PR 5114 . P3 THE 1899 Copy 1 UTOBIOGRAPHY AND LETTERS OF MRS. M. O. W. OLIPHANT Arranged and Edited by MRS. HARRY CAGHILL WITH TWO PORTRAITS -y NEW YORK DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY O ^'OP"^' THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND LETTERS /'i^^ MRS. M;10?Wr^^^^^^^ Arranged and Edited by MRS. HARRY CAGHILL fFITH TWO PORTRAITS ^ NEW YORK DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY Di 3 30090 Copyright, rSgg, By Dodd, Mead and Company TWO COPIES R£CC:iV£D. X'^V ffilniljrvsitu ^rcss John Wilson and Son, Cambriik;f.,U. S. A. k AUTOBIOGRAPHY. I. Windsor, \st February 1885.^ Twenty-one years have passed since I wrote what is on the opposite page.^ I have just been reading it all with tears ; sorry, very sorry for that poor soul who has lived through so much since. Twenty-one years is a little lifetime. It is curious to think that I was not very young, nearly thirty-six, at that time, and that I am not very old, nearly fifty-seven, now. Life, though it is short, is very long, and contains so much. And one does not, to one's consciousness, change as one's outward appear- ance and capabilities do. Doesn't Mrs Somerville say that, so far from feeling old, she was not always quite certain (up in the seventies) whether she was quite grown up ! I entirely understand the feeling, though I have had enough, one would think, to make one feel old. Since the time when that most unexpected, most terrible blow overtook me in Rome — where her father had died four years before — I have had trials which, I say it with ^ It has been thought better to print the earlier portion, or such of it as might interest general readers, after this part of Mrs. Oliphant's journal, so as to preserve the sequence of the narrative. — Ed. 2 See Preface, p. ix. — Ed. 4 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. full knowledge of all the ways of mental suffering, have been harder than sorrow. I have lived a laborious life, incessant work, incessant anxiety — and yet so strange, so capricious is this human being, that I would not say I have had an unhappy life. I have said this to one or two friends who know faintly without details what I have had to go through, and astonished them. Sometimes I am miserable — always there is in me the sense that I may have active cause to be so at any moment — always the gnawing pangs of anxiety, and deep, deep dissatisfaction beyond words, and the sense of helplessness, which of itself is despair. And yet there are times when my heart jumps up in the old unreasonable way, and I am, — yes, happy — though the word seems so inappropriate — with- out any cause for it, with so many causes the other way. I wonder whether this is want of feeling, or mere tem- perament and elasticity, or if it is a special compensation — " Werena my heart licht I wad dee" — Grizel Hume must have had the same. I have been tempted to begin writing by George Eliot's life — with that curious kind of self-compassion which one cannot get clear of. I wonder if I am a little envious of her? I always avoid considering formally what my own mind is worth. I have never had any theory on the subject. I have written because it gave me pleasure, because it came natural to me, because it was like talking or breathing, besides the big fact that it was necessary for me to work for my children. That, however, was not the first motive, so that when I laugh inquiries off and say that it is my trade, I do it only by way of eluding the question which I have neither time nor wish to enter into. Anthony Trollope's talk about the characters in his books astonished me beyond measure, and I am totally incapable of talking about anything I have ever done in that way. As he was a thoroughly sensible genuine man, I suppose he was quite sincere in what he says of them, — or was it that he was driven into a fashion of self-explanation which belongs to the time, and which I am following now though in another SCOTCH TRAITS OF CHARACTER. 5 way? I feel that my carelessness of asserting my claim is very much against me with everybody. It is so natural to think that if the workman himself is indifferent about his work, there can't be much in it that is worth thinking about. I am not indifferent, yet I should rather like to forget it all, to wipe out all the books, to silence those compliments about my industry, &c., which I always turn off with a laugh. I suppose this is really pride, with a mixture of Scotch shyness, and a good deal of that uncomprehended, unexplainable feeling which made Mrs Carlyle reply with a jibe, which meant only a whimsical impulse to take the side of opposition, and the strong Scotch sense of the absurdity of a chorus of praise, but which looks so often like detraction and bitterness, and has now definitely been accepted as such by the public in general. I don't find words to express it adequately, but I feel it strenu- ously in my own case. ' When people comment upon the number of books I have written, and I say that I am so far from being proud of that fact that I should like at least half of them forgotten, they stare — and yet it is quite true; and even here I could no more go solemnly into them, and tell why I had done this or that, than I could fly. They are my work, which I like in the doing, which is my natural way of occupying myself, though they are never so good as I meant them to be. And when I have said that, I have said all that is in me to say. I don't quite know why I should put this all down. I suppose because George Eliot's life has, as I said above, stirred me up to an involuntary confession. How I have been handicapped in life ! Should I have done better if I had been kept, like her, in a mental greenhouse and taken care of ? This is one of the things it is perfectly impossible to tell. In all likelihood our minds and our circumstances are so arranged that, after all, the possible way is the way that is best ; yet it is a little hard some- times not to feel with Browning's Andrea, that the men who have no wives, who have given themselves up to their art, have had an almost unfair advantage over us 6 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. who have been given perhaps more than one Lucrezia to take care of. And to feel with him that perhaps in the after-life four square walls in the New Jerusalem may be given for another trial ! I used to be intensely impressed in the Laurence Oliphants with that curious freedom from human ties which I have never known ; and that they felt it possible to make up their minds to do what was best, without any sort of arricrc pensce, without having to consider whether they could or not. Curious freedom ! I have never known what it was. I have always had to think of other people, and to plan every- thing — for my own pleasure, it is true, very often, but always in subjection to the neccessity which bound me to them. On the whole, I have had a great deal of my own way, and have insisted upon getting what I wished, but only at the cost of infinite labour, and of carrying a whole little world with me whenever I moved. I have not been able to rest, to please myself, to take the pleasures that have come in my way, but have always been forced to go on without a pause. When my poor brother's family fell upon my hands, and especially when there was question of Frank's education, I remember that I said to myself, having then perhaps a little stirring of ambition, that I must make up my mind to think no more of that, and that to bring up the boys for the service of God was better than to write a fine novel, supposing even that it was in me to do so. Alas ! the work has been done; the education is over; my good Frank, my steady, good boy, is dead. It seemed rather a fine thing to make that resolution (though in reality I had no choice) ; but now I think that if I had taken the other way, which seemed the less noble, it might have been better for all of us. I might have done better work. I should in all probability have earned nearly as much for half the production had I done less; and I might have had the satisfaction of knowing that there was something laid up for them and for my old age; while they might have learned habits of work which now seem GEORGE ELIOT. 