, to have learnt such a lesson, except by instinct or theoretical reading. Moore had not, in this respect, been more fortunate than his contemporaries. He undertook the charge of the expedition as a matter of duty, with a sad foreboding of the certainty of failure, 1 and nothing in his previous experience gave him much help in overcoming the peculiar difficulties of his position. But no part of the task presented any untried or 1 Stapleton thus describes Moore's last interview with the secretary at war : " Lord Castlereagh disclosed to the Cabi- net the parting words addressed to him by Sir John. After the latter had had his final interview, had taken his leave, and actually closed the door, he re-opened it, and said to Lord Castlereagh, ' Remember, my Lord, I protest against the expedition, and foretell its failure.' Having thus disbur- dened his mind, he instantly withdrew, left the office, and proceeded to Portsmouth to take the command of the expedi- tion. When Lord Castlereagh mentioned this circumstance to the Cabinet, Mr. Canning could not help exclaiming, ' Good God ! and do you really mean to say that you allowed a man entertaining such feelings with regard to the expedi- tion, to go and assume the command of it?' It was in con- sequence of what passed in the Cabinet respecting this inter- view, that an official letter, which is described as equivalent to one demanding his resignation, was sent after him. But Sir John did not take the hint, sent a dignified reply, and sailed with the expedition." — Stapleton's George Canning and his Times, 1859, p. 160. JOHN HOOKHAM ERE RE. 117 insuperable difficulty to one who, like Wellesley, had practised war on a large scale, and in inde- pendent command, in India ; and the reader who will carefully study " Sir Arthur Wellesley's Indian Despatches," will find every one of the character- istic difficulties of Peninsular warfare faced and overcome in the Deccan, by exactly the same qua- lities and management which were subsequently so successful in Spain. 1 It is a matter of more than personal or passing 1 A striking example will be found in one of his earliest letters to Lord Castlereagh, dated Corunna, 21st July, 1808. His correspondence at that time not only shows a sound ap- preciation of the state of affairs in Spain, but is full of practical suggestions for the conduct of the war, which could not then have been the result of Peninsular experience ; e.g. the recom- mendation that 30,000 Portuguese troops should be raised by Great Britain, as auxiliaries to 20,000 British troops. — Vide " Despatches," vol. iv. pp. 24-43. In a subsequent letter, written Oct. 19, 1808, after his return to England, and when he had no command in the Peninsula, he offers to Lord Castlereagh advice which is not less re- markable for its substance than from its being volunteered by one so constitutionally averse from offering advice unasked. After pointing out the importance of magazines, he observes: " All these difficulties of communication, and supply of maga- zines to which, as I told you in a former [letter], scarcely one of us has turned his mind, render it most desirable that our army should be employed on the enemy's flank and on the coast " In a PS. he adds : " I recommend to you to make all your arrangements for forming a magazine in the heart of Spain, whether the General will call for it or not. After what has passed lately [relative to the convention of Cintra], the gene- ral officers will be disinclined to take upon themselves any- thing excepting the performance of their military duty under their instructions, and Sir John Moore will be unwilling to throw himself into the heart of Spain unless he is ordered to do so, or to make arrangements preparatory to that operation till it will be ordered by Government, when such arrange- ments will be too late." — Castlereagh Correspondence, vol. vi. pp. 476-481. n8 MEMOIR OF interest to note this essential difference in the ex- perience and opportunities of the two generals. For if our officers can have no brighter example than Moore in all the moral and personal qualities which go to form the perfect soldier, it is certain that they will never, as Wellington did, lead to habitual victory the armies of an empire so ex- tended and composed of such varied materials as that of England, if they lack the practice and expe- rience in warfare in ruder countries, which gave to the genius of Wellington its early development. Much of the blame which was at the time so freely thrown on Mr. Frere by those who asserted that he did not see, or failed to appreciate, the ob- stacles to be overcome by the British general, was due to the fact that he saw more clearly than a large proportion of the British public then did, the essen- tial points wherein the contest in Spain differed from the other continental wars in which we had previously taken part against Napoleon, and the vastly superior importance of the issues at stake. It was not a dynastic, but a national struggle for independence, and its peculiar significance was the greater, because the Spaniards had' not the advan- tage, which the Germans and Russians afterwards possessed, of a settled government, able to share and direct their patriotic enthusiasm. The great Whig party had, in many respects, altered the posi- tion which it had held, during the earlier years of the French Revolution, in all discussions with re- gard to the duty and interest of England. Many of those who had ceased to look on a contest with Napoleon as war against the liberties of mankind, were, nevertheless, so dazzled by his achievements, that they regarded hostilities against him almost as if waged against an irresistible fate ; and they failed to see that the cause of the Spaniards was not only the cause of national liberty against foreign tyranny, but that it contained within itself elements of sue- JOHN HO O KH AM FEE RE. 119 cess which could not be looked for in any purely dynastic contest. 1 Thus to the amount of obloquy which would naturally have fallen on all who had any share in what was then regarded as a most unfortunate ex- pedition, was added much of party bitterness ; and the circumstances of Sir John Moore's death pre- cluded such defence of those who differed from him, as might have been possible had all lived to receive their fair award of praise or blame from their countrymen. When urged in after years to leave on record an answer to the calumnies and unjust criticism to which he had been subjected, Mr. Frere replied that the time for his doing so for himself had gone by, and that as one who was long since passed from political life, he was willing to leave it 1 The position of the Whigs at this time, and their mistaken course regarding the Peninsular War, have been well described by Lord Russell, who speaks with unusual authority, both on account of having been in early life an eye-witness of the state of affairs in the Peninsula, and from his intimate lifelong acquaintance with all that concerns that party. After describing the character of the Spanish insurrection, and the obvious duty and interest of England with regard to it, Lord Russell comments on the inability of Lord Grenville and the leaders of the Whigs to comprehend the true nature and bearing of the contest, and quotes Mr. Horner's opinion, in 181 3, as to the serious character of the mistake they had made in 1808-9, which Horner said he had never "ceased to lament," as " so inconsistent with true Whig principles of con- tinental policy, so revolting to the popular feelings of the country, and to every true feeling for the liberties and inde- pendence of mankind." — Selections from Earl Russell's Speeches and Despatches, Longmans, London, 1870, vol. i. p. 4- Speaking of Lord Holland as he saw him at Corunna, Crabb Robinson says : " Lord Holland was known to be among the warmest friends of the Spanish cause ; in that respect differing from the policy of his Whig friends, who by nothing so much estranged me from their party as by their endeavour to force the English Government to abandon the Spanish patriots." — Crabb Robinson, vol. i. p. 278. 120 MEMOIR OF to history to judge whether he or those from whom he differed had best estimated what an English army in Spain could be fairly expected to achieve. He added, that the manner of Sir John Moore's death had prevented him from answering at the time, in any hostile or controversial tone, what Moore's family and friends had written and pub- lished — " but," he added, " I have often been tempted to answer what others said of my having been deceived by Morla. This was utterly false ; I never saw Morla; I was only in Madrid at that period for a few hours, on my way through to Aran- juez ; and so far from being deceived by Morla, some of the leading men at Madrid with whom I was acquainted, came to me at Aranjuez, and com- municated to me their suspicions of his fidelity ; and I went so far as to say that I would, in my communications 'with the Junta, act on their belief of his infidelity, if they were prepared to take the steps necessary to justify my so doing." In speaking of these events, Mr. Frere never under-estimated the difficulties of defending Madrid against Napoleon ; but he referred to the effect of Moore's diversion, late as it was, to prove that the difficulties were not all in Napoleon's favour, and to the experience of subsequent years, as proving that it was impossible to calculate the effect on the French of the slightest reverse at that particular moment, or the degree to which the Spaniards would have been encouraged to resistance, by know- ing that the English were not going to desert them. He said, " I certainly did expect much from them at that time, but not so much as their subsequent conduct justified. It is almost impossible to give an adequate idea of their intense hatred of the French, or of the kind of fellow - feeling which banded Spaniards of the most discordant opinions, to act for the one object whenever they had any- thing to do against the French ; and it is equally JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 121 impossible for any one who does not intimately know the Spanish character to appreciate the extent to which their hatred of the French interfered with all the French operations. There was no beggar so poor that bribery could induce him to carry the French despatches. These were brought to our officers to an extent incredible to those who have not experience of a war carried on against the na- tional feeling of the country which is the scene of operations. I had an intercepted despatch of Soult's when he was on the Douro, complaining that for two months he had had no despatch from Madrid. This was brought to me by a simple countryman, who gave this account of the way in which he came by it. He told me he was coming along a narrow road when he heard the clatter of hoofs behind him, and some one calling to him to get out of the way. He turned, and saw a French trooper riding after him, and stepping aside, as the Frenchman passed, he picked up a stone and threw it with such force at his back, that, as he said, ' I brought him to the ground, and killed him with my knife.' He described the action just as he would have related the killing of a weasel, or any other vermin in a hedge, and seemed to take it quite as a matter of course that he should have killed the Frenchman as soon as he saw that he had the power to do so. ' And there,' he said to me, ' is what I found upon him,' showing the despatches. Some of the reports of the French medical staff, which I saw at the time, were occupied with the description of cases brought into hospital at Mad- rid, where the men were supposed to have been poisoned in the wine-shops in the city. This the medical author of the report discredited, but know- ing how intense and bitter was the hatred of the common people against the French, and how meri- torious they believed the destruction of a French- man to be, I doubted at the time whether the 122 MEMOIR OF horrible suspicion was as unfounded as the French medical officer supposed. Whatever else might have resulted from Moore's having been able to hold a position in the north of Spain, instead of embarking, there can be no doubt that the na- tional spirit which would have been roused against the French would have most seriously impeded their operations in other parts of the Peninsula, and rendered it almost impossible even for the military genius of Napoleon to have maintained and fed in the mountains, or the north coast of Spain, such an army as would have been necessary to have forcibly ejected the English from a strong- hold on the coast." Fortunately for England, for Spain, and for Europe, the British Government, though hard pressed, in and out of Parliament, during the spring of 1809, to abandon the contest in the Peninsula, had resolved to continue it, and to entrust its con- duct to one who had already shown how thoroughly he understood the conditions on which it must be fought out. But the interval between the re-embarkation of the last of Moore's army at Corunna, in January, and Sir Arthur Wellesley's arrival at Lisbon in April, was a period of unexampled trial and sore discouragement to the Spaniards ; and if anything did, from time to time, occur during those winter months to cheer their hopes of ultimate victory, it was less often in the shape of success, however small, than in some fresh proof of the unconquer- able spirit of the people, when contending against the heaviest odds, and under every circumstance of discouragement. Thus, the second siege of Saragossa, though it ended in the reduction of the illustrious city (February 22nd, 1809), read many a memorable lesson, alike to the Spaniards, their enemies, and their allies. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 123 On the Catalan coast, British naval captains like Lord Cochrane, showed how much might be done by enterprising officers to aid the Spaniards in im- peding the operations of the French generals in the maritime districts. At the other extremity of the French line of operations, Romana, with not less courage and en- terprise, and with better fortune than Palafox, maintained an unequal contest against Soult and Ney, amid the mountains of Gallicia. Nothing could well have been more desperate than his posi- tion after the embarkation of Moore's army and throughout the winter. He appeared destined to certain destruction or capture, with no prospect but that of an ignominious death if he were taken. Yet routed, and, as the French believed, practically annihilated at Monterrey in February, he re-appeared in March to surprise the garrison of Villafranca, to make prisoners of 800 of Soult 's best soldiers, and to contribute more than any other single cause to arrest Soult's progress southwards from Oporto. Sir John Cradock, on whom had devolved the command of the British troops left in garrison in Portugal after Moore's death, was a brave and capable officer ; but he was necessarily unacquainted with the effect which the results of Moore's cam- paign might have on the views of the British Government ; and he had neither the means nor the authority required for any but temporary disposi- tions of the force at his command. Many measures were, however, taken by him, or with his consent, which had an important bearing on the success of after-operations. English officers were employed to discipline and command Portuguese troops, and though the full effects of this system were not realised till Beresford was placed in supreme com- mand of the Portuguese forces later in the year, the services rendered by men like Colonels Trant and Patrick, and Sir Robert Wilson, in organizing and 124 MEMOIR OF leading Portuguese levies during the winter and early spring, formed a bond of union between the English soldiers and their allies which was turned to most valuable account by Wellington in his sub-r sequent campaigns. Sir Robert Wilson's position, in particular, speedily became one of great importance. Endowed with great natural abilities as a soldier, and with unusual powers of influencing and commanding men, he speedily extended the sphere of his operations across the Spanish frontier to the country round Ciudad Rodrigo, where his presence was of the utmost importance, as threatening Soult's flank should he move southwards towards Lisbon, and interrupting his communications with Ney and with Madrid. Mr. Frere had prevailed on the Supreme Junta to confer on Sir Robert the rank of a Briga- dier-General in the Spanish army, and thus gave equal scope to his enterprise on both sides the border. It was well that the formidable obstacles they encountered at either extremity of the line of their invading armies, disinclined the French to advance southwards ; for the Spanish armies which nominally covered the provinces south of the Tagus, were not in a condition to offer any effective resistance. There is a dreary uniformity about the description of all the Spanish forces at this time, between the Portuguese frontier and Catalonia. " In such miserable circumstances that increase of numbers brought no increase of strength." "Arms, clothing, and provisions were wanting." " The army was alike without resources, discipline, or system ; in want of efficient officers of every rank, and those which there were, divided into cabals and factions." And worst feature of all, neither the superior officers nor the central Government were aware of their military deficiencies. When prudence would have dictated an entirely defensive policy, and the devo- JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 125 tion of their whole time and resources to organisa- tion and discipline, each general as he succeeded to supreme command, planned extensive and combined operations on the largest scale, such as required for their successful execution the best of troops, of officers and means ; as a natural consequence, one commander after another incurred speedy and ignominious defeat, whenever a general action was risked. It has been truly said by Southey, that this national incapacity for seeing their own defects, which always exposed their armies to defeat, never- theless, as a nation, rendered the Spaniards invin- cible ; and that the French could have invaded no people whom it was so easy to rout, none whom it was so impossible to subdue. Throughout the winter, Mr. Frere continued at his post, with the Supreme Junta, which had estab- lished itself at Seville ; and, in every way by his influence and advice powerfully aided the common cause. It was greatly owing to the confidence with which his personal character inspired the Junta, that they seem never for a moment to have wavered in the trust they reposed in the good faith of the British Government, and the certainty of its con- tinued hearty support ; and that they turned a deaf ear to the reports industriously propagated by the French that the British Government was withdraw- ing its troops from the Peninsula, and that they would never return. To Romana and Sir Robert Wilson, Mr. Frere's correspondence and his ener- getic support of their views with the Supreme Junta, were of the utmost value. In his communications with that body, he exposed with just and unsparing criticism the defects of the Spanish armies, and the short-comings of their generals ; and exerted him- self incessantly, though unfortunately with but par- tial success, to have the commands of the scattered corps combined, and entrusted, with full powers as commander-in-chief, to a single competent officer. 126 MEMOIR OF A good illustration of the difficulties of his posi- tion, and the extent of the personal influence he had acquired, was afforded in February. Sir George Smith had been sent to Cadiz, without previous reference to the British Minister, to provide for the possible case of British troops being needed there. Through excess of zeal Sir George considerably- exceeded his instructions. He informed the Spanish Governor that he was empowered to require that British troops should be permitted to garrison Cadiz ; and without even waiting for the consent of the Spanish authorities, or communicating with the British Minister, he wrote to Sir John Cradock to send troops from Portugal. The Spaniards natur- ally took alarm, which was increased by the secrecy and suddenness of the move, and by its taking the British Minister as well as themselves by surprise. The Supreme Junta, sharing the popular feeling, had further cause for uneasiness on its own account, for the local authorities of Cadiz, jealous of the central Government, spread reports that its members were in league with traitors to deliver up the last remaining arsenal of Spain into the hands of foreigners. In the course of the discussion Mr. Frere appealed to the Junta in the following terms : " The members of the Junta will do me the justice to admit that I have never endeavoured to promote the interests of my nation but as being essentially connected with those of their own. If, however, I have always been guided by the same sentiments and the same views which a Spanish politician might have, I do not think it is to depart from them, if I deliver the same opinion which I should give had I the honour of occupying a place in the council of your nation, viz., That the whole policy of the Spanish Government rests essentially on a per- suasion of perfect good faith on the part of England, and that it is important to confirm it more and more, by testimonies of mutual confidence, and by JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 127 avoiding the slightest appearance of distrust be- tween Government and Government." This appeal had the desired effect. Leave was given that any- British troops which had arrived or might arrive at Cadiz should disembark, and the mode of best employing them was discussed. Ultimately the British Minister was asked to select the Spanish Governor of Cadiz ; and though he of course de- clined the responsibility involved in such an unusual mark of confidence, the correspondence ended in a manner which marked unequivocally the extent to which the Spaniards trusted to the honour of their English allies. While these discussions were going on at Seville, an incident had occurred during a popular tumult at Cadiz, which showed that the feeling of confidence in the English was not confined to the ruling authorities. The people had risen in insurrection on an alarm that the fortifications were to be entrusted to traitors and foreigners, and, at the instance of the Governor and the Guardian of the Capucins, some English officers who could speak Spanish were permitted to assure the populace that the British troops would not interfere in the internal affairs of the city, but would assist in de- fending it. So powerful was the impression pro- duced on the popular mind by what the British officers said, that the mob proceeded to demand that the fortifications should be examined and reported on by them ; and the English general having appeared on a balcony with some of the authorities, and declared his satisfaction with the arrangements made, the mob dispersed with loud vivas "for King George and King Ferdinand !" On the 22nd April, 1809, Sir Arthur Wellesley landed at Lisbon and assumed the command of the British and Portuguese troops in the Peninsula. In less than a month he had concentrated his dispos- able force at Coimbra, forced the passage of the 128 MEMOIR OF Douro, and driven Soult, with the loss of all his artillery, baggage, and one fourth of his men, into the mountains of Gallicia. Suspending the pursuit on the 1 8th of May, he turned to join the Spanish General Cuesta, in operating against Victor in the valley of the Tagus. Having received the full permission of the British Government to extend his operations into Spain, by the 20th of July he had marched the greater part of his force more than three hundred miles, effected a junction with Cuesta at Oropesa, within five marches of Madrid, and had it been possible to induce the obstinate old Spanish general to move at the critical moment, he would have attacked Victor on the 23rd in such a position and with such superior force, that the defeat of the French seemed inevitable. Cuesta's obstinacy enabled Victor to extricate himself and to effect a junction with King Joseph and Sebastiani, but did not save the French from defeat when, disregarding the sounder advice of Jourdan, Victor assumed the offensive, attacked the combined English and Spanish armies at Talavera on the 27th and 28th of July, and, after two days of desperate fighting, was forced to retreat, leaving seventeen pieces of cannon in the hands of the allies. The utter want of effective co-operation from the Spaniards disabled Sir Arthur from following up his victory, and the experience of the whole campaign taught him that with such a small force of British troops as had been entrusted to him, and with such inefficient allies, no skill or energy on his part could enable him to act on the offensive, against the vastly superior French force, with any chance of ultimate and permanent success. Thenceforward he laid down for himself and rigidly carried out an entirely different system. Acting strictly on the defensive, he patiently built up that army of Eng- lish and allied troops with which, as he afterwards said, he "could go anywhere, and do anything." JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 129 But the task required for its successful execution not only every quality of a great commander, but time ; and it was not for a year and a half after his victory at Talavera, nor till he had forced the wave of invasion to break itself against the rocks of Torres Vedras, that he was able to resume the offensive, in that series of masterly campaigns which, in the course of four years of incessant fighting, drove the French armies out of Spain, and enabled him to carry the war into France. On the 1st of August Mr. Frere's functions as British Minister in Spain were terminated by the arrival of the Marquis Wellesley. He had been appointed Ambassador early in April, but had been disabled by illness from leaving England till the 24th of July. He landed at Cadiz on the fourth morning after the battle of Talavera, in the midst of the excitement consequent on the news of his brother's great victory, and was received with every mark of public honour and popular enthusiasm. Mr. Frere carried with him into his retirement the personal esteem, respect and entire confidence of all the best men belonging to the Spanish Govern- ment and armies with whom he came in contact. When he had laid down his office, the Supreme Central Junta, who, with all their faults, had never shown themselves indifferent to services rendered to the Spanish cause, applied to his successor to obtain the sanction of the King of England for their bestowing on him, in the name of the Spanish Sovereign, a Castilian title of honour, that of ' Mar- quez de la Union,' as " a mark of their acknowledg- ment of the zeal with which he had laboured to promote the friendly union and common interest of the two countries." Such honours have never been lightly granted to foreigners of even the highest rank in Spain, and never without the ostensible reason of great services rendered to the Spanish crown or nation. In conveying to Mr. Frere the K 130 MEMOIR OF King's permission to accept the title, Lord Wel- lesley wrote : — " I am further commanded to communicate to you that His Majesty's condescending goodness, in permitting you to accept this mark of the esteem and gratitude of Spain, is intended as a proof of His Majesty's most gracious acceptance and appro- bation of your general conduct in the discharge of the duties of your mission in Spain. " I beg leave to offer you my congratulations on this distinguished mark of His Majesty's royal favour and approbation, and to express the peculiar satisfaction with which I obey His Majesty's most gracious commands on this occasion." From the few words of cold and rather formal courtesy in which this letter was acknowledged, it does not appear as if Mr. Frere thought that the permission of his Sovereign to accept a Spanish title, or the stately periods of the Ambassador's congratulations, were in themselves a suitable recognition of the services he had rendered his own country. But, as far as the Spaniards were con- cerned, he felt then, and ever retained, a deep sense of the only mark it was in their power to bestow of their gratitude for his exertions in the common cause of national freedom. Some weeks later, in a private letter, Lord Wellesley, referring to the formalities connected with the grant of the title, added " amidst all the delays and omissions of this (the Spanish) Govern- ment, it has at length performed its duty towards you." Two months' severe experience had shown him how trying were the responsibilities of the office in which Mr. Frere had laboured, under peculiar disadvantages. In a letter to his brother dated about the same time, Lord Wellesley said with unaffected bitterness, " I am worked like a galley-slave, and can effect nothing." He had already realised the truth of the warning previously JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 131 received from that brother, when Sir Arthur, re- ferring to Lord Wellesley's acceptance of office as Ambassador to Spain, wrote to him, " You have undertaken an Herculean task ; and God knows that the chances of success are infinitely against you." In truth, arduous as had been the duties of British envoy in Spain before Sir Arthur Wellesley's arrival, they were in no respect rendered more easy to discharge when the contest was renewed in the valley of the Tagus. During the winter, with little external support, and mainly by personal influence and character, Mr. Frere had had to meet all the obstacles created by the suspicions of the Spaniards, to encourage them under reverses the most dis- heartening, and, what was far more difficult, to moderate their inordinate self-confidence, on the slightest return of good fortune. All this was not impossible to one who thoroughly understood and ardently sympathised with the Spaniards ; but the case was far different when, as Envoy whose successor had long since been appointed, and whilst holding office, as he himself expressed it, " only from day to day — looking for the arrival of his successor by the first fair wind," Mr. Frere had to face all the obstacles so graphically described in the Wellington despatches written during the Talavera campaign. The tone of those letters which are addressed to Mr. Frere, shows how fully Sir Arthur appreciated the departing Envoy's efforts to aid him, and even when smarting under the disappointment of losing the fruits of his victory at Talavera, through the obstinacy of Cuesta and the supineness of the Spanish authorities, he wound up a letter to Lord Wellesley, full of bitter complaints of the Spaniards, by adding, " I must do the late British Minister the justice to declare that I do not conceive that this deficiency of supplies for the army is at all to 132 MEMOIR OF be attributed to any neglect or omission on his part." Their relations had indeed from the first been of the most cordial and confidential character. 1 The General had at his disposal every advantage that Mr. Frere's experience, or his authority and posi- tion as Envoy could afford. The British officers attached as agents to the Spanish generals, who had in the first instance been directed to report to the Envoy, were instructed by him to consider themselves under Sir Arthur's orders. These in- structions, after Mr. Frere's departure, were for some time suspended ; with effects the reverse of beneficial to the public service. 2 Finally, all the influence Mr. Frere possessed with the Supreme Junta, had been used to obtain for Sir Arthur Wellesley the rank of Captain-General of the Spanish forces, 3 and to substitute for Cuesta a younger and less impracticable commander of the main Spanish army in the south of the Peninsula. Neither of these two latter measures was formally completed till Mr. Frere's successor had arrived, but both were carried mainly by his influence with the Supreme Junta, and had they been adopted at the time when, he first recommended them, there can be little doubt but that they would materially have altered the results of the campaign. At such a moment the supersession of the Envoy by any one possessing the higher office and autho- rity of Ambassador, made a considerable change in 1 Mr. Frere " not being deterred from the performance of his duty by the clamour raised against him in England, but delivering his opinion to the British General, upon the same footing, he said, as he should have done, had he been hold- ing a private conversation with Sir Arthur, and as he should equally have ventured to do had he been residing casually in Spain in a private character." — Southey, vol. II. chap. xxiv. P- 399- 2 Vide " Whittingham's Memoirs," p. ioo, ed. 1868. 3 This office had been offered to and declined by Moore. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 133 the position of the general. In many cases it would have been a decided advantage to him to have such a post filled by a brother ; but, in this instance, such relationship was not needed in order to secure entire cordiality of feeling and unity of action ; and Lord Wellesley's appointment tended to place his younger brother in a position of relative subordination, so similar to that which he had previously held under the great pro-consul in India, that it could hardly be entirely agreeable to one of Sir Arthur's energy and force of character. It is not therefore impro- bable that the young general was " uneasy at his brother's advent into Spain," and that he would have been well pleased to retain Mr. Frere as his coadjutor. 1 Regarding his own services at this period Mr. 1 Vide " Whittingham's Memoirs " as above. The position which General Whittingham occupied while Lord Wellesley remained in Spain, and the confidence with which he was regarded by all the parties referred to, gave him peculiar facilities for judging correctly as to the views and feelings of the two illustrious brothers on such a subject. There are many indications in their published correspondence which tend to support the view expressed by the author of the Memoirs ; and though with such men the feeling could never wittingly have interfered with duty, there can be no doubt that Lord Wellesley, as Ambassador in Spain, was placed in a false position, and might have greatly increased his brother's difficulties, had not his mission been terminated by other considerations, after a little more than three months' tenure of the post. It may not be out of place here to remark that, except by Southey, and in some of Wellington's despatches, scant justice has been done to the great services of General Whit- tingham throughout the war, and notably at a very critical juncture of the battle of Talavera. His Memoirs, as far as they relate to his own proceedings in Spain, contain many valuable contributions to the history of the great struggle, illustrating the career of one of the most active and dis- tinguished of the British military agents employed with the Spanish armies, and the effect which their labours had on the condition of the Spanish troops, and through them, on the later operations of the war. 134 MEMOIR OF Frere never could be induced to publish a line, in addition to the official despatches which were laid before Parliament. But long after these events had become matters of bygone history he would some- times dwell on his recollections of the men who had taken part with him in them. Of Wellington's military genius it is hardly necessary to say that he had anticipated the esti- mate which history has recorded. Speaking after- wards of him he said, " I never met Wellington in Spain but once in Seville, when he came to meet the Junta — but I saw directly, what I had gathered from his letters, that he thoroughly understood the Spaniards — -that he took a right view of the nature of the contest, and I never had a doubt but that, if he were allowed by the people at home, he would carry it to a successful issue." " He never had the same means which Moore had, nor the same power of calling for reinforce- ments which Moore might have had. The first in- tention of the English Government was to confine his operations almost entirely to Portugal, and leave to act in Spain was given him later, and with some hesitation." In reference to some criticism on the Talavera campaign, Mr. Frere said, " It did not seem to me at all rashly undertaken. In fact, had almost any one of the generals except old Cuesta been in com- mand, it must have been a great success. Wel- lington's combinations were so good, and his move- ments so rapid, that had Cuesta supported him Victor must have been crushed, before Sebastiani, Joseph or Soult could have come to his aid ; after defeating Victor, Wellington would have been able to deal with the others in detail, and the French must have evacuated Madrid. It was impossible to calculate what would have been the moral effect of such a blow. Wellington's critics forget how de- moralized and hampered the French army had at JOHN HO OK II AM FRERE. 135 that time become, by their habits of plunder, by the divisions among their commanders, and above all by their experience of the hatred of the country people, and the consequent difficulty of communi- cating, and getting intelligence. " The aid Wellington expected from Cuesta and his army was nothing more than the Spaniards could have rendered under almost any other of their generals. It was a conviction of this that made me so anxious to have old Cuesta superseded, and to get Alberquerque appointed in his stead. I felt then, and am sure now, that had Romana or Alber- querque been in command in place of Cuesta, the whole character of the subsequent contest would have been altered." * * * " Cuesta was not lukewarm nor disaffected, but utterly worn out, and retaining little of his former character but his extraordinary obstinacy and self-will, and his con- tempt for all opinions and orders of the Supreme Junta. Yet in England it was one of the many faults charged against me, that I had pressed on the Junta the old man's removal." 1 1 This estimate of Cuesta is very fully borne out by the ample details given in the Wellington Despatches. On the 13th June, 1809, Sir Arthur wrote to Mr. Frere : "The obstinacy of this old gentleman (Cuesta) is throwing out of our hands the finest game that any armies ever had." (Gur- wood, vol. iv. p. 394.) A month later (13th July) he wrote to Mr. Frere a curious account of his interview with the old Spanish general, who would not speak French, the language of the hated invader, while the young Englishman could not express himself fluently in Spanish. He notes the prevailing contempt which Cuesta evinced for the Junta, and the evi- dence that the Junta were afraid of Cuesta. (Ibid. p. 478.) For the time Wellington thought he had sufficiently se- cured the hearty co-operation of Cuesta's army, through the influence of the Spanish adjutant-general. But this hope proved fallacious ; for he complains (p. 488) that the treat- ment of his army by the Spaniards was worse than if they had been in an enemy's country. And soon after (24th July), just before the battle of Talavera, he wrote to Mr. Frere : 136 MEMOIR OF Of Alberquerque's natural capacity as a general Mr. Frere always expressed a very high opinion. " Had he lived and been continued in command in " Cuesta more and more impracticable every day. It is im- possible to do business with him, and very uncertain that any operation will succeed in which he has any concern." (Ibid. p. 498.) It was by this time apparent that Cuesta's own army had become quite tired of him. To Lord Castlereagh Wellington wrote (1st August), a few days after the battle : " I certainly could get the better of everything if I could manage General Cuesta ; but his temper and disposition are so bad that that is impossible." (Ibid. P- 523)- Southey says, " The necessity of removing Cuesta from the command, appeared so urgent to Mr. Frere, that he deemed it his duty to present a memorial on the subject, though Marquis Wellesley was expected two days afterwards (August 9th) at Seville." Having detailed the evils consequent on Cuesta's neglects and omissions, he urged the appointment of another commander, " either the choice being left to Sir Arthur, or the Junta itself appointing the Duke of Alber- querque, who possessed his confidence, and that of the army ; and whose abilities had been tried and approved." * * " This was the last act of Mr. Frere in his public capacity ; and it was consistent with the whole conduct of that Minister, who, during his mission, never shrunk from any responsibility, nor ever, for the fear of it, omitted any effort which he thought requisite for the common welfare of his own country and of Spain." Southey remarks, that the presentation of this me- morial, at such a moment, might seem irregular in a public point of view, and, in a private one, might alter the feelings with which Mr. Frere would wish to take leave of many friends in Spain. But in addition to the urgency of the case, he considered it would be peculiarly unpleasant for Lord Wellesley to begin his mission with a discussion in which his brother was concerned. In fact, the Marquis did not, on his arrival, think it necessary to follow up the memorial by in- sisting on Cuesta's removal, and limited his interference to a strong expression of his own sense of Cuesta's misconduct. A few days later, after further communication with the Junta and his brother, he came round to Mr. Frere's view, and pre- sented a note, which enforced his predecessor's suggestion. But, in the meantime, a paralytic stroke had rendered Cuesta physically incapable of command, and he had resigned. — Southey, vol. II. chap. xxx. pp. 456-8. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 137 the field, he would have effected a great deal. He had not Romana's education or experience, nor would he, on the whole, have been as good a general- in-chief — but he had great courage and energy, and his high rank and popularity would have enabled him to do many things no one else could have attempted. He had the reputation too of being extremely lucky, which goes a great way with the common people in Spain and every where else. He thoroughly understood his soldiers, and could make them do anything for him, and especially he could make use of their extraordinary powers of endurance and marching, for which, the Spaniards have been famous since the time of the Carthaginians. Nothing could have better shown what he could do with such troops as he had than his march to cover Cadiz when threatened by Mortier. Alberquerque marched from near Cordova to Cadiz, with 8000 infantry and artillery, as well as cavalry, more than 260 miles in eight days, and saved Cadiz. It was after I had been relieved, but I was at Cadiz at the time. I was so surprised, when a man brought the news of Alberquerque's approach, that I could not believe it till the man told me he had spoken to the Duke and given him a light for his cigar, and described him so minutely that I felt sure he had seen Alberquerque." * * " He had in perfection some of the faculties in which Cuesta and all the old generals were most deficient, and had he com- manded earlier, and been better supported, he would have given Wellington exactly the kind of aid he needed, and the war might have been materially shortened ; but after I left, Lord Wellesley did not know his value till too late, and did not support him as he should have done. The Junta were always jealous of him, and anxious to get rid of him, so they sent him to England as Ambassador, by way of an honourable exile, and he afterwards died of vexation and a broken heart." 138 MEMOIR OF Of Romana, Mr. Frere had, on the whole, a. higher opinion than of any of the Spanish generals ; and, making every allowance for their early and intimate friendship, Romana's career justified his estimate, which was in the end fully confirmed by the judgment of Wellington. The following letters are given, as illustrating the character of the intercourse Mr. Frere kept up, and the manner in which he endeavoured to support the Spanish General. 1 After Soult had been driven by Sir Arthur Wel- lesley from Oporto into the mountains of Gallicia, in May, 1809, Romana, having disposed the forces under his immediate command to harass and watch the French, paid a flying visit to Asturias, for the purpose of rousing that province to a better use than had been previously made of their resources. Finding the Junta both inefficient and corrupt, he used his authority as Captain-General to suppress them, and nominated a fresh Junta, composed of men of greater energy, and undoubted devotion to the national cause. 2 The measure seems to have been wise and necessary ; but, under the pressure of more urgent calls on his attention, Romana ne- glected to justify or even report it to the Supreme Central Junta. This omission gave great offence to that body, and led to Mr. Frere addressing the following letter to Romana : — " Seville, Ju?ie tfh, 1809. " My dear Romana, " I HAVE for a long time deferred writing to you upon a subject which is very disagreeable to 1 The limits of a slight biographical sketch do not admit of the insertion of Mr. Frere's longer and more important despatches, which have been already published. 2 See Southey, vol. ii. chap. xxii. p. 322, ed. 1827, for a full account of the romantic incidents of this visit of Romana to Asturias, and of its causes and results. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 139 me to mention ; but which I cannot, I think, any longer delay, without being wanting in that friend- ship with which you have honoured me ; but I can- not conceal from you, that the effect which has been produced by the interruption of your correspond- ence, has been extremely unfavourable. " If you wish to remain upon fair terms with the Junta, and not to be understood as treating them with voluntary disrespect, it will be necessary to send a complete and most careful explanation of your motives for suppressing the Junta of Asturias, in which I have not the least doubt that you were right, and I have lost no opportunity of saying so. But when it is merely objected, that whatever might have been the necessity for suppressing an ancient constituted body, that necessity ought to have been made evident to the Government at least after the measure was taken, I feel myself at a loss for an answer. The expression of their being a Junta nominated by intrigue, has given great offence to their countrymen here, and will require particularly to be accounted for, or qualified. " It will be necessary likewise to enter into a general review of your military operations since your return to Asturias, and their motives. That you must have had great difficulties to encounter cannot be doubted ; but while this is only known or felt in general, and without any knowledge of the particulars, it must lead to a very false esti- mate of your merits, while the Asturians are exag- gerating the means which they say they are ready to put at your disposal. " I have not the least idea that they could have given you two regiments in a state fit to leave the province ; but, till this is explained and made evi- dent, people here will think that you had nothing to do but to march into Gallicia with the force which was offered you, and destroy General Ney." Mr. Frere then refers to his own recall, and pro- ceeds : — Ho MEMOIR OF "You will undoubtedly have heard from Eng- land, that General Moore's business has ended in my recall. I cannot deny that I feel it very sen- sibly, though I knew at the time that I ran the risk, and exposed myself to it voluntarily." He speaks of his own determination, "at any rate, and by any means," to urge Moore to what appeared to him to be the duty of a general in command of such an army, and adds : — " This is among the other reasons which induce me to write to you. My successor is immediately expected. He is a man of talents, but cannot be expected to feel for you the same interest as your very faithful and sincere — J. H. Frere." 1 On the eve of quitting office, and after his suc- cessor had arrived at Cadiz, Mr. Frere, feeling how necessary to Romana would be the support he had always received from the British representative, addressed the following letter to Lord Wellesley, inclosing a copy of a note which he had addressed to the Supreme Junta regarding Romana's services, and the mode in which they might be made of most avail to the common cause. " Private." " August 8t/i, [i 809]. " My dear Lord, " You will have seen from my last dispatch the situation of the M. Romana, against whom the Asturians have been driving a most furious intrigue, which has been assisted by the total want of atten- tion to correspondence on his part ; the consequence 1 Lord Russell, then a very young man travelling in Spain with Lord and Lady Holland, lived for some time with Mr. Frere at Seville. He told me that Romana, who was also living in the house, would often join Mr. Frere in the after- noon, and the two friends would set out without their hats whilst waiting for dinner, and sometimes ramble so far ab- sorbed in their conversation that they forgot the dinner and the other guests waiting for it. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 141 was, that a general idea prevailed here that his faculties were impaired ; and so universal was the consent upon this point, that I hardly felt myself authorized to stand out against it, when the deter- mination was taken by the Junta to recall him. " These ideas have since vanished, and I accord- ingly directed a note to Mr. Garay. " I would not, however, communicate it to him (the Marquis Romana), having nothing but conjec- ture as to the sentiments of the Government at home, and being in expectation of your almost immediate arrival by every dispatch that I received ; and being apprehensive that those sentiments might not be in unison with the conduct which he may probably hold, and which is insinuated at the end of my dispatch (I think No. 93). But if Govern- ment are disposed to continue to him their support, I think that no time should be lost in informing him of the interest which is taken by them in his situation, and I would in that case forward my note to him." Romana had shortly before this been summoned to take a seat in the Supreme Central Junta at Seville. The promotion was ostensibly an honour- able recognition of his great services ; but he re- garded it, with feelings which the event seemed to justify, as a mistake to remove him, at such a mo- ment, from the province where he had so well organized the most effective form of national resist- ance to the invader. In a touching and spirit- stirring general order,' he took leave of the com- panions-in-arms many of whom had followed him in his escape from Denmark. At Seville he soon found fresh proof of the utter incompetence of a body constituted as the Junta was, to rule Spain at such a juncture ; but it was not easy under the cir- cumstances to devise a better form of government. Many plans were discussed, and Romana submitted to his colleagues a note, strongly advocating, on 142 MEMOIR OF constitutional grounds, as well as on considerations of present expediency and general policy, an entire change in the form and machinery of administra- tion ; so that the Government should represent more distinctly a regency acting for the lawful Sovereign and for the Cortes, as, by ancient right, the representatives of all estates in the realm. 1 It is apparently in reply to a letter from Mr. Frere, forwarding a copy of this note, which he had received from Romana, that Lord Wellesley several weeks afterwards wrote to the former : "Private." "Seville, Oct. 17th, 1809. " My dear Sir, " I RETURN the Marquis de la Romana's note, with many thanks to you for this very inter- esting communication. " I request you to express to him my particular gratitude for the perusal. of a paper containing so much real wisdom and public spirit, conveyed in the most powerful and eloquent language. " The general sentiments and ideas expressed by M. de la Romana are entirely conformable to my opinions, and I sincerely hope that he will urge, with his characteristic energy, the instantaneous accomplishment of the two great objects of his pro- posal — the appointment of a Council of Regency, and the proclamation of a fixed and early day for the assembly of the Cortes. " In some of the details of his plan, I should per- haps differ with him, and I should certainly be disinclined to insist on any point of the detail, or of mere theoretical perfection, which might delay the concentration of the executive power, or the meet- ing of a regular representation of the estates of the realm. 1 The substance of the note is given by Southey, vol. II. chap. xxv. p. 492. JOHN HO OKU AM FRERE. 143 " In one point, however, I agree completely with M. de la Romana, in the absolute necessity of rendering the executive power, now to be formed, as exact an image as can be constituted, of the legi- timate sovereignty of the absent King. " Its form, constitution, character, and even its name, should be so framed as to recall to the nation the actual existence of the lawful monarch — a cir- cumstance which the present Government is ill cal- culated to preserve in the memory of the people. " The Marquis de la Romana's note is so admir- able in many respects, that I should be much obliged to him for a copy of it, with permission to translate, and to lay it before His Britannic Majesty, who would not fail to approve a composition which unites such animating sentiments of loyalty and freedom. " Believe me to be, with great esteem, dear sir, your faithful servant, Wellesley." 1 1 When this letter was written, Lord Wellesley was on the eve of returning to England, and nothing effectual was done to improve the constitution of the body which represented the central authority of the Spanish Government. Shortly after- wards, in January, 1810, when the incompetence of the Junta had brought the enemy to the gates of Cadiz, Romana was nominated to command the army in Estramadura. After rendering important service by securing Badajos against be- ing surprised by the French, he, with very inadequate means, made effectual head against them for several months in his own province, whilst Wellington was maturing his plans and organizing his troops for the defence of the lines of Torres Vedras. After Wellington retired within the lines, at the end of 1 8 10, Romana joined him with 6000 men of the Estra- maduran army. When Massena was forced to retreat, and Wellington issued from his lines to follow up his baffled op- ponent, it was arranged that Romana should employ his troops on the enemy's flank. He was to have set out the next day to rejoin his army, which had re-crossed the Tagus, with a view to keep open communication with the rich corn coun- try of Alemtejo and Badajos, when he was seized with a heart complaint, and died suddenly at Cartano on the 23rd of Jan- uary, 181 1. Wellington had learnt thoroughly to appreciate 144 - MEMOIR OF Mr. Frere used to refer to the bitter and most unjust opposition to Wellington, and especially to the clamour in Parliament, in the Common Council of the City of London, and by a portion of the press, against the grant of a peerage and pension to him, after the battle of Talavera, as striking proofs of the errors to which popular contemporary views and opinions are liable, and as illustrating the dangers of entrusting executive power to an assem- bly too exclusively composed of what are called "practical men." "They are apt," he said, "to undervalue or ignore the teachings of history, and always distrust any suggestion of that foresight which requires somewhat of the poetical faculty and imagination. If the ' practical men ' who were always inveighing against the war had had their way, Wellington would have been recalled, and Spain delivered over to France in 1810. The in- stinct of the English nation was right, as it often is, without knowing why ; but comparatively few men, in or out of Parliament, really understood why it was certain that in the long run the Spaniards must succeed if they persevered, and why it was wise and safe for England to support them to the ut- most. The greater part of the Whigs shut their eyes to the fact that the cause of the Spaniards was really the cause of national freedom and liberty. They were so charmed with the Revolution for de- the great qualities of the Spanish soldier under every form of trial ; and unused as he was to lavish praise, he recorded his sense of Romana's services in the following tribute to his memory : " In Romana the Spanish army have lost their brightest ornament, his country their most upright patriot, and the world the most strenuous and zealous defender of the cause in which we are engaged ; and I shall always acknowledge with gratitude the assistance which I received from him, as well by his operation as by his counsel, since he had been joined with this army." — Wellington Despatches, 26th Jan- uary, 181 1, vol. vii. p. 190. ■ JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 145 stroying absolute monarchy, that they continued to worship it after it had, as violent revolutions gene- rally do, erected another and a worse tyranny." In the revulsion of feeling consequent on Wel- lington's splendid successes in the last four years of the war, the very essential services of men like Sir Robert Wilson, Col. Trant, Sir Samuel Ford Whit- tingham, and of many individual Englishmen, as well as Spaniards, were in danger of being altoge- ther forgotten. Few officers suffered more from this forgetfulness than Sir Hew Dalrymple. Of him Mr. Frere said — "He had the rare merit of seeing from the first the real character and import- ance of the Spanish insurrection against Napoleon, and of always doing or advising the right thing to aid it. Yet he is chiefly remembered as if he had been responsible for stopping Wellington's career of victory by the convention of Cintra. Whereas the truth is, all the mischief was done before he arrived, and the convention was, as many excellent military judges believed, the best thing he could have done under the circumstances. However that may be, but for him the Spanish insurrection might have been nipped at the outset." The following memorandum expresses these views more fully : — " I consider Sir Hew Dalrymple to have been the most active agent in promoting the insurrection in the south of Spain. " Had not Castanos relied upon the promises of support given him by Sir Hew, it is much to be feared that he would not have moved from Alge- ziras, for he could by no means rely at that period either upon Pena or Morla. " Castanos had under his command 10,000 regular troops ; with them were incorporated at Utrera 15,000 peasants ; the wJwle of the Spanish force at the Battle of Bay leu. "After the capitulation, 17,000 Frenchmen filed L 146 MEMOIR OF through the ranks of the Spanish army, and laid down their arms. " The number of killed and wounded on the part of the French at the Battle of Baylen amounted to 4,000. Dupont was therefore defeated, and obliged to capitulate, by a force very little superior in num- ber to his own, and three-fifths of which had only learned to load and fire a few days previous to the battle. " It should however never be forgotten that Sir Hew Dalrymple's enlightened view of the grand movement of the Spanish nation induced him, upon his own responsibility, to engage Castanos to take the field, in spite of the lukewarm support of his friends at Cadiz ; and that without the co-operation of Castanos, the Battle of Baylen could not have been fought, and the war would, in all probability, have been crushed in its infancy. " So important, however, and well-timed was the capitulation granted by Castanos to Dupont, that one battalion of Reding's force was actually sur- rounded and taken prisoners by Vedel, before Vedel was informed of the capitulation, and he was at last driven to agree to it by Dupont's threats." On his return to England, Mr. Frere found the posi- tion of parties materially changed, by the differences between Mr. Canning and Lord Castlereagh, which had ended in a duel, in the retirement of both from office, and in the complete breaking up of the Port- land ministry. Many years after, in reply to a question as to the original cause of the divergence of opinions which had ended so disastrously, Mr. Frere said : " Canning told me he had written me a very full account of the quarrel, and of all that led to it. It happened while I was in Spain ; and the letter was lost with the vessel which carried the mails. I have no doubt the cause was something of the same kind as occurred very often to me. For instance : it was a great object for us to occupy JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 147 Cadiz j 1 the difficulty was to overcome the jealousy of the Junta. I was working, by the aid of Garay, the secretary to the Junta, to get the proposition that an English garrison should be sent to occupy Cadiz, to come from the Junta themselves. We had so far succeeded, that I had every reason to believe that such a proposition would in a few days be made to me ; when, without any warning, I got a despatch from Lord Castlereagh (who was then Secretary at War), telling me that he had sent an agent of his own to arrange for the landing of an English force, and desiring me to assist him. This, as far as I could learn, was without any previous communication with the Foreign Office, or any notice to me. The jealousy of the Junta was instantly aroused, and it was with the greatest difficulty I pacified them, pointing out what had happened with Madeira, which had been occupied while I was at Lisbon by an English force, to pre- vent its falling into the hands of the French, with- out previous notice sent to Portugal ; but it was, at the time I spoke, again safe in the hands of the Portuguese. I have no doubt things of this kind were of constant occurrence. This want of fore- thought, and of consideration for his colleagues in the Cabinet, was of Course very galling to a man of Canning's temperament." .... Of Lord Castle- reagh, he added : " When he got among the princes and sovereigns at the Congress, to settle Europe after the war, he thought he could not be too fine and complaisant ; the consequence was, the sacrifice of many points on which we ought and might easily have insisted. The first thing I heard of his doing at the Congress made me feel that he was not up to the work. It was some arrangement which he had much at heart for some accession of territory to Hanover. This satisfied 1 Vide ante, p. 126. 148 MEMOIR OF me that he did not understand his position, for it was in direct opposition to what our Government had always declared to be our own intentions with regard to Hanover. The surrender of Java was another instance of great interests of our own sacrificed to a wish to please other potentates at the Congress. It did not seem to me that he ever clearly saw what of real good had resulted in various ways from the convulsions consequent on the Revolution, and the long war ; and how much there was in the former state of things which it was by no means desirable to restore. Where, for instance, was the necessity for picking up the poor old Pope and all the little Italian princes out of the mire, and brushing them, and setting them up again ? It only turned good men into Carbonari." With his mission to Spain Mr. Frere's active political career ended, and his subsequent life of comparative retirement is marked by few events. His father had died in 1807, leaving him landed estates in the eastern counties, the management of which afforded him for a time ample occupation and amusement. A letter from his mother, written just after he set out on his second voyage to Spain, gives a glimpse of the home to which she was pre- pared to welcome him on his return from his event- ful mission. " October zxst, 1808. "My Dear Son, " The letter I received from Bartle con- taining the account of your safe arrival at Corunna, gave the greatest satisfaction to all your relations here, especially to me, who have listened to all the wind and stormy rain since you sailed with much fear, mixed with a little hope that you might have escaped from them. We had continual accounts of wrecks, but I had no idea of having more than two sons exposed to that danger till I received a JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 149 scrap, in pencil writing, from Temple, 1 dated ' Com- merce,' Yarmouth Roads. You must have had a full gale in your favour to be only one day without seeing land between the English and Spanish coast, and it was no slight rolling of the vessel that would have had an uncomfortable effect on you, which Bartle says he felt in an inferior degree. I am truly thankful your perils from the sea for the present are ended. Temple hurried to London to catch a glimpse of you both, and was too late ; and with his voyage, disappointment, and journey, was more fatigued than ever I saw him before." After a chronicle of family news, she returns to business at Roydon, his country house in Norfolk, details the arrival of the boxes of books, pictures, and painted glass, which he had brought home after his first missions to Lisbon and Madrid, and her deliberations as to the particular windows in which he might think the painted glass could be put up to the best effect — then reverts to the account his brother had given of their landing at Corunna : " Your reception in Spain was both splendid and affectionate ; honourable to your country and to your former representation of it. I hope the close of your mission, whenever it happens, will be fully answerable to the commencement. Susan " [his sister] " is looking for me. As I cannot look at you, I will fold this up, for when your Aunt Fenn comes, whom I am expecting every minute, I must go instantly." At a less hurried moment she adds a — 1 Her youngest son : born 1781 ; died 1859. Rector of Finningham, Roydon and Burston, and subsequently Speaker's Chaplain and Canon of Westminster. Like his brothers he was a tall striking-looking man, whence arose the name given him by his friends, " The Beauty of Holiness." ISO MEMOIR OF " P.S. — Write often. Tell Bartle we thank him for his letters. Answer the painted glass queries." — and ends with a quiet suggestion, such as becomes a good church-woman, even in the days when church restoration was little thought of : " N. B. — Is any of the glass designed for Roydon church ? " x A letter written by a lady who was staying at Roydon in 1813 describes him as "a very odd creature, but very good and very entertaining ;" getting up early in the morning to teach two little nephews grammar, taking one still smaller a walk, during which he completed teaching him his letters, and " spending an hour after dinner in reading to them the ballad of William of Cloudesley, which delighted them very much." One of their school books bears marks of a visit the same boys had just before paid him at East- bourne. Under a picture of a child gathering crabs, he had written : " By cruel uncles harassed and perplexed, First taught to read and to count figures next, His only pastime, when his task is o'er, Is picking Crabs and Sand-eels on the shore." 1 His mother died in 1813. She lived a life of unobtrusive charity and good deeds in a quiet country home ; but her own poetical powers (for one or two short specimens of which vide pp. 6 — 9) were above the average of authoresses of that day, and her extensive reading, correct taste, and capacity for entering into all the literary and political pursuits of her children made her always their trusted friend and companion. When she felt her strength failing, she summoned to her bedside her eight children who were in England, and after talking calmly and cheerfully of that their last meeting on earth, "bade them go to. dinner, which she trusted they would enjoy, and never to let their sorrow for her make them neglect their own health ; and she promised she would send them down a toast," after the fashion of the day. This she did in the words " Our union ;" which, in memory of the occurrence, and in accordance with her wishes, JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 151 There are many passages in his writings which show how well Mr. Frere could appreciate the characteristic features of such East Anglian scenery as Crabbe and Bloomfield have described, and Crome and Constable have painted. The lines headed "Modern Improvements," 1 which Byron admired as a fragment of " real English landscape painting," were inspired by some rough unimproved fields, near the Hall at Roydon. The " Journey to Hardingham" is a versification of an actual reverie on a wintry ride to visit his friend Whiter, and his imitation of " Quid tibi visa Chios," describes the scenes and thoughts of his everyday life at Roydon. But while not insensible to the charms of the coun- try, his favourite pursuits and early friendships all conspired to draw him to the capital. In London society his polished wit and playful fancy, his varied learning and great powers of conversation, joined to the easy courtesy of a travelled English gentle- man of the old school, made him everywhere a welcome guest. He had many qualifications for the highest success in almost any branch of literature, but he wanted the stimulus of ambition or of necessity to write, whilst his extreme fastidiousness disinclined him to regard anything he composed as finished, and his wonderfully accurate and retentive memory tempted him to avoid the mechanical her youngest son Temple afterwards had engraved as the motto on signet rings, bearing the device of the seals which Walton tells us were given by Dr. Donne " to many of his friends" — a Cross as the stock of the Anchor of Hope. 1 The same feeling which runs through " Modern Improve- ments" is more tersely expressed in the following lines, scratched by Mr. Frere with a diamond on a dressing-room window in the east turret of Holland House, in 181 1. They are now hung up as a souvenir in one of the boudoirs : " May neither Fire destroy, nor Waste impair, Nor Time consume thee, till the twentieth heir : May Taste respect thee, and may Fashion spare." 152 MEMOIR OF labour of noting down either his thoughts or the results of his reading. For this he paid a penalty, which is more or less rigorously exacted from all who prefer the pleasures of living society to the task of writing for the future. The most characteristic and valuable results of his reading and thinking were lost in every-day use ; what little remains owes its preservation to con- temporary friends, and the care of their biographers, who have noted a few of the sayings and anecdotes which survived in the memory of his companions long after Mr. Frere had ceased to be among them. Such are the anecdotes preserved by Moore, in his faithful record of the meetings at which he was the petted guest of those who, a generation ago, gathered round them all that was distinguished for literary or political ability in London. At one time he is pleased with Frere's comparison of O'Connell's eloquence to the "aerial potato" described by Darwin in his " Phytologia," and with his severe criticism on Erskine's verses, "The Muses and Graces will just make a jury." Another time he refers to " Frere's beautiful saying that ' next to an old friend, the best thing is an old enemy,' " and again he relates how " Madame de having said in her intense style, ' I should like to be married in English, in a language in which vows are so faith- fully kept,' some one asked Frere ' What language, I wonder, was she married in ? ' ' Broken English, I suppose,' answered Frere." 1 Canning and Frere being invited by a clerical friend to come and hear his first sermon, asked them afterwards how they had liked it ? Canning, to avoid saying it was uninteresting, promptly replied, "I thought it rather — short." "Ah," said the com- 1 " Life, Letters, and Journals of Thomas Moore," edited by- Lord John Russell, vol. iv. p. 302 ; vol. v. p. 102 ; vol. vi. P. 345- JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 153 poser, " I am aware that it was short, but I was afraid, if I made it longer, of being tedious." He paused for an answer. " But you were tedious," replied Frere sotto voce. One night he had returned to Holland House to supper, with Lord and Lady Holland, after the play. They found that Mr. Shuttleworth 1 had already retired to rest. Whilst at supper they were disturbed by strange unearthly sounds at regular intervals, concerning the origin of which Frere ex- pressed some curiosity. " Oh ! it's only Shuttle- worth snoring," said Lord Holland. " Ah," said Frere, "now I understand. He has not got that large nose for nothing." The list might be enlarged by references to the works or memoirs of Scott, Byron, Southey, Gifford, Rose, Coleridge, Moore, Windham, Rogers, and others of his literary or political friends ; but except occasionally in the case of a careful chronicler like Moore, the wit or the wisdom which charmed are generally only to be inferred from the impression noted as produced on the hearer. His letters, on the most trivial incidents of every day life, bear the impress of the same qualities which at all times lent a peculiar grace to his con- versation. From the nature of the topics it is not easy to select what would give to the general reader a fair idea of the charm they had for the intimate friends to whom they were addressed. A few extracts may, however, serve as specimens. The first is to his brother Bartle, who after serving with him for some years, and repeatedly acting as Envoy in Portugal and Spain, had been sent as Secretary of Legation to Constantinople. 1 Rev. Ph. Shuttleworth, " a good scholar and most amiable man," tutor to the late Lord Holland, and subsequently Bishop of Chichester. The story is also told of Mr. Allen — but I am informed on undoubted authority that this was incorrect. 154 MEMOIR OF " Roydon, March 27th, 1812. " My Dear Bartle, "Though I am not well to-day, and my views of things partake of the sort of physical anguish I feel, which I attribute to having sauntered about yesterday in the wind and sun with William, yet as to-morrow is not post-day, and my letter, though it does not enliven you, will show at least that I have not begun to forget you, I would not omit writing while Mam, William, and George were all employed in the same way. It will be no satis- faction, I believe, to you to know that your going makes me very melancholy ; but I am still fully convinced that it was the only thing for you to do, and I think that you can never repent of having done so, and might very much of having refused it. After all, it will not be an unpleasant circumstance in your life to have seen those same Turks, of whom I would endeavour to know everything that could be known, and that my opportunities of leisure would allow me to learn. This cannot but be creditable, and may be very advantageous to you, let alone the satisfaction of one's own curiosity in the history and modes of thinking of so singular a race ; I would, therefore, if possible, acquire the language, or, at least, as much of it as I could. I propose, in return, to task myself to write you long letters of what is going on here, such as if you think them worth keeping, which I hope you will, it may be a satisfaction to me, and perhaps at a more distant time to others, to look over. Above all, believe me, dear Bartle, ever affectionately yours, J. H. Frere." " If you have any commission for books or any- thing else to be sent after you, I will look to it." "Blake's Hotel, May 10th, 1812. " My Dear Bartle, " Mr. Meyer, Secretary to the Commission to Malta, and a student of this Hotel, has sent his JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 155 name to me very civilly, with an offer to take any letter or commission for you. Accordingly, I think it a good and safe opportunity for forwarding Birch's recipe with my compliments to the part affected. If it were not Sunday, I would get over the repugnance which I have felt hitherto in pre- senting myself as a customer at Mr. Weis's magazine, and dispatch the artillery by the same conveyance. Mr. Meyer is going within an hour or two, and there- fore I will only set down, summatim, the history of the family since your departure. William [his brother, Sergeant Frere,] was made Master of Downing 1 on Friday last, by the votes of the two Archbishops and old T ; the two first procured by his own merits, and the third by H , who had been himself a candidate, but seeing no chance of success, chose to secure it to William instead of leaving a doubtful election, which, as it might have left the business to the Chancellor, would in that case have been a decision in favour of his old anti- pathy, C . Little D has been in town, and has been very strenuous and acute in the business, as he himself seems to allow. I have just this moment written a note to him to return me ' Childe Harold,' which I had lent him, and which I wish to send you. His (not D 's, but Lord Byron's) love is Mrs. , as appears by the passage in which he mentions her having been born at Constantinople, and expresses the pleasure which arises from the reflection that the spot in which we are, has been before visited by other friends. " Having just recovered from a fit of coughing, I will only say that William will not feel himself obliged to give up the law, and will continue to do as much business as he can get, and that the Col- lege in his hands will, I really think, be an orna- ment and an advantage to the University, instead 1 Downing College, Cambridge. 156 MEMOIR OF of being (as it would otherwise have been made) a nuisance and a job, and (what you would feel most) a Johnian job." Then after some family news : " As for myself, I am thus far advanced since I left you in my way for Roydon, after having a tete-a-tete in my way here with old Admiral B at Godalming. Before I set off I went to buy a book (to take with me in the chaise), and pitched upon a pocket Pope's Homer. This has since led me to look at the original of that celebrated work. The result of my enquiries is that the second book has nothing to do with the first, and that the cata- logue, together with the third and fourth books, at least, belong to some poem which related to the first events of the war. The author of the first book does not appear again distinctly till we see his Jupiter thundering against Nestor and Diomed. Such are my opinions, more amply detailed in a red book which I wish I could send you ; but if you partake of Lord Byron's feelings and would like ' to read what I have read,' I think you will agree with me. They begin to tell me that it is half-past twelve, and that Mr. Meyer was to set off at twelve. So adieu, my dear Bartle, and, believe me, ever affectionately yours, J. H. Frere." His unmarried sister, Susan, had made her home with him after their mother's death, and her letters to their absent brother at Constantinople form a very faithful chronicle of home doings. The diffi- culty and uncertainty of the communication during the last years of the great war may be judged of from the fact that letters every three or four weeks are spoken of as a " great luxury," though they took from two to five months in transit, and the later-written letters sometimes outstripped their predecessors by a month or two. Mr. Frere, in March, 1814, is described by his sister as joining her on a visit to their cousin, Lady Laurie, at Dover, JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 157 and there entertaining them with some verses of " excellent nonsense," the recital of which is acci- dentally interrupted. The chronicle further records the departure of Louis XVIII. and the Duchesse d'Angouleme from Dover on the 24th April, 18 14, and the arrival of the allied sovereigns on the 6th June : " Not a prince, potentate, or hero can visit England without passing through Dover, and we are waked out of our sleep in the night by the con- cussion of the guns from the cliff above our house, for these great people have so inured themselves to hardships that they travel without respite, and their greatest indulgence seems to be a truss of straw to lie on when they stop to collect the train of their followers ; the Emperor would have no other bed at Mr. Fector's, and his sister the Grand Duchess desired not to have a bed but a sofa to sleep on. This trait, I find, raised them in the estimation of my lady's maid and the housekeeper to an order of beings much above the common race of mortals." She describes the emperor's " ingenuous benign ex- pression, and his look and personal together much like a good English country gentleman, who knows he is surrounded by people who respect him." The Grand Duchess as "pretty, like her brother, with a sweet expression." The Duke of Clarence had determined on escorting the imperial party across the Straits, but the Grand Duchess insisted on Admiral Foley providing her another ship. She had her little son, about four years old, with her, and Mr. Fector's little boy, rather younger, was in- vited to pay him a visit, which was most graciously received ; for, though his little Imperial Highness made light of a warning that " it was not right to stand on the hearthstone," he would not eat till his young guest was first served ; and when they were running about he stopped, and holding up his hands, went softly for a minute aside, and in. reply to a question, What he was doing ? replied, " He was 158 MEMOIR OF begging of God that he would let that nice little boy live." There are also descriptions of " Bliicher shaking hands with everybody. The King of Prussia looking grave, dignified, with a handsome and agreeable countenance, though somewhat me- lancholy. Platoff bent with the fatigues he has gone through, and looking quite aged. The Duke of Wellington, who landed at five in the morning, and had at nine a levee of ladies to see him at breakfast, when they were most graciously received. The only unhappy-looking person of the party being the Prince of Orange (the unsuccessful suitor of the Princess Charlotte), who had come from London to meet the Duke." Mr. Frere had been to Portsmouth to the great naval review given to the allied sovereigns by the Prince Regent, "who ingratiated himself much with the naval officers, who had before all a strong im- pression of his being very unfavourably disposed towards them. The Prince said ' he had never known till then what a glorious thing the British Navy was, and that he should never be satisfied without having Naval aides-de-camp as well as Mili- tary.' " The promise, however, was not fulfilled till after his brother came to the throne. The following is from Mr. Frere to his sister, from Roydon : "August i^th, 1815. " My dear Susan, " I HAVE to thank you first for three letters. " Secondly, for certain lobsters which came very opportunely when I was wanting to mend my dinner for Mr. Carter. " Thirdly, for some picture frames, which are very handsome, and fit the pictures very exactly. " Lastly, I have to thank my cousin for recollect- ing that I should like to see Made. Suffrien's letter, which is indeed a very curious one, and shows that unless a Royalist party is formed quickly, JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 159 there will be only one party in the country, which will reduce it to a situation worse than that of Spain four years ago." Then after some amusing country gossip, and details of his every-day life, he adds : — " I am now thinking what I can do in return for the favours above enumerated. " First, this letter contains all that I could have had to tell you if I had written regularly in answer to yours, for it is all that has happened of any kind. " Secondly, I send you some apricots. "Thirdly, Mr. Bett's cart is agreeable to take your chair, which I send herewith. " Fourthly, I transmit half the remainder of the Stilton cheese, which I hope will meet with your favourable construction. " Fifthly, I return my cousin's letter with many thanks, and desire you to give my love to her, and to believe me, &c. " I must send back my cousin's carriage, and I believe when it goes I shall slip into it, but I have so mitcJi to do, as Mrs. B says." In one of his letters, when urged to " mention news, literature, or the ordinary topics of the day," to a relation who was suffering from the severest of domestic afflictions, and to whom he had just written several pages of grave, thoughtful, earnest reason- ing, he excused himself from attempting lighter topics by saying, " It would be too much like the story in St.-Simon of the old Abbe at Versailles, who finding a man in the forest with his leg broken, being unable to do anything better for him, stood by him and offered him pinches of snuff from his box." A letter written in the autumn of this year by his sister gives an amusing account of the party as- sembled at Roydon. The prospects of a secure 160 MEMOIR OF and prolonged peace were supposed to promise a fall in the high rents of war time. Lady Laurie, the " cousin " of the letter just quoted, had been suggesting various household reforms, and Mr. Frere, his sister says, had gone to London and "amused himself just as he was going in contriving retrenchments of expense, in the prospect of having large deductions of receipts the next rent day. I told him it would end in some nightly visitation of the Muse ; and accordingly, one morning were pro- duced some verses, which I saved to divert you with, though the fragment will never be finished, and my cousin's occupations of making wines and preserves, which were to have been immortalized, are not yet sung : — " In the old cupboard with the fluted key- To hoard the sugar and secure the tea ; To purchase groceries at a cheaper rate, To teach old liveries to outlive their date, To count the fowls, to cater for the hogs, To calculate the coals, to hoard the logs ; In yearly brewings to retrench the malt, To reckon and secure the pork in salt, By just restraint of economic law To curb the roaring oven's ravening maw, To watch the dairy's ever-varying ways With timid censure, or with temperate praise ; Nor seek to scrutinize the wondrous plan, Unfathomable by the mind of man, The mysteries of that secret sphere are known To female spirits, and to them alone. " And here end the verses, which are marred in the transcribing by some absence of mind caused by my cousin's discourse about the fog, which is com- ing by solemn approaches up to our windows ; Mar- shal Ney's trial ; a round of beef that I am contriving how to pickle and send you, that you may have some use for that mustard pot she gave you ; and Patience herself, you know, when represented as tried to the utmost, has been described as seated upon such a throne, watching for the arrival of the JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 161 desired round, and therefore we are uneasy at your being under so long and severe a trial, for we had no notion of the impossibility of getting good salt beef at Constantinople. These topics, and many others have been discussed whilst I am writing, and left me I do not know where in my letter." And then, after an ample family chronicle of the doings of distant branches, she ends with — " Here is a bul- letin that you will scarcely have patience to go through at once ; but, as a gentleman observed to Mrs. C , who proposed reading to him her own poem on the Battle of Waterloo, 'he would have it to read to himself, and take as much as he liked at a time.' " The letters dated 1816 contain numerous refer- ences to the agrarian disturbances which in the spring caused much alarm throughout the country. The details read much more like letters from a pro- claimed district in Ireland than the chronicles of quiet Norfolk and Suffolk villages. The poor had suffered greatly through the winter ; and though in parts wages had been raised in proportion to the rise in the price of wheat, "to id. more than the magis- trates' order," this had not been done generally, and the poorer people, " persuaded that there was some design to wrong them," were inclined to all sorts of outrages. There are daily records of barns and ricks fired, shrouds and threatening notices sent to obnoxious employers, and crowds of pauper la- bourers " parading the country with horns blowing and threats of violence." On the 1 2th of Sept. 18 16, Mr. Frere married Elizabeth Jemima, Dowager Countess of Erroll. At this time, and indeed throughout his life, his friends had many anecdotes of his habitual abstrac- tion of mind, when following out any absorbing train of thought. One of the best authenticated related that the late Mr. John Murray having for once relaxed his usual rule never to allow an author M 162 MEMOIR OF to read or recite in the sanctum in Albemarle Street, got so interested in some verses which Mr. Frere was repeating and commenting on, that his dinner hour was at hand. He asked Mr. Frere to dine with him, and continue the discussion ; but the lat- ter, startled to find it was so late, excused himself on the plea that " he had been married that morn- ing, and had already overstayed the time when he had promised Lady Erroll to be ready for their journey into the country." Another story rested on Lady Erroll 's own authority, and related to their first acquaintance, some years before, when she was in the zenith of her beauty, as Cosway and Sir Martin Shee have painted her. Mr. Frere had just been introduced to her at an evening party, and offered to hand her down-stairs and procure some refreshment ; but getting much interested in con- versation by the way, became so engrossed in the train of thought he was pursuing, that he drank himself a glass of negus that he had procured for her, and then offered his arm to help her upstairs without any idea of their not having achieved the errand on which they came; and was only reminded of his mistake by her laughing remonstrance with him on his forgetfulness of her existence. " This," she added, " convinced me that my new acquaint- ance was at any rate very different from most of the young men around us !" Whatever foundation there may have been for such anecdotes, it is certain that long acquaintance deep- ened his admiration of her into a devoted attach- ment. Except in later years, from her failing health, there was little of earthly sorrow to cloud their married life, the character of which is aptly foreshadowed in the closing verses of the lines he addressed to her in the earlier years of his court- ship. To the charms of personal beauty and en- gaging manners she added those of deep and refined feeling ; and his reliance on her good sense and JOHN HOOK HAM FRERE. 163 judgment is shown by constant reference in his letters to her fiat as decisive not only in questions of every-day life, but of literary taste and fitness. The first part of "The Monks and the Giants" was published by Mr. John Murray, in 1817, as the " Prospectus and Specimen of an intended National Work, by William and Robert Whistlecraft, of Stowmarkct, in Suffolk, 1 harness and collar makers, intended to comprise the most interesting particu- lars relating to King Arthur and his Round Table." A second part was subsequently sent to Mr. Murray, who published both together in 18 18, with the title of " The Monks and the Giants." ~ In this jeu d 'esprit, Mr. Frere revived 3 in English poetry the octave stanza of Pulci, Berni, and Casti, which has since been completely naturalized in our tongue. Men of letters were not slow to recognise the service thus rendered to English literature, and Italian scholars especially were delighted to see one of the most beautiful of their favourite metres suc- cessfully adopted in a language so different from the dialect in which it was first used. Its value was immediately recognized by Byron. He wrote 1 A lady residing in that part of Suffolk amused her friends much, at the time of the publication, by making a pil- grimage to Stowmarket, for the purpose of seeing "those very intelligent Harness-makers." 1 The late Lord Lansdowne, speaking on one occasion of Mr. Frere, to his nephew the Rev. Constantine Frere, said — "All his friends liked him all the more for his originality in everything" — and mentioned as an instance, that when he gave him a copy of " Whistlecraft," he did not formally present it, but, happening to be dining that night at Lansdowne House, said, as he got up to go away, " O, Lansdowne, where I left my hat and stick, in the hall, you'll find something, I think, you may like to see." " I looked," said Lord Lans- downe, " and found Whistlecraft." 3 Fanshawe's " Lusiad," Fairfax's Tasso, Harrington's Ariosto, and other English works had previously been written in this metre. Vide " Notes and Queries" on this subject, — January 27th. T872. 164 MEMOIR OF to Murray, from Venice, in October, 1 8 1 7, announc- ing " Beppo," and said, " I have written a poem of eighty-four octave stanzas, humorous, in or after the excellent manner of Whistlecraft (whom I take to be Frere)." And ten days later, " Mr. Whistle- craft has no greater admirer than myself. I have written a story in eighty-nine stanzas, in imitation of him, called ' Beppo.' " 1 Mr. William Stewart Rose, himself one of the most elegant Italian scholars of his generation, thus addressed Mr. Frere two years afterwards — " O thou that hast revived in magic rhyme That lubber race, and turn'd them out, to turney And love after their way ; in after time To be acknowledged for our British Berni ; Oh send thy giants forth to good men's feasts, Keep them not close." 2 And in 1837 Mr. Rose wrote, 3 "Lord Byron is usually considered as the naturalizer of this species of poetry, but he had seen Mr. Frere's work before the publication of ' Beppo.' He made this avowal to me at Venice ; and said he should have inscribed ' Beppo ' to him that had served him as a model, if he had been sure it would not have been disagree- able. Supposing (as I conclude) that some passages in it might have offended him." 4 Southey, writing to Landor, who was residing 1 A few months later (March 26, 1818), again writing to Murray of " Beppo," he says, " The style is not English, it is Italian ; — Berni is the original of all; Whistlecraft was my immediate model." Further acquaintance with Italian litera- ture showed him Berni's obligations to his predecessors ; and on February 21st, 1820, writing of Pulci's Morgante Mag- giore, he said, " It is the parent, not only of Whistlecraft, but of all jocose Italian poetry." 2 " The Court and Parliament of Beasts. Translated from Casti." London, 1819. 3 " Rhymes." Brighton, 1837. 4 See also Miss Cornwallis's account of her conversation with Mr. Frere on the subject in May, 1819. "Letters of C. F. Cornwallis." Triibner & Co. 1864, pp. 22 and 23. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 165 abroad, in February, 1820, said, "A fashion of poetry has been imported which has had a great run, and is in a fair way of being worn out. It is of Italian growth — an adaptation of the manner of Pulci, Berni, and Ariosto in his sportive mode. Frere began it. What he produced was too good in itself, and too inoffensive, to become popular ; for it attacked nothing and nobody; and it had the fault of his Italian models, that the transition from what is serious to what is burlesque was capricious. Lord Byron immediately followed, first with his 'Beppo,' which implied the profligacy of the writer, and lastly with his ' Don Juan,' which is a foul blot on the literature of his country, an act of high trea- son on English poetry. The manner has had a host of imitators." There are passages in the " Monks and Giants " of great poetical beauty, and it is full of the humour which twenty years before had been so effective in the pages of the "Anti-Jacobin." But it did not achieve the popularity which might have been expected from these circumstances, joined to the complete mastery of metre and delicate sense of rhythm which the versification evinced. This was due not only to the reasons mentioned by Southey, but because people generally looked in it for political satire, and were disappointed when they failed to discover the meaning which they fancied must be hid under every name and allusion. Among men of literary taste, the reception of the poem was sufficiently flattering to render it a matter of surprise to his friends that he never completed the continuation promised in the parts published, and of which he was known to have composed a great number of stanzas; these he would willingly recite to any appreciative listener, though he never wrote them down. Many years after (1844), in reply to a question as to the reason why he never completed the work, he said, " You cannot go on 166 MEMOIR OF joking with people who won't be joked with. Most people who read it at the time it was published, would not take the work in any merely humorous sense ; they would imagine it was some political satire, and went on hunting for a political meaning ; so I thought it was no use offering my jokes to people who would not understand them. Even Mackintosh once said to me, ' Mr. Frere, I have had the pleasure of reading your "Monks and Giants" twice over,' and then he paused ; I saw what was in his mind, and could not help replying with a very mysterious look, ' And you could not discover its political meaning ?' Mackintosh said, 'Well, indeed, I could not make out the allegory ; ' to which I answered, still looking very mysterious, 'Well, I thought you would not.' " I wished to give an example of a kind of bur- lesque of which I do not think that any good specimen previously existed in our language. You know there are two kinds of burlesque, of both of which you have admirable examples in Don Quixote. There is the burlesque of imagination, such as you have in all the Don's fancies, as when he believes the wench in a country inn to be a princess, and treats her as one. Then there is the burlesque of ordinary rude uninstructed common sense, of which Sancho constantly affords examples, such as when he is planning what he will do with his subjects when he gets his island, and determines to sell them 'at an average.' Of the first kind of burlesque we have an almost perfect specimen in Pope's ' Rape of the Lock ;' but I did not know any good example in our language of the other species, and my first intention in the ' Monks and Giants ' was merely to give a specimen of the burlesque treatment of lofty and serious subjects by a thoroughly common, but not necessarily low- minded man — a Suffolk harness-maker. Of course it was not possible always to adhere to such a plan. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 167 and I have no doubt I did occasionally diverge into something which was more akin to one's own real feeling on the subjects which turned up, and thus misled my readers ; but for some time after the work was first published I was very fond of pursuing the idea, and used to finish a couple of stanzas every day. "Another thing which disinclined me to go on with the work was the sort of stigma which at first attached to the metre after the publication of ' Don Juan.' I had a sort of parental affection for the metre, and knew what it was capable of in English as well as in Italian. Byron took a great fancy to it, and used it in ' Beppo,' which was all very well, and so were parts of 'Don Juan,' but there were other parts of ' Don Juan ' which could hardly be read virginibus pncrisque, and there was such an outcry that if I had gone on writing in the same metre, and any one had misunderstood me, I should have been suspected of meaning something very improper." I asked him if he could remember any of the stanzas of the continuation, and he repeated a good many, of which I am sorry to say the following are all of which the notes have escaped shipwreck. They were from the description of Ascopart, a young giant, who having been found by the monks, forsaken by his companions, and powerless from a broken limb, is taken into the monastery, cured, baptized, and, as far as the good brethren were able, civilized and rendered " a useful member of society ;" though his giant nature perpetually breaks out in a manner which rather discomfits his re- verend instructors. As soon as he can get about, the monks lead him round the convent, and show him all the wonders of civilization. Some things he understands, others are an inexplicable puzzle. All the arrangements for storing and providing food are easily enough understood, but — 168 MEMOIR OF " The mystery of the Turnspit in the Wheel He understood not but admired with zeal. " No longer he regrets his native groves, His wonted haunt and his accustom'd rill ; He views the bake-house, scullery, and stoves, And from the leathern jack delights to swill. He saw the baker putting in some loaves, And, being quick and eager in his will, He thrust him in, half-way, for an experiment — It was not malice, it was only merriment. " The monks had purchased for their chapel floor Some foreign marbles, squares, of white and black ; It lay where it was left, upon the shore, Till Ascopart convey'd i't, on his back, Through miry roads, eleven leagues and more, Poked, like backgammon men, into a sack ; Went to the wood and kill'd a brace of bears, Then drank six quarts of ale, and so to prayers. " Besides all this he mended their mill dam, Digging a trench to turn aside the flood ; And brought huge piles of wood to drive and ram, Jamm'd in with stones to make it sound and good. The story looks a little like a flam, But in five days he built five stacks of wood, To serve the convent for five winters' fire, As high as their own convent-church or higher. " But most he show'd the goodness of his heart In slaughtering swine and oxen for the year ; From dawn to sunset there was Ascopart, With sweat, and blood, and garbage in a smear. The butcher pointed out the rules of art — ' I'll smite 'um,' quoth the Giant, ' never fear.' The clapper of the great old broken bell He bang'd about him with, and down they fell. " Pigs, when their throats were cut, amused him most- All cantering and curvetting in a ring ; To see them as they jostled and they cross'd, He swore it was a pastime for a king. — Laugh'd and laid wagers and cried out, ' ware post !' And as the monks were teaching him to sing, He criticized their squeaking, and found fault — ' Come Pig ! now for a holding note in Alt.' JOHN HOOK HAM FRERE. 169 " With such a size, and mass of limbs, and trunk, And his loins girded with a hempen string, He look'd, and might have been, a lordly monk ; Therefore I think it an unlucky thing That at their vespers he was always drunk, And that he never would be taught to sing, But only saunter'd from the kitchen fire, To howl and make a hubbub in the quire." " I put a good deal of this description of the young giant into Latin monkish verses. Here is one of them — " Notandum quod Asquibardus, Gigas et Paganus, Tres menses in ccenobio sejurnavit, Et gratam mentem monachis monstravit, Ad opera monasteria praestans manus ; Ad salinandum bestias mactavit ; Eodem die, viz. Novembris tredecem Comedit salsasorum ulnas sedecem. NOTA. " ' Campanae magna; funis tenet Dimidium ulnae minus,' says the margin ; A learned antiquary that had seen it Transcribed the passage for me, strictly charging That I should keep his secret — and I mean it ; His praises otherwise I should enlarge in — Encouraging and affording me facilities, In order to display my poor abilities." " I thought the feats of pig-killing, and of eating so many ells of sausages, were not bad achieve- ments for my harness-maker poet to admire in his gigantic hero." One of the events was the tossing of King Ryance in a blanket ; his tormentors of course sing a song, the chorus of which was to this effect : — " This is King Ryance of high degree, Who sent the defiance so saucily ; Give him a lift, a turn, and a shift, And a flight in the air, hurra ! hurra !" In a letter to his brother Bartle, dated May 24th, 18 1 8, he wrote regarding the publication of the second part of the poem : — 170 MEMOIR OF " My Lady 1 is very anxious to have it published and very peremptory. My own impulse and reso- lution was to leave the thing unpublished, at least for the present. " In my notion, a mere jeti d' esprit, such as the first, is pardonable if good judges think it good, even if the populace should not like it, and if the poem were a serious one there would be no harm in go- ing on for the sake of the good judges before men- tioned ; but to persevere in a nonsensical work merely for the sake of the good judges of nonsense is a different business. Besides that, people are always ready to say that a continuation is not so good as the first part. I wish you would look it over to see whether there is any room for such an observation." Fortunately his brother's judgment concurred with Lady Erroll's ; and the second part, which contains some of the best passages in the poem, was not lost. The following recent criticism by a distinguished American scholar may be quoted, as showing that something more than personal friend- ship or the fashion of the day actuated his contem- poraries in the estimate they formed of the work at its first appearance : — " There are few books of its size which contain as much genuine wit, humour, and fancy, or which dis- play greater skill in the management of both light and serious verse, or indicate fuller resources of cul- ture. It is a fresh and unique jeu d' esprit, which exhibits a quality of cleverness as rare as it is amus- ing. The form and method of the poem, the struc- ture of its verse, its swift transitions from sprightly humour to serious description or reflection, its mingling of exaggeration with sober sense, its heroi-comic vein, are all derived from the famous Italian romantic poems, especially from the Mor- 1 Lady Erroll. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 171 gante Maggiore of Pulci, and in a less degree from the Animali Parlanti of Casti. It has no moral object, and does not confine itself to a single con- tinuous narrative, but is a simple work of amuse- ment, free in its course, according to the whim and fancy of the writer. It is the overflow of an abun- dant and lively spirit, restrained only by the limits imposed by a fine sense of the proprieties of humour, and a thorough acquaintance with the rules of art. Its execution displays a command of style so com- plete in its way that it may be called perfect. The imaginary authors, the Whistlecrafts, appear in the poem only as giving a natural propriety to some of its simplicities of diction, and humorous absurdities of digression. Frere created the fiction of the 'har- ness and collar makers ' simply to gain a freer swing for his mirth, and is at no pains to preserve an abso- lute consistency of tone. The bland conceit of the pretended illiterate poet and prosaic tradesman add point to the keen wit and delicate appreciation and expression of one of the finest of literary masters, of a scholar who quotes ^Eschylus, transcribes pro- fessed rhyming Latin monkish chronicles, explains the fable of Orpheus, and on every page shows — " ' Traces of learning and superior reading.' " Speaking of the third and fourth cantos, the re- viewer says : " The same qualities of style distin- guish them, — the easy flow, of verse, the perfect command of natural language, the control of rhyme (the poet never seeming to be mastered, as Pulci and Berni often are, by the difficulties of the line), the rapid transitions, the playful humour, the happy strokes of satire, the characteristic delineation of per- sonages, and the charming descriptions of scenery, display the genius of the author in even fuller mea- sure than it is shown in the earlier episode of this delightful poem And thus ends one of the most playful, humorous, and original poems 172 MEMOIR OF in English, a perfect success in its kind, and that, kind one of the rarest and most difficult." 1 He then quotes Miss Cornwallis' account of her con- versation with Mr. Frere on the comparative merits of" Beppo " and " Whistlecraft," and Coleridge's pre- ference for the superior metrical skill of the latter poem, as shown in the greater ease and rapidity of the verse. 2 Byron's own opinion of Mr. Frere's taste and judg- ment is shown by his desiring Mr. Hobhouse to send the first canto of " Don Juan " to him, and to consult him, with Mr. Stewart Rose and Moore, as to the propriety of publishing it. The incidents of this interview are thus described by Moore : 3 " Met Hobhouse. . . . Asked him had I any chance of a glimpse at ' Don Juan ' ? and then found that Byron had desired it might be referred to my decision ; the three persons whom he had bid Hobhouse consult as to the propriety of publishing it being Hookham Frere, Stewart Rose, and my- self. Frere, as the only one of the three in town, had read it v and pronounced decidedly against the publication " Frere came in while I was at Lady D — 's ; was proceeding to talk to hini about our joint umpire- ship on Byron's poem, when he stopped me by a look, and we retired into the next room to speak over the subject. He said he did not wish the opinion he had pronounced to be known to any one except B. himself, lest B. should suppose he was taking merit to himself, among the righteous, for having been the means of preventing the publica- tion of the poem. Spoke of the disgust it would excite if published ; the attacks in it upon Lady B. ; 1 Article on John Hookham Frere in the " North American Review," for July, 1868, by Mr. C. E. Norton. s " Moore's Diary," April, 1823, vol. iv. p. 51. 3 " Moore's Journals and Conversations," vol. ii. p. 263, 30th January, 1 8 19. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 173 and said, ' it is strange, too, he should think there is any connection between patriotism and profli- gacy. If we had a very Puritan court indeed, one can understand then profligacy being adopted as a badge of opposition to it ; but the reverse being the case, there is not even that excuse for connect- ing dissoluteness with patriotism, which, on the contrary, ought always to be attended by the stern- est virtues.' "31st January. Went to breakfast with Hob- house, in order to read Lord Byron's poem : a strange production, full of talent and singularity, as everything he writes must be : some highly beauti- ful passages, and some highly humorous ones ; but as a whole not publishable. Don Juan's mother is Lady Byron, and not only her learning, but various other points about her, ridiculed. He talks of her favourite dress being dimity (which is the case), 'dimity' rhyming very comically with 'sublimity ;' and the conclusion of one stanza is, ' I hate a dumpy woman,' meaning Lady B. again. This would disgust the public beyond endurance. There is also a systematized profligacy running through it which would not be borne. Hobhouse has undertaken the delicate task of letting him know our joint opinions." " April 30th. Murray writes to me that Hob- house has received another letter from Lord Byron, peremptorily insisting on the publication of ' Don Juan.' But they have again remonstrated. The murder, however, will out some, time or other." 1 The remonstrances of his " cursed puritanical committee," as Lord Byron called them, were how- ever in vain. He would hear of no omission or curtailment, with the exception of a passage refer- 1 " Moore's Journals and Correspondence," vol. ii. pp. 266 and 285. i [ng i" i "i.i t . i ■ . 