7 beyond recall. Who can tell? I did with much labour what I thought the best, and there is only a might have been on the other side. In this my resolution which I did make, I was, after all, only following my instincts, it being in reality easier to me to keep on with a flowing sail, to keep my house- hold and make a number of people comfortable, at the cost of incessant work, and an occasional great crisis of anxiety, than to live the self-restrained life which the greater artist imposes upon himself. What casuists we are on our own behalf! — this is al- together self-defence. And I know I am giving myself the air of being an fond a finer sort of character than the others. I may as well take the little satisfaction to myself, for nobody will give it to me. No one even will mention me in the same breath with George Eliot. And that is just. It is a little justification to myself to think how much better off she was, — no trouble in all her life as far as appears, but the natural one of her father's death — and perhaps coolnesses with her brothers and sisters, though that is not said. And though her marriage is not one that most of us would have ven- tured on, still it seems to have secured her a wor- shipper unrivalled. I think she must have been a dull woman with a great genius distinct from herself, some- thing like the gift of the old prophets, which they sometimes exercised with only a dim sort of perception what it meant. But this is a thing to be said only with bated breath, and perhaps further thought on the subject may change even my mind. She took herself with tremendous seriousness, that is evident, and was always on duty, never relaxing, her letters ponderous beyond description — and those to the Bray party giving one the idea of a mutual improvement society for the exchange of essays. Let me be done with this — I wonder if I will ever have time to put a few autobiographical bits down before I die. I am in very little danger of having my life written, 8 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. and that is all the better in this point of view — for what could be said of me? George Eliot and George Sand make me half inclined to cry over my poor little unappreciated self — " Many love me {i.e.y in a sort of way), but by none am I enough beloved." These two bigger women did things which I have never felt the least temptation to do — but how very much more enjoyment they seem to have got out of their life, how much more praise and homage and honour ! I would not buy their fame with these disadvantages, but I do feel very small, very obscure, beside them, rather a failure all round, never securing any strong affection, and throughout my life, though I have had all the usual experiences of woman, never impressing anybody, — what a droll little complaint! — why should I? I acknowledge frankly that there is nothing in me — a fat, little, commonplace woman, rather tongue-tied — to impress any one; and yet there is a sort of whimsical injury in it which makes me sorry for myself, Feb. Wi. Here, then, for a little try at the autobiography. I ought to be doing some work, getting on a little in advance for to-morrow, which gives a special zest to doing nothing : ^ to doing what has no need to be done — and Sunday evenings have always been a time to f ant as ti- care, to do what one pleased ; and I have dropped out of the letter I used to do on these occasions, having — which, by the way, is a little sad when one comes to think of it — no one to write to, of anything that is beneath the surface. Curious ! I had scarcely realised it before. Now for a beginning. I remember nothing of Wallyford, where I was born, but opened my eyes to life, so far as I remember, in the village of Lasswade, where we lived in a little house, I think, on the road to Dalkeith. I recollect the wintry road ending to my consciousness in a slight ascent with 1 This is exactly wliat Sir Walter says in his Uiary, only published in 1S90, so I was like him in this without knowing it. EARLY MEMORIES. 9 big ash-trees forming a sort of arch ; underneath which I fancy was a toll-bar, the way into the world appropriately barred by that turnpike. But no, that was not the way into the world; for the world was Edinburgh, the coach for which, I am almost sure, went the other way through the village and over the bridge to the left hand, starting from somewhere close to Mr Todd the baker's shop, of which I have a faint and kind recollection. It was by that way that Frank came home on Saturday nights to spend Sunday at home, walking out from Edinburgh (about six miles) to walk in again on Monday in the dark winter mornings. I recollect nothing about the summer mornings when he set out on that walk, but remember vividly like a picture the Monday mornings in winter; the fire burning cheerfully and candles on the breakfast- table, all dark but with a subtle sense of morning, though it seemed a kind of dissipation to be up so long before the day. I can see myself, a small creature seated on a stool by the fire, toasting a cake of dough which was brought for me by the baker with the prematurely early rolls, which were for Frank. (This dough was the special feature of the morning to me, and I suppose I had it only on these occasions.) And my mother, who never seemed to sit down in the strange, little, warm, bright picture, but to hover about the table pouring out tea, supplying everything he wanted to her boy (how proud, how fond of him ! — her eyes liquid and bright with love as she hovered about) ; and Frank, the dearest of companions so long — then long separated, almost alien- ated, brought back again at the end to my care. How bright he was then, how good always to me, how fond of his little sister! — impatient by moments, good always. And he was a kind of god to me — my Frank, as I always called, him. I remember once weeping bitterly over a man singing in the street, a buttoned-up, shabby-genteel man, whom, on being questioned why I cried, I ac- knowledged I thought like my Frank. That was when he was absent, and my mother's anxiety reflected in a lO AUTOBIOGRAPHY. child's mind went, I suppose, the length of fancying that Frank too might have to sing in the street. (He would have come off very badly in that case, for he did not know one tune from another, much less could he sing a note !) How well I recollect the appearance of the man in his close-buttoned black coat, with his dismal song, and the acute anguish of the thought that Frank might have come to that for anything I knew. Frank, how- ever, never gave very much anxiety ; it was Willie, poor Willie, who was our sore and constant trouble — Willie, who lives still in Rome, as he has done for the last two- or three-and-twenty years — nearly a quarter of a century — among strangers who are kind to him, wanting noth- ing, I hope, yet also having outlived everything. I shrank from going to see him when I was in Italy, which was wrong; but how can I return to Rome, and how could he have come to me? — poor Willie! the hand- somest, brightest of us all, with eyes that ran over with fun and laughter — and the hair which we used to say he had to poll, like Absalom, so many times a-year. Alas ! What I recollect in Lasswade besides the Monday morning aforesaid is not much. I remember standing at the smithy with brother Willie, on some occasion when the big boy was very unwillingly charged to take his little sister somewhere or other, — standing in the dark, wondering at the sparks as they flew up and the dark figures of the smith and his men ; and I remember playing on the road opposite the house, where there was a low wall over which the Esk and the country beyond could be seen (I think), playing with two little kittens, who were called Lord Brougham and Lord Grey. Tt must have been immediately after the passing of the Reform Bill, and I suppose this was why the kittens bore such names. We were all tremendously political and Radical, my mother especially and Frank. Likewise I recollect with the most vivid clearness on what must have been a warm still summer day, lying on my back in the grass, the little blue speedwells in which are very distinct THE OLD TYPE OF SCOTCH MOTHER. I I before me, and looking up into the sky. The depths of it, the blueness of it, the way in which it seemed to move and fly and avoid the gaze which could not penetrate be- yond that profound unfathomable blue, — the bliss of lying there doing nothing, trying to look into it, growing giddy with the effort, with a sort of vague realisation of the soft swaying of the world in space ! I feel the giddi- ness in my brain still, and the happiness, as if I had been the first discoverer of that wonderful sky. All my little recollections are like pictures to which the meaning, naturally, is put long afterwards. I did not know the world moved or anything about it, being under six at most ; but I can feel the sensation of the small head trying to fix that great universe, and in the effort growing dizzy and going round. We left Lasswade when I was six, my father's busi- ness taking him to' Glasgow, to the misery of my mother, who was leaving her boys behind her. My father is a very dim figure in all that phantasmagoria. I had to be very quiet in the evenings when he was at home, not to disturb him ; and he took no particular notice of me or of any of us. My mother was all in all. How she kept everything going, and comfortably going, on the small income she had to administer, I can't tell ; it seems like a miracle, though of course we lived in the utmost obscurity and simplicity, she herself doing the great part of all that was done in the house. I was the child of her age — not her old age, but the sentiment was the same. She had lost three children one after another — one a girl about whom I used to make all sorts of dream-romances, to the purport that Isabella had never died at all, and was brought back in this or that mirac- ulous way to make my mother and myself supremely happy. I was born after that period of misery, and brought back life to my mother's heart. She was of the old type of Scotch mothers, not demonstrative, not caressing, but I know now that I was a kind of idol to 12 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. her from my birth. My clothes were all made by her tender hands, finer and more beautifully worked than ever child's clothes were; my under garments fine linen and trimmed with little deHcate laces, to the end that there might be nothing coarse, nothing less than ex- quisite, about me ; that I might grow up with all the delicacies of a woman's ideal child. But she was very quick in temper notwithstanding this, and was very far from spoiling me. I was not petted nor called by sweet names. But I know now that my mere name meant everything to her. I was her Maggie — what more could mortal speech find to say.? How little one realises the character or individuality of those who are most near and dear. It is with difficulty even now that I can analyse or make a character of her. She herself is there, not any type or variety of human- kind. She was taller than I am, not so stout as I have grown. She had a sweet fresh complexion, and a cheek so soft that I can feel the sensation of putting mine against it still, and beautiful liquid brown eyes, full of light and fun and sorrow and anger, flashing and melting, terrible to look at sometimes when one was in disgrace. Her teeth projected, when she had teeth, but she lost and never replaced them, which did not, I think, harm her looks very much — at least, not in my consciousness. I am obliged to confess that when I remember her first she wore a brown front ! according to the fashion of the time — which fashion she detested, and suddenly aban- doning it one day, appeared with the most lovely white hair, which gave a charm of harmonious colour to her beautiful complexion and brown eyes and eyebrows, but which was looked upon with consternation by her con- temporaries, who thought the change wickedness. She had grown very early grey like myself, but was at this period, I should think, about forty-five. She wore al- ways a cap with white net quilled closely round her face, and tied under her chin with white ribbons ; and in .winter always a white shawl ; her dress cut not quite to A DANGEROUS FACILITY. 1 3 her throat, and a very ample white net or cambric hand- kerchief showing underneath. She had read everything she could lay hands upon all her life, and was fond of quoting Pope, so that we used to call her Popish in after- days when I knew what Popish in this sense meant. She had entered into everything that was passing all her life with the warmest energy and animation, as was her nature ; was Radical and democratic and the highest of aristocrats all in one. She had a very high idea, founded on I have never quite known what, of the importance of the Oliphant family, so that I was brought up with the sense of belonging (by her side) to an old, chivalrous, impoverished race. I have never got rid of the prejudice, though I don't think our branch of the Oliphants was much to brag of. I would not, however, do anything to dispel the delusion, [if it is one, for my mother^s sake, who held it stoutly and without a doubt. Her father had been a prodigal, and I fear a profligate, whose wife had not been able to bear with him (my mother would have borne anything and everything for her children's sake, to keep their home intact), and her youth had been a troubled and partially dependent one, — dependent upon relations on the one side, whom it was a relief, I suppose, to the high-spirited girl to think as much inferior in race as they were in the generosity and princeliness of nature which was hers. So far as that went she might have been a queen. I understand the Carlyles, both he and she, by means of my mother as few people appear able to do. She had Mrs Carlyle's wonderful gift of narrative, and she possessed in perfection that dangerous facility of sarcasm and stinging speech which Sir Walter attrib- utes to Queen Mary. Though her kindness was inex- haustible and her love boundless, yet she could drive her opponent of the moment half frantic with half-a- dozen words, and cut to the quick with a flying phrase. On the other side, there was absolutely nothing that 14 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. she would not have done or endured for her own ; and no appeal to her generosity was ever made in vain. She was a poor woman all her life, but her instinct was always to give. And she would have kept open house if she could have had her way, on heaven knows how little a-year. My father was in one way very differ- ent. He hated strangers ; guests at his table were a bore to him. In his later days he would have nobody invited, or if guests came, retired and would not see them, — but he was not illiberal. We lived for a long time in Liverpool, where my father had an office in the Custom-house. I don't know exactly what, except that he took affidavits — which was a joke in the house — having a special commission for that purpose. We lived for some time in the North End (no doubt a great deal changed now, and I have known nothing about it for thirty years and more), where there was a Scotch church, chiefly for the use of the engineers and their families who worked in the great foundries. One of the first things I remember here was great distress among the people, on what account I cannot tell — I must have been a girl of thirteen or so, I think. A fund was raised for their relief, of which my father was treasurer, and both my brothers were drawn in to help. This was very mo- mentous in our family, from the fact that it was the means of bringing Frank, up to this time everything that was good except in respect to the Church, to that last and crowning excellence. He got interested about the poor, and began to come with us to church, and filled my mother's cup with happiness. Willie, always careless, always kind, ready to do anything for any- body, but who had already come by some defeat in life which I did not understand, and who was at home idle, took the charge of administering this charity, and used to go about the poor streets with a cart of coal behind him and his pockets stuffed with orders for bread and provisions of all kinds. All this I reniem- AFFAIRES DE CCEUR. I 5 ber, I think, more through my mother's keen half anguish of happiness and pride than through my own recollection. That he had done so poorly for himself was bitter, but that he did so well for the poor was sweet ; oh ! and such a vindication of the bright-eyed, sweet-tempered unfortunate, who never was anybody's enemy but his own — words which were more true in his case than in most others. And then Frank was busy in the good work too, and at last a member of the Church, and all well. This is not to say that there were not domestic gusts at times. When I was sixteen I began to have — what shall I say .'' — not lovers exactly, except in the singular — but one or two people about who revealed to me the fact that I too was like the girls in the poets. I recollect distinctly the first compliment, though not a compliment in the ordinary sense of the word, which gave me that bewilder- ing happy sense of being able to touch somebody else's heart — which was half fun and infinitely amusing, yet something more. The speaker was a young Irishman, one of the young ministers that came to our little church, at that time vacant. He had joined Frank and me on a' walk, and when we were passing and looking at a very pretty cottage on the slope of the hill at Everton, embowered in gardens and shrubberies, he suddenly looked at me and said, " It would be Elysium." I laughed till I cried at this speech afterwards, though at the moment demure and startled. But the little incident remains to me, as so many scenes in my early life do, Hke a picture suffused with a soft delightful light : the glow in the young man's eyes ; the lowered tone and little speech aside ; the soft thrill of meaning which was nothing and yet much. Perhaps if I were not a novelist addicted to describing such scenes, I might not remember it after — how long.? Forty-one years. What a long time ! I could not have been sixteen. Then came the episode of J. Y., which was very serious indeed. We were engaged on the eve of his going away. He was to 1 6 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. go to America for three years and then return for me. He was a good, simple, pious, domestic, kind-hearted fellow, fair-haired, not good-looking, not ideal at all. He cannot have been at all clever, and I was rather. When he went away our correspondence for some time was very full ; then I began to find his letters silly, and I suppose said as much. Then there were quarrels, quarrels with the Atlantic between, then explanations, and then dread- ful silence. It is amusing to look back upon, but it was not at all amusing to me then. My poor little heart was broken. I remember another scene without being able to explain it : my mother and myself walking home from somewhere — I don't know where — after it was certain that there was no letter, and that all was over. I think it was a winter night and rainy, and I was leaning on her arm, and the blank of the silence, and the dark and the separation, and the cutting off of all the dreams that had grown about his name, came over me and seemed to stop my very life. My poor little heart was broken. I was just over seventeen, I think. These were the only breaks in my early life. We lived in the most singularly secluded way. I never was at a dance till after my marriage, never went out, never saw anybody at home. Our pleasures were books of all and every kind, newspapers and magazines, which formed the staple of our conversation, as well as all our amuse- ment. In the time of my depression and sadness my mother had a bad illness, and I was her nurse, or at least attendant. I had to sit for hours by her bedside and keep quiet. I had no liking then for needlework, a taste which developed afterwards, so I took to writing. There was no particular purpose in my beginning except this, to secure some amusement and occupation for myself while I sat by my mother's bedside. I wrote a little book in which the chief character was an angelic elder sister, unmarried, who had the charge of a family of motherless brothers and sisters, and who had a shrine of sorrow in her life in the shape of the portrait and memory of her FIRST LITERARY EFFORTS. 