1 1 1 1 < • . i • • 1 1 . .mil one other.' M i. Frere always regarded IJyron'a Inflexibility on this point .i i .i .;i. .ii misfortune to English literature, Some <>i i he p. i '.i".' ■■ in " I '"ii I uan " he i onsidered equal to anj i inn", evei writ ten by one w hoiii lie pla< ed hi the firs! i .mi-, "i modern English pocta rhe |..i ■. h i "■ ■ vvhii ii foi med I he grounds i >i his objei I ion i" ihr publii ation oi iii< - poem as II stands, were, in his opinion, no Less poetical than moral blemishes j .in.i would probably nevei have been written, .uim mi", 1 8 1 8 i<>. M i Frere seems to ha> e devoted urn, h oi his time to the translations, bj w hii h, pro bablj . i athei than by his oi Iginal w oi ks, his rank ami 'ii". i he | '. >el s ol the pi cscnl < cnl urj will be de i. -I mined I ie had b rare i ombinal Ion ol .ill I hose powers which arc necessary to reproduce the ideas oi .i distant age, and oi a different language, in su< Ii modern dress as the original authoi might have used bad he lived nov\ . and he had also the critical powei which enabled him to detect and point out Hi, secret oi good and bad I ranslat Ion, and t" i.i\ down canons which might aid others in the evei tempting but arduous task oi transmuting into modern English verse the wit and poetrj oi ilw - .in. Icnta riir undertaking was "n> - foi which, from his ichoolboj days, he had shown a special taste and apt iin.i, 1 1 is eai liei ex pei intents in translation are thus described bj Mti Norton "In April, 1808, Southey v\ rites lo S< oil 'l saw Imtiv in I ondon, ■ | .. •• m,,,mi •'■■ I ii-- ol Byron," vol l\ pp i |8 nnd 1 1" "i,u,r. to Mi Miui.n oi I. in loth, -'-iii. sao Fob tit, , I and he has promised to lei mo print Ins translations from the " Poems del Cid." they are admirably done Indeed, 1 nevei sa>& anyth fficult to do, and i excellently, except youi supple ment to Sii ti istrem.' ' rhese tra ap peared in I - \ >pend \ to Southey's 'Chronicle ol the Cid,' and e .»ll t lu- praise that Southey w> them, Mi ricknor, in lu^ 'Histon ol bpanish 1 iterature,' quotes some pa from them, and chara< Mi Erci ■ the most accomplished scholars England lus produced, and one whom Sii Mackintosh has p^ Bounced to be the first of English translal Frcre's excellence as .t translatoi had, indeed, been exhibited at .1 very early age, In Ellis' mens oi the Earl) English poets,' which first ap ■ Anglo Saxon Ode on v. helstans \ ven in the original, with a literal trans lation, to which is subjoined a metrical v< supplied, says Mi i ''•••. ' by the kindness of a friend ' This friend was the young Frere, and Mr, Ellis adds; ' Hus [version] was written several years ago, during ilu x controversy occasioned by the poems attributed to Rowley, and was intended as an imi tation ol the style and language oi the fourteenth century, rhereadei will probably heai with some surprise that this singulai instance ol critical ingc nuit) was the composition ol an Eton school boj \ an example of skilful adoption ol the language and style of an earlj period, this version is not less remarkable, undei the circumstances, than the com- positions ol Chatterton, 'It is, 1 says Mackintosh, in his 'Historj ol England,' 'a double Imitation, 1 South*) adds, " i do not betteva that man) men have .i greatei commando! language and versification than myself, and yet tlu-> i.»siv ol gi\ in;-, .i specimen ol that wonderful poem l ihrunk from fearing the difficulty." Southe] to waltai ScOtt, April I tnd, tl 176 MEMOIR OF unmatched perhaps in literary history, in which the writer gave an earnest of that faculty of catching the peculiar genius, and preserving the character- istic manner, of his original, which, though the spe- cimens of it be too few, places him alone among English translators.' And Scott, in his ' Essay on Imitation of the Ancient Ballads,' written in 1830, and published in the 'Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border,' says : ' I have only met, in my researches into these matters, with one poem, which, if it had been produced as ancient, could not have been de- tected on internal evidence. It is the "War Song upon the Victory at Brunnanburg, translated from the Anglo-Saxon into Anglo-Norman," by the Right Honourable John Hookham Frere.' " At the time of the publication of ' Sir Tristrem,' in 1804, Frere expressed a cordial admiration for the performance ; and George Ellis wrote to Scott that Frere, ' whom you would delight to know, and who would delight to know you,' has ' no hesitation in saying that he considers " Sir Tristrem " as by far the most interesting work that has as yet been pub- lished on the subject of our earliest poets, and, indeed, such a piece of literary antiquity as no one could have, d priori, supposed to exist.' To this Scott answers : ' Frere is so perfect a master of the ancient style of composition, that I would rather have his suffrage than that of a whole synod of your vulgar antiquaries.' " In translating the ancient Spanish poem of the Cid, Frere was thus at work in a field of which he was doubly master. The full merit of his versions is hardly to be understood without acquaintance with the archaic vigour and simplicity of the ori- ginal, and the peculiarities of its diction and versi- fication. . . . " There is probably no classic author of whose works a good translation is more difficult than Aris- tophanes. The wonderful combination of widely JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 177 different qualities which he exhibits in his comedies, — the knowledge of human nature, the insight into affairs, the solid sense, the fertile invention, the daring fancy, the inexhaustible humour, the pro- digious exaggeration, both in invention and in language, which, even in its wildest and most amusing excesses, displays the controlling influence of the finest taste, and of native elegance of mind, the keen irony, the vehement invective, the serious purpose under the comic mask, — demand, if theplays are to be fitly rendered, a scarcely less wonderful combination of powers in the translator ; while the exquisite form of the poetry, the melody of the various rhythm, and the frequent change in the versification, modulated according to each change in tone of sentiment, require for their reproduction in another far less flexible language, with another and far poorer system of metres, not only a consummate mastery of the forms of verse, but also a vocabulary in the highest degree pure, racy, and idiomatic." 1 Mr. Norton then refers to Mr. Frere's article on Mitchell's Aristophanes, in the Quarterly Review of July, 1820, 2 of which he gives a summary, and 1 "North American Review," ubi sitpra, p. 160. 8 "Talked of Aristophanes. I mentioned the admirable article upon Aristophanes in the "Quarterly" two or three years ago. Sharpe remembered it also, and thought it alto- gether perfect." (Moore's "Journals," vol. ii. p. 265, Jan. 30, 1819.) The article here referred to, which will be found re- printed in the second volume, was Mr. Frere's only con- tribution to the " Quarterly." He had been one of the original projectors of the Review, when it was started by the late Mr. Murray in 1807, with promises of support from Walter Scott, Canning, Southey, and others of the best writers on the Tory side of politics, and with Gifford as editor. Mr. Frere thought that Gifford exceeded the legitimate discretion of an editor in omitting from the Review of Mitchell's Aris- tophanes an example which was intended to show how it was possible to treat modern English social life and politics dramatically, in the same spirit in which Aristophanes treated the social life and politics of Athens four hundred years before X 178 MEMOIR OF observes that the principle of generalization in translation, which Mr. Frere there lays down, " is obviously one which can be safely adopted only by a genius corresponding in quality to that of the original. Few writers could hope to apply it suc- cessfully even in the translation of an author far less difficult than Aristophanes. " But Mr. Frere's genius was sufficient for the task, and his translations of Aristophanes are the proof of the soundness of his rule, as Tie was capable of applying it. They are works of the best literary art. They reproduce the essential, permanent characteristics of the Aristophanic comedy in such a manner that from their perusal the English reader not only may obtain a truer conception of the genius of the Athenian playwright than any but the most intelligent and thorough students of the original derive from the Greek itself, but also finds himself charmed with the plays as pieces of English com- position, and contributions to English comedy. Frere was so complete a master of both languages, he entered so sympathetically into the spirit of Aris- tophanes, was so well versed in the learning re- quisite for understanding the allusions in which his comedies abound, and he possessed so fully the humour and feeling needed to appreciate their most fleeting, remote, and delicate touches of poetry and our era. The specimen was set up in type, and a proof was in existence many years after ; but I have failed to discover any further trace of it. Two other articles, on Pitt and Fox, have been attributed to Mr. Frere ; but I am assured, on the unquestionable authority of my friend, Mr. John Murray, that they were written by the late Sir Robert Grant. They were among the earliest published writings of that elegant scholar and lamented statesman, and were also among the first of those political articles which, to our own day, have maintained for the " Quarterly " an historical reputation. The article on Aristophanes is signed " W." (for Whistlecraft), probably one of the first instances of a reviewer signing his contri- bution. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 179 of wit, — he was, in fine, such a scholar and such a poet, that the very difficulties of his task seem to present themselves only to be happily overcome. As a contribution to literature, his versions of these plays stand unmatched. 1 Their value is greatly increased, moreover, by the comment, which is sometimes in the form of brief side-notes and stage- directions, and sometimes in that of longer notes, inserted in the text, for the purpose of illustration and explanation. These notes are of the best sort, and really assist the reader to intelligent enjoyment of the plays, enabling him to read them, as it were, through the eyes and with the keen perceptions of the most sympathetic of spectators." Coleridge writes to Crabb Robinson, in June, 18 1 7, inviting him and Tieck to Highgate : "I should be most happy to make him and that admir- able man, Mr. Frere, acquainted. Their pursuits have been so similar ; and to convince Mr. Tieck that he is the man among us in whom Taste at its maximum has vitalized itself into productive power — Genius, you need only show him the incompar- able translation annexed to Southey's ' Cid ' (which, by the bye, would perhaps give Mr. Tieck the most 1 A critic in the "Pall Mall Gazette" for November 29, 1867, in an article on Rudd's Aristophanes, says, with reference to Mitchell's translation : — " Mr. Hookham Frere made it the subject of a most admirable essay in the ' Quar- terly,' which contains more valuable reflection on the principles of translation generally than will be found anywhere within the same compass. . . . His own versions of some of the plays . . . not only excel all that Mitchell had done, and all that Walsh or Wheelwright had done in the interval, but placed him in the very first rank of translators of the world. Indeed, Frere is the true standard by which to test everybody who ventures on the same ground. Apart from the extra- ordinary merit of his literary execution, he enters into the dramatic spirit of the plays with the sympathetic insight of a spectator. He succeeded with Aristophanes by dint of being himself Aristophanic in politics, in humour, in poetry, and in scholarship." 180 MEMOIR OF favourable impression of Southey's own powers), and I would finish the work off by Mr. Frere's ' Aristophanes.' In such goodness, too, as both my Mr. Frere (the Rt. Hon. J. H. Frere) and his brother George (the lawyer, in Brunswick Square) live, move, and have their being in, there is Genius." 1 None of these translations were however printed, and but few of them were completed for many years afterwards. They were taken up from time to time, at intervals of leisure, during the unsettled life which he led before he finally took up his resi- dence in Malta. In 1818, Lady Erroll, while "visiting the new rooms built at the British Museum for the Elgin marbles," had caught a severe cold, from the effects of which she never entirely recovered. After try- ing various changes of air to Brompton 2 and the coast, Mr. Frere settled for a short time at Tun- bridge Wells, whence in a letter dated November ioth, 1818, to his brother George, Lady Erroll writes : — " You must not look for us nor think at all about us until you hear we are at Blake's Hotel. We are almost packed up, in short, as packed up as any people can be while they still sleep in a house ; but there has been some interruption, which is always 1 Crabb Robinson, vol. ii. p. 57. In a letter to Mr. Heber, written in 181 7, Mr. Frere says : " I am sorry that I shall not be able to attend the club to-morrow . . . any other engagement I would have put off for the sake of giving Bozzy a white ball. I cannot give you any more precise direction as to Tieck's habitation at Oxford ; but I should hope that anybody there would not be at a loss to find him out." 2 Mr. W. Turner, writing from the Foreign Office, in Sept. 18 1 7, to Mr. Bartle Frere, says : "Your eldest [brother] has a delicious little house at Brompton, in which I called on him, and he comes sometimes, though rarely, to the Office ; Gloucester Lodge is his chief resort. He is there perpet- ually." JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 181 a bad thing when one has settled a journey — one day put off, puts off several. Mr. Canning stopped us on Saturday, as he said he might come for a day, and on the Monday a note arrived to say he would be here at five o'clock, and accordingly he arrived, and made my dear husband very happy. They were both in great good humour with each other, and I left them early in the evening to go to Mrs. Chaloner's, where we were to have had our farewell dinner that day, and the two friends en- joyed each other much the whole evening, and were, I believe, much obliged to me for having left them. Canning went off to Brighton yesterday, sent on his chaise, had his riding-horse walked after him, while he and your brother walked half the first stage together. Think what a walk his poor dear excel- lency had had, — I believe fourteen miles, — and he came back not in the least tired. . . It was quite pleasant to see how happy these two friends were together on Sunday. Canning was in good spirits, and in very good humour." The following lines, which have not, as far as I can learn, been published, appear to have been written about this time. They were repeated to me as a versification, by Mr. Frere, of a letter which Mr. Canning showed him, received by a lady, who had been applied to for a servant's character. Another copy attributes them to Mr. Canning, as his rendering of a conversation, at which he hap- pened to be present, between two ladies — " Wanted a Maid to make herself generally useful. " The person I hired would first be required On me as my maid to attend ; Then my measure to take, and my mantuas to make, And those of the Colonel to mend. My new bombazeen she must wash very clean, With my muslins and fine what-d'ye-call-its ; My silk hose in a tub she must lather and scrub, And when she's done mine, Col. P 's. 1 82 MEMOIR OF House linen and stores, and tradespeople's scores, She must note in a neat little book ; And when company comes she must do butter'd crumbs, And make pastry instead of the cook. She at nothing must stickle, young gherkins must pickle, And if housemaids of work shall complain, Up stairs she must clamber, clean out the best chamber, Then back to her pickling again. There's a housekeeper's room, but she must not presume To pop her pert visage within it ; If strange servants are there, and will hand her a chair, She may then just sit down for a minute. If for this she engages, besides her year's wages, (Though no stipulation I make it), If the winter prove hard, an old gown's her reward, — In summer she'll chiefly go naked." No change of climate to be found in England seemed permanently to benefit Lady Erroll's health. In October, 1819, Mr. George Frere writes of his brother as " thinking of taking his wife abroad to avoid the suffering of last winter," and in August, 1820, he describes her as "very ill again, and my brother quite out of heart about her. Canning " (who had been staying with them) " is going away to-morrow, and my brother has asked me not to leave him. He wishes me to go into the City to see about ships." A few days later he writes that "a ship is engaged," the " Sicily," Captain Cupper, who undertook to visit such ports, and to stay as long at each of them, as Mr. Frere might require, and they sailed for the Mediterranean soon after, Mr. Frere's unmarried sister and a niece of Lady Erroll accompanying them. The voyage answered its main purpose, and after a short stay at Lisbon, they proceeded to the Medi- terranean. From Palermo he wrote to his brother George on November 15th, 1820 : — " Susan tells me that she has written to you, but that her letter is a fortnight old. You will not, JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 183 therefore, be sorry to hear that we have been going on well up to this date. " My Lady yesterday got a little cold, but we are used to these occasional interruptions in her re- covery. She is better to-day, and is at this moment chatting in very great spirits with Susan. We have seen all the things of which Susan has told you, and about a week ago took my Lady ashore, with the sailors carrying her sofa, to see a magnificent house and gardens, made about twenty years ago, on the side of the mountain at the entrance of the harbour. 1 It might now be bought for about a twentieth part of what it cost ; such is the state of things here. The Neapolitans are ramming their revolution down the throats of the people here, and will never rest till they have ruined and confiscated and enslaved the whole island. There are no Eng- lish here except the resident merchants, and we get no news, except now and then a sight of " Gali- gnani" papers printed at Paris. We have seen pretty nearly all that is to be seen here. I had intended to go to Segesta, where there is a very perfect temple, like those at Paestum, and as old ; but from what I hear of the state of the country, I shall not venture. This place has spoilt me for Malta, but go I must." In the extracts from his letters which follow, I have been obliged, as a rule, to curtail all that is of merely domestic or family interest; but I have done so with some hesitation and regret, for such portions of his letters illustrate in a remarkable degree the kindliness of his nature, and his unfailing sympathy 1 The Belmonte Palace on a hill at the foot of Monte Pele- grino overlooking the harbour. Mr. Frere seems to have been at one time inclined to settle at Palermo rather than at Malta. One reason for finally preferring Malta was the very •characteristic one, that as he drew his pension from England, he felt bound, if possible, to live where it would be spent among British subjects. 184 MEMOIR OF with the cares and trials, as well as the intellectual pursuits, of all with whom he had any ties of kin- dred or friendship. Almost every letter he wrote to any intimate friend or member of his own family bears witness to his constant solicitude for his wife's health. Every change was watched with affectionate anxiety ; and how best to minister to her comfort and happiness was, up to the day of her death many years afterwards, the one ruling motive of all his thoughts and actions. Arrived at Malta, he wrote a long letter to his brother George, in April, 1821. After some excel- lent advice regarding the college allowance of the son of a literary friend, to whom he wished to give every chance of University distinction, but who, he feared, might, if he found his life too easy, be di- verted from his good resolutions "eniti per ardua," he relates that they had a rough passage from Syra- cuse, but that Lady Erroll was better, and sends a message " that she was on deck, and had seen Malta at last." Her niece and his sister, he said, "had already established themselves in a very good house,, which the General, Sir Manly Power, has allotted to me, and which I have furnished with exquisite cheapness. I have taken another house for the summer — a very good one for ^40. It is close upon the water, and will enable us to promenade in a boat, if we can do no better;" and here, with very little intermission, he passed the remaining twenty- five years of his life. To Dr. Young, who had been both a professional and literary friend, he wrote soon after his arrival : — " Malta, May 23rd, 1821. " My dear Young, " I send you something of a curiosity, a fac- simile of an inscription found at Syracuse a few years ago, and now in the possession of the anti- JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 185 quarian Capodieci. I can have no doubt of its authenticity from external evidence, the notoriety of the circumstance of its discovery in rebuilding an old house in the quarter of the town formerly inha- bited by the Jews, the no price which was paid for it by its present possessor, and the little value which he seemed to attach to it ; so little, that I believe, with a little coaxing and a few dollars, I might have got possession of it, if I had thought it fair to carry away from the place a monument which so pecu- liarly belonged to it. He did not know, nor did I, till I came here, and had an opportunity of refer- ring to Pindar, that the lines were to be found in one of the Olympic odes ; it was rather a disappoint- ment to me, the lines being manifestly Pindaric, and as such above the reach, I think, of forgery ; whereas, now the external evidence (as above stated) is the only proof, though a fully convincing one to me, for Capodieci is at war with all his brother antiquaries at Syracuse, who would not have failed to attack him if there had been any the least suspi- cion of a forgery ; indeed they hardly seemed to have troubled themselves about it, or to have thought more of it than the proprietor himself. Capodieci is a very extraordinary man, a most zealous and indefatigable antiquary, and has filled above sixty volumes in folio with antiquarian re- searches and transcripts of records and documents (of the middle ages chiefly), which he has presented to the public library. But he is by no means what we should call a classical scholar; the mere circum- stance of character, therefore, would be enough to remove from my mind any suspicion of forgery. The original is in the inside of the covering of a sarcophagus made of baked clay. Several of the same size and form, and serving for the same pur- pose, are to be met with in Syracuse ; but no other, that ever I heard of, has been found with an inscrip- tion. I should imagine it to be older than the 186 MEMOIR OF Roman conquest of Sicily. The cursive character, which is its great peculiarity, is evidently alluded to by Aristophanes, as used in taking notes in courts of justice and in debate; but I believe there is no specimen existing of the antiquity which seems to belong to this relic. When you have shown it to the few people in town who take an interest in such matters, I will thank you to send it to Cambridge, to my brother, and Professor Monk, or either of them. 1 My doctor has written so fully and so clearly on our medical matters, that I have nothing to add on that score. "Believe me, dear doctor,- yours ever, "J. H. FRERE." The following, dated Malta, March 31st, 1822, is to his brother Bartle : — " I have only a moment to anticipate the sailing of the packet, but I will not omit thanking you for two letters, one of which I cannot at this moment lay my hands on, but which I remember related to Southey's history. I perfectly agree with you in the good taste and good sense of avoiding all con- troversial matters. Ob yaq ia-Qxov Kixi^avovtri ke^to/aeiv J57' avopacn." And I hope that if there is anything of the kind 1 The inscription consists of the first four lines of the fifth antistrophe of the sixth Olympic ode : — EiTTov $£ fj-ifA-vaa-Qai LvpaKovtrav te Jtai Oprwylag' Tav 'iEpaiv na.9a.pa! trKa-Tfrca Sisirtev, "Apna /xr)$6[A.evog, ^oivMowei^av AfAtyiiru AafAarpa. "KivKnarov te Ouj/arpof loprav. Thus translated by Moore : — " Bid them remember Syracuse and sing Of proud Ortygia's throne, secure In Hiero's rule, her upright king; With frequent prayer he serves and worship pure The rosy-sandal'd Ceres, and her fair Daughter, whose car the milk-white steeds impel." * " For it is not right to find fault with our dead heroes." JOHN HOOK HAM FRERE. 187 (which I greatly deprecate) it will be known that I at least had no concern in it. I am glad you are satisfied with Hamilton. I only wish he could tempt you to pay him a visit. Why should you not go to see Rome and Florence, and Naples ? it is what most gentlefolks do now-a-days, and then, perhaps, you would come and give a look at us here in Malta. It will be a long time before the Span- iards acknowledge the independence of America, and I suppose we shall not send a real Envoy or Ambassador there till they do. I have kept your secret, except only and solely to my Lady. As to the thing, 1 I think the first consideration is your health. Peru or Mexico or Chili would do well, but you must not go to die of a yellow fever among the Columbians and Cundinarcans. For the rest, to be a notoriously ill-requited servant of the State, may not be an unsafe situation in the times which are manifestly coming on, and for which we ought all to prepare ourselves." The following is from an undated letter to his brother Bartle, but apparently written in the same year (1822) : — " I wish you would send the enclosed to Southey with a civil note, and such papers from my Roydon Box as are fit to be comm imitated, relative to the state of things at Seville. As to the controversy in which my name is more concerned, I have taken a resolution to leave it as it lies." His sister writes from the house he had taken in Strada Forni, Valetta, in November, 1822, that he had been suffering from a chill, " but is again well, and fortifies himself by taking some exercise, and wearing coat within coat of flannel. He has actually determined to ride, which will be an excellent thing for him, and I do suppose he will mount soon, for 1 Apparently, an offer of employment as Minister to one of the South American States. 188 MEMOIR OF the horse has been really brought ready saddled for him once, by his own order ! . . . We spent all yesterday at a Maltese wedding, and were all much diverted. My brother was there, very joyous and agreeable." Mr. Canning had complained of the infrequency of his letters, and his brother Bartle had charged him with neglecting his translation of Aristophanes. In reply to the latter accusation, he said, " I have not yet been able to turn my mind to Aristophanes, but — when the packet is gone — and my Lady gets a little better — and I have finished my task of bottling in the cellar, I will set to work, I will indeed." This promise seems to have been faithfully kept ; for he writes to his brother George from Malta, January, 1823 : — " I have sent you the translation of the ' Knights ' by Montgomery, whom I wish to introduce to your acquaintance and friendship, of which he is well worthy. It will serve to amuse you, and the copy will be safe if Lizzy does not lose it. " Lord C is not a ruffian or a ragamuffin by any means, but a very honourable well-mannered young man, rather too high-spirited for his situa- tion, and too much disposed to act upon impulse ; at least, having seen a good deal of him, I could never find out any other faults that he had, and I believe him to be very free from scandalous or de- grading vices. His pecuniary difficulties are not of his own creating, but arise from his father's treatment of him, yet I never heard him speak of his father otherwise than with respect. " If I had an heiress to dispose of, I should think her lucky to meet with no worse a match." On March 28th, 1823, he wrote : — " I have wasted my time in a letter to William upon the Paston Letters, 1 which has barely left me 1 This refers to a project which he had frequently pressed JOHN HOOKHAM PRE RE. 189 a minute to thank you for your attention to my in- terests in the New River shares." A few days later he added, with reference to his wife's health : — " I have just written to Temple a letter, in which I say, ' from the experience of the last six months, I must conclude that our joint return to England is hopeless, my wish therefore to find a tenant for Roydon is increased by the mortification which she feels at a house being kept up, upon a prospect of the only event which would render it possible for me to inhabit it, but which, in fact, I should not on his brother William, to edit and publish all of the Paston letters which had not already been printed. Sir John Fenn, in the first edition of the letters which he published in 1786-9, in 4 vols., had selected chiefly those which referred to events of some historical importance. The originals of most of these Sir John had bound, and presented, with his presentation copy of the printed letters, to George III., but some of the MS. volumes appear to have been subsequently lost, as they were not to be found when the King's Library was many years afterwards transferred to the British Museum by order of George IV. After Lady Fenn's death, many of her husband's MSS. came into the possession of her nephew and heir, Mr. Serjeant (William) Frere, and among them some of the origi- nal Paston letters which had not been published by Sir John Fenn, apparently because they had little reference to politics and events of historical importance. But Mr. Frere con- sidered that the circumstance of their dealing mainly with the domestic household affairs of a country gentleman's family in times before the Tudors gave them a peculiar interest, and he urged the propriety of publishing them. He remarked of such letters that, apart from any historical importance they may possess as illustrating particular events, they have a value of their own, as showing how little, except in externals, the details of private life have altered in the class to which the writers belonged ; and how much in essentials, in its friendships and its feuds, in its plans for advancing family interests by marriages, by inheritances, by thrift, and by energetic pursuit of a profession, the life of a squire's family in Lancastrian times, resembled that of our own days. His suggestion was in part carried out by the publication, in 1823, • of a fifth volume. I go MEMOIR OF wish to inhabit in that case. M , I am told, is looking out for a house in the country, and I should be very glad to give him a lease of it, and you would not perhaps be sorry to have him for a neighbour. I am writing to George upon the sub- ject ;' and so I do, you see." He then discusses the terms of lease, half play- fully, half in earnest, and sundry possible additions and alterations, of which he sends a plan, calculated to give the house more and warmer rooms, "and I constitute William (Stewart) Rose the architect thereof," ending with — " I have made two new rooms, because on paper they cost nothing. And now, my dear, you will be glad to hear that my poor Lady is a little better, and I hope we may got a little strength this sum- mer, but I reallydread the winter even here, though the one before last we managed to get through very tolerably." In the June following, he wrote : — " In the meantime, as Captain Cupper (who took us out) is returned here, and now in a long quaran- tine, we propose (if he can get a freight to Mar- seilles) to take a jaunt there, which I think may be of service to her. I find that Susan and she think it quite a natural and easy thing that you should travel all the way for the sake of seeing us. I should not dare to think of mentioning it. But if Bartle, who has his time and money, I hope, to spare, should happen to be at Paris, I think he will receive a letter stinking of brimstone and dated quarantine, to inform him of our arrival, and point- ing out to him the conveniences and advantages of a journey of six hundred miles and back in the hot weather. " As to the disposal of my time, I have taken a fancy to learn as much Hebrew as may enable me to get through the two or three words which one meets with in a note, and which it is a mortification JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 191 to be obliged to pass over in ignorance. I have found one very curious thing already, viz., that their measure of syllabic quantity must have been much more accurate and distinct than that of the Greeks, or at least than that which the Greek grammarians have given us ; and I rind many things, which had occurred to me obscurely in my habit of verse- making, reduced to a regular system. If I had a fancy to learn Arabic, it would have been an easy matter, for it walks the streets. Young Roper has made a great progress in it, and here is a young lady of seventeen who is studying it with great success. Susan has half a mind to learn a little Hebrew, it" you please. * * My Lady is reading Madame de Sevigne backwards and forwards. I cannot bear her, for it is clear to me from her let- ters, that when her son was at the arm}-, she would not have been sorry to hear that he had been shot. ' Mon his est a 1'armee du Roi, e'est-a-dire a la gueule du loup — comme les autres.' You see that this is her company-phrase, the proper conversa- tional cant, and this she sends in a letter to her daughter." In the course of the sea-trip, which had been proposed when this letter was begun, they visited Naples, whence his sister wrote of the great enjoy- ment he had found in excursions to Paestum, Salerno, and Amalfi ; and in the society of Mr. Hamilton, and many amusements and occupations which were not within his reach at Malta. After his return to Malta in March, 18J4, writing on affairs connected with his property in Suffolk, he observes : — " It is not, however, a business which can be dis- cussed or settled at this distance. I feel that for other businesses I ought to be in England, but when and how it can be managed is a puzzling question. My Lad}-, I am afraid, could never bear the climate even in summer, and three or four months of ab- 192 MEMOIR OF sence would, in her eyes, be a grievous deduction from her remaining- comforts. " We will talk of other matters. My Lady said she had told you that I had done another play of Aristophanes. It is the ' Acharnians ' translated from beginning to end, at least it will be in two or three days. I hope to be able to send it you by some safe conveyance. I wish I could get from Bulmer, the printer, a copy of what is already printed of the ' Frogs.' I have got no copy, and I should like to have two or three. "Did I thank John for his Whistlecraftian flight, the 'Titano-Machia' ? I will send him in return some English hexameters of my own, of the right sort, without false quantities, all about Malta, at least they begin about Malta. " It is Shrove Monday, and there is not a servant in the house to take the letters, and Susan is shout- ing and ringing after them, and the boys hallooing and blowing horns in the street. It is a perfect Barthelemy Fair. Oh, there is somebody at last. But we are too late, and have to pay." A long business letter, dated Malta, April, 1824, discusses at great length, and with wonderful hu- mour, acuteness, and cleverness, a number of ques- tions relating to his property, which he wished to consolidate and clear of various old burdens, " for the purpose," as he expresses it, " of annulling, can- celling, and confounding" an old mortgage. He makes constant reference to his wife's opinion : — " And so likewise thought my Lady, who is wiser than anybody You will think perhaps that I ought to come over and look after my own concerns like a man, but with the care of so frail a life, I cannot bring myself to subtract so much from its remaining comforts by absenting myself for any time, but perhaps, if you report progress, I may run over for six weeks. You will receive from Captain Cupper a pipe of Syracuse wine, the wine is a JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 193 present of mine, but you will have to pay freight and duty. We think it very good here, and drink it with great comfort and satisfaction." On June 23rd, 1824, he again writes to his brother George : — " I will not trouble you with business this time, but will thank you for three copies of the ' Frogs,' which came safe to hand. I should like to have the second volume of Mitchell and the trans- lation of the ' Birds ' by Cary, the translator of Dante, if I were not ashamed of giving you so much trouble who have so many other things to do. Susan says that the verses from the ' Cid,' that is to say, the copy of them which I intended to send to you, is hers, and that she will send it to Lizzy, and she is doing so, I believe, at this mo- ment ; perhaps Lizzy will let you have a sight of them ; if she should, pray observe how well the Cid manages to leave off with the laugh on his own side, when he is baffled by the Count's obstinacy, the dry humour with which the Bishop's character and appointment are mentioned is not at all exag- gerated, and the motive of doing it for public effect is quite as clear in the original. Observe too the wild state of the country, the King with his Court moving about, and the messenger riding in search of him. Observe the real arrogance of Minaya's first address to the King, studiously clothed in all the forms of the most abject submission, and com- pare it with his modern respectful courtly style, when the King has shown himself favourably dis- posed. But I have not told you about my Lady, who has not been very well, which I am inclined to attribute to a long continuance of Sirocco winds, we still however go about in the carriage of an evening, and I mean in a day or two to try airing in a boat, which has in general agreed with her. We shall likewise make an excursion to Gozo for change of air. As this is a literary letter hitherto, I will O 194 MEMOIR OF send you some of my hexameters, all that are written out. Observe that hexameters (having six musical bars in one verse) are to be read very slow, one of them should occupy the time of a common English couplet." Another long letter on business later in the same year, laments his distance from England, " three months between question and answer," and ends — " I have been amusing her (Lady Erroll) and myself for the last fortnight with scenes of Aristo- phanes — the ' Birds.' You recollect, I think, some part of it being done at Tunbridge, the scene where Iris is arrested and brought before Peisthetairus. It is a very long play and tedious in some parts, which may be omitted with advantage, but I have done about 1,200 lines of it, which in my humble opinion are excellent. The ' Acharnians ' you will have a copy of by the first fair opportunity. It is fairly transcribed and complete." In a letter written in October of the same year in reply to remonstrances against what seemed an unnecessary act of liberality, he writes : — " Therefore your caution and Bartle's against a sudden propensity to largess, does not apply in this case. Your prohibition of fooleries in the form of medals, pictures, &c. &c. is a very just one, and I trust that a growing indifference to that sort of trumpery will enable me to comply with it. They are the proper playthings for a childless old fool, who looks to surviving for a year, or a year and a half, after his death, in the sensation which his sale catalogue is to produce among the connois- seurs. The immortality of men of taste and re- finement !" In October of the same year he wrote : — " My Lady's letter will have told you graphically (which is the great beauty of her letters — I hope you keep them) how much I was pleased at the completion of this, and the other concerns for which JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 195 I am indebted to your care and industry. I trust, however, that my anticipation of being an old hunks is rather likely to be frustrated than fulfilled by this change in my affairs, my thoughts about money were directed to one point, and, now it is accomplished, I hope I shall not be exposed to the temptation of looking out for another " My plan against the future declension of the family is the best, namely, that we should all go in a body to colonize, and form a clan at the Cape, or Van Diemen's Land. What say you ? I am sure Ned would like it, and Hatley. Bartle would go for a lounge, and we should persuade him to stay with us. My Lady says she has no objection. I could take out my books and endeavour to put a little literature into the rising generation, and in the mean time lend money upon good security at six per cent., a great inducement, by the bye, for Bartle to remain with us " I thank you for Cary's ' Birds,' it is much better than Mitchell's translations. Mais ce nest pas encore la bonne. Nobody has yet seen the true character of Peisthetairus." In another letter, referring to iron works, written in December, 1824, he observes : — " It seems to me that the iron masters are ani- mated by the activity of the new markets. They do not consider that, except in the case of a country rapidly increasing in wealth and population, the annual demand for iron is not like that for other articles. The consumer of iron is not like the con- sumer of salt fish or of printed cottons ; he con- sumes very slowly. It is a long time before his poker and gridiron are worn out. In a stationary country when it is once stocked with iron at a low rate, the future demand (except in instances where iron may be made applicable to new purposes) will be much inferior to the first. Hence, I fear that our speculators will experience another re-action, 196 MEMOIR OF their only hope is in the prospect of general peace, and increasing population and wealth throughout the world, a state of things for which I sincerely pray, but on the chance of which I should be very sorry to trust my security. And now, my dear George, I have worried and jawed long enough." In September, 1825, he paid a short visit to England. He greatly enjoyed the opportunity this afforded for a brief renewal of his personal intercourse with Mr. Canning and with others of his early friends. Unfortunately few letters rela- ting to this period have been preserved, but there are elders of the present generation who remember the vivid impression made on them in youth by the humour and playful fancy which rendered him as great a favourite with children as with those of his own age. Crossing the Continent was in those days a very tedious business, and only preferable to the monthly sailing packets, whose six-weeks' voyages, inter- minable delays, and occasional deviations, when blown out of their direct course, as far as to the Banks of Newfoundland, are a constant subject of complaint in the Malta letters. Mr. Frere made some stay at Paris, to meet his sister, Lady Orde, who was on the Continent. There was no regular or direct communication between France and Malta, and his sister Susan writes that Lady Erroll was "long unhappy about him, but hopes now that the journey will do away the ill effects of the climate of Malta, and having been long without amusement and society ; and that he may be recruited so entirely that she shall have no fear of his not being able to remain with her here for as long a time as her health may require a warm climate." .... " I am glad," she adds, " there was a meeting in such force at Roydon. It seems to me more like a dream than a reality, when I think it is ten years JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 197 since my brother was there ; he must have found the trees grown to his heart's content, and I hope he was well pleased with all he found ; he writes as if he did like every thing. I doubt the books can- not be kept in very good order in that large damp room, now there is no one at leisure as I was to look after and air them." In telling his brother, soon after he reached England, of his intention of paying this visit to Roydon, he had sent kindly messages to his friend Lady Margaret Cameron and her daughters, adding, " I am afraid Lady Margaret will think that some- body is trying to repeat your trick " [of passing him- self off as a stranger] " upon her, for I am grown woefully thin." A letter from his brother Edward's wife describes him while on a visit to their cottage near Bath in November, 1825, as little aged by his long sojourn at Malta. He took his night's rest chiefly by sleeping early in the evening, from " seven till eleven, and then he has awoke, and entertained his brother and nieces by repeating verses which he has translated or com- posed, till two o'clock in the morning," which did not prevent his rising early next day. A reading of "King Lear," with a running commentary to prove that the story was founded on a Celtic myth, in which Cordelia, the only faithful child, symbolized the true religion, is noted as the subject of one of these evening dissertations. In September of the next year all the brothers who were able met to take leave of him at Mr. Bartle Frere's house in Savile Row. It was the last family gathering of his generation. Shortly afterwards he left England and travelled vid Italy, accompanied by his brother Bartle and their friend Mr. Montgomerie. In August, 1827, he lost, by the unexpected death of Mr. Canning, the warmest, most intimate, and most congenial friend of his youth and early man- 198 MEMOIR OF hood, and his one great link of interest to the politics of the day. The depth of his unselfish fraternal affection for Mr. Canning was apparent even to comparative strangers whenever, during the many years he survived his friend, Canning's name was mentioned ; and it is not surprising, that he had little toleration for those, whose desertion, as he considered it, of Pitt's rightful political heir, hastened not remotely the loss to England of the one man whom he thought capable of guiding the nation at a most important crisis. Many years afterwards, when the personal motives of all concerned had become matters of history, he maintained that it was clearly the duty of those members of Lord Liverpool's cabinet who refused to join Mr. Canning, either to have accepted the king's offer and to have made a stand on an anti-Catholic policy, without Canning ; or, if they thought that impossible, to have joined Canning in giving effect to a policy for removing the Roman Catholic disabilities, which, in his hands alone, could not have been attributed to intimidation. Their standing aloof, seemed to him inconsistent with a belief in the soundness of their own opinions ; while it left the measure to be extorted from the fears of the nation, instead of being granted as a concession due to its sense of justice. He maintained that had the Duke of Wellington and Sir Robert Peel supported Mr. Canning at this period, the vast changes in the constitution, to which both were subsequently unwilling parties, would have been fewer in number, and might have been introduced with less dangerous rapidity. He found less excuse for the Duke of Wellington than for any of those who acted with him. The Duke's practical good sense and sagacious judgment ought, he thought, to have enabled him to see how inevitable and pressing was the necessity for conceding the claims of the Roman Catholics, and how dangerous JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 199 it was to resist them till they could be resisted no longer. The Duke alone, moreover, was in a posi- tion to put aside all considerations of personal and party prejudice, whether on the part of the king or of minor political personages, and his aid might have lessened the labours and anxieties which wore out Mr. Canning, might have prolonged his admin- istration, and by temperate and wise reforms, such as became true disciples of Pitt, have saved the country from many risks of hasty and revolutionary changes. There were not wanting personal con- siderations which should have inclined the Duke to such a course. " Canning," Mr. Frere said, " was Wellington's greatest support in and out of Parliament through- out the Peninsular War, for he was one of the few who from the very first thoroughly understood the importance of the contest ; and he deserved a better return for his support at that time than he himself afterwards met with, when it was in Wellington's power to have aided him." Speaking of some of the final reforms which Pitt had been forced to lay aside during the stress of the French Revolution, and in answer to a question whether any knowledge of Mr. Canning's views on such subjects had anything to do with the seces- sion of so many of the old Tories, Mr. Frere said : — " No, I do not think Canning ever talked much of such intentions to any but those who were as intimate with him as I was. It was personal feeling of jealousy of his great ability, which actuated most of those who ought, on principle, to have supported him. It was the same kind of feeling with which Pitt often had to contend. I remember old Lord W , the father of the present old Lord, a fine specimen of a thoroughgoing old country Tory, coming to call on my father to tell him that Pitt was out of office, and that Addington had formed a ministry. He went through all the members of 200 MEMOIR OF the new cabinet, and rubbing his hands at the end, with an evident sense of relief, said, ' Well, thank God, we have at last got a ministry without one of those confounded men of genius in it ! ' " Some years after Canning's death, Mr. Frerewas consulted with regard to the inscription to be placed on his monument in Westminster Abbey. The following is his letter in reply to Mr. Backhouse who had sent him the suggested inscriptions with a request that if he did not feel quite satisfied with any of them, he would send one of his own : — "My dear Mr. Backhouse, " I WAS much gratified with your kind recol- lection of me, upon such an occasion as that which gives rise to the letter I have received from you. On reading the inscriptions which have been pro- posed, particularly the one marked A, it seemed to me perfect in its kind. There is nothing to- which a friend of Mr. Canning could object, no- thing which he could complain of as deficient or inadequate, nothing that could give offence to either of our political parties. Notwithstanding all this, I experienced a feeling like your own ; I was not satisfied. But why ? There was nothing which I could have wished altered, nothing which I could have inserted, nothing to be expunged. I confess that I felt bewildered in endeavouring to- account for my own sensation of disappointment. But perhaps, though perfect in its kind, this inscrip- tion is not of a kind suited to the subject. This I take to be the case, — and the true solution of your feelings, and my own. " A character like that of Mr. Canning is not a. theme for prose. " When Nature produces any thing perfect, or nearly approaching to the highest perfection, it becomes a model for the highest branches of art. In painting or sculpture, a perfect form affords a JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 201 model for the ideal ; in such cases we are dissatisfied with a mere prosaic facsimile. Upon the same principle then, since mind can only be delineated by language, the highest perfection of mind requires to be represented by the higher and more artificial form of language — by verse rather than prose. Upon this conviction, I have complied with your suggestion of ' sending an original composition of my own.' Of the principle I have no doubt, but am naturally distrustful of the execution ; not only from the consideration that sexagenary verses are seldom good for much, and that mine are somewhat older, but because I have not had time to grow cool upon them, and to consider them as I should half a year hence. One merit they have, and as you see they claim for themselves — that of perfect truth. There is not a line for which I could not add a voucher. Of the two copies which I have sent, one is reduced to the prescribed dimensions. They have been printed here at the Government press, to save the trouble of transcribing, and to enable you (if you do not yourself disapprove of them) to send copies to the members of the Com- mittee. I should think that the members whom you mention would be disposed to coincide with me in opinion that the appropriate memorial for such a character is verse. He did not belong to the prosaic every-day world ; and in order to speak of him simply and truly, as he was a most mar- vellous and extraordinary person, that form of language must be used which has the privilege of saying extraordinary things without offence. In a prose inscription, I should have been perpetually balancing and embarrassed between the desire of doing justice to the subject, and the apprehension of appearing inflated and exaggerated. Verse is under no such restraint, and (while it engages, voluntarily and gratuitously, to confine itself to truth) is at full liberty to speak the whole truth. 202 MEMOIR OF " I wish I had time to communicate this view of the subject in separate letters to the members of the Committee, particularly Lord Haddington and Lord Morley : the latter is acquainted with Mr. Coleridge, to whose decision, as a critic and meta- physician, I would willingly submit the question of prose or verse. To the same person also, as a poet, I should be glad to submit the verses, not being, as I said before, able to trust to my own judgment of them, or to the impression they have made upon not more than three persons, to whom they have been communicated. " I have sent the longer copy (from which the shorter one is reduced to the prescribed dimen- sions), because the Committee might be disposed to make a different selection, and perhaps a better. The first lines, for instance, might be discarded, and it would begin with, Approved through life, like the most ancient of the Roman epitaphs, Hunc unum plurimi consentiunt Romce optimum fuisse virum. " Again, the four lines describing his rapidity of invention might also be omitted. They were an afterthought on my part, as necessary to a com- plete enumeration of his extraordinary faculties, and the darn, which always marks an ex-post-facto insertion, is (though I have, as you see, been trying to mend it) still visible at the end. The middle line of the last triplet, — When Europe s balance — though a good line, is not quite a perfect rhyme ; it might therefore be omitted, though I should be sorry to lose it. This would reduce the number of lines to twenty-five ; and as verse may be inscribed in lines more closely together, and in smaller charac- ters, than prose, it need not exceed the dimensions of the inscription A. " In a prose inscription, emphasis and transition must be marked by gaps and breaks in a perpen- dicular direction : for verse this is unnecessary ; or, if a new paragraph is to be marked, it is done JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 203 by advancing the line in a horizontal direction. The character also may be smaller, as you may satisfy yourself, if you try to read prose or verse by a very imperfect light, or by the known fact that critics are able to decipher a metrical inscription when in a state of mutilation which would render prose illegible. I am glad to hear that the statue is worthy of the subject, and of such a master of his art as Chantrey. He, I think, would be best pleased with an inscription marking the individuality of the character which he has represented. Of Mr. Canning's political conduct it is surely sufficient to say, what can be said of no other man — that he was at once the favourite of the sovereign and of the people, and that in a time of general peace his death was felt throughout the world as an omen of general danger. To say this, and to be able to say it with truth, is to say every thing. Under all the circumstances, it is more than ever could be said of any other man. " I am inclined to mention a notion which might be worth the consideration of the dean and chapter : — One of the most striking objects in our church here, the great church of St. John, is the magnifi- cence of the pavement, consisting of large slabs of marble inlaid with mosaic ; each slab being the monument of one of the knights or dignitaries of the Order. They are all of the same size, with some diversity of pattern in each, producing on the whole a most harmonious and striking effect. The mural monuments are reserved for the most dis- tinguished persons (I think for the Grand Masters of the Order almost exclusively), whereas in West- minster Abbey the pavement remains perfectly plain and unornamented, while the walls are crowded, rather to the detriment of the appearance of the building. In St. John's this is avoided, and the whole pavement is like a carpeting of rich mosaic. I was thinking that if the long inscription .204 MEMOIR OF were preferred, it might in this way be placed at the foot of the monument, with a border orna- mented in any way, or according to any design that might be preferred, the letters being inlaid so as not to present an uneven surface. Such a stone so inlaid would be executed in this country at a small expense. " As you may perhaps wish to circulate this, I enclose a copy in a more legible hand than my own. Believe me, " My dear Backhouse, " Yours ever sincerely, " Malta, Oct. 27, 1833." " J. H. FRERE." After his return to Malta in 1827, he appears to have resumed his former pursuits, but his letters refer little to them till March, 1828, when he sent his brother Bartle sundry commissions for books and periodicals, among which he specifies some of the early numbers of the "Westminster Review," and says :— - "You had proposed to send me a new foreign Review, which I should have been glad of ; but, instead of it, there has come a quarterly journal of sciences and discoveries, and so forth. I do not dislike it though I do not understand a quarter of it. But I should like to have my foreign Re- view also. " Pray tell Montgomerie that I am heartily glad to hear that he is alive and well, and that the Fred. Montgomery in the Commissariate, who is dead, happens to be another person. I was not aware before of the vital importance which attaches to the proper spelling of his name, a mistake in this instance might have been fatal to him, and in- stances of this kind have been known to occur, particularly in France during the Reign of Terror. If his friends every where else were alarmed for him, his own alarm at seeing his name in the con- demned list must have been extreme. JOHN HOOK HAM FEE RE. 205 " I have been doing some Aristophanes lately, viz. about 400 lines towards completing the ' Birds.' There are about 250 more, which are hardly worth finishing, but I think I shall do them." His sister, who had been to England and re- turned in 1828, accompanied by one of his brother Edward's daughters, describes him in June, 1829, as well, " and much improved of late in spirits, but he has taken for these two days to shutting him- self up to read a large parchment folio printed in double columns in small type upon yellow paper ; in short, a most formidable article, and it makes him formidable, for he will scarcely let me go near, for fear I should expostulate and want him to go out, or at least open his windows." He had hardly been roused from his studies by the advent of Marshal Maison, the French Minister of War, who had visited Malta in the " Didon " frigate, with a large staff, many of them after- wards distinguished among the first French in- vaders of Algiers. In August he wrote to his brother Bartle a very touching letter on the early death of Lady Orde, the wife of a nephew to whom he was much attached, and then proceeds to discuss how they should divide the expenses of another nephew at Haileybury : — " Upon the principle upon which the Count of Benevento offered to defray the expense of the forcible operation to be performed on Dr. Villa- lobos, ' y sea a mi costa para que me haya mas bien a mi'.' Thus you may go shares with me in the merit of learning Hindostanee, of which we shall each obtain a portion vicariously " I am glad to hear of Montgomerie's welfare. I did not send him any commissions to be executed at Paris, indeed I am not disposed, with so many claims upon me, to throw away money upon mere ^curiosity and amusement, and I find it much 206 MEMOIR OF cheaper to read the old books that I have got already, than to send for new ones. Nevertheless you must send me two : Heeren's ' History of Greece,' printed by Hurst and Co., and the ' His- tory of the Hebrew Commonwealth,' a translation from the German, by the same printer. I forgot Clinton's ' Fasti Hellenici,' I think printed by Rivington, which I should also be glad to have. The sheets of the ' Frogs ' are at his service, — I mean Montgomerie's, though there has been rather a long parenthesis between the pronoun and ante- cedent. I am thinking of finishing them, and have got over the most impracticable parts, either by translating or shewing how and why they cannot be translated. " I have read Bourienne and agree with him (Montgomerie again) in liking it much. He seems to have a real zeal for truth. I have also read Madame du Barry, which I must think authentic. tout) fxiVToi Qav/xacrrov . . . rafts yap ilitHv tw Tcavovpyov Kara to (pavepov aft' avouocog OVK Ml W0JU.YIV SV YI/ALV oufte TQ^ixriaai 71 or av. x " The drabs of the Court certainly had a right to be scandalized and astounded at the appearance of a drab so much more stupendous and enormous than any that had ever appeared amongst them before. " Did not Rose desire a copy [of some of Aristo- phanes] for a lady who had fallen in love with them and him ? and has he got one ? If not, and the lady's longing is not over, let her have one by all means." He took a deep interest in the passing of the 1 Aristoph. " Thesmophoriazusae," 520, ed. Bekker : " This indeed is the wonder . . . For I could not have believed that there ever was any woman among us, who would have dared to have said publicly such things so shamelessly." JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 207 Roman Catholic Relief Bill, which became law in April of this year (1829). "It ought," he said, "to have passed long before. Had Pitt lived it would have been passed directly there was breathing time after the great war was ended." A note of a con- versation mentioned in a letter from his niece says, " He expressed great astonishment at the sudden change of opinion in the House of Lords, and added that if his mind had not been made up on the sub- ject thirty years before, he did not think that any- thing that had lately occurred would have convinced him." " It had always appeared to him," he said, " that there were but two possible courses in the present state of things, either excessive severity, or a relaxation of all attempts at coercion ; no middle course would succeed, and arguing merely on the expediency of the measure, without reference to any higher motive, it is surely advisable to try the latter. It is true, that if the Roman Catholics were to break out into actual rebellion, they might nozv be crushed at once ; but experience had taught us the effect of such repression would only last for a time, and thirty years hence a new generation would spring up and would have to be quelled in like manner. " The ancient Romans, who certainly never acted with unnecessary lenity, found themselves obliged to admit the other Italian States to the privileges of Roman citizens. Supposing we were able to con- sult, if not Satan himself, say his namesake and imitator, Nicholas Machiavel ; after explaining the case to him, he would certainly answer, ' It is not two centuries ago since many of your countrymen were sent down here, Ireton and several others, who, I was told, belonged to the Calvinistic party ; have you none of that stuff left ? Cannot you employ one sect against the other ? No feeling of remorse seemed to come across them — they exterminated. This is your only plan. Have you none left whom you could trust with the same system ? What have 208 MEMOIR OF you done with the Calvinists ? ' ' Why, to own the truth, the Calvinists have become philanthropists. In these days, they open Sunday schools, and are promoters of negro emancipation, in short, you would hardly think they were the same sect.' ' In that case you have but one course left, make the Catho- lics a part of the State, and consequently make it their interest to uphold it.'" On September I ith, 1829, he wrote to his brother Bartle :— " I have finished the ' Frogs,' as far as they are capable of being translated, and as soon as they are transcribed (by my amanuensis) shall send you over a copy, and if you would take the trouble of over- looking the press, would print two hundred and fifty copies for distribution among the few who are likely to care for such a work. " In addition to the other works translated from [the] German, which I begged you to send me, I see one on the Dorians, which I should be glad to have. It is translated by a pair of translators (like Niebuhr's work), the name of one of whom is Tuffnell, which was the name of an old class-fellow of mine at Cormick's school. " Susan tells me that she has been writing to you, so I may spare myself the trouble of recollecting whether there is any gossip which you would care to hear. Public news there is none. It is a great pity the Sultan did not make peace while he might have done it with some credit to his new system ; now it must be utterly discredited by the event, and almost impossible to establish to any purpose after such a desengano." This year the opera at Valetta had been started under new and improved management, greatly to the delight of the Malta world. " Mr. Frere," his sister writes, " is the only obstinate despiser of this opera. If there is a comic opera he may perhaps go. This is what he says sometimes with so grave JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 209 a face that I almost believe he is in earnest I wish you " (his brother Bartle,) "were here to read over with my brother his translations. He is quite himself again since he has taken to that work afresh, but he does feel the want of some one who can understand the subject of them and correct errors with him. He says there are many mistakes that a careful review with a friend of competent knowledge would enable him to detect. He is, however, deter- mined to print what he has done to present to his friends. I could almost wish they were to be pub- lished for the benefit of such simpletons as myself; for, independent of their merit as a faithful render- ing of the sense of the original, the lively represen- tation of character, with the play of fancy expressed in such genuine English, choice phraseology, and variety of harmonious measure, makes a very de- lightful reading. There is the spirit and life of an original composition." In a letter of October, 1829, his niece 1 writes, " My uncle Frere is not in good spirits about the state of things in England, and this makes him think of Mr. Canning, and of the loss he was to the country ; to give you an idea of his depression at times, some one in conversation alluded to the feel- ings becoming callous with age ; I said, ' I thought people were often mistaken, for that though the feelings were frequently blunted by age, yet I thought people did not discriminate, and often mis- took for want of feeling the resignation which is the consequence of being impressed with the short- ness of time of separation.' My uncle said, ' You are quite right, I have felt it myself; I think twenty years ago, Canning's death would have caused mine ; as it is, the time seems so short, I do not feel it as I otherwise should.' " 1 Jane Ellinor Arabella, second daughter of his brother Edward. Born 1804, died 1872. P 2io MEMOIR OF In October of this year he received the intelli- gence of the death of his sister the Dowager Lady Orde, " the first inroad which death has made upon our generation of the family," as he said in writing to his brother. In the following March his sister, Miss Frere, writes that " he has been doing more translations from Theognis, prettier, several of them, than the first, of which we sent a copy last mail." Lady Erroll's failing health and increasing weak- ness caused him much anxiety at this time. His sister writes in April, " My brother has walked up with Lady Erroll's sedan as far as the bastion by Lord Hastings' monument, and passed an hour or more in sitting there or pacing up and down, but with this exception he has scarcely moved out of the house for many weeks, nor stirred from his dressing-room till the dinner-hour. However, he seems now in good health, and much interested about the projected emigration from Roydon." In July she mentions his having written to Rossetti a strong dissuasion against publishing an enlarged edition of the " Spirito Antipapale." He had also missed, in reading over Rossetti's "Salterio" as published, some very good lines upon the ambi- tious tyranny of Bonaparte, which had been in the MS. and which he wished had been retained, as showing what were the author's opinions respecting what is to be styled tyranny, and the barrier which separates it from the legitimate restraint of kingly government. The following letters are on the subject of the projected emigration from Roydon to which his sister alludes. The first is to his brother Temple, then Rector of Roydon, and is dated Malta, April 26, 1830 : — " YOU see that I am going to be tedious with malice prepense, as I think Burke says somewhere upon the same occasion of beginning a letter upon JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 211 a long sheet of paper. But there is a piece of intelli- gence in your letter which coincides with views and notions which I have long had in my mind. It seems that emigration has begun from Roydon and the neighbourhood. It is what I had long wished to see, though if I had been there, I should hardly have known how to propose or originate a plan, of which the immediate result is a relief to the parish, accompanied with the expatriation of a part of its inhabitants ; yet, since it has arisen spontaneously, I much regret that I am not upon the spot, as I think I see in it the beginning of what may be of infinite advantage to the nation, or might be, at least if the scheme were followed up by persons of active and practical benevolence. " If the current of emigration is directed to New York or any of the American States, all I have said is nothing to the purpose — the emigrants when they arrive will mix with and be lost among the multi- tude of the natives, 1 and there will very soon be an end of any connection between them and their former friends and neighbours at home. But let us suppose them to be settled in Canada with which we have a constant communication, and where they might be settled in a body together. I say then that we shall have means of assisting them beyond the mere expenses for their outfit (whereas in America they would have to shift for themselves) and they, in their turn, when they have got over their first difficulties, having more land than they will be able to cultivate with their own labour, will be glad to provide employment for the sons of their old acquaintances, who may be sent over to them under indentures as farming servants for a certain time ; supposing them to be sent out at 14, 1 5, or 16, and to be bound for 7, 6, or 5 years, they would at the expiration of the time find themselves at liberty 1 Like salt in water, as Sancho says. — J. H. F. 212 MEMOIR OF to set up for themselves with much more knowledge of the country, and other advantages, than the pre- sent new settlers. Such a system once established (and I think it might be established with great ease) would at once deliver us from all the embar- rassments arising from want of employment at home, and would give a much more respectable character to the new colony, connecting it at the same time (which is a consideration for the Govern- ment) with the mother country, more closely perhaps than any other means that could be imagined. " Indeed, when I consider the immense tracts of unoccupied country which England possesses in Canada, in Africa, and in Australia (or Australasia, which is it ?) I cannot see why every parish in Great Britain might not have its counterpart in one or more of these countries ; and when I consider the difficulties which were to be overcome in a very beneficial scheme, but one of much less ultimate importance, I mean that of the Saving Banks, it seems to me that nothing is wanting but a portion of the same energy to accomplish it — and though I am very deficient in this and other practical quali- ties, and therefore should not feel confident that I could be of much use, yet so much am I in earnest that I can assure you that if I were at liberty to visit England at this time, I would do so for the sake of seeing what was to be done, and what could be done in this sample of such a scheme which has just sprung up at my own door. " There is one branch of industry which I think will recommend them — all the Roydon people know something of the growth and management of hemp, and it is an object with Government to encourage the growth of it in Canada, instead of drawing it, as we do now, from Russia. You tell me that 130 are going from North and South Lopham in a month — I hope they will have settled some regular corre- spondence with them. I hope you will assign a JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 213 page in your ' Register ' to the emigration from Roydon, recording the names, &c, that they may know that they leave a memorial behind them. Engage them to write to you and to their friends ; we will contrive that the postage shall cost them nothing on either side. Let them mention in their letters the name of any respectable man in trade, through whom any letters or presents may be sent to them. Let them take out two maps of the country (which I will pay for), and let them return one of them with the place where they are settled distinctly marked, which I shall be glad to see, and hope you will allow it a place on the wall of the vestry. I hope they will call the place Roydon. As the number of our colonists is only 20, I should hope they may keep together and settle together, — it would be very useful if the absolutely necessary trades, such as blacksmith, carpenter, shoemaker, are among the number, and if they are not, it would be desirable that any such may be induced to join them, and if none such can be found in the parish, I would, on my own account, do as much for them as the parish does for the others ; — perhaps Fin- ningham may furnish some artificer of the kind. If the colonization continues it would be useful that a lad or two should, upon declaring their willingness to go, have a year or two's education given them in a blacksmith's or carpenter's shop ; on their arrival they would earn sufficient wages, and would be better off than any other new settlers. H ave they any woman amongst them who could be capable of assisting the others in childbirth ? If they have not, this is a thing to be thought of, though perhaps not to be mentioned ; for nature manages those matters better than apprehension represents them. " And now let me put in a piece of whim or vanity of my own. Put up twenty sovereigns in four sealed papers (five in each), and let them be given to the mothers of the four first Roydon chil- 214 MEMOIR OF dren that are born in Canada, being intrusted in the meanwhile to the most trustworthy person of the party ; and I should wish that the children might be named after me, or my dear good mother, John, or Jane Frere, that it may be recollected that there were persons of our name, who had a con- siderate kindness for them, which certainly could not be more welcome, than under such circum- stances in a new country. " Of the annoyances and inconveniences which they will have to encounter, the one of which I have heard the greatest complaint is the quantity of gnats, a great deal worse and in greater numbers than those that are bred in Roydon Fen ; it would not be amiss to take out two or three dozen yards of gauze as a defence, which the women, and per- haps the men, may be glad to make use of against this nuisance. The only diseases are agues, which are sometimes tedious, though not by any means dangerous, and rarely so violent as to disable a man from work ; this is the case all over America, and not confined to Canada. They will do well per- haps to take a stock of bark, remembering (for we have some experience of agues at Roydon), that it is not to be used till after the patient has gone through a thorough purge, and for this purpose they may as well be provided with a large box of Mr. Hine's smartest pills. " The greatest difficulty for new settlers consists in the scarcity of money. Grain is cheap — meat is cheap — land may be had at first for nothing, and afterwards for next to nothing — fuel costs nothing, but the trouble of cutting down the trees. But money is scarce, and markets at a long distance through roads which Norfolk justices would con- sider as inditable. In their own immediate neigh- bourhood the bargains among new settlers are, I believe, chiefly in the way of barter ; a man gives grain in exchange for pigs, or pigs for grain, and JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 21$ keeps his money for the purchase of articles from England, such as tools, clothes, and household ware. Labour indeed is highly paid, but in the beginning this cuts two ways, for the labour of building a house, for instance (which must be finished before the beginning of winter) is one in which the people there, who are used to it, are very expert, and therefore it is sometimes more useful to hire them, than to lose time in attempting a work in which new settlers are unaccustomed and awkward. The best way, as I have heard, is for a company of settlers (such a company, for instance, as is now going from Roydon) to content themselves for the first winter with living together in a single building, after which, they may (when their means are im- proved) divide and establish themselves separately, receiving from the family who continue to live in the original building, such a part of the value as may be agreed upon. This is of great importance, that they may constitute a community in the first instance, however small that community may be ; it is the groundwork for everything which may be done hereafter. For this purpose then, I will advance them fifty pounds, and if, at the end of a year, I receive a voucher attesting that they have been living together, and are settled together, I will again send them the same sum. One of the incon- veniences which is felt by new settlers is the impos- sibility of supplying the want of various little articles of convenience. A woman breaks her tea- pot, and the shop perhaps is twenty miles off, — it is desirable therefore that all the utensils they take out with them should be of durable materials — pewter and wood and copper, with as little crockery and earthenware as possible, as the breakage in bad roads, and afterwards in a confused and crowded dwelling, will be very considerable ; — and here is a glorious opportunity for the old pewter plates, with the arms of Alderman Ironside, which we used to 2i6 MEMOIR OF dine upon in my grandfather's time, and which, I suppose, the servants would now disdain. Let them be roused to enterprise, and summoned to useful and active service ; let them descend from the kitchen-shelves, and with a simultaneous and enthusiastic impulse, crossing the Atlantic and ascending the majestic St. Lawrence, let them become the ornament of the rising colony ; when they may exclaim with Dido in Virgil, " Urbem praeclaram statui : mea mcenia vidi." The appear- ance of the Alderman's coat of arms, presented to their imagination at their daily meals, will, I trust, tend to counteract that tendency to Democracy, which is said to be so lamentably prevalent in new settlements. I mentioned before the scarcity of money, and I stated the case of a broken teapot ; now, in addition to the bad roads and the fifteen miles, it may happen that the settler may not have money to purchase it ; he may have twenty acres in wheat and half-a-dozen fat hogs, and at the same time may be at a loss to raise a couple of dollars ; the fact is, that these things, provisions and pro- duce, are not money, nor hardly money's worth, they must be carried to a distant and limited market, and sold for a low price. This leads to another consideration : may not our people con- trive to escape from this inconvenience ? I think that they may ; or may be easily enabled to do so. They understand the growth and management of hemp. Some can weave, and the women can spin, they would thus produce an article that would be saleable at a better price than it would fetch in England, and that price in actual money. The bale of hempen cloth would not cost as much in carrying to market as a sack of wheat, and would not be liable to be killed with overdriving in a bad road. But it may be thought that settlers in a new country will have enough to do without any time left for occupations which must be carried on within JOHN HOOKHAM FRF RE. 217 doors, such as spinning, weaving, and hackling — this is not the case : during the winter they will have a good deal of useless time upon their hands, which it will be advisable for them to turn to account. This is the general report from all who have given us an account of Canada. If therefore a weaver is of the party it will be so much the better, if not, I would be at any reasonable charge to engage one to join them, for if they have not a weaver to work it up for them, the market for yarn, I am afraid, would be a very poor one. If they are placed on a good land for the growth of hemp, we might appren- tice a parish boy to a rope-maker, and send out cunning artificers in rope and twine, which are articles in constant use and demand in an increasing country. " There are other handicrafts in which an indus- trious man might occupy himself, when he is debarred from out of doors labour, such as turning in wood, a material they have at hand. The Tyrolese in their long winters contrive to earn a good deal by this branch of industry, they makc toys which are sold all over Europe ; but in Canada, I imagine, they have not much taste for toys, we would make bowls and platters, and things of real necessary use, which would find a sale among our sensible industrious neighbours. But the hour admonishes me to be brief (as some- body says), therefore let me recapitulate. "Whatever things are necessary for domestic use in copper, pewter, or wood (and everything that they want should be as far as possible of these materials, though iron is safer than copper, and ought, indeed, if to be had, to be preferred), all these things I will provide at my own charges, exclusive of a free donation of the chivalrous and heraldic pewter plates before alluded to, and which I trust will remain to form an incident in the future novels of a Canadian Mr. Cooper. 218 MEMOIR OF " Moreover, a supply of bark and of a sufficient number of cathartic pills ; likewise three or four dozen yards of gauze. Moreover, a venture of hempen cloth, the produce of Roydon, to be sold as a specimen of our manufacturing industry, and of that which they may establish with greater advantage, when its incomparable durable qualities are known and approved. This venture to be about ten pounds, or rather more than less, but if there should be aught of it in the market, you may go as far as twenty. " Fifthly (I think it is), fifty pounds in hand for the expenses of building a dwelling sufficient to shelter them for the first winter. " Sixthly, fifty pounds to be paid a year hence. " Seventhly, the twenty sovereigns in four packets, as before mentioned. " Eighthly, Farewell dinner at the ' White Hart,' for the whole party, with a sovereign under each plate. " The other things which are contingent, such as engaging persons of necessary trades, I leave, as indeed I must leave much of what I have men- tioned (and in which you may happen to know that I am wrong) to your judgment. But do not think that I over-estimate the advantage of the plan if it can be accomplished, or that I shall grudge the expense (whatever it may be) of accomplishing it. We are providing a regular outlet for superfluous and unemployed labour, instead of suffering it to accumulate until it becomes burdensome and dan- gerous, and then sending out droves of people un- connected and undisciplined, to live like white Ma- roons in the woods — this seems our present course. " Let them not forget to take a sample of hemp seed. I see that in my recapitulation I have not mentioned the two maps." 1 ' On the subject of this letter, Mr. Frere, in a pencil note JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. aiQ u April yx " TELL Lady Margaret (Cameron) that my lady- has been ill, but is now much better ; we are under no uneasiness about her." The following letter was written while the French invasion of Algeria was impending, and was sent by one of the steam-packets started to run every six weeks from Falmouth to Cadiz, Gibraltar, Malta, and Corfu. These were the first regular steam-packets which ran to the Mediterranean : — " Malta, April 29th, 1830. " My dear Bartle, "The steamer from England brought me your made by him at this time in a blank page of a volume of Rees' " Encyclopaedia," wrote — " In a new country labour is of all things the dearest, and time the most valuable, therefore whatever time and labour can be saved by bringing out neces- sary objects ready made is so much gain ; clothes, therefore, shoes, &c, should be taken out in sufficient quantities, and, as what is destroyed cannot easily be replaced, everything should be as durable as possible, and on this principle pewter should be preferred to crockery. Many objects which domestic industry could supply, and which consume invaluable time in a new settlement might, by the application of a little ingenuity, be comprised in a portable form ; even the frame of a house, that is, the supports and the skeleton of the roof, with its wall plates, might be made of iron so contrived with hinges and screws as to be divided in portable packages and easily put together. I say portable packages, because it seldom happens that the best situations are to be found in the im- mediate neighbourhood of the sea, and we must take into account the want of roads and bridges — the situation should be so chosen as to combine health and fertility with the con- venience of fresh water and fuel, for the last must not be lost sight of. With this view, or upon the principle of securing a future return with the least possible expenditure of labour, it might not be amiss when the first difficulties of lodging and subsistence are overcome, to employ the plough for a day or two in scratching furrows to be sown with the seeds of fruit- bearing trees, including the Glandiferas, which in future would afford food for animals and give a return without trouble or labour. There was a time in England when a wood was estimated not by reference to the value of the timber, but the number of animals it would fatten— Silva centum porcorum . ' 220 MEMOIR OF packet yesterday, and to-day a steamer from Corfu, going to England, will take this ; but it starts at twelve, which hardly gives me time to say or deter- mine any of the questions which you suggest re- specting the ' Frogs.' " I am vexed to think that 1,500 sheets of that nice paper should have been thrown away upon an imperfect copy. However, the punctuation is de- testable ; there is hardly such a thing as a semi- colon, or anything but commas throughout. It is an art which I never learnt. Dear Canning had a little vanity about it, and was never better pleased than when he was correcting a proof-sheet, and putting the proper stops ; so that in that, and in many other things, I never felt the necessity of correcting my own deficiencies. Upon the whole, if there is enough of the same paper to print the whole, I think I would send back the copy, which I have now received, with, perhaps, some little altera- tions and a less faulty punctuation ; otherwise, copies corrected by hand, which might be done neatly and without so great an expense, would agree well enough with the character of non-publi- cation, which I am anxious to preserve, and which is expressed in the pococuranteism of the preface. I do not mean to add my name, except in writing ' with Mr. Frere's comp ts - ' to the persons they are sent to. If I should allow any copies to be sold at the universities, which, perhaps, I may do, the cir- cumstance of the name would make it a publication, therefore it is best to omit it. " But I will say no more upon this head till the return of your steam-packet from Corfu ; by that time I shall have got a standing writing-desk in- stead of scribbling with a folio on my knees for want of one, as I am now doing. I have, in the meantime, a scheme of more urgency in point of time, and in which, I think, you may be as kindly disposed to co-operate. JOHN HO OK If AM FRERE. 221 " I think you know Mr. Hay of the Colonial Office ? if not, he is a person whom I like very much, and who, I believe, likes me, as I have endeavoured to keep up his liking by sending him some little amusing works in clay, representing Maltese families and manners. Well, I received from Temple an account of a projected emigration from Roydon. The letter which I send to him in answer I send open to Mr. Hay, desiring him, if he pleases, to read it, and then to frank and forward it. A copy of this letter is here enclosed ; but as it will arrive before the original, which was sent by the old sailing packet, I will thank you to dispatch it to Temple, that it may have a better chance of arriving in time. I will not trouble Hay with receiving the copy first, and then the original. Official people do not like to be overbored with the volunteer crotchets of individuals ; and Canada, I believe, is not on Hay's side of the office, nor am I acquainted with his colleague ; but I have written to him (Hay) on the subject, hoping that he may assist, and telling him that I wish the people, of whom I give a very good character, to be kept together, and to be located on land that will serve for hemp, and that, if they are formed into a parish, I will settle a stipend for the priest, that is, if I live four or five years longer. I shall, of course, expect that the advowson shall be mine, or given to the person I appoint, and that the parson shall have from Government a sufficient allotment of land. I will also give something towards building a log- house church, which may stand, perhaps, 1,000 years. There is such a one now somewhere in Kent. Who knows but Master John, whom we are sending to college, and who ought to make an excellent clergyman, might be settled in this way, and become the squire parson and patriarch of New Roydon. Unless something of this kind is done — if, now that the spirit of enterprise has 222 MEMOIR OF reached the lower ranks, the gentry and persons of education do not put themselves at the head of it, they are only getting rid of a present inconvenience, with the prospect of creating other evils in future. " Our present emigration is a mere secession of the plebeians, and we cannot flatter ourselves that their mons sacer in Canada, or elsewhere, will long continue friendly or submissive. Our great error (an error of omission) was at the end of the war. There were then hundreds of young gentlemen, inured to hardships and looking out for some pro- vision or employment, who would have contributed a gentry in the new colonies. The multiplication of younger brothers may do much, if accompanied with a reduction of those establishments in which they now roost themselves. But the midshipmen and lieutenants who had been keeping a winter's blockade of Brest and Toulon, and the lieutenants and ensigns who had starved and fought through the Peninsula, would have made better backwoods- men than our present growth of destitute dandies. " I am comical to be talking about plebeians, when we are, in fact, nothing else ourselves, save and except our ancient and undoubted right to the two flanches and leopards' faces ; which flanches, as heralds say, typify flitches of bacon, 1 signifying that the original grantee was a thriving churl. I do not believe them ; but, be that as it may, I think such as we are, people of our class are neces- sary in new colonies, and perhaps as useful in this country as the great [flirting] and game-preserving establishments, with their elopements and battues. " To have done with nonsense — " If, from what you learn from Temple, the letter which he receives from me does not arrive too late, and if the Roydonians are not already departed, 1 This, as far as I can learn, is a perfectly original heraldic theory ; Vide anted, p. 4. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 223 will you call upon Hay, and show him the copy of the letter which I wrote to Temple, or, in any way which your diplomacy may suggest, endeavour to procure through him as favourable a recommenda- tion for these honest people as possible ; even if they should be gone, it would not perhaps be too late to accomplish the objects which I wish, of keeping them together, placing them on hemp land, and sending the money for their first habita- tion ; and for the women, perhaps, too, the utensils of pewter, &c, might be sent and consigned for their use. You will judge that I am anxious about this, when this time and the last I have written upon nothing else." He then gives his brother a commission for a number of locks with a master key : — " I wonder that I should have gone on so long without them, considering the fuss and trouble they will save me. There is no Maltese lock which will not open with a crooked nail, and I have recourse to all sorts of expedients, to put things out of the way. " Mr. John Frere, of the ' Rattlesnake ' [his nephew], is just come in from Algiers. They had gone to bring away the consul's wife and family ; but the Dey, it seems, being desperate, has refused to let them go ; so the admiral is going to try if he can prevail. It seems a difficult negotiation, for you can threaten nothing more than they are already prepared for. " My lady has been very unwell, but is getting better. I positively forbid her writing, for her ill- ness was brought on, I believe, mainly by over- exertion in scribbling late at night. " All that I have said about Algiers is a first report, and false, as usual. The second is, that the French object to our going through their blockade . . . so the admiral is going to negotiate with the French ; this is the present version. 224 MEMOIR OF " In the meanwhile Jane is going to see her brother at the Parlatorio, and I continue scribbling in my nightgown ; but I will not scribble any- more, but shave and dress, for the departure of the steamer is deferred in consequence of this intel- ligence." " Malta, May %th, 1830. " My dear Brother, " This letter is begun by candlelight. ' Ante diem librum cum lumine,' as the poet 1 says. I wish I had kept a copy of my last, for I cannot recollect it so perfectly as not to feel in doubt that something may have been omitted which I should have wished to have said upon the subject of the Roydon emigrants. I forget whether I mentioned that you might show it to Mr. Hay, who would feel an interest even in the unofficial part of it, of and concerning the ' Frogs.' The ' Frogs ' above men- tioned have not advanced so rapidly as you wished in your last letter, and as I intended at the time I received it. The continued illness of my poor lady had left my mind incapable of doing anything but what was merely mechanical. . . . We have been for many days nearly in the same state as you may remember us to have been in when we left Grove House. We are, however, at present decidedly on the mending hand, and have been so for three or four days past, and I have little doubt but that, with the means of management that we have, and our experience of her complaint, together with the season of the year, which is always favourable to her, we shall see her again before long restored to a state of tolerable health and comfort ; but in the meantime constant attention is necessary, and I am not sufficiently at leisure to study the mysteries of punctuation. " As with printing 500 there will be more copies 1 Hor. I. EpisL ii. 35. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 225 than can be wanted for distribution among my friends or acquaintance or literary persons whom I know of, I shall send a parcel to Cambridge to be sold by a bookseller, just like the verses of any ordinary poet, the profits whereof, being paid into William's hand, will form my contribution in be- half of his protege. . . . " Did you not say, or was it George, that you should like to be the custode of my Sicilian medals, which are now in said Hoare's hands ? I shall send him an order to deliver them to you, on your applying in person and giving a receipt, which he will forward to me. It is always right to be prig- gish and particular with one's banker. I have got a gold medal, of the size of the second large gold one. This new one is in profile ; the second is obverse, as we call it; so that, if I were in England, I might address myself in the language of the Abbate Calcagni to Lord Northwick — " ' E voi che in questa laureata Metropoli del Britannico Unito Impero, dove la Numismatica e stata ed e in tanto pregio, e donde sorgono Nummilogi Genii sublimi, siete pur felice di una Greco-Sicula- collezione, a nissuna di quante se ne vedano fuor di Sicilia minore.' 1 " Now this is what I call true eloquence, and, if English people think otherwise, it cannot be helped ; but certainly the Italians ought to know best. " By the bye, I see there is a quarto book, I think with plates, an historical account of medals, lately published, which is highly spoken of. I can- not recollect the name or find the advertisement at this moment ; but your bookseller, probably, will know it, and I should be glad if he would send it 1 " ZV Re di Siracusa, Finzia e Liparo non ricordati dalle Slor/e, riconosciuti or a con le Monet e dnl Cav. M. Calcagni.' Palermo, 1808, torn. i. p. 23. Mr. Frere evidently quoted the passage from memory. Q 226 MEMOIR OF me. I shall want, also, the following : — ' Identity of Druidical and Hebrew Worship,' by Nimmo, Gower Street ; ' Services of Mr. Dawson,' by Smith, Elder & Co. ; ' Veracity of Five Books of Moses,' Rev. J. Blunt, printed, I think, at Cambridge. Your said bookseller has sent me in (five months ago) an account in which there are articles of which I know nothing, not even the names of the books ; others of which I have a distinct recollection that they were paid for at the time, being little classics which I bought for my nephews. Nevertheless, as I do not think I should better myself by changing, and as it will be more convenient for you if you will take the trouble of my commissions in this kind ; moreover, as he is a Norfolk man, and not a Scotchman, we will remain as we are. . . . "We are still in town, but the weather is so fine that I regret our present inability to move to the Pieta. " Well, my dear Bartle, I must write to other people as well as you, though they consist mainly of commissions ; yet you see there are two sheets fairly counted, and if that is not enough, I will send you a third, just to show that Aristophanes has been in my thoughts, in spite of impediments and disturbances." The following, intended as an introduction to the translation of the " Frogs," was inclosed in the foregoing letter : — " The writer of this translation having for many years past found an unfailing source of amusement and occupation in the Comedies of Aristophanes, has felt unwilling that the result of much time and attention — greater, probably, than any other person is ever likely to bestow upon such a subject — should be left liable to the common destiny of posthumous manuscripts ; a small edition, there- fore, of one of the translated comedies has been printed, sufficient for distribution among the nar- rowed circle of his surviving friends ; sufficient, JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 227 also, to serve as a token of respect to those learned persons whose advice and assistance, if it had been attainable at an earlier period, might have en- couraged him to venture on a more extended pub- lication. " With respect to the rising race of scholars, with whom, he regrets, he has had no opportunity of becoming acquainted, but amongst whom there may possibly have arisen some feeling of curiosity re- specting an attempt which, whether right or wrong, has been undertaken upon a new principle, no method of distribution has appeared more obvious or less invidious than that of sending the remaining copies to be sold by a bookseller at the university to which he has the honour to belong." In the summer of 1830 he made a yachting trip to Marseilles, in the hope of benefiting Lady Er- roll's health. The following is from a letter to his brother Bartle written in September, after their return to Malta : — " I have sent the 'Frogs.' You have, I think, or had at Hampstead, a more complete copy of the ' Birds' than I have here. I should be glad to have a copy of it taken, and sent out here, or the original sent out here, leaving a copy behind in case of acci- dents. It is not perfect, nor is the play finished, but I have done some more of it. I do not wish any distribution to be made of the Frogs, till I can send something by way of preface (extracted from my own review of Mitchell's translation). " But I have never told you how we were at Mar- seilles on the day the ordonnance came down, and the newspapers were stopped. How afraid every- body was to say a word. This was on Saturday the 31st of July. On the Sunday and Monday it was known that there was resistance ; so, on the Monday, the 'jeunes gens' of the Athenaeum and the merchants' clerks, &c, were in meeting against the Prefect, but the common people took no part. 228 MEMOIR OF Why should they ? On the Tuesday the Telegraph proclamation (of the Duke of Orleans as Lieutenant- General) which had arrived the evening before, was published, and we set sail for Malta. Last time it took nine years for the Revolution to reach Malta from Paris. How long will it take this time?" Later in the year his sister describes him as en- joying, as usual, the society of his friends Dr. Davy and Mr. Nugent, and much interested in the accounts he had received of the extraordinary talent deve- loped by a brother of Mrs. Davy's who had been brought up to the law, but who had shown an irre- sistible bent for the fine arts, especially sculpture. He had again become seriously alarmed at the state of his wife's health, and in December he writes to his brother Bartle : — " I have no notes to ' Frogs' to send you this time. My lady's illness has in fact quite unhinged me. She is now out of immediate danger, but deplorably and distressingly weak. Will you send me a copy of the 'Birds?' I have almost finished them, but I have no copy of the part which is in England. " I am so pressed for time that I must desire you to thank George for his letter. I perfectly agree with his view of the state of things. The burthen of taxation must be shifted on to the shoulders of the proprietors. Till that is done, we have no right to tax the necessities of the commonalty." In January, 183 1, his anxieties regarding his wife were terminated ; Lady Erroll passed away after a brief interval of sufferings hardly more acute than those to which she had been long subject. The removal of one who had been for so many years the object of constant affectionate thought and devoted care, left a terrible void. He had injured his back by a fall a few days before, and could only attend the funeral by being carried in a chair to the boat which took him across the Quarantine Harbour. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 229 The letters of those around him give a vivid picture of his mental agony, aggravated by severe bodily pain. The grave was in the old garrison burial- ground, in a bastion of the outworks of Valetta, overlooking the Quarantine Harbour, and in sight of Mr. Frere's residence at the Pieta. He had desired that the funeral should be as private as possible, and his wishes were respected, his sister and his two nieces being his only companions ; but an old priest relates how six thousand of the poor Maltese, to whom Lady Erroll had been greatly endeared by her charities, came to visit the grave as a mark of respect, retiring to a distance as the funeral approached. His sister, writing a fortnight afterwards to his brother Bartle, tells him that a copy he had made of some portion of the Aristophanes which had been left in England, had arrived most opportunely to divert Mr. Frere's mind from dwelling on his own grief. " He is more and more in admiration of your work. ' Not less than 1,300 lines written out in his own hand — that is something like a brother ! ' said he to me this morning, and I set about reck- oning for him what he had done in addition, and find there are near 900 lines which he says shall be copied out from the margin of the copy of Aristo- phanes which you gave him." Three months later he writes to his brother : — " In the list of Leipsic publications 1 see ' De Babyloniis Aristophanis Commentatio.' I should wish very much to have it, in order to see whether it agrees with my own conjecture, viz., that it was a sort of reductio ad absurdum of the Athenian schemes of imperial policy exemplified in the supposed case of their utmost possible or impossible success. " With respect to the ' Frogs,' I wish to have the text printed now that the types are set up, and not to be at the expense of keeping them standing. 230 MEMOIR OF The notes will follow, and be printed separately at the end. " I want to say a word about our nephew George. He said to me (in a postscript) that he should like to emigrate. If it is a fixed and serious wish, and one which his father would approve of, I should be willing to contribute to it to the best of my ability, since no one can tell what the state of Europe or of England may be. I should not be sorry to see one of the family established with a house and a barn, and a few hundred acres, in a quiet quarter of the globe, and he might find recruits to accom- pany him from Roydon and Finningham. In his office, 1 it occurs to me that by an effort he might distinguish himself and become indispensable. There is no one there now who can translate a Russian Gazette. If he could acquire this accom- plishment, it would make him known and talked of as a Frere ought to be, and might lead to other things, as being sent out secretary to an ambassador there. It is a language which will ultimately be considered as indispensable in that office, and the first (whoever he is) that acquires it, will be thought to have great merit. I am sorry to see by the paper so poor an account of Lord Holland. I hear nothing else of him, but the symptoms seem very fearful ones." The subject of emigration still continued to oc- cupy much of his thoughts ; his sister writes of him, " It is very strange that my brother in the midst of his first grief, looking over a book of Mr. Wilmot Horton's, which he sent out to him here, in which there is much of attack of Mr. Sadler upon the subject of emigration, set about writing some re- marks which are very forcible, in his peculiar style of grave irony and humour ; they are scratched at the end of the book ; and in return for my reading The Foreign Office. JOHN HOOKHAM ERE RE. 231 to him one night the ' Remedies of Pauperism,' in hopes of putting him to sleep, he made me laugh afterwards with his observations." In May she describes him as " very busy studying Hebrew. When he has tried his eyes over-much with the vowel points, he learns some by heart. This keeps him in cheerful, even spirits." On the 5th of August, 1831, he wrote to his brother Bartle : — " I send an advertisement to be prefixed to the ' Frogs,' which I hope you will not object to ; I send a title-page also, which I do not like so well. Perhaps it would be better to put ' The Frogs of Aristophanes, translated in English verse,' adding the motto from Virgil's ' Catalecta.' 1 " We are very well here, but hotter than anything ever was. Our Governor has left us on leave, which is a great loss to us. " Being rather out of the reach of moral volcanoes, we are occupied with a natural unmetaphorical one in the neighbourhood, i. e. about 120 miles off, 2 which I think too far for visiting distance. — As little am I disposed to visit the moral volcanoes. Have you seen what Niebuhr says ? I believe it has been the feeling and apprehension of great numbers. It is one of the subjects which I can hardly bear to think of ; therefore, the less is said about it the better." The "Advertisement" inclosed in the above letter was as follows. It is slightly altered from that given at p. 226 : — " The first forty pages of the following translation having been printed above ten years ago, had re- 1 xi. 62, 63. s Graham's Island, which rose from the sea between Malta and Sicily, and after a few months sank again. A description of it by Sir Walter Scott, who landed on it in Nov. 1831, will be found in " Lockhart's Life of Scott," vol. x. chap, lxxxi. 232 MEMOIR OF mained since that time as an incumbrance in the printer's warehouse. It became necessary therefore either to condemn them at once as waste paper, or to distribute them in an imperfect state to those friends to whom complete copies had been pro- mised ; or finally (under the disadvantages of ab- sence and distance, and a growing indifference to the task) to finish the printing of the entire play. This has been done, and in addition to the narrowed circle of the author's private friends, copies will be presented to those learned persons, whose advice and assistance, if it had been attainable at an earlier period, might perhaps have justified a more extended publication. With respect to the rising race of scholars with whom he has had no opportunity of being acquainted, no method of distribution has appeared more obvious or less invidious, than that of sending the remaining copies to be disposed of by a bookseller at the University to which he has the honour to belong. " This play was exhibited during the last crisis of Athenian power and ascendancy (at a time when peace upon equal and honourable terms was still attainable) after the victory at Arginusae and before the final and irrevocable defeat at .^Egospotamos." " Title page : — " The ' Frogs of Aristophanes,' being an attempt to convey to the English reader, some notion of the comic design and characteristic humour of the ori- ginal. ' Si patrio Graios carmine adire sales Possumus : optatis plus jam procedimus ipsis.' Virgil. Later in the year he was much occupied by a reference from Mr. Bandinell on the choice of an epitaph on Mr. Canning ; with what result has been already described. 1 1 Vide anted, p. 200. JOHN HOOK HAM FRERE. 23 3. On November 3rd, 1831, he wrote to his brother Bartle in reply to a question as to the proper time for a young man to go to college : — " I do not know what opinion you expected me to give about , or why I should give an opinion, when others as well able to judge are on the spot. I only think, in general, that the longer a man's education lasts, and consequently the later he goes to college, the better chance he has of distinguishing himself, both at college or afterwards, therefore I am very well satisfied with hearing that his father has decided on his passing a year at the King's Col- lege. " I will send you positively by the next packet, either by notes or by an extract from my review of Mitchell's ' Aristophanes,' enough to fill up the sheet. For it must be very hard to keep the printer so long with his press standing. " The letter (which I thank you for having ma- naged with your usual diplomacy) was to show the true grounds of the present discontents, which are wholly fiscal : the removal of them would, I am per- suaded, have obviated any call for Reform, and would now obviate, as I conceive, any dangerous discontent at its rejection. I have been writing by candle-light, and it is now sunrise. So, good morning." In November of this year he had the pleasure of welcoming Sir Walter Scott to Malta. They had been friends since their first meeting in 1806, when Scott wrote from London to Ellis, " I met with your friend Mr. Canning in town, and claimed his acquaintance as a friend of yours, and had my claim allowed ; also Mr. Frere, — both de- lightful companions, far too good for politics and for winning and losing places. When I say I was more pleased with their society than I thought had been possible on so short an acquaintance, I pay them a very trifling compliment and myself a very great 234 MEMOIR OF one." Similarity of tastes and feelings, and of opinions on many important questions of public policy, had made them closer friends than might have been expected from the infrequency of their personal intercourse. Many anecdotes of this their last meeting are to be found in Lockhart's Life of Scott, and in the quotations from Mrs. Davy's journals, which relate to Sir Walter's stay at Malta. After describing her first visit to Sir Walter in Quarantine, Mrs. Davy says, "our visit was short, and we left Mr. Frere with him at the bar on our departure. He came daily to see his friend, and passed more of his quarantine time with him than any one else. We were told that between Mr. Frere's habitual absence of mind and Sir Walter's natural Scotch desire to shake hands with him at every meeting, it required all the vigilance of the attendant genii of the place to prevent Mr. F. from being put into quarantine along with him." Mrs. Davy describes the sad change which had come over Sir Walter's appearance since his para- lytic attack in the preceding April, but Sir Walter was " astonished " we are told, in a letter from Mr. Frere's niece, " at his old friend looking so well and appearing so strong." Miss Frere writes on the 3rd December : — " My brother has been taking Sir W. Scott out to drive, to effect which he had to come back to St. Antonio in the rain. He tells me Sir W. ap- peared very comfortable, not fatigued by the honour and attentions paid him here. You would not per- haps guess, that the United Service, army and navy, devised giving a ball on Thursday to Sir Walter. He attended, and had the good nature to stay three hours, and leave a general persuasion that he was very much amused. Some of the performance was indeed laughable enough. . . . Sir Walter's going was as great a compliment as he could pay the JOHN HO OK II AM FRERE. 