1 7 lover who had died young. It was all very innocent and guileless, and my audience — to wit, my mother and brother Frank — were highly pleased with it. (It was published long after by W. on his own account, and very silly I think it is, poor little thing.) I think I was then about sixteen. Afterwards I wrote another very much concerned with the Church business, in which the heroine, I recollect, was a girl, who in the beginning of the story was a sort of half-witted undeveloped creature, but who ended by being one of those lofty poetical beings whom girls love. She was called, I recollect, Ibby, but why, I cannot explain. I had the satisfaction afterwards, when I came to my full growth, of burning the manuscript, which was a three-volume business. I don't think any effort was ever made to get a publisher for it. We were living at the time in Liverpool, either in a house in Great Homer' Street or in Juvenal Street — very classical in point of name but in nothing else. Probably neither of these places exists any longer — very good houses though, at least the last. I have lately described in a letter in the ' St James' Gazette ' a curious experi- ence of mine as a child while living in one of these places. It was in the time of the Anti-Corn Law agita- tion, and I was about fourteen. There was a great deal of talk in the papers, which were full of that agitation, about a petition from women to Parliament upon that subject, with instructions to get sheets ruled for signa- tures, and an appeal to ladies to help in procuring them. It was just after or about the time of our great charity, and I was in the way of going thus from house to house. Accordingly I got a number of these sheets, or probably Frank got them for me, and set to work. Another girl went with me, I believe, but I forget who she was. The town was all portioned out into districts under the charge of ladies appointed by the committee, but we flung our- selves upon a street, no matter where, and got our papers filled and put all the authorised agents comically out. B 1 8 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. Nobody could discover who we were, I took my sheets to the meeting of the ladies, and was much wondered at, being to the external eye a child, though to my own consciousness quite a grown-up person. The secretary of the association or committee, or whatever it was, was, I think, a Miss Hayward ; at all events her Chris- tian name was Lawrencina, which she wrote L'cina. I admired her greatly, and admired her pretty hand- writing and everything about her. I myself wrote abominably, resisting up to this time all efforts to teach me better ; but the circulars and notes with Miss L'cina's pretty name developed in me a warm ambition. I began to copy her writing, and mended in my own from that day. It did not come to very much, the printers would say. I was a tremendous politician in those days. I forget when it was that we moved to Birkenhead — not, I think, till after the extraordinary epoch of the publication of my first book. From the time above spoken of I went on writing, and somehow, I don't remember how, got into the history of Mrs Margaret Maitland. There had been some sketches from life in the story which, as I have said, I burned ; but that was pure imagination. A slight reflection of my own childhood perhaps was in the child Grace, a broken bit of reflection here and there from my mother in the picture of Mrs Margaret. Willie, after many failures and after a long illness, which we were in hopes had purified him from all his defects, had gone to London to go through some studies at the London University and in the College called the English Presbyterian, to which in our warm Free Churchism we had attached ourselves. He took my MS. to Colburn, then one of the chief publishers of novels, and for some weeks nothing was heard of it, when one morning came a big blue envelope containing an agreement by which Mr Colburn pledged himself to publish my book on the half-profit system, accompanied by a letter from a Mr S. W. Fullom, full of compliments 'MRS MARGARET MAITLAND. 1 9 as to its originality, &c. I have forgotten the terms now, but then I knew them by heart. The delight, the astonishment, the amusement of this was not to be described. First and foremost, it was the most extra- ordinary joke that ever was. Maggie's story ! My mother laughed and cried with pride and happiness and amazement unbounded. She thought Mr S. W. Fullom a great authority and a man of genius, and augured the greatest advantage to me from his acquaint- ance and that of all the great literary persons about him. This wonderful event must have come most fortunately to comfort the family under new trouble ; for things had again gone wrong with poor Willie — he had fallen once more into his old vice and debt and misery. He had still another term in London before he finished the course of study he was engaged in ; and when the time came for his return I was sent with him to take care of him. It was almost the first time I had ever been separated from my mother. One visit of two or three weeks to the Hasties of Fairy Knowe, which had its part too in my little development, had been my only absence from home ; and how my mother made up her mind to this three months' parting I do not know, but for poor Willie's sake everything was possible. We had lodgings near Bruton Crescent in a street where our cousins, Frank and Tom Oliphant, were in the same house. We had the parlour, I remember, where I sat in the mornings when Willie was at his lectures. Afterwards he came in and I went out with him to walk. We used to walk through all the curious little passages leading, I believe, to Holborn, and full of old bookshops, which were our delight. And he took me to see the parks and various places — though not those to which I should suppose a girl from the country would be taken. The bookshops are the things I remember best. He was as good as he could be, docile and sweet- tempered and never rebellious ; and I was a little dragon watching over him with remorseless anxiety. I dis- 20 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. covered, I remember, a trifling bill which had not been included when his debts were paid, and I took my small fierce measures that it should never reach my mother's ears, nor trouble her. I ordained that for two days in the week we should give up our mid-day meal and make up at the evening one, which we called supper, for the want of it. On these days, accordingly, he did not come home, or came only to fetch me, and we went out for a long walk, sustaining ourselves with a bun until it should be time to come home to tea. He agreed to this ordinance without a murmur — my poor, good, tender- hearted, simple-minded Willie; and the little bill was paid and never known of at home. Curiously enough, I remember little of the London sights or of any impression they made upon me. We knew scarcely anybody. Mrs Hamilton, the sister of Edward Irving's wife and a relation, took some notice of us, but she was almost the only individual I knew. And my heart was too full of my charge to think much of the cousin up-stairs with whom my fate was soon to be connected. We had known scarcely anything of each other before. We were new acquaintances, though relations. He took me, I remember, to the National Gallery, full of of expectation as to the effect the pictures would have upon me. And I — was struck dumb with disappointment. I had never seen any pictures. I can't tell what I expected to see — something that never was on sea or shore. My ideal of absolute ignorance was far too high-flown, I suppose, for anything human. I was horribly disappointed, and dropped down from untold heights of imagination to a reality I could not understand. I remember, in the humiliation of my downfall, and in the sense of my cousin's astonished disappointment at my want of appreciation, fixing upon a painting — a figure of the Virgin in a Crucifixion, I think by Correggio, but I am quite vague about it — as the thing I liked best. I chose that as Words- worth's little boy put forth the weathercock at Kilve A GREAT DISILLUSIONMENT. 21 — in despair at my own incapacity to admire. I re- member also the heads of the old Jews in Leonardo's Christ in the Temple. The face of the young Re- deemer with its elaborate crisped hair shocked me with a sense of profanity, but the old heads I could believe in. And that was all I got out of my first glimpse into the world of art, I cannot recollect whether it was then or after, that an equally great disillusionment in the theatre befell me. The play was "Twelfth Night," and the lovely beginning of that play — " That strain again ! it had a dying fall " — was given by a nobody in white tights lying on a sofa and balancing a long leg as he spoke. The dis- gust, the disenchantment, the fury remain in my mind now. Once more I came tumbling down from my ideal and all my anticipations. Mrs Charles Kean was Viola, and she was middle'-aged and stout ! ^ I was more than disappointed, I was angry and disgusted and cast down. What was the good of anything if that was all that Shakespeare and the great Masters could come to? I remember after this a day at Greenwich and Wool- wich, and the sight of the Arsenal, though why that should have made an impression on my memory, heaven knows ! I remember the pyramids of balls, and some convicts whose appearance gave me a thrill of horror, — I think they were convicts, though why convicts should be at Woolwich I can't tell — perhaps it was a mistake. And then Mr Colburn kindly — I thought most kindly, and thanked him avec effusion — gave me ;^I50 for 'Margaret Maitland.' I remember walking along the street with delightful elation, thinking that, after all, I was worth something — and not to be hustled about. I remember, too, getting the first review of my book in the twilight of a wintry dark afternoon, and reading it by the firelight — always half-amused at 1 Probably under thirty. — Ed. 22 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. the thought that it was me who was being thus dis- cussed in the newspapers. It was the ' Athenaeum,' and it was on the whole favourable. Of course this event preceded by a couple of months the transaction with Mr Colburn. I think the book was in its third edition before he offered me that ;^I50. I remember no reviews except that one of the ' Athenaeum,' nor any particular effect which my success produced in me, except that sense of elation, I cannot think why the book succeeded so well. When I read it over some years after, I felt nothing but shame at its foolish little polemics and opinions. I suppose there must have been some breath of youth and sincerity in it which touched people, and there had been no Scotch stories for a long time. Lord Jeffrey, then an old man and very near his end, sent me a letter of sweet praise, which filled my mother with rapture and myself with an abashed gratitude. I was very young. Oddly enough, it has always remained a matter of doubt with me whether the book was published in 1849 o'' 1850. I thought the former; but Geraldine Macpherson, whom I met in London for the first time a day or two before it was published, declared it to be 1850, from the fact that tJiat was the year of her marriage. If a woman remembers any date, it must be the date of her mar- riage ! 1 so I don't doubt Geddie was right. Anyhow, if it was 1850, I was then only twenty-two, and in some things very young for my age, as in others per- haps older than my years. I was wonderfully little moved by the business altogether. I had a great pleasure in writing, but the success and the three edi- tions had no particular effect upon my mind. For one thing, I saw very few people. We had no society. My father had a horror of strangers, and would never see any one who came to the house, which was a con- tinual wet blanket to my mother's cordial, hospitable nature; but she had given up struggling long before 1 It was 1849. — Eo. 'CALEB FIELD.' 23 my time, and I grew up without any idea of the pleasures and companions of youth. I did not know them, and therefore did not miss them ; but I daresay this helped to make me — not indifferent, rather uncon- scious, of what might in other circumstances have " turned my head." My head was as steady as a rock. I had nobody to praise me except my mother and Frank, and their applause — well, it was delightful, it was everything in the world — it was life, — but it did not count. They were part of me, and I of them, and we were all in it. After a while it came to be the custom that I should every night " read what I had written " to them before I went to bed. They were very critical sometimes, and I felt while I was reading whether my little audience was with me or not, which put a good deal of excitement into the performance. But that was all the excitement I had. I began another book called ' Caleb Field,' about the Plague in London, the very night I had finished ' Mar- garet Maitland.' I had been reading Defoe, and got the subject into my head. It came to one volume only, and I took a great deal of trouble about a Noncon- formist minister who spoke in antitheses very carefully constructed. I don't think it attracted much notice, but I don't remember. Other matters, events even of our uneventful life, took so much more importance in life than these books — nay, it must be a kind of affec- tation to say that, for the writing ran through every- thing. But then it was also subordinate to everything, to be pushed aside for any little necessity. I had no table even to myself, much less a room to work in, but sat at the corner of the family table with my writ- ing-book, with everything going on as if I had been making a shirt instead of writing a book. Our rooms in those days were sadly wanting in artistic arrange- ment. The table was in the middle of the room, the centre round which everybody sat with the candles or lamp upon it. My mother sat always at needle-work 24 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. of some kind, and talked to whoever might be present, and I took my share in the conversation, going on all the same with my story, the little groups of imaginary persons, these other talks evolving themselves quite un- disturbed. It would put me out now to have some one sitting at the same table talking while I worked — at least I would think it put me out, with that sort of conven- tionalism which grows upon one. But up to this date, 1888, I have never been shut up in a separate room, or hedged off with any observances. My study, all the study I have ever attained to, is the little second draw- ing-room where all the (feminine) life of the house goes on; and I don't think I have ever had two hours un- disturbed (except at night, when everybody is in bed) during my whole literary life. Miss Austen, I believe, wrote in the same way, and very much for the same reason; but at her period the natural flow of life took another form. The family were half ashamed to have it known that she was not just a young lady like the others, doing her embroidery. Mine were quite pleased to magnify me, and to be proud of my work, but always with a hidden sense that it was an admirable joke, and no idea that any special facilities or retirement was necessary. My mother, I believe, would have felt her pride and rapture much checked, almost humiliated, if she had conceived that I stood in need of any artificial aids of that or any other description. That would at once have made the work unnatural to her eyes, and also to mine. I think the first time I ever secluded my- self for my work was years after it had become my profession and sole dependence — when I was living after my widowhood in a relation's house, and withdrew with my book and my inkstand from the family drawing- room out of a little conscious ill-temper which made me feel guilty, notwithstanding that the retirement was so very justifiable ! But I did not feel it to be so, neither did the companions from whom I withdrew. After this period our poor Willie became a minister A NORTHUMBRIAN VILLAGE. 25 of the English Presbyterian Church, then invested with glory by the Free Church, its real parent, which in our fervid imagination we had by this time dressed up with all sorts of traditional splendour. It, we flattered ourselves, was the direct successor of the two thousand seceders of 1661 (was that the date?). There had been a downfall, we allowed, into Uni- tarianism and indifference; but this was the real, and a very respectable, tradition. Willie went to a very curious little place in the wilds of Northumberland, where my mother and I decided — with hopes strangely wild, it seems to me now, after all that had gone before — that he was at length to do well, and be as strenuous to his duty as he was gentle in temper and tender in heart. Poor Willie ! It was a sort of show village with pretty flowery cottages and gardens, in a superior one of which he lived, or rather lodged, the income being very small and the position humble. It was, however, so far as my recollection goes, suffi- ciently like a Scotch parish to convince us that the church and parsonage were quite exotic, and the humble chapel the real religious centre of the place. A great number of the people were, I believe, Presby- terians, and the continuance of their worship and little strait ceremony undoubted from the time of the Puri- tans, though curiously enough the minister was known to his flock by the title of the priest, I don't in the least recollect what the place was like, yet a whiff of the rural air tinged with peat or wood, and of the roses with which the cottages were garlanded, and an impression of the subdued light through the green- ish small window half veiled in flowers, remains with me, — very sweet, homely, idyllic, like something in a pathetic country story of peace overshadowed with coming trouble. There was a shadow of a ruined castle in the background, I think Norham ; but all is vague, — I have not the clear memory of what I saw in my youth that many people retain. I see a little collec- 26 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. tion of pictures, but the background is all vague. The only vehicle we could get to take us to Berwick was, I recollect, a cart, carefully arranged with straw- covered sacking to make us comfortable. The man who drove it was very anxious to be engaged and taken with us as " Miss Wilson's coachman." Why mine, or why we should have taken a rustic " Jockey- to-the-fair" for a coachman, if we had wanted such an article, I don't know. I suppose there must have been some sort of compliment implied to my beaux yeux, or I should not have remembered this. We left Willie with thankful hearts, yet an ache of fear. Surely in that peaceful humble quiet, with those lowly sacred duties and all his goodness and kindness, he would do well ! I don't remember how long it con- tinued. So long as he kept up the closest correspon- dence, writing every second day and giving a full account of himself, there was an uneasy satisfaction at home. But there is always a prophetic ache in the heart when such calamity is on the way. One day, without warning, except that his letters had begun to fail a little, my mother received an anonymous letter about him. She went off that even- ing, travelling all night to Edinburgh, which was the quickest way, and then to Berwick. She was very little used to travelling, and she was over sixty, which looked a great age then. I suppose the trains were slower in those days, for I know she got to Edinburgh only in the morning, and then had to go on by the other line to Berwick, and then drive six miles to the' village, where she found all the evil auguries fulfilled, and poor Willie fallen again helpless into that Slough of Despond. She remained a few miserable days, and then brought him back with her, finally defeated in the battle which he was quite unfit to wage. He must have been then, I think, about thirty-three, in the prime of strength and youth ; but except for a waver- ing and uncertain interval now and then, he never got A SORROWFUL HOME-COMING. 27 out of the mire nor was able to support himself again. I remember the horrible moment of his coming home. Frank and I went down, I suppose, to the ferry at Birkenhead to meet the travellers. We were all very grave — not a word of reproach did any one say, but to be cheerful, to talk about nothing, was impossible. We drove up in silence to the house where we lived, asking a faint question now and then about the journey. I remember that Willie had a little dog called Brownie with him, and the relief this creature was, which did not understand being shut up in the carriage and made little jumps at the window, and had to be petted and restrained. Brownie brought a little movement, an involuntary laugh at his antics, to break the horrible silence — an angel could scarcely have done more for us. When we got home there was the settling down in idleness, the hopeless de- cision of any wretched possibility there might be for him. The days and weeks and months in which he smoked and read old novels and the papers, and, most horrible of all, got to content himself with that life ! The anguish in all our hearts looking at him, not knowing what to do, sometimes assailed by gusts of impatience, always closing down in the hopelessness of it; the incapacity to find or suggest anything, the dreary spectacle of that content is before me, with almost as keen a sense of the misery as if it had been yesterday. I had been in the habit of copying out carefully, quite proud of my neat MS., all my books, now becoming a recognized feature of the family life. It struck us all as a fine idea that Willie might copy them for me, and retrieve a sort of fictitious independence by getting 10 per cent upon the price of them ; and I really think he felt quite comfortable on this. Of course, the sole use of the copying was the little corrections and improve- ments I made in going over my work again. It was after this that my cousin Frank came upon a 28 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. visit. We had seen, and yet had not seen, a great deal of each other in London during the three months I had spent there with Willie ; but my mind had been pre- occupied with Willie chiefly, and a little with my book. When Frank made me the extraordinary proposal for which I was totally unprepared, that we should, as he said, build up the old Drumthwacket together, my only answer was an alarmed negative, the idea never having entered my mind. But in six months or so things changed. It is not a matter into which I can enter here. In the spring of 185 1 my mother and I were in Edinburgh, and there made the acquaintance of the Wilsons, our second cousins, — George Wilson being at that time Professor of something which meant chemistry, but was not called so. His mother was an exceedingly bright, vivacious old lady, a universal devourer of books, and with that kind of scientific tendency which made her encourage her boys to form museums, and collect fossils, butterflies, &c. I forget how my mother and she got on, but I always liked her. George Wilson was an excellent talker, full of banter and a kind of humour, full of ability, too, I believe, writing very amusing letters and talking very amusing talk, which was all the more credit to him as he was in very bad health, kept alive by the fact that he could eat, and so maintain a modicum of strength — enough to get on by. There were two daughters — Jessie and Jeanie — the younger of whom became my brother Frank's wife; and the eldest son, who was married, lived close by, and was then, I think, doing literary work for Messrs Nelson, reading for them and advising them about books. He very soon after this migrated to Canada, and became eventually President of Uni- versity College, Toronto, and Sir Daniel in the end of his life. My mother at this time renewed acquaintance with Dr Moir of Musselburgh, an old friend of hers, who had, A BLACKWOOD GROUP. 29 I believe, attended me when, as a very small child, I fell into the fire, or rather against the bars of the grate, marking my arm in a way which it never recovered. This excellent man, whom everybody loved, was the Delta of ' Blackwood's Magazine,' and called everywhere by that name. He had written much gentle poetry, and one story a la Gait called ' Mansie Wauch,' neither of which were good enough for him, yet got him a certain reputation, especially some pathetic verses about children he had lost, which went to the heart of every mother who had lost children, my own mother first and foremost. He had married a very handsome stately lady, a little conventional, but with an unfailing and ready kindness which often made her mannerisms quite gracious and beautiful. There was already a handsome daughter married, though under twenty, and many other fine, tall, well-bred, handsome creatures, still in long hair and short skirts, growing up, "I think I was left behind to pay a visit when my mother returned home, and then had a kind of introduction to Edinburgh Hterary society, in one case very important for myself. For in one expedition we made, Major Blackwood, one of the publishing firm, and brother of the editor of the ' Magazine,' was of the party ; and my long connection with his family thus began. He was accompanied by a young man, a Mr Cupples, of whom, except his name, I have no recollec- tion, but who was the author of a sea-story then, I think, going on in ' Blackwood,' called the ' Green Hand,' and who, it was hoped, would be as successful as the author of ' Tom Cringle ' and the ' Cruise of the Midge,' who had been a very effective contributor twenty years before. All I remember of him was that my cousin Daniel Wilson, who was also of the party, indignantly pointed out to me the airs which this young author gave himself, " as if it was such a great thing to be a contributor to ' Blackwood ' ! " I am afraid I thought it zvas a great thing, and had not remarked the young author's airs ; but Daniel was of the opposite camp. Major Blackwood, 30 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. who interested me most, was a mild soldierly man, with the gentlest manners and drooping eyelids, which softened his look, or so at least it appears to me at the end of so many years. I remember that one of the places we visited was Wallyford, where was the house in which I was born, but of which I had no recollection. It must have been a pleasant homely house, with a projecting half turret enclos- ing the staircase, as in many houses in the Lothians, the passages and kitchen down-stairs floored with red brick, and a delightful large low drawing-room above, with five greenish windows looking out upon Arthur's Seat in the distance, and a ghost of Edinburgh.^ That room charmed me greatly, and in after days I used to think of becoming its tenant and living there, for the sake of the landscape and the associations and that pretty old room ; but before I could have carried out such an idea, even had it been more real than a fancy, the pretty house was pulled down, and a square, aggres- sive, and very commonplace new farmhouse built in its place. The consequence of my introduction to Major Black- wood was, that some time in the course of the following months I sent him the manuscript of my story ' Katie Stewart ' : a little romance of my mother's family, gleaned from her recollections and descriptions. The scene of this story was chiefly laid in old Kellie Castle, which I was not then aware was the home of our own ancestors, from whom it had passed long before into the hands of the Erskines, Earls of Kellie — with the daughter of which house Katie Stewart had been brought up. She was my mother's great-aunt, and had lived to a great age. She had seen Prince Charlie enter Edin- burgh, and had told all her experiences to my mother, who told them to me, so that I never was quite sure whether I had not been Katie Stewart's contemporary in my own 1 This house is the scene of the story of 'Isabel Dysart,' reprinted since Mrs Oliphant's death. — Ed. MARRIAGE. 31 person. And this was her love-tale. I received proofs of this story on the morning of my wedding-day, and thus my connection with the firm of Blackwood began. They were fond of nicknames, and I was known among them by the name of " Katie " for a long time, as I discovered lately (1896) in some old letters. I suppose they thought me so young and simple (as they say in these letters) that the girl's name was appropriate to me. I was not tall (" middle height " we called it in those days), and very inexperienced, — "so simple and yet self- possessed," I am glad to say Major Blackwood reports of me. I was only conscious of being dreadfully shy. We were married in Birkenhead on the 4th May 1852, — and the old home, which had come to consist of such incongruous elements, was more or less broken up. My brother Frank, discontented and wounded partly by my marriage, partly by the determination to abandon him and follow me" to London, which my father and mother had formed, married too, hastily, but very suc- cessfully in a way as it turned out, and so two new houses were formed out of the partial ruins of the old. Had the circumstances been different — had they stayed in Birkenhead and I gone alone with my husband to London — some unhappiness might have been spared. Who can tell t There would have been other unhappiness to take its place. They settled in a quaint little house in a place called Park Village, old-fashioned, semi-rustic, and pretty enough, with a long strip of garden stretching down to the edge of a deep cutting of the railway, where we used to watch the trains passing far below. The garden was gay with flowers, quantities of brilliant poppies of all colours I remember, which I liked for the colour and hated for the heavy ill odour of them, and the sensation as of evil flowers. Our house in Harring- ton Square was very near: it looked all happy enough but was not, for my husband and my mother did not get on. My father sat passive, taking no notice, with his paper, not perceiving much, I believe. 32 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. My child's birth made a momentary gleam of joy soon lost in clouds. My mother became ailing and concealed it, and kept alive — or at least kept her last illness off by sheer stress of will until my second child was born a year and a day after the first. She was with me, but sank next day into an illness from which she never rose. She died in September 1854, suffering no attendance but mine, though she concealed from me how ill she was for a long time. I remember the first moment in which I had any real fear, speaking to the doctor with a sudden impulse, in the front of her door, all in a green shade with the waving trees, demanding his real opinion. I do not think I had any understanding of the gravity of the circumstances. He shook his head, and I knew — the idea having never entered my mind before that she was to die. I recollect going away, walking home as in a dream, not able to go to her, to look at her, from whom I had never had a secret, with this secret in my soul that must be told least of all to her; and the sensation that here was something which would not lighten after a while as all my troubles had always done, and pass away. I had never come face to face with the inevitable before. But there was no daylight here — no hope — no getting over it. Then there followed a struggle of a month or two, much suffering on her part, and a long troubled watch and nursing on mine. At the very end I remember the struggle against overwhelming sleep, after nights and days in incessant anxiety, which made me so bitterly ashamed of the limits of wretched nature. To want to sleep while she was dying seemed so un- natural and horrible. I never had come within sight of death before. And, oh me ! when all was over, mingled with my grief there was — how can I say it .'' — something like a dreadful relief Within a few months after, my little Marjorie, my second child, died on the 8th February; and then with deep shame and anguish I felt what I suppose was MORE DISILLUSIONMENT. 33 another wretched limit of nature. My dearest mother, who had been everything to me all my life, and to whom I was everything; the companion, friend, counsellor, minstrel, story-teller, with whom I had never wanted for constant interest, entertainment, and fellowship, — did not give me, when she died, a pang so deep as the loss of the little helpless baby, eight months old, I miss my mother till this moment when I am nearly as old as she was (sixty, loth June 1888); I think instinctively still of asking her something, referring to her for in- formation, and I dream constantly of being a girl with her at home. But at that moment her loss was nothing to me in comparison with the loss of my little child. I lost another infant after that, a day old. My spirit sank completely under it. I used to go about saying to myself, " A little while and ye shall not see me," with a longing to get to the end and have all safe — for my one remaining, my eldest, my Maggie seemed as if she too must be taken out of my arms. People will say it was an animal instinct perhaps. Neither of these little ones could speak to me or exchange an idea or show love, and yet their withdrawal was like the sun going out from the sky — life remained, the daylight continued, but all was different. It seems strange to me now at this long distance — but so it was. The glimpse of society I had during my married life in London was not of a very elevating kind ; or per- haps I — with my shyness and complete unacquaintance with the ways of people who gave parties and paid incessant visits — was only unable to take any pleasure in it, or get beyond the outside petty view, and the same strange disappointment and disillusion with which the pictures and the stage had filled me, bringing down my ridiculous impossible ideal to the ground. I have tried to illustrate my youthful feelings about this several times in words. I had expected everything that was super- lative — beautiful conversation, all about books and the finest subjects, great people whose notice would be an C 34 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. honour, poets and painters, and all the sympathy of congenial minds, and the feast of reason and the flow of soul. But it is needless to say I found none of these things. We went "out," not very often, to parties where there was always a good deal of the literary element, but of a small kind, and where I found everything very com- monplace and poor, not at all what I expected. I never did myself any justice, as a certain little hon-hunter, a Jewish patroness of the arts, who lived somewhere in the region about Harley Street, said. That is to say, I got as quickly as I could into a corner and stood there, rather wistfully wishing to know people, but not ventur- ing to make any approach, waiting till some one should speak to me; which much exasperated my aspiring hostess, who had picked me up as a new novelist, and meant me to help to amuse her guests, which I had not the least idea how to do. I fear I must have been rather exasperating to my husband, who was more given to society than I, and tried in vain (as I can now see) to form me and make me attend to my social duties, which even in such a small matter as returning calls I was terri- bly neglectful of — out of sheer shyness and gaucherie, I think ; for I was always glad and grateful when anybody would insist on making friends with me, as a few people did. There was an old clergyman, Mr Laing, who did, I remember, and more or less his wife — he especially. He liked me, I think, and complimented me by saying he did not like literary ladies — a sort of thing people are rather disposed to say to me. And Lance (the painter of fruits and flowers and still life), who was a wit in his way, was also a great friend of mine. He dared me to put him in a book, and I took him at his word and did so, making a very artless representation, and using some of his own stories ; so that everybody recognised the sketch, which was done in mere fun and liking, and pleased him very much — the only actual bit of real life I ever took for a book. It was in ' Zaidee,' I think. MRS S. C. HALL. 35 Among my literary acquaintances was the Mr Fullom who had read for old Colburn my first book, and whose acquaintance as an eminent literary man and great notability we had all thought at home it would be such a fine thing to make. He turned out a very small per- sonage indeed, a solemn man, with a commonplace wife, people whom it was marvellous to think of as intellectual. He wrote a book called ' The Marvels of Science,' a dull piece of manufacture, for which by some wonderful chance he received a gold medal, Fiir Ktmst, from the King of Hanover. I think I see him moving solemnly about the little drawing-room with this medal on the breast, and the wife following him. He soon stalked away into the unknown, and I saw him no more. I forget how I be- came acquainted with the S. C. Halls, who used to ask me to their parties, and who were literary people of the most prominent and conventional type, rather satisfying to the sense on the whole, as the sort of thing one ex- pected. Mrs Hall had retired upon the laurels got by one or two Irish novels, and was surrounded by her husband with the atmosphere of admiration, which was the right thing for a " fair " writer. He took her very seriously, and she accepted the 7'dlc, though without, I think, any particular setting up of her own standard. I used to think and say that she looked at me inquisi- tively, a little puzzled to know what kind of humbug I was, all being humbugs. But she was a kind woman all the same ; and I never forget the sheaf of white lilies she sent us for my child's christening, for which I feel grateful still. He was certainly a humbug of the old mellifluous Irish kind — the sort of man whose specious friendlinesses, compliments, and " blarney " were of the most innocent kind, not calculated to deceive anybody, but always amusing. He told Irish stories capitally. They had the most wonderful collection of people at their house, and she would stand and smile and shake hands, till one felt she must stiffen so, and had lost all consciousness who anybody was. He on his side was 36 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. never tired, always insinuating, jovial, affectionate. It was at their house, I think, that we met the Hewitts — Mary Howitt, a mild, kind, delightful woman, who frightened me very much, I remember, by telling me of many babies whom she had lost through some defective valve in the heart, which she said was somehow con- nected with too much mental work on the part of the mother, — a foolish thing, I should think, yet the same thing occurred twice to myself. It alarmed and sad- dened me terribly — but I liked her greatly. Not so her husband, who did not please me at all. For a short time we met them everywhere in our small circle, and then they too disappeared, going abroad, I think. There was a great deal about spiritualism (so called) in the air at this time — its first development in England, — and the Howitts' eldest daughter was an art medium producing wonderful scribble-scrabbles, which it was the wonder of wonders to find her mother, so full of sense and truth, so genuine herself, full of enthusiasm about. I remember a day at the Halls, which must have been in the summer of 1853. They had then a pretty house at Addleston, near Chertsey. My husband and I travelled down by train in company with a dark, dash- ing person, an American lady, whom, on arriving at the station, we found to be going to the Halls too. She and I were put into their brougham to drive there, while the gentlemen walked ; and she did what she could in a patronising way to find out who I was. She thought me, I supposed, the poor little shy wife of some artist, whom the Halls were being kind to, or something of that humble kind. She turned out to be a literary person of great pretensions, calling herself Grace Greenwood, though that was not her real name, — and I was amused to find a paragraph about myself, as " a little homely Scotchwoman," in the book which she wrote when she got back. Two incidents of this entertainment remain very clear in my memory. One was, that being placed at table beside Mr Frost, the academician, who was A SINGING MANDARIN. ^^ very deaf and very gentle and kind, I was endeavouring with many mental struggles to repeat to him something that had produced a laugh, and which his wistful look had asked to understand, when suddenly one of those hushes which sometimes come over a large company occurred, and my voice came out distinct — to my own horrified consciousness, at least — a sound of terror and shame to me. The other was, that Gavan Duffy, one of the recent Irish rebels, and my husband began to discuss, I suppose, national characteristics, or what they believed to be such, when the Irishman mentioned gravely and with some heat that the frolic and the wit usually attributed to his countrymen were a mere popular de- lusion, while the Scotchman with equal earnestness repudiated the caution and prudence ascribed to his race; which was whimsical enough to be remembered. Another recollection of one of the Halls' evening parties in town at a considerably later period rises like a picture before me. They were fond of every kind of lion and wonder, great and small. Rosa Bon- heur, then at the height of her reputation, was there one evening, a round-faced, good-humoured woman, with hair cut short and divided at one side like a man's, and indeed not very distinct in the matter of sex so far as dress and appearance went. There was there also a Chinese mandarin in full costume, smiling blandly upon the company, and accompanied by a missionary, who had the charge of him. By some means or other the China- man was made to sing what we were informed was a senti- mental ballad, exceedingly touching and romantic. It was like nothing so much as the howl of a dog, one of those grave pieces of canine music which my poor old New- foundland used to give forth when his favourite organ- grinder came into the street. (Merry's performance was the most comical thing imaginable. There was one organ among many which touched his tenderest feelings. When it appeared once a-week, he rushed to it, seated himself beside the man, listened till rapture 38 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. and sentiment were wound up to the highest pitch, and then, lifting up his nose and his voice to heaven, — sang. There could be no doubt that the dear dog was giving forth all the poetry of his being in that appalling noise, — his emotion, his sentiment, his pro- found seriousness were indisputable, while any human being within reach was overwhelmed and helpless with laughter.) The Chinaman sang exactly like Merry, with the same effect. Rosa Bonheur, I suppose, was more civil than nous autres, and her efforts to restrain the uncontrollable laugh were superhuman. She almost swallowed her handkerchief in -the effort to conceal it. I can see her as in a picture, the central figure, with her bushy short hair, and her handkerchief in her mouth. All my recollections are like pictures, not continuous, only a scene detached and conspicuous here and there. Miss Muloch was another of the principal figures per- ceptible in the somewhat dimmed panorama of that far- off life. Her friends the Lovells lived in Mornington Crescent, which was close to our little house in Harring- ton Square, — all in a remote region near Regent's Park, upon the Hampstead Road, where it seems very strange to me we should have lived, and which, I suppose, is dreadfully shabby and out-of-the-way. Perhaps it was shabby then, one's ideas change so greatly. Miss Muloch lived in a small house in a street a little farther off even in the wilds than ours. She was a tall young woman with a slim pliant figure, and eyes that had a way of fixing the eyes of her interlocutor in a manner which did not please my shy fastidiousness. It was embarrassing, as if she meant to read the other upon whom she gazed, — a pretension which one resented. It was merely, no doubt, a fashion of what was the intense school of the time, Mrs Browning did the same thing the only time I met her, and this to one quite indisposed to be read. But Dinah was always kind, enthusiastic, some- what didactic and apt to teach, and much looked up to by her little band of young women. She too had LITERARY LIONS. 39 little parties, at one of which I remember Miss Cushman, the actress, in a deep recitative, without any apparent tune in it, like the voice of a skipper at sea I thought it, giving forth Kingsley's song of "The Sands of Dee." I was rather afraid of the performer, though long afterwards she came to see me in Paris when I was in much sorrow, and her tenderness and feeling gave me the sensation of suddenly meeting a friend in the darkness, of whose existence there I had no conception. There used to be also at Miss Muloch's parties an extraordinary being in a wheeled chair, with an imperfect face (as if it had been somehow left unfinished in the making), a Mr Smed- ley, a terrible cripple, supposed to be kept together by some framework of springs and supports, of whom the story was told that he had determined, though the son of a rich man, to maintain himself, and make himself a reputation, and had succeeded in doing both, as the writer — of all things in the world — of sporting novels. He was the author of ' Lewis Arundel ' and ' Frank Fairleigh,' both I believe athletic books, and full of feats of horse- manship and strength ; which was sufficiently pathetic — though the appearance of this poor man somewhat frightened me too. Mr Lovell, the father of one of Miss Muloch's chief friends, was the author of " The Wife's Secret," a play lately revived, and which struck me when I saw it as one of the most conventional and unreal possible, very curious to come out of that sober city man. All the guests at these little assemblies were something of the same kind. One looked at them rather as one looked at the figures in Madame Tussaud's, wondering if they were waxwork or life — wondering' in the other case whether the commonplace outside might not cover a painter or a poet or something equally fine — whose ethereal qualities were all invisible to the ordinary eye. What I liked best in the way of society was when we went out occasionally quite late in the evening, Frank and I, after he had left off work in his studio, and went 40 AUTOBIOGRAPHY. to the house of another painter uninvited, unexpected, always welcome, — I with my work. Alexander John- stone's house was the one to which we went most. I joined the wife in her little drawing-room, while he went up-stairs to the studio. (They all had the drawing-room proper of the house, the first-floor room, for their studios.) We women talked below of our subjects, as young wives and young mothers do — with a little needle- work and a little gossip. The men above smoked and talked their subjects, investigating the picture of the moment, going over it with advice and criticism ; no doubt giving each other their opinions of other artists and other pictures too. And then we supped, frugally, cheerfully, and if there was anything of importance in the studio the wives went up to look at it, or see what progress it had made since the last time, after supper. And then we walked home again. They paid us a return visit some days after of just the same kind. If I knew them now, which I no longer do, I would ask them to dinner, and they me, and most likely we would not enjoy it at all. But those simple evenings were very pleasant. Our whole life was upon very simple lines at this period : we dined in the middle of the day, and our little suppers were not of a kind to require elaborate preparation if another pair came in unexpectedly. It was true society in its way. Nothing of the kind seems possible now. h?^ "^ \m LIBRftRY OF CONGRESS 11 003 168 342 7 #