235 good people concerned in this ball, for he had a flight of many stairs to ascend, and to sit up long after his usual hour, which is from eight to nine o'clock, and his strength is so fluctuating that he sometimes is quite wearied with conversing or being in company half an hour ; so says his daughter ; I think however he must be improved in this re- spect, since he has been in Malta, for he has been dining out three times in the course of this week — that is, since he has been out of Quarantine. He had apartments at Fort Manuel, instead of the usual Lazaretto, where the view is more open and cheerful, and the weather was perfection, and he said he felt the good effects of the climate so much he was in- clined to stay the winter instead of going to Naples." The Reform Bill was, at this time, the ge- neral topic of greatest interest in the news from England. Some one asked Mr. Frere his opinion of the political banquets, Reform and Anti-Reform, which the newspapers were discussing, " would they do any real good ?" He was not at the moment inclined for any serious political discussion, and replied, " I have no doubt that it would do great good, if every man in England would ask himself to dinner, drink his own health, and resolve to re- form himself." On the 4th December, Mrs. Davy writes, " On joining us in the drawing-room after dinner, Sir Walter was very animated, spoke much of Mr. Frere, and of his remarkable success, when quite a boy, in the translation of a Saxon ballad. This led him to ballads in general, and he gravely lamented his friend Mr. Frere's heresy in not esteeming highly enough that of ' Hardyknute.' He admitted that it was not a veritable old ballad, but 'just old enough,' and a noble imitation of the best style. In speaking of Mr. Frere's translations, he repeated a pretty long passage from his version of one of the ' Ro- mances of the Cid,' and seemed to enjoy a spirited 236 MEMOIR OF charge of the knights therein described as much as he could have done in his best days, placing his walking-stick in rest like a lance, to ' suit the action to the word.' " Miss Scott says, she has not seen " him so animated, so like himself since he came to Malta." On the 9th, Mrs. Davy describes a drive she took with Sir Walter "to St. Antonio, a garden residence of the Governor's, about two miles from Valetta, then occupied by Mr. Frere." . . . Sir Walter " snuffed with great delight the perfume of the new oranges, which hung thickly on each side as we drove up the long avenue to the court-yard, or stable-yard rather, of St. Antonio — and was amused at the Maltese untidiness of two or three pigs running at large under the trees. ' That's just like my friend Frere,' he said, ' quite content to let pigs run about in his orange-groves.' We did not find Mr. Frere at home, and therefore drove back without waiting. ... On Friday, December 10th, he went in company with Mr. Frere to see Cittavecchia. I drove over with a lady friend to meet them at the church there. Sir Walter seemed pleased with what was shown him, but was not animated." An anecdote connected with this last drive illus- trates Sir Walter's habitual kindliness. When they called at the Pieta, Mr. Frere's young mid- shipman nephew, John, who was in the house slowly recovering from a Morea fever, had begged to be carried from his bed to the window that he might see Sir Walter as he stopped in the carriage. Sir Walter, on being afterwards told of this, ex- pressed great regret that he had not heard it sooner : " If I had known in time I would have tried to hobble up stairs to see him." Sir Walter re-embarked on board the" Barham" on the 14th of December, and sailed for Naples. On the 3rd of January following (1832) Miss Frere writes : — JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 237 " The dull, rainy, chilly weather is not enlivening, we are here without society,, and the season brings with it some depressing recollections. My brother however is well, and when we move, as I hope we shall do next week to warmer quarters, and more within reach of the inhabitants of Valetta, we shall proceed as usual." ..." Sir Walter Scott got pratique at Naples on Christmas Day, after only a few days' quarantine, the 'Barham' is returned this morning. It was expected there would be long quarantine, thirty days at least, and in that case he would probably have returned here. My brother enjoyed much his being here, and scarcely missed going in daily to Valetta, to take him out to drive." On the 2nd February, 1832, he wrote to his brother Bartle : — " I must again forfeit my word to you and the printer, though you might, I think, taking the Review of Mitchell's ' Aristophanes,' pick out enough to fill the miserable imperfect sheets. There are one or two precious pieces of pedantic pleasantry (such as probo alitcr) in conformity with the common style of Reviews, which of course you would strike out, as also all criticism in disparage- ment (there is as little as I could put in conscience), of Mr. Mitchell's performance ; if you do not, I must, between the time of the arrival of the next packet and its departure, do the thing myself. " The fact is, my dear Bartle, that I am so immersed in Hebrew, and find so much exertion and time necessary, to keep up what I have already, and to acquire daily a little more, and having got a slight hold upon the language, I am so apprehen- sive that if I were to leave go of it for a short time it would escape me altogether, that I allow myself no other pursuit or amusement or avocation that I can possibly avoid. You would therefore do me a great kindness if you could save me this trouble, 238 MEMOIR OF and you, who were a Reviewer yourself so many years ago, could not fail to do it well. " I hope I am not invading your province in providing for the outfit of your godson, but I shall be ready to give way to you ; or admit you into a partnership in the speculation if you express a wish to that effect." " P.S. — I have.opened my letter again for a com- mission with which I must trouble you, it is to send me half-a-dozen handsomely bound classics as pre- sents for lads here, who have been writing compli- mentary Latin verses to Sir W. Scott, at my instigation. Two of them or three should be hand- somer than the others. Horaces would do. The whole not to exceed ^"20." In March, 1832, his sister wrote, referring to his Hebrew studies : — " I meant to have copied out and sent you an essay of my brother's upon the song of Deborah, but it is not quite finished. He talks of publishing it in the ' Cambridge Miscellany.' You will be pleased with it, and a few others, but the world in general will judge of it, as of poor Rossetti's ex- planation of Dante. I say nothing of this to Bartle, who must be in no disposition to be pleased with hearing of any studies which interfere with the completion of the ' Frogs,' to which indeed I wish my brother would give the necessary attention ; but I find he fears breaking in upon the train of thought with which his mind is at present occupied, he thinks he might not be able to recover it again." Visitors of distinction, political, literary, or social, were not very numerous in Malta in those days ; but few of them arrived without bringing or obtain- ing during their stay an introduction to Mr. Frere. Sometimes these introductions led to laughable mistakes, one of which is described in the following letter from Miss Frere to her brother Bartle : — " There have been several interruptions, and I JOHN HObKHAM FRERE. 239 could have wished you were present at the inter- view of one visitor who came with a letter from Cavaliere Landalina of Syracuse ; I Was making the civil to him in the drawing-room, trying to make out what he was. He spoke French, his dress was studied, and ornamented down the front of his shirt with very splendid coloured stones, a brooch and buttons. I was thinking how I should get to give notice to my brother, for Lady Georgina Wolff being with me, I did not like to leave the person on her hands, when in walked my brother, as he had been sitting in his arm-chair ; his velvet cap on, and a dressing-gown all covered with snuff in the front, and bearing marks of it in various parts. After a little while, the gentleman explained that the design of his visit was to give my brother an opportunity of possessing himself of some black- ing, excellent for shoes and harness, the invention of his late father, and that he had five bottles with him in the calesse, value 72 francs, which he should be happy to leave with him." In December Mr. Frere wrote to his brother George : — " For an account of ourselves, let me refer you to a long letter which Susan has written to Lizzy, though how she can have filled it with anything this place affords I cannot imagine. Let me also thank you for Sir George Rose's book, which I was really pleased with, and like his solution of some difficulties better than others that had occurred to me upon the same points. I speak only of the beginning, and exclusive of the geology, of which I know next to nothing and suspect that he does not know much. This, however, I know, that both Moses and Solomon must have known more of that science than was known in Europe thirty years ago. The rest of his volume I have got to read, for it was snatched from me by a lady who has not yet returned it. 240 MEMOIR OF " Do you see anything of Rossetti ? I feel very anxious about him, and should be glad to know if he has not worked himself into ill health. I have sent presents of his books to some gentlemen in Italy. He is prohibited in the highest degree, and one of his old acquaintances knew nothing, or did not feel it safe to confess that he knew anything even of his Dante. In Malta I think that the English are upon honour with respect to Catho- licity, and therefore I have not communicated it. " Susan has been occupying herself in a very good work, the superintendence of a soup kitchen, in which the ladies are the managers and directors. She is just come to call for my letter. We are both well. Have you heard that Lord has become very serious in point of religion ? His sister told me so — regretting it." About the same time he wrote to his brother Bartle :— " I am ashamed of writing to you without saying something about what has given you so much trouble, viz., those same ' Frogs.' I must publish them, but cannot find myself in the vein for writing the notes which, unluckily, are promised in the marginal references : perhaps when the weather changes I may succeed. At present we are drowned with rain, and notes are dry work. " With respect to our individual selves, we are all very well. " The rain has filled all the tanks. In September they were all dry but one, and that had only two feet of water. " Susan is very busy at this moment with an old ebony cabinet, which she has persuaded me to buy a bargain. But there is some little disappointment I believe about the drawers which, upon examina- tion, are found to be cedar, and hence a doubt arises as to the propriety of painting them. How it will be settled it is impossible to foresee. In the mean time believe me, &c. JOHN HOOKHAM ERE RE. 241 Two months later, nth February, 1833, his sister wrote : — " My brother is much better than he was during the time he shut himself up entirely. The dismal weather continues, but he usually takes some little exercise, upon the roof of the house at least, and he has had company, and joined in dinner parties given to some strangers, who came with letters addressed to almost every house in Malta, and one to Sir John Richardson. They went on in the packet to see Corfu and Zante, and then after their quarantine was over, they remained a little more than a fort- night, going for Sicily and Naples in a steamer which brought a party of seventy visitors from Naples. They were chiefly Poles and Russians with hard names and titles, some few French, and fewer English. Lady Georgina Wolff found a cousin among the latter. . . . She was pleased to learn from him that some of her Whig relations think the reform has gone too far, especially General W , who, from being a very vehement partisan, is become a decided Tory or Conservative. told my brother, that of the number of those in France of the same sentiments as himself, the greater part choose to live in perfect retirement, neither meddling with politics nor mixing in gene- 'ral society ; but there is a strong party in favour of the Duchesse de Berri, who has displayed a resolution and courage, and generous regard for others, together with a disregard to danger as affecting her own person, which would be sufficient to furnish out half-a-dozen heroines of romance. Her strength of constitution is no less extra- ordinary than the firmness and energy of her spirit. These two Frenchmen, of finished manners, like the very best style of English breeding, made a pleasant contrast with our three English strangers, Archdeacon , his son, and another clergy- man their friend, who have a becoming simplicity R 242 MEMOIR OF and placidity of deportment very agreeable also. We were sorry at their going just as we found out that we liked them. The son, on whose account they are travelling, is quite well ; but the friend, Mr. Newman, 1 of Oriel, was confined with some ailment of his chest. My brother, had some good talk with him one morning, and would have liked to introduce his Aristophanes to him had there been fair opportunity. The brother of this Mr. Newman is a young man of great promise, who has left the fairest prospect of advancement in England, to go as missionary to Persia. Mr. Wolff we expect daily, having heard of his arrival at the Himalayan Mountains, and meeting there with Mr. Horace Churchill and Lord and Lady William Ben- tinck, with whom he was to stay a fortnight, and then proceed south. William Edward, 52 in his last letter, of the 17th of August, mentions Mr. Wolff, and Lord Clare's kindly disposition towards this most extraordinary man. I shall be glad when he returns in safety, though I do not expect to enjoy his being in such close neighbourhood, for the rest- less energy which actuates him, regardless of time and common conveniences, is not suited to every- day life." On March 21st, 1833, Mr. Frere wrote to his brother Bartle : — " As you were kind enough to advance me a letter on the credit of my good intention, I now send you not only a letter for yourself, but another for Hamilton, which as you will see refers to matters likely to fall within your local and personal know- ledge. 1 Dr. Newman. 2 Their nephew, third son of their brother Edward, had then recently joined the Indian Civil Service, in which he rose to be Senior Judge of the Sudder Court and Member of Council at Bombay. He was expecting Mr. Wolff at Bombay on his return from his first visit to Bokhara. JOHN HO OKU AM FRERE. 243 " I am also precisely in the same situation with the Antiquarian Society, except that I have no arrears to pay (having compounded for them by a single payment at my admission), but there also all the volumes of Archaeologia which are my due, with prints and other publications of the Society, lie accumulated. Now if at any time you should be seized by a paroxysm of activity, Gurney or W. Hamilton himself would assist you to get them. I do not, as you see, mention this to Hamilton, but the other point, my dues from the Dilettanti, as connected naturally with the correspondent pay- ment of my own arrears to that eminent society. " Pray send to me any remaining copies of the twenty of Rossetti's last book. 1 I have sent away in different directions all that I had here. One this morning to Algiers. The Hats are arrived, and are exquisite. I am so delighted with them that I can hardly keep them off my head. I almost expected to have found Theognis at the bottom of the box, but the contents were all for the outside of the head. " I am anxious about Temple. 2 I think he might make a good sermon on the duties and character of a preacher before the House in times such as •were formerly and are now returned, when the Commons were, as they are now(?), a perfect re- presentation of the will and spirit of the people. The preachers were then for the most part extra- ordinary men for learning, activity and austerity of life and manners. The audience, with whatever shade of opinion, zealous believers. I think George with his original good sense would be able to help him, if he could get half an hour of Coleridge. 1 " Spirito Antipapale." His youngest brother had been appointed Speaker's Chaplain. 244 MEMOIR OF " Pray let me know what you hear of poor Lord D . Is there any chance of his being restored to society ? I have been very sincerely grieved for him. Your neighbour's funeral was precisely such a one as she would have directed. I cannot say that I am very sorry for her, she made her husband's house very disagreeable to all his friends, and I found it so among the rest." The following remarks on social and political prospects in England are contained in a letter to his brother Edward, dated 14th May, 1833, and were elicited by his hearing that his nephew Richard 1 wished to enter the Army : — " I could for a moment delude myself by ima- gining that things were getting right, and arrived at a fixed point at which they would rest ; but I remember how during the progress of the French 1 Sixth son of his brother Edward ; born 18 17, died a lieute- nant in H. M.'s 13th Regiment of Light Infantry, 1842, from the effect of the hardships and exposure undergone by him during the Affghan war. He was present in every action in which his corps was engaged throughout the war in Affghanistan, amongst which were the storming of Ghuznee in 1839, tne battle of Bamdan in 1 840, and the march through the Khoord, Cabool, and Tezeen Passes in 1841, when he was wounded. He afterwards did service, which was publicly noticed, in the successful defence of Jellalabad in 1 842, where the tide of disaster was first stayed, and from whence the ascendency of British power was ultimately re-established. Lieutenant;. Frere returned to Cabool with the force in September, 1842, and was within a few days' march of Ferozepoor, where the troops were assembling to receive the honour due to their distinguished services, when he died at Rawul Pindee in the Punjaub. Havelock, in his account of the attack and capture of Ghuznee, adds this note : — " The narrator must be allowed to indulge the partiality of friendship in recording that the first standard that was planted on the ramparts of the citadel was the Regimental Colour of the 13th Light Infantry, carried on the occasion by Ensign R. E. Frere." — [Literary Gazette, 12th Sept., 1840.] JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 245 Revolution there were intervals of calm, and a seem- ing stability of things under a new form, and how often these hopes were disappointed. It is as people, who are standing on the sea shore, and who because the last wave does not reach so far upon the beach as the one before, take it for granted that the tide is turned. I could contrive, too, to flatter myself in this way ; but there are other more certain tokens which mark that it is setting in. I tell my friends, and I am convinced of it, that it is in vain to think that we can continue to have an Almack's administration. They have insisted upon letting the ruffians into the House, and now they call upon their old oppo- nents to assist them in defending the dining-room, but it will not do, at least not beyond this Parlia- ment at the utmost ; the next will be the pendent to the Legislative Assembly, and then welcome 20ths of June and ioths of August and 2nds of September, and 2ists of January and all the Fructidors, and Messidors, and Thermidors. Such being, in my estimation, the prospect before us, I should have been well pleased if George and Richard (vis unita fortior) had been inclined to settle themselves out of the reach of mischief; I should willingly have made any necessary sacrifice for the purpose. If however Richard's mind is fixed upon heroic achievements and triumphant laurels, and such branches of learning, I suppose I must purchase him his commission, but I would much rather give much more to place him in a more hopeful and happy situation." On the same subject he wrote to his brother Bartle, Feb. 14th, 1834: — "... I am vexed to think of Richard's going into the Army ; it is the most desperate and hopeless of all professions, in the present state of things. Look to the growing opinion — what is it ? That the Army, in its present state, is a useless and ex- 246 MEMOIR OF pensive incumbrance ; that we must either reduce it vigorously, to ' low peace establishment,' like what we had forty years ago — or expend it des- perately in a War. " The rising opinion in the Country is divided between these two alternatives ! The latter is I think likely to prevail, and we shall see a War, and lose. A war for anything — a war to support Ibra- him Pacha against the Russians and Greeks — in short anything for a War. " I do not speak of the disposition of the present Ministry, they are merely the Drop Curtain which conceals the preparations for the future tragedy ; I am thinking of their inevitable successors. Now though I should not have grudged the expenditure of a few Nephews at Talavera or Salamanca, I should not be reconciled to the idea of having devoted them torvo spectacula Marti, in contests such as I foresee — contests for no object. " The other alternative, that of a system of strict military retrenchment, is not more encouraging to a young man, without interest, or connexion, or a command of money. . . . We are well at last, but there has been a good deal of illness. I have had my share." In a letter dated 8th June, 1833, Miss Frere writes : — " My brother says he is going to write and ask himself manfully for Niebuhr and the Parkhurst Hebrew Lexicon in a good type ; but whether he actually will, I doubt, for there are Galignanis come in of as late date as the 29th May from Marseilles, which he is reading. He says you do very pru- dently in requiring great precision about commis- sions, otherwise we should plague you unmercifully. . . . He believes he did leave some of his copies of the ' Spirito Antipapale' in Rossetti's hands, to be distributed, and the rest to be sent here ; whether JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 247 there are more to come, I suppose he will ascer- tain from Rossetti himself, to whom he says he means to write to-day. I wish there may be a reserve, for he is very desirous of making the book known ; and I have had first the copy Rossetti himself sent me taken, to be given to a gentleman going to Rome ; and again, when possessed of an- other, that went to Sicily." After describing various improvements in the garden : — " My brother has made himself a very broad strait walk along a north wall, where from noon till near sunset there is shade. He never took any concern in the garden before, but the having this length of about 150 yards to pace up and down he enjoys ; and by dint of watering, we have al- ready a pretty little collection of shrubs and plants, looking fresh and growing fast, in a broad border that goes parallel with the wall." He had also been much interested in promoting the emigration of the poorer classes of Maltese, who had suffered much from the extensive reduc- tions of establishments. " He has assisted a good many in getting to the African coast, — to Tunis, to Tripoli, and Alexandria, where the Maltese Arabic is readily understood, and at the latter place good workmen get profitable employment in the Pacha's establishments. At Algiers no one is allowed to land unless they have money to spend. At first the French were well content to receive any arti- ficer who went to exercise his trade, and the having the place open was a great resource." The following from Mr. Frere to his brother George, is dated June 30th, 1833 : — " I believe I must mark this secret. " It is so long since I have written to you that I cannot omit the opportunity (not of answering it) of acknowledging your last letter. The fact is that somehow or other the attitude of writing has become 248 MEMOIR OF so uneasy to me that it has taken me the whole morning to write a letter of three sheets and a half, not a very usual thing with me ; but it was addressed ' to R , who by mere accident has escaped pub- lishing a work, which would have done neither him nor anybody else any good. In the course of his researches he has fallen in with some discoveries as I conceive of partially conceived truths or opinions, the publication of which in his opinion (much more I suppose in mine) would be productive of infinite mischief. Upon this subject I had to write to him to exhort and dehort. He is an excellent, honest man, but exposed I am afraid to the suggestions of ad- visers who have not so much good principle. I wish that some of the family would . . . look after him a little. It may be the means of doing a great deal of good or preventing a great deal of harm. He has a great respect for the good opinion of good people. " Do you hear anything of this new church, 1 and what does Hatley say of it ? It is, I apprehend, a delusion ; but even in this view it is a most awful characteristic of the times." In 1834 another link with his early literary associations was broken by the death of Coleridge, for whom he had the warmest personal regard, joined to the highest admiration for his learning, and critical as well as poetical powers. Coleridge was not only, in his estimation, the parent of all that is soundest and most acute in modern English philosophy, but of much that is most beautiful in modern English poetry. " Coleridge's waste thoughts," he said, "would have set up a dozen of your modern poets." In reply to a question as to how they first became acquainted, he said : — " I remember seeing some verses in a newspaper signed 1 Irvingites. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 249 S. T. C, and being very anxious to find out and make the acquaintance of the author ; but it was not till fifteen years afterwards that I made his acquaintance. I went up and introduced myself to him after one of his lectures." Coleridge, in that most touching record of his feelings and wishes preserved in his will, written in Sept., 1829, said : — " Further to Mr. Gillman, as the most expressive way in which I can only mark my relation to him, and, in remembrance of a great and good man, revered by us both, I leave the manu- script volume lettered ' Arist. Manuscript — Birds, Acharnians, Knights,' presented to me by my dear friend and patron, the Rt. Hon. John Hookham Frere, who of all the men that I have had the means of knowing during my life, appears to me eminently to deserve to be characterized as b Kaxo- " To Mr. Frere himself I can only bequeath my assurance, grounded on a faith equally precious to him as to me, of a continuance of those prayers which I have for many years offered for his tem- poral and spiritual well-being. And further, in remembrance that it was under his (Mr. Gillman's) roof I enjoyed so many hours of delightful and profitable communion with Mr. J. H. Frere, it is my wish that this volume should, after the demise of James Gillman senior belong, and I do hereby bequeath the same to James Gillman junior, in the hope that it will remain an heir-loom in the Gillman family." The following is from Mr. Frere to his niece, who had greatly endeared herself to him, during a pro- longed stay at Malta : — " April 8i/i, 1834. " My dear Jane, " It seems to me I am chargeable with a long arrear of unanswered letters. I will therefore 250 MEMOIR OF strike off something from that account by replying to your last. You think that John 1 will have written to me. Much you know of Mr. John ! But, however, he is going on well, I have no doubt ; and as our name is to be spread over land and sea (as the poet says) I trust he will spread it over the sea in a creditable manner. You give a pleasing pic- ture of Mr. and Mrs. H 's establishment, con- cluding (like a wise old gentleman) with a general remark that a few young men of family living in the country in the way that he does would do a great deal of good. Nothing can be more true, and I am pleased that you remember my inveteracy against living genteel on a small income. It is my principle, though I sometimes take a fancy to indulge myself in a shilling's worth of magnifi- cence ; accordingly I have laid out to the amount of 1 6 dollars in an old-new looking-glass frame for the old dining-room, just like the old ones, and IOO, I am ashamed to say, in another, uncouther, and larger, of ebony and figures, and what not. Where we are to put it is not decided. Some are for the dining-room, and over the chimney-piece ; others again propose substituting it for that which is in the old dining-room, and placing that which it sup- plants in the new dining-room. My own opinion (I confess it) is unfixed and wavering with opposite suggestions. Perhaps if Bartle would chaperone you, you might be able to give a casting vote on the question. . . . Colonel Campbell, from Cairo, tells us that a steamer will start from Cal- cutta on the 25th of April, and another on the 15th of July for Suez, and on their return will touch at 1 His brother Edward's fourth son, who was in the Navy. He was afterwards, when a lieutenant on board the Carys- fort, appointed Commissioner for the Sandwich Islands, when they were provisionally ceded to Lord George Paulet in 1844; after having distinguished himself in the Crimea under Lord Lyons, he died a Post-Captain in 1864. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 251 the Island of Socotra, where it is arranged with the Governor of Bombay that a vessel is to be waiting to convey letters and passengers to Bombay. 1 Will this suit Bartle better than his earlier plan, or is he anxious to get a start ? I send it as I received it " Wolff is returned, and is now in quarantine. I believe he means to remain and put the account of his journey in order for publication ; but I expect he will be sick of a calm before long. I have seen him, and did not find him at all altered, or looking the worse for all his fatigues and hardships." In this year (1834) he received from his friend William Stewart Rose the first edition of a poetic epistle, inciting him to join Mr. Rose in the retreat he then occupied near Brighton. The epistle has been twice privately printed, but never, I believe, published entire. 2 Some of the most beautiful passages were given to the public in an article on Townsend's " Miscellanies " in the " Quarterly Re- view" for July, 1836. But the reviewer naturally quoted most frequently from those portions which described the poet's friend, the Rev. Charles Townsend, and the Sussex coast scenery, and people among whom they lived at Brighton, and the then quiet village of Preston. No apology will be needed, even to those few who have access to the original, for here quoting the passages which have more special reference to Mr. Frere, and to the circumstances which surrounded him in Malta. The epistle is addressed — 1 This refers to the first attempts to establish a steam com- munication overland via Egypt. His nephew, fifth son of his brother Edward, had just got the permission of the Court of Directors to go to Bombay overland, in hopes of meeting this experimental steamer. 2 The first edition, 8vo., was privately printed at Brighton, without title, in 1834. It was reprinted with considerable additions and alterations in 1837. Brighton, i2mo. The quotations here given are from the later edition. 252 MEMOIR OF "To the Right Honourable John Hookham Frere, in Malta. " William Stewart Rose presents with such kind cheer And health as he can give John Hookham Frere. " Brighton, MDCCCXXXIV." " That bound like bold Prometheus on a rock, O Self-banish'd man, you boil in a Scirocco. ' Save when a Maestrale makes you shiver, While worse than vulture pecks and pines your liver ; — Where neither lake nor river glads the eye Sear'd with the glare of 'hot and copper sky;' Where dwindled tree o'ershadows withered sward, Where green blade grows not ; where the ground is charr'd : — Where, if from wither'd turf and dwindled tree You turn to look upon a summer sea, And Speronards sail of snowy hue, Whitening and brightening on that field of blue ; Or eye the palace, rich in tapestried hall, The Moorish window and the massive wall ; Or mark the many loitering in its shade, In many-colour'd garb and guise array'd ; Long-hair'd Sclavonian skipper, with the red And scanty cap, which ill protects his head ; White-kilted Suliot, gay and gilded Greek, Grave, turban'd Turk, and Moor of swarthy cheek ; — Or sainted John's contiguous pile explore, Gemm'd altar, gilded beam, and gorgeous floor, Where you imblazon'd in mosaic see Memorials of a monkish chivalry ; The vaulted roof, impervious to the bomb, The votive tablet, and the victor's tomb, Where vanquished Moslem, captive to his sword, Upholds the trophies of his conquering lord ; Where if, while clouds from hallow'd censer steam, You muse, and fall into a mid-day dream, And hear the pealing chaunt, and sacring bell, Amid loud 'larum and the burst of shell, Short time to mark those many sights, which I Have sung, short time to dream of days gone-by, Forced alms must purchase from a greedy crowd Of lazy beggars, filthy, fierce, and loud, Who landing-place, street, stair, and temple crowd : — Where on the sultry wind for ever swells The jangle of ten thousand tuneless bells, 1 "The bells in Malta are rattled, not rung, and almost JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 253 While priestly drones in hourly pageant pass, Hived in their several cells by sound of brass ; — Where merry England's merriest month looks sorry, And your waste island seems but one wide quarry ; — I muse : — and think you might prefer my town, Its pensile pier, dry beach, and breezy down." After a description of the Downs and their scenery, which is worthy of the best masters of English pastoral poetry, Mr. Rose paints the little hamlet of Preston, the ancient frescoes of Becket's murder in the church, and his friend, its then curate- pastor, their walks and rides by down and valley, and their after-dinner colloquies : — u When rambling table-talk, not tuned to one key, Runs on chace, race, horse, mare ; fair, bear and monkey ; Or shifts from field and pheasant, fens and snipes, To the wise Samian's world of antitypes ; And when my friend's in his Platonic lunes, Although I lose his words I like his tunes ; And sometimes think I must have ass's ears, Who cannot learn the music of the spheres. But oft we pass to Epicurean theme Waking from mystic Plato's morning dream, And prosing o'er some Greek or Gascon wine, Praise the rich vintage of the Rhone or Rhine." Their potations, however, were, as the valetudi- narian poet confesses, more suited to a couple of anchorites than to genuine votaries of Bacchus : — " But that old saw, great talkers do the least, Is verified in me and in my priest." . . . " They ' seldom drain withal the wine-cup dry.' " Then addressing his exiled friend : — " Would you were here ! we might fulfil our task; Faith ! we might fathom Plato and the flask. 1 incessantly, on account of religious festivals, in honour of innumerable processions of monks who are always Hived in their several cells by sound of brass? W. S. R. • ' " His ability to sound the depths of Plato is perhaps warranted by the testamentary honour paid by that distin- guished Platonist, Mr. Coleridge, to the person who is ad- dressed." W. S. R. 254 MEMOIR OF Or we — would you not help us to unsphere His spirit to unfold new worlds — might hear That rampant strain you were the first to raise, Whereof another bears away the praise, Who (let me not his better nature wrong) Confess'd you father of his final song ; ' That rhyme which ranks you with immortal Berni ; Whiqh treats of giant, monk, knight, tilt and tourney ; And tells how Anak's race, detesting bells, Besieged the men that rang them, in their cells ; With whom they justly warr'd as deadly foes For breaking their sequester'd seat's repose. (Strange siege, unquestion'd by misdoubting Bryant !) And how in that long war, a young sick giant Was taken, christen'd, and became a friar ; And how he roar'd, and what he did, i' the quire. 2 Or, if, like that rare bard who left half-told Of yore the story of Cambuscan bold, You will not tell the sequel of your tale Of cavern, keep, and studious cloister's pale, Sing (what you verse in veriest English vein) Some snatches of his merriest, maddest strain, Who in wild masque upon Athenian stage Held up to scorn the follies of the sage Famed for vain wisdom, that in Cecrops' town Would fain have pull'd time-honour'd custom down ; Or, sparing the blind guides of Greece and Rome, Yourself may scourge our blinder guides at home ; You have crush'd reptiles. ' Rise and grasp,' (I say In your own words) ' a more reluctant prey.' 3 But anxious fear and angry feeling square 111 with the pleasures I would have you share. So gladly I return to down and dale, And sea, though sadden'd now by wintry gale." 1 " Lord Byron is usually considered as the naturalizer of this species of poetry, but he had seen Mr. Frere's work before the publication of ' Beppo' and ' Don Juan.' He made this avowal to me at Venice, and said he should have inscribed ' Beppo' to him that had served him as a model, if he had been sure it would not have been disagreeable, supposing (as I conclude) that some passages in it might have offended him." W. S. R. 4 " This part of the story, showing the development of the green mind of a giant under monkish discipline, was never printed." W. S. R. (but vide suprci, p. 168). 3 " See the poem entitled ' New Morality' in the Anti- jacobin." W. S. R. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 255 To this succeed a charming- series of sea and land paintings, and inimitable sketches of the win- ter frequenters of Brighton, which the Quarterly- Reviewer justly styles Horatian, but which are too long to quote here. The epistle ends, " Sometimes ('tis strange ; and I'm at my wit's end To find the cause) things please us which offend ; * # # # # And thus at strife with the retreat he chose Here dwells your invalided William Rose ; Who sings the pleasures and the pains — as best He can — of his selected place of rest. Nor think it strange if he that home commend For pains as well as pleasures to his friend. A preacher 1 (and he, like a saint of old, Deserves the title of the mouth of gold) Says that it steads not body more than soul To infuse some bitter in the festive bowl ; Which makes the cup so season'd, when 'tis quaff'd, A sounder and more salutary draught ; Thus I, the beverage which I mingle, stir Like that brave prelate, with a branch of myrrh, Join me, dear Frere, and be, if you can swallow This wine and wormwood draught, my great Apollo." The light in which Mr. Rose regarded his friend's voluntary exile and protracted residence at Malta was very much that in which it appeared to Mr. Frere's relatives, and in which I was prepared to view it, when in May, 1834, he invited me to visit him on my way to India. But one result of my stay for some weeks under his roof was, (whilst deepening the regret I felt at his continued separation from so many who loved and honoured him, and who would have been in every way bene- fited by his society,) to make me feel that it would be a very hazardous experiment for him to uproot himself from a position, which, in many respects, suited him better than almost any life I could imagine for him in England. 1 " Jeremy Taylor." W. S. R. 256 MEMOIR OF He had remained so long in the genial and equa- ble climate of Malta, that his constitution and habits had become accustomed to a temperature which probably tried him less than the chills and constant variations of an English winter would have done. If in Malta he was cut off from the literary and political society of London, he would, on the other hand, had he returned to England, have missed from the circle of his early associates most of the friends of his youth and manhood whose society he valued. In the perfect quiet and uninterrupted leisure of his life at Malta, he enjoyed, to an extent rarely attainable elsewhere, that intellectual com- munion with the great authors of other times and countries which has been so often described as the peculiar privilege and consolation of scholars in their old age ; and he lived, among a simple and grateful people, a life of singular ease and dignity, rendered conspicuously useful by his large-hearted liberality and intelligent benevolence. The following extracts, which have been kindly placed at my disposal from the letters and journals of a valued friend, 1 who stayed with Mr. Frere a few years afterwards, will show the impressions left on an acute and impartial observer, who saw him then for the first time. They relate to a period rather later than my own visit, but Malta had been little changed in the interval, and Mr. Frere's mode of life was still the same as when I was with him. There were then few steamers among the men-of- war or merchant-ships in the Mediterranean, save the monthly mail-packets, which looked into Valetta Harbour every fortnight, to and fro between Corfu and England. All the inlets which indent the rocky shore round Valetta are now crowded with steamers of every nation which possesses a mercan- 1 Mr. G. T. Clark of Dowlais House; and Talygar, Gla- morganshire. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 257 tile marine, carrying half the commerce of India and the Levant, of Australia and China ; but in 1834 the Quarantine Harbour was rarely tenanted by more than two or three small sailing vessels, Greek or Italian, with corn from Odessa, or pulse from Alexandria. There were few signs of life, except perhaps an occasional shore boat of quaint form and brightly painted, with two huge eyes on the prow, and rowed by a couple of Maltese fisher- men in red pendent caps. The blue waters rippled clear and undefiled against the white retaining wall of the roadway which separated Mr. Frere's house at the Pieta from the harbour. The building itself, originally two or three separate houses which had been thrown into one, extended for some distance along the road, at the foot of a rocky hill, rising steeply from the waterside. It was a good speci- men of a Maltese residence of former times, such as the knights built for themselves in their later and more luxurious days, when, though the galleys of St. John were still the terror of the Barbary Rovers, the Order thought less of fighting Saracen or Turk, than of enjoying the good things earned for its members by the great soldiers of its earlier years. A massive portal admitted the visitor to a large hall with a stone arched roof, supported by colossal caryatides of Giants and Titans at the angles, rather dimly lighted by windows high up in the walls, while a cistern of clear cool water in the centre, surrounded by strange semi-tropical plants, and enlivened by a macaw of magnificent plumage, helped to remind the English visitor that he had reached a southern climate. The house itself is thus described by Mr. Clark : — " The house stands near the head of the Quaran- tine Harbour, with only a road between it and the sea. It is of considerable extent, has an upper floor, and a flat roof. The ground floor is occupied by the servants and as offices, and on the upper s 258 MEMOIR OF and principal floor are the sitting-rooms and bed- rooms of the family. A double staircase, winding round a small open court with a fountain, leads from the entrance-hall into a long picture gallery, into which open the principal rooms. These are lofty, spacious, and well-proportioned. The walls are painted, as are the joists of the open ceiling. A row of small holes, near the cornice, open into the external air. The doors and windows are large, and the latter open with folding-doors into large balconies, parts of which are covered in and shaded. The floors are of stone, polished and stained in various patterns, and the rooms are well furnished with tables, sofas, easy chairs, ottomans, a pro- fusion of carved cabinets, and mirrors in heavy Venetian gilt frames, according to the prevailing Italian taste. Behind the house rises a steep hill of rock, and this which at considerable labour has been converted into a garden, forms, to an English eye, the principal curiosity of the place. The whole rock, up to the summit, is cut into terraces and platforms, parts of which are hollowed out into rock basins, which are filled with earth brought from a distance. Many of these terraces are enclosed by walls, and upon others are double rows of columns, supporting a trellis work covered with creepers, so as to protect the walks below from the rays of the sun. The different stages are approached by flights of steps, and the whole hill is excavated into tanks, containing a sufficient supply of water. "The view of the whole from a temple at its summit is very singular. The garden looks like a collection of sheep folds or paper boxes, but nothing can be richer than the heavy ornate staircases, tem- ples, seats, and benches, lines of arches and balus- trades, Gothic and Moorish turrets, and the gibbets for raising water from the tanks, all carved in the fine white Maltese stone, after bold and flowing patterns, and in excellent taste. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 259 " As to trees and shrubs, all kinds from the cedar to the hyssop are there. The fig, palm, banana, orange, lemon, tamarind, vine, pome- granate, and olive ; magnificent geraniums as big as that at Warwick, legions of roses, and carnations that would do credit to Chiswick. " The customs of the house are luxurious. No- body is visible before eleven or twelve, at which hours a sort of breakfast goes forward, which you may or may not attend. Before this, coffee is brought, if you wish, to your bed-room, and if you are disposed for an early walk, there is the garden with its pleasant alleys and trellised paths, or if you prefer the sea, it flows clear and bright before the very doors. Between eleven and seven people do what they please. Mr. Frere is reading or writing in his own apartment. At seven dinner goes forward. Covers are laid for a table full, and usually some privileged and pleasant guests drop in. The charm of the party is the master of the house, who though infirm in body, is not materially injured in mind or memory, and receives all with a fine old-fashioned courtesy that puts all at their ease. Other visitors come in the evening, usually good talkers, and the conversation becomes general. Mr. Frere however sees few strangers. After coffee comes a drive in the cool evening, perhaps from ten to midnight or even later, when the air is delightful." The garden here described was then, and con- tinued to the end of his life, a great source of interest to Mr. Frere, and afforded him almost his only means of outdoor exercise and amusement. It had been commenced with no further object than that of bringing into some kind of order the wilderness of stone walls, and prickly pears, and caruba trees which overspread the hill behind the house, but Mr. Frere soon found in it a ready 260 MEMOIR OF means of giving employment to the poor. There were no poor laws then in Malta. A population denser, in proportion to the area it occupied, than any other in Europe, pressed at all times closely on its means of subsistence, which were greatly affected by every fluctuation in the Government military and naval establishments ; for the rocky island then produced no more corn than sufficed for about six weeks' consumption in every year, and any reduction in the numbers of workmen employed in the port and dockyard was sure to be felt in many a poor Maltese family already sorely straitened for daily food. From the earliest years of his residence Mr. Frere had been a great advocate for emigration, and his arguments, backed, as was his wont, by liberal assistance from his own purse, had a great effect in overcoming the prejudices of the Maltese, who are a very home-loving people, and in pro- moting that extensive emigration which of late years has planted large communities of industrious Maltese in Algeria, Egypt, and Syria ; and even carried numbers to distant settlements in South America and the West Indies. But the old, the lame, the halt, and the blind remained behind, and when the master of the house at the Pieta went out for his evening drive, a crowd of these would usually collect at the door to beg for alms, which were never withheld from the helpless, or to ask for aid to get employment for the able-bodied. The conversion of the rocky hill-side into a garden was made to supply work when other means failed. The Maltese is born a builder and carver in stone ; and the result was the labyrinth of flights of stone steps, terraces, walls, and carved balustrades which Mr. Clark describes. Political economists might shake their heads at what they would consider a very imperfect pallia- tive of a general evil. But Mr. Frere had his JOHN HO OK II AM I RE RE. 261 reward in the gratitude of every class of the Maltese population, for while the better-informed fully appreciated his efforts to promote emigration, the poor knew him as one who was not content to answer a starving fellow-creature's appeal for aid, by an able exposition of the laws of supply and demand. In a letter written several years after the extracts just quoted, Mr. Clark writes : — " You asked me what impression Mr. Frere pro- duced upon me, and to describe him to you as he appeared to me during my stay under his roof at Malta in 1845. This is not an easy task, for his character was anything rather than commonplace. " What first struck me was his grand personal appearance. He was a very tall and altogether a large man, for his age very upright, with bold, commanding features, a good nose and brow, and a peculiar expression perhaps of sarcasm with a touch of hauteur about the curves of his mouth and nostrils. I have heard that Mr. Temple Frere was once spoken to for him by the Duke of Wellington ; but neither Mr. Temple Frere nor Mr. Edward Frere, two of his brothers, though both grandly built men, had anything of the expression to which I refer. Hoppner's picture, however, an excellent representation of him, gives this expression, which is also preserved in the engraving of it. " I was told that he saw few strangers, and was, therefore, the more pleased when I found that he did not treat me as a stranger. I had not been an hour at the Valetta Hotel before he sent for me, and lodged me in his house, then the Pieta. " At dinner he said little, but later in the .even- ing somebody used the phrase, ' toot him soundly,' for ' whip him,' and he at once noticed the word, quoted an instance of its use, and continued a con- versation till the small hours, upon old and quaint books and phrases of the sixteenth and seventeenth 262 MEMOIR OF centuries, displaying quietly a wonderful acquaint- ance with half-forgotten literature, useless, as he called it. I was told that, though he sat up late, he did not often remain in company. " At breakfast he never appeared, and I rarely saw him much before dinner. At that meal and at tea he was accustomed to meet the few people whom he knew intimately, but he did not visit, and did not usually care for new faces. However, on one occasion, I remember, he received Bishop Alexander and his sister, and nothing could exceed his kindness to them. I think the bishop was introduced by Wolff, in whom Mr. Frere much delighted, and concerning whose sayings and doings, when he stayed at the Pieta, there were many droll stories. " Though he talked well, and was both a full and a ready man, he was never overbearing, and always willing to hear others. I remember his showing a good deal of knowledge on scientific military sub- jects, followed by a present of his copy of Jomini's works, to a young soldier then on his way to join his regiment. " Of early English literature he talked, as was to be expected, and of the 'Anti-Jacobin' and its poetry. But he said little of his own share in it, or of his own writings generally ; nor did I think it polite to lead the conversation to them. " He was full of anecdotes about Pitt, and Canning, and Wyndham — with whom, I think, he had some county connexion. 1 One of his anec- dotes was, that when canvassing together with Wyndham, a fish-wife opened upon them with a torrent of abuse. When she had done, Wyndham responded in her own strain, and fairly beat her down with his superior flow of the coarse vernacular 1 Mr. Wyndham was his father's colleague in representing Norwich, and always a warm personal friend of Mr. Frere. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 263 of the ' tyo cyownties.' It was very pleasant thus to meet a man who had moved on equal terms with the great political and literary leaders at the commencement of the present century ; who knew Holland House in its early days, and had been intimate with George Ellis and the founders of the * Quarterly Review,' and with Coleridge ; for Canning his affection was very great. " He had the good breeding of a past school, with little or nothing of its stiffness or formality. In his comments upon public events and business, there was a very remarkable high-minded and very upright way of forming an opinion, and a marked contempt for anything mean or tortuous. In this, as in the kindliness of his disposition, he appeared to me much to resemble his brother, Mr. Bartle Frere, also a diplomatist of the old school." Malta in 1834 was still looked on as one of our most important foreign possessions. Its English official society comprised many men of family and education, and the military and naval command were always confided to veterans of the great war, for the companions of Nelson and Wellington had not yet disappeared from the lists of those fit for active service. Among the younger naval and military officers there were always some connex- ions of Mr. Frere's early friends who had intro- ductions to him, and who found the Pieta ever open to them, and a host who could always tho- roughly enjoy the high spirits and unaffected frankness of a well-bred young Englishman. He found, too, in those days, much pleasure in the society of many of the Maltese and Italian in- habitants of the island, who mixed with the English on terms of greater intimacy and cordiality than is, perhaps, possible in these times of comparative unrest and ceaseless change. The last surviving knight of the Order, who had seen a Grand Master in the Palace at Valetta, was still an occasional 264 MEMOIR OF guest of the English Governor. And there were many other relics of a picturesque and historical past, which gave interest and variety even to the very retired life which Mr. Frere led. Few months passed without his interchanging a visit with Caruana, the Roman Catholic bishop — a fine specimen of a learned, high-minded, and cour- teous ecclesiastic of the old school ; who, if he was little prepared to make concessions to the demands of modern liberalism, was still less inclined to seek compensation for the loss of political influence by submission to ultramontane ecclesiastical rule. Another frequent visitor was Sir Vincent Borg, also a Maltese gentleman of the old school. To these two men, he was wont to say, the English in a great measure owed the possession of the island. The following is from a note of a description of the rising against the French, as he related it to me one day after a visit from Borg : — " The insurrection against the French began by their attempting to rob some of the churches ; they were taking down some of the damask hangings in the great church at Birchircara, near the Pieta, when the people who were looking on, and could not stand such a sacrilege, tripped up the ladder of the men employed and killed them. They then went to Borg, who was not a man of noble family, and begged him to lead them, and ring the bells of the church as an alarm. He said, ' The bells are neither yours nor mine, they belong to the Prae- posito, let us ask him.' This he said to gain time to consult the Praeposito, an old man, of whose sagacity Borg had a high opinion ; he then took the Praeposito aside, and asked him what he thought should be done ? The old Praeposito answered, ' The thing is done now, and either they or we must go to the wall, so we must do our best to beat them.' Borg then went back to the Maltese crowd and agreed to lead them, rang JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 265 the bells, and, setting two little boys on the top of the church tower at Birchircara to watch — one towards Valetta the other towards Civita Vecchia — he took a muster of the people and their fire-arms ; they had thirty stand of the latter, and the rest of the multitude were armed with sticks. At length a re-inforcement of the French, about three hundred in number, was seen issuing from the Floriana Gate. Borg led his men to attack them just where the Vignacourt Aqueduct crosses the road to Civita Vecchia. He placed his musketeers in ambush, and they fired from behind the stone walls, killed the officers, and then all closed in upon the men of the French detachment, who fairly turned and re- treated to Valetta. He got the bishop, who was then a young priest, to join him, and the Maltese next attacked a small sea battery towards St. Juliens, and, killing the guard, took the guns, which they dragged with the bell ropes into a battery erected on this (the Pieta) side. They had another against the Floriana Gate ; and, after raising the whole Maltese population of the island, they blockaded the French in Valetta. As the French were not strong enough to attempt sallies in force, the Mal- tese got to entertain a great contempt for them, and used to harass them in every kind of way, preventing their fishing in the harbour, getting down at night (for they can climb like cats) into the gardens which the French had made in the ditches, and destroying them till they made the French give up attempting to cultivate. On a small scale it was just like the insurrection in Spain ; when the province of Biscay, with a few hundred dollars in its treasury, formally declared war against the Emperor Napoleon (who had then Austria, Russia, and Prussia prostrate) and sent Biscayan dignitaries to England as ambassadors, who arrived simultaneously with the other envoys from the other provinces, sent without any previous 266 MEMOIR OF concert. I remember Romana telling me he was once talking to some officers who said they feared the expulsion of the French would be a tedious business. ' Are you Spaniards,' he said, ' and do you forget that we were four hundred years in turning out the Moors ? But we did it at last \'" 1 Among Mr. Frere's constant visitors at the Pieta in those days Father Marmora must not be omitted. He was very learned in Hebrew, and all its cognate languages. He had collected every word and in- scription which was then known to exist in Phoe- nician ; and had written a treatise to prove that Maltese was a dialect of Phoenician, and retained more of the old Punic element than any other language. He had for many years read Hebrew with Mr. Frere, who highly esteemed him, not only for his learning, but for his amiability and gentle manners. He rarely left his study in one of the religious houses at Floriana, except to visit the Pieta, and always dined with Mr. Frere on Sun- days ; when the conversation would occasionally — especially when Mr. Joseph Wolff was present — get so Semitic that it was not easy for an unlearned bystander to follow. The following are a few fragmentary recollec- tions of some of these Sunday evening conversa- tions, when Mr. Frere was incited by the worthy priest to enlarge on subjects connected with Phoe- nician antiquities : — J. H. F. " All the sites of Grecian colonies in Sicily were once possessed by the Phoenicians, and we have no record when or how they were trans- ferred to the Greeks without, as far as we know, any contest ; possibly it was when Tyre was ex- hausted by Nebuchadnezzar's attacks. Many of 1 Borg was knighted a few years before his death, in 1837. He is buried in the church at Birchircara, partly built by him, and a characteristic epitaph by Mr. Frere records his many public services and private virtues. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 267 the Greco-Sicilian coins bear Phoenician legends. Syracuse still retains its Phoenician name, it is 'Marsa Sirocco,' i.e. the S. E. Port. There is a port still so called in Malta. So Marseilles, ori- ginally a Phoenician, and subsequently a Greek em- porium, retains its Phoenician name, it is ' Marsa,' the port. So port Mahon, 'Mago,' or Maho, is Phoenician for ' refuge.' This explains Hannibal's remark, when, by detaching his general Mago, he had completed his combinations for defeating the Romans at Thrasimenus ; l it was, in fact, a Punic pun ; he said, ' He was sure of them, because they had no Mago ' (i. e. refuge). " It is very possible that the Giant's Tower at Gozo, and the similar remains which are found elsewhere in Malta and, I believe, in Sardinia also, may be Phoenician. They certainly do not belong to the Greek or Roman, or any later age, and are quite different in style from any of the remains which are called Cyclopean or Etruscan in Italy." J. H. F. " I take it the real history of the siege of Syracuse was, that the Athenians having been successful in the East, by leading the patriotic spirit of the Greeks in opposing the Persians, thought to play the same game over again in the West against the Phoenicians and Tuscans ; but they forgot that all the Sicilian colonies were Doric, and that no man can play the same game in politics twice. Your throws are not the same ; and, if they are the same, your adversary knows how you played last time, and takes care to play differently himself." 1 Query Trebia? Polyb. iii. 71 — 74, Liv. xxi. 54, 55. Com- pare with the account of the battle of Thrasimenus, Polyb. iii. 82 — 84, Liv. xxii. 4 — 6, in which Mago's name is not mentioned by either historian. He is, however, mentioned on this occasion by the poet Silius Italicus (iv. 825, v. 287 — 375, 529, foil. 668). At Cannae, Mago was posted with Hanni- bal on the centre, Polyb. iii. 1 14, Liv. xxii. 46. 268 MEMOIR OF In reply to a question, Are there any remains of the Osci still to be traced ? J. H. F. " The radical letters (S. C.) of the name Osci, are found in the names of a vast number of neighbouring nations — Siculi, Sicani, Susci, Cy- clopes (query Syclops) — a compound national name, the result of the union of two tribes (like Celtiberi, Gallogreci). Another nation, of whose name P. S. C. were the radical letters, is traced in Dolo-Pisci, or Dolopes. Etrusci is also a compound national name ; the Etri, or Atri, being a tribe who gave their name to the Adriatic. Pelasci, or Pelasgi, another compound (query, were the Pels, or Beels, your Indian Bheels ?) Fe/S/Cinnini and Vi/S/caeni or Biscayeni, are also names which it is possible are compound names from two tribes, one of which were Osci. There may possibly yet be found traces of some of the languages of these old na- tions in the patois of some of the remote mountains in Italy or Greece." J. H. F. " The several labours of Hercules were each the extinction of some form of heresy or super- stition ; thus the destruction of the Mares of Dio- medes was the eradication of some Molochian superstition. Possibly so were the labours of Perseus. Medusa was the moon ; the sword (harpe, which, by the way, is Hebrew) forms the crescent moon, and the sack to hold the head is the inter- lunium. A head referred by some authors to the moon, and by others to the Medusa (probably, as just observed, both being the same) is borne on the coins of Camarina in Sicily ; Camar in Maltese (probably in Phoenician also) signifies the moon." I will now resume the extracts from his letters. To his brother George he wrote, on the 3 ist January, 1835:— " I was very much pleased with Anne s and Susan's verses. They are reallysingularly good. The JOHN HO OK HAM FKERE. 269 description of Coleridge 1 is perfect. Did you show them to Rogers ? No, you were afraid he would think you an old fool of a father. If you have an opportunity, show them to him upon my recom- mendation. I will incur the responsibility as an uncle." In a letter dated the 9th of April, 1835, he writes to his brother Edward, who was in the habit of using a style and carbonized copying paper, which often tired the eyesight of his correspondents, but who had written him one letter with ordinary pen and ink : — "Malta, April yh, 1835. " My dear Ned, " I have to acknowledge the receipt of yours of the 2nd March, written with a ' real pen, real ink, and real paper.' What is the nonsense which that puts me in mind of? Do you recollect? It was something of poor Bob Clive's at Putney " [where they had been at school together], " and his writing-master at home, Mr. Skelton by name, 1 On the Poet Coleridge. Thou reverend good old man ! I see thee still ; Thy silver locks, thy countenance benign, Beaming with inward light, and with divine Charity, that nor doth nor thinketh ill, Thy voice yet seems my raptur'd sense to fill, Discoursing sweetly to the soul and ear, Like some fair stream, majestically slow, Aye bearing onwards with unwearying flow, Ever uncheck'd, and wandering at will. Oh ! if thy mighty spirit, to this shore Of earth confin'd, where others do but creep, Launch'd forth so far into the boundless deep, And gather'd of rich pearls so large a store, What depths are thine now freely to explore ! The source of light and life, the fountain clear Of wisdom, open to thee; whence with joy To hear this sentence, " Well thou didst employ Thy talents — to thee shall be given more." — S. F. 270 MEMOIR OF whose figure he used to draw on the blank pages of his books. . . It is not the less true that the sight of your real ink was a great refreshment to my eyes. So much for the form and material characters of your letter. For the substance, I am truly glad that your bargain for Turton 1 is approaching to a satisfactory termination, the more so as I trust it will enable you to inspect us here. Do not be afraid of the summer, it is all nonsense. Ask William ! he will tell you ; and I can tell you that I am never so well here as in the height of summer, and our con- stitutions, I take it, are not much unlike. Take example by the old Welsh mules which are sent over to the West Indies, where they are found to grow young again. You will see how I am ruining myself with building (I dare say you will be told so, if you remain in England). I built my first piece of wall simply by the Lesbian rule, as Aristotle de- scribes it ; but I have since made a discovery of the true Pelasgic method, and am finishing the other end of it like a perfect Cyclops, such as Neptune employed in building the walls of Troy. I have not time to explain this, so you must come and judge for yourself on the spot, and stop my hand if you think I am likely to do myself any real injury by the expense, for my architect is persuading me to build a small Doric temple, though the cost, even according to his own statement, will not be less than fifteen pounds ; and it will cost me, I believe, seven or eight to finish my wall in a way that Sir W. Gell would approve. " I have been running on with nonsense (from which you will only collect that I am well, and that I shall be very glad to see you), while you are look- ing for some account of dear S — " [a niece who had gone out to Malta for her health]. "She is the most cheerful creature under suffering that ever was, and 1 Turton Tower, near Bolton, in Lancashire, which his brother was about to sell. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 271 the delight of everybody, including even that old uncle of hers. You know ' she is living with an old uncle.' " Speaking of a young couple who were about to marry on very narrow means, he adds : — " With respect to means, if they will be content to live like poor gentle folks like and , they may do very well. The opposite line, that of living genteel upon a small income, is the vilest slavery, and never answers." " Malta, August 6t/i, 1835. "My dear Bartle, " Bandinell has met with some difficulties at the Treasury, the nature of which I do not very well understand. It seems that I am 'to state the period during which I have been free from office, and from which I claim the pension.' Now these two periods are not the same, for my pension was granted on my first return from Spain, and on my being sent there again, my pension was not stopped, and I had no fixed allowance as a minister (as in so confused a state of things it was hardly possible to fix on any amount which might not be extravagant or insufficient) ; but I was left at liberty to draw for necessary expenses, a liberty which you know I used with great moderation, con- ceiving, as I did, that anything like the usual display of foreign ministers would appear offensive in the midst of the general distress. " Such is the history of my pension ; but having no papers or memoranda to which I can refer, it is impossible for me to make it strictly chronological. If this should be required, you, perhaps, would assist, and you and Bandinell together would draw up a certificate in the form in which I ought to send it. I am now two quarters in arrear, and should be very glad of a little money. " I am much obliged to you for the trouble you 272 MEMOIR OF have taken about Theognis. I flatter myself it will show the Germans that an Englishman can do something, though not exactly in their way. " Pray thank Hamilton for his care about my dilet- tanti books, and tell him that I shall be anxious to show every civility to his friend, Captain Stodart." 1 " Malta, May $th, 1836. " The same packet by which my brother Edward arrived here on the 19th of last month brought me your letter recommending Mr. W , who arrived here afterwards in the ' Manchester ' steamer, and is now on his way home with four giraffes, and Mr. and Mrs. B on board. I have been as civil to them all (the giraffes included, for I called upon them — the giraffes — twice) as I could possibly be, and if you see them they will, I trust (with the exception of the giraffes), make a favourable report of their reception here. I liked Mr. W very much, and was delighted (as everybody else was) with Mrs. B . They are roaming in quest of health for him, and have already passed two winters in Madeira. I am in hopes that they may be per- suaded to pass the next winter here. I have pro- mised to be ' as obliging and attentive as possible.' It would be a great thing for the island if some real gentlemen of fortune would take to living here, and it would be a great boon to " Your scrubby but affectionate brother, "J. H. FRERE." " I wish some morning, when you are in good spirits, that you would call on Mrs. B ." To his sister-in-law, he wrote, November 8th, 1836:— " Pray thank my brother for the trouble he has taken in writing to Chantrey. I have sent a part 1 The unfortunate traveller who afterwards, with Arthur Conolly, perished in captivity at Bokhara. JOHN HO OKH AM FREKE. 273 of his letter to Lord Holland. Poor John is in quarantine within sight of this window, and in quarantine he must remain, oscillating between this place and Alexandria, till his friends are able to clap an epaulette on his shoulders. . . . We have all kinds of people here: the Prince de Joinville, Louis Philippe's younger son, and the Principe di Capua, the King of Naples' younger brother, with the Irish lady whom he has married. Count Matu- tiwitz is just gone, and John will have to convey Lord and Lady Brudenell to Alexandria, from whence they proceed to Bombay with a letter of recommendation to Mr. William Frere, of the Sud- der Adawlut, after which they are to go to Delhi or Meerut, where they will have the advantage, pro- bably, of seeing Mr. Richard Frere. Nonsense ! " In 1836 Lord Melbourne's Government appointed a Commission to examine into a vast number of complaints received by the Colonial Office regarding the administration of the laws, and of public affairs generally, in Malta. Many of the abuses and evils — political, economical, and social — to be investi- gated and reported upon, seemed to Mr. Frere beyond the reach of any remedy which such a com- mission could recommend, or any government ap- ply ; and he had some fears of the effects on the island population of the exaggerated expectations raised by what the Duke of Wellington is said to have likened to " an attempt to frame a constitution on the British model for a line-of-battle ship." Both the Commissioners were men of distinguished ability and literary mark, the senior being Mr. Austin, the celebrated jurist, who was accompanied by his wife, already well known as an accomplished autho- ress. The junior member was Mr. (afterwards Sir) George Cornewall Lewis, whose death in 1863, after he had filled the offices of Chancellor of the Exche- quer, Home Secretary, and Secretary of State for War, in Lord Palmerston's administrations from T 274 MEMOIR OF 1855, has not yet ceased to be regretted by con- temporary statesmen of all parties. Notwithstanding the difference of their ages — for Mr. Lewis was then barely thirty — and, in many respects, of their political views, Mr. Frere formed the highest opinion of him as a politician, as well as a man of letters. Speaking of him, he said, " Lewis is one of the very few really learned Eng- lishmen I have met of late years, and his fairness is as remarkable as his learning. It is a great pity he is such a desperate Whig ; but I think, if we could have kept him in Malta a little longer, we might have made a very decent Tory of him. I do not think he was very well pleased with his first essay in constitution-making." It is fair to add, however, that the constitution, and the reforms generally, which the Commission recommended, seem to have answered most of the purposes for which they were designed, even if they did not fulfil the somewhat extravagant expectations of those who called for the Commission. Writing to Sir Edmund Head soon after arriving in Malta, Mr. Lewis said : — " The two main evils of Malta are — for the upper classes practical exclusion from office, and brutal treatment by the English in society ; and for the lower classes, over-population. . . Already carubas have become an article of food ; and if the increase goes much further, the people must starve if they are not fed by English charity. I have seen Hook- ham Frere, who found himself in Malta sixteen years ago, at his wife's death, and has forgotten to return to England. He has translated four plays of Aristophanes, and will, I imagine, publish them." Mr. Lewis appears, from his subsequent letters, to have been at first much disappointed in what he saw of Mr. Frere, who, he thought, had completely rusted in his long exile. Probably Mr. Frere had expressed to him his own doubts of the Commission being able to effect all that the sanguine young JOHN HOOK HAM FRERE. 275 Liberal thought possible ; and \% is not unlikely that, as time proved the task to be more difficult and tedious than it had at first appeared, Mr. Lewis got to entertain more respect for what he had pre- viously regarded as Mr. Frere's antiquated notions. On January 18th, 1837, Mr. Frere wrote to his brother Bartle : — " [John] is the bearer of a postscript to my Theo- gnis and a title page — which took me more time than any other ten pages in the book. " My chief difficulty in publishing, is this — that the world is at this moment mad with political excitement, and everything is supposed to have some political bearing. " Now Theognis denounces the abuses and op- pressions which terminated (as he predicted) in a revolution, he also deplores the violences of the revolution which followed. " I wish therefore ... to publish it simply as a school book, renouncing all the fashionable Whig, and Tory, and Radical booksellers, and betaking myself to a publisher who is simply scholastic." "March II, 1837. " I shall be very glad to shew any civility to any person recommended by you, and shall look out on board the 'Vanguard' for Mr. J. E. Johnston. " Is Sir Alexander Johnston the same man who is so zealous and liberal a promoter of Oriental investigations ? I must in return trouble you with some commissions. " Will you tell Rodwell to send me the first volume (the last published) of Clinton's ' Fasti Hel- lenici,' together with Thirlwall's ' History of Greece,' and Boeckh's ' Public Economy of Athens.' I have not time to write to Hamilton, and to thank him, as I ought to do. " I am really, as they say here, tutto confuso with his kindness and attention. 276 MEMOIR OF ".You see him I imagine so often, that it will not be giving you a very troublesome commission to desire you to say for me (I might say for us) for we have been all indebted to his kindness, how sensible we are of it — I myself in particular. " So you are a subscriber to the Jini bronzes, and you were right ! What perfectly beautiful things they are ! " People on the packet day run away from writing their own letters, and go about visiting, hindering Others — o Kai kfj,o\ vuv\ cruftfisBwEV. " If you cannot make this out, no more could I make out the inscription on the polychrome temple, till Mr. Lewis, who had taken more pains with it, tranquillized my mind by informing me it was nonsense. " With nonsense then I conclude, ***** " We are all here as comfortable as possible." "April yd, 1837. "... It is, as you say, rather a shame in a biblio- polish point of view, not to have finished those poor Frogs ; perhaps I may surprise you some day, by the sudden exertion of writing out the half-dozen remaining hexameters and writing the notes, (if I can remember what they were intended to be,) which are referred to in the text already printed. Mr. Lewis, who is here as Commissioner, and who is a complete scholar, is urging me to print the Knights at the Government Printing Office, and offers to superintend it. I do not know — to say the truth, I wish I could clear my mind of those clas- sicalities, which, between ourselves, have a tendency, more or less, to make heathens of us all, at least to weaken and confuse those impressions, which ought to be uppermost in the mind (Etatis atmo 68. " Nothing has been done to ' Theognis,' and nothing is required; it might even go to the press as it is, but JOHN II 00 KH AM FRERE. 277 there are some sentences, here and there, which I should think it might be better to scratch out. " Believe me, my dear Bartle, " Very affectionately yours, "J. H. Frere. " P.S. — Pray give my best thanks to W. Rose for his recollection of me. I was much pleased with it, and with many of the verses. 1 Hamilton's ' Clouds ' were borrowed of me, by Mr. Lewis, before I had read them myself. I therefore as yet can only thank him for having thought of me." " Carnival Monday, 1837. "... I have another copy [of ' Theognis '] here, in which I should wish to make some correc- tions, and if you, or any judicious friend (Hamilton for instance, not omitting Ainslie, whose taste is perfect), would point out any desirable alterations or omissions, I should feel much obliged to them. " But the copy in your hands is in the mean- while sufficient to enable the publisher to form his estimate, and to make an offer. " As a last resort, or perhaps in some respects as good as any, I might print at Eton, by the successor of the noble Jos. Pope." '■'■June 2, 1837. " We are all well, which perhaps you may be glad to hear, for it is possible that strange exag- gerated accounts may reach England. The influ- enza has reached us, and has spread with extra- ordinary rapidity through the fleet and troops, and into the town ; but I do not hear that it has proved fatal, as yet, to any body : its period is from three 1 This refers to the privately-printed " Rhymes " by William Stewart Rose (Brighton, 1837), containing the Epistle to Mr. Frere, already quoted. 278 MEMOIR OF days, in some cases, to about a week, and is accom- panied with a good deal of pain and extreme weakness. Susan has had something very like it, though not much differing from the kind of colds which she has had once before this winter. I have had a cold too, such as I never had before. . . . " So much for the sanitary question. " I have not seen poor Sir W. Scott's life, and if you pass by Rodwell's any day, would be obliged to you to tell him to send it me. " There is something in the atmosphere and the state of the weather which is, I believe, the origin of this general complaint ; a ship from Tunis, where the disorder had not appeared, was attacked with it on approaching the island, and those who are not attacked are sensible of extreme languor and oppression. " It seems as if the elements were generally in a state of discomposure. But enough of this." In the summer of this year, while the Commis- sion was still at Malta, the island was visited by a frightful epidemic of cholera, which carried off 2,000 people in five weeks, and Mr. Frere suffered in many ways from the strain which his exertions to mitigate the general distress and alarm imposed on him. His sister, writing in September, after the disease had somewhat abated, describes the effect as having been so great as to make her fear that he was suddenly falling into old age. She speaks gratefully of the relief he had found in Mr. Lewis's society, and in the revived interest with which her brother had returned to his Translations, conse- quent on his young friend having volunteered to superintend their being printed at the Maltese Government press, though she says she has not yet been able quite to forgive the Commission for having abolished the House of Industry, the place of refuge for poor girls, and the Ospizio for old JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 279 people, and fears that "all our charitable institu- tions will be absorbed into a hateful sort of general poor-rate." Mr. Bartle Frere refers to the aid thus tendered by Mr. Lewis in several letters written in 1837, in one of which, after saying that two London pub- lishers had declined to undertake to print the trans- lation of Aristophanes at their own risk, he urges his brother to publish it himself, " even if it cost him fifty pounds," reminding him of the consolation which a friend of theirs had found in paying a heavy printer's bill for her son's unsaleable publica- tions, "that it was a very creditable way of spending one's money ! " In a subsequent letter he adds: — " In my opinion, you had better accept at once Mr. Lewis's offer, and print at the Government press. You will be then laying out your money, not only for a credit- able purpose (as I suggested in my last), but will be doing something for the good of the island, whose export trade in this article of books, I suppose, is far overbalanced by those which you import. By the bye, if I was not enjoined to send no books but what are ordered by you, I should have told Rod- well to forward to you the two first volumes of Lockhart's ' Life of Scott ; ' the second only comes out to-day, and I see your name frequently men- tioned in it, in conjunction with G. Ellis and Canning, in terms in which one might not com- plain of being handed down to posterity ; for this is a book which ivill go to posterity, and also, I suppose, have a more extensive sale at its first appearance than any other modern work." With the help which Mr. Lewis had kindly offered, the translation of four plays of Aristophanes was at length put through the press at Malta, though with- out the marking of the dominant accents, or other indications of the rhythm, which Mr. Frere had contemplated as aids to a better understanding of 280 MEMOIR OF the effect of the original. He found that, with the limited resources of the local press, the correction of typographical errors in the accents would have in- volved a greater amount of labour than, at his age, it was possible to give to such a task ; and he some- what reluctantly yielded to the advice of Mr. Lewis, who judged that, though careful scholars would appreciate the assistance to be derived from an accentuated text, readers in general would be more likely to be deterred from perusal by the unusual aspect of the page, than to be aided by the addi- tional labour bestowed on it. But, though printed, the work was not published, and was consequently inaccessible to the public, and its merits were very imperfectly appreciated by the world of scholars till Mr. Lewis, some years after- wards (1847), gave, in the "Classical Museum," 1 very ample extracts, accompanied by much kindly and judicious criticism. In his introductory remarks, he says : — " The reproduction of the comedies of Aristophanes in a modern language seems almost a hopeless task. The endless variety of his style and metres, the exuberance of his witty imagination, the richness and flexibility of the Attic language in which he wrote, and the perpetual byplay of allu- sions, often intimated merely by a pun, a meta- phor, or a strange new compound, to the statesmen, poets, political events and institutions, manners and domestic history of his times, appear to make it equally difficult to execute a poetical version which shall adhere to the letter or render the spirit of the original." After noticing the imperfections of Mitchell's translation, he adds : — " Mr. Frere (who had many years ago exercised his poetical powers upon Aristophanes, and who wrote a fair and, indeed, favourable critique of the first volume of Mr. Mitchell's translation, in the 'Quarterly Review') 1 No. ii. p. 238. JOHN HOOK HAM I MERE. 281 judged rightly that the success of previous trans- lators had not rendered his efforts superfluous. He has accordingly been induced to print, for private distribution, his versions of the 'Acharnians,' the 'Knights,' the 'Birds,' and the 'Frogs.' If anybody was likely to meet with success in this undertaking, it was the author of the admirable imitation of Darwin in the 'Anti-Jacobin' — an imitation which bids fair to be much more long-lived than its original — and of the excellent poem of Whistlecraft, the model on which Lord Byron wrote his ' Beppo,' but which, by some accident of popular taste, has never obtained a reputation equal to its merits. And, in our opinion, Mr. Frere's success as a trans- lator of Aristophanes has been greater than might have been reasonably anticipated. Of the plays which he has selected, three, the 'Knights,' the ' Birds,' and the ' Frogs,' are certainly the most difficult which a translator could deal with. More- over, what he has undertaken he has performed ; the entire play is rendered, so that the merely English reader can form a complete judgment of the original : no scenes are omitted as unmanage- able. Of the four plays, the translations of the ' Frogs ' and ' Knights' appear to us to be the best : the latter, in particular, gives an excellent idea of this masterpiece of comic invective ; the foivoTyg of which was never exceeded by any of the vitupera- tive effusions of those great masters of the art, the Attic orators. " As the work is not published for sale, we pro- pose to give such full selections as will enable the reader to judge for himself of the goodness of the translation. Before, however, we proceed to do so, we repeat that the difficulty of worthily representing Aristophanes in a modern language can scarcely be over-estimated, and it can only be appreciated by one who is acquainted with the original. The Germans, as far as we know, are almost the only 282 MEMOIR OF continental nation who have attempted any other translation of Aristophanes than a literal prose version for the use of school-boys. 1 All poetical translations from the ancient classical languages are difficult ; as the failure of great poets (such as Dryden and Pope), and the rarity of even tolerable success, evince. But a poetical translation of Aristophanes is peculiarly difficult. Comedy is harder of translation than tragedy ; it is easier to copy the lofty and serious than the ridiculous and familiar. That Menander's grace and elegance was not easily transferred into another language is proved by the comparative failure of Terence, whom Julius Caesar, doubtless disposed to speak of him as highly as he could, only ventured to call half a Menander. If, however, the equable flow and domestic plots of Menander were hard to imitate, what is to be thought of the grotesque, fantastic, and local humour of Aristophanes ? The translation of Goethe's ' Faust' is no easy task, as many modern poets have found. It has not, we believe, been attempted in French or Italian verse. But ' Faust ' is far less obscure, and less tinged with the colours of time and place, than the ' Knights ' or the ' Frogs.' Moreover, there is an affinity in modern metres and forms of words which renders the transfusion of a poem from one living language to another easier than the transfusion from a dead language." After giving copious extracts from the four plays, the article concludes with some criticism on Mr. Frere's translation of Theognis, which was printed some years after the Aristophanes. In August, 1837, while the cholera was still 1 The " Biographie Universelle," torn. ii. p. 455, states that in the complete translation of the plays of Aristophanes by Poinsinet de Sivry, some plays are translated in verse, and others in prose : and that the translation of Brottier (the nephew of the translator of Tacitus) is entirely in prose. We have not seen either translation. JOHN HO O KH AM FRERE. 283 devastating the island, Mr. Frere wrote to his brother Bartle : — " Not having been able to sleep, and having laboured under a paroxysm of laziness all yester- day, and it being now light enough to enable me to see what I am writing, and owing to Susan's inflam- mation in her eyes, devolving upon me the task of writing to everybody who may be supposed to care about us, I sit down with pleasure (or more pro- perly stand up at my desk) to inform you that we are hitherto alive and well, except as above excepted. . . . . The cholera is on the decline in point of numbers, but within these few days has been more frequent among the higher class of Maltese, and among the English. As for myself, when a disorder is going about, I rarely get it till everybody else has done with it. Susan has had her equivalent in the influenza, which prevailed as unaccountably as the cholera during all the singular cold wet weather which we experienced this spring. It was with a sudden burst of extreme heat on the 9th of June that the cholera first broke out, and (as is usual with epidemics on their first appearance) was rapidly fatal. It is strange that (as if it had introduced itself into a new region) the same rapidity of execu- tion is visible in the class into which it has now found its way. I take what care I can of myself, and some care of others. My only method is to be very moderate in everything, so here is a very moderate letter." On 20th September, 1838, he wrote : — "My dear Bartle, " I shall be happy to show any civility in my power to your friend Sir H. Willoughby. I say in my power, for I have found it necessary to give up dining out, or entertaining large parties at home, so that my company is pretty much restricted to the few persons I can venture to ask, either on the same day, or the day before. 284 MEMOIR OF " Do not imagine that I am very bad, but as I am indebted for my quasi-recovery to this mode of life, I do not run the risk of altering it. "Temple writes me word that Mr. Dykes (the other Lord of the Manor of Roydon) is dead, and that there is an opportunity of purchasing it, with 90 acres of land. I do not want the land ; but if you were inclined to purchase land, we might make a joint bargain, for the Manor might, in troublesome hands, become a source of annoyance. " I am glad to hear so good an account of W. Rose." His sister never entirely recovered from the effects of the illness above mentioned, and in the autumn of 1838 he became much alarmed by her failing health. Her home had been in his house since their mother's death, twenty-five years previous. A great part of the few letters he now wrote was devoted to allaying in others the anxiety which he could not himself cease to feel on her account. After dwelling on this subject in a letter to his brother George, dated November 15, 1838, he writes : — " According to your desire, I return Dr. Words- worth's, and beg you to return my thanks to his son l for his obliging present of the ' Pompeian Inscriptions,' which have amused me a good deal, though some of them are puzzles to me. " I was glad to hear of our cousin Watlington's - 1 Dr. Christopher Wordsworth, now Bishop of Lincoln. He had lately married Mr. Frere's niece. 2 A connexion of their family, who had applied to Mr. G. Frere for some information regarding their common descent from Dr. John Dee, Queen Elizabeth's astrologer. Dr. Dee's great grand-daughter, Margery Dee, married Mr. Flowerdew, and had two daughters ; Jane, who married Mr. Stephen Pomfrett, and was Mr. Frere's great-grandmother, on his mother's side ; and Elizabeth, who married Mr. W. Watling- JOHN HOOK HAM FEE RE. 285 prosperity. I had not been aware that there were any ties of consanguinity between us. " I remember a Mrs. Flowerdew, my mother's great aunt, a tall, very old lady, dressed in black, whom I used to like, partly, perhaps, because she used to regale me with savoury biscuits ; but my recollection of her is as of a very nice old person, who was exceedingly fond of my mother, and always delighted to see us. She was unmarried ; the daughter of a Mr. Flowerdew, who had married a Miss Dee, a descendant (I do not know in what degree) of the mathematician and hermetic philoso- pher. There are some verses of hers on her separa- tion from her intended husband, Mr. Flowerdew, who, upon some mercantile emergency (the seizure, I think, of English property by the Spanish Govern- ment), had been called away to Cadiz. The verses are in the cabinet at Roydon. 1 " Mrs. Flowerdew, whom I recollect, was old enough to recollect the alarm of the Irish massacre ton. Dr. Dee's silver Divining Cup is now in the possession of R. Temple Frere, Esq., to whose father (Temple Frere, see ante, p. 151) it was given by his mother. By the Will of Francis Dee, Bishop of Peterborough, 1638, who was a son of Dr. John Dee, a boy educated at Merchant Taylor's School, or Peterborough School, being of the kindred or name of the bishop, is entitled to a scholarship or fellow- ship at St. John's College, Cambridge. [See " Wilson's His- tory of Merchant Taylor's School," p. 1170.] 1 The subjoined are the verses. The original is written in a clear round hand, presumably Margery Dee's, and is marked on the outside in Jane [Hookham] Frere's handwriting : — " My Great-Grandmother's curious Composition." 1 The World a garden is wherein I walk but what my heart doth muse I dar.not talk 2 For when I looked on the flowers which grow I spy.d a jelly flower that grew so Low — 3 That when I did atempt the flower to gain great flouds of water drove me back again 286 MEMOIR OF — not the real massacre, but the strange alarm spread through the city by the Whigs, to try the temper of the people, and to ascertain the extent of their gullibility. " There was a story of poor Mrs. F.'s absence of 4 With bended head it sometims then did Crouch and with a Silent Voice did Crave a touch 5 But of my hand which I Could not deny- but was much pleas.d to see its modisty 6 For often with a blush the Leaves were dy.d as if humility did strive to hide 7 Those Charmin graces which I must admire Alltho I dare not say its my desire 8 To Call it mine alas that were a Crime which nothing Could Excuse but length of time 9 Yet had I ventur.d to Express my mind but that I fear.d to raise a Storm of wind io Might of this tender plant then me deprive or blast it so that it should never thrive 1 1 Thus all my thoughts did but increase my fears thus musingly I stood for many Years 12 At last — by an invisable hand it was transplanted in another Land 13 That the warm sunshine of prosperity rrlight make it grow but ah how mournfull I 14 Did seek a place where I might vent my grief which to discover would be Some reliefe 15 All mortalls terour which Is Called grim death I did invoke to Ease of my breath 16 Then the silent grave might me secure from all those Sorrows which I did indure 17 The tedious Nights I spent in bitter Cries my days in piercing Sighs and fixed Eyes 1 8 I look.t so long I allmost lost my Sight because I could not look on my delight 19 Reason did bid me then forget the flower but I could never yet obtain that power 20 And sure my Life had Ended with the day but that I found there was no other way JOHN HO OK II AM FRERE. 287 mind ; how, having been down into the kitchen on a Sunday morning, she was seen proceeding to church with a knife in her hand instead of a fan. " This is all I can recollect at present, and with it I return Mr. Watlington's letter, in order that the 21 Which Could advance this flower or it improv.d whose hapiness more than myself I Lov.d 22 O heavens doe not regard my moan if it is better thare let it alone 23 Parents and friends did bring me Floria's Bower and ask.d me if there was not there a flower 24 Which I could like to place within my breast but still to them I made it my request 25 That I might have the leave but to refuse all those rich flowers which they would have me Chuse 26 But they and all that knew me with one Voice did then intreat me for to make my Choice 27 Out of those flowers whose great worth might tempt the most resolved heart for to relent 28 Its true I did confess that their desert did merit ten times more than my poor heart 29 And if I had a heart for to bestow I Could not Count it wisdom to say no 30 With frowns and Checks they call'd me then blind fool and with a thousand threats my heart did Cool 31 When I had broke those bonds asunder to the world I then became a wonder. 32 But in such woes as these a pride I take because that I do bear them for the sake 33 Of that rare flower which Could I but obtain all worldly Losses I should Count a gain 34 When I am most alone methinks I hear some secret whisper bid me not despair 35 And may I hope that I shall live to see this jelly flower again return to me 36 Then dying heart revive that I may plead to swift pace time yet to make greater Speed 37 And bring to me that happy hour and then this grief will turn to joys. Ah but when." 288 MEMOIR OF two documents, if you think them worth preserving, may repose together." "Malta, January nth, 1839. " A hard wind blowing into the mouth of the harbour detained the packet, and allows me time to thank you for your almanack, and to request you to send a duplicate for a purpose which, as before in my letter to my sister, I shall leave her to guess. "I do not exactly recollect what I wrote upon occasion of our cousin Watlington's genealogical communications. I think it related chiefly to the Dees and the Flowerdews ; but I believe I omitted to mention one fact, harsh-sounding and unwelcome to the genealogical ear — one of the Flowerdews was hanged — durum verbum. You will say, ' What is to be done with him ? ' But, ho ! we ought to en- deavour, if possible, to trace our lineage to him, and hitch him in as a collateral ; for it was, in fact, a most creditable occurrence, and one upon which (since he would undoubtedly have been dead before this time) we ought rather to congratulate our- selves. He was, in fact, hanged (I dislike the word as applied to an ancestor) ; but it was by the rebels in the time of Kett the Tanner — the Furor Norvi- censis, as it was called by the learned. 1 " It is wrong, however, to be singular in any way; and since candour towards rebels is so much in fashion, I must not omit to state a probability in their behalf, implying that the family were not very liberal or popular, their house, standing at some distance from the road, on the right hand as you go from Hetherset to Norwich, was, as it is now, known by the name of ' Mock-beggar Hall.' " The question, then, to be determined, in behalf of omnipotent candour, on the one hand, and family honour on the other, reduces itself to a question of 1 Temp. Edw. VI. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 289 time : ' Is the name ancient ? Can it be traced to a period anterior to the time of Kett the Tanner ? ' In that case the presumed illiberality of the owner might be pleaded in palliation of the violence of which he was the victim. Or was it imposed at a time immediately subsequent, when the resentment of the family, and their disgust against the lower orders (arising from the incident before mentioned), might have rendered them less charitable and hos- pitable than we find that peoples' ancestors were. Or, lastly, was the name given when it was reduced to a farm-house (retaining, as it does, the appearance of a gentleman's mansion, as was before observed) at a distance from the road, and consequently alluring vagrants to a fruitless application ? These are the points which can never be cleared up, unless by the investigation of some local antiquary, whose great ability has manifested itself chiefly in the elu- cidation of similar difficulties. And though we may delight to indulge our fancy in the contemplation of those comfortable old times, yet, situated as we are, certainty is in most instances unattainable. " I must now conclude, for the wind that detained this packet is also detaining one for Alexandria, by which I have more than one letter which I ought to write." A few days after this letter was written, his anxieties regarding his sister were terminated by her death, on the 18th January, 1839. She died, as she had lived, a bright example of every Christian and domestic virtue. Her brother laid her near his wife, and close to the spot which he had long before marked as that where he wished himself to rest. None were now left near him of his own family or generation ; and for some months after her death there were many duties connected with her letters, her property, and the poor around, to whom she had long been his willing and most judicious almoner, which made him feel his loss very acutely. U 290 MEMOIR OF He wrote on the subject to his brother George on the 22nd January, enclosing a detailed account of his sister's last illness and of her death. " Little did I imagine when I was sending my absurd letter of the I ith, and at a time when my sister appeared, in the opinion of those who saw her that same day, to be in better health than she had been for a long time past, that the following morn- ing should bring upon us the beginning of the dis- tress and confusion which has since overwhelmed us. " The sad narrative which I enclose is substan- tially accurate, at least as far as my own recollection, compared with that of others, would enable me to make it so " The last sad ceremony is appointed for the day after to-morrow, in conformity with the wish of the Governor, who expressed a desire to be present ; it will be exactly similar to that which took place eight years ago, in the same month, and almost the same day. The month of January, if I should live to see it again, will in future be a most melancholy one for me. " You probably are well informed respecting her will : I have no knowledge or even guess about it. I lost an opportunity of inquiring at a time when I told her, about nine months ago, that it was my in- tention to provide for her future, a becoming and comfortable residence here ; but in fact the idea of surviving her myself did not once cross my mind. " During her sickness I was unwilling to alarm her ; and when she herself became — I will not say alarmed — but aware of the approach of death, I would not divert her mind from thoughts which it was occupied with by the recollection of any worldly concerns, from which they had appeared during the whole course of her illness to be entirely ab- stracted." About a year before this time, Lady Erroll's niece, Miss Blake, who had always lived with her JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. . 291 aunt from her childhood, and had been to Mr. Frere as a daughter, had married Lord Hamilton Chiches- ter, for whom Mr. Frere had the warmest regard. They were able to live much with him at Malta, and nothing was ever wanting to his comfort which their perfectly filial affection and constant watchful attention could ensure to him. On February 21st, 1839, he wrote to his brother George : — " I have again to perform the melancholy task of sending back the letters addressed to my poor sis- ter. The papers which you mention as having been sent from Hampton Court in 1831, 1 should wish to be sent out here by some safe conveyance. Pray, my dear George, thank Lizzy for her kind letter, though it made me very sad to see the hopes and expecta- tion under which it was written " Except that we are tolerably well, I do not know anything that remains for me to say, unless I were to send you the news of this place, which, of a sudden, is become a very bustling one." "March 20th, 1839. " My dear Bartle, " I am not very well able to write, having been suffering for these three days with a pain in my face — a pain which of all incapacitates me the most for any exertion. I mention this lest you should hear that I had been ill and confined to my room, which is true, to this extent, but no further. In other respects, I think I have passed through this winter better than the last. Accordingly I have exhorted Lord and Lady Hamilton to go to Rome to see Lady Cadogan, who had wished to see us there. I would not venture to go myself, for March is the worst month here, and, I should imagine, not at all better at Rome. " It was otherwise in the times of the Cid — ' El invicrno es exido, que el marzo quiere entrar.' " And now, my dear Bartle (after a very disagree- 292 MEMOIR OF able interruption, which has occupied me upwards of an hour), I return to conclude with a subject with which I ought to have begun. I ought to have begun to thank you for the admirable lines 1 which you have .sent me. I conclude them to be your own, though you do not say so distinctly, and there is a great deal of poetry in the family. Whosesoever they are, they are excellent, and (to use a phrase which I am not fond of) appropriate. This, mind, in this respect, is singular." .... " April 13th, 1839. " If the packets which Sir William Eden has had the kindness to take charge of, arrive safe at their destination, Temple and you will find yourselves charged with a task of distribution, scarcely com- pensated, I am afraid, by your own individual 1 Inscribed on his sister's tomb with her epitaph : — " Susanna Frere Joannis Frere et Joannas Hookham filia nata d. conv. S. Pauli, 1777, cum olures annos in hac insula commorans pietatis et caritatis singulare exemplum prasbuisset, ad meliorem vitam transiit d. Jan : 18 : anno 1839. J : H : Frere defunctas Frater mcerens posuit." " Farewell, blest spirit, not for thee the tear Steals down this furrow'd cheek — unscath'd hast thou Life's thorny path of sin and sorrow trod ; But well may they who to thy heart were dear Mourn for themselves, unblam'd, yet mourning, bow With humble resignation to the rod. Thy birth befell upon that hallow'd day When burst th' ineffable light upon the Jew Of Tarsus, and affirm'd the call divine. Upon that rock is cast thy coil of clay Where from his arm the great Apostle threw Unharm'd the venomous beast — What fitter shrine For her whose course through life was ever true To the aspiration which the zeal accords Of the new convert —those heart-breathing words — ' Who art thou, Lord ? What wouldst thou have me do ?' JOHN BOOK HAM FRERE. 293 share in the concern ; but the offer was made and accepted suddenly, no longer ago than yesterday- evening. " Hence the copies are sent in a form in which they are hardly presentable ; and no more are sent, from the apprehension of putting Sir William's civility to too severe a trial. I was upon the point of having a number of them stitched, but this imme- diate offer has anticipated my resolution, which, on the other hand, had been delayed by this strange weather, which has discouraged me from going to Valetta. " I have been tolerably well, however, with the exception of colds, which I have scrambled through rather more nimbly than usual. " It occurs to me, that if this letter reaches you before the package to which it refers, you will not, perhaps, be very well able to guess what it is all about. It is about the Acharnians and Knights, which I have taken the opportunity of printing before the expiration and extinction of the Govern- ment Press." To his sister-in-law he wrote, on May 2nd, 1839:- " It is very kind of you to grant me an exemption from the task of writing, which has been occasion- ally, though not so much of late, physically distres- sing to me — I mean the posture and the act of writing. "You have, I hope, by this time received the Aristophanes. Having a very sudden and unex- pected opportunity, I was obliged to send them in sheets as they were, and to trouble my brothers Bartle and Temple to get them stitched in a pre- sentable form. A copy is directed to Dr. Words- worth, and I should have liked to have sent more, in case he should so far approve of it as to wish to present copies to any of his scholars. . . . "John is still here. Lord and Lady Hamilton 294 MEMOIR OF not yet returned. * * I am afraid that I shall not have time to write to George, therefore you must thank him for his letter. It would be endless to write politics, but the prospect of things getting worse would not afford me any consolation from the anticipated expectation of their getting better. In the year '92 I remember to have heard people in France administering to themselves the same sort of consolation." In the same year he wrote to his brother Bartle :— "May 16th, 1839. "My dear Bartle, "Our packet is going to start before the arrival of the one from England, which will occasion bre- vity, the events of the place not being very multifa- rious or interesting. " Honoria 1 and Lord Hamilton are returned, after a short stay at Rome and Naples. Prince George has been here about ten days, and starts to-day for Corfu. Everybody here has been much pleased with him as an easy, unaffected, manly young man. There has been here a young Norfolk squire of the name of Styleman, an inhabitant of the parts about Lynn, a very stout Conservative, whom I have been much pleased with, and am sorry that he is going away this day. "Aristophanes has been stopped for want of paper, but is going on again. I have advanced to the 48th page of the ' Birds.' "Your transcript will be preserved from the hands of the printers, and another sent to them instead. I have always regarded that transcript as one of the highest compliments ever paid me. "Honoria tells me that she is writing to you. I Lady Hamilton Chichester. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 295 cannot think that she will be able to find anything to say that I have omitted. No. I have omitted to say that Lord Hamilton is much better, and has ceased to suffer from rheumatism. " Besides she will have to tell you about Rome and Naples. She describes poor Lord C as quite disabled by gout, a sad declension from the nimbleness which you both exhibited in Germany." " PietA, May 2,0th, 1839. " The enclosed will show you how I have been occupied for the last fortnight ; I send it to you exclusively, in acknowledgment of your former kind service in transcribing it. I thought you would like to see your manuscript converted into print ; it will be finished, I hope, in another week. " I am not aware that anything has occurred here which you would care to know. I doubt for instance whether it is worth while to mention that Lady Strachan has been here, and that her carriage was embarked this morning under these windows. Oh, yes ! there is a M. Gautier, belonging to the French consulate, here, whom we all like very much, and who will, I think, be much liked in London, to which he is now advanced. " He goes in October ; and it would be a great relief at that dreary season, if he could find himself a member of the Traveller's. Will you and Hamilton interest yourselves in his behalf? He leaves this place in a few days, to our sincere regret." " June 27th. " I wish I had an opportunity of sending more copies. The one remaining in your hands, ought, I think, as he stands foremost in your list (and justly so, in consideration of his alphabetical precedence), to be given to Sir R. Ainslie. " I wish I had one for Hudson Gurney and 296 MEMOIR OF Montgomerie ; but if you see them you must make my excuses to them and others for the present." "July nth, 1839. "The packet from England came in yesterday evening, and goes to-day at 12 o'clock. " Let me thank you for the trouble you have taken in detecting and correcting errata. "Most of them are marked in a table of errata, already printed ; but as nobody attends to tables of errata, I shall have them corrected here by hand ; this will save you from the trouble you have been so good as to take with them. " Some must be sold, not for my profit, but for poor Mr. 's, who is entitled to all kindness from the lovers of learning, and particularly from me, in this instance ; for poor Mr. Coleridge had requested in his last will, that some of the tran- scripts which I had lent to him might be allowed to remain with Mr. . I have done, therefore, what I suppose he would have wished, by giving Mr. half the impression (250 copies). I have desired that 50 should be sent to each of the Universities. " In the meantime, they, Mr. and Mrs. , have agreed with Mr. Pickering, of Chancery Lane, whom I have mentioned as a bookseller of curious books out of the common line. How they will settle it I do not know, but it rests with them : at any rate the book will be acceptable for those who want it, and inquire for it. Any further popularity I should deprecate. " I have sent the ' Birds ' to the Bish6p of London. " I am very sorry for poor Dr. B . I must have done." " Malta, August 22?id, 1839. " I thank you for your very detailed account of family matters. The very elements seem to have JOHN HO OKI/ AM FKERE. 297 conspired auspiciously to honour John's nuptials. 1 In the first place a downpour of rain to put the bishop's zeal and good-will to the proof ; and secondly, as Lizzy affirms, a most beautiful fine day, to do honour to the wedding itself. " With respect to copies of Aristophanes, I have not been able as yet to find any opportunity ; for anything except letters, the communication between this place and England is, I think, worse than ever." 11 Oct. 17 th, 1839. " I feel much obliged to you for the trouble you have taken about the last sheet of the ' Frogs,' which I return herewith, with a single correction in page j6, and my full assent to your suggestion. " I should like to have 100 copies sent out here, but how I cannot tell ; the steam conveyance is the worst possible for the transmission of parcels. Oh ! here is Honoria, as usual full of resources ; she says the imperials of a carriage which is coming out here for her and Lord Hamilton may be filled with them, and any thing you may wish to send. Said car- riage is to be found at Adams and Hooper's, Hay- market, who will be able to notify the last hour of its departure. 2 1 His nephew, the late Rev. John Frere, rector of (Totten- ham and chaplain to Dr. Blomheld, when Bishop of London. He died in 1851, just as he was fulfilling the early promise he had given of a useful as well as brilliant career. 2 The following " Apology for the Translation of Aristo- phanes " seems to have been written with a view to its being prefixed to these copies ; a different preface was subsequently added {vide supra, pp. 226 and 231). "The appearance of a publication so little suited to the period of age at which the writer has arrived, seems to require explanation on his part. The fact is, a strong persuasion had, from a very early time, been impressed upon his mind, that the English language was possessed of capabilities [for such a purpose] which had never hitherto been systematically studied, or sufficiently developed. 298 MEMOIR OF " Did I write to you some time ago about a Dr. Mill, 1 a very learned orientalist, who passed through here many months ago, on his return from India ? he seemed much interested in my views for establishing the study of Hebrew, and its cognate dialects, which (as the Maltese is one) the natives have a peculiar facility for acquiring. He took charge of a commission for procuring books for the scholars, and, now that their long vacation is over, the poor young men are looking to me for the ful- filment of my promise. In the meantime I have heard nothing from Dr. Mill, and do not know where to write to him. " Speak you of young Master ? Well, my dear brother, I shall be willing to go you halves. Mrs. G applied to me for her rent, and I sent her ;£i2. She says that she could get a better house for ^"ioo; and I would do it for her, but I fear, when people have once got to depend upon the power and efficacy of (what is called) ' making a poor month,' they never thrive. " I wish some one branch of our families were settled in one of the colonies, where industry and To attempt such a task was beyond his powers ; indeed, without a knowledge of music, (which he never possessed, and for which he felt no talent or inclination,) it would have been impossible ; but the persuasion above mentioned gave rise to a habit of endeavouring to express in English any passage which had struck him as remarkable in any foreign or ancient language. It happened, owing to circumstances in which the public can have no interest, that some passages longer than usual were translated from Aristophanes ; but the possibility of producing an adequate translation of an entire play never would have entered into his mind but from the example of his friend Mr. W. Hamilton, who had himself completed a trans- lation of almost the whole of Aristophanes." 1 Formerly Principal of Bishop's College, Calcutta, and subsequently Regius Professor of Hebrew at Cambridge, and Canon of Ely. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 299 regularity can hardly fail to succeed. If the like to go, and you think them capable of it, their outfit would not require me to sell a farm in order to make them landed proprietors in the Anti- podes." " November 28///, 1839. " I thank you for Mr. Maurice's book, and will be obliged to you to let me keep it, and procure another for John. I spent all the morning yester- day upon it, which has obliged me to abridge my correspondence this packet. . . " We have here a Mr. B , a friend and adherent of the Oxonian divines. I shall lend him Maurice. " Can you send the three numbers of ' Primi- tive Christianity ? ' It was to have been published the 28th of August." "Dec. 2nd, 1839. " I send you per favour of Captain Moresby of the ' Pembroke ' and under the particular care of Mr. Ewart, a midshipman of the same ship, a grand- son of Mr. Ewart of eminent diplomatic memory, and (though very different from him in principles) a nephew or cousin, I forget which, of the Radical paper-money Mr. , I send, I say, 27 copies of the ' Birds,' to be distributed according to their several directions — likewise some copies of the three Plays, bound together, which are also directed. " There is one to General Hutchinson, of whom I have lost sight so long, that I really do not know whether he is still alive, but if he is, it would be unpardonable in me, not to send him a copy — for the promise is 20 years old and more. I shall put it into a cover, with a note, which if it should fall into the hands of any other General Hutchinson, will serve at least to explain the mistake. * * HE * * " Mr. Ewart is also charged with a bottle of Ilex acorns, and two Cones of a Cedar of Lebanon in- 300 MEMOIR OF tended for Roydon. He will also endeavour to smuggle ashore the Lamp which my poor sister had made, as a present for her nephew at Finningham, and will take a model of the monument which Temple was desirous of having. ***** " Mr. Hay and Sir A. Barnard have passed through here on their return from Egypt, and Petra and Syria, having seen every thing that was to be seen, except Palmyra. " I envy them their spirits and juvenility : they have, however, been very bountiful, and I am in- debted to Mr. Hay for the Cones of Cedar above mentioned." His brother had no difficulty in finding Dr. Mill, and a list of the books which he recommended for the use of the Maltese Hebrew scholars was made and sent out. But, on looking over the list with Father Marmora, an unexpected difficulty presented itself, as described in the following letter to his brother : — " Malta, January 9, 1840. " I am much obliged to you for the trouble you have already taken, but at the same time sorry to tell you that your trouble is not entirely over, at least if the books are not already sent ; in which case, you may be able, either by yourself or by Dr. Mill, to save me the sum of £22 iys., being the amount of those books upon the list, which Mr. Marmora considers as useless. I enclose the list, with observations to which I do not think it neces- sary to add anything ; the fact is, that the students are all of the clergy, actual or intended, and among the clergy a knowledge of English is a most rare acquirement. " My chief inducement for urging the establish- ment of lectures on Hebrew in this university arose from the consideration that the natives possessed a JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 301 grammar in' their own language, which, with some insignificant variations, is applicable to Hebrew : to teach it through the medium of English would be ignotum per ignotius. I hope, therefore, that I may- be spared the mortification of receiving so large a lot of books, which I should not be able to apply- to any useful purpose, not to mention the ^"22 lys. before alluded to, which, I am thinking, at this time of the year, would be a very acceptable present to poor Madam , and as an act of charity will be a stimulus to your exertions, you may think yourself at liberty so to apply it. " Dr. Mill will probably have greater authority over his bookseller ; and if you should find it ne- cessary, you may send this to him, with the accom- panying list. The difficulty of intercourse betwixt this place and England, except for letters, is such that I flatter myself the package may still have been detained. " I have not been able to find a conveyance for any additional copies of Aristophanes. Pray, when the 'Frogs' are finished, send a copy, with my best respects, to Dr. Mill." 1 1 The following memorandum seems to have been drawn up by Mr. Frere, and submitted to the Council of the Univer- sity at Malta, embodying his views on the subject of teaching Hebrew as a branch of higher education. The remarks on the office and powers of such an University, on the affinities of Maltese, and the value of grammar taught through a cog- nate language, will justify the insertion of the paper. It shows, moreover, how little the lapse of years had diminished the interest he felt in his favourite studies : — " Reflections on the Studies which may be cultivated in the University of Malta, respectfully sjibmitted to the consider- ation of the Members of the Council. "There are two points of view under which an University may be considered. First, as a place of education for the superior classes of the rising generation instituted and organized for the purpose of qualifying them for the due per- 302 MEMOIR OF " January i()th, 1840. " I have only just received your letter, and have only a moment to answer it, so I must crowd as many thanks as I can into a small compass. I am really mortified to think of the amount of trouble you have had. formance of their civil and professional duties. The utility and necessity of an institution for these purposes is too obvious to require to be supported or confirmed by an unne- cessary length of argument. " But the Universities of Europe from their first institution have supported another and a higher character ; and if they had not, the mere process of education according to the degree of knowledge and acquirements possessed at the time of their establishment, continued to the present time, would have left mankind in a state very little advanced from what it was four hundred years ago. " The Universities, as I said before, had a higher character, like separate states combined in political union ; they were, it may be said, federal members of the Great Republic of Letters, engaged in a mutual commerce of science and litera- ture : the whole present stock of our literary wealth may be said to have been accumulated by this commerce, exclusive at least of that portion of it, which has been contributed during the t last century, by voluntary associations of learned and scientific persons. " This duty of contributing their efforts towards the general advancement of knowledge, constitutes the peculiar dignity of an University ; and unless it is in some degree maintained, we may rest assured that the subordinate but obviously useful objects will never be accomplished in a satisfactory manner. " It is an universal truth, that subordinate advantages arise from the pursuit of those which are of a more general and elevated character ; and that if the subordinate are pursued, separately, exclusively, and solely for their own sake, we shall generally be baffled in our attempt to secure them. " If, for instance, the establishment of Religion is attended to solely with a view to its civil influence in the maintenance of social subordination, religion will be degraded, its degra- dation will bring on hypocrisy with its attendant infidelity, and ultimately anarchy, the very evil against which it was considered as the best security. If the fine arts are cultivated solely with a view to the profit to be derived from improved taste in the patterns of our manufactures, we may be assured (as Sir J. Reynolds justly observes, upon this very subject, JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 303 " Do not suppose that I forget that I owe you £%o, though I do not remind you of it like Falstafif. I hope you will find me a better paymaster than that worthy knight. " The ' Rodney ' which sailed on the 14th, con- in his lectures to the artists of the Academy), that they will never accomplish even this subordinate and paltry purpose. "Thus in everything, if a noble and superior object is pursued for its own sake with zeal and generosity, all the inferior advantages which are connected with it, will follow naturally and of their own accord. " Let us apply this principle to the conduct of an University, and particularly of an University situated as that of Malta is. If we suppose an University incapable of producing anything which can be generally interesting to the learned world, which should be unable to quote the name of a professor whose reputation had extended beyond the limits of his native country, such an University (whatever diligence it might apply to the just execution of its ordinary duties in assisting and directing the studies of the pupils) would labour under great disadvantages — First, from the want of that authority and reputation on the part of its seniors, which can only be confirmed in its highest degree, by the testimony of foreign literati, and the applause of other countries ; and, again, because the younger students, seeing their horizon bounded by a narrow circuit, and having no examples immediately before their eyes, of scholars who by their own merits and exertions had extended their reputation to a wider sphere, would confine their efforts to the attainment of a local supe- riority, considering their own countrymen as their only com- petitors, and that degree of excellence which would be suffi- cient to surpass them, as the just limit of their own exertions. But, it may be asked, what hopes are there for an University, situated as that of Malta is (locally insulated, and with the poorest endowment possible) to produce anything which can be considered as a contribution to the general mass of science and knowledge ? In regard to those pursuits which are followed with the eagerness of fashion in other parts of Europe, the want of communication, and the difficulty of intercourse, would perpetually throw us in the background. A professor at Malta might waste a year in the solution of a difficulty, which had been already solved at Paris or London, and the same discoveries, even when published and printed, might in many instances escape his notice. Not to mention that for those pursuits which require an expensive apparatus, 304 MEMOIR OF veys a bureau of which some of the drawers con- tain copies of the three plays, and several of the ' Birds,' for those to whom the two first plays were sent before. " This is another trouble which our consanguinity imposes upon you. ..." astronomy, for instance, or chemistry, the establishment of an observatory or of a scientific laboratory would be wholly out of the question. " Under these circumstances it is consolatory to reflect that we possess within ourselves the materials for a branch of literary industry, which, if properly employed, would enable us to enter with advantage into the general commerce of literature : the example of the University of Corfu, and the expectation of new improvements and discoveries likely to arise in the study of Greek literature, when cultivated by those to whom a dialect of the same language is familiar from their infancy, may suggest to us the adoption of a similar course, and it would not be presumptuous to anticipate that an equally favourable expectation would be excited, of new illustrations likely to arise in the cultivation of a very exten- sive branch of Oriental literature, if zealously pursued and candidly encouraged in the University of Malta. " The native language of Malta is an Oriental dialect, inti- mately connected with Arabic, Hebrew, and Syriac ; with respect to the first the fact is notorious, that a Maltese finds no difficulty in making himself understood anywhere in the Mediterranean coasts of Africa and Asia, a circumstance which is of no small convenience in commercial intercourse, and which might be improved to great advantage in that respect. In Casal Zeitun the boys actually learn to write their own language in the Arabic character, and as the language itself is intelligible in all the countries before mentioned, it is obvious that the inhabitants of that place would possess great advantages, if a change of circumstances reanimating commerce and directing it to Africa and the Levant, should enable them to develop again the commercial industry which they exhibited, not long ago, on the northern and western coasts of the Mediterranean. But perhaps it may be said that this is foreign to the proper pursuits of an University, and particularly to those higher ones on which I have chiefly insisted. It may be so ; but it is an acquirement very easily attained, which may possibly be of real utility to JOHN HO OK HAM FRERE. 305 " January 29th, 1840. " I could not write by the last packet, but there is an intimation of something likely to go to Mar- seilles, and Honoria is going into town for ' por aveniguar' as we used to say, and though I have many who receive their education in the University, and it would be discreditable if its scholars were deficient in an accomplishment possessed by the sons of the poorest peasants in another part of the island. Besides, with respect to the attainment of proficiency in a branch of literature for which we have such peculiar advantages (which is so extensive and interesting in itself, and which to all other Europeans pre- sents such uncommon difficulties) as the Arabic, it would be no slight step to be able to read and write with ease in a cog- nate dialect, and this step is one which is now actually acquired by boys of seven or eight years old in a few weeks. " The direct practical utility of being able to write and read their own language in the Arabic character, is evidently the object proposed in the method adopted at Zeitun, where the boys learn at once their own grammar and the Italian, declin- ing and conjugating in both languages together, with great facility, at a very early age. " I should apprehend that any person, himself a native of Malta, and possessing a knowledge of the literal and classical Arabic, would (if desirous of instructing a countryman of his own in the same studies) begin the course of instruction by the process which I have already described, and of which we have an actual example before us — we see then that the same method which is usefully employed for subordinate purposes, may be made an elementary foundation for higher literary attainments : to understand the grammar of his own language in conjunction with Italian, and to be able to read and write it with facility in the Arabic character, may be the means of profit and advancement to the poorest native of the island if possessed of industry and talents, his own language and the Italian enable him to traffic in the whole of the Mediter- ranean ; and if he is able to read and write in both languages the advantage which he has in this respect will be greatly in- creased. But if fortune or profession should destine a youth to higher and literary pursuits, the same elementary rudi- ments which would be practically useful to the mercantile adventurer, will afford to the Maltese scholar an advantage which would enable him to outstrip the competition of any- other European scholar in a branch of study highly interesting X 306 MEMOIR OF little to say, except to thank you for the trouble you have taken in all your journeys to the bookseller and the bookbinders — I must not omit what is so much your due — fervently hoping at the same time that in itself, and which has been hitherto little explored by Euro- pean literati. " The same observations (at least as far as the scholar is concerned) will apply to the study of Hebrew. I conceive that a Maltese master with a Maltese pupil would find great advantage in beginning with a short preliminary course, in which he would point out to him the grammatical rules existing in his own language, and which he had been in the practice of following from habit and imitation, without being aware of their principles or nature. " These rules are totally different from those which exist in any of the modern European languages, or in Greek or Latin, but they have a direct analogy with, and are in many instances identical, with the rules of the Hebrew language. "And here an observation occurs which ought not to be omitted. To speak one's own language without a knowledge of its grammar and construction, is the true characteristic of ignorance in an individual, or of barbarism in a people. A native of any other country in Europe, by acquiring any other of the languages which are usually learnt, acquires at the same time the grammar of his own. Thus an English- man learning French, or an Italian learning Latin, cannot fail to observe that the rules which guide him in the acquisi- tion of the new language, are equally applicable to his own ; and it is a common observation that those persons who have learnt another language are usually the most correct and perfect in speaking their own. This is the result of the analogy subsisting between them, but where this analogy does not exist — as for instance between the Maltese language and any one of those which are usually acquired by the in- habitants of the island (as English, for instance, Italian, or Latin), it is possible, and I believe not unfrequent, for a native to acquire another language, without deriving from it any very correct notion of the nature and construction of his own. If, therefore, it is desirable that a man should speak his own language correctly, and not merely as a parrot, or a barbarian, an attainment which is so easily acquired, and which may be made by boys of seven years old, ought not to be omitted in the course of Maltese education. " It has been shown already that the Maltese language may JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 307 the rogues' laziness may have been proof against your remonstrances, and that my last letter may have arrived in time to save me the mortification of receiving' what would be altogether useless. 1 be usefully employed if written in the Arabic character, and that this is an acquirement within the reach of mere children, who ought not to be left in ignorance of the grammar of the language which they habitually speak. I should, therefore, venture with submission to propose that the grammar of the Maltese language combined with the Italian, and the practice of writing it in the Arabic and perhaps also in the common alphabet, should be introduced in the lower school, and taught at the same time with the rudiments of Latin to boys of ten years old and under. Those who are obliged to dis- continue these studies, will in this way have acquired an accomplishment which may be of profit and advantage to them in foreign commerce, and facilitate their intercourse with those countries to which our trade in future seems most likely to be directed. Those who continue to pursue their studies, will possess an advantage peculiar to themselves, in entering upon a vast field of literature hitherto very im- perfectly explored in those languages which are cognate dialects of the Native Maltese, the Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, and Ethiopic. In all of these the University of Malta might obtain a decided pre-eminence over the other Universities and learned bodies in Europe — and pre-eminence in one species of knowledge would (as has been before observed) be attended with advantages in others. It would be contrary to experience to suppose that an University pre-eminent in one point would at the same time be deficient in others. " These are the reflections which I venture to submit, thus hastily, to the judgment of those who are fully capable of estimating them (if they should be deemed worthy of any consideration), and who possess a practical and local know- ledge of the means by which such a plan might be effectually realized. " It would be too presumptuous in me to venture in this stage to enter into a detail of arrangements ; it would, more- over, be premature, unless the principles and views, which have been generally stated, should be sanctioned by the pre- vious approbation of the Council." Owing to mistakes in the transcribing. 308 MEMOIR OF " The books which you mention as likely to come with the carriage, viz. ' Holdius Schrceder,' &c. and three others, will be very acceptable in the mean- while. "But after so much trouble as you have had already, as appears by your last, I really feel some compunction at the thought of the additional trou- ble which you are likely to have in discarding what is useless." 11 February 6th, 1840. " You will be glad to hear that I have seen our old friend Colonel C here, in the Lazaretto, very well and cheerful, and the same warm-hearted worthy fellow that we recollect him. " We must both of us I apprehend have appeared to each other somewhat older than we were 30 years ago. " The packet from England is just come in and ours to England is just starting. " We are all well, i. e. Lord H. is (though very slowly) recovering. Lady H. and myself as well as usual." "March $th, 1840. " I had entirely forgot that it was packet day, which will occasion brevity, as it is now very near the packet hour. I have packed up and directed a number of Aristophanes, which Captain Barker, who sails for England in a few days, will have the kindness to take charge of. " I am afraid that you will think that you have imposed a troublesome task upon yourself in under- taking to distribute them. I wish you may feel impatient and pack them off speedily. . . . Here comes Honoria to tell me that I shall be too late, and if she had not come before I should not have known that it was post day." JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 309 "April 2nd, 1840. " You will be glad to hear that the ' Prince George ' is safe arrived, and though she is not yet unpacked nor the soldiers disembarked, we trust that the carriage, and its contents, will be found to have arrived safely also. " We are now looking out for the ' Boadicea.' I have had bad luck in maritime affairs — a cask of special ale, brewed at Roydon, and sent by the ' Fanny,' has not been heard of — they met with bad weather, and were forced to throw every thing overboard — fine English furniture, Forti - pianos, &c. &c. were consigned to the care of the Nereids, and with them I presume my cask of ale, as a pro- pitiatory libation. " We have been disappointed by the non-arrival of Mr. and Mrs. . We suspect they must have trusted themselves to the Rhone steamer, which had not arrived when the one from Marseilles started for this place. " It is very provoking, I had provided a superb nuptial bed, large enough for a polygamist, and all to no purpose. " I have no time for more nonsense. " "May i^th, 1840. " I have so many letters to write, that I can only afford a few lines to each of them, and those few must be only to give you additional trouble. " Would you then have the goodness to send copies (complete ones) with my compliments (re- spectful ones) to Lord Wellesley, Lord Burghersh and Dr. Crotch the musician, also the three Plays to Mr. Hammond, he has had the ' Frogs ' sent him already by Messieurs Allen, his brothers-in-law, who passed through here a day or two ago. " I send some lines, which if you think it ad- visable may be forwarded to Temple. The post is 310 MEMOIR OF going or I would send them to him myself, in my own hand." To his brother George, Mr. Frere wrote by the same mail : — "First let me thank you for Lord Wellesley's verses. I have desired Bartle to send him in return my plays, and also to Lord Burgh ersh ; perhaps he may set some of the choruses to music. A propos to this I have also desired him to send one to Dr. Crotch." The following are extracts from numerous other letters which he wrote to his brother Bartle during the remainder of this year : — "June 25//Z, 1840. " We are going for a trip on board a ship ; it is the ' Tyne,' Captain Townsend, bound for Corfu, and from thence where the Admiral pleases ; so that I must say, as the sailor said — ' Look into Steele's List,' and you will always be able to tell where we are. " I shall write again when I know what direction we are likely to take. " This summer threatens to be so excessively hot, that we are glad to escape to the air of the sea.. " Captain Townsend is a very old acquaintance of ours ; he expects us on board at twelve o'clock. " Mr. Bouchier will take care of our letters, and of this which I am now writing among the rest." [The subjoined, in a letter dated July 19th, 1840, refers to his anxiety to prevent the publication of a book that was, in his opinion, likely to be harmful.] " Talking of , I must tell you a thing which I have never liked to talk about ; in prosecuting his researches .... he has fallen upon some JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 311 strange and shocking discoveries, my sister and myself urged him to suppress them, but his friend Mr. L encouraged him, in fine, the work is printed, and now he is frightened, and Mr. L also to a certain degree, but not so much so as not to retain fifty copies for himself. is willing to sacrifice his time and labour if I will pay my share of the printers' bill ; this I have done, as you will see by his letter which I enclose, and will thank yon to return. " You will see also by this the heap of dangerous matter which is lying in deposit at my disposition ; he had offered to send them here, where I might destroy them as I pleased, I wrote to say that I would trust them in his keeping, and this is his let- ter acknowledging and thanking me for my con- fidence. I do not, however, feel perfectly secure ; the event of his death or an execution in his house might spring the mine. " I should wish you therefore to call upon him and to form your own judgment. I should have no objection to his retaining a number of copies, say forty or fifty, trusting to his discretion for their distribution out of England ; the rest I should wish to have secured against any such contingency by their immediate destruction. If you can contrive this with the assistance of the next baker, you will set my mind at rest ; or they may, at any rate, be sent here, as a supply for my own oven. Do not think me foolish or extravagant in all this. I do not know in what way I could employ the means attached to me more usefully to religion and society." "Zante, August 1st, 1840. 1 " You will be glad to hear that we are alive and well at this distance of time and place. 1 In this year Mr. Frere visited the Ionian Islands, Trieste, and Rome in company with Lord and Lady Hamilton Chichester. 312 MEMOIR OF " Besides I have to thank you for the trouble you have had with . Among other reasons for not prefixing a title-page * there is this, that the copies which are distributed as presents would be less perfect than those which remain for sale. I forget whether I desired you to send a copy to a Mr. Jeremie, of Trinity College ? It was a request of our nephew Bartle, whose tutor he had been at the East India College, and who had somehow got a copy of the forty first pages of the ' Frogs,' which he taught his pupil to understand and admire. Perhaps the copy had better be sent to the care of Mr. Philip Frere of Downing, who will know where to find him. " I have been much distressed at hearing a very unfavourable account of the health of our old friend W. Rose ; let me know if the account is less bad than that which I heard, and which represented the case as a very desperate one. " I have just lost a very sincere friend and well- wisher, Mr. Nugent, whom I had known for thirty- six years. Poor Manning too, whom I had not seen since I left college, but who is really a public loss, considering the mass of knowledge which has perished with him. " This, the only letter which I write by this occa- sion, will serve to notify my existence to inquiring friends." "VENICE, September 15///, 1S40. " I have taken an estesissimo foglio di carta sim- ply for the sake of announcing our arrival at this place, depicted in the prefixed vignette : if you retain a recollection of the prints in the old show 1 In a previous letter to Mr. Bartle Frere. dated Malta, June 31st, 1S40, he said, in speaking of the same subject, "It would be too ridiculous in me. now for the first time in my life to clap my name on a title-page ; and I cannot think it can be necessary for the sale of so limited an edition." JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 313 box at Bedington you will conjecture that we are at Venice ; and you will be right so far, but you will still be at a loss to guess what inn we are at, there- fore I have thought right to mark it, with a bird flying over it, ad hunc modum (as the Greek gram- mar says). " We came here from Trieste with Sir Andrew Barnard, and here met with Mr. Hay, but they have both left us, one for Greece, the other (Sir Andrew) for England. They are the most active young fellows in the world. We very narrowly missed seeing Sir R. Inglis, he being at Ancona ; but we have found a most obliging cicerone, an English gentleman, who has lived here these eight years, and who is very deep in the Venetian anti- quities and records, some of which he is printing. " They are printing the reports of the Venetian Ambassadors ; you know that on their return from a mission they made a general report, the first of them goes back as far as the time of Henry VII. " But I suppose they are in England by this time. " This place is recovering its commercial activity, and I see no appearance of poverty or discontent. Trieste, in the meanwhile, is advancing at a rate which must astonish I think even the Americans, whom I saw there in the three-decker, commanded by an old acquaintance of mine, whom I had been civil to at Malta. Some of the officers came over here, and lodged in this hotel, ' Fiera gente, terri- bile, non parlano lingua.' " I find that ■ is going to be married, and that you give ^500 to that effect, and I mean to follow your excellent example with an equal sum." "September 15///, 1840. " Pray advance the money for 's bookseller, for I have not time to write a separate letter to Hoare. 314 MEMOIR OF " I have a letter from Mr. L , which, if I had time to look it out, and you were not such an enemy to postage, I would enclose. I think I can trust him ; he writes as a very serious and sensible gentle- man, deprecating above all things the circulation of the work in England, but thinking that it can do no harm abroad, where so much worse are circu- lated." " Malta, September 2,0th, 1840. " Many thanks for your kind and considerate letter of the 20th of this month. I was much relieved at the same time by receiving a letter from Temple, written in a very firm and manly spirit. 1 I trust he may be able to support and con- sole his poor wife. " My first impression of course was for the loss of such a young man ; but when I told Honoria, she threw up her arms, with the tears in her eyes — ' Oh ! poor Mrs. Frere ; ' and this certainly ought to be our only thought at present. "Do you think that a total change of scene would be useful, or a thing which one could venture to propose ? a visit for instance to this place ? Pray let me know ; or, if you think it advisable, suggest it yourself. " I have sent Messrs. Hoare an order to pay you ^65, which, as I conceive, will put you in cash to the amount of £J or thereabouts. " Mr. Pickering, of Chancery Lane, has already received one hundred and sixty copies, to be sold as profit of Mr. and Mrs. G . I have heard nothing from him, but can have no doubt of their having reached him. " Well then — will you call there and purchase a couple of copies of him, and send them with my 1 On the death of his eldest son. JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 315 compliments, and a copy of the ' Frogs,' to Lord Aberdeen and Mr. Thomas Grenvillc, both of whom I have unaccountably forgotten. At this rate you will see that I am not likely to enrich myself by literature. " Inquire too whether he has done anything to secure the copyright by entry at Stationers'-hall, or sending copies to the Museum and Bodleian, &c. "Honoria tells me that it is time to close my letters, which saves you for the present from another commission." While at Rome, in January, 1841, Mr. Frere had an attack of apoplexy, with a threatening of para- lysis. The following letter is undated, but appears to have been written while he was still confined to his room. It shows that the attack, though very alarming at the time, had not in any way affected his mental powers : * — " My dear Bartle, " I think it is better that you should have an account immediately from myself, as pro- bably from among the many English here, some incorrect ones may reach England — vague and ex- aggerated, which it may be better to rectify. The case is this. On Saturday last (it is now Tuesday) I perceived a weakness and want of command in the fingers of my left hand, and upon rising I per- ceived that my gait and footing was very much like that of a drunken man. I accordingly lost no time in sending for doctors, and in a short time had 1 Lord Brougham, speaking of him to the Rev. Constantine Frere (Mr. Frere's nephew), in 1853, said that when he met Mr. Frere in Rome in 1841, in answer to his greeting Mr. Frere replied, "Oh, very well, thank you ; I've had an attack of apoplexy and a touch of paralysis, but I'm very well." — "So like Frere," said Lord Brougham. 316 MEMOIR OF two of them (English) at my elbow ; they unani- mously bled and blistered, and purged, and put me to bed, where, for the present, they have advised me to remain, and avoid all exertion or excitation. I cannot guess what their real opinions are, but they talk confidently and cheerfully to others. " Mr. Hay is a joint inmate of this hotel, and is a great comfort. " I have not been able to see Mr. D . He called at this hotel and left a letter, but no card of his address. I now hear that he has gone to Naples ; but as the letter which he brought from you was intended to be delivered at Malta, I con- clude that he will proceed there, and that we shall meet. I shall be happy to show him any civilities in my power, an attention due, I think, to a person who, as I see, calls you uncle. " My doctors forbid my reading, 1 and, a fortiori, would forbid my writing ; so I conclude, dear Bartle, " Affectionately yours, " J. H. FRERE." To his brother George, after his return to Malta, he wrote : — "April 2%th, 1841. " I had begun a note something like this by the last packet, the purport of which was to thank you for your kind annual present, which I found here on my return, together with numbers 5 and 6 of the work on ' Ancient Christianity.' It is a great pity that the subject should have been stirred, but I think it is treated temperately enough, and above 1 In answer to the remark that Mr. Frere's love of reading had become so exaggerated in his latter days that he read almost constantly, Lord Brougham said, "Ah, but he was always an helluo librorum." JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 317 all, with great decency. I do not see any such great advantage in the revival of the study of the old ecclesiastical writers. They seem to me like the furniture in the shop of Romeo's apothecary, very curious, but not fit to be prescribed as remedies. I have not any duplicates here, but I think there is at Roydon a copy of the ' Scriptores Ecclesiastici ' in three volumes folio, which Temple would send to you or to the Rector of Cottenham. I have also to thank you for poor Lord Dudley's letters. I have not yet told you that our nephew William, with his wife and two children, have been with us since their release from quarantine, about ten days ago. I flatter myself that all her new relations will be as much pleased with her as I have been. " Read Ranke's ' History of the latter Popes.' " His nephew William, whose return from India is mentioned in this letter, availed himself of the op- portunities which his stay with Mr. Frere afforded, to induce him to put the finishing strokes to his translation of " Theognis," and to take it to the printers. Of this translation Mr. Norton, his Ame- rican critic, observes : — " His ' Theognis Restitutus ' affords another instance of his success in conveying '* to the English reader a complete notion of the intention of the original, and a clear impression of the temper, character, and style which it exhibits.' His object was not to give a literal and verbally exact rendering, which might often puzzle the modern reader, but to translate in such a manner as to present clearly the essential meaning of the poet. ' It might not be difficult,' he says, ' to crowd into a given number of lines or words an exact verbal interpretation, but this verbal interpretation would convey almost in every instance either an imperfect meaning or a false character ; the relative and collateral ideas, and the associations which 318 MEMOIR OF served as stepping-stones to transitions apparently- incongruous and abrupt, would still be wanting ; and the author whose elliptical familiar phraseology- was a mere transcript of the language of daily life, would have the appearance of a pedantic composer studiously obscure and enigmatic' Such versions as Mr. Frere's become a component part of the literature of the language in which they are made. They do not exclude the literal and precise trans- lations which are intended to exhibit, not merely the permanent and universal elements of the ori- ginal, but also its local and personal peculiarities, and the exact forms of its expression. These, too, are required, and have their value. Only the man of genius can venture to adopt such a method as Mr. Frere's, and how few translators are men of genius ! " From the confused mass of fragments which form the existing remains of ' Theognis ' — some fourteen hundred lines in all — Mr. Frere endea- voured to reconstruct a biography of the poet, about whose life very little is absolutely known, and to indicate the successive changes of circum- stance and situation under which his verses were composed. The ingenuity and learning displayed in it, the acuteness of interpretation, and the interest of the mode in which the subject is developed and illustrated, give to this little book a great charm as a work of delicate and thorough scholarship, and of imaginative reconstruction. How far the author is correct in his inferences and conclusions must be left to the determination of critics not less learned than himself." x A very favourable notice of this translation ap- peared in the "Quarterly Review" in 1843, 2 of "North American Review" for July, 1868, p. 165. No. 144, P- 452. JOHN II 00 KH AM FRERE. 319 which Sir Cornewall Lewis said, in the " Classical Museum" for October, 1843 (No. II.):-"We had intended to append to this article" (on Aristophanes) " some specimens of Mr. Frere's translation of parts of ' Theognis ; ' but the very complete account of this work given in the last number of the 1 Quarterly Review ' has rendered this a super- fluous task. We will only express our admiration of the facility with which Mr. Frere has passed from the wild, grotesque and ever-varying language and metres of Aristophanes to the sedate admonitions and reflections of the gnomic poet, and the fidelity with which he has represented both sorts of diction in English always pure, terse, and idiomatic." Both critics thought he had built upon the frag- ments of " Theognis " a superstructure of supposed facts which the foundation of materials was hardly wide enough to support ; and Sir Cornewall Lewis held that sometimes, by combining separate frag- ments, a meaning had been obtained for which no evidence beyond conjecture could be produced. But he added, " These objections to his arrange- ment, however, rarely affect the success of the translations." To his brother George, Mr. Frere wrote : — "August 18///, 1 84 1. " There is no chance, I fear, of my acquitting my debt to you as a correspondent otherwise than by beginning when a mail is not going, having always at those times letters which absolutely require to be answered, and the very posture and act of writing being somewhat fatiguing to me. Otherwise, if I had found it on my arrival here, your kind and considerate letter would have been acknowledged before ; but it so happened that it, with two or three others (amongst them one from Hatley on the same subject, that of my illness at Rome), had been 320 MEMOIR OF huddled away separately, and were not discovered till some time after. " I thank you for explaining to me what I could not well explain to myself, namely, the nature of my dislike to these temperance societies." " Augtist 27 th. " I had, as you see, begun, but had not succeeded in finishing, ten days ago. " I agree with you perfectly as to what you say, that our only chance of safety consists in reforming and extending the church ; but we must be content to do it by great sacrifice, of self-denial of our own, not by votes of parliament with our new majority. Now it was said in old time that we should give ' the devil his due;' and without entering into the question of their respective merits (for there is another old saying, that ' comparisons are odious '), it cannot surely be contended that the Whigs are so much worse that in the present age, distinguished as it is by candour and liberality, the same equit- able consideration should not be extended to them. Therefore I laud them for two things — first, for having stopped the translation of bishops ; and secondly, for having established a commutation of tithes. A propos of these questions, I have con- tributed to the building of the church at Harlow. Has the question of endowment been thought of, or is it to be left entirely to the voluntary system f I have no objection to a. partial dependence on the good-will of the parishioners ; but, without some endowment, in fifty years our church may be turned into a malt-house. " I am tolerably well, and the day before yester- day read over ' Spiritual Despotism ' a second time. Have you read a 'Voice from America?' What are we about ? and how is it to end ? " The early agitation of questions, the discussions on JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 321 which have since led to what is now known as Ritual- ism, had extended to Malta. With all his rever- ence for ancient uninterrupted usage, Mr. Frere had little sympathy with the revival of forms long ob- solete. Commenting on some innovations in music and vestments which had troubled an Anglican congregation in the see of Gibraltar, he said, in reply to the argument that the change was justified by the custom in Edward the Sixth's time, — " But if I were to appear at church in the costume of Queen Elizabeth's time, would the clergyman con- sider it a sufficient justification for my disturbing the gravity of the congregation that I could prove the dress to be in strict accordance with the usages and sumptuary laws of three hundred years back?" Still less sympathy had he with the custom of discussing the gravest questions of theology as sub- jects of merely ordinary table-talk. But he com- plained that he sometimes found it difficult to evade such discussion, or to turn the conversation. One very enthusiastic lady, who had repeatedly pressed him for his opinions on purgatory, declared, sitting next him at dinner, that she must know what he thought on the subject, — " I told her," he said, " that I really knew very little about it, except what I had learned from the church in the Floriana, which I pass on my way into Valetta. The church, you remember, is surrounded with groups of figures carved in stone, and rising out of stone flames, and I told her that, if the reality were at all like that, I was clearly of opinion that the flames were neces- sary for the decent clothing of the figures. — After that she managed to talk about something else." On September 18th, 1842, he wrote to his brother Bartle :— " I am afraid you have had a good deal of trouble about ' Theognis.' One part of it, viz. the table of errata, I shall be much obliged to you if you will Y 322 MEMOIR OF undertake ; and, in addition, there are one or two gross errata, destructive of the metre and sense, which I would wish corrected by hand in any copies you may give away .... for the fact is that hardly anybody ever looks to a table of errata. " It is odd that I should since have found the initial lines of the poem to which Fragment C. P. 103 belongs, and another fastens on to F. LXXXIV.; so that it should seem, after all, that I ought to have bestowed another year upon it, instead of Horace's nine ! " For the rest, you cannot do amiss in distributing them to any person whom you think capable of en- joying [them], and whom you may wish to oblige. " Pray send the four plays and ' Theognis ' to Mr. Lyell, junior. If Mr. Lyell, senior, has not the ' Theognis,' it ought to be sent to him at ' Kinnordie, Kirriemuir, N.B.' I send the direction, lest you should be at a loss for it ; and, as I know you hate postage, I do not return it. " Pray send two copies to Lord Holland and to the Bishop of London, and any other bishops, Llan- daff, for instance, and Monk." " Malta, March 2yd, 1843. (After telling him of the dispatch of a box of ilex seed for distribution to several friends.) "I have also sent fourteen copies of 'Theognis,' in one of which I have marked and corrected the errata majora, such, I mean, as confuse the metre and the sense ; so that, if you have a mind to show a particular attention to any one of your friends, you may do it at the cost of the trouble of correcting the errata. There are, I think, some other points on which I had meant to write to you, but which I do not immediately recollect. One of them I have recollected. It is to know whether Mrs. has profited] by the sale of the Aristophanes, of which JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 323 (/. e. of the three plays) 170 copies were sent to Pickering almost as soon as they were printed ? If it were not out of your way some morning - , I should be glad if you would make inquiry of him." " April yh, 1S43. " My dear George, " I am sorry that the few words in which I mentioned the affair should have given you the trouble of writing a long letter. D has so little regard to truth that I believe he has finally lost the perception of it, and really imagines him- self to have a case ; an imagination from which, I believe, he is not to be driven, even by the sentence of a court, but will continue to his life's end to believe and repeat the same stories which he has told hitherto. I really believe, as you say, that he is now got entirely out of your reach, and equally beyond the fear of exposure for dishonourable con- duct ; but to find that he has acted foolishly and unsuccessfully will, I conceive, be some mortification to him." "May isth, 1843. " The few lines which I have time to write will serve to thank you for your letter with the amusing tale of ' Miss Margaret Catchpole.' 1 I think she is 1 " Margaret Catchpole," by the Rev. Richard Cobbold, of Wortham. The tale was founded on the history of a servant girl in Suffolk, who carried off a horse to enable her to rescue her lover. She was tried and convicted, and only saved from the death which was then the penalty of her offence by great interest made for her by her employers. She was one of the first female convicts transported to New South Wales, and having, by her worthy conduct there, obtained a pardon, she distinguished herself by the ability and energy with which she subsequently devoted herself to good works during a long and useful life. Her story, as told by Mr. Cobbold, is a very inter- esting one ; but it is to be regretted that the series of remark- 324 MEMOIR OF an shonour to the county. So this comes of emi- gration — that they come in another generation and are able to bid for the estates of foolish Squires ; why should not you, who have a son already an emigrant at the Cape, enable him to purchase land there ? Poor writes to tell me that his doctor prescribes him wine, which he cannot afford to pur- chase ; it would be a great charity if you would advance him a few bottles on my account. " I have not time for more, or I would say some- thing about Welcker's ' Theognis ; ' he has hacked and minced his author most unmercifully, and not having formed a true judgment of the time in which he lived, has obelized passages for no other reason than that they did not square with his preconceived chronology. The account which Brunck gives of the Parisian MSS. shows that he has taken a most unwarrantable licence in making mincemeat of his author in the way he has done. " I have no letter of Southey here." "Malta, October 14th, 1843. " My dear Bartle, " Your letter of the 29th ultimo was lying open on my table all yesterday morning, waiting to be answered by the English packet ; but the other letters which I had to write turned out to be so long and rambling, and I was so tired with standing at the desk, that it was left to stand over till to-day, to be answered per favour of the French steamer to Marseilles. This, I fear, will aggravate the charge for postage, but, in point of time, may turn out to be rather an economy than otherwise. " I thank you for your offer of going halves with able letters written by her in her banishment, are not printed in the very idiomatic Suffolk dialect in which they were written. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 325 me in our relations of consanguinity to Mrs. G- I have had a letter which I took to be hers, lying unopened, but which, upon opening it preparatory to writing to you, proves to be from a person whom you have occasionally assisted, though he has had no ground of claim upon you, viz. . I shall send him something by this post, which, I hope, will prevent him from troubling you. As he never bullied you at Eton, he has no right to make you his tributary now. Poor fellow ! I could not help thinking of him as I was doing the 98th Frag- ment of ' Theognis,' ' watching and importuning every friend.' Talking of ' Theognis,' I am told from a person likely to know, that the critique is by Hallam. I have not yet seen it, for my periodicals come in very irregularly, and I rarely go to the garrison library. Whoever the writer may be, I think, as you say, it is rather cool and easy to affix my name to an anonymous work privately distributed. " This laborious epistle has again been delayed to this day, Oct. 25. In the meantime, I have received the Review. It is not uncivil, but my name is repeated ad nauseam thirty times, altogether, one would imagine that I was a candidate for fame ! " " Malta, May 2gt/i, 1844. " My dear George, " Though I have many letters clamouring for their respective answers, I must not omit to thank you for your green morocco present. 1 First of the preface. It is, I think, excellent in point of feeling. "I am like the man in the old 'Kitchen Al- manac ' with all the constellations poking at him, so that the utmost I can do is to distribute a line 1 A "Parentalia" drawn up and prefaced by his brother •George. 326 MEMOIR OF or two apiece, in answer to my pocketful of let- ters For the present I am tolerably- well, though somewhat weak on my legs, and as. Master Waters used to say ' numb ' in my hearing ; but he used also to say ' numb in my understand- ing,' which perhaps also may be my case ; but I put it to the test from time to time with bits of translation. " I am sorry to have received a bad report of the condition in which the ilex acorns arrived. You were to have had a share, and shall, please God, this year, if I live to see them ripen." Towards the end of this year, and in 1845, I had again the happiness of being for some weeks under my uncle's roof, on my way home from India. The lapse of ten years had greatly impaired his bodily vigour, but not the clearness and activity of his mind, nor was there any change in the warmth of his affection for all who had once been dear to him. The filial care of Lord and Lady Hamilton Chichester had preserved all the arrangements which, in earlier years, his wife and sister had devised for his comfort in his lonely island life, and had added much that his advancing age needed. His eye- sight was nearly as good as of old, and so were his extraordinary powers of reading continuously for many hours at a stretch, and the wonderful tenacity and accuracy of his memory for what he read or composed. He went less abroad than formerly, partly owing to increasing bodily infirmity, partly to the loss of old friends and his dislike to the task of making new ones. There were also many changes in the island which were distasteful to him. It had become a bustling place, full of commercial activity, and of people always in a hurry. The old order of things had been replaced by a new Constitution, better adapted, no doubt, to the altered circum- stances of the place, and to the political activity JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 327 awakened among the people, but little in accord- ance with that quiet once the peculiar charm of Malta, which, like everything Maltese, used to have a character of its own, equally removed from the luxurious idleness of Naples, and from the Oriental torpor which, before the days of steam navigation, infected most places further east. With the new- order of political ideas had come in many religious innovations which, though they little affected him personally, he thought likely to work ill for those around him and after him. The Roman Catholic Church in Malta had for centuries been strongly national, if the word can be used where the area is so limited. The clergy, who, in old times, seldom went further afield for their education or for travel than to the great monasteries in Sicily, were the recognized guardians of insular rights and privileges ; and to such an extent used this to be carried, that Mr. Frere told me he had found instances of the Dominicans arrayed as the champions of popular right, to defend the Maltese from the illegal ex- actions of the ruling order ; and the servants of the Inquisition engaged in escorting market carts through the gates of Valetta, to protect the poor peasantry from the extortionate demands of re- tainers requiring more than the customary toll for the Grand Master and the Knights of St. John. These island clergy had always, from the first rising against the French invaders, been loyal in their advocacy of British rule, and they had enjoyed in return, from the English Government, a degree of consideration for all their customary rights and privileges which sometimes occasioned murmurs in Exeter Hall when it was thought to exceed the limits of reasonable toleration. But with the advent of reforms in the political administration, a considerable change was observable in the disposi- tion of those who had the direction of popular 328 MEMOIR OF opinion in ecclesiastical affairs. Ultramontane preachers, themselves foreigners to the island, were commissioned to denounce from the pulpit what they considered the infidel tendencies of the English Government ; and Mr. Frere found that the universal affection with which he was regarded among all orders of Maltese did not protect him from being sometimes held up as an object for popular aversion, because he was an Englishman, and a member of the English Church. Nor did he find much to console him in the general aspect of political affairs, of which he was to the last a careful student. Of many of the measures of the various administrations after the Reform Bill, he very cordially approved. The best of them were, he said, the same measures which Pitt would have brought forward had breathing time been allowed him, and which Canning, but for the de- sertion of those who ought to have supported him, might have carried. But he viewed with alarm the growing tendency of statesmen of all parties to follow, instead of aspiring to lead and direct, public opinion — a tendency which he foresaw must often transfer the initiation of great measures from the wisest and best-informed to those who were simpiy discontented with the existing order of things. He particularly disliked the new name under which the broken ranks of the Tories had been rallied after the Reform Bill. " Why do you talk of Conser- vatives ?" he asked ; " a Conservative is only a Tory who is ashamed of himself; " and he was especially indignant with men who, knowing better than the unreflecting rank and file of their party, attempted to defend any abuse long after they knew it to be indefensible, and thus left the correction of such abuse to violent or, at best, unfriendly hands. He was habitually inclined to take a very gloomy view of the political future ; but he never ceased to urge JOHN HOOKHAM FEE RE. 329 on younger men the duty of hoping the best for the state. " It is the privilege as well as the duty of your age to hope," he said. Many of the fragments of his " Table Talk " have found insertion in the foregoing pages. The fol- lowing, which have for the most part no special reference to any particular period of his life, were noted, some at this time, others in various earlier years, and by different persons : — " It is clear Cervantes quite changed his plan after he had written the first part of ' Don Quixote.' He begins with fights with flocks of sheep and windmills, and other practical jokes ; but after he had published it, an author whom he mentions in the second part 1 wrote a continuation of 'Don Quixote,' in which the knight was made to fall among people who understand and honour him. This struck Cervantes as affording a much finer field for fancy and humour than the accidents which happened to the Don among ignorant boors, and he adopted the idea in the second part in all the scenes relating to the Duke and Duchess, which are infinitely the best." " Every original author paints himself in some character in his works, as Cervantes in the latter part of ' Don Quixote,' Moliere in the ' Humoriste,' Smollett in ' Roderick Random,' and afterwards in ' Matthew Bramble.' I have no doubt that in 1 Hamlet ' Shakespeare was describing himself. No man imagines himself in a lower situation than he actually fills, and Hamlet is, what Shakespeare imagines he would have been, had he been a prince. 1 The author is not named. He called himself Alonzo Fernandez de Avellaneda ; and is supposed by some to have been Luis de Aliaga, the King's Confessor, and by others Juan Blanco de Paz, a Dominican friar. [Vide Ticknor's " History of Spanish Literature."] Cervantes only mentions his birth-place, Tarragona. 330 MEMOIR OF His advice to the players, and his morbid love of contemplating the relics of mortality, and their constant association with terms relating to the law, which Whiter observed upon, are all characteristic. I have no doubt if one knew where Shakespeare had served his apprenticeship in a scrivener's office, we should find it looked out on a graveyard. ' Hamlet ' falls off at the end, ' Macbeth ' (and two others) are the only plays where the end is equal to the beginning. It is the same with Aristophanes ; the ' Frogs,' ' Knights,' and ' Birds ' are the only perfect plays of his ; this is not to be wondered at, considering in what haste they must have been written. I dare say Shakespeare often wrote with the prompter's boy sitting on the stairs waiting for ' copy.' Lope de Vega wrote plays as fast as he could put pen to paper, and you always find that the first two or three hundred lines are good." " At one time I used to read every novel that came out, and seldom found one which had not some chapters very good. They are those parts where the writer is describing what he has himself seen ; and every man has seen something which, if he would describe it exactly, would make a good scene in a novel. " A really good novel one can read quite as often as a good play. There are some of Scott's which I read almost every year, and some of Gait's. It was a great misfortune for him that he lived in the same age as Scott. I remember the 'Trials of Margaret Lindsay' striking me when I first read it, quite as much as some of the Waverley novels did. " Have you read Lady Duff Gordon's translation of the ' Amber Witch ? ' 1 It is quite the best thing of the kind I have read for a long time ; at first 1 In Murray's " Home and Colonial Library." JOHN HOOK HAM FRERE. 331 I could hardly believe it was not a genuine chro- nicle of the time, and the translation seems admira- bly done. I can think of nothing so nearly ap- proaching ' Robinson Crusoe,' unless it be ' Pen- rose's Journal.' I was so taken with Penrose when I first read it, that I used to buy up all the copies I found on the bookstalls, and give them to my friends. I could never understand why it did not become more popular with boys and with old people too, and I never could learn who wrote it, or whether it was, or was not, a genuine journal of a cast- away." " I am surprised to find how few young men of the present day know anything of Swift. He is quite one of our best models of racy forcible idio- matic prose. He is sometimes savagely coarse and indecent, but there is less danger of corruption of morals or opinions in the whole of Swift's works than in almost any one volume of any modern French writer of fiction. No man was ever at- tracted to, or made tolerant of vice by reading Swift ; but it is not easy to find any modern French work which is at once witty, and free from all apology for* or incentive to evil. I suspect it is because the materials of modern French fiction are usually drawn from the more corrupt classes of society, and their authors neglect much in ordinary French life which is not only excellent in itself morally, but really better adapted for dramatic purposes than the common run of French heroes and he- roines." " One of the best pictures of modern French manners I know, and one quite free from all that is objectionable, is Leclerq's ' Proverbes Drama- tiques.' They are very slight sketches, but full of wit and humour, and I should think depict French society in the middle ranks very truly." Speaking of Leclerq's " Proverbes " to Mr. Nu- gent, he said, " If I were obliged to give up either 332 MEMOIR OF Moliere or Leclerq, I am not sure that I should not surrender Moliere." To which Mr. Nugent ob- served that " Mr. Frere was hardly a fair judge, as he knew Moliere by heart, and would not, therefore, lose anything by giving him up." In reply to a lament on the disuse of the old custom, common formerly in England, as it still is in Malta and in many southern countries, of ad- dressing the wayfarer in inscriptions of more per- manent interest than the merits of " Warren's Blacking," or the number of miles to the next village, he said : — " When I lived at Roydon, I used to think I would celebrate my churchwardenship by putting up a few such inscriptions. But it was difficult to decide what language to choose. If you wrote in Latin no one but the parson would understand you ; and in English it was not easy to write on the topics most interesting to the country traveller, in terms befitting the dignity of a churchwarden. Here are some verses for a bridge I intended to have built across the Waveney below Roydon : The Parish vestry, persons of much taste, Permit me to enclose this piece of waste ; I gave them in return the field called Darrers, Let this preserve my fame from censure's arrers [East Anglian for ' arrows ']. And further, to accommodate all people, I built this bridge and beautified the steeple. " I thought they were in the proper churchwarden style ; and so was the motto for the White Hart at Roydon, when the road was altered : Stranger, be not offended or concern'd If you discover that this road is turn'd. A bowl of punch, or shilling's worth of porter, I'll bet you, that the present road is shorter. "That would have been intelligible and inter- esting to most of the people who would have read it. But then some of my travelled neighbours JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 333 would have thought it very vulgar. So, you see, here (at the Pieta) I have stuck to Latin." " I suspect that Tacitus' ignorance and mistakes about the Christians were partly affected — it seems to have been the established fashionable rule to know nothing about them — the same tone continued very late, indeed as long as Paganism subsisted, or a Pagan writer was left. It is most absurdly re- markable in Zosimus." Captain Basil Hall remarked (1834) that "he had met with more intentional incivility in a fort- night in France than during all his. long stay in America." Mr. Frere observed : — " I think the tone adopted by Englishmen gene- rally towards America is very much to be deplored. We have numbers of American travellers here in Malta, and I never met one who had not some very good points. We should try to promote that kind of feeling which should lead to a union between the two nations for establishing the supremacy of the Anglo-Saxon race over the whole of the western continent. " At the end of the American war, if we had not been so utterly exhausted, it was a scheme of Fox's and some of his party, to have promoted an union between England and the United States, to assist an insurrection which then raged in Peru." Speaking of some American review on English politics, he said : — " The tone is particularly good, especially where they notice the vulgar abuse heaped on them as a nation, by . " As regards our own English politics, if we go on as we do now, there will be little chance of any really impartial judgments of our public men among ourselves ; and future historians may have to go to American writers for all really unbiassed contem- porary criticism." 334 MEMOIR OF " I wish you young gentlemen would not talk so much of 'our Indian empire.' — An empire is a very good thing in its way, but we are in danger of forgetting the thrift and other homely commercial virtues which helped us to that empire. When I lived in the country, I used to observe that there was no fool like a fool in a ring fence — the man who was always telling you ' his property was in a ring fence,' till he got to pride himself on having as little as possible in common with his poorer neighbours. I am sometimes afraid of that kind of spirit infecting us in India. That was not Malcolm's nor Munro's way, nor Elphinstone's, who, I take it, was the greatest man you have ever had in our days." In answer to a remark, that the French seemed able to make but little out of Algiers, he said : " Your Frenchman is always trying to be im- posing, and to make an impression ; there are some people who don't like that, and I fancy the Arabs don't." In reply to a question why, with his opinions regarding the Spanish insurrection against the French, he did not feel more sympathy with the cause of liberty in Greece, he said : — " There was no kind of similarity between the two cases. I was sorry the insurrection in Greece broke out when it did. The Greeks had the com- merce, the diplomacy, the education, in short, every branch of the internal administration of Turkey, and much of the external, in their own hands ; and, had the outbreak been delayed for ten years, they would have expelled the Turks from the whole of their European possessions. I do not see what we have to do meddling in Greece at this present time (1844-5), or why we should trouble ourselves with what the French are doing there. If we act with them we may be drawn into a contest with Russia ; if against them, we shall be fighting the battles of Russia." JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 335 " It is a pity when all Europe was eager to go to war, fourteen years ago, we did not let them, and keep ourselves quiet the while. Had we done so we should not now have been complaining of com- mercial combinations against us. We never got any thanks from Europe, though we have three times saved it from becoming subject to one power. We saved them from the Spaniards in Philip II. 's time, and from the French in Marlborough's and again in Napoleon's, and we never got any thanks for it." In answer to a remark that it was strange a mind like Milton's should have been blind to the advan- tages of a monarchical form of government for Eng- land, he observed : — " It was no wonder all the ardent imaginative spirits of the' time of the Great Rebellion were led away into republicanism ; they had before their eyes the example of the Dutch, bearding such a power as the Spaniards then were, and naturally attributed all to the republican form of their govern- ment." " But then the republics they imagined were something widely different from the democracies of modern days." Talking of recent improvements in agriculture : — " There is nothing of such real permanent value to a nation. How little remains of the vast wealth acquired by Florence or the Netherlands which can be compared, as a permanent source of national riches, with their improved agriculture." The following is one of the latest letters of Mr. Frere which has been preserved. It is addressed to Mr. G. T. Clark, at Bombay. " Malta, March $ist, 1845. " I was much gratified by your obliging letter, showing you were aware how much I feel interested in your proceedings ; and, if Providence is pleased to 336 MEMOIR OF prolong our dominion in India, your Railway will, I am persuaded, be one of the chief means employed for its maintenance, and ultimately change the condition of the country ; and the rupee will then be enabled to find its way back to the ryot, out of -whose fist it has been wrenched by the collector; and our troops .... will no longer — I should hope — be of necessity disabled from moving with their artillery, etc I often used to wonder how the Romans contrived to keep the whole world in order, with a force, such as Gibbon enumerates, apparently so inadequate ; the secret lay, I am persuaded, in their system of roads, which enabled them to bring an overwhelming force upon any point where insubor- dination manifested itself. They did not allow time for the Ragojees, 1 whom we hear of, to grow up to be Sivajees, and to found a predatory empire like the original Maharattas. However, this fear, I hope, is got over for the present. " Surely it should be thought a shame for English- men that the Spaniards should have outrun us in the race of improvement, yet so it is ; they have already established railroads in the island of Cuba, and this they have done under all the disadvantages of having to execute great public works by slave labour ; but they had the advantage of a man of talent and energy in the person of their Governor, and I suppose also of some clever able engineer like . Why then should Bombay be behind- hand ? I should wish to see a line to Nagpoor ; if that were once done, the great Zemindars and capitalists of Calcutta will feel obliged to meet you half-way ; the disadvantage of position, which they now endeavour to elude by expensive and clumsy contrivances, will then be reduced to the difference of not many hours. While our commu- 1 A freebooting Maharatta, whose exploits about this time caused some anxiety to our political officers in the Deccan. JOHN HOOKIIAM FEE RE. 337 nication continues through Egypt, the priority of intelligence cannot by any contrivance be long with- held from Bombay ; the wisest then, as well as the fairest way, is to endeavour to reduce that difference to a minimum by the utmost rapidity of communi- cation. It was the maxim of some great Eastern conqueror, ' that the world should always be kept in astonishment and expectation,' and this, though a work of peace, would have that effect. ' What a strange people these Ingilesi are, that enable us to fly over the country like birds.' Half a dozen battles and sieges would not, I believe, excite the same impression of our superiority. 1 I say Ingilesi, for we ought never to allow ourselves to be called Feringhes. No ! The FeringJies were the allies of Tippo Said, the Ingilesi subdued Tippo, and drove the Feringhes out of India. " This is the way that it all happened : — ' In the beginning, 100 years ago, the Feringhes and the Ingilesi had each a trading company, but as the Ingilesi had more success in trade, the Feringhes endeavoured to gain the advantage in war and politics ; and in this way they succeeded for a time, and had nearly driven out the Ingilesi ; but at last the Ingilesi got the better of them in war, as they had before in commerce.' " This is an abrege of the modern history of India in nsnm scholarum. " But I have not time to go on rambling at this rate ; only believe that I shall feel most interested in your proceedings, and grateful for any account of your progress which you may at any time find leisure to send me. I cannot promise for my own 1 The railway here referred to, the first defined railway project in India, was a line from Bombay to Callian, pro- posed by Mr. Clark in 1843, whilst on a visit to Sir George Arthur, then Governor of Bombay, who warmly encouraged it. It ultimately formed the first section of the present Great Indian Peninsula Railway from Bombay to Calcutta. Z 338 MEMOIR OF part to be a very regular correspondent ; the posture and act of writing being at times very irksome to me, and obliging me to set pen to paper by fits and snatches, as you may perceive by the date of this. I am at a loss how to direct this ; and I believe I must take the liberty of sending it under cover to Sir George Arthur." During the whole of 1844, he had continued to enjoy his usual health, and, beyond a slight increase of feebleness in movement, those around him could detect no mark of the increasing infirmities of age. But, in 1845, he had an attack of apoplexy, and in the first days of January, 1846, a repetition of the paralytic attack, partly due to suppressed gout, which had alarmed his friends at Rome five years before. 1 Every remedy which the best medical 1 The following extracts from a letter of Lady Hamilton Chichester's on the subject, give many characteristic details, which will interest those who knew and loved him. " In January 1841, at Rome, Mr. Frere had his first attack of apoplexy, from which he rallied so entirely as to leave no traces of it in his mind or general health till the spring ot 1845, when he sometimes said he felt feeble on his limbs — he had a presentiment that he was going to have an attack, as, on once starting for a drive to see the new aqueduct, opened in May or June, he turned round to Lord Hamilton, when getting into the carriage, and said, ' Ask Nony to bring her little lancet in case I should have a fit.' I was in another carriage. I jumped out and got the lancet, and then kept close behind his carriage; all went well; he walked about and forgot his fears." After giving an account of a seizure Mr. Frere had about a week after this, which rendered him in spite of all that the best medical advice and skill and care could do, entirely unconscious for some time, Lady Hamilton Chichester relates that as soon as animation had been gradually re- stored, and he was put into bed by the doctors' orders, — " liie room darkened and he was told that he must keep quiet," — he said, "Don't shut me up, and give me a book/" This raised a general cry, that he must not attempt to read. He was left alone, in bed, in the dark, the door ajar, through which his friends and the doctors could watch him, as the doctors expected another attack which would be fatal. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 339 skill, and the ever-watchful affection of Lord and Lady Hamilton Chichester could suggest, was tried, but without effect ; he never recovered speech or consciousness, and passed away without apparent suffering on the 7th January. He was laid beside About an hour afterwards, they saw him " look round the room, and finding himself alone, he deliberately got out of bed and walked quickly to his desk, on which was lying the book he had been reading when he was seized, and returned quickly to the bed with it ! The ruling passion of life still strong in death." After a while he cried out, " Is any one there ?" The servant went in. " Open that shutter and shut the door." The doctor and I allowed all this to be done, to watch the result, the poor doctor, so utterly con- founded at the strength and clearness of the man who had been all but dead two hours before, feared it was a flare-up of the candle." .... " From this attack he completely recovered, his mind as clear and his memory as perfect as in his most youthful days. " In the month of January (on the 6th), Dr. Stilon came about half-past five o'clock. He went to see Mr. Frere. Mr. Bourchier and Lord Hamilton were sitting with him, and he was giving them a clear account of Lord Sidmouth's adminis- tration and of everything connected with it — the conversation was still going on when the servant went in to say it was time to dress for dinner. On this, Mr. Bourchier and Dr. Stilon left the room, and Stilon came back to me to say that he had not for months seen Mr. Frere so bright and so well ! It was past six . . . he went into the drawing-room, there were about eight to dinner. I always went out the last (he never dined at table) and he said to me, putting out his hand, ' I am rather chilly and shall like my soup.' — Beppo with his tray was at the door. — I passed on to the dining- room, but before I sat down Beppo ran back to me, touch- ing my shoulder and saying, ' Come quick.' I was not (as you know the distance, across one room only) a minute — he was sitting up in the position I had left him — the eyes open, motionless. ... I went over to him and said, ' You are not well,' at the same time supporting him with a cushion and my own arm. He looked at me with a gentle smile — it was the last ! He remained in that position for two hours. Stilon was there immediately, but all hope was over. He breathed gently for a while — then louder — then louder — and I was hoping from that change — but it only pre- 340 MEMOIR OF his wife in the English burial-ground, in one of the Floriana outworks overlooking the Quarantine Har- bour, where a sarcophagus bears the following in- scription to his memory : — PRtEHONORABILIS VIR JOANNES HOOKHAM FRERE Ab ingenua stirpe in agro Britannorum Norfolciensi oriundus Regii ablegati Munere in Lusitania, Eodemque una et altera vice in Hispania, egregie perfunctus, Melitam denique, uxoris suae valetudinis causa, se recepit, atque ibi 25 annos commoratus est. Hie cultu Literarum quas semper ab adolescentia in deliciis habuit senectutem oblectans, (Minime interea suorum immemor) Eruditos Commercio Studiorum Familiares vero et Advenas Comitate & Hospitalitate Pauperes etiam largissima Munincentia ita sibi divinxerat, Ut interitus ejus publica queedam Calamitas fuisse videretur, Et nomen post se reliquerit pio omnium amove prosequendum, Quod faxit Deus ut Vitas quoque sempiternal Libro Ob Christi merita inscriptum reperiatur. Natus est Londini 21 Mens. Maii 1769— Obiit 7 Mens. Jan" 1846. On the spot where he had so long lived, the ceded those three last sighs which always attend a calm death, and which once heard can never be forgotten ! Thus the dear old man died as he had lived ! He had received the Sacrament on Christmas-day, Mr. Cleugh having come to the house to give it to him with Lord Hamilton. They had been forbidden to go to church in consequence of the cold. Hundreds crowded round the doors all day, the servants were followed to the market to know if it could be ' really true.' The day of his funeral all the shops were closed. He was borne to the grave on the shoulders of his own labourers. All the Maltese of the upper class attended to the entrance of the burying ground, and most of them went in and attended the service, a very rare circumstance. " My husband went as chief mourner with Constantine, and for three long hours stood over the vault after all had left, except Mr. Bourchier and two or three servants, and Constantine, till he saw the vault built up and the last stone placed." JOHX HOOKHAM FRERE. 341 general grief of all classes, but especially of the poor, was his best epitaph ; and even now, when the generation of those who were the objects of his active sympathy has passed away, there are Maltese who will point out his tomb as the grave of the noble-hearted Englishman, known in his day as the best friend of their fellow-islanders in want or distress. In his own land, he has left behind him a better and more enduring monument, and it is possible that some trace of his labours, if not of his name, may survive in our literature, long after the institu- tions which he loved so well have undergone the changes, which, in the latter years of his life, he thought so imminent. It is still, perhaps, too early to judge of the place he will permanently occupy among his literary con- temporaries, for much of what he wrote is but now published, and he has been hitherto known chiefly by the estimation in which he was held by a com- paratively small circle of personal friends. The American critic, from whom I have already quoted, notices the " curiously scanty and barren " sources of information regarding one whose name is so frequently met with in the Memoirs of Scott, of Byron, of Southey, and of Moore, but " of whose character, genius, and literary performances, few, even among the professed lovers of literature, have more than an indistinct impression ;" and yet, he adds, " there was no one among his contemporaries whose intellectual gifts were more original, more various, or of a rarer quality." "It is not wholly to the freak of fortune, or the malicious blindness of fame, that the limited repu- tation of Mr. Frere is to be charged. He cared nothing for vulgar applause. He was too indolent to push his way in the long procession of aspirants to the Temple of Fame, and far too fastidious to like the company he would have been forced to 342 MEMOIR OF meet at the door. His literary temper was aristo- cratic, and he preferred the quiet appreciation of a few clever and congenial men of culture, to the troublesome admiration of the great public. Writing neither for bread nor renown, he published but little, and only a few copies of his books were printed, so that all of them are, bibliographically speaking, rare. "He was one of those men, of whom there are always too few, with ample and self-sufficing power, who can do so easily what others find it hard to accomplish that they are deprived of the sting of ambition, and are content to enjoy while others are compelled to labour. His temperament, his taste, his culture, his position, united to make him the type of the man of literary genius, as distinguished from the professional author. His fulness of ac- complishment saved him from dissatisfaction with what he did ; and if he wrote but little, it was not that Toujours mecontent de ce qu'il vient de faire II plait a tout le monde, et ne saurait se plaire, but that he had a just confidence that he could do what would suit himself, and that no one else could do better." 1 His politics were those of the school of Pitt. From conviction, not less than from early asso- ciation, he had a rooted distrust as well as dislike of sudden revolution, which he believed generally led, through a period of anarchy, to despotism 1 Norton, " North American Review," vol. cvii. 1868, p. 136. Coleridge's opinion of Mr. Frere's powers has been already quoted. Lord Brougham, in a letter to Mr. Frere's nephew, the Rev. Constantine Frere, dated 24th January, 1854, wrote : — " The pleasure I had in seeing you was, like other sweets, mingled with bitter ; for it recalled the memory of your uncles whom we have lost, and for both of whom, J. H. and William (Bartle I knew much less), I had a sincere v regard, for J. H. the greatest admiration." JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 343 more severe than that which originally drove the oppressed to seek for change. But he had a pro- found abhorrence of every form of oppression and tyranny, more especially of that which would inter- fere with national liberties, or allow any one nation or class to domineer over others. He looked on rank and property as held in trust, on the condition that the classes enjoying them should ever be ready to stake all they possessed to secure the freedom and happiness of their fellow-countrymen. He had little faith in those who professed them- selves mere mouth-pieces of numerical majori- ties. He held that the English people at large were better and more truly represented by men chosen for their general character and weight in the community, and because the people knew them and liked them, and felt that they sympathized with their constituents, than by men bound to advocate particular measures. He believed that power was better exercised by those whose education, rank, and property tended to make them independent in forming and fearless in expressing their own opi- nions, than by delegates pledged to express the opinions of others. With many of the changes which he saw carried out in his later years he thoroughly sympathized ; but he mistrusted the mode in which and the motives from which they were effected, as tending to impair the stability of institutions which he wished to see reformed and perpetuated — not swept away. Of the traits of personal character which endeared him to all who came in contact with him, some traces may be found in his literary remains and in the correspondence from which, in the preceding pages, a few extracts have been given : they bear more or less the impress of the playful humour, the kindliness, the generosity, which characterized the most trivial words and actions of his every-day life. 344 MEMOIR OF But it is not from such evidence that a judgment can be formed of the higher qualities of the man. Those who knew him most intimately soon dis- covered that the largest tolerance and charity were not incompatible with a thorough contempt for all that was mean and base : among other marks of true nobility of character he possessed the royal art of never humiliating one in any way inferior to himself. " Meaner natures near him, while they saw and felt his superiority, tasted the luxury of feeling their own aims elevated, and of discovering a higher standard than that by which they had been accus- tomed to regulate their own actions. It was this quality which secured for him at one and the same time the a'ffection of the poorest and weakest, and the respect of the best and noblest who knew him well enough to judge of his true character. H. B. E. F. The Highwood, Sept. ist, 1 871. Since the above Memoir was first published I have been repeatedly asked to give some definite statement of what was Mr. Hookham Frere's reli- gious belief, or of the light in which he might be supposed to view the leading modern schools of religious thought. His early training had been in what a century ago was regarded as the orthodox school of English theology. The books which were put in his hands as a young man comprised all the great divines of the Church of England, from Wyclyffe through Hooper and Andrewes, Jeremy Taylor, Ken and Tillotson, down to Home, Bishop of Norwich, and Jones of Nayland, whom he used to meet at his father's house. Later in life he found much in Coleridge's writings with, which he cordially agreed. JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 345 He was fully alive to the evils resulting from the long-continued stagnation of all internal action in the Church, whilst non-residence and pluralism and prevalent inattention to the spiritual wants of a growing population had forced so many earnest men into the ranks of Dissent. Of Wesleyanism, and its effects on the English Church as manifested in the development of the Evangelical school, he always spoke with respect ; of Wesley, personally, with admiration, as of one who, but for some impatience of his own joined to the obstinate bigotry of his opponents, might have completed the work of the Reformation by restoring to our Church that element of growth which every legislative settlement has necessarily a tendency to check. But there was much in the action and utterances of the more demonstrative followers of the Evan- gelical school which prevented its securing the entire sympathy of men of very refined taste and keen sense of humour. The earlier works .of Maurice ; or of those of the Oxford school who joined to the earnest personal piety of the Evan- gelicals the culture and learning of the great divines of the Reformation, seemed to him to promise more fairly for the future of the English Church. But he lived to see somewhat of the zeal from which he had hoped for active work wasted in frivolities of ornament and ritual ; and he was not permitted to witness how much of substantial growth has ac- companied the reaction against the stagnation of the last century. The Church of Rome he had known chiefly either in decay — as in Portugal and Spain — or in the full enjoyment of apparently unquestioned supremacy under the protection of the English flag, as in Malta. He had always been warmly in favour of conceding the most liberal toleration to that Church in Ireland where it was the Church of the erreat bulk of the 346 MEMOIR OF people, and had long been subject to oppressive distinctions and restrictions for the maintenance of which no present justification could, he thought, be urged. It came upon him in his later years with something of a painful surprise, that under the guidance of political agitators the old aggressive spirit of the Romish Church was still capable of active development in forms hostile to religious freedom, and to unfettered discussion of truth. Towards all who differed from him on questions of religion the prevalent feeling of his mind was one of the fullest and most sympathetic toleration. He had warm personal friendship with men who fanatically held the most opposite religious opinions. He seemed never to doubt that a man who clung earnestly to a form of religious belief opposed to his own, might, after all, be as good a Christian as himself; not that he was himself latitudinarian, but he held that the range of subjects on which absolute certainty was demonstrable by religious controversy was wisely limited, and that Christianity was for all mankind, and not for any one nation, still less for any one form of mind or temperament. It would be a mistake to infer from the rarity of any religious discussion in his letters or conversa- tion that religion was little in his thoughts. Especially during the latter part of his life, when the language of the Hebrew poets afforded him his chosen intellectual exercise, his mind dwelt very habitually on the realities of the world to come. But to him, and to many of his generation, reli- gion was not a matter of anxious discussion but of settled conviction, and, withal, as touching re- lations between the Creator and Redeemer with a man's own soul, so sacred, that he would as soon have thought of discussing with a stranger their respective feelings towards a wife or parent, as their religious experiences. His religion, more- over, was not a scheme of ultimate selfish aggran- JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE. 347 disement, but a partial revelation of an existence dimly seen now, though extending to all eternity; a rule of conduct by which alone could be ordered all that was high and noble and enduring in life ; a standard for measuring affinity to that Divine Nature whose revealed will was, he held, the only sure foundation of the believer's practice. Wressil Lodge, Wimbledon, August, 1872. ADDITIONAL NOTES. Page 41. — Through the kindness of Mr. Fuller Maitland, of Stansted, Herts, I have had an opportunity of examining his copy of the original numbers of the "Anti- Jacobin," which appears to have belonged to Mr. Canning, and bears numerous marginal notes in his own handwriting relative to the authorship of most of the pieces which were written by him and Geo. Ellis. The only other writers noted are Macdonald (one article), Lord Liverpool (two articles), Lord Grenville (who is noted as the author of letters signed "Detector," Nos. 18 and 31, of March 26th and July 2nd ; an article on the Treaty of Pavia, in No. 14, of 12th February, 1798), and Pitt, who is noted as the author of the articles on Finance, in Nos. 2 and 3, of the 27th and 30th November, 1797 ; Nos. 10 and 12, of 15th and 29th January, 1798; No. 25, of April 30th; and the Review of the Session, in No. 35, of July 2nd. The fact of Pitt having contributed these six articles, one of them in the penultimate number of the Journal, seems established by the testimony of this copy. Page 85, 1. 17. Vide Alison. — It is strange that Robertson himself does not record this incident in the interview, but merely mentions that he recalled to Romana's mind the first occasion on which Mr. Frere had dined with him at Toledo, and a picture that he had seen there, and that he then showed Romana a small fragment of Mr. Frere's handwriting, which convinced Romana of his claim to be relied on [vide his "Narrative of a Secret Mission to the Danish Islands in 1808." London, 1863, page 65]. INDEX. DDINGTON, 30, 54- Ainslie, Sir Ro- bert, 53. Albuquerque, 136. Alisons "History of Europe," 26. " Anti-jacobin," the, 31, 281. Aristophanes, 1 76, 1 77, rf sivpius. Arthur, Sir George, 337, 338. Avellaneda's continuation of " Don Quixote," 329. BAIRD, Sir David, 90, 94. Barbauld, Mrs., 11. Belmonte Palace, the, 183. Bentley, Dr., his disputes with the Fellows of Trinity, 5. Bernadotte, Marshal, 83. Berni, 164. Bloomfield, Robert, 151. Blucher, 158. Borg, Sir Vincent, a Maltese gentleman of the old school, 264. Boringdon, Lord, 65. Botany Bay, 18. Bourrienne, 206. Brougham, Lord, his reminiscen- ces of Mr. Frere, 315, 343. Buonaparte, Joseph, made King of Spain, 78 ; flight from Madrid, 80, 81. Buonaparte, Napoleon, a phe- nomenon on which no man could have calculated, 26 ; prowess of, 36, 53, 70, 72, 75, 79-82. See also Napoleon. Burke, Edmund, 27 ; saying of, 210. Burrard, Sir Harry, 88. Byron, Lord, his "Childe Harold," 155, i56;his"Bep- po" an imitation of "Whistle- craft," 164 ; his " Don Juan" 165, 167, 172-174, 254, 281. Calcagni, Abbate, his address to Lord Northwick, 225. Canning, George, at Eton with Mr. Frere, 13 ; anecdote of, 17 ; his entrance into public life, 22 ; Pitt's interest in him, 24, 28; eager to abolish slavery, 3 1 j; his Introduction to the poetry of the "Anti-Jacobin," 34 ; Foreign Under Secretaiy, 40 ; removal to the Board of Trade, 41 ; his marriage, 46, 47 ; his quarrel and duel with Lord Castlereagh, 146 ; inter- course with Mr. Frere, 181, 182, 196 ; death of, 197 ; his character and career, 19S ; Mr. Frere's inscription for his monument, 200, 209 ; his skill in punctuation, 220, 263. 35° INDEX. Capodieci, the antiquarian, 185. Carlisle, Earl of, play by, 52. Caruana, Roman Catholic bishop of Malta, 264. Cary, Rev. H. F., his translation of the "Birds" of Aristo- phanes, 193, 195. Casti, 164, 171. Castlereagh, Lord, 116, 146 ; at the European Congress, 147 ; reference to, in "Don Juan," 174. Catchpole, Margaret, 323. Catholic Emancipation, 73. Cervantes, his " Don Quixote," 166, 329. Chantrey, 203. Charles I., execution of, 37. Charles IV., of Spain, corrupt court and government of, 55- Charmilly, Colonel de, 106. Chatterton, 175. Cid, poem of the, 84, 175, 179, 193 ; quoted, 291. Cintra, Convention of, 145. Clark, Mr. G. T., his descrip- tion of Mr. Frere's house at Malta, 257. Clinton's " Fasti Hellenici," 206, 275. Cochrane, Admiral, 62, 69. Coleridge, his translation of Schiller's " Piccolomini," 49; on " Whistlecraft," 172; de- sires to make Tieck and Mr. Frere acquainted, 1 79, 244 ; death of, 248 ; passage in his will, 249, 253, 296 ; verses on, 269. Constable, works of, 151. Cooper, Fenimore, 217. Cornvvallis, Miss, account of her conversation with Mr. Frere, 164, 172. Cosway, his portrait of Lady Erroll, 162. Cowper, lines by, 27. Crabbe, poetiy of, 151. Cradock, Sir John, 123. Crome, works of, 151. Cuesta, obstinacy of, 128, 135. Dalrymple, Sir Hew, 80, 84, 145- Darwin, 152, 281. Davies,Dr. ,head master of Eton, 12, 15. Dee, Dr. John, his divining cup, 285. Donne, Dr., his gift to friends, 151- Dmry-lane Theatre on fire, 97. Dubarry, Madame, 206. Dundas (Lord Melville), 31, 73, 74- Edgeworth, Miss, n ; her "Castle Rackrent," 49. Ellis's Specimens of the Early English Poets, 175. Emigration from Roydon, 210. Erroll, Countess Dowager of, 67; married to Mr. Frere, 161 ; her portrait painted by Cosway and Shee, 162 ; letter to George Frere, 180 ; her failing health and suffering from the English climate, 182 ; death of, 228. Erskine, verses by, 152. Eye in Suffolk, priory of, I. Fenn, Lady, 10 ; her books for children, n, 27, 149. Fenn, Sir John, editor of the " Paston Letters," 11, 189. Feringhes, the, 337. Fontainebleau, Convention of, 78. Foster, head master of Eton, 13. Fox, Mr. , scheme of, at the end of the American war, 333. French Revolution, the, 22, 24. Frere, Bartholomew, fifth brother of Mr. Hookham Frere, 42. Edward, Fellow of Trinity, an adherent of Bentley, 4. Edward, brother of Mr. Hookham Erere, 16, 261. Family, pedigree and genealogy of, 1-7. ■ George, third brother of Mr. Hookham Frere, 60, 180. INDEX. 351 Frere, James Hatley (brother of Mr. Hookham Frere), 46, 263. John (father of Mr. Hook- ham Frere), contends for the Senior Wranglership with Paley, 5 ; married to Jane Hookham, 6 ; elected mem- ber for Norwich, 8 ; his anti- quarian pursuits, 10 ; death of, 148. Frere, JOHN Hookham, birth and parentage, 1-11 ; at Eton, 12 ; his friendship with Can- ning, 13; his papers in the " Microcosm," 14 ; at Cam- bridge, i8;entrance into public life, 20 ; member for West Looe, ib. ; visits France, 22 ; joins Canning and others in the "Anti-Jacobin," 31 ; ap- pointed Foreign Under Secre- tary, 41 ; Envoy to Lisbon, 48, 52 ; transferred from Portugal to Spain, 54 ; his friendship with Romana, 56 ; return to England, 62, 63 ; and reception there, 64 ; his second mission to Spain, 82; consulted by Sir John Moore, 92 ; his reply, 93 ; employment of de Charmilly. 106 ; misunderstanding and differences with Sir John Moore. 109 ; succeeded as British Minister in Spain by the Marquis Wellesley, 129 ; end of his active political career, 148 ; death of his father, id. ; life at Roydon, 150; in London society, 151 ; sayings preserved, 152; marries Lady Erroll, 161 ; publishes the " Monks and the Giants," 163; at lirompton and Tunbridge Wells, 180 ; his wife's illness, 182 ; sails for the Mediterra- nean, ib. ; arrival and settle- ment at Malta, 184 ; extracts from his letters, ib. ; short visit to England, 196 ; return to Malta, 197 ; loss of his friend Mr. Canning, 198 ; resumes his translation of ''Aristophanes," 205 ; letters to his brothers,&c, 210, sqq. ; makes a yachting trip to Marseilles, 227 ; death of his wife, 228 ; his Hebrew studies, 230 ; his " Frogs" of Aristophanes, 231 ; welcomes Sir Walter Scott to Malta, 233; various letters, 237, sqq. ; his house at Malta described, 257 ; death of his sister, 289 ; letters to his brothers, &c, 290 ; publication of his Aristo- phanes, 296 ; his "Theognis" sent to press, 317 ; his illness and death, 338-339. Frere, Sheppard, 5. Susan, sister of Mr. Hook- ham Frere, 149, 156 ; death of, 289 ; inscription on her tomb, 292. Temple, brother of Mr. Hookham Frere, 149, 261. William, brother of Mr. Hookham Frere, 42, 155. Fryer, Dr., his travels in the East Indies, 3. Galt's novels, 330. Gell, Sir W., 270. "Gentleman's Magazine," 10. George III., his visits to Eton, 13 ; his opposition to Reforms, 29 ; and Pitt, 30. Gibbon, quoted, 336. Gifford, William, his connexion with the "Anti-Jacobin," 39 ; his editorship of the "Quarter ly Review," 177. Gillman's Life of Coleridge, quoted, 40. Graham's Island, 231. Grant, Sir Robert, his articles on Pitt and Fox in the " Quarter- ly Review," 178. " Gregory Griffin," 15. Grenville, Lord, at the Foreign Office, 20, 58. Guizot, 30. Hall, Captain Basil, 333. Hamilton, Sir Charles, 63. 352 INDEX. Havelock, Sir H., his account of the attack and capture of Ghuznee, 244. Hobhouse, Mr., and "Don Juan," 172. Holland House, 151, 153. Holland, Lord, at Corunna, 119 ; in Spain, 140 ; at Holland House, 153 ; dangerous illness of, 230. Homer, 156. Hook, Theodore, his " Life of Sir David Baird," quoted, 104, in. Hookham, Jane (mother of Mr. Hookham Frere), her character and gifts, 6 ; verses by, ib. ; let- ter to her son, 1 48; death of, 1 50. Horace, quoted, 224. Home, Bishop, anecdote of, 10. Jarvis, Sir John, 55. Jones of Nayland, 7, 344. Keats, Admiral, 86. Kett, the tanner, 288. Knife-Grinder, the Needy, 38. Lambton, General, 15. Lambton, Mr., 15. Leclerq's " Proverbes," 331. Lewis, Sir G. C, on the "Anti- Jacobin" parodies, 39; ap- pointed Commissioner to Malta, 273 ; his intercourse with Mr. Frere, 274; his notice of Mr. Frere's " Aris- tophanes," 280 ; and " Theog- nis," 319. Lockhart's "Life of Scott" quoted, 231, 278, 279. Lope de Vega, 330. Louis XVIIL, his departure from Dover, 157- Louis Philippe, 30. Machiavelli, 207. Mackintosh, Sir James, on "The Monks and the Giants," 166 ; on Mr. Frere's translations, 175- Mallett, Robert, I. Malmesbury, Lord, his "Diary" quoted, 67 ; Mr. Hookham Frere's intercourse with him, 69, 78. Malta, finally chosen by Mr. Frere as a residence, 180, 183 ; his arrival and settle- ment there, 184 ; described, 252 ; society of, 263. Marlborough, Duke of, 26. Marmora, Father, 266. Marten the regicide, 37. Maurice, Rev. F. D., book by him, 297 ; his earlier works, 345- Mela victories, 44. Melville, Lord. See Dundas. Menander, 282. "Microcosm," the, 14, 15- Minto, Lord, 45, 48, 50. Mitchell's "Aristophanes," 177, 179, 237, 280. Mole, Count, 29. Moliere, 332. Monge quoted, 35. "Monks and the Giants," the, 163. Moore, Sir John, 87, 89, 92 ; mor- tally wounded at Corunna, 96 ; review of his campaign, 100. Moore, Thomas, on the "Anti- Jacobin," 41 ; "Journals" of, quoted, 152, 153, 172-173. Mornington, Lord. See Welles- ley. Mulgrave, Lord, 44. Midler on the Dorians, 208. Murray, Mr. John, 161. Napier's " Peninsular War," 82. Napoleon, his meeting with the Emperor of Russia at Erfurth, 81, 91 ; at Madrid, 92. See Buonaparte. Nelson, his daring at Copen- hagen, 21. Newman, John Henry, of Oriel, his meeting with Mr. Frere at Malta, 242. Ney, Marshal, trial of, 160. Niebuhr, 231. INDEX. 353 Norton, Mr. C. E., on "The Monks and the Giants," 170- 172 ; on Mr. Frere's earlier experiments in translation, 175 ; on "Aristophanes," 178, and "Theognis," 317. O'Conneix, Daniel, his elo- quence, 152. Orde, Lady, sister of Mr. Frere, 48. Paley, his contest with John Frere for the Senior Wrangler- ship, 5. " Paston Letters," the, 10, 1S8. Peninsular War, 78, sqq. " Penrose's Journal," 331. Pickering, William, "a book- seller of curious books out of the common line," 296. Pindar, 185. Pitt, William, 20, 21, 24, 28, 30 ; his reported cooperation in the "Anti-Jacobin," 39; at Canning's marriage, 47 ; his speech on the Spanish war quoted, 68 ; and Catholic Emancipation, 73 ; his labours, 75- Pope's " Rape of the Lock," 166. Pulci's " Morgante Maggiore," 164, 171. Punctuation, 220. " Quarterly Review," the, 177, 178, 263, 319. Quinton, Mr., copies some family portraits of the Freres, 44. Reform, 235. Ritualism, 321. Robertson, an accomplished lin- guist, confidential mission of, 84. Robinson, Henry Crabb, sent out to Corunna as corre- spondent of the "Times" newspaper, 90 ; his impression of Mr. Frere, 91 ; of Lord Holland, 1 19 ; invited by Cole- ridge to meet Tieck and Mr. Frere at Highgate, 179. Romana, Marquis de, 56 ; Mr. Frere's friendship for, id. ; death of, 143. Rose, William Stewart, his ad- dress to Mr. Frere on the "Monks and the Giants," 164, 172, 190 ; his Epistle to Mr. Frere, 251. Rossetti, Gabriele, his "Spirito Antipapale," 210, 238, 240, 243, 247. Royclon, 3, 149 ; emigration from, 210. Rudd's "Aristophanes," 179. Russell, Earl, on the Whigs and the Peninsular War, 119; in Spain with Lord Holland, and meets Mr. Frere, 140. Sadler on Pauperism, 230. Scott, Sir Walter, his supple- ment to "Sir Tristrem," 175; his admiration of Mr. Frere, 176 ; his description of Gra- ham's Island, 231 ; his visit to Malta, 233. Sevigne, Madame de, Letters of, 191. Shakespeare's "Hamlet," 329. Shee, Sir Martin Archer, his portrait of Lady Erroll, 162. Sheridan, Richard Brinsley, 82. Shuttleworth, Rev. Mr., story of, 153- Sinking Fund, the, 25. Smith, Adam, writings of, 18, 19- Smollett's novels, 329. Southey, Robert, his inscription on Marten the regicide, 37 ; his Peninsular War, 82, 1 12, 132, 138, 142 ; letter to Lan- dor on Mr. Frere and Lord Byron, 165 ; on Mr. Frere's translations from the " Poem of theCid," 175; his "Chro- nicle of the Cid," 179, 186, 187. Spanish fleet, the, 72. A A 354 INDEX. St. Simon, his story of the abbe and the snuff-box, 159. Stapleton's ' ' George Canning and his Times," quoted, 116. Swift, Dean, 331. Tacitus, his ignorance and mistakes about the Christians, 333- Taylor, Isaac, his " Ancient Christianity," 297, 317; his " Spiritual Despotism," 321. " Theognis," 275, 318, 319. Thiers, 30. Ticknor, Mr., on Mr. Frere's version of the "Poem of the Cid," 175. Tieck, invited by Coleridge to Highgate to meet Mr. Frere, 179 ; at Oxford, 180. Townsend, Rev. Charles, 251. Trimmer, Mrs., II. Upcott, William, 40. Vanbrugh, his "Provoked Wife," 37. Virgil, quoted, 216, 232. Walton, Izaak, his "Life of Dr. Donne " quoted, 151. Watson, bishop of Llandaff, his life quoted, 5. Welcker's "Theognis," 324. Wellesley, Marquis, at Eton, 15; selected as Mr. Frere's suc- cessor at Madrid, 97, 129 ; return to England, 143. Wellington, Duke of, flogged for a barring-out at Eton, 16, 26; sent to Portugal, 87 ; his In- dian Despatches, 117 ; at Lis- bon, 122, 127 ; military genius of, 134; his rampart lines at Torres Vedras, 143; his opinion of Romana, 144 ; unjust oppo- sition and clamour against, ib. ; with the Allied Sovereigns, 158 ; his conduct in reference to Catholic Emancipation 198. Wesley, John, preaches at Diss, 10 ; Mr. Frere's admiration, of, 345- " Whistlecraft," pseudonym of Mr. Frere, 163, 178. "Whittingham's Memoirs," 132- 133- Wilson, Sir Robert, 124. Wimbledon Church, reparation of, 30. Wolff, Rev. Joseph, Mr. Frere's interest in, 262, 266. Wordsworth, Dr. Christopher, bishop of Lincoln, 284, 293. Wyndham, Mr., 262. END OF VOL. I. CHISWICK PRESS \ — PRINTED BY WHITTINGHAM AND WILKINS, TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE.