4J88ARY CALIFORNIA ^Tfr 77] Q HP SAN DIEGO * . A *?' if T A A I W 3E S T 1 \\ yV' 'JV'l'inS : 2d. p-'-r Vul \ : ' , - -'.:'-:' -:".o . : S - - -..: ".;. i I ',;-: Pi SHELLEY'S EARLY LIFE. SHELLEY'S EARLY LIFE FROM ORIGINAL SOURCES. W1JH CURIOUS INCIDENTS, LETTERS, AND WRITINGS, NOW FIRST PUBLISHED OR COLLECTED. A'c. -, Lcnucr SnckvilU Street, Dublin, from, the balcony of which Shelley and his -wife threw the first Irish fa:n?li/-:t. BY DENIS FLORENCE MAC-CARTHY, M.R.I.A. AUTHOR OF " DRAMAS AND AUTOS FROM THE SPANISH OF CALDEROV," ETC. LONDON: JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, PICCADILLY. PREFACE. HPHE present work, within the limits prescribed to itself, is founded almost entirely on original re- search among sources of information not previously known or examined. How it grew up the following narrative will explain. Keats, in the well-known passage of the noble sonnet which records his astonishment " on first look- ing into Chapman's Homer/ 7 compares his wonder to that of an astronomer who in searching the depths of space has suddenly discovered a new star : " Then felt I like some watcher of the skies, When a new planet swiins into his ken." Something of the same delight and the same surprise was awakened in my mind, when in making re- searches into a particular period of Shelley's life which had not received the attention that I conceived it merited, I came upon the extraordinary fact that he had published a volume of verse just on the eve of his expulsion from Oxford, which was unknown to his companion in that misfortune, which his friends, his family, and his biographers have been ignorant of, and which now, at the expiration of sixty years, is first identified with his name. This poem, for the volume contained but one, it may be as well to state here is not to be confounded Ti PREFACE. with the Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson, or the Original Poetry by Victor and Cazire, of which more or less satisfactory accounts have already been published. In the Border of publication the poem referred to came third, but of the two preceding works I shall have something additional to say in the follow- ing pages. The discovery I speak of is that of the fact of publication, for of the poem itself, notwithstanding all the exertions I have made, extending over a con- siderable period, and in every possible direction, I have not yet been successful in finding a copy.* To continue or rather to vary the illustration from Keats, I may say that I have discovered the surrounding light that indicates the presence of the star, but have not yet detected its nucleus; or rather, that I have demonstrated its existence without having seen it, and at a time too when I did not know even its name. A distinguished mathematician has referred in eloquent language, and with justifiable pride, to what he calls "the great effort of scientific genius which our time has witnessed the discovery of Neptune." " Need I remind you," continues the same learned person, te that it was no astronomical observer no practical skill which gave to us that great discovery? * It is needless to say that this interesting volume is not to be found in any of our public libraries. To the courteous librarians of the Bodleian at Oxford, and of University College at Cam- bridge, I have specially to return my thanks for the search they had kindly made for it. A printed circular sent by myself to almost every second-hand bookseller in the three kingdoms was equally unsuccessful. To advertisements in the public journals, and special inquiries instituted by Mr. Quaritch, Piccadilly ; Mr. Stibbs, Museum Street; Messrs. Longmans, Paternoster Row, and others, no reply has ever been received. PREFACE. vii We owe it not to the telescope of the astronomer, but to the pen of the mathematician. And surely it would be hard to find in the history of the human intellect anything more irresistibly attractive to the imagina- tion more poetic (if I may use the word) than the thought that on the scribbled page, in these grotesque symbols, lay a power which enabled the mathema- tician to look up from his table in the solitude of his own study to point to the heavens with the unerring finger of science, and to say I cannot see it, but it is there/'* Though the discovery of a poem even by such a poet as Shelley is a matter of trifling importance com- pared to that of a planet, yet there is a slight resem- blance perhaps in the mode, as will be described in the following pages, by which the lesser fact was ascertained. This curious story must doubtless be one of the most interesting portions of the present volume, but the other subjects discussed will be found to contain much new and valuable information connected both with the life and works of Shelley. The republica- tion of the Irish pamphlets is alone a matter of con- siderable importance. They had become so scarce that no biographer of Shelley but one has stated that he had even seen them.f It seems paradoxical to say so, but it is quite true, that no portion of the * Address delivered before the Royal Irish Academy at the Stated Meeting, on Wednesday, Nov. ^oth, 1870. By John H. Jellett, B.D., President, p. 14. Dublin. 18/0. t The two English pamphlets published by Shelley in 1817, under the name of The Hermit of Marlow, which are nearly as difficult to be met with as those he printed in Dublin, are also given as a supplement to the present volume. Tiii PREFACE. early life of Shelley is so little known and so much misrepresented as that which includes his first visit to Dublin in 1812. The cynical Mr. Hogg, in bis in- complete Life of the poet, surpasses himself when referring to this event and the subsequent visit of 1813. Of the former he knew nothing at the time, as Shelley was then totally estranged from his college friend by a well-founded mistrust in the sublime virtue of that stoical gentleman, which rendered it advisable that the unsuspicious philanthropist and the innocent Harriet should terminate, for a while at least, all communication with the immaculate Mr. Hogg. Nearly thirty years ago the writer of these lines was the first to allude with any precision to the interesting episode of Shelley's visit to Dublin in 1812.* Three years later, a more elaborate paper was published by the same writer on the general character of Shelley's poetical genius. f The portions of this essay referring to the literary and political labours of Shelley during his visit to Dublin in 1812, have been incorporated by Mr. Middleton in his Shelley and his Writings, and are to be found ver- batim in vol. i. of that work from p. 211 to p. 229. This account as originally given in the articles just * In letters, under the signature of " An Admirer of Shelley," to the editor of The Dublin Evening Post, Nov. 24th and Dec. 6th. 1842. Seven years earlier, in The Dublin Weekly Satirist of October loth, 1835, a j uven ^ e poem "To the Memory of Percy Bysshe Shelley," was published by the same writer. The motto shows the extent of his Shelley enthusiasm at that period. It is from Prometheus Unbound. " My soul is an enchanted boat, Which like a sleeping swan doth float Upon the silver waves of thy sweet singing." f In The Nation, Dec. 2oth and Dec. 27th, 1845. PREFACE. mentioned, notwithstanding its meagreness of detail, is the only one hitherto published that can be relied on for accuracy and truth. Since then, however, the whole matter has been re-investigated by me with almost unhoped-for success. The earliest public allusions to Shelley that ever appeared have been found in occasional numbers of rare old Irish news- papers, and are now published for the first time in connexion with his biography. A copy of The Dublin Weekly Messenger of the yth of March, 1813, the paper sent by Shelley to Godwin on the day following, has been recovered. It is in this paper, thus authenticated by himself, that I found the allusion to a poem published by Shelley which has so strangely escaped the knowledge of all his biographers The other local and contemporary allusions to Shelley are very valuable. These will be found in the letters of " An Englishman " and "A Dissenter" in. Faulkner's Dublin Journal, a paper first established by Swift's publisher, but long since extinct. This was the organ of the Irish Government and the Protestant Ascendency party, and the only hostility experienced by the young philan- thropist when in Dublin came from it. The letter of "An Englishman" is particularly interesting. It describes Shelley's appearance and manner at the celebrated meeting in Fishamble Street Theatre, at which he spoke. The writer calls him " a stripling," denounces him as a " degenerate Englishman," studi- ously avoids mentioning his name, but bears the most unequivocal testimony to the eloquence of the young speaker, and to the enthusiastic reception which he met with from the assembly. This letter is decisive as to the probabilities of Shelley's success as an orator had he devoted himself to a political career. b x PREFACE. The late Chief Baron Woulfe, after the lapse of many years, endeavoured to recall the manner of the youth- ful poet on this occasion when making his maiden speech, but the contemporary description here for the first time produced, written not in admiration but in anger, proves that the recollection of the learned judge on this subject was erroneous. The conduct of the audience towards Shelley at this memorable meeting, which has been so recklessly misrepresented by Mr. Hogg, and so carelessly adopted without inquiry by his followers, is here for the first time described with truth. More valuable, however, than these public allusions, are some private memoranda still existing in the hand- writing of Shelley himself on this and other important events in his life during these eventful years. These, with some remarks in the autograph of Harriet, then his happy and kind-hearted young bride, I have been permitted to see and transcribe. From these truthful and precious memorials I have extracted many pas- sages which will put the whole motives and preparation of Shelley for his Irish Avatar in a clear and intelli- gible point of view. Some biographical particulars relative to the two remarkable men with whom Shelley became acquainted in 18 n, 1812, and 1813 are given. Independently they would merit and repay a separate inqtiiry, but their connexion with Shelley, one by the poem of 1811, which was published for his benefit, and the other by the History of Ireland, projected and partly printed in 1812, will be at the present day, at least in England, their chief source of interest.* * I wish to modify a statement at p. 4 of the present volume, in which the first of the gentlemen above alluded to, is said to PREFA CE. li Of these two historical characters and of Shelley's political projects at the time, some curious particulars will be found in the present volume, partly derived from the State Papers in the Record Office. Those that relate to the seizure of the Irish pamphlets at Holyhead and the attempt to circulate the Declaration of Rights at Barnstaple are in themselves important and interesting documents. For the very curious letter of the Earl of Chichester, and the correspondence between Mr. afterwards Sir Francis Freeling and the Post Office agents at Holyhead, I have to return my very grateful thanks to the Right Hon. Chichester Fortescue, M.P., President of the Board of Trade, who has obligingly placed them at my disposal. A separate correspondence, referring to the same seizure, between the officers of the Board of Customs at Holy- head and the Home Secretary, the Right Hon. R. Ryder, is also preserved among the State Papers. It has hitherto escaped notice, and is here published for the first time. The simple but affecting letter of the kind and gentle Harriet, a copy of which is preserved among the State Papers, will be read with much interest. To my friend Dr. R. R. Madden, M.R.I. A., I have have " succeeded Leigh Hunt as editor of The S'atesman," after that paper was given up for The Examiner, by Hunt and his brother. He was probably only a contributor. Who the editor of The Statesman may have been in 18089 is uncertain. In the latter year the proprietor was Daniel Lovell. An autograph letter of his, which I have recently seen, shows that in March, 1809, he had been long enough connected with the journal to authorize in some way his making a claim on a distinguished nobleman, a member of the Ministry, for the sum of 1 300^., " agreeable to the account delivered," as he says, " for balance due to the Statesman Paper." This claim throws some light on a passage in the letter of Leigh Hunt, which will be found at p. 74 of the present volume. xii PREFA CE. to return my best thanks for the copy of The Dublin Weekly Messenger of March yth, 1812, which first drew my attention to the singular fact in Shelley's literary life, of which so much is said in the following pages. I have since procured a second and a more perfect copy of the same number. It would be difficult to find a third. All the old newspapers once preserved in the Irish Stamp Office, previous to the abolition of stamp duty, were removed some years ago to London, as I am informed by the Solicitor of the Irish Stamp Office, by direction of the Government. What has become of them I am unable to discover. Nothing is known about them, as I have learned on inquiry, at the British Museum. To another of my kind friends in Dublin, John David O'Hanlon, Esq., Barrister- at-Law, Under Trea- surer to the Honourable Society of King's Inns, 1 am indebted for Shelley's second pamphlet, Proposals for an Association, &c., and I take this opportunity of ten- dering him my best thanks. The first pamphlet, An Address to the Irish People, has been in my own possession for forty years. These introductory remarks have exceeded the ordinary limits of a preface, so that I am unable in this place to return my thanks individually to other friends who have kindly borne with my trouble- some inquiries during this investigation, or who, like Philip H. Howard, Esq., of Corby Castle, and W. J. FitzPatrick, Esq., of Kilmacud Manor, have presented me with original documents of considerable value. Collectively, however, I wish to do so, trusting that I have not omitted, as opportunity arose, to draw at- tention to each particular act of courtesy with which I have been favoured. PREFACE. xiii In conclusion I may say with perfect truth that no published or unpublished source of information to which I could gain access has been neglected in my preparation for this volume, which though containing only a portion of the matter collected and dealing with a brief period of the poet's history, I think I may venture to offer to the public as an honest con- tribution to those authentic materials out of which sooner or later a thoroughly trustworthy Life may be written of Percy Bysshe Shelley. POSTSCRIPT. At the moment that this, the concluding sheet of the present volume, is going to press, an elaborate article on Shelley has appeared in the current number of Blackwood's Magazine. It is a careful resume of the supposed facts of Shelley's life, as given in former biographies, and will probably be the last in which much reliance will be placed upon them. On the most momentous circumstances of the poet's personal history, I am glad to find that the opinions expressed in the following pages are confirmed by the just and well-founded conclusions contained in this able paper. It must be said, however, that on less important mat- ters the writer, in following the usual authorities, falls into the usual mistakes. Two of these may be noticed. A point is made of Shelley's supposed brief stay in Dublin. But Shelley left Dublin at the time he had from the first arranged to leave it, and the duration of his visit is erroneously abridged by about three weeks. The allusion to O'Connell is also unfounded. He had no recollection of Shelley, and appears never to have xiv PREFACE. seen him. He probably left the meeting at Fishamble Street Theatre after the delivery of his own .speech, and before the young poet had addressed the assembly. I had twice the opportunity of speaking to O'Connell on the subject of Shelley, once in the autumn of 1844, at Darrynane Abbey, after " the unjust cap- tivity," as he calls it in an autograph paper presented to myself. This visit to Darrynane I paid with two distinguished friends one the present Prime Minister of Victoria, and the other a leading member of the Irish bar, a gentleman equally loved and admired for his many virtues and his various gifts. On a later occasion O'Connell himself introduced the name of Shelley. It was in the study of his town house in Merrion Square, Dublin. He alluded to an article ou Shelley which had just appeared in The Nation of Dec. 2oth, 1845. It attracted his notice, probably from some allusions to himself. He paid it the unde- served compliment of attributing it to the powerful pen of Mr. John Mitchell, and was surprised to find it was written by me. On both the occasions I refer to he only spoke of Shelley, to use his own words, as ' the man who wrote Queen Mab." The winter in Blackwood says, " Perhaps that astute demagogue was not sorry to have the name of the son of an English Member of Parliament in the list of his supporters at that early period." At the meeting in question there were several Protestant gentlemen, one a noble lord, of higher social position than Shelley ; but whatever his rank, I believe that O'Connell would have repudi- ated his political support until he had withdrawn the atrocious calumnies on the religion of the people of Ireland, which Shelley had so innocently put forward in both of his Irish pamphlets. PREFACE. XT Another matter, of interest perhaps to some of my readers, may here be mentioned. The exact locality of Mrs. Fenning's school, where Shelley first saw Harriet Westbrook, having been dis- puted, I have made some inquiries in this neighbour- hood, and find the conclusions I had already arrived at, given at p. 114 of the present volume, quite cor- rect. The school stood on the north side of Clapham Common, near the " Old Town," directly facing Trinity Church, a position from which it probably derived its name, the mansion having been called " Church House." The site is now occupied by a range of about six houses, known as " Nelson Terrace." Old inhabitants of Clapham recollect " Church House" very distinctly. It was approached by an elaborate antique gateway and neat grass lawn. For some of these particulars I am indebted to the kindness of a lady, the granddaughter of Mrs. Fenning, residing in Kent, to whom I beg to return my best thanks. 2, CAVENDISH TERRACE, CLAPHAM, COMMON, London, S. W. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Introductory remarks Glance at Shelley's first visit to Dublin Sensa- tion produced by him Earliest public notice of Shelley Allusion to a poem published by him hitherto unknown Silence of Leigh Hunt and Mr. Hogg as to this Poem Not referred to for sixty years Singular statement as to its success Mr. Finnerty Shelley's inten- tion to reprint his Irish pamphlets in London Letter to Mr. Hook- ham Biographical value of the Irish pamphlets Godwin's dread of political Associations The poet wiser than the philosopher Retro- spective view of Shelley's earliest writings Zastrozzi Contradictory statements as 'to it John Joseph Stockdale Original Poetry by Victor and (Jazire Stockdale's Budget Description of Shelley in it The Stockdales Victor and Cazire advertised in The Times Cause of its suppression Conjectural explanation of the name Victor Shelley at Oxford Mr. Hogg's first acquaintance with Shelley Grave suspicions as to his Life of the poet Hogg and Medwin com- pared Mistakes of both on Lord Grenville's election as Chancellor of the University Letter alleged to have been published by Shelley on the candidateship of Lord Grenville Shelley not then a student of University College Endeavour to explain the statement A letter answering Medwin's description given pp. I 25 CHAPTER II. Shelley interested in Oxford affairs before his entrance at the University His Latin lines In Horologium only a translation Original where found Mr. Hogg's description of Shelley's rooms at Oxford too ela- borate Altogether a fancy picture Reasons for doubting the sudden intimacy between him and Shelley Posthumous Fragments of Mar- garet Nicholson When published Mr. Hogg's account of the matter Reprint of the volume Continuation of Mr. Hogg's narrative xviii CONTENTS. His statements examined The Oxford University and City Herald John Muiiday Particulars connected with him Margaret Nichol- son published three weeks after Mr. Hogg first met Shelley Ad- vertisement of it Analysis of the poems Omission in Mr. Rossetti's edition of the Posthumous Fragments pp. 26 40 CHAPTER III. St. Irvyne published by Stockdale Its commercial failure Debt in- curred by its publication A Refutation of Deism Contradictory accounts of this book by Mr. Hogg Probably the work offered to Stockdale to pay off the debt on S'. Ii~cyne Shelley's letter to God- win describing his literary employments at Oxford Absurd state- ments of Medwin and Hogg as to newspapers Shelley a diligent reader of newspapers all his life His project of having one of hia own " Classical reading and poetical writing" Shelley's occupation at Oxford Attempt to explain this statement The Oxford Univer- sity and City Herald Its politics and character- Poems published in it during Shelley's residence at Oxford Ode to the Death of Sum- mer Its Shelleyan tone Translations from the Greek Anthologia signed " S." in The Oxford Herald Epigram from Vincent Bourne Epigrams from the Greek AntJiologia resumed Do not appear in the paper after Shelley's expulsion pp. 41 61 CHAPTER IV. The Shelley Letters, edited by Mr. Robert Browning Letter of Shelley to the Editor of The Statesman Letter of Shelley to the Editor of The Examiner The letter when first published Place assigned to it in Mr. Hogg's book His absurd comments upon it Letter printed Passages in it identical with those in the letter to the Editor of The Statesman Singular oversight in Mr. Browning not to perceive this identity Some of the letters forged Detection of the imposture Suppression of the volume Reasons for believing the letter to The Statesman genuine Leigh Hunt's account of the letter addressed to himself confused and full of errors Who was the editor of The Statesman ? No copy of the paper in the British Mu- seum Founded by John and Leigh Hunt. Its prosecution by the Government Five years' incarceration of Mr. Lovell Mr. Lovell not the person addressed as editor of The Statesman by Shelley Mr. Peter Finnerty Elaborate account of him from an article in The Examiner by Leigh Hunt The Walcheren expedition Sir Home Popham and Mr. Finnerty Sir Richard Strachan Epigrams 63 94 CONTENTS. xix CHAPTER V. Sir Francis Burdett and Peter Finnerty Subscription to sustain Mr. Finnerty in prison commenced Universal sympathy with him Local committee formed at Oxford Article on Mr. Finnerty in The Oxford Herald Subscription opened there Subscription of "Mr. P. B. Shelley" to the fund Shelley's letters to The Statesman and The Examiner evidently suggested by articles in the The Oxford Herald Shelley's missing poem of 1811, advertised conspicuously in The Oxford Herald, March gth, 1811 Strong probability that the poern was a satire Quotation from The Curse of Kehama Mr. Hogg's absurd statement relative to that poem Mr. Hogg described in The Atlantic Monthly The Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things, probably referred to under another name by Shelley in a letter to Godwin Alleged extraordinary success of the poem A profit of lool. realized by it, and presented to Mr. Finnerty Ac- count of Shelley's life at Oxford resumed pp. 95 106 CHAPTER VI. The Necessity of Atheism An advertisement of its intended publication discovered, and now first extracted from The Oxford Herald The MS. offered to Mr. Stockdale Stockdale's opinion of Mr. Hogg Remonstrance of Mr. Hogg, and his allusion to Peter Fin- nerty in Stockdales Budget Poems by Janetta Philipps Shelley's interest in that volume Probably published at his expense List of subscribers Names of Shelley, Miss Shelley, Miss Hellen Shelley, and Miss Harriet Westbrook amongst them Acquaintance of Shelley with Harriet Westbrook probably formed in consequence of her sub- scription to this volume Expulsion of Shelley and Mr. Hogg from Oxford Shelley's residence with Mr. Hogg in Poland Street Ad- vertisements of the Poetical Essay in the London papers during this period Mr. Hogg's charge of " underhand ways" in Shelley Cir- cumstances to which he may have alluded Harriet Westbrook at Clapham Extracts from unpublished letters by her Terms of en- dearment used by Shelley towards Harriet Dedication of Queen Mali Promised revelations as to the real facts of the separation Shelley's married life with Harriet at Edinburgh Visit of Mr. Hogg Removal of the Shelley s and Mr. Hogg to York Miss Westbrook sent for by Harriet "A guardian angel" Abrupt separation of the Shelleys from Mr. Hogg at York A "Fragment of a Novel" too true " Charlotte" and "Albert" real personages Residence of the Shelleys at Keswick Total cessation of all intercourse between XX CONTENTS. Shelley and Mr. Hogg for more than a year Letter of the Duke of Norfolk to Shelley Untrue statement as to its contents by Mr. Hogg Substance of the letter Extracts from the Private Diary of the Duke of Norfolk alluding to Shelley, now first published Expla- nations of same Visit of Shelley, Harriet Shelley, and Miss West- brook to the Duke of Norfolk at Greystoke Extracts from the Private Journal of Mrs. Howard, of Corby Castle, now first pub- lished, describing the party Mr. James Brougham and Mr. Calvert Unpublished letter of Shelley alluding to Mr. Calvert De Quincey on Shelley's residence at Keswick Shelley's intercourse with Southey at Keswick Sowthey's lines on Robert Emmett Shelley's "differences" with Southey Southey' s two sets of opinions and feelings pp. 107 129 CHAPTER VII. Preparations for the Irish campaign Letter to Godwin The Addicts to the Irish People described Duration of Shelley's intended resi- dence in Dublin prearranged The programme not departed from Miss Eliza Kitchener Letter to her Intention of Shelley to pub- lish his Poems in Dublin Shelley writes Verses on Robert Emmett Departure of the Shelleys from Keswick Shelley's parting observa- tions on Southey, from an unpublished letter written at \Vhitehaven. Mrs. Calvert The Isle of Man visited en route for Dublin Arrival of the Shelleys in Dublin Date hitherto given erroneous Stormy passage Coincidence between it and Southey's in i8or Sackville Street, Dublin, described Unpublished letter of Shelley describing his hopes Apostrophe To Ireland The Mexican Revolution, &c., in this letter Amount of his income Letter of introduction to Curran from Godwin Seeming indifference of the Government to Shelley's proceedings The State Papers of 1812 Slowness of Curran in seeking out Shelley The Address to the Irish People advertised and published The first sheet sent to Miss Hiichener Copies also sent to Mr. Westbrook and Godwin Heavy postage on the pamphlets, which were charged as letters Godwin the greatest sufferer Curran still slow in making advances to Shelley Lord Cloncurry's opinion of Currau's accepting office pp. 130 154 CHAPTER VIII. An unpublished letter of Godwin to Curran Lord Sidmouth and the Mafque of Anarchy Curious paper in the Reoord Office addressed to Lord Sidmouth, relaiive to Godwin's Juvenile Library, published CONTENTS. xxi under the name of Baldwin Minute analysis of the various works, most of which are mentioned by Godwin in his letter to Curran Shelley's letter to Hamilton Rowan Rowan's friendship for Mary Wollstonecraft Elizabeth Dixou, of Ballyshannon, the mother of Mary Wollstonecraft Unpublished letter of Shelley, describing his mode of circulating his pamphlets He and Harriet throw them from the balcony of No. 7, Lower Sackville Street Daniel Hill, the Irish servant of Shelley -He gives out that his master is only fifteen years of age Postscript by Harriet Article in The North British. Review, by the late Dr. Anster Recollections of Chief Baron Woulfe, as to Shelley's mode of addressing a meeting, erroneous Shelley's " Plan for Proselytising the Young Men of Trinity Col- lege" The balcony of No. 7, Lower Sackville Street Roger O'Connor Other unpublished letters of Shelley . . pp. 155 177 AN ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE OF IRELAND, BY PERCY BYSSHE SHELLET pp. 179224 CHAPTER IX. Peter Finnerty alluded to in the foregoing Address The Limerick Evening Post Papers in the Record Office relative to the proceed- ings of the Catholics Mr. Finnerty mentioned Statement in the House of Commons relative to Mr. Finnerty's speech Letter of Mr. Wellesley Pole The meeting in Fishamble Street Theatre Origi- nally a music hall The Bull and Head Society and Dean Swift Handel's visit to Dublin The Messiah Decay of Fishamble Street, and demolition of the theatre Private reports of the meeting fur- nished to Government preserved in the Record Office Shelley briefly alluded to Mr., subsequently Sir Thomas, Wyse described Remarks on this description Shelley's speech, as reported in The Freeman's Journal Report in The Dublin Evening Post Report in The Patriot Shelley's own account of his reception at the meeting, from an unpublished letter Mr. Hogg's reckless misde- scription of the scene His statements proved to be untrue The resolution to which Shelley spoke Extract from the speech of Mr. Wyse pp. 225 248 CHAPTER X. Shelley as an orator Opinions of Medwin, Trelawny, Captain Williams, andChief Baron Woulfeon the subject Important letter of "An Eng- lishman " who was present at the meeting in Fishamble StreetTheatre on the 28th of February, 18 1 2, as given in Faulkner's Dublin Journal xiii CONTENTS. of March 7th, 1812 Description of Shelley His enthusiastic recep- tion by the meeting The earliest, article ever published on Shelley from The Dublin Weekly Messenger of March /th, 1812 A poem of Shelley hitherto unknown referred to in this article The poem published for the purpose of assisting to sustain Mr. Peter Finnerty in prison Its great success The paper sent by Shelley to Godwin A. second letter alluding to Shelley, signed "A Dissenter,'' in The Dublin Journal, March 2ist, 1812 p;>. 248 261 PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION OF PHILANTHROPISTS, &c., BY PERCT BYSSHE SHELLEY pp. 263286 CHAPTER XI. Shelley's residence in Dublin continued Godwin and old letters Political Justice an ineffective work Shelley to Miss Kitchener Beresford and the army in Portugal A Dublin "magistrate of hell" Major Sirr Shelley and Sir Francis Burdett Mr. Law- less Failure of the attempt to establish the associalion Post- script by Harriet Mr. and Mrs. Lawless Autobiographical sketch by Harriet Shelley The " Pythagorean system'' of food adopted Postscript by Shelley Lord Fingal Shelley's description of his reception at the meeting in Fishamble Street Theatre Intends to establish a' newspaper with Mr. Lawless Letter to Mr. Medwin, senior History of Ireland parily printed Shelley's "literary friend " Who he was Godwin and the Philosopher's stone Mr. Harold Skimpole Article in The Examiner on "Young Poets" Suicide of Harriet Curious reference to Shelley and Mr. Lawless in The Dublin Evening Post, Nov. 1 7th, 1842 Frederick William Con way and John Lawless Letter of Mr. Con way to Lord Sid- mouth in the Record Office Shelley withdraws his pamphlets from circulation Letter to Godwin Seizure of the pamphlets and De- claration of Rights at Holyhead Letter of the officer of Customs Letter of the postmaster at Holyhead Letter of the Earl of Chichester Curious statements about Shelley, Harriet Shelley, and Miss Kitchener in Lord Chichester's letter Second letter of the officer of Customs at Holyhead, enclosing the copy of Harriet's letter preserved in the Record Office Harriet's letter Curious allusions in it Mrs. Nugent St. Patrick's night, &c. pp. 287320 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XII. Harriet Shelley's letter sent to Mr. "Wellesley Pole No action taken by the Irish Government The Declaration of Rights printed at Dublin Passages in it and Shelley's second pamphlet identical. PP- 321324 DECLARATION OF RIGHTS pp. 324 329 Shelley leaves Dublin Misstatements of Mr. Hogg Unpublished letter of Shelley from Rhayader Habeas Corpus Act not suspended "Verses on Robert Emmett" Description of Nantgwillt Letter to Godwin Reflections on the visit to Dublin Shelley deficient in humour Disappointed with Curran Curran's wit described by Godwin Curious allusions of Shelley in an unpublished letter from Rhayader Unchanging fidelity to Harriet proclaimed " Percy's little circle " Mistakes corrected Shelley's departure from Dublin not "abrupt" Absurd romance of Captain Medwin Mr. Peacock's resume of Shelley's visit to Ireland completely wrong, pp. 329 341 CHAPTER XIII. The Shelleys leave Wales and settle at Lynton, Lymouth, North Devonshire Godwin pressed to visit Description of Miss Kitchener A suggestion that the philosopher should bring that lady with him Miss Kitchener finds her way alone Daniel Hill, the Irish servant of Shelley His arrest at Barnstaple Curious papers in the Record Office published by Mr. Rossetti The same story told else- where The Literary History of Barnstaple New facts The Letter to Lord Ellenborough printed at Barnstaple Mr. Syle Suppression of the Letter Incompletely printed by Lady Shelley Mistakes in the transcript of the State Papers referring to the Barnstaple affair corrected The Devil's Walk Lord Castlereagh and Shelley equal admirers of Lady Morgan's Missionary Departure of the Shelleys from Lymouth Godwin's visit "The Shelleys gone!" "The Hon. Mr. Lawleys ;" not a brother of Lord Cloncurry Re- moval of the Shelleys, Miss Westbrook, and Miss Kitchener to Tremadoc Samuel Rogers at Tan-yr-allt Alleged subscription of Shelley to the Tremadoc breakwater fund The story very doubtful Reparation from Miss Kitchener Confused account by Mr. Hogg Miss Kitchener considers herself badly treated Shelley's visit to London in reference to this matter Alleged residence of Shelley with Godwin during this visit scarcely possible "Fanny Godwin " Her IT CONTENTS. real name Her melancholy fate "The Brown Demon" The " attempted assassination " at Tan-yr-allt Arrival of Daniel Hill His complicity in this affair very improbable an attempt to clear up the mystery Conclusion pp. 341 366 SUPPLEMENT. A PROPOSAL FOB PUTTING REFORM TO THB VOTE THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY, BY THK HERMIT OF MARLOW .... pp. 369 378 (" We pity the plumage, but forget the dying bird.") AN ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE ON THE DEATH OF THE PRINCESS CHAR- LOTTE, BY THK HERMIT OF MAHLOW pp. 379 394 APPENDIX. No. 1. Death of Mr. Peter Finnerty pp. 395 400 No. 2. Correspondence between the Earl of Moira and the Right Hon. Richard Ryder, relative to "Mr. Lawless," from the State Papers Letter of Mr. Philip Lawless Death of Mr. John Lawless His Funeral pp. 400 408 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY, ETC. CHAPTER I. the 1 2th of February, 1812, a young English- man, with his wife and sister-in-law, arrived in the capital of Ireland, and took up his residence in the principal street of that city. The gentleman had completed his nineteenth year a few months before, but still preserved the appearance of a boy. His wife, remarkable for her fair and girlish beauty, was still younger than her husband, and her sister, the eldest of the party, was but little in advance of her com- panions as to age. This not very formidable -looking trio had come to Ireland on a business of no small importance, for which they had been long preparing. Their object was, " as far as in them lay" to use the language of the chief organizer to effect a funda- mental change in the constitution of the British Empire, to restore to Ireland its native Parliament, to carry the great measure of justice called Catholic Emancipation, and to establish a philanthropic associa- tion for the amelioration of human society all over the world. The young man was perfectly unknown in Ireland, or even in England outside the circle of his B i PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. own family and a few friends. He had published anonymously two or three little books, both iu prose and verse, which perhaps may be considered the least promising first attempts ever made public by a man of genius. One poem, indeed, is said to have been " very beautiful/' but as yet we are not in a position to judge if the laudatory epithet was well deserved. Of that poem and its history we shall have much to say. Undeterred by these literary failures, and with a consciousness of possessing intellectual powers which had not yet found their proper mode of expression, he determined to devote himself to the work that lay nearest to his hand in the great and universal scheme of philanthropy which he had projected. The con- dition of Ireland particularly attracted him. His sense of justice revolted at the oppression which that country had long endured, and his benevolence was enkindled by the miseries from which it still suffered. He determined to devote himself to its cause. He resolved to become a true Knight of St. Patrick, and to extirpate from its soil those serpent forms of bigotry, prejudice, and misrule which had unfortunately re- placed the less venomous reptiles that had fled before the staff of the Apostle. How he prospered in that generous undertaking is partly the object of the following pages to relate, for the first time, truthfully and in detail. Bearing in one hand, as Caesar did his Commen- taries, his unpublished Address to the Irish People, and in the other a letter of introduction from a celebrated though rather ineffective philosopher to an illustrious Irish orator and wit, he crossed the stormy Channel and boldly raised at once the standard of Philanthropy. EARLIEST PUBLIC NOTICE. 3 On the 1 2th of February, 1813, he arrived an un- known stranger ; by the ayth of the same month he had already become famous. To use his own language in an unpublished letter, he had within that short time " excited a sensation of wonder in Dublin/' and " ex- pectation was on the tiptoe." The day following the date of this letter he made his first public appearance in a great assembly, which he roused to enthusiasm by his fervid eloquence, and a week later appeared the first of the innumerable papers which year after year, and perhaps century after century, were destined to be written upon the genius and the story of that then unknown young man, under the now familiar head- line of Percy Bysshe Shelley. This article, which was the first to foreshadow the proud anticipations of Shelley himself, that his fame would one day become " A star among the stars of mortal night," and which was the earliest to recognise the benevolence at least of his intentions, would for these reasons alone be worth preserving. It will therefore be given entire in its proper place, but its concluding paragraph may be here extracted for the exceedingly interesting fact in his literary history which it records, and which by this casual allusion alone has been rescued from complete oblivion. To the accidental preservation of an Irish newspaper published sixty years ago, we are indebted for the following singular and most unexpected piece of information. " We have but one word more to add/' says The Dublin Weekly Messenger of March 7, 1812: " Mr. Shelley, commiserating the sufferings of our distin- guished countryman Mr. Finerty, whose exertions in B a 4 PEROT SYSSHE SHELLEY. the cause of political freedom he much admired, wrote a very beautiful poem, the profits of the sale of which, we understand from undoubted authority, Mr. Shelley remitted to Mr. Finerty. We have heard they amounted to nearly an hundred pounds. This fact speaks a volume in favour of our new friend." What was this " very beautiful poem ?" and who was " Mr. Finerty ?" Such are two of the questions I propose to myself to answer in the course of this inquiry. Since the yth of March, 1812, until the publication of the present work, except in the private researches set on foot by the author for its recovery, it may safely be asserted that no other allusion can be found to the existence of the poem referred to in the paragraph just quoted. As to Mr. Finerty, the case Is somewhat different. The State Trials by Cobbett, the eloquence of Curran, and the history of the United Irishmen, preserve the earlier incidents of his story ; while the annals of English journalism, the disastrous Walcheren expedition, and the debates in Parliament, supply ample materials for his later career. But the connexion of Shelley with him, and the ignorance of Shelley's friends as to that connexion, are alike ex- traordinary. Mr. Finnerty, as he subsequently wrote his name, must have been personally well known to Leigh Hunt. He succeeded Hunt as editor of The Statesman news- paper, when that journal was given up by the future friend of Shelley for the more successful Examiner. It was an article written by Leigh Hunt in the latter paper that drew the attention of Shelley to the case of Mr. Finnerty, and led in a very short time to the remarkable fact of his publishing a poem for his SHELLEY AND MR. FINNERTY. 5 benefit. Shelley, it is true, was not personally known to Leigh Hunt until two years after the publication of this poem; but Mr. Finnerty lived until 1822, the year of Shelley's death, and Leigh Hunt long survived both. It is strange that in all this time Leigh Hunt should have been silent as to a fact which it is difficult to conceive he could have been entirely ignorant of. It is just possible that he heard of it at a time when he had no conception of the astonishing dimensions to which Shelley's fame would eventually grow. That he preserved no accurate recollection of his own first acquaintance with Shelley himself is certain. It will be shown hereafter that what he has written on this subject is full of errors. Another friend of Shelley, and an earlier one his biographer, Mr. Hogg in a letter of remonstrance to John Joseph Stockdale, the publisher, alludes with approval to the conduct of a gentleman who it will be proved was Mr. Finnerty. This letter is published in Stockdale s Budget. But neither in the Autobiography of Leigh Hunt, nor in the so-called Life of Shelley by Mr. Hogg, is there any mention of the journalist to whom the poet paid this singular mark of respect, or of the poem itself. It is scarcely necessary to say that later biographers do not supply the omission. The time when this poem was published, and the place where it was written, render Mr. Hogg's ignorance of its existence most remarkable. The redeeming feature of Mr. ^ Hogg's egotistical and eccentric book is generally considered to be that portion of it which, written many years before under the title of Shelley at Oxford, is incorpo- rated with the later work. What authority can be placed even on this division of Mr. Hogg's book will be seen further on. At present it need only be said 6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. that while he loads his page with trivial details and apocryphal conversations, he forgets, or was never told, that his incomparable friend, " the Divine poet," as he sometimes almost derisively calls him, with whom he represents himself as living in daily and almost nightly intercourse, had published a poem when at Oxford which, in a pecuniary point of view, was the most successful he had ever written. There is another place where the absence of any allusion to this poem is also remarkable. Mr. Finnerty, as will subsequently be more fully stated, had been prosecuted by the Attorney-General for an alleged libel on Lord Castlereagh. Being prevented by Lord Ellenborough from proving that the statements com- plained of were true, he declined to enter into his defence, and allowed judgment to go by default. He was sentenced to a long imprisonment in Lincoln gaol. The liberty of the Press being considered to be involved in the persecution of Mr. Finnerty, an important meeting was called at the Crown and Anchor Tavern, at which Sir Francis Burdett presided. A vote of sympathy and approval of Mr. Finnerty's conduct was passed, and a subscription to sustain him in prison at once set on foot. I have taken the trouble of ex- aminirg all the lists in reference to this fund which I could find in The Morning Chronicle and other papers of the period. In the course of the year the amount exceeded the sum of one thousand pounds. I have, however, been unable to meet with any acknowledg- ment of so handsome a contribution as one hundred pounds the profits, as we are told, of the poem which, as will be shown, Shelley published for the benefit of Mr. Finnerty. I was, however, rewarded by finding the personal subscription of " Mr. P. B. Shelley," not THE DUBLIN WEEKLY MESSENGER. 7 in a London paper indeed, but in a very unexpected quarter, as will subsequently be given in detail. It is perhaps equally singular that no recollection or tradition of this circumstance, and no copy of the poem, or even of the fact of it ever having been published, have been preserved by the collateral descen- dants of Mr. Finnerty who are still living. Two gentlemen have kindly responded to my inquiries, but have not been able to give me any information. And yet there can be no doubt that the statement in The Dublin Weekly Messenger of March yth, 1812, is true. At the time this statement was publicly made, Mr. Finnerty was still in prison. He was not released until the ex- piration of his sentence in the following August. The Weekly Messenger frequently alluded to his martyrdom for what was considered to be the liberty of the Press. He on more than one occasion wrote from his prison to the editor of that journal. A famous speech delivered by him before his incarceration, which was made the excuse in Parliament for the revival of the Convention Act, will be found fully reported in the volume of the paper for 1810. Nothing published in The Weekly Messenger could possibly have escaped his notice. It is incredible that he would not have con- tradicted this statement of the presentation to him of the profits of a poem if it were not true. This state- ment, too, it should be remembered, is authenticated by Shelley himself, for he sends the paper containing it to Godwin, and pointedly refers to the article in which it is given. In his first pamphlet, printed in Dublin, Shelley expressly alludes to Mr. Finnerty by name. The subject, in whatever point of view we regard it, is full of difficulties, but as much light as can possibly be now thrown upon it is endeavoured to 8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. be supplied in the following pages. It is here alluded to in order to direct the attention of the reader to what will perhaps be found to be one of the most interesting incidents recorded in this narrative. To tell the story satisfactorily, it will be necessary to give, in the first place, the only authentic allusion hitherto published, which Shelley himself has made to the extraordinary episode in his life comprised in his first visit to Dublin in 1812, and the pamphlets which he printed and circulated there in furtherance of the great objects which led him to undertake so singular an expedition. We shall then review his career as a student both at Eton and Oxford; his early publica- tions, including the missing poem of 1811 ; some singularly interesting particulars of his married life, particularly at York ; his residence at Keswick ; until at length we find him at the age of nineteen years and five months in Dublin, a political agitator and emanci- pator, an advocate for " Home Rule," a repealer of the Union, and a universal philanthropist. Percy Bysshe Shelley, in a letter to a literary friend in London, thus writes from Lymouth, Barn- staple, on the 1 8th of August, 1812 : " In the first place, I send you fifty copies of the letter [to Lord Ellenborough] . I send you a copy of a work which I have procured from America, and which I am exceedingly anxious should be published. It develops, as you will perceive by the most super- ficial reading, the actual state of republicanized Ire- land, and appears to me above all things calculated to remove the prejudices which have too long been cherished of that oppressed country. I enclose the two pamphlets which I printed aud distributed whilst THE IRISH PAMPHLETS. g in Ireland some months ago (no bookseller daring to publish them). They were on that account attended with only partial success, and I request your opinion as to the probable result of publishing them with the annexed suggestions in one pamphlet, with an expla- natory preface, in London. They would find their way to Dublin."* Without referring at present to the letter addressed to Lord Ellenborough, about which I shall have to mention subsequently some interesting facts not pre- viously given in any biography of the poet, we have here the important statement by Shelley himself, that so far from being ashamed of his Irish crusade, in the early part of the same year, as insinuated by Mr. Hogg, he had the deliberate intention of publishing in London the pamphlets which he had printed and distributed in Dublin a few months before. For the republication of these pamphlets, even after the lapse of sixty years, it may be said that we have in this letter Shelley's own express sanction. It is true that his object in republishing them at the time would have been a political one. But in a literary point of view, I think he must have regarded them with some complacency. The second pamphlet, at least, he considered to be written in his " own natural style." In this respect, however, it differs very slightly, if at all, from the first, and both pam- phlets may be favourably compared with the letter to Lord Ellenborough, which has been reprinted, though incompletely, by the poet's family. * Letter of Shelley to Mr. Thomas Hookham, of Old Bond Street, " a valued friend of Shelley." See Shelley Memorials, pp. 38, 39. jo PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. It is not, however, for their literary value or their political significance that the pamphlets are now re- pnblished : it is for their biographical, perhaps I should say their autobiographical, interest. The poli- tical importance of these eloquent protests against intolerance, injustice, and misrule has passed away ; but as historical memorials both of the writer and of the time and place in which they were published, they will always be read with interest. Many of the evils against which these fervid appeals were directed have been, at least in recent years, honestly attempted to be remedied. One of the two great measures which Shelley so ardently supported, not only by his pen but by his voice, was passed within seventeen years of the time when it received the enthusiastic advocacy of the young poet. What is more to the purpose, the great victory of Catholic Emancipation was won by the very means and in the very way which Shelley himself had projected. That way and those means, it is scarcely necessary to say, were not suggested by Shelley to the powerful mind that organized and made them effective. They were in existence before the youthful philanthropist visited Ireland, and they were practically worked out after he left. With him, how- ever, they were original, and their success in other hands only proves the sagacity with which he sug- gested their use. To whomsoever the merit is due, the fact remains that an association, the mere probability of which Godwin looked upon with terror as inevitably leading to bloodshed, anarchy, and defeat, carried its point successfully, without violence and without even a word of insulting exultation over those who opposed it. In this way the youthful poet proved himself a wiser teacher and a truer prophet than the mature philosopher. ZASTROZZI. II Before proceeding to describe the actual facts of Shelley's first visit to Dublin, hitherto so briefly alluded to or so strangely misrepresented, I have thought it right to trace, if possible, the source of that interest in the cause of Ireland which he retained all his life, and which led him to begin his public career as a reformer and a philanthropist by becoming its avowed champion. This investigation will have a value outside the particular subject here alluded to, as an opportunity will be thereby afforded for the cor- rection of several important errors connected both with the life and works of Shelley, which, having been once stated with an air of confidence in some bio- graphical account of the poet, have been adopted without examination by succeeding writers. The first published work of Shelley was the little prose romance called Zastrozzi. It appeared in June, 1810, and advertisements of it will be found in The Times of the 5th and the 12th of that month. Ac- cording to the recollections of a schoolfellow, Shelley gave a farewell banquet to some of his companions at Eton out of a sum of 4O/. which he is said to have received from Messrs. Wilkie and Robinson, of Pater- noster Row, for the privilege of publishing this puerile extravaganza. Lady Shelley, who gives this recollection of Mr. Packe, apparently contradicts it in subsequent pages of her Memorials. She states that "in 1809, Shelley left Eton and returned home" (p. 12), and "when still at home, he had written a great many romances in prose, some of which, have been printed" (p. 20). This, however, is a mere in- advertence on the part of Lady Shelley. It was pro- bably St. Irvyne alone that was written in the interval between the time of Shelley's leaving Eton and his H PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. entrance at Oxford. The other " wild romances," including Zastrozzi, were probably composed when Shelley was " at home " before he went to Eton. Whatever may have been the arrangement between Shelley and Messrs. Wilkie and Robinson, Zastrozzi was published by them on the 5th of June, 1810. Its success does not appear to have encouraged the generous publishers to renew their somewhat dubious liberality, as we find Shelley arranging with a different but more celebrated publisher in reference to another matter of very singular interest. This was the transfer on the iyth of September, 1810, to John Joseph Stockdale, 41, Pall Mall, of the entire impression of a volume as yet undiscovered, entitled Original Pottry by Victor and Cazire. It is rarely that a publisher becomes the biographer of one of his authors ; seldom is it that the fable is reversed, and the lion depicts the man. Mr. Stock- dale did not become the biographer of Shelley in any very extended sense ; he only gave an episode in the poet's life which it is evident he considered by no means an unimportant one as being connected with himself. In fact, at the conclusion of the series of papers which he devotes to Shelley in that curious melange of vanity and vindictiveness called Stockdale's Budget, he declares that but for this accidental though fortunate intercourse between himself and the poet, the family of the latter would have been deprived of "the only ray of respect and hope which may illumine their recollections of a father when they have attained an age for reflection, and shed a gleam of ghastly light athwart the palpable obscurity of his tomb."* * Stockdale's Budget, No. 9, Wednesday, February /, 1827. STOCK DALE'S BUDGET. 13 . The principal facts connected with Shelley's brief intercourse with Mr. John Joseph Stockdale have been given by Mr. Richard Garnett in his well-known paper entitled Shelley in Pall Mall* A few inte- resting particulars, however, are omitted. One of these is important as giving additional grounds for hoping that a copy of Victor and Cazire may yet be found. Another refers to Mr. Hogg. In reprinting Shelley's letters as given in Stockdale 9 s Budget, Mr. Garnet! says, "We have not scrupled to occasionally correct an ob- vious clerical error, generally the result of haste, some- times of a misprint." Considering that we have not the originals of these letters, but only a transcript of them by Stockdale, these corrections, though extending sometimes to the substitution of a more appropriate for a less appropriate word, may be justified. In such extracts, however, as I shall give, I think it will be more satisfactory to print them exactly as they are given in the original publication. As Stockdale's Budget is now difficult to be met with, and as the passage has not been extracted by Mr. Garnett, it may be interesting to quote in his own words the account which the publisher gives of his first interview with Shelley. This is found in the first number of the publication, dated Wednesday, Dec. 1 3th, 1826. It commences thus : " PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " The unfortunate subject of these very slight re- collections introduced himself to me in the autumn of 1810. He was extremely young. I should think he did not look more than eighteen. With anxiety * Macmillaris Magazine, June, 1860. 1 4 PERCY B YSSHE SHELLEY. in his countenance, he requested me to extricate him from a pecuniary difficulty in which he was involved with a printer whose name I cannot call to mind, but who resided at Horsham, near to which Timothy Shelley, Esquire, afterwards I believe made a Baronet, the father of our poet, had a seat called Field Place. I am not quite certain how the difference between the poet and the printer was arranged ; but after I had looked over the account I know that it was paid, though whether I assisted in the payment by money or acceptance I cannot remember. The letters show that it was accomplished just before my too conscien- tious friendship caused our separation. Be that as it may, on the I7th September, 1810, 1 received fourteen hundred and eighty copies of a thin royal 8vo volume entitled Original Poetry by Alonzo and Cazire, or two names something like them. The author told me that the poems were the joint production of him- self and a friend, whose name was forgotten by me as soon as I heard it. I advertised the work, which was to be retailed at 35. 6d., in nearly all the papers ; but I was told that, though paid for, it did not appear in The Times, and from my frequent experience I consider that such omission was far from improbable, and I fear The Times was not singular in the omission. In many papers, however, I saw it. I am only par- ticular on this point because few if any were sold a consequence which, as I intimated, was not unlikely to be the case ; though even from these boyish trifles, assisted by my personal intercourse with the author, I at once formed an opinion that he was not an every- day character." Passing over the mistake of Mr. Timothy Shelley, THE STOCK DALES. 15 the poet's father, having been " made " a baronet, we come to the curious statement that the advertisement of Victor and Cazire, though paid for, was not inserted in The Times. This omission, of which Stockdale had no doubt, was, he considers, done designedly. In this supposition the publisher must have had a con- sciousness that at some period of his career a certain watchfulness and caution were occasionally exercised in the offices of respectable journals before advertise- ments from the house of " Stockdale Junior " were given to the public. This, however, refers to a later stage of his business. In 1810 he had not commenced that downward course that ended in his ruin. For more than half a century the house of Stockdale had been an eminent one. The elder Stockdale and his sons had carried on a respectable and extensive busi- ness in Piccadilly before and after John Joseph had set up for himself in Pall Mall. Theology, history, and fiction issued continually under their name. They were in great request among amateur poets and poetesses, who, if they could " write/' could also pay " with ease." The lady song-birds nocked to them by hundreds. I have seen a large collection of poetical works written exclusively by women, the greater part of which was published by the Stockdales. Among these was Mary Stockdale's Effusions of the Heart, a volume published in 1790 by her father, John Stock- dale. The house being thus established for the production of this not very dangerous class of literature, tte statement that an advertisement of a harmless book of juvenile poetry like Victor and Cazire was deliberately suppressed by The Times seemed very improbable. An examination of the file of The Times for 1810 removed 1 6 PERC T YSSHE SHELLE T. all doubt upon the point. Mr. Garnett had found in The Morning Chronicle of September i8th an advertise- ment of the volume, but twenty-four days later that is, on Friday, October 12th The Times contains the following : "In royal 8vo, price 45. boards, ORIGINAL POETET. By VICTOR and CAZIEE. Sold by Stockdale Jan., 41, Pall Mall." This is important as shdwing that the volume was on sale for more than a fortnight longer than Stock- dale remembered it to have "been. In that time some additional copies were doubtless sent out for review, or presented by the author and publisher to their friends, thus increasing the probabilities that this very interesting volume may yet be found. The cause of the suppression and destruction of the volume was as follows : A short time after its appear- ance, Mr. Stockdale tells us that, on examining his new venture with more care than he had previously bestowed upon it, he discovered that one or other of the bards who concealed their names under the romantic pseudonyms of Victor and Cazire had contributed anything but " Original Poetry " to the volume thus infelicitously entitled. " Thin" as the royal 8vo was, Mr. Stockdale found it was thick enough to contain at least one poem by the well-known Matthew Gregory Lewis. The name of this poem is not given ; but as we have seen that Stockdale, in first mentioning the volume, gives the title as " Original Poetry by Alonzo and Cazire," instead of Victor, it is not improbable that the appropriated poem may have been that of " Alonzo the Brave and Fair Imogene," which appeared in the Tales of Wonder of " Monk" Lewis in j8or. Shelley was indignant at the imposition which had been practised upon him, and ordered the whole im- VICTOR AND CAZIRE. 17 pression to be destroyed. Stockdale, however, considers that before the sentence was carried out nearly a hundred copies had been put into circulation. Mr. Garnett has some ingenious conjectures as to Shelley's probable coadjutor in this curious volume. He considers that Cazire represents a female name, which is very likely. But he has not noticed, neither has the coincidence been remarked by any other writer, that the Posthumous Fragmentsof Margaret Nicholson Shelley's next publication are alleged to be edited by " Fitz- Victor" that is, as I understand it, by the son, or literary executor, of the " Victor" of the suppressed volume. It would be curious to find, should a copy of " Victor and Cazire" ever be met with, that the " Posthumous Fragments" were to some extent but a re-issue of Shelley's original contributions to the pre- ceding work. I now come to a very important event in Shelley's life his matriculation at the University of Oxford. One would think that the exact day on which his name was entered on the books of University College could easily be ascertained, but it has never been given. Lady Shelley says that Shelley went to Oxford in 1810, "in which year he became an undergraduate of University College." This is rather vague. Mr. Hogg gets over the difficulty very adroitly. Describing the first evening which he spent with the young poet, he says, " I inquired of the vivacious stranger, as we sat over our wine and dessert, how long he had been at Oxford, and how he liked it ? He answered my ques- tions with a certain impatience, and, resuming the subject of our discussion, he remarked that," &c. This is in Mr. Hogg's best style. He always found it easier to invent or embellish a conversation than to i8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. state a fact. He tells us when he first met Shelley, but that does not fix with any certainty the period of the poet's entrance at the University ; otherwise, what was the meaning of the question ? The passage of Mr. Hogg's book is well known, but it is always a pleasure to read it and to quote it. " At the commencement of Michaelmas Term that is, at the end of October, in the year 1810 I happened one day to sit next to a freshman at dinner : it was his first appearance in hall. -His figure was slight, and his aspect remarkably youthful, even at our table where all were very young. He seemed thoughtful and absent. He ate little, and had no acquaintance with any one. I know not how it was we fell into conversation/'* &c. At first sight, the palpable inaccuracies of Mr. Hogg's book seem to arise from defective memoi*y though it seems strange that a gentleman who could so minutely remember the very words of lengthy con- versations after an interval of twenty-two years should have fallen into the grave mistakes as to matters of fact which will presently be pointed out. A more careful study of the book, however, and a fuller knowledge of Mr. Hogg's character, create a strong presumption that a good deal of deliberate mystifica- tion as to dates, conversations, and letters, has been practised by that gentleman. Captain Medwin was a careless writer, and the mistakes in his Life of Shelley are so numerous as totally to destroy its authority. Mr. Hogg, on the contrary, perhaps from the fact of his having been a * Life of Shelley, vol. i. p. 51. The passage quoted was origi- nally published in the 3~ew Monthly 3/Lagatine, 1832. HOGG AND MED WIN. 19 successful conveyancer, is generally supposed to be accurate, except in those instances where his personal prejudices lead him astray. Thus it is that most of his statements pass unquestioned, and are repeated over and over again without examination by those compilers who find in his two bulky volumes an in- exhaustible storehouse of supposed facts. But even on questions which apparently he could have no motive in misrepresenting, he is just as inexact as Captain Medwin. The following is an instance of this, although the later biographer supplements the error of his pre- decessor by a greater one of his own : " During the whole period of our residence there" that is, at Oxford, says Mr. Hogg, in one of those un- guarded moments when he enables us to test his statements by a reference to a fixed date " the Uni- versity was cruelly disfigured by bitter feuds arising out of the late election of its Chancellor : in an especial manner was our own most venerable college deformed by them, and by angry and senseless dis- appointment. Lord Grenville had just been chosen." (i. p. 254). Captain Medwin, who, it must be admitted, generally throws the whole responsibility of all state- ments relative to Shelley's life at Oxford on Mr. Hogg, adopts of course the foregoing narrative, and thus supplements it with the following marvellous details : " It might be supposed that it was not without some reluctance that the master and fellows of University College passed against Shelley this stern decree" [his expulsion on Lady-day, 18 ii], " not only on ac- count of his youth and distinguished talents promising to reflect credit on the college, but because his father had been a member of it, his ancestors its benefactors. c a 20 PERCY BYSS1IE SHELLEY. I know not if these considerations had any weight with the conclave, but it appears that Shelley was by no means in good odour with the authorities of the college, from the side he took in the election of Lord Grenville, against his competitor, a member of University. Shelley, by his family and connexions, as well as disposition, was attached to the successful party, in common with the whole body of under- graduates, one and all, in behalf of the scholar and liberal statesman. Plain and loud was the avowal of his statements, nor were they confined to words, for he published, I think, in The Morning Chronicle, under the signature of " A Master of Arts of Oxford/' a letter advocating the claims of Lord Grenville, which, perhaps, might have been detected as his by the heads of the college. // was a well-written paper, and calculated to produce some effect ; and as he expressed himself eminently delighted at the issue of the contest, 1 as that wherewith his superiors were offended, he was regarded from the beginning with a jealous eye/ Such at least was the impression of his friend." This story thus ben trovato was too good to be lost, and thus we have so painstaking and generally so accurate a writer as Mr. Rossetti adopting it without the least misgiving. Under the title of " Minor Writings of Shelley," Mr. Rossetti assigns to the year 1811 that is, two years after Lord Grenville was elected Chancellor the composition of this apocryphal letter. "He published, under the signature of ' A Master of Arts of Oxford/ probably in The Morning Chronicle, a letter upholding the candidateship of Lord Grenville as Chancellor of the University." Rossetti's Memoir of Shelley, p. clxxiv. ELECTION OF LORD GRENVILLE. 21 A few words will show how utterly irreconcilable these statements are with the date of Shelley's entrance at University College. The Duke of Portland, who preceded Lord Gren- ville as Chancellor of the University of Oxford, died on Wednesday, the 3oth of October, 1809. The elec- tion of Lord Grenville as his successor took place two months later on the I3th and I4th of December in the same year. The following is the result of the contest as given in The Oxford University and City Herald of Saturday, December 16, 3809 : " The com- mittee for the election of a Chancellor of the Uni- versity, in the room of the late Duke of Portland, met between nine and ten o'clock on Wednesday morning, and continued sitting day and night, without any adjournment, till ten o'clock on Thursday night, when the numbers were declared as follow : " For Lord Grenville .... 406 Lord Eldon .... 393 Duke of Beaufort . . .222 Majority for Lord Grenville . 13 " The candidateship of Lord Grenville, therefore, ex- tended from the 3oth of October to the i4th of December, 1809. But in 1809, as we have seen, Shelley was at Eton and Field Place, and did not go to Oxford until the end of October, 1810 that is, exactly a year after the candidateship of Lord Grenville com- menced, and ten months after he had been elected. Even the installation of Lord Grenville as Chancellor preceded the entrance of Shelley into the University by four months. That event took place on June 30, 18] o. It was attended with great rejoicings, the re- citation of many odes, amongst which was one by the 22 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Rev. W. Lisle Bowles ; the striking of a medal in honour of the event, and though last, not least, the ascent of Mr. Sadler in a balloon. The poem of Bowles appeared simultaneously in The Morning Chroni- cle and The Oxford Herald on Saturday, July 2ist, 1810. A poet was found also to describe, perhaps satirically, the great event of Oxford life in the midsummer of 1810. The following advertisement appears in The Oxford Herald, Saturday, June 3Oth, 1810, the day of the installation, so that not only the bard, but the printer, must have had the power of improvisation : "This day is published, price $s.6d.,A Poetical Account of the Installation of a Chancellor of the University of Oxford. Ox- ford : Printed by and for J. Munday, and sold by Longman, Hurst, and Orme, London." As Shelley did not enter the University of Oxford until the end of October, 1810, it is therefore simply impossible that he could have taken any part, as a member of the University, in the election of Lord Grenville. That nobleman had not " just been chosen," as Mr. Hogg writes ; he had been elected ten months before. It is equally untrue that during " the whole," or any part of Shelley's residence there, " the Uni- versity was cruelly disfigured by bitter feuds arising out of the late election of its Chancellor." All outward animosity or dissatisfaction had long since ceased. Even in July, 1810, three months before Shelley entered, The Oxford Herald declined to publish a letter on the subject through fear of reviving any unpleasant- ness that may have arisen out of that event. In the number for Saturday, July aist, 1810, the following notice was given : " To Correspondents. We acknowledge the receipt of a letter on the election of Lord Grenville, and, although MR. TIMOTHY SHELLEY. 13 we cordially agree with the sentiments of our corre- spondent, we are unwilling to revive any question which may create party animosity, and therefore decline its insertion." These explanations conclusively dispose of Mr. Hogg's careless and erroneous statements. The express declaration, however, of Captain Medwin, that he had read an effective letter which Shelley published on the subject of Lord Grenville's candidateship, requires some further notice. We have seen that during the whole period that Lord Grenville's name was before the con- stituency of Oxford, Shelley, who had left Eton, was residing with his father at Field Place. Mr. Timothy Shelley had been a student of University College, and had graduated there.* It is admitted on all hands that he took a warm interest in the affairs of that college, and was a staunch adherent of the Liberal party both in and out of Parliament. The contest for the Chancellorship must have roused all his energies. He had a vote, and possessed, doubtless, considerable in- fluence, which we infer from his character he was not slow to use for the benefit of the cause. It was his exertions, and not those of his son, who had not then entered, that may have provoked that hostility and unfriendliness which the poet experienced later, and at a critical moment. From the specimens of his letters which have been published, the epistolary powers of the future Sir Timothy were certainly not consider- able. What more likely thing than to employ the ready pen and the sympathetic liberalism of his talented * He received the Degree of B.A. Jan. i6th, 1778, and of M.A. Feb. i6th, 1781. Catalogue of Oxford Students, 1841, p. 598. 4 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. young SOD, who was then preparing for his entrance into the great University ? How better account for Shelley assuming the title of a Master of Arts of Oxford when he had not even entered the University, in which he never took a degree ? I had previously searched The Morning Chronicle and The Oxford Herald during " the whole period of his residence there," as Mr. Hogg says, for a letter on the election of Lord Greuville, answering the description of Captain Medwin, but in vain. As Longfellow sings, it was like looking for the birds in last year's nest. Not so, however,, when I came to the right period, and when this thought occurred to me, that Shelley might possibly have written a letter on the impending election in his father's name. In The Morning Chronicle of November I5th, jSoQ, there is a long letter on the subject, signed " A. M. Oxon," substantially the signature remembered by Captain Medwin. The commencement of the letter seems to have been " inspired" from a different source than that which dictated the conclusion. The former is more personal, and reflects on the nepotism or family partiality attributed to Lord Chancellor Eldon. It attacks the Duke of Beaufort also, but more lightly. The letter rises in dignity as it advances, and appeals to larger and more general principles. This portion may be quoted. It is not unworthy of Shelley, even at a more advanced period of his life than he had then attained. " Lord Grenville," says the writer, " between his pigmy rivals, rises with a colossal grandeur of character, with all the private worth that belongs to both of his competitors, and without the infirmities that are im- puted to one of them. He unites the accomplished LETTER IN THE MORNING CHRONICLE. 25 scholar with the eminent statesman. As a parliamentary orator, he is considered by a celebrated author whose works now lie before me, since the extinction of the great luminary, Mr. Fox, without an equal. But Lord Grenville not only promises appropriate excellence for the Chair of the University, but is also particularly recommended to the admiration of the country by his manly political career. Twice has he given up place and power, and lately refused them, solely upon public principle. These are facts which confer real dignity, and constitute a gr6at man. In these times, when independence is so rare, and when place is generally sought alone for the profit it produces, it is the duty of those with whom the expression of any part of the national voice is entrusted, to honour, with all the distinction they can bestow, him who is almost a solitary exception to the opprobrium cast upon public men. A contrary course of conduct must induce suspicion, especially if it be seen on the present occa- sion, that if public virtue be seldom found in the statesmen of the present day, it is because the public itself is degraded. " I am, Sir, your obedient servant, "A.M. Oxon." " Oxford, Nov. ijth, 1808 " [a misprint for 1809]. CHAPTER II. HP HE RE is another and a curious reason for sup- posing that Oxford affairs occupied a large share of the attention of the good people at Field Place in those stirring months of September and October, 1809. The Oxford University and City Herald, of which I have spoken so frequently, and about which I shall have much more to say, circulated largely in the southern counties. We may be sure that Timothy Shelley, Esq., M.P. for Shoreham, was one of its subscribers, It is extremely likely from the following circumstance that the paper was not unfrequently in the hands of his son. Captain Medwin (vol. i. p. 48), referring to the facility with which Shelley wrote Latin verse, has the following passage : " That he had certainly arrived at great skill in the art of versifica- tion, I think I shall be able to prove by the following specimens I kept among my treasures, which he gave me in 1808 or 9." The first is the epitaph in " Gray's Elegy in a Country Churchyard/' " probably a school task." " The second specimen of his versification," says Captain Medwin, " is of a totally different character, and shows a considerable precocity :" " IN HOBOLOGIUM. " Inter marmoreas Leonorae pendula colles Fortunata nimis machina dicit horas. Quas manibus premit ilia duas insensa papillas Cur mihi sit digito tangere, amata, nefas ?" SHELLEY'S LATIN VERSES. 27 These lines, which Mr. Rossetti prints in his edi- tion (vol. ii. p. 501), more correctly than Captain Medwin had given them in his Life of Shelley, he assigns, with doubtful accuracy, to the year 1808. It is evident that Captain Medwin considered the thought to be not only precocious, but original, with Shelley. In this opinion probably Mr. Rossetti agreed. Some- thing of the precocity is explained, however, and all of the originality removed, by a reference to The Oxford Herald of Saturday, September i6th, 1809, where the following English epigram appears : " On seeing a FEENCH Watch round the Neck of a Beautiful Young Woman. " Mark what we gain from foreign lands, Time cannot now be said to linger, Allow'd to lay his two rude hands Where others dare not lay a finger." It is plain that Shelley's Latin lines are simply a translation of this epigram, which he most probably saw in The Oxford Herald, but may have read in some other paper of the time, as I distinctly recollect having met with it elsewhere when making my re- searches among the journals of the period. In giving an account of the next poetical venture of Shelley while at Oxford, it will be necessary to draw particular attention to the manner in which this story is told by Mr. Hogg, and the place in his narra- tive assigned to it. The evidence already existing establishes a case at least of grave suspicion against him, and proves that, for some reasons best known to himself, he has not told certain events and circum- stances of his hero's life in the actual order of their succession. This mode of dealing with his materials 28 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. is very remarkable in the way that he introduces to our notice the Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson. Every one interested in Shelley has read the lively papers which Mr. Hogg contributed to the New Monthly Magazine in 1832, under the title of " Shelley at Oxford." To these we have previously alluded. They form a considerable part of the first volume of his incomplete life of the poet, and are certainly the most interesting portion of it. If they cannot be taken as a perfectly faithful account of what actually took place between the young men during their intercourse at Oxford, they have been generally received as a clever elaboration of what by possibility may have occurred. The conversations are too minutely remembered and too elaborately re- ported to be taken for more than an attempt on the part of the writer to fill up an outline that must have well-nigh faded from his mind after an interval of twenty-two years. Such descriptions as the fol- lowing betray rather the trick and artifice of a novelist endeavouring to produce an effective picture than the serious aim of a historian able and willing to tell the truth. It will be remembered that this is the account which Mr. Hogg gives of his first visit to the rooms of a young student whose acquaintance he had made the day before, and with whom he had no grounds for supposing he would ever be much connected in after life. " Books, boots, papers, shoes, philosophical instru- ments, clothes, pistols, linen, crockery, ammunition, and phials innumerable, with money, stockings, prints, crucibles, bags and boxes, were scattered on the floor and in every place ; as if the young chemist, in order to analyse the mystery of creation, had endeavoured HIS ROOMS AT UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 29 first to reconstruct the primeval chaos. The tables, and especially the carpet, were already stained with large spots of various hues, which frequently pro- claimed the agency of fire. An electrical machine, an air-pump, the galvanic trough, a solar microscope, and large glass jars and receivers, were conspicuous amidst the mass of matter. Upon the table by his side were some books lying open, several letters, a bundle of newspapers (!), and a bottle of japan ink (!), that served as an inkstand; a piece of deal, lately part of the lid of a box, with many chips ; and a handsome razor that had been used as a knife. There were bottles of soda-water, sugar, pieces of lemon, and the traces of an effervescent beverage (!). Two piles of books supported the tongs, and these upheld a small glass retort above an argand lamp. I had not been seated many minutes before the liquor in the vessel boiled over, adding fresh stains to the table, and rising in. fumes with a most disagreeable odour. Shelley snatched the glass quickly, and dashing it in pieces among the ashes under the grate, increased the unpleasant and penetrating effluvium."* In this story there may be one or two of the cir- cumstances which we can rely upon as having actually occurred ; as to the rest of the description, it is evi- dently as complete a study as a chapter in The Old Curiosity Shop. Mr. Hogg had forgotten that he told us a few pages before that Shelley had but just entered the University, that he had dined the preceding even- ing for the first time in hall, and that, as far as Mr. Hogg's information goes, this might have been only the third day of Shelley's residence at Oxford, and * The Life of Percy Bysshe Shelley, vol. i. pp. 69, Jo. 30 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. yet there was time in this short interval to burn the carpets and the tables, and create the chaos which Mr. Hogg depicts with the hand of a master. The " bundle of newspapers,"* the " bottle of japan ink," and the " traces of an effervescing mixture," recorded after twenty-two years, are wonderful results of the imagination if not of the memory of the writer. It is, however, with these graphic but perhaps not very faithful details that more than 300 pages of Mr. Hogg's book are taken up. The " Ima- ginary Conversations," as they would have been called had they been written by Savage Landor, we may be sure, are quite as good as the real ones, and they may be taken at any rate as evidence of the subjects that occupied the attention of the friends during the period of their residence at the University. It seems strange, however, that so little transpires in these interminable discussions about the literary occupations of Shelley at the time. He either did not confide in Mr. Hogg at all, or Mr. Hogg con- sidered a report of his own clever mode of arguing with Shelley would be more interesting to the reader than a detail of those poetical pieces which Shelley not only wrote but published when at Oxford. He makes an exception to this reticence, indeed, in his account of the Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson, but it will be noticed that he does not do so until nearly the end of his paper called " Shelley at Oxford" after 210 pages have been filled with those apocryphal walks and talks to which I have been alluding. It is quite evident that Mr. Hogg wished * " A neicspaper never found its way to his rooms the whole period of his residence at Oxford," says Mr. Hogg in another mood, and totally forgetful of what he had previously written. Life of Shelley, vol. i. p. 257. THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD. 31 it to be understood that the events and conversations recorded in those 210 pages preceded the publication of Margaret Nicholson, and that it was not until after an acquaintance of some duration, and a close intimacy, that Shelley showed him the proof-sheets of this work, and announced to him his intention of publish- ing it. So far from this being the fact, it will be seen from the evidence here given for the first time, that it must have been at the very beginning of their intercourse probably on the very first visit ever paid by Hogg at Shelley's rooms that the mention of the poems published seventeen days after was made. The whole of this story is very curious, and must be told somewhat in detail. Mr. Hogg represents Shelley's first attempt at authorship while at Oxford as the result of that personal and private application to study which was stimulated and aroused by the public neglect of his college. " The University at large was not less remiss than each college in par- ticular. . . . The languid course of chartered laziness was ill-suited to the ardent activity and glowing zeal of Shelley/'' Life, i. p. 259. " Since those persons who were hired at an enor- mous charge by his own family and by the state to find due and beneficial employment for him, thought fit to neglect this their most sacred duty, he began forthwith to set himself to work. He read diligently I should rather say he devoured greedily, with the voracious appetite of a famished man the authors that roused his curiosity ; he discoursed and discussed with energy ; he wrote he began to print and he designed soon to publish various works " (vol. i. p. 260). " Shelley/' says Mr. Hogg, on the same page as that from which I have just quoted, " was quick to conceive, and not less quick to execute." He must 32 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. certainly have been " quick to conceive " in one day's experience of the University the extent of the tutorial and maternal want of care that was in store for him quick, too, to devour all the authors that roused his curiosity, and quick to execute those overt acts of authorship that were the result of all this individual industry and collegiate neglect. But Mr. Hogg must be allowed to tell his tale out fully in his own way. " When I called one morning at one, I found him busily occupied with some proofs, which he continued to correct and re-correct with anxious care. As he was wholly absorbed in this occupation, I selected a book from the floor, where there was always a good store, and read in silence for at least an hour. " My thoughts being as completely abstracted as those of my companion, he startled me by suddenly throwing a paper with some force on the middle of the table, and saying in a penetrating whisper, as he sprung eagerly from his chair, ' I am going to publish some poems/ " In answer to my inquiries, he put the proofs into my hands. I read them twice attentively, for the poems were very short, and I told him there were some good lines, some bright thoughts ; but there were likewise many irregularities and incongruities. I added that correctness was important in all composi- tions, but it constituted the essence of short ones ; and that it surely would be imprudent to bring his little book out so hastily; and I then pointed out the errors and defects. " He listened in silence with much attention, and did not dispute what I said, except that he remarked faintly that it would not be known that he was the author, and therefore the publication could not do him any harm. HIS FIRST POEM. 33 " I answered, that although it might not be disad- vantageous to be the unknown author of an unread work, it certainly could not be beneficial. " He made no reply ; and we immediately went out and strolled about the public walks. " We dined, and returned to his rooms, where we conversed on indifferent subjects. He did not mention his poems, but they occupied his thoughts ; for he did not fall asleep, as usual. Whilst we were at tea, he said abruptly, ' I think you disparage my poems. Tell me what you dislike in them, for I have forgotten/ " I took the proofs from the place where I had left them, and looking over them, repeated the former ob- jections and suggested others. He acquiesced, and after a pause asked might they be altered ? I assented. " ' I will alter them/ " ' It will be better to re-write them ; a short poem should be the first impression/ " Some time afterwards he anxiously inquired, ' But in their present form you do not think they ought to be published ? J " I had been looking over the proofs again, and I answered, ' Only as burlesque poetry ;' and I read a part, changing it a little here and there. " He laughed at the parody, and begged I would repeat it. " I took a pen and altered it, and he then read it aloud several times in a ridiculous tone, and was amused by it. His mirth consoled him for the con- demnation of his verses, and the intention of publishing them was abandoned. " The proofs lay in his room for some days, and we occasionally amused ourselves during idle moments by making them more and more ridiculous by striking 34 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. out the more sober passages, by inserting whimsical conceits, and especially by giving them what we called a dithyrambic character, which was effected by cutting some lines in two, and joining the different parts together that would agree in construction, but were the most discordant in sense/' Life of Shelley, vol. i. pp. 261, 2, 3. It is necessary here to interrupt Mr. Hogg for a moment. The Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson, though a rare volume, is not inaccessible. A copy of the original edition is in the British Museum, and a fac simile reprint, of which a limited number of copies were issued some time ago, may be seen without much difficulty. The poems, with the exception of the first,* which extends to eighty-eight lines in couplets, are also given in Mr. Rossetti's edition (vol. ii. p. 511). They are thus within the reach of all, and it will be found that in no single respect do they bear out the description of Mr. Hogg. There is no intentional burlesque traceable in them. There is no example of this process of cutting lines in two and then joining them, so as to agree in con- struction but to differ in sense. Indeed, Mr. Hogg seems to have had a misgiving, after all this display of his own drollery and cleverness, that some day or the other his statements would be examined and his de- scription put to the test. This difficulty did not put him to much inconvenience. Three pages later he in- * It is to be regretted that Mr. Rossetti omitted this poem from his edition, on the mere statement of Mr. Hogg that " the MS. had been confided to Shelley by some rhymster of the day." It is the only poem Shelley refers to in his "advertisement " to the volume, and its omission renders that " advertisement " unintelligible. MARGARET NICHOLSON. 35 troduces this saving clause, which is highly creditable to his professional skill : " The work, however, was altered a little, I believe, before the final impression ; but I never read it afterwards " (vol. i. p. 267) a state- ment that may well be believed after his utterly erroneous description of its character and contents. It was to Mr. Hogg, however, as it appears, that we owe its name. " I hit upon a title at last, and we inscribed it on the cover. " A mad washerwoman named Peg Nicholson had attempted to stab the King, George the Third, with a carving-knife ; the story had long been forgotten, but it was then fresh in the recollection of every one. It was proposed that we should ascribe the poems to her. The poor woman was still living and in green vigour within the walls of Bedlam ; but since her existence must be uncomfortable, there could be no harm in putting her to death, and in creating a nephew and administrator to be the editor of his aunt's poetical works. " The idea gave an object and purpose to our burlesque to ridicule the strange mixture of senti- mentality with the murderous fury of revolutionists that was so prevalent in the compositions of the day ; and the proofs were altered again to adapt them to this new scheme, but still without any notion of pub- lication. When the bookseller called to ask for the proofs, Shelley told him that he had changed his mind, and showed them to him. " The man was so much pleased with the whimsical conceit, that he asked to be permitted to publish the book on his own account, promising inviolable secrecy, and as many copies gratis as might be required. After D 2, 56 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. some hesitation permission was granted upon the plighted honour of the trade. " In a few days, or rather in a few hours, a noble quarto appeared ; it consisted of a small number of pages, it is true, but they were of the largest size, of the thickest, the whitest, and the smoothest draw- ing paper ; a large, clear, and handsome type had im- pressed a few lines with ink of a rich glossy black amidst ample margins. The poor maniac laundress was gravely styled ' the late Mrs. Margaret Nicholson, widow ;' and the sonorous name of Fitz Victor had been culled for her inconsolable nephew and ad- ministrator. To add to his dignity, the waggish printer had picked up some huge text types of so unusual a form that even an antiquary could not spell the words at the first glance. Shelley had torn open the large square bundle before the printer's boy quitted the room, and holding out a copy with both his hands, he ran about in an ecstasy of delight, gazing at the superb title-page" (vol. i. pp. 265, 6). "Without noticing the remarkable good fortune of Mr. Hogg in being always on the spot at a critical moment of the conception, gestation, and safe delivery of this poetical bantling, it may be stated that, with the exception of Shelley's probable delight at the appearance of the volume, all the other circumstances maybe attributed to the fertile imagination of Mr. Hogg. The poor maniac laundress is not gravely styled "the late Mrs. Margaret Nicholson, widow," nor is her name mentioned in the whole volume except on the title-page. The printer was " waggish " only to the extent of using the type that he had in most abundance. The paper to which I have already re- ferred, The Oxford University and City Herald, and of JOHN MUNDAT. 37 which I shall have much to say further on, was the property of the same printer, and in it there is not a column of advertisements that does not contain frequent examples of this type. It is used in the ad- vertisement of the book itself, as will presently be seen. The name of the printer Mr. Hogg does not con- descend to give us, although it will be found that Shelley had other transactions with him besides the publication of the Posthumous Fragments. Captain Medwin, to whom it appears a copy of the volume was sent, though he takes his whole description of it from Mr. Hogg, states that it was " published at Parker's." This of course is a mistake. It was printed and published by John Munday, a name long and honourably known in connexion with the city of Oxford. Of him and of his family I have been favoured, by the present representative of the firm of Munday and Slatter, Mr. Rose, with some interesting particulars, in a letter which will be found below.* It will be seen from Mr. Hogg's own acknowledg- ment that a considerable interval elapsed between his first seeing the proofs and the final appearance of the volume under the title of Posthumous Fragments of * " Oxford, High Street, Dec. 3rd, 1870. " Sir, Your letter asking for information about a Poetical F.ssay, 1811, came duly to hand. I have made what inquiries were possible, but without any success. There does not appear to be any trace of the tract in the old books, so far as they are in my pos- session. The family of Munday have disappeared from Oxford long since, with the exception of a daughter of Joseph Munday, living in the neighbourhood ; but the son, who succeeded to the printing business, left Oxford many years since for Bristol, and is since dead, so that all chance ot discovery from that source is h P eless< " I am, sir, your obedt. servt. " JOHN EOSE." 38 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Margaret Nicholson. They were condemned, altered, recast, retouched, rejected, and finally adopted after much cogitation, and after intervals of " several days/' To produce a volume of the elegance described would in itself require a good deal of mechanical skill and considerable time. It should also be remembered that the book was produced in a printing office busily occupied in bringing out a large weekly journal. Altogether, the most impatient author could scarcely expect under these circumstances that his productions should be offered to the public in less than three weeks. These reasonable conditions, if they are ad- mitted, establish beyond doubt that these poems were first shown to Mr. Hogg, not as he insinuates after his intimacy with Shelley had been matured, and as a natural result of their long acquaintance, but most probably, as I have stated, on the first occasion he ever paid the young poet a visit. Mr. Hogg has told us that it was " one day at the end of October, i8io/' on which he first saw Shelley. The end of October must, of course, mean about the 3oth or 3ist of that month. The two young men thus for the first time brought together spent the evening at Hogg's rooms. The host obligingly tells us that he slept very soundly after the departure of " the vivacious stranger" so soundly indeed that next day he forgot, not only the stranger himself, but the promise he had made to visit him at his rooms. The long conversation to which several of the preceding pages had been devoted, thus congealed by the frost of forgetfulness in one night, came out like the tunes in the horn of Baron Munchausen's courier twenty-two years afterwards. An hour, however, after the time Mr. Hogg had promised to meet his young friend, he ADVERTISEMENT OF MARGARET NICHOLSON. 39 remembered his engagement and repaired to Shelley's rooms. I have given the description of those rooms, but we have now to do with the date. It was pro- bably the ist of November. At the utmost stretch it could only be a day or two earlier. On Saturday, the 1 7th November, 1810, that is sixteen or eighteen days after Hogg by his own showing first saw Shelley, the following advertisement appears in The Oxford University and City Herald : " Just Published, price 2s., Posthumous Fragments of MAE- GAEET NICHOLSON ; being Poems found amongst the Papers of that noted female, who attempted the life of the King in 1786. Edited by J0J)it Jltj Uictor. Oxford : Printed and sold by J. Munday." In this advertisement, which is almost identical with the title-page, the name JOHN FITZ VICTOR is printed in the large black-letter type used in the volume itself. The advertisement is repeated a week later in the next number of The Oxford Herald, the price in the interval having risen to 2s. 6d. The extent of the very slight acquaintance that could have existed between Shelley and Mr. Hogg whilst the Posthumous Fragments were passing through the press being thus established, we may, without much injury to Shelley, give Mr. Hogg the whole credit of assigning them to Margaret Nicholson. That was a stroke of humour quite worthy of some others complacently recorded of himself by the biographer. Shelley had written a wild rhapsody entitled Frag- ment Supposed to be an Epithalamium of Francis Ravaillac and Charlotte Corde. This is described by Mr. Hogg, in his most characteristic manner, as " a poem concerning a young woman, one Charlotte Some- body, who attempted to assassinate Robespierre or some 40 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. such person." Poor Margaret Nicholson's happily unsuccessful attempt on the life of the King preceded by seven years the famous act of tyrannicide perpe- trated by Charlotte Corday in 1793, not on Robespierre, but on Marat. Careless of the anachronism, Mr. Hogg boldly assigned the poem to the " mad washer- woman" as a happy stroke of humour. The supposed authoress speaks in the first poem of " wife and children /' this, too, must be taken as a delicious bit of burlesque, in making Mrs. Nicholson imagine herself to have been a man and a father.* On the whole, we cannot but think that the poems would have fared all the better had they been published by Shelley, as they evidently were written by him, as serious compositions. One of them, " The Spectral Horseman," is interesting as showing that at this early period Shelley had begun to take that interest in the history and legends of Ireland which led to such extraordinary results two years later. We have here "The Banshee's moan on the storm " " A white courser, " like that of O'Donoghue, " bears the shadowy sprite " " The whirlwinds howl in the caves of Innisfallen/' " Then does the dragon, who, chained in the caverns To eternity, curses the champion of Erin, Moan and yell loud at the lone hour of midnight." Fragments, p. 25. Extravagant as all these passages are, they show that Shelley's sympathies for Ireland had already been awakened, and that his practical efforts for her benefit at a later period were not the result of any sudden or passing caprice. * This poem which, as previously noticed, Mr. Rossetti omitted from his Annotated Edition, is given in the faithful reprint of the original editions of Shelley's early poems recently issued by Mr. Hotten a volume remarkable for its accuracy and cheapness. CHAPTER III. HILST the Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson were thus passing through the press at Oxford, Shelley was in communication with Stock- dale about the publication in London of a more im- portant work. This was the prose romance of St. Irvyne ; or, The Rosicrucian. Only three days before The Oxford University and City Herald had announced the publication of Margaret Nicholson that is, on the 1 4th of November, 1 8 10 Shelley returned to Stockdale the manuscript of St. Irvyne, thanking him at the same time for the trouble he had taken " to fit it for the press." The work thus " fitted for the press " by Mr. Stockdale was placed at once in the hands of " S. Gosnell, Little Queen Street, London," by whom it was printed. By the i7th of December, exactly one month after the publication of Margaret Nicholson, St. Irvyne was so far advanced that Stockdale announced its immediate appearance. The announcement was forwarded to Shelley, then at Field Place, who wrote to the publisher in the following terms : "Field Place, December i8th, 1810. " My dear Sir, " I saw your advertisement of The Rosicrucian, and approve of it highly : it is likely to excite curiosity. .... Mr. Munday, of Oxford, will take some romances; I do not know whether he sends directly 4 7 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. to you, or through the medium of a bookseller. I will enclose the printer's account for your inspection in another letter. " Dear Sir, yours sincerely, " P. B. SHELLEY." From the last passage in this letter it would appear that Shelley had undertaken the risk of printing St. Irvyne himself. Mr. Stockdale, it is evident, had the pleasure not only of inspecting the printer's account, but of paying it also. This probably formed the foundation of the debt due to him by Shelley, which, " interest included/' he calculated in 1826 amounted to 3OO/. The rate of interest must have been high indeed if it be true, as stated in a MS. journal of Dr. Polidori, that the principal sum due on the ist of August, 1 8 1 1, was about lool. Whatever the amount was, Shelley, writing to Stockdale on that day, de- clared his inability to pay it. He admits " the im- prudence of publishing a book so ill-digested as St. Irvyne" but still asks with a faint glimmer of hope, " Are there no expectations on the profits of its sale ?" This gleam, however, is but momentary ; for in the next sentence he offers a new solution of the difficulty " My studies have, since my writing it, been of a more serious nature. I am at present engaged in completing a series of moral and metaphysical essays perhaps their copyright would be accepted in lieu of part of my debt." It is needless to say that this offer did not tempt Mr. Stockdale to indulge a second time in the luxury of inspecting and paying a printer's account, even with the hope of adding the ideal interest thereon which had so mysteriously expanded the first. A REFUTATION OF DEISM. 43 Whether these moral and metaphysical essays were substantially the same work to which Shelley alludes in his letter to Stockdale of the i8th December, 1810, from which I have already quoted, it is now impossible to say. In that letter he writes : " I have in prepa- ration a novel; it is principally constructed to convey metaphysical and political opinions by way of conver- sation. It shall be sent to you as soon as completed, but it shall receive more correction than I trouble myself to give to wild romance and poetry." Mr. Garnett, referring to this subject, says : " Speedy extinc- tion, too, was the fate of the MS. novel, of which the above is the first and last mention " As to the novel, this remark is doubtless true; but we certainly do hear again of a work conveying " metaphysical and moral opinions by way of conversation." The idea or plan of a fiction may have been abandoned, and the sub- stance and conversational form of the essays preserved in a book of which Mr. Hogg gives us the following curious account : "The year 1814 had come upon us. In that year and at the beginning of the year, I think Shelley published a work entitled A Refutation of Deism : in a Dialogue. It is handsomely, expensively, and very incorrectly printed in octavo. It was published in a legal sense, unquestionably ; whether it was also published in a publisher's sense and offered for sale I know not, but 1 rather think that it was the preface informs us that it was intended it should be. I never heard that anybody bought a copy ; the only copy I ever saw is that which my friend kindly sent to me; it is inscribed by his own hand, on the title-page, ' To his friend T. Jefferson Hogg, from P. B. S/ I never heard it mentioned any further than this, that 44 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. two or three of the author's friends told me that it had been sent as a present. It is a short dialogue, comprised in 101 pages of large print. Eusebes and Theosophus discourse together and dispute with each other, much as the author loved to dispute when he could find an opponent whenever Eusebes could find a Theosophus, and get up an antagonistic dialogue. It is written in his powerful, energetic, contentious style, but it contains nothing new or important, and was composed and printed also in a hurry. He never spoke of it to me, or in my presence. It attracted no attention, and doubtless Shelley himself soon dis- covered that it did not merit it." Life of Shelley, vol. ii. pp. 484, 485. How Mr. Hogg could have known that this work was " composed and printed also in a hurry/' when Shelley never spoke of it to him or in his presence, is one of those mysteries of intuition so frequently propounded for our belief throughout his book. It is apparently the same work which Shelley had planned in December, 1810, and which he determined should receive " more correction than he troubled himself to give to wild romance and poetry." The description Mr. Hogg gives of this book is fuller than usual, and may lead to its recovery. There is always, however, something incomplete and unsatisfactory even in his most minute analysis when dealing with facts. He tells us that " a long quotation is given in a note from Plutarch's treatise on eating flesh. It is in the original Greek, without any translation either in English or in Latin a convincing proof that the dialogue was not addressed to unlearned readers" (Life, vol. ii. p. 486). This Mr. Hogg gives without the TEA N8LA TION FROM PL UTA RCH. 45 slightest reference to what he had printed but a few- pages before, in a letter of Shelley's dated Edinburgh, Nov. 26th, 1813. " I have translated the two Essays of Plutarch, Trepl aapKoyayiaQ, which we read together. They are very excellent. I intend to comment upon them, and to reason in my preface concerning the Orphic and Pythagoric system of diet." Life, vol.ii. p. 482. It will be amusing, as another example of Mr, Hogg's sublime indifference to facts, to find, when- ever a copy of A Refutation of Deism is discovered, that the "long quotation from Plutarch's treatise on eating flesh," left in the original Greek for learned readers as a note, is translated into English for " un- learned readers" in the " Preface."* But we must now return to St. Frvyne, which we have abandoned rather unceremoniously on the firsr day of its existence. An announcement of the birth was published, as we have seen, a day or two before the 1 8th of December, 1810 ; but the new arrival showed little signs of life, if we may judge by the silence of the papers, until towards the end of January, 1 8 1 1 . The advertisement, * A long quotation from the same treatise of Plutarch, both in Greek and English, concludes the notes to Queen Mab, in Clark's edition of 182 1. It would appear from a notice signed " W. Clark," on p. 92 of this edition, that the notes of the original Queen Mab of 1813, "in French, Latin, and Greek," were not translated. In the editions of Queen Mab by John Brooks (1829), Mrs. Shelley and Mr. Rossetti, the passage from Plutarch is not trans- lated. In those of Clark, 1821 ; Carlile, 1822 (the same book with Carlile's imprint) and Carlile 1823, with the titlepage of the original edition of 1 8 1 3 , the passage is given in Greek and English. In the edition said to be printed at " New York, by William Baldwin," 1821, the translation alone is given. 4 6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. which Shelley thought was " likely to excite curiosity," began to appear more frequently. Except the head- ing, " The University Romance/' there is nothing in it different from ordinary advertisements. I tran- scribe it from The Times of Saturday, January 26th, 1811, and Saturday, February and, 1811 : " THE UNIVERSITY ROMANCE. This day is published, price only $s., St. Irvyne ; or, The Rosirrucian : A Romance. By a Gentleman of Oxford University. Printed for Stockdale Junior, 41, Pall-Mall." St. Irvyne has one advantage, and one only, over Zastrozzi it is considerably shorter : in every other respect it is as unreal, imperfect, and puerile as his first attempt. Shelley believed that at least it would have made a bigger book than Zastrozzi, but in this he was mistaken, as though printed in a somewhat larger type it fills exactly sixteen pages less. St. Irvyne, though not published until the end of i8jo, was probably written while Zastrozzi was passing through the press in the earlier part of the same year. He tells us himself that the second title of the story, The Rosi- crucian, is derived from St. Leon : " What I mean as ' Rosicrucian' is, the elixir of eternal life. Mr. God- win's romance of ' St. Leon' turns upon that super- stition " It has not, however, been noticed that its first title, St. Irvyne, may have been suggested to him by a locality in which he had spent some of the happiest hours of his life in the company of his first love, Harriet Grove. Lady Shelley calls this place St. Leonard's* but Mr. C. Grove, who formed one of the party described in the following interesting passage of a letter addressed by him to Miss Hellen Shelley, * Meaning probably St. Leonard's Forest, in a part of which lay the seat of the Duke of Norfolk. ST. IRVYNE. 47 the poet's sister, in 1857, speaks of it as St. Irviny's, a name singularly like that of Shelley's romance : " I did not meet Bysshe again/' says Mr. Grove, " till I was fifteen, the year I left the navy, and then I went to Field Place with Harriet [Grove]. Bysshe was there, having just left Eton, and his sister Elizabeth. Bysshe was at that time more attached to my sister Harriet than I can express, and I re- collect well the moonlight walks* we four had at Strode, and also at St. Irving's ; that, I think, was the name of the place, then the Duke of Norfolk's, at Horsham."f After this, in a parenthesis, is the following fuller description : " St. Irving's Hills, a beautiful place on the right-hand side as you go from Horsham to Field Place, laid out by the famous Capability Brown, and full of magnificent forest-trees, waterfalls, and rustic seats. The seat was Elizabethan. All has been destroyed." Mr. Grove adds "that was in 1810" evidently a mistake for the summer of 1809, as cor- rectly given by Lady Shelley. Hogg's Life of Shelley, vol. ii. pp. 550, 551 ; Shelley Memorials, p. 13. * The moon, as might be expected, figures conspicuously in St. Irvyne. One or two passages may be given : " The moon became as bright as polished silver, and each star sparkled with scintillations of inexpressible whiteness" (p. 194). And again, " I gazed in eager anticipation of curiosity on the scene before me ; for a mist of silver radiance rendered every object but myself im- perceptible; yet was it brilliant as the noonday sun" (St. Irvyne, p. 194). t " Hill Place" is the name given to it in Beauties of England and Wales. London, 1813. "In tbe same direction, on the right of the road, is an old seat called Hill Place, formerly the property of the late Viscountess Irwin, but now belonging to the Duke of Norfolk" (Sussex, p. 97). Mr. Howard, of Corby Castle, tells me it was sold after the death of Duke Charles in 1815. The " Viscountess Irwin" may perhaps have suggested the name " Irving" to Mr. Grove. 48 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. As the place was called St. Irviticfs by Mr. Grove, it may so have been remembered by Shelley ; and even apart from the associations connected with the pre- sence of Harriet Grove and Elizabeth Shelley, it was a locality that may well be supposed to have lingered in the memory of the poet. It is stated that St. Irvyne as well as Zastrozzi re- ceived a good deal of notice from the press. This statement, which seems rather improbable, I have not been able to confirm after a diligent search. In ex- amining the reviews and periodicals of the period for some trace or record of the missing poem published by Shelley in 1811, which will presently be more fully described, the names of these romances would have arrested my attention, but I do not recollect having met a single allusion to them. The second romance, however, had an admirer, and a warm one, in a very unexpected quarter. " Fortunately for himself/' says Mr. Rossetti, in his Memoir of Shelley (p. Ixi.), " Hogg had probably not read St. Irvyne, or he would have found that that name designates a locality, and not a man." It might be urged that perhaps it designated neither. The interest of more than half the story, and that its concluding portion, entirely rests upon Eloise de St. Irvyne, a sort of newer Nouvelle. Heloise, who may be considered its heroine, after the astound- ing Megalena de Metastasio is disposed of, and from whom it may have derived its name. But whether Mr. Hogg read the romance or not, he praised it ; so much so, indeed, that the modest and perhaps con- scientious author had to deprecate the infrequent, perhaps the unique, adulation of his friend. " Why will you compliment St. Irvyne ? '' says Shelley in a letter to Mr. Hogg, dated Sunday, May I7th, 1811 THE IRISH MELODIES. 49 a question which that gentleman doubtless would have found it very difficult to answer. As in the case of Margaret Nicholson's Posthumous Fragments, St. Irvyne supplies additional proof of the interest which Ireland was then beginning to awaken in the mind of Shelley. The witchery of the Irish Melodies had already enthralled him. He even goes the length of making the exceptional moral person in his book an Irishman. Compared with " the unhappy Wolfstein" and the " awe-inspiring Ginotti," the Englishman, Mountfort, may be regarded with some favour, but he is not immaculate. He has, however, a more perfect companion. " What companion ?" Eloise interrupted him, in- quiringly. " Why/' replied he, " a friend of mine, who lives at my cottage ; he is an Irishman, and so very moral, and so averse to every species of ga'iete de ccKur, that you need be under no apprehensions/' " He wanders about, writes poetry, and, in short " appears to be a very harmless sort of person. He eventually becomes the husband of Eloise, who having " stout notions on the marrying score," would have willingly dispensed with what she considered a superfluous ceremony. " Nay, do not start," says the gentle Fitz- eustace, when he proposes to the fair Eloise the hard condition of submitting to the " harmless " formality of being legally married. He probably composed her by the charm which he had found so potent in an earlier scene. " Recline on this sofa, then," said Fitzeustace, " and I will play some of those Irish tunes you admire so much." " Eloise reclined on the sofa, and Fitzeustace, seated on the floor, began to play. The melancholy plaintive- 5 o PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. ness of his music touched Eloise she sighed, and concealed her tears in her handkerchief. At length she sank into a profound sleep : still Fitzeustace con- tinued playing, noticing not that she slumbered. He now perceived that she spoke, but in so low a tone that he knew she slept " (St. Irvyne,* pp. 209, 216, 217, 280). The way in which Shelley disposes of all his cha- racters not in the book itself, but in a private letter to his publisher is amusing. Stockdale, after " fitting the work for the press/' rubbed his eyes when all was over, to- perceive if possible what had become of the various personages. Like the ferryman in the ballad of Kopisch,t he stood bewildered ; the elfin people had all vanished, and he held in his hand nothing but crumpled leaves. Shelley came to his relief. " Ginotti, as you will perceive, did not die by Wolf- stein's hand, but by the influence of that natural magic which, when the secret was imparted to the latter, destroyed him. Mountfort being a character of inferior import, I did not think it necessary to state the catastrophe of him, as it could at best be but uninteresting. Eloise and Fitzeustace are married and happy, I suppose, and Megalena dies by the same means as Wolfstein. I do not myself see any other explanation that is required." Letter dated " University Coll., Nov. I4th, 1810," in Stockdale's Budget. As my readers will probably be not more exacting * In 1822, after the death of Shelley, Stockdale reproduced the old sheets of St. Irvyne, with a title page dated that year. It is from a copy of this reissue in my own possession that the above extracts are given. t The Fairies' Passage. The translation of James Clarence Mangan. SHELLEY AND NEWSPAPERS. 51 than Mr. Stockdale, with this epilogue of the author we shall take our leave of St. Irvyne. In the second letter which Shelley addressed to Godwin, then personally unknown to him, dated " KESWICK, January loth, 1812," he thus epitomizes in one sentence the results of his academic career : " Classical reading and poetical writing employed me during my residence at Oxford " (Hogg, vol. ii. p. 56). As far as we have yet gone in this investigation, the only evidence of poetical writing that has been presented to us is the collection of poems, serious or burlesque, whichever they may be considered to be, that he published under the name of Margaret Nicholson. Indeed Mr. Hogg leaves it to be inferred that with that sublime effort of genius the poetical aspirations of his young friend were satisfied, and that he printed nothing subsequently, either in prose or verse, while at the University, but the unfortunate syllabus entitled The Necessity of Atheism. How completely this is the reverse of the fact will presently be shown. It will be proved that he not only indulged in " poetical writing " to a much greater extent than might be supposed from the silence of his biographer on that point, but that he published a distinct volume of verse the earliest that came entirely from his own hand a fact which, after the lapse of sixty years, it has been the good fortune of the present writer to have discovered. Among the many loose though dogmatic assertions of Mr. Hogg, for which there is not a tittle of evidence, and that are absolutely contradicted by the facts, is one to the effect that Shelley not only had a dislike to newspapers, but that they never reached him while at the University. " A newspaper never found E 2 52 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. its way to his rooms the whole period of his residence at Oxford " (Life, vol. i. p. 257). How Shelley could have written and published a volume of verse without his friend knowing anything about it, and yet be unable to receive a single newspaper unseen by that keen-eyed Argus, is a difficulty not easily got over. And yet this reckless assertion is adopted by later writers without the slightest investigation. So far from Shelley being in- different to newspapers and to writers in newspapers, we find him at Oxford alive to the passing political events of the day writing to the editors of news- papers, identifying himself with their opinions, con- gratulating them on their triumphs, indignant at their persecution, and, stranger than all, publishing a poem for the sustainment in prison of one of them who was considered by the leading Liberals of the day, as well as by Shelley, a martyr for the liberty of the Press. Captain Medwin was determined not to be outdone by his rival biographer Mr. Hogg, in affecting an intimate acquaintance with the private habits of their illustrious friend. The infallible Mr. Hogg had declared ex cathedra that " a newspaper never found its way to his rooms the whole period of his residence at Oxford." At a time when Shelley was engaged in writing to the editors of three newspapers, and publishing a poem for the sustainment of one of them who had been imprisoned, Mr. Hogg puts into the mouth of his friend the following marvellous statement : " "With how unconquerable an aversion do I shrink from political articles and reviews \" Sometimes, alas ! he had to endure the affliction. " When waiting in a bookseller's shop or at an inn," says Mr. Hogg, relaxing a little from the severity of his first assertion, " he would sometimes, although rarely, permit his eye ABSURD STATEMENTS DISPROVED. 53 to be attracted by a murder or a storm !" What a careful watch had Mr. Hogg at this time over his young friend, when he stole behind his chair and looked over his shoulder to know the precise article that engaged the attention of the poet ! What a high idea he gives of the subjects most interesting to the youthful philanthropist ! Captain Medwin, as we have said, affects to be equally well informed as to Shelley's habits in this respect at a later period of his life. Speaking of his visit to the poet, at Pisa, in 1821, he says : " Never have I seen him read a newspaper." This, no doubt, may be perfectly true when taken as a personal recollection of the writer. It is, however, relied upon by those who, having adopted the earlier assertion of Mr. Hogg as to Shelley's dislike to newspapers, see in Captain Medwin's statement a complete confirma- tion of it. We have already disposed of Mr. Hogg's delusion the imparting to his friend sentiments and prejudices that were clearly his own. If additional arguments are necessary, they will be found in the single fact that within twelve months of the time at which this aversion to newspapers is said to have existed in the mind of Shelley, he was endeavouring to establish one himself, of which he would have the entire control. This occurred in Dublin, as will be fully detailed in our subsequent account of Shelley's visit to that city. The fact is immaterial whether Captain Medwin ever saw Shelley read a newspaper or not, when we have it under his own hand, in letters written from Italy, that he not only received newspapers, but sub- scribed for them. The following extracts are taken from Mr. Peacock's papers in Fraser's Magazine, 54 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. where the letters are published. Writing from Leg- horn, June, 1819, Shelley says " Cobbett still more and more delights me, with all my horror of the sanguinary commonplaces of his creed " (Fraser, March, 1860, p. 308). Later in the same year he says " The Examiners I receive. Hunt, as a political writer, pleases me more and more" (August, 1819). " Many thanks for your attention in sending the papers which contain the terrible and important news of Manchester Pray let me have the earliest political news which you consider important at this crisis" (September, 1819). "I have received all the papers you sent me, and the Examiners regu- larly " (September, 1819). " / take in Galignani's paper, which is filled with extracts from The Courier" (Pisa, May, 1820). "The Paris paper which I take in copied some excellent remarks from The Examiner" (Leghorn, July, 1820). Finally, at the end of the same letter, he begs of his friend Peacock to send him, with a number of books which he mentions, "Papers, 1 Indicators/ and whatever else you may think interest- ing." So much for the accuracy of Shelley's biogra- phers, from Mr. Hogg to Captain Medwin, and the followers of both. Putting aside this newspaper controversy, at least for a while, we may return to the account which Shelley himself gives of his occupations during the brief term of his University career. " Classical read- ing and poetical writing employed me during my residence at Oxford " (Letter to Godwin, Keswick, January loth, 1812). The only evidence of "poetical writing " that has yet been adduced is the curious volume entitled Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson. That work, slight and trifling as it is, " THE OXFORD UNIVERSITY AND CITY HERALD." 55 was published, as we have shown, within three weeks after Shelley's entrance at the University. If the time of his going to Oxford is correctly given by Mr. Hogg and by Lady Shelley, these poems must have been written by Shelley in the interval between his leaving Eton and his entrance at University College. One would expect more results from this systematic prosecution of " classical reading and poetical writing" than the Fragments, which are plainly the product of earlier studies and earlier inspirations. Whenever the missing poem the fact of the publication of which we have discovered is found, it will probably justify the assertion of Shelley, that when at Oxford he oc- cupied himself in "poetical writing" as well as "clas- sical reading." While waiting for the appearance of that poem, which will be most interesting as the first poetical work published by Shelley without the assistance or co-operation of an ally, any poems pub- lished at this period which with reasonable probability may be attributed to him must awaken a certain amount of curiosity. We have spoken of The Oxford University and City Herald, of which John Munday, the publisher of Margaret Nicholson, was printer. We shall shortly find Shelley's name avowedly in that paper, and in that paper is the earliest advertisement of the missing poem to which we have so often referred. The Eng- lish epigram on a watch, which Shelley translated into Latin, appeared, as we have pointed out, in The Oxford Herald so early as September i6th, 1809. We have suggested that the member for Shoreham (Mr. Timothy Shelley) could scarcely have done less than support by his subscription a Liberal journal which probably circulated largely in Sussex and the adjacent 5 6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. counties. Should this surmise be correct, the paper was, of course, week -after week forwarded to Field Place, and thus, even before he went to Oxford, may have been frequently in the hands of the young poet. It seems strange that no one has hitherto examined the Oxford journals of 1810 and 1811 for some traces of Shelley while at the University. The details given by Mr. Hogg are so copious, and appear to be so authentic, that curiosity was satisfied, and subsequent writers were content with reproducing in one form or another the elaborate narrative of that gentleman. It was difficult, it is true, to see those papers even at Oxford, as I am informed by the courteous librarian of the Bodleian that no Oxford journals of those years are preserved in that library. The British Museum is more fortunate, as it possesses in a tolerably com- plete state a copy of The Oxford University and City Herald for the years in which, on Shelley's account, we are most interested. This copy was "purchased at the sale of Mr. Heber's books, June, 1834," as mentioned on the fly-leaf of the volume, which contains, with some exceptions, the numbers from December, 1806, to the 28th February, 1815. The numbers for 1810 seem to be quite perfect, as are those of 1811 to the 29th of September. Through all these years The Oxford Herald seems to have preserved a uniform character. Its politics were ultra-Liberal, especially on all questions connected with the liberty of the Press. It appeared once a week, on Saturday, and was " printed and published by John Munday, at The Herald Office, High Street, Oxford." The name of J. Munday as printer is changed in the number for January i2th, 181 1, to those of "Munday and Slatter/' by whom it was subse- POEMS SIGNED "S." IN "THE OXFORD HERALD." 57 quently carried on. In the same number there is an advertisement of " Munday and Slatter, Printers and Booksellers, Herald Office, High Street, Oxford." A son of John Munday succeeded him in the business, but on his leaving Oxford, as mentioned in the ( in- teresting letter by the present representative of the firm, Mr. John Rose, which has already been given, the establishment was carried on under the names of Slatter and Rose. The Oxford Herald appears to have been conducted with a good deal of literary ability and taste. A column was usually devoted to a prose essay on some of the older English poets. Crashaw and other writers of the same period and school such as Cowley, traces of whose influence may perhaps be found in the lyrical poetry of Shelley are frequently mentioned. One of these essays, signed " P. S./' appeared during the period of Shelley's residence, and may possibly have been written by him. There is a marked absence, however, of original poetry in The Oxford Herald, or of verse written expressly for publication in that journal. Political squibs and lengthy odes are in abundance, but they are generally taken at second-hand from The Morning Chronicle, Sometimes a poem appeared on the same day in the two journals. With the ap- proach of Shelley a change appears in this respect in the pages of the paper; original verse begins to appear, is continued during his residence at the University, and ceases when he leaves it. By original verse I mean, as I have said, verse pub- lished originally in The Oxford Herald. Most of these are signed with the letter " S." They are chiefly translations from the Greek Anthology (of which in his collected works we have undoubted 58 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. specimens) and from the Latin poems of Vincent Bourne. Here is curiously combined in the same pieces some evidence of the " classical reading " and " poetical writing " of which he himself has spoken. These translations do not possess any remarkable merit, nor have they that peculiar Shelleyan flavour by which we can so easily recognise his later poems. They are, however, not inferior to most that he had written up to this period. The signature attached to them, the time at which they appeared, the journal in which they were published, and the course of his studies at the time, all create an amount of presump- tive evidence that justify me in offering them here as having in all probability been written by Shelley. Before the ordinarily received time of his arrival at Oxford, however, and as an avant-courier of the coming poet, there appeared in The Oxford Herald a short poem which, as I conceive, possesses to a remarkable degree that peculiar Shelleyan flavour of which I have spoken. This little poem cannot, of course, be put in comparison with some of those exquisite lyrics written by Shelley in his later years lyrics with which, in fact, nothing in the language can be compared. But there is something essentially Shelleyesque both in the language and the ideas. If the lines were not written by Shelley, they were the composition of some young poet who anticipated Shelley himself in what was peculiarly characteristic of Shelley. As Pope said of Chapman's translation of the Iliad, that it was " something like what one would imagine Homer him- self would have writ before he arrived at years of discretion " so this little poem may be offered as something like what Shelley would have sung before he attained the full faculty of lyrical expression : ODE TO THE DEATH OF SUMMER. 59 ODE TO THE DEATH OF 8TJMMEE. Zephyr, whither art thou straying, Tell me where : With prankish girls in gardens playing, False and fair ; A butterfly's light back bestriding ; Queen bees to honeysuckles guiding, Or in a swinging harebell riding, Free from care ? Before Aurora's car you amble High in air ; At noon, when Neptune's sea-nymphs gambol, Braid their hair ; When on the trembling billows rolling, Or on the smooth sands idly strolling, Or in cool grottoes they lie lolling, You sport there. To chase the moonbeams up the mountains, You prepare : Or dance with elves on brinks of fountains, Mirth to share ; Now seen with love-lorn lilies weeping, Now with a blushing rosebud sleeping ; Whilst fays from forth their chambers peeping, Cry, Oh rare ! The braiding the hair of the sea-nymphs by the breeze the personification of the "love-lorn lilies" the intense enjoyment of Nature throughout, and the abrupt exclamation at the end, all raise a strong probability that this lyric was written by Shelley. It appeared in The Oxford Herald of Saturday, Sep- tember 22nd, 1810. Shelley was then at Field Place, as we have letters in the Stockdale correspondence dated there, both before and immediately after. As Shelley had sent so far as Edinburgh to the Messrs. Ballautyne the MS. of his long poem The Wandering 60 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. Jew, written in conjunction with Captain Medwin, to which they refer in their curious letter of the 24th of September, 1810, there is no improbability in his having sent a short lyric to Oxford for publication in a local paper. It should be noticed that the poem is printed very conspicuously in The Oxford Herald, at the top of a column not usually devoted to litera- ture, whether in justice to the merits of the composi- tion itself, or in deference to the social position of the supposed writer, cannot now be ascertained. The evidence of authorship in the " Ode to the Death of Summer" is altogether, or nearly so, internal. In the translations from the Greek Anthologia it is perhaps exclusively external, arising from the signature and the classical character of the poems themselves. The first of these versions from the Greek is given in The Oxford University and City Herald of Saturday, January 5th, 1811: - THE GBAPB. From the Greek Anthologia. This grape, of future wine the store, Who from the tree unripen'd bore ? And, loathing its yet acid taste, Thus on the ground half-eaten cast ? To every footstep passing by The spurn'd remains obnoxious lie ; To him, the foe of mirth and love, May Bacchus ever hostile prove, As to the barb'rous prince of yore Who Thracia's blooming vines uptore : This grape, thus wantonly abus'd, When in the sparkling glass infus'd, This might have warrn'd some poet's lay, Or chased corroding care away ! S. In the next number, for January i2th, i8ir,is the following : EPIGRAMS FROM THE GREEK ANTHOLOGIA. 61 EPIGBAM. From the Greek Anthologia. Supposed to be spolcen by some Hoses on the ^Birth-day of a Beautiful Girl ^vho was on the Point of Marriage. We that were wont in Spring's soft lap to bloom, Now early blush, 'mid Winter's dreary gloom, And on this day we smiling hail thy charms, That soon, sweet maid, shall bless a husband's arms ; More pleased thy lovely temples to adorn, Than wait the rising of the vernal morn. S. The series of epigrams from the Greek is here interrupted by one from the Latin. The signature " S. " is changed also for " VERSIFICATOR," but the writer is evidently the same person, as the translations from the Anthologia are resumed under the latter signa- ture on March 9th, 18 n, sixteen days before Shelley's expulsion, after which they no longer appear. In The Oxford Herald of Saturday, February 1811, is the following: TBANSLATION OF AN EPIGEAM OF VINCENT BOUENE. Down the river's gentle tide, As to London Bridge we glide, Hark ! the bells of Mary's tower Sweetly warbled music pour ! With what harmony and grace Each preserves its stated place ! While the air, above, around, Trembles with the varied sound. Merry changes ceaseless glide To old Thames's willow'd side : Still recede, and sweeter still Through the raptur'd breast they thrill, Such the pleasure to our hearts Distant melody imparts Enter once within the tow'r, All the harmony is o'er. VEESIFICATOE.* * Since this page was in type I have found in The Oxford 62 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. The Oxford Herald of Saturday, March 9th, 18 u, contains two epigrams from the Greek, with which, as I have stated, the series closes : ON OLD AGE. From the Greek Anthologia. Mortals for age, when distant, pray ; Age, when at hand, they wish away ; The thing of which we're not possest, We constantly esteem the best. VERSIFICATOB. VENUS AND THE MUSES. From, the same. The Queen of Love once threat'ning vow'd, Unless the Nine her sway allow'd, That Cupid's never-erring dart Should quickly pierce them to the heart. Then they : " On Mars your menace try, The little urchin we defy." VEKSIFICATOR. There is one thing very remarkable about these last two epigrams in connexion with the suggestion I have ventured to make as to their authorship, and it is this, that they appear in the same number of The Oxford Herald which contains the earliest advertisement of the poem unknown to all Shelley's biographers, to his widow and to his family, which he published on that day. Before entering on this curious and most interest- ing subject, we have to retrace our steps a little, and resume the inquiry as to Shelley's connexion with the editors of newspapers, and the interest which he took in the political questions of the day. Herald another translation from Vincent Bourne, signed " S. S Edmonton." Whatever effect this may have on the suggestion thrown out above, it is only right that it should be mentioned. CHAPTER IV. T T is not the least of the peculiarities connected with Shelley's singular story, that while so much that was not only written but published by him remains, and will probably always remain, undiscovered, so many attempts have been made to pass off forged and supposititious documents as his. The most celebrated example of this ingenious mode of trading on the growing celebrity of the poet is the well-known collection of so-called Letters of Percy Bysshe Shelley, published in 1852, and edited, it is to be presumed much to his own subsequent chagrin, by Mr. Robert Browning. This publication, it is scarcely necessary to say, was immediately withdrawn from circulation, and has now become scarce. That some of the letters are forgeries there can be no question, but others, it is almost certain, are genuine. Indeed, it is not easy to see how the counterfeits could have been manufactured without the forgers having some authentic originals to imitate. All the circumstances of the case point to the first letter of the collection as being a genuine document. If so, it is the earliest piece of political writing which we have from the pen of Shelley. Shelley, into whose rooms, if we are to believe Mr. Hogg, " a newspaper never found its way the whole period of his residence at Oxford/' thus addresses the editor of a London newspaper from Oxford : 6 4 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. ' To the Editor of The Statesman, London. " University College, Oxford, Feb. 22, 1811. " Sir, The present age has been distinguished from every former period of English history by the number of those writers who have suffered the penalties of the law for the freedom and the spirit with which they descanted on the morals of the age, and chastised the vices or ridiculed the follies of individuals of every rank of life, and among every description of society. In former periods of British civilization, as during the flourishing ages of Greece and Rome, the oratorical censor and the satirical poet were regarded as exercising only that just pre-eminence to which superior genius and an intimate knowledge of life and human nature were conceived to entitle them. The Mac Flecknoe of Dryden, the Dunciad and the satirical imitations of Pope, remained secure from molestation by the Attorney-General ; the literary castigators of a Bolingbroke and a Wharton enjoyed the triumph of truth and justice unawed by ex-offic'ws ; and Addison could describe a coward and a liar without being called to account for his inuendos by the interference of the judicial servants of the King. " But times are altered, and a man may now be sent to prison for a couple of years, and ruined per- haps for life, because he ' calls a spade a spade/ and tells a public individual the very truths that are obvious to the most partial of his friends.* * This passage proves almost conclusively that the person addressed as " Editor of The Statesman" must have been Mr. Finnerty. The " public individual" of whom he published those " obvious truths" that were pronounced a libel by Lord Ellen- borough was Lord Castlereagh. The former editor of The States- man, Mr. Lovell, was suffering imprisonment for a different offence. LETTER TO THE EDITOR OF " THE STATESMAN." 65 " As I am not in the number of those determined censors to whom Newgate is an elysium, and whom the very idea of being persecuted by the Attorney- General exhilarates more effectually than all the treasures of the Castalian fountain; yet as I love to speculate on the virtues and the vices of the world, it has been the object of my anxious study to discover some honest and easy means of speaking the whole truth, without incurring the vengeance of Government. The ultimate intention of my aim is to induce a meeting of such enlightened, unprejudiced members of the com- munity, whose independent principles expose them to evils which might thus become alleviated ; and to form a methodical society which should be organized so as to resist the coalition of the enemies of liberty, which at present renders any egression of opinion on matters of policy dangerous to individuals. " Although perfectly unacquainted with you privately, I address you as a common friend to liberty, thinking that, in cases of this urgency and importance, etiquette ought not to stand in the way of usefulness. With the hope of securing your co-operation, " I remain, Sir, " Your most obedient servant, " PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY." This letter, whatever its claim to authenticity may be, is dated February 22nd, j8n. Six days later that is, on the 2nd of March in the same year Shelley addressed, for the first time, another news- paper editor then personally unknown to him, but who became a few years later one of his most valued and intimate friends Leigh Hunt. Whatever question may be raised as to the p 66 PERCY BYSSBE SHELLEY. genuineness of the letter " to the Editor of The Statesman" there can be none as to that which Shelley addressed " to the Editor of The Examiner" The original autograph is still probably in existence, having been in the possession of Mr. George Henry Lewes in 1841, who published it for the first time in his article on Percy Bysshe Shelley in the North British Review of that year. There is, howeverj some difficulty about it. In the first place, the super- scription of the letter is not given, and we are therefore in doubt whether it was addressed "to the Editor of The Examine)'" or "to Leigh Hunt "by name. In the copy of this letter which Mr. Hogg very re- luctantly published in the second volume of his Life of Shelley, and which he was not aware had been already in print for seventeen years, the words " to Leigh Hunt " are no doubt added ; but this was merely done for his information by Mrs. Shelley, as will be plain from his own account of the matter : " A strange epistle," says Mr. Hogg, " of which a copy in Mrs. Shelley's writing has lately been placed in my hands, may be conveniently introduced and noticed in this place as being connected with the subject, although it ivas written two years before, during our residence at Oxford." Life, vol. ii. pp. 187, 188. This is truly a wonderful specimen of Mr. Hogg's " convenient " mode of manipulating materials en- trusted to him when he finds they are directly contra- dictory to some passionate or petulant dictum pro- pounded by himself in some other portion of his confused and chaotic biography. One would think that a letter written by Shelley when at Oxford might be more " conveniently introduced and noticed" when describing his residence there in 1811, than forcibly LETTER TO " THE EXAMINER" WHEN PUBLISHED, 67 wrenched out of its proper place and given in his corre- spondence from Tanyralt in 1812. But this would not suit the plan of Mr. Hogg. Having committed himself in his original essays published in the New Monthly Magazine to the ahsurd declaration that " a newspaper never found its way to his rooms the whole period of his residence at Oxford/' it would not do in the reprint- ing of those papers to put side hy side with that state- ment a document which completely established its inaccuracy, if not its absolute untruth. He therefore relegates the tell-tale letter of March 2nd, 1 8 1 1, to the safe limbo of his second volume, by which time ordinary readers had quite forgotten the fable of the first. The disconcerted biographer had, however, to publish the letter somewhere, and he does so at length, but with a very bad grace. A better biographer than Mr. Hogg, but one who has unfortunately adopted too many of the loose and unfounded statements of that gentleman, speaks of the two volumes of the Life of Shelley as " Mr. Hogg's irresistibly amusing book/' If it be amusing, it is certainly at the expense of Mr. Hogg himself, and not at that of some of his characters (including his hero), whom he attempts to hold up to ridicule. Thus it is, that when he discovers Shelley had done certain acts and written certain letters about which he had not thought it necessary to consult his " guide, philosopher, and friend," Mr. Thomas Jeffer- son Hogg, those acts and those letters are at once condemned as the ne plus ultra of folly, of which in his after-life Shelley was heartily ashamed. Had Mr. Hogg lived to find out that the divine poet, his incom- parable friend, not only ventured to send letters with- out his knowledge, but absolutely had the audacity to write and publish poems and pamphlets without the F 2 08 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " imprimatur " of Mr. J. F. H., -what would have been his surprise ! how " amusing " the description of Shelley's subsequent shame ! Unhappily, however, we have not the third and fourth volumes of the "irresistibly amusing book/' and must be content with the first and second. The present sample could scarcely be exceeded. " The truth is," says Mr. Hogg, making a clean breast of it, "my poor friend knew well that it was quite wrong " (that is, to have written a generous letter to Leigh Hunt), " because he never communicated his intentions to myself, or to any of his friends ; he never told me what he had done, being un- questionably ashamed of his precipitancy ; he never showed me the letter or the answer to it, if he ever received one." Life, vol. ii. p. 190. Before giving this letter, which it is necessary to print for the illustration of this part of my subject, one or two other instances of these overt acts of high treason against the sovereign rights of Mr. Jefferson Hogg may be mentioned. In 1812, as will fully be detailed hereafter, Shelley visited Dublin on a political crusade, without the necessary forms of obtaining permission from his despotic master. This was evidently a pira- tical proceeding, which, though unintelligible, could not be silently passed over. With a sort of mild severity, but still using the stereotyped phrases, he says : " He did not communicate his intentions to me at the time. I never heard of his exploits in Dublin until after their termination, and but little did I learn at any period from himself. He seldom spoke of them. If he ever referred to the subject at all, it was briefly : and in truth he appeared to be heartily ashamed of the whole proceeding" (ii. p. 75). When we come to treat of this period, the last statement FIJIST LETTER TO LEIGH HUNT. 69 will be found to be contradicted by Shelley's own reflections on the subject, as given in an unpublished letter. But when at Dublin Shelley published two elaborate pamphlets in furtherance of his political scheme. On this additional proof of the young re- former's want of confidence in his constitutional adviser, the elderly Tory gentleman of 1858 thus descants : " Bysshe invariably sent me a copy of all his other works, whether long or short, in verse or in prose, as soon as they were published, or, more commonly, as soon as they were printed; but he never gave me, either at the time of their appearance or subsequently, his two Irish pamphlets. He never named them to me, and I saw them for the first time a few months ago" (ii. p. 76). It will be found, quite apart from the private grounds of complete separation between Shelley and his college acquaintance about this period, that there were other publications of the poet besides the Irish pamphlets which were not sent to Mr. Hogg, probably because the writer knew they could meet with little sympathy from one the depth and shallowness of whose pre- judices, both personal and political, the young en- thusiast had by that time pretty well gauged. Shelley's first letter to Leigh Hunt, as Editor of The Examiner, is as follows : "University College, Oxford, March 2nd, 1811. " Sir, -Permit me, although a stranger, to offer my sincerest congratulations on the occasion of that triumph so highly to be prized by men of liberality ; permit me also to submit to your consideration, as one of the most fearless enlighteners of the public mind at the present time, a scheme of mutual safety and mutual 70 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. indemnification for men of public spirit and principle, which, if carried into effect, would evidently be pro- ductive of incalculable advantages. Of the scheme, the following is an address to the public, the proposal for a meeting, and it shall be modified according to your judgment, if you will do me the honour to consider the point. " The ultimate intention of my aims is to induce a meeting of such enlightened and unprejudiced members of the community, whose independent principles expose them to evils which might thus become alleviated ; and to form a methodical society which should be organized so as to resist the coalition of the enemies of liberty, which at present renders any expression of opinion on matters of policy dangerous to individuals. It has been for want of societies of this nature that corruption has attained the height at which we now behold it ; nor can any of us bear in mind the very great influence which, some years since, was gained by ' Illuminism/ without considering that a society of equal extent might establish national liberty on as firm a basis as that which would have supported the visionary schemes of a completely equalized community. "Although perfectly unacquainted with you pri- vately, 1 address you as a common friend to liberty, thinking that, in cases of this urgency and impor- tance, etiquette ought not to stand in the way of use- fulness. "My father is in Parliament, and on attaining twenty-one I shall, in all probability, fill his vacant seat. On account of the responsibility to which my residence in this University subjects me, I, of course, dare not publicly avow all I think ; but the time will come when I hope that my every endeavour, insufficient MR. BROWNING AND LETTERS OF SHELLEY. ji as this may be, will be directed to the advancement of liberty. " I remain, Sir, " Your most obedient servant, " To Leigh Hunt." " P. B. SHELLEY. The general resemblance of these two letters one to the Editor of The Statesman, and the other to the Editor of The Examiner is at once apparent, but it has not previously been pointed out that two important passages in each are identical. These, for the sake of comparison, I have printed in italics. It will be remembered that the circumstance which first created a suspicion of the genuineness of the letters published in 1852 under the superintendence of Mr. Browning, was the introduc- tion into a letter purporting to have been written to Godwin in 1819 of a passage published long subse- quently in The Quarterly Review by Sir Francis Palgrave. The passage in The Quarterly lingered in the memory of Mr. Palgrave, the son of the writer, but escaped the notice of Mr, Browning, although the subject of the paper in which it is found, " The Fine Arts in Florence/' might reasonably have attracted the attention of Mr. Browning, who resided so long in that city. The forgetfulness of one so deeply read in Shelleyan literature is more surprising, as he must have been long familiar with the letter to Leigh Hunt, originally published by Mr. Lewes in 1841. This identity should, of course, have been pointed out, but in the opinion of the present writer it by no means establishes the fact that the letter to the Editor of The Statesman is a forgery. The object which Shelley had in view was the same, but the position of the two editors at the time was different. The 72 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Government had succeeded in its prosecution of The Statesman, but was defeated in that of The Examiner. "While condoling with the Editor of the former on his imprisonment, and congratulating the latter on his triumph, Shelley proposes to each the formation of an Association which, among other things, would place in greater security the freedom of the press. We have here the outline of those " Proposals," which he pub- lished a year later at Dublin in the second of his Irish pamphlets. It is not at all improbable that on the general subject of his letters, which were intended rather as a circular to the Liberal papers than a special communication to any, he would have repeated the exact phrases which seemed best to express his ideas. It does not appear that he received any reply to either of the letters. I shall have presently to inquire who in all probability was the person whom Shelley may have addressed as Editor of The Statesman. The account which Leigh Hunt gives of the letter addressed to himself is so confused as to raise the presumption that he did not receive it until some years later, when Shelley personally sought his acquaintance, if indeed it ever reached his hands at all. He never published the letter himself. In 1841 it is found in the possession of a stranger, who first prints it. Mr. Hogg, in 1858, not knowing that it had been published before, prints it from a MS. copy in the handwriting of Mrs. Shelley, who probably took it from the printed version of Mr. Lewes, and finally it is given most likely from the same source by Mr. Thornton Hunt, in the corre- spondence of his father, with no further explanation than this, that " among the letters of this period I find the first from Shelley/' Leigh Hunt, in his Autobiography, thus describes his earliest recollections MISTAKEN RECOLLECTION OF LEIGH HUNT. 73 of Shelley : " He was then a youth not come to his full growth, very gentlemanly, earnestly gazing at every object that interested him, and quoting the Greek dra- matists. Not long afterwards he married his first wife, and he subsequently wrote to me while I was in prison, as I have before mentioned." Leigh Hunt's Autobio- graphy, edited by his eldest son. London, 1860, p. 255. This is, of course, entirely wrong. The letter " be- fore mentioned" was written in 1811, two years before Leigh Hunt was in prison. There is no evidence to show that Shelley was personally known to Leigh Hunt until long after his marriage with his first wife ; and Thornton Hunt expressly mentions that among the literary and political visitors to his father when imprisoned in 1813 and 1814, he has no recollection of Shelley. Mr. Thornton Hunt supplies the omission of his father, and tells us how, but not when, Leigh Hunt and Percy Bysshe Shelley became acquainted. Speaking of Mr. Hunter, the bookseller in St. Paul's Churchyard who it would seem was the second hus- band of Mrs. Kent, the mother of Marian Kent, Hunt's wife he says : " It was indeed Mr. Rowland Hunter who first brought Leigh Hunt and his most valued friend personally together. Shelley had brought - a manuscript poem which proved by no means suited to the publishing house in St. Paul's Churchyard ; but Mr. Hunter sent the young reformer to seek the counsel of Leigh Hunt" (p. 255). The poem here referred to may have been Queen Mob, which Shelley privately printed in 1813 (though Hunt could scarcely have forgotten a circumstance connecting that famous poem with his first personal acquaintance with its author) ; but the anecdote cannot by any possibility refer to 181 j. 74 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. We return now to the question, who was the Editor of The Statesman newspaper, to whom Shelley is alleged to have written on the 22nd of February, 18 1 1 ; and what were the circumstances that provoked the letter we have transcribed ? The Statesman newspaper was the first political speculation of Leigh Hunt and his elder brother John. In a letter to his future wife, Marian Kent, dated Gainsborough, Sunday, February 23rd, 1806, Leigh Hunt says : " My brother John sent me a letter last night, begging that I would come to town as soon as possible, as the first number of The Statesman will be published on the 26th/' . . . . " The Earl of Moira has taken the paper under his immediate patronage, and it will no doubt have a large circulation in the Ministerial circles" (Correspondence, vol. i. p. 17). " His brother John," says Thornton Hunt, " with whom he resided for a time, was a printer, and they had already endeavoured to unite their forces. John had sought to establish the paper already mentioned, The States- man" . . . . " but it was relinquished apparently through some want of perseverance in the capitalists. Early in 1 808 the brothers set up The Examiner" (Ibid. vol. i. p. 42). In the British Museum there is, unfortunately, no copy of The Statesman. That noble library, which with all its shortcomings is one of the finest in the world, contains but a single number of a paper which, if for nothing else, would be interesting from having been established by Leigh Hunt, and contributed to by Shelley. It is also memorable from the sufferings of at least one of its proprietors. Shelley's letter to the Editor, as given in Mr. Browning's suppressed volume, naturally awakened in me the desire to know ' ' THE STA TESMAN, "AND " THE DAT." 75 if in the paper itself there was any acknowledgment of its receipt. Unfortunately, but one number, as I have said, of The Statesman, and that of a date sub- sequent to the period we are investigating, is preserved in the British Museum. A few facts connected with it may, however, be given from other sources. The Statesman was established, as we have seen, in 1806, by Leigh Hunt and his brother John. It re- mained in their hands until 1 808, when The Examiner was started. In September, 1810, it was found, to his cost, to be the property of one Daniel Lovell. The character of the paper and the cause of its misfor- tunes were very succinctly stated by Lord Folkestone in a speech delivered by him in the House of Com- mons on the a8th of March, 1811. " The Statesman," said he, " is a paper which has attracted notice by its opposition to Ministers" (Cobbetfs Political Regis- ter, April ^rd, 1811, p. 818). An excuse was easily found to set the machinery of the law against it, the Editor having copied into his own journal two articles which had appeared in contemporary newspapers. One of these was from The Day,* which severely com- mented on the conduct of the military in Piccadilly on the yth of April, 1810, at the arrest of Sir Francis Burdett. No prosecution was instituted against the * The Day, according to the late Master of the Rolls in Ireland, Mr. Walsh, was established by James Farrell (the asso- ciate of Robert Emmett, but subsequently an eminent merchant in London), Irish Johnson, Quin, and Peter Finnerty. " Among other literary speculations," says the late Judge, " they established a newspaper called The Day, which did not succeed. It was proposed to improve its appearance by a new and expensive ar- rangement and an improved title, which Farrell suggested should be, ' Sufficient for The Day is the evil thereof.' The evil day was then given up." Ireland Sixty Years Ago, p. 185. 76 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. papers in which these articles originally appeared, the whole vengeance of the Government being concen- trated on the head of Mr. Lovell. Making no de- fence except that the articles complained of were copied in the usual way of selection, the Editor al- lowed judgment to go by default. The excuse as- sisted him little in a Court presided over by Lord Ellenborough. Mr. Lovell was sentenced to an im- prisonment which extended to the incredible length of nearly five years, in consequence of his being unable to procure the necessary bail. In the session of 1815 attention was drawn to his case in Parliament, and he was at length released from his imprisonment, which he had endured from the 29th of November, 1810. This was a case that even in its inception might surely have aroused all the generous indignation of Shelley, but it will be remembered that on February 22nd,i8n, when the letter to the Editor of The Statesman was written, Mr. Lovell had been already three months in prison. It is difficult to understand the sudden interest taken by Shelley in Mr. Lovell, supposing him to be the person addressed as the Editor of The Statesman. It is possible, however, that the individual addressed was not Mr. Lovell at all, but a totally different person, who either had been acting as editor since the incar- ceration of Lovell in the previous November, or who, from having published in The Statesman, as well as in The Morning Chronicle, the so-called libel on Lord Castlereagh, for which he too suffered a long imprisonment, might have been considered by Shelley as the editor of the former paper. This individual, whose name the present work has been the first to mention in connexion with that of Shelley, as we "THE EXAMINER" AND MR. FINNERTY. 77 have briefly stated in our opening chapter, and in a preceding note, was Mr. Peter Finnerty. The eloquence of Curran, as we have said, has pre- served the name of Peter Finnerty from oblivion ; but few could imagine that perhaps a more enduring fame has been reserved for it in the poetry of Shelley. Such, however, is the fact, and such is the singular story I have to relate. The story of Mr. Peter Finnerty has been told and the principles involved in his prosecution discussed by no less skilful a hand than that of Leigh Hunt. The future author of Rimini had not yet made the acquaintance of Shelley, but as Editor of The Examiner he courageously defended in the person of Mr. Fin- nerty the conduct of a brother journalist, and upheld a cause then very much imperilled, the liberty of the press. Expecting to be an immediate sharer in Mr. Finnerty's imprisonment, he was not deterred from avowing a complete participation in the opinions for the publication of which that gentleman was then enduring punishment. This thorough knowledge of the case of Peter Finnerty renders it peculiarly strange that Leigh Hunt, of all people, should have been ig- norant that his illustrious friend Shelley had sus- tained as a poet the same man whom he himself had defended as a journalist. In The Examiner for February lyth, 18 n, and February 24th, 1 8 1 1, are two elaborate articles on the prosecution of Peter Finnerty. Both have the usual signature used by Leigh Hunt in his political writings. The first article deals with the principles involved in the case ; the second, with the facts. The reader will scarcely consider the latter tedious, giving as it does the history of a man for whose benefit Percy 78 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. Bysshe Shelley wrote and published a volume of verse : From The Examiner, February 24th, 1811. :< The immediate cause of Mr. Finnerty's present misfortune is well known to the public. He had accompanied the expedition to Walcheren* at the request of Sir Home Popham, in order to write an account of it for publication, but was forced to return home by an order to that effect by Lord Castlereagh, the then Secretary of the War Department. Finding himself deeply injured in profit, reputation, and health, by a proceeding so directly calculated to put him to loss and expense, to degrade his character, and to prey upon his mind, he thought on his return of bringing an action against his lordship, but was dissuaded from it as of no use ; and therefore he vented his feelings in a letter to Lord Castlereagh, which was published in The Morning Chronicle [and The Statesman], and in which he plainly accused the Viscount of an intention to harass and destroy him, reminding his lordship at the same time of the tyrannous and horrible cruelties practised upon the people of Ireland during the noble lord's administration in that country. In consequence of this letter, the ATTORNEY-GENERAL was directed to * The Walcheren Expedition is best remembered at the present day by the celebrated epigram, which has been published in a variety of forms. The following is the original version, which I take from The Morning Chronicle of Monday, Feb. 26th, 1810 : Abstract and Brief Chronicle of the Documents and Evidence concerning the Expedition to the Scheldt. LOED CHATHAM, with his sword undrawn, Kept waiting for SIR RICHAED STKACHAN ; Sir Richard, eager to be at 'em, Kept waiting too for whom ? LOED CHATHAM LEIGH HUNT ON PETER FINNERTY. 79 file an information for libel against Mr. FINNERTY, and the result, as everybody knows, has been the imprison- ment of that gentleman a heavy expense in addition to his past losses, and a prospect of total ruin in his removal to a distant gaol, far from the scenes and occupations in which his pen had hitherto enabled him to procure a subsistence. " But these later facts disclose little. It is naturally asked why the Secretary of State, who suffered and even encouraged other persons to accompany the expedition, should demand back Mr. FINNERTY alone ? The Ministerialists easily satisfy themselves on the occasion by saying ' his lordship must have had excellent reasons / and The Morning Post, that epitome of all that is accomplished and interesting, in order to settle the matter for ever, informed the public that Mr. FINNERTY was a suspicious person, with a very treasonable cast of mind. As the Ministers and their friends, however, have been long discovered not to abound in ' excellent reasons ' for anything, and as decent people, who look to facts and events, are accustomed to believe the reverse of what the said Post advances, the public waited to hear what Mr. FINNERTY himself should produce on his trial in ex- planation; and they were not surprised at discovering that a long antipathy, common between my Lord Castlereagh and his countrymen, had subsisted ever since 1798 [1797] between his lordship and Mr. FINNERTY, in consequence of the view which each took of the other's character the former regarding his opponent as a bad subject, the latter considering his lordship as an execrable Minister. Here then the parties are at issue : the dispute resolves itself into a question, of political character, and by looking a little So . PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. at their past actions by observing which of the two has most offended honest people, and, consequently, which of the two is most desirous of concealing the wrong- he has done we shall quickly see to which of the two the general support belongs, and to which the universal contempt. "To begin with Mr. FCNNERTY, who is the person first accused. This gentleman, it must be confessed in the outset, has one deadly sin in the eye of a number of persons he is an Irishman, a native of that country where to feel for the people about you is to be accused of bloodthirstiness, and to differ with the propriety of cheating them is to show that you are not fit to be trusted. "What will at once determine the persons aforesaid to conclude him guilty beyond question is, that he long ago expressed those feelings warmly, and has been in the habit of so doing when- ever an opportunity offered. It was in this way, like the rest of his countrymen, that he acquired the par- ticular notice of LORD CASTLEREAGH. In 1798 [1797], Mr. FINNERTY, at that time twenty years of age, was following his business as a printer in Dublin, where he was concerned in a paper called The Press. This and another print called The Northern Star were the only newspapers, it seems, which ventured to notice the house-burnings, the scourgings, the pickettings, the half-hangings, and other dreadful inflictions then practised against suspected people atrocities which, in proportion to their iniquity, it was the natural wish of the perpetrators to keep from the knowledge of the people of England. The destruction of the latter paper was effected, and The Press alone remained to repeat the groans of the country, and to waft them over to the ear of this nation ; but not FINNERTY THE FIRST PUBLISHER OF "THE PRESS." 8r long. If to speak the truth is accounted a punishable offence even in England, where it may be spoken without shaking everybody's conscience, what must it be accounted in Ireland, where every scourge was reeking, and every dungeon echoed, with the crimes of the rulers? Mr. FINNERTY was soon convicted of libel, and the customary miscreants were not want- ing to bring forward an accusation of treasonable connexion. Another informer, whom the fellow known by the appellation of Major Sirr (Town Major) had been encouraging to make the same charge, con- gratulated himself, as he afterwards declared in print, on being 'relieved from the necessity of adding another to the list of innocent men imprisoned through his means.' " Mr. FINNERTY, after suffering a public punish- ment which is inflicted on the lowest and vilest of our species the pillory was committed to gaol, where he had been but a short time when the superintendent magistrate of Dublin, with a summary mode of pro- ceeding perfectly astounding to all of us who are ac- customed to regard our property as secure, took a party of soldiers to The Press office, and ' destroyed/ says the affidavit, ' not only the papers ready for publication, but the types and other printing materials, amount- ing in value to about 500^.' This man was a creature of Lord Castlereagh, who had been understood for some time to hold the Secretaryship under the Lord Lieutenant as locum tenens for Mr. Pelham, from which circumstance and his predominant influence in affairs the ostensible Administration was usually called Lord Castlereagh's Government. Be that as it may, his lordship openly succeeded to office during Mr. Finnerty's imprisonment; and the latter, who was 82 PERCY BYSiSBE SHELLEY. confined in a gaol-room sixteen feet by nine, with four- teen other persons, some of them convicted of capital offences, and who was otherwise subjected to those attendant circumstances of degradation and disgust which render imprisonment trebly painful to decent minds, wrote twice to his lordship on the subject, stating the sickness and pain of mind which he suffered in consequence of such treatment; but no notice was taken of the applications. Upon his liberation, finding that he was in no way of procuring a subsistence, Mr. FINNERTY waited upon the noble lord to request a passport for leaving the country, but this too he was refused, not without harshness and insult ; and at last he found himself under the necessity of escaping to England in the disguise of a sailor. Here, where printing-presses are not to be cut up by a magistrate, and where fifteen people are not confined at a time in a room sixteen feet by nine, Mr. FINNERTY concluded himself safe from persecution; and for a time past his pen had enabled him to live comfortably in the metro- polis ; but he formed a strange estimate of the mag- nanimity or conscious virtue of his enemies, if he thought that the decided part which he continued to manifest against their proceedings would induce them to be regardless of his. To write warmly in news- papers, to speak warmly at public meetings, and to prepare the statements of aggrieved officers* for the public eye. were so many stimulants that kept alive their memory and their dislike ; and the first time Mr. FINNERTY subjected himself to the arm of power, he felt it in all its weight. In addition to the vexation * The " aggrieved officer" here alluded to by Leigh Hunt, was the gallant Sir Home Popham, afterwards Admiral. The " state- THE WALCHEREN EXPEDITION. 83 of being obliged to return from Walcheren, he had the mortification of seeing his character become an object of the lowest suspicion, in consequence of the sudden- ness and apparent alarm of the order for that purpose ; and people whose subserviency or whose temper inclines them to believe anything on these occasions, were not slow, as usual, to give the worst colour to what they thought. Some of them, however, went beyond their policy in so doing. A certain nobleman connected with Lord Castlereagh was heard to say at a tavern in Middle- hurst, in the presence of several officers, ' I wish some one would shoot that fellow out of the way at once/ Without pushing this speech to its extremity, and in- sisting, as an Attorney-General might insist, that the said nobleman being a malicious and murderous per- son, and manifestly intending, conspiring, and devising the death of the said PETER FINNERTY, did hope to stir up some person or persons to take a loaded mus- ket and discharge said musket in the face of said Peter it may be fairly asserted that such an ebullition of impatience argued a malicious feeling against him, and showed that the person who uttered it was prepared to chagrin and annoy him in order to gratify those who wished his injury. And what could have dictated the order for his return but his personal obnoxious- ness to men in office ? So confident were those who invited him to Walcheren of the harmlessness of their object in so doing, that they even proposed to him to ment" of his case prepared by Mr. Finnerty will probably be found in the " Full and Correct Report of the Trial of Sir Home Popham." &c. London: 1807. "And maybe had of the different book- sellers in the seaport towns." It is likely that Mr. Finnerty was also the Editor of this volume, which contains an elaborate preface extending to xxxii pages. G 2 84 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. inform the commander of the expedition, beforehand, of his intention to write a mere military account of it for the public a proposition which he very properly rejected as humiliating and servile. What then could it be ? His friend Sir Home Popham was in the confidence of the Ministers ;* they would not willingly let us suppose that they were conscious of defects in the military system not altogether fitted for the in- spection of a shrewd observer; and if the expedition terminated in deadly disgrace, it is hardly to be sup- posed that they anticipated such determination. It is, * The preceding note has shown the connexion between Mr. Finnerty and Sir Home Popham. The treatment the former received is the more remarkable from the high estimation in which the gallant Admiral was held by majiy members of the govern- ment. It is singular that the letter, about to be quoted, was written by Sir R. Strachan, the most intimate friend of Sir Home Popham and the godfather of one of his sons. Even in the second generation a grandson of Sir Home Popham has " Strachan" prefixed to a name of great historic interest, connected both with Ireland and England in the reign of Elizabeth. The following is the letter : " His Majesty's Ship Venerable, Downs, July 26, 1809. " MEM. It is my directions that the captains and commanders of his Majesty's ships and vessels under my command do report whether there is a person or gentleman of the name of Peter Finnerty on board any of his Majesty's ships, and in what capa- city, and if he is, to send him here. It is my directions that the agents of transports make inquiry, and report the same. " (Signed) E. STBACHAN. " To the respective captains, &c. &c." Case of Peter Finnerty. London: 1811, p. 7. If a letter of this description had been addressed during the Crimean war " to the respective captains" before Sebastopol, referring to a " person or gentleman" named William Eussell, we know what would have been the result. The injury to Mr. PETER FINNERTY AND LORD CASTLEREAGH. 85 on the contrary, certain that they anticipated a signal triumph ; that they expected the Dutch, on being put to fire and sword, to fall affectionately into their arms, and that my LOKD CHATHAM intended to cover himself with glory with as much ease and leisurely gaping as he would put on his night-cap. But, says The Post, Mr. FINNERTY had been suspected in Ireland of treasonable connexion. Then, says common sense, why was not the business investigated, when he him- self repeatedly requested an investigation of this very LORD CASTLEREAGH in consequence of the language held by his lordship against him ? But no ; the truth is that he had annoyed the Irish Government ; in other words, he had been a libeller a character which, when regarded with reference to the definition lately given of libel, and to the times and the country in which he wrote, the first impulse of honest men is, I verily believe, to look upon with respect. Had he written in liquor, of a different colour from ink had he practised the scourge against which he exclaimed his usage might have been very different ; for the public will not easily forget that the same Govern ment which recalled from an expedition a man wh( had proved himself the foe of cruelty and oppression Finnerty was really too serious to admit of jocularity, yet the following squib or travesty of the letter which I have seen some- where was absolutely written : "SlE HOME POPHAM AND MR. FlNNEBTY. Sir It. Strachan to the Respective Captains. Should Peter Finnerty be found On board the Fleet to Walcheren bound, You're ordered, sir, to stop him- Too dangerous to be let to roam ; Arrest the rogue , and pop him home, In spite of Sir Home Popham !" 86 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. sent out with an expedition, in a situation of emolu- ment and honour, a man \vho had been convicted upon trial of both ; no less a man no less a man, did I say ? no less a monster than Governor Picton. The reader ought to remember that in consequence of the anxieties which Mr. FINNERTY underwent on this occasion, he was seized with a severe illness which affected his mind ; he ought to be told, also, that when the defendant applied to tbe prosecutor's attorney to be allowed a postponement of the trial on account of the absence and distance of several persons whose evidence he thought necessary on the occasion, he re- ceived a peremptory refusal ; and, in fine, that no littleness and pertinacity of annoyance might be want- ing to the last stage of the business, he ought to be informed that when another dangerous illness seized Mr. FINNERTY, and the trial was compelled to be post- poned, a person who is understood to be a confidential friend of Lord Castlereagh called upon the defendant's attorney, and impatient, it should seem, at the delay, loaded the sick man with opprobrium. " Of the noble lord, who has the honour of being better known than his antagonist, the reader may not desire to hear much further. But it is right that he should call to mind what Mr. FINNERTY wished to produce against his lordship in evidence of the truth ; for let some judges contradict others as much as they please in defining libel, no generous and just people will ever endure to confound truth with falsehood in any way, much less in determining between the merits of two parties, one of whom is anxious to prove, and the other to punish only. With his lordship's private character, as far as it is distinguished, or can be, from his public one, we have nothing to do. I TORTURES INFLICTED IN DUBLIN. 87 know that people differ with respect to the indissolubility of the two ; and whatever I may think myself on the matter, as far at least as regards principle, I cannot but remember that Sir Robert Walpole was an affec- tionate husband, and that King Charles I. was as good a master to his household as he was a bad one to his country. Considering, therefore, the character of his lordship in a light altogether public, it is impossible to help a feeling of the ludicrous in hearing him com- plain of an intention to bring it into contempt ' public hatred and contempt ' is the phrase ; probably the indictment would have been more correct had it said ' hatred in Ireland/ and ' contempt in England.'* What makes the thing still more singular is, that he should think such prosecutions as these a likely mode of diminishing either. To look at England alone has his lordship forgotten two simple facts that are quite sufficient for all reasonable detestation of his public conduct : ist, his attempt to barter and trick away a seat in the House of Commons, in flagrant violation * Iu The Morning Chronicle, February nth, 1811, is the fol- lowing- epigram : To LOED CASTLEEEAGH. On some expressions respecting Mm in Mr. Whitbread's Speech, as reported in The Chronicle of 26th ult. " Quid immoventes hospites vexas, canis, Ignarus adversum lupus ?" HOEACE. Wherefore, dread peer, thy heaviest vengeance shed On luckless FINNEBTY'S offending head ? Or at St. Stephen's, in sarcastic tone, Why vent thy anger on Burdett alone ? A nobler, worthier foe is now in view, For WHITBBEAD e'en proclaims thee cruel too ; He calls in doubtful phrase, yet half unwilling, Thy candour merciless, thy very kindness killing. 88 PERC Y B YSSUE SHELLS Y. of his oaths and public faith ; and 2nd, his concern in planning and prosecuting the infamous expedition above mentioned an expedition which wanted no ex- treme of negligence, folly, and misfortune to render it useless to our friends, ridiculous to our enemies, and agonizing to ourselves ? Yet these are nothing to the offences of which he is accused in Ireland. Mr. FINNERTY would have produced in court, had he been suffered, above fifty affidavits charging his lordship with the knowledge and sanction of the tortures notoriously inflicted upon Irishmen. One of them, as the public have seen, stated that in the year 1798, floggings, half-hangings, &c., were practised in Dublin, close to the Castle gate, where the Secretary of State's office was, and that Lord Castlereagh must have heard the cries; another, that in the same year a Mr. Dixon saw three persons whipped and tortured without a trial ; a third, from a Mr. Hughes, that he was seen by Lord Castlereagh after suffering the torture which had rendered his back raw and his shirt a mass of gore ; and a fourth, that under his lordship's govern- ment a father and son had been tortured side by side. Had these four affidavits been allowed a hearing, there would still have remained above six-and-forty ; so that we have no alternative but to believe either that LORD CASTLEREAGH was the wicked Minister he is described to have been, or that upwards of fifty persons have voluntarily come forward to perjure themselves in a court of justice, and subject themselves to the most degrading penalties for the mere sake of obliging Mr. FINNERTY. It is true, we are ignorant of the character of these persons, but then we are not ignorant of my Lord Castlereaglv's. If he could prove them guilty of perjury, why, as Mr. FINNERTY asked, did he not come MR. FINNERTY ENTITLED TO SYMPATHY. 89 forward and do so, instead of choosing a mode of trial which stopped the mouth of proof? ' If he had pro- ceeded against me by information/ said Mr. FINNERTY, ' he might have shown my statement was false ; if he had proceeded by action, I might have sworn it was true ; but no : he chooses to proceed criminally, where neither can take place, and this he calls a vindication of his character/ In fact, setting aside Mr. FINXERTY'S case altogether, and all the affidavits that might rise up against his lordship from London- derry to Cork, it is quite manifest that till LORD CASTLEREAGH can disprove the fact of his having undertaken to market for a seat in Parliament, he has no particular character to lose, and it is as ridiculous for him to bluster on the subject as it would be for a wooden leg to complain of a pain. He may have something he chooses to call a cha- racter, and may truly be afraid of having it touched ; in like manner, a person with a false nose may affect to sneeze at taking snuff, and will be equally alarmed at the approach of a fist not for fear that the thing itself should be hurt, but that the disguise should be pulled off. " Convinced, however, as any humane and indepen- dent mind must be of the ill-treatment Mr. FINNERTY has undergone, and of the brightness of contrast with which he comes from the side of LORD CASTLEREAGH, it does not appear that in his latter appearance in court he had to complain of the interruption from the Bench. There seemed to be two distinct features in his case the one general, arising from the ground upon which his letter was declared libel ; the other relative, arising from contingencies which, in fact, he created against himself. The former, which declares that truth 90 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. is libel, aud even aggravated libel, meets with the unqualified and hearty indignation of all Englishmen who value freedom of speech and of person ; the latter, while it excites their regret, does not allow them wholly to exculpate Mr. FINNERTY when rigidly judged. I allude to the hope under which he was induced, in the first instance, to let judgment go by default, thereby acknowledging in word, if not in deed, that he had committed an offence worthy of punishment. I know, as he afterwards declared, that such was not his real opinion ; and I believe that he thought he was jus- tified in availing himself of what he imagined would di- minish the punishment, but on both these very accounts the proceeding was unworthy of him. He felt that he had spoken the truth, and he should have felt also that it could do no honour and no good to that truth to submit even to the smallest approaches towards a double dealing, fit only for his and truth's opposers. There are times, places, and classes of people in which those approaches are considered as nothing, particularly if the end of them, as they say, is good and patriotic ; but there are other persons equally patriotic on this subject who consider them as worse than useless, and are inclined on that account, and on no other, either of pride or affectation, to hold themselves aloof from those who practise them. Mr. FINNERTY has tried both ; and his spirit, in rising above the little clogs and puddles of expediency, and proving itself equal to the most elevated sentiments, has gratified beyond measure the truest friend to reform. ' Scarce vanish'd out of sight, He buoys up instant and returns to light,' The original cause for which this gentleman has ex- posed himself to imprisonment and poverty must ever LETTER IN THE STATE PAPER OFFICE. 91 awaken but one feeling in the minds of freemen ; and it rejoices us to see that the spirit he has evinced has awakened as much sympathy in Englishmen as his long suffering has endeared him to the Irish, and his display of talent has raised him in the estimation of everybody." On Thursday, February 7th, 1811, Mr. Finnerty was brought up for judgment. He was sentenced to be imprisoned in the gaol of Lincoln for eighteen months, and at the expiration of that period to give security for his good behaviour for five years, himself in 500^., and two sureties in 2$oL each. To conclude this portion of Mr. Finnerty 's history, the following additional facts, partly derived from State Papers in the Record Office, may be given. The arrival of Mr. Finnerty at Lincoln Gaol to commence the long period of his imprisonment, is described at considerable length in The Examiner of March 3rd, 1811, the article being taken from the Stamford News. One passage may be quoted. " We are happy to say that Mr. Finnerty has met with good friends here ; some of the most wealthy and most respectable gentry have intimated that he may com- mand any alleviation of his troubles they can furnish." There is a curious letter in the State Paper Office which has not been printed, confirmatory of the fore- going allusion to the sympathy felt for Mr. Finnerty by respectable inhabitants of Lincoln. The letter has no address, but as the writer signs himself "D. P. M." which may mean Deputy Post Master, it may have been forwarded to Mr. Francis Freeling, afterwards Sir Francis, the Secretary of the Post Office, of whom and to whom there are numerous letters in the Record Office. 92 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " Domestic, Geo. III., 1812. No. 239. " Lincoln, August ipth, 1812. " Sir, I am much obliged to you for the Gazettes, and many loyal inhabitants of this place were gratified with a perusal of them; but I am sorry to confess that the disloyal party have very much increased here : Mr. Drakard and Mr. Finnerty are the cause. The latter I consider to be a dangerous character, and yet, strange to tell, his conduct is admired by many respectable people. " I am, sir, your obliged servant, " JOHN DRURY, D.P.M." If the signature " D. P. M." means Divisional Police Magistrate, the letter must have been addressed to one of the Under-Secretaries of State, Mr. Ryder or Mr. Becket. Before Mr. Finnerty's removal from King's Bench Prison, London, he had been visited by the Hon. Leicester Stanhope. This act of courtesy brought down upon that gentleman the abuse of a scurrilous magazine called The Satirist, or Monthly Meteor, of which thirteen volumes were published 1808 to 1813. Mr. Stanhope condescended to notice this attack, in which the editor, a person of the name of G. Manners, affected to be indignant that " a son of that univer- sally respected nobleman, Lord Harrington, should become the bearer of a message from Mr. Finnerty." In his letter, the Hon. Leicester Stanhope calls Mr. Finnerty " a high-minded and honourable man." Satirist, vol. ii. pp. 408, 504. In Lincoln, as we have seen, the same feeling was shown to Mr. Finnerty by persons of position outside the prison ; but inside the case was very different. He MR. FINNERTTS PETITION. 93 was treated with considerable harshness, put into an unhealthy room, and deprived of the privilege of taking exercise in the place usually assigned for prisoners not convicted of felony. Charges of mis- conduct were brought against him by the officials of the gaol, and a very curious investigation took place before the visiting magistrates, the whole of which is given in a folio MS. in the Record Office, of con- siderable length : " Domestic, Geo. III., No. 226." The matter was also brought before Parliament several times. Mr. Fiunerty succeeded in obtaining a less rigorous treatment, and the remainder of his imprison- ment passed quietly. In the same collection of State Papers is the original petition to the Prince Regent, presented by Mr. Finnerty through the hands and by the advice of Mr. Whitbread. It contains the re- markable signa- ture of Mr. Fin- nerty, May 23rd, 1811, of which the above is a tracing. The petition is substantially the same presented to Parlia- ment about the same period. Mr. Finnerty's sentence expired on the 7th of August, 1812, as mentioned in the following extract from The Dublin Weekly Messenger, August 22nd, 1812, the same journal, it will be recollected, which contains the sin gular allusion to Shelley 's poem : " Our countrymen will hear with pleasure that Mr. Finnerty has been liberated from confinement, from the incarceration which for eighteen months he had suffered in the cause of truth, justice, and his country. On Friday the 7th instant, a public dinner to celebrate 94 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. his liberation was given at Lincoln, to which Mr. Finnerty was invited. George Langton, Esq., a patriot and a magistrate, took the chair/' In The Morning Chronicle, August i8th, 1812, there is a fuller account of this dinner, which took place at the Reindeer Inn, Lincoln. " Mr. Finnerty addressed the meeting at considerable length, and expressed his gratitude for the kindness and attention with which he had been favoured." The Mr. Drakard referred to in the letter of Mr. Drury in the Record Office, was the proprietor and editor of The Stamford News. In 1822 he published a very excellent History of Stamford. He was prosecuted in j8i i for printing in The Stamford News an article on military punishment. Though ably defended by Brougham, he was sentenced on March 1 3th, 181 i, to precisely the same punishment as Mr. Finnerty, whose imprisonment he shared. The trial is reported in the following rare 4to tract. " Report of the Proceedings on an Information filed by His Majesty's Attorney-General against John Drakard, Proprietor of The Stamford News, for publishing in that Paper an Article on Military Punishment. STAM- FORD : printed and sold by J. Drakard; and sold by Crosby and Co., Stationers' Court, London." It may be interesting to note here that " Crosby and Co., Stationers' Court, London," were the publishers of Shelley's poem which will presently be described, and which appeared two days before the conviction of Mr. Drakard.* * In January, 1813, Mr. Drakard started in London Dra- kard's Paper. A Weekly Political and Literary Journal. In January, 1814, it changed its name to The Champion, and became eventually the property of John ThelwalL CHAPTER V. THE sympathy awakened by Mr. Finnerty's spirit and ability, as shown by the article from The Examiner quoted in our last chapter, was not confined to Englishmen. It was felt throughout the three kingdoms, and various local bodies were formed in the chief towns of England, Scotland, and Ireland to support the movement commenced by Sir Francis Burdett* at the Crown and Anchor Tavern, London, on the 2oth of February, 1811, for the purpose of sustaining Mr. Finnerty in prison. These manifestations of public feeling do not ap- pear very remarkable in the larger towns, where there is always a considerable amount of political excitement ready at any moment to be aroused. But one would scarcely expect to find that the earliest voice of sympathy and co-operation the London movement to * Sir Francis Burdett came in, of course, for a good deal of abuse in Tory journals for the part he took in this movement. Alluding to this, and to his duel with Mr. Paull, arising out of the Westminster election, the following epigram is to be found in one of the publications of the day : EPIGEAM ON PETEK FINNERTY'S SUBSCRIPTION. Knights of the Post, of old, strove all By robbing Peter to pay Paul ; Sir Francis Burdett nicks it neater He pistols Paul and pensions Peter ! The Satirist, or Monthly Meteor, vol. viii. p. 335. 96 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. sustain Mr. Finnerty received, should come from the tranquil city of Oxford and its learned University. The meeting at the Crown and Anchor Tavern, in the Strand, took place on Wednesday, February 2Oth, 181 1 . In the next ensuing publication of The Oxford Uni- versity and City Herald, on Saturday, February 23rd, only three days after, appears the following article, to which we would draw the reader's special attention, in connexion with the alleged letter of Shelley to the Editor of The Statesman, dated the 2 2nd of February the day preceding. The tone, and occasionally the language, of these two documents are so similar, particularly when read in the light of a fact that will subsequently be mentioned, that I have no difficulty in believing that Shelley either wrote the article in The Oxford Herald himself, or saw it in proof, the day before the paper was published the same day on which he addressed the " Editor of The Statesman," whom he must have believed to be Mr. Finnerty. Here is the article which appeared in The Oxford University and City Herald, February 23rd, 18 n : " We are happy to find that the case of Mr. Fin- nerty has made a strong impression on the public mind, and that, in consequence, the frequent informa- tions which have been lately filed by the Attorney- General will become the subject of parliamentary in- quiry. Of Mr. Finnerty in his private capacity we know nothing ;* but as Englishmen, and living under what has always been esteemed and what we hope * The language of Shelley's letters "to the Editor of The Statesman " and " The Editor of The Examiner " is almost the same : " Although perfectly unacquainted with you privately, I address you as a common friend to liberty," &c. " THE OXFORD HERALD" ON FINNERTY. 97 will always remain a free constitution, we are bound to respect the LIBERTY OP THE PRESS, as far as it in- volves a free discussion on the merits of public men, and the probable consequence of public measures ; for these are a public concern, are supported and carried on by the public purse, and become the fair objects of public praise or censure ; and our readers need not be informed that a peculiar hardship attends the case of informations filed ex-officio, as a heavy punishment necessarily precedes the verdict ; for the individual against whom the information is filed may be perfectly innocent, and, though acquitted, may be previously ruined by the expenses of a trial to which he is brought by the will of the Attorney- General, and without the case being submitted to a grand jury. For these reasons we have just opened a subscription at THE HERALD OFFICE in favour of Mr. Finnerty a measure which will, without doubt, subject us to the invectives of sycophants and flatterers, pensioners and expectants ; a tribe of gentry, however, whom we heartily despise, and will always endeavour to expose." The Oxford Herald was not slow in making its arrangements for the collection of the subscription thus so warmly encouraged. In the same number the following announcement is conspicuously given : " LIBERTY OF THE PRESS. The friends to the Liberty of the Press are informed, that a subscription in behalf of Mr. Finnerty is opened at the office of The Oxford Herald. " Subscriptions already received : Proprietors of The Oxford Herald, $1. 55. ; Mr. Bird, il. is. ; Mr. Hobbs, i/. is." In the next number of The Oxford Herald, Saturday, H 98 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. March 2nd, i8n,the same announcement appears, and is followed by the same list of subscribers, -with the addi- tion of one name indeed a name that will, we think, be of some interest to our readers namely, that of " MR. P. B. SHELLEY, il. is. od." The circumstance that Shelley's name is not given in the first list strengthens the alternative which I have suggested above, that he was not himself the writer of -the article on Finnerty's case published on the 23rd of February, but that he saw it in proof when the rest of the paper was set up, and when it was too late to have his name inserted as a subscriber in that week's impression. There are abundant reasons for believing that Shelley must have been a constant visitor at this time to the printing-office of John Munday, who was, we have little doubt, the proprietor as well as the printer of The Oxford Herald. Without attaching too much importance to the fact that one of the poems which I have ventured to suggest as having probably been written by Shelley, appeared in the same paper with the article on Finnerty, there is conclusive proof that between February the 9th and March the 9th, 1811, Shelley, being then at Oxford, was engaged in printing two works one of them of fatal omen to him, the tract entitled The Necessity of Atheism ; and the other the missing and hitherto unknown poem, the title and story of which I have been the first to discover and to trace. A strong corroboration of the view I am maintain- ing, that Shelley had a very early acquaintance with the articles, particularly on this subject of the Liberty of the Press, as they appeared in The Oxford Herald, is SHELLEY'S SUBSCRIPTION TO THE FINNERTY FUND. 99 found in the fact that in the number for March 2nd, 1811, which contains his own name as a subscriber to the Finnerty Fund, there is a leading article on the triumph of The Examiner in the special prosecution directed against it. Our readers will remember that it was on this very day, March and, 18 u, Shelley wrote his first letter to Leigh Hunt, inspired probably by the following remarks, as he had been the week before by those on Finnerty : " The acquittal of the proprietors of The Examiner" says The Oxford Herald, " for a libel, on a criminal information filed ex-officio by the Attorney-General, gives us extreme pleasure, as we conceive it will prove a salutary check to the mode of proceeding which of late has been so frequently adopted, and which, if persevered in, will reduce the press to a state of tame- ness and servility, and prevent that open and' free discussion which leads to the repeal of obnoxious laws, and the general advantage and comfort of society." The article does not end here, but the passage quoted is sufficient for our purpose. It will remind the reader as much of the letter to the supposed or real " Editor of The Statesman," of the 22nd of Feb- ruary, 1811, as of that to Leigh Hunt on the 2nd of March. The story of the publication, or at least the intended publication, of the unfortunate tract, The Necessity of Atheism, though perhaps in chronological order it should now be given, may be more conveniently de- ferred until we treat of the termination of Shelley's academical career at Oxford a termination rather vio- lently produced by the tract itself. The name of Peter Finnerty, sentenced on the yth H 2 loo PERCY EYSSffE SHELLEY. df February, 1811, first appears in The Oxford Herald of the 23rd of February. Shelley's subscription to the fund for his benefit is acknowledged in the number for March 2nd, 181 1; and in the next number, for March 9th, 18 1 1, we find the following remarkable advertisement, filling a space of about three inches, and printed in the most conspicuous part of the paper, at the head of the first column : ^iterahtte. Just published, Price Two Shillings, A POETICAL ESSAY ON THE Existing State of Things. AND FAMINE AT HER BIDDING WASTED WIDE THE WRETCHED LAND, TILL IN THE PUBLIC WAT, PROMISCUOUS WHERE THE DEAD AND DYING LAY, DOGS FED ON HUMAN BONES IN THE OPEN LIGHT OF DAY. Curie ofJZehama. BY A GENTLEMAN of the University of Oxford. For assisting to maintain in Prison ME. PETEK FINNERTY, IMPRISONED FOR A LIBEL. LONDON : SOLD BY B. CROSBY AND Co., AND ALL OTHER BOOKSELLERS. 1811. This poem was written and published by Percy Bysshe Shelley. In the absence of direct proof, it is impossible to say with absolute certainty what the precise character of the poem was. A pretty exact POETICAL ESSA Y ON EXISTING STATE OF THINGS. 101 inference, however, may be drawn from its title, and from an allusion here and there in Shelley's letters which may possibly refer to it. There can be very little doubt that the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things was a satire dealing with the condition of Ireland, particularly in reference to the miseries of the late rebellion, and the persistent misgovernment of that country. The quotation from Southey points to this. The powerful picture of famine there drawn, and the phrase " the wretched land," were in those days unhappily too applicable to Ireland. The lines are from the sixth part of The Curse of Kehama, en- titled " The Enchantress," and will be found at page 588, second column of the one- volume edition of Southey's Poems. This quotation puts an end to one of Mr. Hogg's most apocryphal stories. He tells us that nearly a year after this period, when Shelley was living at Keswick, during one of his visits to Greta Hall, the residence of Southey, the elder poet, taking an unfair advantage of his opportunity, locked the door of his study on his young visitor, and mercilessly read him to sleep from the MS. pages of The Curse oj Kehama a poem from which, in its published form. Shelley had printed a quotation twelve months before. The egotistical buffoonery which Mr. Hogg mistook for humour, almost more than its want of reliability, has been the ruin of his book. This farcical tendency of Mr. Hogg's mind seems to have shown itself at a very early period, and, if we may judge by the fol- lowing character of him, was as little relished by his friends then as by his readers now. Mr. Thornton Hunt, in an article on Shelley in the Atlantic Monthly (February, 1863), thus describes the future unsuccessful biographer of the poet : 102 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " His school-friend Hogg was a gentleman of inde- pendent property. Shelley detected the sensitiveness of his nature, and I know that the man has been capable of truly generous conduct. How is it then that he has written such utterly unintelligible stuff, and has descended to such evasions as to insert [qy. invert ?*] initials, lest people should detect amongst Shelley's correspondents a most admirable friend, who happened, it is supposed,. to be of plebeian origin? Mr. Thomas Jefferson Hogg, I surmise, was conscious somewhat early in life that his better qualities were not fully appreciated ; and his love of ease, his wit, his perception of the ludicrous made him take refuge in cynicism until he learned almost to forget the origin of the real meaning of the things he talked about. His account of Shelley is like a figure seen through fantastically distorting panes of glass." Shelley was at home during the Christmas vacation of 1810. His first letter to Hogg was written there, and is dated " Field Place, December 2oth, 1810." He mentions that his father had called upon " S." that is, Stockdale in London, and we are prepared for the quarrel that soon after took place between Shelley and the publisher of St. Irvyne. Towards the end of the letter is the. following curious passage : " I am composing a satirical poem. I shall print it at Ox- ford, unless I find, on visiting him, that R. [qy. * This must refer to the letters addressed to Mr. Thomas Hook- ham, ot New Bond Street, both by Shelley and Harriet, as given in Hogg's Life, vol. ii. pp. 2062 1 1. Jhe initials are not " in- serted," but inverted, " H. T." being invariably used for " T. H." But might not this have been done to prevent careless readers from confounding letters to " Thomas Hookham " with those addressed to " Thomas Hogg ?" PROBABLE CHARACTER OF THE POEM. 103 Robinson ?] is ripe for printing whatever will sell. In case of that, he is my man." Hogg, vol. i. p. 143. We have heard, and indeed we know, that " Shelley was quick to conceive, and not less quick to execute ;" but with all this rapidity of conception and facility of execution it would almost have been impossible for him to have written, printed, and published a poem which from its price must have been at least as large as Margaret Nicholson, in one fortnight. As I have already pointed out, that was exactly the time that elapsed from the first mention of Mr. Peter Finnerty's name in The Oxford Herald, until a poem for his benefit was announced in that paper as "just pub- lished." It is plain that Shelley must have had some poem ready, the title of which he had not decided on, when his attention was drawn to this case of injustice, as he conceived it to be, when it occurred to him to connect his work with the charitable movement to sustain Finnerty thus set on foot. The Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things I believe to be the " satirical poem " above referred to. Whether it was submitted to " Mr. R.," of Paternoster Row, or not is uncertain ; but there is no improbability in supposing that it was. The second letter in Mr. Browning's suppressed volume is addressed to "3. H. Graham, Esq./''* at whose house, 18, Sackville Street, Piccadilly, as we know from Hogg's book (vol. i. pp. 388, 389, 417), Shelley occasionally stopped, and where he di- rects his friend's letters to himself should be addressed. This letter to Graham, if it be genuine, shows that * Mr. Graham is represented in Mr. Hogg's boot as being the " factotum " of Mr. Shelley senior, the poet's father. Life, vol. i. P- 307- io 4 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Shelley was in the habit of sending him from Oxford (for the letter is dated there " University College, February 26th, 1 8 1 1 ") his poetical pieces according as they were written, perhaps to have them offered for publication to some bookseller. The date admits the possibility that the allusion may have referred to the Poetical Essay. Mr. Graham may have suggested that it was too slight for separate publication, to which Shelley replies : " What I sent you last is not enough for a pamphlet, I grant you/ but I cannot help it. -V subject soon exhausts itself with me. You must get some of your volume friends to spin the text for Should the " satirical poem " referred to by Shelley in his letter of the loth December, 1810, have been the Poetical Essay, he was right for once in his esti- mate of what was likely to " sell.'" In a document authenticated by himself, as we have seen, it is said to have produced the sum of ioo/. for the object it was published to sustain. This alone is such a phenomenon in the pecuniary results of Shelley's writings during his lifetime, that it intensifies our desire to recover a copy. No doubt it was bought, not for the sake of the verse, but for the sake of the cause. Yet when u e are told that the Epipsychidion " fell dead from the press not a copy of it was sold not a single review noticed it " (Medwin, vol. ii. p. 76), and that the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things pro- duced a profit of ioo/., we have only an additional * It is curious that Mr. Hogg makes no allusion to these poems sent up to London for the approval of Mr. Graham. This is an adi'it'OTial corroboration of the fact that Mr. Hogg did not possess the eutire conn' deuce of Shelley. THE "ESSAY ON LOVE." 105 proof of the seemingly capricious fate that so often befalls poems as well as individuals. The advertisement of the Poetical Essay in The Ox- ford Herald of March 2nd, 181 i, though the earliest and the most important, was not the only one which an- nounced the publication of a work that would now be read with an amount of interest and curiosity little anticipated by the author or the public whom he ad- dressed. In point of fact, it happens to have been the last which I discovered in my researches into this most curious subject. Before it occurred to me to inquire for some Oxford paper of the period, and of course before I had seen The Oxford Herald, I had worked my way into a knowledge of the title of the poem. The evidence of the fact that Shelley had published some poem, the name of which is not given, in con- nexion with the case of Mr. Finnerty, is contained, as we have seen, in a newspaper, a copy of which Shelley sent to Godwin from Dublin, the receipt of which is acknowledged by Godwin in his letter to Shelley, March i4th, 1813 (Hogg, vol. ii. p. 96). Shelley himself makes no allusion to the Poetical Essay in his letters to Godwin, unless indeed he may have referred to it in the list of the "publications of my early youth " under the altered title of the " Essay on Love," " a little poem," which he gave to him in his letter from " Keswick, January i6th, 1812 " (Hogg, vol. ii. p. 62). The word " Essay " gives great probability to this supposition ; but whether this be true or not, I found the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things advertised in The Morning Chronicle of March i5th and March 2ist, and in The Times of April loth and April nth, 1811. It was thus more than a month before the world, by which time, it may be presumed, io6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. the whole impression was bought up, as we hear no more about it except the allusion in The Dublin Weekly Messenger of Saturday, March 7th, 1812, which states that a poem for the benefit of Mr. Firmerty had been published by Percy Bysshe Shelley, and that the sum of nearly ioo/. produced by the sale of that poem had been presented to Mr. Finnerty by the author. This article, authenticated by Shelley himself as having been forwarded by him to Godwin, will be given in due course. We wish again to impress the fact on the attention of our readers that Mr. Finnerty was still in prison when this act of liberality on the part of the young poet was publicly announced ; that he was in communication with the paper in which it appeared ; and that it is utterly impossible such a statement could have passed uncontradicted if it were not true. Reserving a further consideration of the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things until we have to speak of Shelley's first visit to Dublin in 1812, we resume our account of his remaining literary efforts while at Oxford.* * The earliest London advertisement of the poem that I have found is in The Courier, March nth, i8il,two days after it was announced in The Oxford Herald. The advertisement is repeated in Ttie Courier, March ijth, 1811. CHAPTER VI. ITTLE dreaming that Shelley had printed and published a poem after the appearance of the Posthumous Fragments of Margaret Nicholson, and before the printing of The Necessity of Atheism, Mr. Hogg thus proceeds in his history of the intellectual progress of his friend : " The operation of Peg Nicholson was bland and innoxious : the next work that Shelley printed was highly deleterious, and was destined to shed a baneful influence over his future progress" (vol. i. p. 269). This work was the little tract entitled The Necessity of Atheism, for which Shelley was expelled. Mr. Hogg, whose statement has been adopted by every succeeding writer, has said that this little pamphlet " was never offered for sale," and that " it was not addressed to an ordinary reader, but to the metaphysician alone." That it was " never offered for sale" was certainly not the fault or the intention of the author, as proved by the following advertisement, which is now for the first time given in connexion with Shelley's life. It was this bold and open an- nouncement on the part of the author that the work would be published and sold in the ordinary way, that probably compelled the authorities of Oxford to take notice of a tract, the existence of which they might otherwise not have known. Had it been announced io8 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. in the London papers that a work entitled The Necessity of Atheism was about to be published, even " by a gentleman of the University/' it would have provoked little attention at Oxford, whither the waifs and strays of blasphemy, ever floating in the metropolis, seldom found their way. Far different was it when in a journal circulating largely in the University, and calling itself " The Oxford University and City Herald/' the following portentous announcement appeared : Speedily will be published, To be had of the Booksellers of London and Oxford, THE NECESSITY OF ATHEISM. "Quod clara et perspieua demonstratione caveat pro vero habere, mens omnino nequit huruanae." Bacon de Augment. Scient. This advertisement appears in The Oxford University and City Herald of Saturday, Feb. 9th, 1811. It has hitherto been unknown. Should the authorities of Oxford University require any defence for the manner in which they acted towards the author, this advertise- ment will, I think, show that it was scarcely possible for them to overlook the carrying out of an intention so audaciously announced. In January, 1811, this tract had been offered to Mr. John Joseph Stockdale for publication. St. Irvyne, Shelley's second prose romance, had just been published by him. Mr. Hogg, as Shelley's friend, had called on Stockdale, and appears to have impressed the publisher very unfavourably. " I really did not credit/' writes Mr. Stockdale, " that with, as I thought, a mind so infinitely beneath that of his friend, he could be the master spirit to lead him astray." Some inquiries instituted by Mr. Stockdale, and the fact that Mr. MR. STOCKDALVS OPINION OF MR. HOGG. 109 Hogg was made the medium of submitting to him for publication the manuscript of The Necessity of Atheism,) removed all doubt from the conscientious mind of the worthy publisher. The author of Shelley in Pall Mall tells the story of the quarrel between the young author and Mr. Stockdale, but Mr. Garnett does not give the letter of Mr. Hogg to the latter, which has a double interest : first, in evidently referring to the manuscript of The Necessity of Atheism ; and secondly, in alluding to Mr. Peter Finnerty, whose conduct, it would seem, had met with the approval even of the fastidious Mr. Hogg. Writing from Oxford, Jan. 2ist, 1811, he says : " The bare mention of the MS. which I entrusted to you was an unparalleled breach of confidence. There have been instances of booksellers who have honourably Defused to betray the authors whose works they have published, although actions were brought against them. I believe that one gentleman had honour enough to sub- mit to the pillory rather than disgrace himself by giving up the name of one who had confided in him, however unworthy he might be of such generous treatment." Stockdale's Budget, p. 34. The gentleman who had honour enough to submit to the pillory, there can be no doubt, was Mr. Finnerty. The circumstance is alluded to in the article already quoted from The Examiner, but which was known to Mr. Hogg earlier, probably from the letter of Finnerty himself the so-called libel which had been published in The Statesman and The Morning Chronicle of January 28th, 1810. The story of the expulsion of Shelley, and also of Mr. Hogg, from Oxford, is too well known to be re- 1 1 o PERCY B YSSHE SHELLEY. peated here; but one or two circumstances hitherto unnoticed may be mentioned in connexion with his residence at the University, which, though of no great importance in themselves, may be useful to the future biographer of Shelley. In Mr. Hogg's book (vol. i. p. 396) there is a letter of Shelley's to that gentleman, undated as usual, but written probably about the end of April, 1811. In this letter, referring to his sister Elizabeth, he says : " Elizabeth is indeed an unworthy companion of the Muses. I do not rest much on her poetry now. Miss Philipps betrayed twice the genius; greater amiability, if to affect the feelings is a proof of the excess of the latter." In another letter printed a few pages earlier (p. 386), though written certainly after the preceding, as it is dated from Rhayader, Shelley again mentions the name of Philipps. " I have at this moment no money, as Philipps's and the other debt have drained me." The " other debt" may have been, perhaps, some part payment to Stock- dale, as we have a letter of Shelley's from the same place on August ist, 1811, promising to settle the publisher's account as soon as possible. Mr. Hogg gives us no information as to who the lady was in whose poetry Shelley felt so interested, neither does he explain what " Philipps's debt " could mean. The accident of my finding on a book-stall a little volume entitled " Poems by Janetta Phillips. Oxford : Printed by Collingwood and Co., 1811," may perhaps clear up the mystery, and will exhibit Shelley in the amiable light of being an active encourager of a youthful muse. The little volume possesses a greater interest than this. It is probably the only place where the names of Percy Bysshe Shelley and Harriet \Vestbrook ever POEMS BY JA NETTA PHILIPPS. 1 1 1 appeared together in public before their marriage. The poems are preceded by a long list of subscribers,, chiefly belonging to the various colleges of Oxford. The particular copy which I picked up belonged to one of these, " Mr. Coffin, University College/'' whose name is written on the cover. The list is an alphabe- tical one. Under the letter " S." I had the pleasure of finding the following entries : " Mr. P. B. Shelley six copies. " Miss Shelley, Field Place, Sussex. " Miss Hellen Shelley/' In letter " M." we have " Thomas Medwin, Esq., Horsham/' and " Mr. Munday, bookseller, Oxford/' Elsewhere we find the names of " Mrs. Grove, Lin- coln's Inn Fields three copies/' " C. Grove, Esq.," "Mr. Graham, 29, Vine Street, Piccadilly." But perhaps the most interesting name in the entire list is that of " Miss H. Westbrook." It should be noticed that to Shelley's name the address " University College " is not added. This is usually the case with those subscribers who were members of the University. Of this class there are upwards of eighty in the list. This would imply that the printing of this part of the volume at least was not completed until after Shelley had left Oxford. The obtaining such a numerous list of subscribers, among whom is the present venerable Duke of Leinster, who left Oxford in 1811, must have taken a considerable time. With the exception of a " Mr. Philipps," probably a relative of Janetta Philipps, the author of the poems, who took six copies, no one subscribed for so many as Shelley. This circumstance, taken in connexion with the fact of so many of his relatives and friends uniting to sustain the work, ii2 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. raises a strong presumption in my mind that Shelley had undertaken the responsibility of bringing out the volume, and that to this the phrase " Philipps's debt" refers. The Oxford subscribers were probably secured while Shelley was at the University, and those of his sisters and Harriet Westbrook during the Christmas vacation of 1810-11, when he was at home. It is not at all improbable that Harriet Westbrook's name was first obtained by Hellen Shelley, who was at school with her at Clapham, and to this circumstance may be attributed the first acquaintance of the poet with his future wife. It may have been in return for this sub- scription that Shelley, on January nth, j 8 1 1 , requested Stockdale to " send a copy of St. Irvyne to Miss Harriet Westbrook, 10, Chapel Street, Grosvenor Square/' where she was at home with 'her father for the Christmas holidays. Shelley and his friend Mr. Hogg, as is well known, were expelled on Lady-day, 1811, and left Oxford for London on the following morning. They took lodgings at 15, Poland Street, Oxford Street, and remained together for about three weeks, when Mr. Hogg went to York, where he entered the chambers of a convey- ancer. It is very curious that during the three weeks they lived together in Poland Street, the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things was advertised several times in the London papers without Mr. Hogg being let into the secret of the composition and publication of this poem. Advertisements will be found in The Times, April icth and April nth that is, about the middle of that period of unrestricted confidence, as Mr. Hogg would have us believe, in which the friends lived together in London after their expulsion from Oxford. MR. TIMOTHY SHELLEY AND MR. HOGG. 113 Mr. Timothy Shelley, the father of the poet, had, during the Stockdale affair, expressed an opinion that Mr. Jefferson Hogg was " the original corruptor" of his son's principles ; so at least Shelley had informed his friend. Up to this time there was nothing but eulogy and admiration expressed by Mr. Hogg in his book toAvards " the divine poet/ 7 but now he had a duty to discharge from which he did not shrink. " I do not believe/' says Mr. Hogg, " that Mr. T. Shelley ever let fall the expressions which were imputed to him" thus charging Shelley with having written a deliberate falsehood. " It is my duty to speak the truth, the whole truth/ 7 says this veracious biographer, " and therefore I cannot but confess that the poor fellow [Shelley ! his " incomparable friend/ 7 the " divine poet 77 ] had many underhand ways ; these I found out, sometimes long subsequent to the event 7 ' (vol. i. p. 329). The " underhand ways 77 here referred to may, per- haps, mean those opinions on the character and conduct of Mr. Hogg himself which, though unpublished, still exist in the handwriting of Shelley. There was nothing " underhand 77 whatever in those communications. In less direct language, Shelley had written to Mr. Hogg himself on the same circumstance. And there cer- tainly was nothing " underhand 77 in his breaking off for twelve months all communication with his college friend on account of the same transaction. The ex- istence of these letters Mr. Hogg probably " found out/ 7 and he thus attempts to prejudice the judgment of the public when they shall have been given to the world. But one notable instance at least of Shelley 7 s " underhand ways" he did not find out namely, that while to his guileless friend the romantic young poet i u 4 PERCY BTSSBE SHELLEY. appeared to be only thinking of Thaddeus of "Warsaw in their trellised chamber in Poland Street, he was engaged in constant intercourse with Messrs. Crosby and Co., of Stationers' Court, Ludgate Hill, and adver- tising through them in the public papers a poem which he had written and published without the knowledge of Mr. Hogg. Harriet Westbrook was the schoolfellow of Shelley's sisters at a boarding-school kept by a lady of the name of Fenning. I have already suggested that the ac- quaintance between Shelley and Harriet arose out of her subscription to the poems of Janetta Philipps. With the usual carelessness attending every statement made about Shelley, four different localities are as- signed to the school at which Shelley's sisters and Harriet Westbrook were fellow-pupils. Miss Hellen Shelley, who was at the school, says " Clapham ;" Lady Shelley, by a slip of the pen, writes " Brompton ;" Mr. Hogg calls the place " Wandsworth ;" and Mr. Middleton, " Balham Hill." The following extracts from unpublished letters of Harriet herself will show that the school was situated at Clapham. The follow- ing was written a few months after her marriage, to a lady of whom we shall hear a good deal more in the following pages : (From an unpublished letter of Harriet Shelley.) " But I know you now, and this blessing I should not have had if I had never been to Clapham. So I must be content and think myself very happy that I did go, though I was not aware of the happiness that would result." In another unpublished letter to the same person poor Harriet again fixes the locality of the school, UNPUBLISHED LETTERS OF HARRIET SHELLEY. 115 and refers to the horror with which she had heard while there of Shelley's peculiar opinions. (From an unpublished letter of Harriet Shelley.} " Being brought up in the Christian religion, you may conceive with what horror I first heard that Percy was an Atheist at least so it was given out at Clapham. At first I did not comprehend the mean- ing of the word, therefore when it was explained I was truly petrified. I wondered how he could live a moment professing such principles, and solemnly de- clared that he should never change mine." Alas for human resolutions ! the sequel proves, un- fortunately, how easily and how fatally they were changed. If we fix the first week in January, 1811, as the date at which Shelley became acquainted with Harriet Westbrook, we find that either by letter or per- sonal observation he had eight months to form an opinion of her disposition and character before she became his wife. The circumstances of the marriage are well known. In the first week of September, 1 8 1 1, Shelley and Harriet proceeded to Edinburgh and were married according to the Scottish law. How Shelley then regarded her, and still regarded her a year later, we shall have the opportunity of showing a little further on from an unpublished letter of Shelley himself. In 1813, two years after the marriage, he dedicated to her Queen Mob. " Whose eyes have I gazed fondly on, And loved mankind the more ?" Shelley asks in the dedication of this poem, and answers his own question thus " Harriet, on thine ;" and yet the reality, or at least the intensity of i 2 1 1 6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. his love for Harriet at any time has been questioned. On the 24th of March, 1814, he re-married her at the Church of St. George, Hanover Square, " in order/' as the certificate states, " to obviate all doubts that have arisen or shall or may arise touching or concerning the validity of the aforesaid marriage " in Scotland. On the 28th of July in the same year that is, in less than four months after having thus made assurance doubly sure Shelley went off to the Continent with Miss Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, accompanied by Miss Clairmont, the daughter of Mr. Godwin's second wife by a former marriage. Mr. Garnett, in his interesting little volume, Relics of Shelley, published in 1862, refers to certain un- published letters of Shelley and Harriet which he believes will place this painful matter in a more favourable light than the circumstances of the case itself unfortunately present it. If any documents exist showing that Harriet was a party to the se- paration, they certainly should be published. It is expressly denied on her own authority that she was so, by Mr. Peacock, who saw her several times after the occurrence. Should any such letters be forth- coming they will put an end to the charge of desertion as it is usually understood, but they scarcely can excuse Shelley for a worse kind of abandonment the leaving a young girl, whose moral and religious principles he had overthrown, to the guidance of those fine-sounding philosophical axioms she had learned from him, which he did not follow in the hour of trial, and which brought her to destruction. After a few weeks' residence in Edinburgh the young married couple were joined by Mr. Hogg. Towards the end of October the whole party proceeded to York, where MYSTERIOUS INCIDENT AT YORK. 117 Mr. Hogg was to resume his attendance at Chambers. On the morning after their arrival there Shelley was compelled to go up to London to consult his father's solicitor about some arrangements that were then pending. According to Mr. Hogg, Harriet was left in York under his own immediate protection. Other evidence would show that she accompanied her husband on this occasion, and that Mr. Hogg in this part of his book mixes up and confuses two distinct transactions. Something, however, unquestionably did occur at York in the absence of Shelley, that neces- sitated the arrival there of Eliza Westbrook, the elder sister of Harriet, in the position, as Mr. Hogg sneer- ingly admits, " of a guardian angel." Shelley himself returned from London or perhaps from Keswick, on the following day, when the whole party got immediate notice from their landlady to leave their lodgings. A few days later Shelley, Harriet, and Eliza West- brook, without telling Mr. Hogg of their intention, or bidding him good-bye, abruptly left York and pro- ceeded to Keswick. I have collected a good deal of curious matter on this subject, which though most im- portant in a complete survey of Shelley's life, would occupy too large a space in this investigation. It is enough to say that those who feel an interest in the subject can get a tolerably clear idea of the circum- stances which put an end to all intercourse between Shelley and his friend Mr. Hogg for more than a year, if they turn to the second volume, p. 490, of that gentleman's so-called Life of the poet, and read there what is very questionably called a " Fragment of a Novel." The substitution of two real names for those of " Charlotte" and " Albert," will greatly assist them in understanding the true meaning of this singular 1 1 8 PERC T B TSSHE SHELLE Y. " Fragment," which there can be little doubt is a portion, however altered, of a genuine letter. Mr. Hogg doubtless had very good reason for repre- senting this affair as a fiction, but in mere matters of fact he is equally untrustworthy. On the 28th of October, 1 8 1 1 , the day before he left York for Keswick, without taking leave of Mr. Hogg, Shelley wrote to the Duke of Norfolk the letter which has been published by Mr. Philip H. Howard of Cor by Castle in Notes and Queries, Nov. 2oth, 1858. Mr. Hogg, owing to the estrangement which had taken place, was not informed of this letter. Wishing it to be supposed that a friendly intercourse still continued between himself and the poet after the abrupt depar- ture of the latter for Keswick, he says, " My instruc- tions with regard to Shelley's correspondence, were to open all letters that should come to York for him, and to despatch such only as appeared to me worth the postage. Many letters arrived daily, but few of them merited to be sent farther. One of the few was an invitation, kindly and cordially worded from the Duke of Norfolk, to visit him at Graystoke. It was franked by his grace and dated November yth, 1811. The letter was transmitted to Keswick, and the visit was paid." vol. ii. p. 23. This is really too good a specimen of Mr. Hogg's power of invention to be passed over. The reason alleged for not sending all Shelley's letters forward was to save postage on those that were not worth it. Now as the letter of the Duke of Norfolk was not only " franked by his grace," but probably sealed with his arms, one might expect that Mr. Hogg could have let that important document pass without examina- tion. But no. Mr. Hogg's instructions were too DIARY OF CHARLES, DUKE OF NORFOLK. 119 precise, and he accordingly opened the ducal letter and read in it " an invitation" which it did not con- tain. The substance of that letter is given in the private Diary of Charles, Duke of Norfolk, still preserved at Corby Castle, some interesting extracts from which have been kindly transcribed for me by Mr. Philip H. Howard, whose father was the executor of his grace. So far from inviting Shelley to Grey- stoke,, in the letter so curiously misdescribed by Mr. Hogg, the Duke of Norfolk seems to have thought that the poet's father was not without justification in the way he was acting towards his son. There is a little of sternness in the reply of his grace to the young poet's appeal, but he nevertheless proposes to call on Shelley in York to speak to him more fully on the subject of his letter. The invitation which formed the subject of a second letter was not written until the 23rd of November, and could never have passed through the hands of Mr. Hogg. He knew, however, that Shelley, his wife, and Eliza Westbrook spent some days at Greystoke, and he not unnaturally considered that the letter of the 7th of November to York, " franked by his grace/' contained the " invita- tion." But he should not have said he " opened" and read the letter, which from his misdescription of its contents he certainly could not have done. The following are the extracts kindly furnished me by Philip H. Howard, Esq., of Corby Castle : " Diary of Charles, Duke of Norfolk. " 1811, Nov. 7. Wrote to T. Shelly that I would come to Field Place on the loth, to confer with him on the unhappy difference with his son, from whom I have a letter before me. 3 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. "To Mr. B. Shelly in answer that I should be glad to interfere, but fear with little hope of success ; fearing that his father, and not he alone, will see his late conduct in a diffe- rent point of view from what he sees it. " That I propose going into the North next week, and will come to York to see him, pro- vided he will inform me when I may find him there. "Nov. 10. Wrote to Mr. Shelly, dined at Hor- sham. "Nov. 23. Wrote to Mr. B. Shelly to invite him,* his wife, and her sister to meet me at Greystoke. Came to Parlington, dined and slept. [Reaches Appleby it appears on the 25th.] " Nov. 26. Greystoke Wrote to Mr. and Mrs. Howard of Levens, inviting them to Greystoke,, to Mr. and Mrs. H. de C." (Howard of Corby, the father and mother of Mr. Philip Henry Howard), "to Mr. aiid Mrs. B. Shelly do. " Dec. i. Mr. and Mrs. B. Shelly, his wife, and her sister came. Wrote to his father thereon. " Dec. 6. Wrote in answer to Mayor of Thet- ford, &c. " In this week, Lady Musgrave, Mr. and Mrs. H. de C., Messrs. Calvert, and James Brougham at the castle. " Dec. 9. Came with Mr. Wybergh to Greta Bridge. * The date of this entry, " November ajrd," conclusively dis- poses of Mr. Hogg's assertion that the invitation to Greystoke was given in the letter of November /th, 181 1. ALLUSIONS IN THE DUKE'S DIARY. 121 "Dec. 10. To Parlington. "Dec. ii. To Doncaster. "Dec. 12. To Worksop [whence he writes many letters, and one] " to T. Shelly, on subject of his son, from whom I expected a letter, when he should again hear from me." Mr. Philip II. Howard not only favoured me with this very interesting extract from the Diary of the Duke of Norfolk, but kindly explained some of the allusions. Thus, in reference to Parlington, he says : " Parlington named several times was the seat in Yorkshire of Sir Thomas Gascoyne, the last Bart, and male representative of that ancient family/' With regard to Lady Musgrave, he says " The Lady Musgrave named would be the widow of Sir John Charden Musgrave, of Edenhall, a daughter of Sir Edmund Filmer, Bart., of Kent, a near neighbour." He further adds, " Lady Musgrave, of Edenhall, Cum- berland, and Hartley Castle, Cumberland, was a good Italian scholar, and a person of considerable attain- ments, the mother of the present and two preceding Baronets. You will remember that an ancestor, Sir Philip Musgrave, was the celebrated cavalier leader (temp. Car. I.) The Shelleys seem to have left 8th December, or perhaps the pth. The Duke in his Diary generally names my father and mother Mr. and Mrs. H. de C., that is, Howard of Corby." Mr. Calvert and Mr. James Brougham are also described by Mr. Howard in his valuable letter, but these I defer until the equally interesting extract from his mother's Journal, describing the party at Greystoke, is given. There is a published letter from Shelley to Mr. 1 2 2 PERC r B YSSHE SHELLEY, Medwin senior, referring to this intended visit to Grey stoke. It is well known, and has some distressing passages in it. Two referring to his actual cir- cumstances may be given. The letter is dated " Keswick, Cumberland, November 3oth, 1 8 1 1, My Dear Sir . . . . " We are now so poor as to be actually in danger of every day being deprived of the necessaries of life," ..,.." and it is nearly with our very last guinea that we visit the Duke of Norfolk, at Grey- stoke, to-morrow. We return to Keswick on Wednes- day. I have very few hopes from this visit." Medwin's Life of Shelley, i. p. 376. The 3oth of November, 1811, fell upon a Saturday, so that the visit was intended to last until Wednes- day, the 4th of December. Mr. Howard con- siders that the Shelleys remained at Greystoke until the 8th, or perhaps the 9th. The following is the extract from Mrs. Howard's Journal, sent by her son : " Extract from my Mother's Journal. " Corby Castle, 181 I, December ist, 2nd, 3rd. " I had a terrible journey [to Greystoke], with hail, snow, and sleet, and only arrived at half-past six. " I had the pleasure of finding the Duke of Norfolk very well, and in good spirits. Lady [Musgrave ?*] with Mr. and Mrs. Shelley, and Miss Westbrook, her sister ; Mr. James Brougham, and Mr. Calvert, were the party." * The name is inadvertently omitted by Mrs. Howard in her journal, but there can be no doubt from the entry in the Duke of Norfolk's Diary, December 6th, that it must have been Lady Musgrave who, with Mr. and Mrs. Howard, Mr. James Brougham, and Mr. Calvert, met the Shelleys at Greystoke. EXTRACT FROM MRS. HOWARD'S JOURNAL. 123 Mrs. Howard's journal being intended only for her own use, she doubtless thought it superfluous to mention her husband. Her son says : " My father, Henry Howard, will have been there all the time/' Of Mr. Brougham and Mr. Calvert mentioned in the journal, Mr. Philip H. Howard says in his letter to me : " James Brougham, named as having met the Shelleys at Greystoke, was second brother of the late Lord Brougham. He represented Kendal in the first reformed Parliament, having sat previously for Tregony and Winchelsea. Mr. Calvert, of Greta Bank, was a Cumberland Squire, very popular in his day." The Calverts were neighbours of Southey, and became Shelley's greatest friends at Keswick. We shall see subsequently in what terms he spoke of Mrs. Calvert in particular, in some of his unpublished letters. As neither Mr. James Brougham nor Mr. Henry Howard could have been correctly described as " elderly " in 1811, the allusion in the following most interesting extract from an unpublished letter of Shelley to a friend, refers in all probability to Mr. Calvert :* (From an unpublished letter of Shelley.) . . . . " We met several people at the Duke's. One in particular struck me. He was an elderly man, who seemed to know all my concerns, and the expression of his face, whenever I held the argument, which I do * Mr. Howard, who met Shelley at Greystoke in 1811, was then fifty-four years of age. I am indebted for this information to his son, Philip H. Howard, Esq., of Corby Castle, who tells me that his father was born on July 2nd, 1757, in the reign of George the Second. Mr. James Brougham, the eldest brother of the first Lord Brougham, was born January i6th, 1/80, and was therefore in his thirty-second year when he met Shelley at the Duke of Norfolk's. i?4 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. everywhere, was such as I shall not readily forget. 1 shall have more to tell of him, for we have met him before in these mountains, and his peculiar look struck [me?] [and] Harriet/' The manuscript is a little illegible in the place I have marked, but the two words do not affect the sense. The latter part of the passage, referring to Harriet and himself having met the " elderly man" among the mountains, corroborates an impression which I had previously entertained that Shelley had removed to Keswick earlier than Mr. Hogg would have us to believe. As already mentioned, another passage, which will subsequently be given in full, shows that Shelley had made the acquaintance of Southey before the 2oth of October, the day it will be remembered on which he wrote to Mr. Whitton from Cuck field. There is no record of Shelley having made any other acquaintances at Keswick but Southey and the Calverts. Coleridge unfortunately was not at the lakes during the period of Shelley's visit. He thinks he might have been of some use to the young philo- sopher (for at that time he had published nothing under his own name which could give even a faint hope of his becoming a poet) had he been at Keswick, but it so happened that he was not, and Southey re- ceived him instead. This he considered a misfortune for Shelley. " I might have been of use to him, and Southey could not; for I should have sympathized with his poetics, metaphysical reveries, and the very word metaphysics is an abomination to Southey, and Shelley would have felt that I understood him." Another celebrated writer who could not plead the excuse of absence seems to have regretted in after COLERIDGE AND DE QUINCE Y. 125 years that he did not at this period avail himself of the opportunity of " showing some little attention to a brother Oxonian and a man of letters." This was Thomas De Quiucey, who was then living at Grasmere, thirteen miles from Keswick. From the very am- biguous way in which De Quincey writes, some careless readers, as well as Lady Shelley and Mr. Rossetti, have inferred that he became acquainted though slightly with Shelley. The simple fact, though in- volved in a cloud of verbiage, is, that he did not call on him. The fanciful description of Shelley, " that he looked like an elegant and tender flower, whose head drooped from being surcharged with rain," was one which De Quincey " had heard of him in .some company." It was probably six years later, when an interest was created in his mind by the Revolt of Islam, he remembered, no doubt with regret at not having seen him, that the future author of that poem had been a neighbour of his for four months. We have, however, from De Quincey the fact, though in- directly, that Shelley did not make the acquaintance of Wordsworth, then residing at Grasmere, or of John Wilson, whose Isle of Palms was published in the year of Shelley's visit to the lakes. Though De Quincey came, I think, somewhat late to the knowledge of Shelley's writings, his essay conveys at once an eloquent and a discriminating estimate both of the genius and character of the poet. The opening sentence is particularly true, and should always be borne in mind by those who write or read of Shelley. " There is no writer named amongst men," says De Quincey, " of whom, so much as of Percy Bysshe Shelley, it is difficult for a conscientious critic to speak with the profound respect, on the one hand due 126 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. to his exalted powers, and yet without offence on the other, to feelings the most sacred which too memorably he outraged" (Works, vol. v. p. i). The essay, how- ever, is full of mistakes, one of which only need be pointed out here. Like Coleridge, De Quincey seems to have thought that he too would have been of more use to Shelley than the Laureate. Speaking of the attractions of Grasmere he says, " Finally, my own library, which being rich in the wickedest of German speculations would naturally have been more to Shelley's taste than the Spanish library of Southey. As Shelley at this time knew as little of German as he did of Spanish, it is difficult to understand how he could have been much interested in these departments of either library. We learn, however, from De Quincey the following interesting fact : " The Shelleys," he tells us, " had been induced by one of their new friends to take part of a house standing about half a mile on the Penrith road, more I believe, according to that friend's intention, for the sake of bringing them within reach of his own hospitalities than for any beauty in the place." Had this friend been Southey, as Captain Medwin suggests, De Quincey would doubtless have been glad to set off this act of kindness against what Coleridge calls the " harshness" of the Laureate's later manner towards his young neighbour. A more likely person was Mr. Calvert, the " elderly man" whose acquaintance Shelley first made at the Duke of Norfolk'?. An unpublished letter, written by Shelley on the 3rd of February, 1812, immediately after his leaving Keswick, confirms this supposition. An extract from that letter will be given in its proper place. In one of the eight un- dated letters to Hogg from Keswick, he says, " The RESIDENCE AT KESWICK. 127 thing is, we are not in, but near Keswick." At- tached to this house, but not belonging to their por- tion of it, was the garden* in which with girlish sim- plicity and innocence poor Harriet told some of her lady visitors that Percy and herself were let to " run about" when they were tired of sitting within doors. Poor child ! what a race was that for her elsewhere on a certain occasion in the " drear-nighted December" of 1816! From the very beginning of Shelley's residence at Keswick, he appears to have been occupied with those questions connected with the state of Ireland which led to the extraordinary and romantic expedition to Dublin in the following February. The quotation from The Curse of Kehama, which he adapted to the condition of Ireland, and prefixed as a motto to the poem published to assist in maintaining an Irish patriot in prison, shows that nearly twelve months before his generous enthusiasm had been roused on behalf of that ill-governed and badly treated country. " And Famine, at her bidding, wasted wide The wretched land, till in the public way, Promiscuous where the dead and dying lay, Dogs fed on human bones in the open light of day." Instead of Southey setting his young visitor to sleep, as absurdly narrated by Mr. Hogg, by reading this poem in manuscript, when it had already been pub- lished a year, Shelley may possibly have made Southey open his eyes in astonishment at finding The * In a playful letter to Hartley Coleridge, June I3th, 1807, Southey has the following allusion to the Calverts' garden. " We had one day hotter than had been remarked for fourteen years ; the glass was at 85 in the shade ; in the sun in Mr. Calvert's garden at 1 18." 128 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Curse of Kehama turned already to such vile uses as to supply a motto for a poem that absolutely expressed some sympathy for the suffering Irish. There was a time when Southey himself was not ashamed of sharing and avowing feelings precisely similar. Those were the days when from that very house in Keswick he apostrophized the shade of Robert Emmett. Every one knows the famous and touching entreaty of that young enthusiast. " Let no one write my epitaph. Let my character and my motives repose in obscurity and peace till other times and other men can do them justice. Then shall my character be vindicated, then may my ejritaph be written." Robert Southey thought it would be hazardous to wait for " other times and other men/' when there was a man then living so capable, perhaps alone capable, of doing this act of justice to the memory of his martyred namesake. Accordingly we have, from the future author of The Vision of Judgment, this mild and modest expostulation in reference to the last wish and the dying words of his " young hero." " Emmett, no ! No withering curse hath dried my spirit up, That I should now be silent, .... that my soul Should from the stirring inspiration shrink, Now when it shakes her, and withhold her voice, Of that divinest impulse never more Worthy, if impious I withheld it now, Hardening my heart. Here, here in this free Isle, To which in thy young virtue's erring zeal Thou wert so perilous an enemy ; Here in free England shall an English hand Build thy imperishable monument." Works, one vol. ed. p. 140. Many persons believe that had the spirit of recent legis- lation influenced the action of government in 1803, " the EGBERT SOUTHEY AND ROBERT EMMETT. 129 often- widowed Erin" would not have had to " mourn the loss" of one of " her brave young men" at least. That gentler and wiser spirit commenced in 1829 with the act of Catholic Emancipation, which great measure, though not passed in his lifetime, had no sincerer advocate than Robert Emmett. But what did his pane- gyrist he who raised an " imperishable monument" of rather perishable blank verse to his memory what did he think in 1811 of that question, and of the people who were so deeply interested in its settle- ment ? Shelley will tell us. In the unpublished letter of the loth of October, 1811, subsequently referred to, he says : " Southey hates the Irish ;* he speaks against Catholic Emancipation. In all these things we differ. Our differences were the subject of a long conversation." We shall find from another unpublished letter, written immediately after his leaving Keswick three months later, that the " differences" between Shelley and Southey increased every day to such an extent that the youthful admiration of Shelley for the author of Thalaba was greatly cooled, if it was not wholly extinguished, while at the same time he admits the possibility of his many private virtues. * Southey appears to have had during his life two contradictory opinions and two opposite states of feeling about everything. In 1 80 1, when in Dublin, he rather liked " the Irish," and gave the people generally some credit even for " genius." In a letter dated Dublin, October i6th, 1801, he says: "Genius, indeed, imme- diately appears to characterize them ; a love of saying good things, which 999 Englishmen in 1000 never dream of attempting in the course of their lives." Life and Correspondence of Robert Southey, vol. ii. p. 170. CHAPTER VII. '"THE preparation for the Irish campaign and the ex- ceedingly interesting correspondence with Godwin which Shelley commenced oa the 3rd of January, 1812, fill up the whole of that month. The letters to and from Godwin being among the valuable materials confided to Mr. Hogg, he had no opportunity of exercising his very perplexing ingenuity in suppressing, transposing, or otherwise confusing any portion of their contents. The reader is therefore referred to that portion of Mr. Hogg's book with perfect confidence. I shall only make a few extracts in reference to the meditated descent on Dublin to carry Catholic Emancipation and to repeal the Union. In the second letter to Godwin, January 1 6th, 1812, he gives the philosopher a list of his writings up to that period ; among them is an " Essay on Love," " a little poem/' which he says was written after he had become acquainted with the profounder works of his correspondent, seeming thereby to attach to it a greater importance. I have already suggested that this " Essay on Love" may have been nothing else than the " Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things" under a new name. He then continues : " In a few days we set off to Dublin. I do not know exactly when, but a letter addressed to Keswick will find me. Our journey has been settled some time. We go principally to forward as much as we (viz., LETTERS TO GODWIN. 131 Harriet, Eliza, and myself) can the Catholic Eman- cipation. " South ey, the poet whose principles were pure and elevated once, is now the paid champion of every abuse and absurdity. I have had much conversation with him. He says, f you will think as I do when you are as old/ I do not feel the least disposition to be Mr. S/s proselyte." On January 28th, 1812, he again writes to Godwin : " Your letter has reached me on the eve of our de- parture for Dublin. I cannot deny myself the pleasure of answering it, although we shall probably have reached Ireland before an answer to this can arrive. You do us a great and essential service by the enclosed introduction to Mr. Curran : he is a man whose public character I have admired and respected. You offer an additional motive for hastening our journey " With these sentiments I have been preparing an address to the Catholics of Ireland, which, however deficient may be its execution, I can by no means admit that it contains one sentiment which can harm the cause of liberty and happiness. It consists of the benevolent and tolerant deductions of philosophy reduced into the simplest language. I know it can do no harm ; it cannot excite rebellion, as its main principle is to trust the success of a cause to the energy of its truth. It cannot " widen the breach between the kingdoms," as it attempts to convey to the vulgar mind sentiments of universal philanthropy ; and what- ever impressions it may produce, they can be no other but those of peace and harmony ; it owns no religion but benevolence, no cause but virtue, no party but the world. 1 shall devote myself with unremitting zeal, K 2 132 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. as far as an uncertain state of health will permit, towards forwarding the great ends of virtue and happiness in Ireland, regarding as I do the present state of that country's affairs as an opportunity which, if I, being thus disengaged, permit to pass unoccupied, I am unworthy of the character which I have assumed/' It has been stated by Mr. Hogg, who was kept in profound ignorance of all these proceedings, and repeated by others on his unsupported assertions, that it was owing to Shelley's disgust at the failure of the project in Dublin that he left that city abruptly before the expiration of the time he had arranged to stay there. This will be found to be quite incorrect. The subsequent residence in Wales was pre-arranged before he left Keswick, and fixed with the same de- liberation as the visit to Dublin itself. " We left Dublin," Shelley says in a'fe unpublished letter from which more will be quoted, " because I had done all that I could do." The following passage in the fore- going letter to Godwin shows that before he went to Dublin Shelley had planned the residence in Wales : " I will say no more of W T ales at present. We have determined next summer to receive a most dear friend, of whom I shall speak hereafter, in some ro- mantic spot. Perhaps I shall be able to prevail on you and your wife and children to leave the tumult and dust of London for awhile. However that maybe, I shall certainly see you in London. I am not yet of age. At that time I have great hopes of being enabled to offer you a house of my own. Philanthropy is confined to no spot. Adieu ! Direct your next ( Post Office, Dublin.' " My wife sends her respects. SHELLETS "POEMS" TO BE PUBLISHED IN DUBLIN. 133 " Believe me, in all sincerity of heart, yours truly, sincerely, "P. B. SHELLEY. "To Mr. William Godwin, London." The " dear friend" alluded to by Shelley was Miss Eliza Hitchener of Hurstpierpoint, Brighton, with whom he was carrying on a voluminous correspondence at this time. The antecedents of this lady's history will be found a little further on, as sketched by no less a per- sonage than the Right Hon. Thomas Pelham, Earl of Chichester, joint Postmaster- General with the Earl of Sandwich. This lady received intelligence, two days earlier than Godwin, of the intended visit to Dublin. The letter to her has not been published, but I am per- mitted to make the following extract from it, which contains some very curious information not hitherto known : (From an unpublished letter of Shelley.} " Keswick, January 26th, 1812. " All is prepared. I have been busily engaged in an address to the Irish people which will be printed as Paine's works were, and posted on the walls of Dublin. My poems will be printed there." I have italicized the last line for the singular interest of the intention which it announces. Dublin, the chosen city where the first collection of Shelley's poems was to have been published ! "What poems can he have alluded to ? Were we to have Victor without Cazire, and Fitz-Victor without Mr. Hogg? That alone I think would have been a happy consum- mation. But these were rather insignificant materials to be called his " poems." In this collection, beyond all doubt, we would have had the Poetical Essay on the 134 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Existing State of Things and the Essay on Love, if they were not the same. In every point of view it is to be regretted that this idea was not carried out. What a treasure would not that Dublin edition of Shelley's early poems be, though printed in the style of the Address to the Irish People or the Proposals for an Association. It would have contained one poem at least, which I think the world would not willingly let die a poem by Shelley on Robert Emmett ! That might indeed have been the " imperishable monument" which Southey, with almost incredible vainglory, had considered his own to be. In a subsequent letter, also unpublished, written after his alleged disgust with Irish politics, Shelley says : " I have written some verses on Robert Emmett which you shall see, and which I will insert in my book of poems." I am sorry to say that the corre- spondence from which we learn this interesting fact does not contain the poem. The reference to the Dublin edition of Paine's works is also curious, par- ticularly if it be true that they were ever posted on the walls of that city. Shelley may have alluded only to his own Declaration of Rights, which was printed at Dublin, expressly to be <: posted on the farmers' walls." I do not remember having seen a Dublin edition of Paine's works, but I have no doubt they were printed there, as I have in my own possession a Dublin edition of The Life of Thomas Pain, by Francis Oldys, A.M., 1791.* The number of booksellers who took a share * THE LIFE OF THOMAS PAIN, the author of the Rights of Man, with a Defence of his Writings. By Francis Oldys, A.M. of the University of Pensylvania. DUBLIN : Printed for R. Cross, P. Byrne, P. Wogan, A. Grueber, J. Moore, J. Jones, T. Heery. W. M'Kenzie, W. Jones, R. M'Alliston, and H. Watts. M.DCCXCI. FINAL ESTIMATE OF SOUTHEY. 135 in this publication is in itself a striking proof of the intellectual and commercial activity of Dublin before the Union. After his letter to the " dear friend" at Hurstpier- point of the 26th of January, and his more elaborate epistle to Godwin of the 28th, Shelley did not lose much time in setting out on his adventurous expedi- tion. The following letter, which is now published for the first time, details the course of his journey from Keswick to Dublin. It is most curious and interesting in many respects. He must be cold indeed who can read without emotion the sanguine and exulting expectation of this generous young man, going forth like a knight of romance to the champion- ship of a nation. His final estimate of Southey is also very interesting. It has been said that, even after their first interview at Keswick, Shelley could speak of Southey " as a great man/' He must have changed this opinion very soon, for in one of the un- published letters so frequently referred to he says the very reverse. Speaking of Southey, he emphatically declares, " He is not the great man I first thought him to be/' It was in this latter mood that he penned the following letter : (From an unpublished letter of Shelley.) " Whitehaven, February 3rd, 1812. " MY DEAREST FRIEND, " We are now at Whitehaven a miserable manufacturing sea-port town. I write to you a short letter to inform you of our safety, and that the wind which will fill the sails of our packet to-night is favour- able and fresh. Certainly it is laden with some of your benedictions as with the breath of the disem- 136 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. bodied virtues who smile upon our attempt. We set off to-night at twelve o'clock, and arrive at the Isle of Man, whence you will hear from us, to-morrow ; then we proceed, when the wind serves, to Dublin. We may be detained some days in the Island ; if the weather is fine, we shall not regret it; at all events we shall escape this filthy town and horrible inn. . . . "We felt regret at leaving Keswick. I passed Southey's house without one sting. He is a man who may be amiable in his private character, stained and false as is his public one. He may be amiable, but, if he is, my feelings are liars, and I have been so long accus- tomed to trust to them in these cases, that the opinion of the world is not the likeliest corrector to impeach their credibility. But we left the Calverts [qy. with regret] . I hope some day to show you Mrs. Calvert ; I shall not forget her, but will preserve her memory as another flower to compose a garland which I intend to present to you. Harriet and Eliza in excellent spirits bid you affectionate adieu. Adieu ! " Your " P. B. SHELLEY." The phrase " but we left the Calverts," strengthens, if it does not confirm, the suggestion already throAvn out, that it was in a part of their house " on the Penrith road/' as mentioned by De Quincey, that the Shelleys were living.* The well-known letter of Southey, dated * I had come to this conclusion before I was favoured by Mr. Philip H. Howard of Corby Castle with the following exact par- ticulars : " The residence of Greta Bank, which in 181 1 was the property and home of Mr. Calvert, lies on the Keswick and Pen- rith road to the north side of the beautiful stream and well-wooded banks of the Greta. It cannot be much more than half a mile from the town of Keswick. The railroad there running parallel to MR. AND MRS. CALVERT. 137 January i4th, 1812, describing "a man at Keswick, who acted upon him as his own ghost would do," says this man, or ghost, meaning Shelley, had ''mar- ried a girl of seventeen after being turned out of doors by his father, and here they are both in lodgings, living upon 2OO/. a year, which her father allows them." Harriet was not seventeen, neither was Shelley turned out of doors. The " zooL a year" from Mr. Westbrook may be admitted, as we find Shelley, exactly one month after the date of this letter on the 1 4th of February, 1812 stating to Miss Kitchener that he was then in receipt of " 400^. per annum," half of which must have come from his father, and half from Mr. Westbrook. The other circum- stance was one that Southey could not be misinformed about. The Shelleys were " in lodgings," most pro- bably in the house of one who received them, as De Quincey says, merely for the opportunity it afforded of paying them attention. This was Mr. Calvert, the gentleman who had fascinated Shelley so much at the Duke of Norfolk's. Mr. Philip H. Howard, of Corby Castle, the extract from whose mother's journal had led me to identify the " elderly man" of the dinner party at Grey stoke with Mr. Calvert, confirms that conjecture in the following interesting passage from one of his letters : " It was doubtless Mr. Calvert, of Greta Bank, near Keswick, who captivated the poet's fancy ; his thoughts were fresh, ' the dew was on the south side of the river is a good deal nearer to the mansion than the old coach road. Skiddaw forms a bold background to the scenery." It is an interesting fact communicated to Mr. Howard by Mr. Spedding of Mirehouse, Keswick, that there is a lady still living in that neighbourhood who remembers Shelley's appearance at this period. " He was very striking looking." 1 38 PERCY B TSSHE SHELLEY. them/ The Duke and his friends were very fond of him; he promoted all local improvements, and was a person of great vigour and originality of mind." Shelley left Whitehaven for the Isle of Man at midnight on the 3rd of February, 1812. He seems to have stopped a few days in the Island, as he said he would do, and reached Dublin after a stormy voyage on the night of the I2th. This is twelve days earlier than any date previously assigned to his ar- rival. Mr. Hogg knowing nothing about the matter, took the first letter that came to his hand referring to the subject, and boldly assigned that as the date. " A letter from Dublin of the 24th of February states that they have just arrived there" (vol. ii. p. 76). The letter, which was to Godwin, in reality states no such thing. It mentions the delay of " a few days/' during which period the first of his pamphlets, which he encloses, had been printed. Yet this erroneous date is repeated even by Mr. Rossetti. " Shelley arrived in Dublin, with Harriet and Eliza, about the 24th of February, 1812." Mr. Rossetti had not be- fore him, and probably had never seen, the first pamphlet printed by Shelley in Dublin, but Mr. Hogg professes to describe it in the very page in which he gives this random guess at a date. That pamphlet in which Shelley says he was then " a week in Dublin/' is dated " No. 7, Lower Sackville Street, Feb. 22," that is, two days, and a week at least, ac- cording to Mr. Hogg's showing, before Shelley had actually arrived there. Even the name of his friend Mr. Hogg could not transcribe correctly from the title page of the second pamphlet. Quoting it in in- verted commas he writes, " By Percy B. Shelly : SHELLETS ARRIVAL IN DUBLIN. 139 Dublin/' whereas the name is printed in full cor- rectly, as in the first pamphlet, " Percy Bysshe Shelley." The false spelling of Shelley's name in this instance is also repeated by Mr. Rossetti through that over-confidence in Mr. Hogg's assertions, which seems strange in so acute a writer. Shelley's first letter from Dublin puts an end to all doubt as to the exact date of his arrival. It is very short, and is here printed for the first time : ( Unpullished letter of Shelley.) "Dublin, February I3th, 1812. " MY DEAREST FRIEND, " Last night we arrived safe in this city. It was useless to have written to you before. Now I have only time to tell you of our safety. We were driven by a storm quite to the north of Ireland, and yester- day was the end of our journey thence. Expect to hear soon; all is well. " Your affectionate " P. B. SHELLEY. " Direct to me at Mr. Dunne's, No. 7, Sackville Street, Dublin." Remembering the bitterness with which he had parted from Southey at Keswick, it seems a sort of retribution that Shelley should have experienced the same unfavourable weather in crossing the Channel that had attended the visit of the elder poet to Ireland eleven years before. A storm " drove him to th' Hibernian shore," as it had done Southey, and drove both considerably out of their way in the same direction. Southey in a letter to his wife, dated October i4th, 1801, makes the curious mistake of saying i 4 o PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. that " the wind had drifted them so far south that no possibility existed of their reaching Dublin that night/' the fact being that, like Shelley, he had been driven to the north of Dublin. " The captain/' says Southey, " a good man and a good sailor, who never leaves his deck, and drinks nothing but buttermilk, therefore readily agreed to land us at Balbriggan, and there we got ashore at two o'clock. Balbriggan is a fishing and bathing town fifteen miles from Dublin, but miles and money differ in Ireland from the English standard, eleven miles being as long as fourteen English." Southey must have thought the points of the compass were differently arranged in Ireland also, when he placed Balbriggan fifteen miles to the south of Dublin. The fifteen miles which Southey crossed in his way to the metropolis of Ireland were so bare of trees that he could only account for it by the supposition that they had all been cut down for pike-handles. The tract, however, unlike that between Dan and Beersheba, was not all barren. " One little town we passed, once famous, its name Swords : it has the ruins of a castle, and a church with a round tower adjoining the steeple, making an odd group/' As he approached Glasnevin, the home of Addison, Tickell, and Delany, as well as the occasional visiting place of Swift, he saw "mountains near Dublin most beautifully shaped." Even Dublin itself came up to his expectations. He calls it " a very fine city a magnificent city such public buildings, and the streets so wide \" It was in the widest of those wide streets that Shelley took up his residence in Dublin. Sackville Street in 1812 did not present precisely the same appearance which is now so familiar to us, either from SACKVILLE STREET, DUBLIN. 141 actual knowledge or through photographs. The column to Nelson was only in process of erection, and the fine edifice of the Post- Office had not been commenced ; but the effect of the view was equally good, perhaps even better, than it is at present, as but one majestic avenue seemed to unite the historic circle of the Rotunda, where the Volunteers had often assembled, with that beautiful building in which the patriotic resolutions of Dungannon had been confirmed by the Parliament of Ireland. Both of these struc- tures must have been objects of great interest to Shelley, and we shall find subsequently in what terms he spoke of the then actual condition of the latter. The house in which he lived was very favourably situated ; from the balcony of it, which still remains, and from which, as he tells us himself, he was accus- tomed to fling copies of his pamphlet to whoever appeared to him to be likely recipients, he could see over the roofs of Trinity College and the Bank of Ireland, some of those "beautifully shaped mountains " which had attracted the attention of Southey. But six houses separated him from the river : " There was the Liffy rolling downe the lea." And by his side at that time was one to whom with truth could be applied the lines of Tickell. For surely, notwithstanding all the native beauty that had been mirrored in its wave, never before " Did Liffy 's limpid stream Reflect a sweeter face." These allusions may be pardoned in one to whom that street is very dear, who was born in it, who spent the best part of his life close to it, and to whom the 1 4 2 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. residence of Shelley therein gave an additional and an enduring charm. * We have already given the short note which Shelley addressed to his friend at Hurstpierpoint the day after his arrival in Dublin. On the following day he again addressed the same lady in a long and somewhat extravagant epistle. It has, however, a many-sided interest, and I am permitted to make some extracts from it which Jiave not been printed. (From an unpublished letter of Shelley.} "Dublin, 7, Sackville Street, Feb. I4th, 1812. " Mr. Dunne's, Woollen Draper. " .... At length, however, you are free from anxiety for our safety, as here we have nothing to apprehend but Government, which will not, assure yourself, dare to be so barefacedly oppressive as to attack my Address ; it will breathe the spirit of peace, * On the i^th of August, 1835, I saw anotber famous poet enter the house No. 7, Lower Sackville Street, which then belonged to Messrs. Kohler & Co., who had succeeded Mr. Dunne. It was Thomas Moore. I recognised him in Sackville Street in company with a well-known vocalist of that day, Mr. Morrisson. They entered the house on some business, and came out in a few minntes. They proceeded to the theatre in Hawkins Street, and afterwards to Trinity College. Moore's morning visit to the theatre is ex- plained by the following entry in his diary : " The playbill of to-day and yesterday having announced the entertainments of this evening to have been selected by me, &c. &c., went to look at the box-book to see what sort of promise it gave " (Memoirs, vol. vii. p. 102). On that evening I attended the theatre, and had the pleasure of hearing Moore address the house in acknowledgment of his enthusiastic reception. He spoke from the third box to the right facing the stage, in which sat his sister Ellen with some Dublin friends. The speech, which is very slightly alluded to by Moore, is given in full by Mr. James Burke, A.B., in his Memoir of Thomas Moore (Dublin, 1852), p. 168. LETTER TO MISS HIT CHEN ER. 143 toleration, and patience. ... As my name, which will be prefixed to the Address, will show that my deeds are not deeds of darkness, nor my counsels things of mystery and fear." " Dread nothing for me ; the course of my conduct in Ireland (as shall the entire course of my life) shall be marked by openness and sincerity/' The importance which he attached to the junction of his correspondent, even as a political ally, is shown by the following and some succeeding passages : "We will meet you in Wales, and never part again. You shall not cross the Channel alone. It will not do. In compliance with Harriet's earnest solicita- tions, I entreated you instantly to come and join our circle, resign your school, all, everything for us and the Irish cause. This could not be done. . . . But summer will come. The ocean rolls between us. O thou ocean, whose multitudinous billows ever wash Erin's green isle, on whose shores this venturous arm would plant the flag of liberty, roll on ! and with each wave," &c. A great many romantic apostrophes to the ocean, to Ireland, and to his correspondent here follow. The same feelings and the same hopes found expression in verse, of which some fragments have been pre- served. The following may be given as an example : To IEELAND. Bear witness, Erin! when thine injured isle, Sees summer on its verdant pastures smile, Its cornfields waving in the winds that sweep The billowy surface of thy circling deep. Thou tree whose shadow o'er the Atlantic gave Peace, wealth, and beauty to its friendly wave, ] 44 PERC T B YSSHE SHELLE Y. .... its blossoms fade ; And blighted are the leaves that cast its shade ; Whilst the cold hand gathers its scanty fruit, Whose dullness struck a canker to its root. Dublin, February, 1812. The personal allusions in the remarkable letter from which these lines are taken are still more interesting: " I ought to count myself a favoured mortal/' says Shelley, " with such a wife and friend" .... " Your dear little Americans may come and live with us. (Suppose there was a little stranger to play with them.} This, however, is a hope which I do not anticipate but at some distance." .... " 4OO/. per annum will be quite enough for us all. Our publications would supply the deficiency/' .... " Have you heard a new Republic is set up in Mexico ?" He then introduces the following lines, which, though printed in Mr. Rossetti's edition, as are the preceding (vol. ii. pp. 528, 529), may here be given: THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION. i. Brothers ! between you and me Whirlwinds sweep and billows roar ; Yet in spirit oft I see On thy wild and winding shore Freedom's bloodless banners wave, Feel the pulses of the brave Unextinguished in the grave, See them drenched in sacred gore, Catch the warrior's gasping breath, Murmuring " Liberty or death !" ii. Shout aloud ! Let every slave, Crouching at corruption's throne, Start into a man, and brave Hacks and chains without a groan ; LINES ON THE MEXICAN REVOLUTION. 145 And the castle's heartless glow, And the hovel's vice and woe, Fade like gaudy flowers that blow Weeds that peep, and then are gone ; Whilst from misery's ashes risen, Love shall burst the captive's prison. in. Cotopaxi ! bid the sound Through thy sister mountains ring, Till each valley smile around At the blissful welcoming ! And thou stern Ocean deep, Thou whose foamy billows sweep Shores where thousands wake to weep Whilst they curse a villain king ; On the winds that fan thy breast Bear thou news of Freedom's rest ! IV. Ere the daystar dawn of love, Where the flag of war unfurled Floats with crimson stain above The fabric of a ruined world Never but to vengeance driven When the patriot's spirit shriven Seeks in death its native heaven ! Then to desolation hurled, Widowed love may watch thy bier, Balm thee with its dying te,ar. Dublin, 14^ February, 1812. After this impassioned invocation, in which we may already perceive the advancing power of the poet, he reverts to the great business of his expedition and to his forthcoming pamphlet. " My Address will soon come out ; it will be in- stantly followed by another with downright proposals for instituting associations for bettering the condition of human kind; at all events, we will have a L 146 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. debating society, and see what will come out of that." .... "Godwin has introduced me to Curran; I took the letter this morning. He was not at home. I shall see him soon." .... Before adverting to this introduction, which Curran was very slow in acknowledging, we must conclude our extracts from this long and remarkable letter of the I4th of February, 1812, The following paragraph, though written in all seriousness, has a quiet though unconscious touch of humour about it. He tells his correspondent that Eliza Westbrook was going to collect the " useful passages " out of Tom Paine's works and publish them, and then adds the rather in- consequential piece of information from which we are glad to learn that the good Eliza was at the moment more " usefully " employed. " She is now making a red cloak which will be finished before dinner." .... " Harriet sends her love. Eliza longs to see you." .... The postscript is by Harriet. " MY DEAR FRIEND, I have not yet answered your kind letters, but depend upon it I shall very soon ; they are not lost upon me I assure you. In the mean- time believe me, "Your affectionate friend, "H. S." At the commencement of this long letter, hitherto unpublished, from which we have taken the foregoing interesting extracts, Shelley expressed a confident expectation that the Government would not interfere with his Address. On this subject he was a true prophet. In the Record Office I have examined all the State Papers of the Irish Government referring to THE STATE PAPERS OF 1812. 147 this period, and while many important documents have been discovered referring to the political action of the Catholics in preparing for the great meeting of the 28th of February, which had been publicly announced, there is no reference whatever to the eloquent pamphlets which Shelley had printed, and one of which he had circulated before that day. The Government, as may be seen from the letter of the Duke of Richmond there pre- served, seemed disposed at first to prohibit the holding of this meeting. Wiser counsels however prevailed, and the meeting took place. Special agents, as might be expected, were sent by the Government to give a private report of the proceedings, and their resume of what took place is preserved among the State Papers. It is curious that although Shelley spoke at this meeting for more than an hour, and produced the extraordinary effect which will be de- scribed farther on by " an Englishman," who was an eye-witness of the scene, one of the Government reporters does not mention him at all, while the other merely describes him as " Mr. Shelly, who stated himself to be a native of England." Shelley himself was not prepared for this indifference on the part of the Government. He expected that the suspen- sion of the Habeas Corpus Act at least would have shown the alarm which his pamphlets had inspired. To this possibility he refers in an unpublished letter from Radnorshire immediately after leaving Ireland. Plarriet also alludes to it with some appearance of alarm m a most interesting letter, a copy of which I have dis- covered in the Record Office, and which will be given subsequently in full. His youthful appearance may have had something to do with this carelcsmess on the L 2 148 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. part of the Government. He admits that it interfered with the effect of his teaching on the public. " My youth is much against me here/' he says, in an unpublished letter, which will presently be given almost entire. " To improve on this advantage" he continues, " the servant gave out I was only fifteen years of age." The servant here alluded to was Daniel Hill, the hero of Barnstaple and Tanyrallt, of whom we shall have much more to say. Whatever may have been the cause of the inaction of the Irish Government, it is certainly strange that the same documents which excited so much alarm when discovered at Holyhead and Barnstaple as to lead to a remarkable corre- spondence with Ministers of State and the highest functionaries of the Post Office, attracted no official notice in Dublin, though sent gratuitously to sixty public-houses, and flung openly from the windows of the author's lodgings in the chief street of that capital. It will be seen from Shelley's letter of the I4th of February that he had lost no time in presenting him- self with Godwin's introduction at the house of the Right Hon. John Philpot Curran, the Master of the Rolls. Mr. Curran was then residing in the fine mansion on the south side of St. Stephen's Green, the same house which was subsequently occupied by the emi- nent lawyer and judge Mr. Burton. On Judge Burton's death, the late Sir Benjamin Guinness, the restorer of St. Patrick's Cathedral, purchased the house for his town residence, and erected shortly before his own demise the new and imposing front and portico by which it is now easily recognised. In 1811 Mr. Curran had been residing in Harcourt Street, and in 1807 in Ely Place, to which the only CURE AN AND GODWIN. . 149 letter of Godwin's to him which has been preserved was directed. This letter, the original of which -has been kindly presented to me by a friend, and which has not been published, will be found a little further on.* Considering the friendship which had long existed between Curran and Godwin, it seems rather strange that the Master of the Rolls should have taken no notice whatever, for a considerable time, of the young reformer who had been introduced to him by the author of St. Leon. He seems studiously to have kept out of his way, and Shelley did not succeed even in seeing him until some time after the i8th of March a period of at least five or six weeks. God- win had some misgivings as to the reception Shelley possibly might meet with ; for before the latter had made any complaint of inattention, he wrote to him in the following words : " How did you manage with Curran ? I hope you have seen him. I should not wonder, however, if your pamphlet has frighteoed him. You should have left my letter with your card the first time you called, and then it was his business to have sought you" (Letter of March 4th, 1812. Hogg's Life of Shelley, vol. ii. p. 89). But this is precisely what Shelley had done ten days before his pamphlet was printed; and in those ten days it is plain that Curran had not thought it his business to walk over to Sackville Street to seek Shelley. The Address to the Irish People was first announced for publication on Tuesday, February 25th, 1 8 1 2. In The Dublin Evening Post of that day is the following advertisement : * I am indebted to my friend W. J. Fitzpatrick, Esq., J.P., of Kilmacud Manor, Stillorgan, for this very interesting document. 150 - PERC Y B YSSHE SHELLEY. " This day is published, price Fivepence, to be had of all the Booksellers, ADDEESS TO THE IKISH PEOPLE. By PEECY B. SHELLEY. " ADVEBTISEMENT. The lowest possible price is set on this publication, because it is the intention of the Author to awaken in the minds of the Irish poor a knowledge of their real state, sum- marily pointing out the evils of that state, and suggesting rational means of remedy. Catholic Emancipation, and a Repeal of the Union Act (the latter the most successful engine that England ever wielded over the misery of fallen Ireland) being treated of iu the following Address, as grievances which unanimity and resolution may remove, and associations conducted with peaceable firmness, being earnestly recommended as means for embodying that unani- mity and firmness which must finally be successful." The same advertisement appears in The Dublin Evening Post of Saturday, February 29th, which also contains the outline of Shelley's speech delivered at the meeting of the day before. It is given for the last time in The Evening Post of March 3rd, 1812. Of the second pamphlet The Proposals I have not been able to discover an advertisement. The Address to the Irish People seems to have left the printer's hands on Monday, the 24th of February, twelve days after Shelley's arrival in Dublin. On that day he wrote to Godwin as follows : " A most tedious journey by sea and land has brought us to our destination. I have delayed a few days informing you of it, because I enclose with this a little pamphlet which I have just printed, and thereby save a double expense. I have wilfully vulgarized the language of this pamphlet, in order to reduce the remarks it con- tains to the taste and comprehension of the Irish peasantry, who have been too long brutalized by vice and ignorance. I conceive that the benevolent passions of their breasts are in some degree excited, and indi- SEELLETS VOYAGE TO DUBLIN. 151 vidual interests in some degree generalized by Catholic disqualifications and the oppressive influence of the Union Act, that some degree of indignation has arisen at the conduct of the Prince Regent, which might tend to blind insurrections. A crisis like this ought not to be permitted to pass unoccupied or unimproved. I have another pamphlet in the press, earnestly recom- mending to a different class the institution of a philanthropic society. No unnatural unanimity can take place if secessions of the minority on any ques- tion are invariably made. It might segregate into twenty different societies, each coinciding generically, though differing specifically. " We have had a most tedious voyage. We were driven by a storm completely to the north of Ireland in our passage from the Isle of Man. Harriet, my wife, and Eliza, my sister-in-law, were very much fatigued after twenty-eight hours' tossing in a galliot during a violent gale. They are now tolerably re- covered. I am exceedingly obliged by your letter of introduction to Mr. Curran. His speeches had in- terested me before I had any idea of coming to Ireland. It seems that he was the only man who would engage in behalf of the prisoners during the times of horror of the Rebellions. I have called upon him twice, but have not found him at home." Hogg, vol. ii. pp. 77, 78. The allusion at the beginning of this letter to " a tedious journey by sea and land," as well as the period of the sea- voyage itself, " twenty-eight hours/' lead us to the conclusion that Shelley, like Southey, had landed at some northern sea-port, and had thence proceeded by coach to Dublin. In this way he must have passed through Swords and the scenery described by Southey. 1 5 2 PERCY B TSSHE SHELLS Y. Godwin was not the first to whom Shelley sent a specimen of his pamphlet. There is in existence a sheet or page of a Dublin newspaper called The Corre- spondent, on which is written by Shelley the following unpublished note : " I send you the first sheet of my first Address as it comes out. The style of this, you will perceive, is adapted to the lowest comprehension that can read. It will be followed by another in my own natural style, though in the same strain. This one will make about thirty such pages as the enclosed : the other as much. Expect to hear soon. Happiness be with you. My dear friend, yours " The first sheet of the pamphlet was enclosed in this page of The Correspondent, on which the foregoing was written. It was evidently the wrapper which came from the printer, and is directed on one of the margins " Mr. Percy Shelley." As in the case of the copy of the pamphlet sent to Godwin, both were forwarded as newspapers, and charged by the vigilant post-masters according to their weight as letters. Godwin was the greater sufferer, as the whole of the pamphlet was included in his package. It must be admitted that he bore his misfortune with good humour. The fol- lowing allusion to the subject in his reply to Shelley is amusing : " To descend from great things to small, I can per- ceive that you are already infected with the air of that country.* Your letter, with its enclosures, cost me * According to Mr. Charles Phillips, Godwin had himself visited Ireland as the guest of Mr. Curran. " Godwin had gone on a visit to the Priory " [Curran's residence near Stillorgan, Co. Duhlin], " where he had at once an opportunity of enjoying the society of his friend and of studying the manners of a new people." (Recol- lections of Curran, p. 233.) As Godwin is reported to have FIRST PAMPHLET SENT THROUGH THE POST OFFICE. 153 by post il. is. 8d. ; and you say in it that ' you send it in this way to save expense/ The post always charges parcels that exceed a sheet or two by weight, and they should therefore always be forwarded by some other conveyance." Hogg, vol. ii. p. 90. In Shelley 's rejoinder to this letter, of the 8th of March, he endeavours to console the philosopher by the following explanation : " I had no conception that the packet I sent you would be sent by the post ; I thought it would have reached you per coach." Hogg, vol. ii. p. 95. It appears that there were three victims to this rather expensive mode of anticipating the book-post Mr. Westbrook, Miss Kitchener, and Mr. Godwin. In the copy of the letter of Harriet preserved in the State Paper Office is the following passage : " I sent you two letters in a newspaper, which I hope you received safe from the intrusion of the post- masters. I sent one of the pamphlets to my father in a newspaper, which was opened and charged, but which was very trifling to what you and Godwin paid." Copy of Harriet's Letter in the Record Office. This letter of Harriet, though not directed, was written to Miss Hitchener under the name of " Portia," and was a part of the seizure made at Holyhead on the 3oth of March, 1812, as will be fully described in a subsequent page. Harriet's letter is dated March i8th, but ten days earlier Shelley himself heard one of Curran's great oratorical displays, and to have admired nothing but " the manner " of the orator, the visit must have been paid before 1806, when Curran tfecame Master of the Eolls. The story told by Mr. Phillips is rather apocryphal, but the fact of the visit may be received, although Mr. William Henry Curran makes no mention of it in the Life of his father. 154 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. had referred to the mistake of sending the first sheet of the pamphlet as a newspaper, in the following passage of an unpublished letter to Miss Kitchener. Writing on March i oth, he says : " In a day or two I shall make up a parcel to you, which will come per coach. It is a terrible mistake that of the last; the blundering honest Irishman we have came without it." Here a scapegoat had been found in the person of Daniel Hill already referred to, and who thus makes his second appearance in Shelleyan story. Shelley was evidently a little annoyed at the inattention of Curran, though he makes no direct complaint of it to Godwin. In an unpublished letter of the ayth of February, 1812, he says : " I have not yet seen Curran. I do not like him for accepting the office of Master of the Rolls." One would think from Shelley's remark that Curran had accepted the office of Master of the Rolls in the interval between the date of his own calling at his house on the 14th of February and the 27th of the same month, when he wrote as above to Miss Kitchener. But Curran had been Master of the Rolls since 1806. The opinion expressed by Shelley was evidently formed from conversations which he had in Dublin with persons who agreed with Lord Cloncurry in thinking that Currants acceptance of office was a somewhat lowering of the position which he had held in the estimation of his countrymen.* There can be very little doubt who some of those Dublin friends of Shelley were, as will presently be pointed out. * Personal Recollections of Valentine, Lord Cloncurry, pp. 169, 170. CHAPTER VIII. PHE letter of introduction to Curran which Shelley received from Godwin has not been preserved. Indeed it is remarkable that so few of the letters, either written by Curran or addressed to him, have been published. This renders the following letter the more interesting, and it may perhaps serve as a sub- stitute for that which Shelley presented to Curran from Godwin. It is rendered still more interesting by the unexpected and unintended explanations of some of its allusions which I found in the Record Office. As a letter written by Godwin to Curran, it is in itself a document worth preserving, and may not be considered wholly irrelevant to the subject in hand. Unpublished Letter of Godwin to Curran. " The Right Honourable the Master of the Eolls, Ely Place, Dublin. Soraers Town, London, March 7th, 1807. " DEAR, CURRAN, When last in England, you made me two promises shall I say ? No, neither of them was absolutely a promise, but both very interesting to me. One had the word March, with which it was connected in tenour, and the other the word Spring. " I am very desirous of seeing you in March, and that not only for the immediate pleasure it would give me, but as connected with your visits of September 156 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. and December last, it would be a pledge of the frequency with which I might hope to see you ; I should then think of you as a neighbour ; I should feel as if forty and not four hundred miles was the distance that separated us. But alas ! this is the jth of March. I look in my almanac, and find that Easter Term (curse on the technical phraseology !) begins April J5th; I ruminate on human frailty, and begin to suspect both that you are not Jupiter, and that you have not sworn by Styx that you will come. " The other subject I allude to, I am sorry to say, is of a sordid and mercenary cast, such an one as we shall not be obliged to think on, if ever we meet hereafter in Utopia or Elysium. What you said of it was not a promise; yet as it first occurred in September, and was reconsidered at Christmas, I have been compelled to rely upon it with some sanguineness of hope, and, sordid and mercenary as it is, it is neces- sary I should own that it is intimately connected with the existence of myself and my family. My com- mercial affairs are going on with sufficient prosperity of promise. The Fables, as you know, have been printed twice ; the Pantheon is much in request ; the little History of England, which at first seemed to be hardly noticed, I am now obliged instantly to send again to the press, and the Shakspeare Tales I am presse to bring out separately in twenty parts (three are already finished), in which form I have reason to think I shall sell ten or twenty thousand copies. Yet amid all this plentifulness of prospect, I suffer a consi- derable degree of famine of means. Great disburse- ments are necessary, and you, who (happy, thrice happy man !) were never entangled in affairs of com- merce, can have no idea of the unconscionable credit UNPUBLISHED LETTER OF GODWIN TO CURRAN. 157 which traders in this commercial country demand and must obtain. My books of course are principally sold to the booksellers, by whom they are distributed through the town and the empire ; and they will only settle with the dealer once a year, at Christmas, when their accounts are liquidated by bills at three, six, and nine months after date. My demands against them for last Christmas were comparatively small, being at most solely for the two volumes of Fables, and it is therefore impossible that I should find myself entirely at my ease till Christmas next. I can indeed, and shall make a forced sale of some of my books for an earlier pay- ment, but that can only be to a small limited amount. If I were to exceed that, I should part with them almost for waste paper. I should have laboured, and other men would enter into the fruits of my labour. Thus circumstanced, it cannot be but that I shall have to struggle with great difficulties, and to encounter great anxieties during the present year; but this I shall meet with the utmost chearfulness,* if ease and competence and peace seem likely to be the final result. " Having thus, my dear friend, [laid the state of my position] before you, the first thing I have [to hope is that you whom I relied entirely] on would not hold me in suspense, [as I have pay]ments to make on the * " Chearfulness." This old-fashioned mode of spelling the word was nearly extinct in Godwin's time. It is so written in a letter from John Wilkes, dated Naples, May 2^th, 1/65. Referring to Churchill, he says " I have a present from Rome of a sepulchral iirn of alabaster, which I am going to inscribe to my friend in his three great characters a chearful companion, a bitter satirist, and a true patriot." See Notes and Queries, 4th S. v. p. 48, January 8th, 18/0. i 5 8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. 2nd and following days [of June ?] to the amount of 3OO/. ;* and though I have not, and very probably cannot find any adequate resources independently of the hopes you have given me, yet the greatest calamity that could happen to me would be to be kept to the last moment in vain expectation. " I have seen Lord Lauderdale twice somewhat in the way of a message from Lord Holland. What will come of it I am unable to say. " I have just seen an account in a newspaper of your having been taken ill in court, Feb. 26th. I hope by the time this reaches you, you will just have forgotten the circumstance. " I am, my dear Curran, "With the sincerest regard and affection, " Yours, "W. GODWIN. " Mrs. Godwin begs me to add a line to say how truly she joins in remembrance." Few authors, except those who, to use the language of Lord Byron as applied to his friend Hobhouse, aim at " foaming into patriots to subside in Newgate," can expect that their works should undergo a critical examination in the office of a Minister of State. Had there been a Minister of Instruction, as in France, the subject of the following paper would come legitimately under his notice ; but to add to the many labours of the Secretary for the Home Department, the task * Godwin had commenced writing another figure, I think 400^., which he changed to 300. The upright stroke of 4 makes the figure 3 look like 8, but that appears to be too large a sum to ask his friend, who was only one year on the Bench, to advance him. VISCOUNT SIDMOUTH. 159 of discovering the hidden and perhaps dangerous meaning that may underlie the impenetrable pro- fundity of this poet or of that proser, might deter the most courageous from assuming the dignity and undertaking the responsibilities of office. The Secre- tary of State for the Home Department in 1813 was Viscount Sidmouth, whose head in 1820 narrowly escaped the honour of being put into a special bag with Lord Castlereagh's by the Cato Street con- spirators. He had another escape of a less tragic kind two years earlier. At the earnest solicitation, as it would seem, of Lady Donegal, he was left out of The Fudge Family. Moore at first seemed reluctant to yield the point. Alluding to a lady he had spared, at his friend's request, the satirist proceeds, " She is, however, safe, though it has already cost me the strangling of two or three young epigrams in their cradle. All, in fact, shall be safe, except Lord Sidmouth ; but that the author of the Circular, the patron of spies and informers, the father of the Green Bag, the eulogist of the Knights of Northampton (?), &c. &c., should not have a touch or two, is out of the nature of things. I only promise that he shall neither be called ' Doctor/ nor ' Old Woman/ which is quite as much as his warmest friends could expect."" Moore to Lady Donegal, Jan. 9th, 1818. Moore's Memoirs, vol. ii. 131. The friendly mantle, however, of Lady Donegal protected the noble Viscount, as he does not figure in The Fudge Family, or in any of Moore's satirical poems. Shelley was made of sterner stuff. The rather in- effective statesman whom Moore spared and Thistle- wood had not the opportunity of decapitating, the author of the Masque of Anarchy represented, only in 160 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. metaphor it must be admitted, as riding " on a crocodile." Clothed with the Bible as with light And the shadow of the night, Like Sidraouth next, Hypocrisy On a crocodile came by. The Masque of Anarchy, st. vi. For figuring so conspicuously in the Masque of Shadows, which passed before the mind of the dreaming poet as he " lay asleep in Italy/' Lord Sidmouth would probably have forgiven the charge of hypocrisy. It is scarcely necessary to say that any who professed to believe in Christianity must have been a hypocrite in Shelley's estimation. One who knew Lord Sidmouth's private character thus speaks of him : " We were also at that poor dear honest man's, Lord Sidmouth's, for a few days. As to your wicked story of his getting drunk and singing ballads with his royal master, there is not a word of truth in it ; it would be much more like him in his cups to give him a high-flown dis- course upon all the cardinal virtues and Christian graces. Seriously, I believe him to be as honest, as frank, and as open a character, as free from all little meannesses as any man in the whole world." Miss God- frey to Moore, Feb. 1816. Moore's Memoirs, vol. ii. 95. This character of Lord Sidmouth, however, renders it the more remarkable that he took no notice of the following State Paper which endeavours to prove the insidious artifice of Godwin in disseminating his peculiar views under the harmless appearance of children's books. The writer of the paper, whose name is not given, probably calculated on the popular estimate of Lord Sidmouth's religious principles for his taking a special interest in the subject. In this GODWIN'S JUVENILE LIBRARY. 161 he was mistaken. Whether Lord Sidmouth would have preferred to " drink up Esil, eat a crocodile/' or ride one, rather than read Godwin's Juvenile Library, cannot be stated with absolute certainty ; but that he did not do so is plain from the only endorsement which appears on the back of the following remarkable document, the brief but significant word " nil/' The paper is to be found in the Record Office : " Domestic, Geo. Ill,, 1813. January to March. No. 217." " A FEW PARTICULARS CONCERNING GODWIN'S JUVENILE LIBRARY WHICH OUGHT TO BE MADE GENERALLY KNOWN. " Godwin's Library was carried on for some time in Hanway Yard, Oxford Street, without any name either at the shop or on the several publications pub- lished for it. The business has since been removed to Skinner Street,* Snow Hill, for the last three or four years; for some time also it was called the Juvenile Library; no name appeared. " At length Mr. J. Godwinf was written on the door-post in very small letters ; within a very few months it appeared boldly in large letters over the door ; still it is very little known that the proprietor * Curran, in a letter to Leonard MacNally, gives the number " Godwin's, 41, Skinner Street, London." Life of Curran, by his Son, vol. ii. p. 1/2. t This could scarcely be intended for John Godwin, an elder brother of William, who was a member of the Inner Temple, and died in 1805 (Notes and Queries, 3rd S. i. p. 503). Shelley, writing from Field Place, Dec. 2oth, 1 8 1 o, speaks of a John Godwin then living. " It is not William Godwin who lives in Holborn it is John; no relative to the other" (Hogg, i. 144). In the same letter Shelley says he had written to William Godwin. The philosopher replied briefly, and addressed his correspondent as " Keverend." i6a PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. is Godwin, the author of Political Justice. There appears to be a regular system through all his publi- cations to supersede all other elementary books, and to make his library the resort of preparatory schools, that in time the principles of democracy and Theo- philanthropy may take place universally. " In order to allure schools of a moderate and a lower class, he holds out the temptation of an allow- ance of threepence in every shilling for such books as are published by him. He publishes books with the name of Edward Baldwin, Esq., which are said to be his own writing. " One of these, Baldwins Mythology, has been in- troduced at the Charter House. It is an insidious and dangerous publication. The preface is calculated to mislead well-disposed persons, who may perhaps be too indolent or misjudging to read through the whole work ; it professes to exalt the purity and show the superiority of Christianity over the heathen morality taught in the Grecian and Roman mythology, and then through the whole work improperly excites the curiosity of young persons to read the grossest stories on the subject, and artfully hints the wisdom of the morality of the heathen world. The principal works he has published are a Grecian, a Roman, and an English History, all three of the size of Goldsmith's abridg- ments. In these, every democratic sentiment is printed in italics that they may not fail to present themselves to a child's notice, and as a specimen of some ideas contained in these works the following may be men- tioned. In the History of Rome, instead of carrying it down to the destruction of the Empire it leaves off at the reign of Augustus, and in italics remarks that it is useless to write the History of the tyrants who STATE PAPER ON GODWIN IN THE RECORD OFFICE. 163 governed for the remaining 400 years, for when it ceased to be a Republic it ceased to deserve the name of History. " The History of England opens with some extra- ordinary remarks on the subject of the Druids and the subsequent introduction of Christianity into the island. When it arrives at the reign of Elizabeth, instead of noticing the Reformation it says she was tinctured with superstition, though in other respects a woman of abilities ; and the reign of George the Third is only remarkable for two events America declaring her Independence and the Revolution in France. " Godwin has also among his list Mylius's English Dictionary, which has been inadvertently introduced into Christ's Hospital. It is a pocket dictionary, the danger of which consists in giving only one meaning to words which have several, and omitting all such words as philosophers of the present day do not like to explain. For example, take the word ' revolu- tion/ the meaning given is, f things returning to their just state/ By their interpretation the Bible is no longer to be understood The Book, but according to it there are various bibles, one for every religious sect, for example, the word ' Koran, the Bible of the Mahometans/ " The next publication is an abridgment of Home Tooke's Diversions of Purley, by Haylets, simplified, as it is pretended, for young people, to the price of 35. 6d., and again reduced to a one shilling publication. Next, Fables Ancient and Modern, by Baldwin, which are amplified to four pages for each fable. " By these different publications it is evident there is an intention to have every work published for the M 3 164 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Juvenile Library that can be required in the early in- struction of children, and thus by degrees to give an opportunity for every principle professed by the infidels and republicans of these days to be intro- duced to their notice. " By such means did Voltaire and his brethren for twenty years before the Revolution in France spread infidelity and disloyalty through the remotest provinces of that country, and we know too well how they succeeded. "In the Times' newspaper of this date (17 Feb. 1813) the various juvenile books of Mr. Godwin are advertised with a positive statement at the head of the advertisement that they are sanctioned by the schoolmasters of Christ Hospital and used in that insti- tution" There is no signature to this paper. No action seems to have been taken upon it. To the last passage, which is underlined, there is a " N.B." in pencil in the margin. The only endorsement except the date, "17 Feb. 1813," is, as I have said, the word "nil." Retracing our steps after this digression about Godwin, we resume our narrative of Shelley's pro- ceedings in Dublin. Shelley's Address to the Irish People came from the printer's hand on the 24th of February, 1813. On that day, as we have seen, he sent an early copy by post to Godwin. On the following day, the 25th, the pamphlet was published. The advertisement which appeared in the Dublin Evening Post of that date has already been given. We may be sure that one of the earliest copies presented personally by Shelley was to the Master of the Rolls. " I have not SHELLET& LETTER TO HAMILTON ROWAN. 165 seen Mr. Curran," says Shelley, in a letter to Godwin of the 8th of March. " I have called repeatedly, left my address and my pamphlet. I will see him before I leave Dublin." On the day of publication he sent a copy of the Address to the Irish People to Hamilton Rowan, with the following letter : "7, Lower Sackville Street, Feb. ajjth, 1812. " Sir, Although I have not the pleasure of being personally known to you, I consider the motives which actuated me in writing the inclosed sufficiently intro- ductory to authorize me in sending you some copies, and waiving ceremonials in a case where public benefit is concerned. Sir, although an Englishman, I feel for Ireland; and I have left the country in which the chance of birth placed me for the sole purpose of adding my little stock of usefulness to the fund which I hope that Ireland possesses to aid me in the unequal yet sacred combat in which she is engaged. In the course of a few days more I shall print another small pamphlet, which shall be sent to you. I have intentionally vulgarized the language of the enclosed. I have printed 1500 copies, and am now distributing them throughout Dublin. " Sir, with respect, " I am your obedient humble servant, " P. B. SHELLEY." Mr. Middleton, in his work called Shelley and his Writings, referring to this subject, says, " Dr. Drum- mond tells us that ' Shelley selected Ireland as a theatre the widest and fairest for the operations of the determined friends of political and religious free- dom' (vol. i. p. 210), and adds in a note, ' See Life of 1 66 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. Hamilton Rowan/ " It is quite evident that this gentleman did not consult the work from which he professes to quote. The observation about selecting Ireland is not Dr. Drummond's but Shelley's, and is to be found in the postscript to his first pamphlet. No one who had Dr. Drummond's book before him could fall into this mistake. He says, "In February, 1812, the celebrated poet Percy Bysshe Shelley paid a visit to Dublin, having, as he informs us, ' selected Ireland as a theatre the widest and fairest for the operations of the determined friends of religious and political freedom' " (p. 388). In this extract, however, Dr. Drummond himself has not transcribed the words quite correctly. Shelley says, "the friend/' not "the friends " " of religious and political freedom/' The fact that Hamilton Rowan preserved until the day of his death, which took place on the 1st of No- vember, 1834, when he had reached his eighty-fourth year, both the pamphlet and letter of Shelley, shows that he must have felt some interest both in the sub- ject and in the writer. Could he have foreseen the connexion which was ultimately to take place between the daughter of his old friend Mary Wollstonecraft,* and the young political enthusiast of 1 8 1 2, we may be sure that in him Shelley would have found a sincere * The fact that Mary Wollstonecraft's mother was an Irishwoman may not have been without interest to Hamilton Rowan. " Her father's name was Edward John," says Mr. Godwin, " and the name of her mother Elizabeth, of the family of Dixons of Ballyshannon, in the kingdom of Ireland " (Memoirs of the Author of a Vin- dication of the Right of Woman, p. 5). Some interesting particu- lars of Mary Wollstonecraft's life in France during her connexion with Mr. Gilbert Imlay may be found in The Autobiography of Hamilton Rowan, by Dr. Drummond. COPY OF PAMPHLET SENT TO HAMILTON ROWAN. 167 and useful friend. Shelley in his letter speaks of " copies" of his pamphlet, but one only it would ap- pear was sent. This particular copy I have seen. On the death of Mr. Rowan, after a brief delay, his papers were placed in the hands of the Rev. Dr. Drummond, one of the ministers of the Unitarian Meeting-house, Strand Street, Dublin, and with these the letter and pamphlet of Shelley. The Address to the Irish People was inscribed on the title-page in Mr. Rowan's hand- writing, " Mr. Shelley's pamphlet with a letter." The letter as above stated was printed in the Autobiogra- phy of Hamilton Rowan, and the original in this way got separated from the pamphlet. This was sold a few years ago, after the death of Dr. Drummond, at the auction of his library. It was bought by a Dublin bookseller, who deals almost exclusively in works re- lating to Ireland,* and was resold by him, as he informs me, to the late learned Dr. Todd, the Librarian of Trinity College, Dublin, who purchased it either for himself or the College library. On the sale of Dr. Todd's valuable library, however, which commenced on November I5th, 1869, it was not forthcoming; neither had it been received at the library of Trinity College a year later, when I inquired for it. The two days that followed the writing of the letter to Hamilton Rowan must have been busy and exciting ones for Shelley. How he 1 was occupied, and the extraordinary steps he took to circulate his pam- phlet among the people of Dublin, will be best shown by the following copious extracts from a hitherto un- * Mr. John O'Daly, of pj-Anglesea Street, Dublin, in whose Bibliotheca Hibernica the Address to the Irish People, by Percy Bvsshe Shelley, was advertised at the time referred to. 168 PEROT BYSSHE SHELLEY. published letter of Shelley to his philosophical female friend at Hurstpierpoint in Sussex. Long as these extracts are, they form only a portion of the letter. I have selected only those passages that refer to the public objects he had in view such explanations as seem needful will be given at the end. From an unpublished letter of Shelley to Miss Hitchener. " Feb. 27 [1812], 7, Lower Sackville Street. " I have already sent 400 of my Irish pamphlets into the world, and they have excited a sensation of wonder in Dublin. 1100 yet remain for distribution. Copies have been sent to sixty public-houses. No prosecution is yet attempted. I do not see how it can be. Congratulate me, my friend, for everything pro- ceeds well. I could not expect more rapid success. The persons with whom I have got acquainted approve of my principles .... but they differ from the mode of my improving their principles " . . . . [Re- ferring to his wish to have his friend with him in Dublin, he says that it did not arise from any private partiality], "but because you would share with me the high delight of awaking a noble nation from the lethargy of its bondage. Expectation is on the tip- toe. I send a man out every day to distribute copies, with instructions -where and how to give them. His account corresponds with the multitudes of people who possess them. I stand at the balcony of our window, and watch till I see a man who looks likely. I throw a book to him. On Monday my next book makes its appearance : this is addressed to a different class, re- commending and proposing*associations. I have in my mind a plan for proselytizing the young men at MODE OF DISTRIBUTING THE PAMPHLET. 169 Dublin College. Those who are not entirely given up to the grossness of dissipation are perhaps reclaimable." . . . . " Whilst you are with us in Wales I shall at- tempt to organize one there" [that is, a " philanthro- pic association"], which will co-operate with the Dublin one. Might I not extend them all over Eng- land, and quietly revolutionize the country ?".... " My youth is much against me here. Strange that truth should not be judged by its inherent excellence, independent of any reference to the utterer. To im- prove on this advantage, the servant gave out I was only fifteen years of age." . ..." I have not yet seen Curran. I do not like him for accepting the office of Master" [of the Rolls] . " O'Connor, brother to the rebel Arthur, is here." [I have] " written to him. Do not fear what you say in your letters. I am resolved. Good principles are scarce here. The public papers are either Oppositionists or Ministerial. One is as contemptible and narrow as the other. I wish I could change this. I am of course hated by both of those parties. The remnant of united Irish- men whose wrongs make them hate England, I have more hope of. I have met with no determined re- publicans, but have found some who are democrat- ifiable" . . . . " We shall leave this place at the end of April. I must not be idle in Wales : there you will come to us. Bring the dear little Americans, resign your school, and live with us for ever." The postscript is by Harriet. " Percy has given me his letter to fill up, but what I'm to say I really do not know. Oh, yesterday I received a most affectionate letter from dear Mrs. C " [probably Calvert]. "Now don't you be 1 70 PERCY B 7SSHE SHELLEY. jealous when I mention her name. She is afraid we shall effect no good here, and thinks our opinions will change of the Irish. We have seen very little of them as yet, but when Percy is more known, I suppose we shall know more at the same time. My pen is very bad, according to custom. I am sure you would laugh were you to see us give the pamphlets. We throw them out of window, and give them to men that we pass in the streets. For myself I am ready to die of laughter when it is done, and Percy looks so grave. Yesterday he put one into a woman's hood of a cloak. She knew nothing of it, and we passed her and could hardly get on, my muscles (?) were so irritated." (?) There is a second postscript by Shelley. " I have been necessarily called away whilst Harriet has been scribbling. You may guess how much my time is taken up. Adieu the post will go. You will soon hear again from your affectionate and unalter- able " PERCY." The whole of these curious extracts will be read with interest, particularly perhaps the girlish and simple postscript of Harriet. The eleven hundred copies of the Address to the Irish People which re- mained for distribution seem to have been almost all dispersed by the i8th of March, as we shall find by Harriet's remarkable letter of that date which was stopped at Holyhead, and a copy of which, sent to the Home Secretary, is still preserved in the Record Office, that few then remained in the possession of the author. It is to be noticed that at the moment when Shelley "could not expect more rapid success," he had fixed DR. ANSTER AND THE "NORTH BRITISH REVIEW." 171 the time of his intended departure from Ireland. This disposes of the statement so frequently repeated that Shelley abandoned his Irish project in disgust. The man whom Shelley sent out every day to distribute the pamphlets, was in all probability " the servant " who gave out that Shelley was only fifteen years of age. This was Daniel Hill, who accompanied the Shelleys to Barnstaple, who was arrested and impri- soned there, who turned up at a critical moment at Tanyrallt, returned with the Shelleys to Dublin, and eventually went with them to London. The letter of Shelley corroborates the story told in the North British Review, for November, 1847, in an article on the Life and Writings of Shelley. The paper was written by my lamented friend the late Dr. Anster, the translator of Faust* He says : " Shelley's pamphlet is before us. Medwin it seems searched in vain for a copy. Ours was obtained through an Irish friend of Shelley's, whose acquaintance with the poet originated accidentally. A poor man offered the pamphlet for a few pence its price stated on the title-page was fivepence. On being asked how he got it, he said a parcel of them were given him by a * In the last letter which I had the pleasure of receiving from the celebrated author of the History of Spanish Literature, Mr. Ticknor makes the following allusion to Dr. Anster, under date Boston, Aug. 29th, 1870. " I was touched and pleased to see your extract from Anster's Faustus, which I have liked ever since parts of it appeared anonymously in Blackwood's Magazine. Indeed I knew the author afterwards in Dublin in 1835, and have a copy of the first part, which I value not a little as his gift. I dare say you knew him. Yours very cordially, GEOEGE TICKNOB." This tribute of the great American scholar, written a few months before his death, to the memory of a highly accomplished, able, and amiable man will be read with interest. 1 71 PERCY B TSSHE SHELLEY. young gentleman, who told him to get what he could for them at all events to distribute them. Inquiry was made at Shelley's lodgings to ascertain the truth of the vendor's story. He was not at home; but when he heard of it he went to return the visit, and kindly acquaintanceship thus arose. The Shelleys husband and wife were then Pythagoreans. Shelley spoke as a man believing in the metempsychosis and they did not eat animal food. They seem however to have tolerated it ; for on one occasion a fowl was murdered for our friend's dinner. Of the first Mrs. Shelley the recollection of our friend is faint, but it is of an amiable and unaffected person ; very young and very pleasing, and she and Shelley seemed much attached." After describing the Address to the Irish People, Dr. Anster says (speaking of Shelley) : " And he promises another pamphlet, in which he shall reveal the plan and structure of the proposed associa- tion. Whether he printed that pamphlet we have not been able to learn." North British Review, vol. viii. Nov. 1847. This last sentence raises considerable doubt as to the extent of the personal acquaintance said to have existed between Dr. Anster's friend and Shelley. A person who had sought Shelley out in consequence of the interest excited in him by the first pamphlet could scarcely have been left in ignorance of the second. Of the second pamphlet Dr. Anster's informant knew nothing, probably from its not having been mentioned by Medwin, who was equally ignorant of its existence. It was published on Monday the 2nd of March, 1812, about a week before the adoption of the Pytha- gorean system of diet by Shelley and his wife. The time at which they commenced to abstain from animal THE YOUNG MEN OF TRINITY COLLEGE. 173 food is fixed almost to the day by Harriet herself in an unpublished letter which will subsequently be quoted. In another part of Dr. Anster's very interest- ing paper on Shelley, he speaks from the recollection of the late Chief Baron Woulfe of Shelley's cold and precise mode of addressing a public meeting. This will be found to have arisen from some imperfect recollection of the circumstance by the estimable judge. The plan for " proselytizing the young men at Dublin College/' or at least such of them as were not " entirely given up to the grossness of dissipation," has unfortunately not been revealed. We are left in ignorance also whether it was to patriotism, philan- thropy, or the Pythagorean system they were to be converted. Whatever may have been the direction of the intended reformation, there may be some who will think that this project was not the least chimerical of those that occupied the mind and heart of the young poet when in Dublin. The balcony in front of 7, Lower Sackville Street, from which Shelley and Harriet threw the pamphlets to whoever looked "likely," still remains. It runs across the whole width of the house, so that Percy and Harriet had each a window from which they could bombard the astonished town with " books. 3 ' We have no doubt that he must have enjoyed this mode of diffusing useful knowledge immensely quite as much as he did the following year at Lymouth when he substituted for it his oil-skin boats and air- tight bottles. The house then belonging to Mr. Dunne was occupied for many years by Messrs. Kohler and Co., and is now in possession of Messrs. Stark Brothers, printsellers and artists. As long as the 1 74 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. balcony remains it will always be an object of interest to those who regard with something like affection even the " local habitation '' of an author whom they love as well as admire. The " O'Connor, brother to the rebel Arthur/' to whom Shelley wrote, was the celebrated Roger O'Connor, father of the perhaps still more famous Fergus O'Connor. The history of Arthur O'Connor, who became a general in the French service, is too well known to be dwelt on here. Arthur and Roger O'Connor were nephews of Viscount Longueville, and the events of both their lives are full of romance and mystery. The most famous event in the life of Roger was the charge, for which he was tried and acquitted in 1817, of having, with a band of his retainers, robbed the Galway mail coach in 1812, the year in which the letter above alluded to was addressed to him by Shelley. It is stated that plunder was not the motive of this daring outrage ; but that certain docu- ments of a political nature compromising both Roger O'Connor and Sir Francis Burdett being known to be in the mail bags, the attempt to secure them was made and successfully carried out. The active agents in the matter were, however, not so fastidious in their tastes. Five of the gang were subsequently hanged at Cavan for attempting to pass some of the bank- notes plundered on this occasion. If there had been any person of rank the leader or tempter in this, out- rage, the fidelity of these men is very remarkable. From my own recollection I know that a popular though unfounded impression exists in Ireland that Roger O'Connor had something to do with the affair. That seems to have arisen from an idea that there was enough of the daring and romantic in the act as ROGER a CONNOR AND SIR FRANCIS BURDETT. 175 to make it not uncharacteristic of the man. There is no evidence whatever worth a moment's consideration that would in any way connect Sir Francis Burdett with such a lawless proceeding. In fact, the circum- stance of his coming to Ireland in 1817 to stand be- side his friend, for whose independence of mind on political matters he had a great regard, when Roger O'Connor was tried for this offence and acquitted, is an evidence not only of his own, but of his friend's innocence in the matter. Those who care to read " a sensational story " on the subject, should get the sixth edition of Mr. Fitzpatrick's popular work Ireland before the Union, as certain misappre- hensions connected with Sir Francis Burdett, pre- viously inserted in the work, are corrected in that edition. Nothing further in Shelley's letter of the 27th of February, 1812, seems to require explanation. The following extract is taken from another unpub- lished letter of Shelley to Miss Kitchener. It is undated, but was probably written some time after the preceding. The intended visit to the printer could have no reference to the second pamphlet, which was by that time probably struck off, as it was published three days later. It was more likely in connexion with The Declaration of Rights, a broadside intended for posting on walls, which he printed at Dublin, and which formed part of the seizure at Holyhead on the 3oth of March, 1812. The establishment of the very peculiar bank of deposit referred to in the following extract, where the common stock of the three travellers was kept for security, was not a discreditable, and may have been a wise precaution on the part of the much abused Eliza Westbrook : 176 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. (From an unpublished letter of Shelley.} " . . . . Things go on in Ireland as you shall know. I have much food for interest and occupation of mind in the events of each day." . . . . " Eliza keeps our common stock of money for safety in some nook or corner of her dress, but we are not dependent on her, although she gives it out as we want it." . . . . " You think too meanly of yourself, too highly of me." .... " I proceed (?) in the next street after I have seen the printer." It may be mentioned that one of the sheets of The Correspondent, a Dublin newspaper, previously re- ferred to as having been sent to Miss Hitchener as a wrapper to some enclosure, is part of the number for "Friday, March I3th, i8j2." Both the pamphlets were at that date printed and circulated. The other sheet of The Correspondent must have belonged to a different and earlier nnmber of that paper, as Shelley writes in it that he sent therewith the first sheet of The Address to the Irish People. The second sheet of The Correspondent, on which there is a rude pen-and- ink drawing by Shelley, probably contained the proof sheet of The Declaration of Rights, and this fixes the time of its being printed, which was certainly before the 1 8th of March, on which day it was forwarded to Holyhead with all the copies of the pamphlets then remaining in Shelley's hands. This may be the fitting time to introduce the first of these remarkable pamphlets, The Address to the Irish People. Excepting an occasional correction of some obvious error of the press, it is here printed exactly as in the original. From many of the historical parallels and deductions I entirely differ, as will WISE A DMON1TION OP GOD WIN. 1 7 7 doubtless most of my readers. Those who do not may study with advantage the following judicious remarks of Godwin to Shelley himself on the receipt of this very pamphlet : " One principle that I believe is wanting to you, and all our too fervent and impetuous reformers, is the thought that almost every institution or form of society is good in its place, and in the period of time to which it belongs. How many beautiful and admirable effects grew out of Popery and the monastic institution, in the period when they were in their genuine health and vigour. To them we owe almost all our logic and our literature." Letter to Shelley, March 4th, 1812.* * The great excuse of Shelley lies in " his want of religious education at home," which his friend Captain Medwin in the words just quoted frankly admits {Life of Shelley, vol. ii. p. 3^7). In that best of schools the feelings of love and reverence which are usually implanted in the minds and hearts of most children seem to have been entirely omitted in the case of the neglected Shelley. To his ill-chosen college friend Mr. Hogg, with whom at the time he was only acquainted six months, he could thus write of the most hallowed circle in the world that which is drawn around the fireside of one's home. " Certain members of my family," says Shelley, " are no more Christians than Epicurus himself " (Hogg, vol. i. p. 377). We may deplore the sad condition of such a childhood, but we cannot admit that the experience which is here so painfully acknowledged prepared the writer to be either a just or competent critic of the effects of religious teaching on the minds of others who happily were subject to far different influences. As for the supposed facts, historical and theological, in Shelley's pamphlet, they are for the most part simply untrue. The uncon- scious libel on the religion of the people he addressed, which he calls " fair," is, under the circumstances of the case, absolutely amusing. N AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. BY PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. ADVERTISEMENT. The lowest possible price is set on this publication, because it is the inten- tion of the Author to awaken in the minds of the Irish poor a know- ledge of their real state, summarily pointing out the evils of that state, and suggesting rational means of remedy. Catholic Emanci- pation, and a Repeal of the Union A ct (the latter, the most successful engine that England ever wielded, over the mfsery of fallen Ireland) being treated of in the following Address, as grievances which unanimity and resolution may remove, and associations conducted with peaceable firmness, being earnestly recommended as means for embodying that unanimity and firmness which must finally be successful. JBublm : 1812. Pi-ice AN ADDRESS IEISH PEOPLE. FELLOW MEN, I am not an Irishman, yet I can feel for you. I hope there are none among you who will read this address with prejudice or levity, because it is made by an Englishman ; indeed, I believe there are not. The Irish are a brave nation. They have a heart of liberty in their breasts, but they are much mistaken if they fancy that a stranger cannot have as warm a one. Those are my brothers and my coun- trymen who are unfortunate. I should like to know what there is in a man being an Englishman, a Spaniard, or a Frenchman that makes him worse or better than he really is. He was born in one town, you in another, but that is no reason why he should not feel for you, desire your benefit, or be willing to give you some advice, which may make you more capable of knowing your own interest, or acting so as to secure it. There are many Englishmen who cry down the Irish, and think it answers their ends to revile all that belongs to Ireland : but it is not because these men are Englishmen that they maintain such i2 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. opinions, but because they wish to get money, and titles, and power. They would act in this manner to whatever country they might belong, until mankind is much altered for the better, which reform, I hope, will one day be effected. I address you, then, as my brothers and my fellow men, for I should wish to see the Irishman who, if England was persecuted as Ireland is, who, if France was persecuted as Ireland is, who, if any set of men that helped to do a public service, were prevented from enjoying its benefits as Irishmen are 1 should like to see the man, I say, who would see these misfortunes, and not attempt to succour the sufferers when he could, just that I might tell him that he was no Irishman, but some bastard mongrel bred up in a court, or some coward fool who was a democrat to all above him, and an aristocrat to all below him. I think there are few true Irishmen who would not be ashamed of such a character, still fewer who possess it. I know that there are some, not among you, my friends, but among your enemies, who, seeing the title of this piece, will take it up with a sort of hope that it may recommend violent measures, and thereby disgrace the cause of freedom, that the warmth of an heart desirous that liberty should be possessed equally by all, will vent itself in abuse on the enemies of liberty, bad men who deserve the con- tempt of the good, and ought not to excite their indignation to the harm of their cause. But these men will be disappointed I know the warm feeling of an Irishman sometimes carries him beyond the point of prudence. I do not desire to root out, but to moderate this honourable warmth. This will dis- appoint the pioneers of oppression, and they will be sorry that through this address nothing will occur AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 183 which can be twisted into any other meaning but what is calculated to fill you with that moderation which they have not, and make you give them that toleration which they refuse to grant to you. You profess the Roman Catholic religion which your fathers professed before you. Whether it is the best religion or not I will not here inquire : all religions are good which make men good ; and the- way that a person ought to prove that his method of worshipping God is best is for himself to be better than all other men. But we will consider what your religion was in old times and what it is now : you may say it is not a fair way for me to proceed as a Protestant, but I am not a Protestant, nor am I a Catholic, and therefore not being a follower of either of these religions, I am better able to judge between them. A Protestant is my brother, and a Catholic is my brother. I am happy when I can do either of them a service, and no pleasure is so great to me than that which I should feel if my advice could make men of any profession of faith, wiser, better, and happier. The Roman Catholics once persecuted the Protes- tants, the Protestants now persecute the Roman Catholics. Should we think that one is as bad as the other? No, you are not answerable for the faults of your fathers any more than the Protestants are good for the goodness of their fathers. I must judge of people as I see them ; the Irish Catholics are badly used. I will not endeavour to hide from them their wretchedness ; they would think that I mocked at them if I should make the attempt. The Irish Catholics now demand for themselves and proffer for others un- limited toleration, and the sensible part among them, which I am willing to think constitutes a very large 184 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. portion of their body, know that the gates of Heaven are open to people of every religion, provided they are good. But the Protestants, although they may think so in their hearts, which certainly, if they think at all, they must, seem to act as if they thought that God was better pleased with them than with you ; they trust the reins of earthly government only to the hands of their own sect. In spite of this, I never found one of them impudent enough to say that a Roman Catholic, or a Quaker, or a Jew, or a Mahometan, if he was a virtuous man, and did all the good in his power, would go to Heaven a bit the slower for not subscribing to the thirty-nine articles ; and if he should say so, how ridi- culous in a foppish courtier not six feet high to direct the spirit of universal harmony in what manner to conduct the affairs of the universe ! The Protestants say that there was a time when the Roman Catholics burnt and murdered people of diffe- rent sentiments, and that their religious tenets are now as they were then. This is all very true. You certainly worship God in the same way that you did when these barbarities took place, but is that any reason that you should now be barbarous ? There is as much reason to suppose it as to suppose that because a man's great-grandfather, who was a Jew, had been hung for sheepstealing, that I, by believing the same religion as he did, must certainly commit the same crime. Let us then see what the Roman Catholic religion has been. No one knows much of the early times of the Christian religion until about three hundred years after its be- ginning; two great Churches, called the Roman and the Greek Churches, divided the opinions of men. They fought for a very long time a great many words were wasted, and a great deal of blood shed. AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 185 This, as you may suppose, did no good. Each party, however, thought they were doing God a service, and that he would reward them. If they had looked an inch before their noses, they might have found that fighting and killing men, and cursing them and hating them, was the very worst way for getting into favour with a Being who is allowed by all to be best pleased with deeds of love and charity. At last, however, these two religions entirely separated, and the popes reigned like kings and bishops at Rome, in Italy. The Inquisition was set up, and in the course of one year 30,000 people were burnt in Italy and Spain for entertaining different opinions from those of the pope and the priests. There was an instance of shock- ing barbarity which the Roman Catholic clergy com- mitted in France by order of the Pope. The bigoted monks of that country, in cold blood, in one night massacred 80,000 Protestants ; this was done under the authority of the Pope, and there was only one Roman Catholic bishop who had virtue enough to refuse to help. The vices of monks and nuns in their convents were in those times shameful. People thought that they might commit any sin, however monstrous, if they had money enough to prevail upon the priests to absolve them. In truth, at that time the priests shamefully imposed upon the people ; they got all the power into their own hands; they persuaded them that a man could not be entrusted with the care of his own soul, and by cunningly obtaining possession of their secrets, they became more powerful than kings, princes, dukes, lords, or ministers. This power made them bad men ; for although rational people are very good in their natural state, there are now, and ever have been, very few whose good dispositions despotic power ?86 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. does not destroy. I have now given a fair description of what your religion was ; and Irishmen, my brothers will you make your friend appear a liar, when he takes upon himself to say for you that you are not now what the professors of the same faith were iu times of yore. Do I speak false when I say that the Inquisition is the object of your hatred ? Am I a liar if I assert that an Irishman prizes liberty dearly, that he will preserve that right, and if it be wrong, does not dream that money can give to a priest, or the talking of another man erring like himself, can in the least influence the judgment of the eternal God ? I am not a liar if I affirm in your name, that you believe a Protestant equally with yourself to be worthy of the kingdom of Heaven, if he be equally virtuous, that you will treat men as brethren wherever you may find them, and that difference of opinion in religious matters shall not, does not, in the least on your part obstruct the most perfect harmony on every other subject. Ah ! no, Irishmen, I am not a liar. I seek your confidence, not that I may betray it, but that I may teach you to be happy and wise and good. If you will not repose any trust in me I shall lament ; but I will do everything in my power that is honourable, fair, and open to gain it. Some teach you that others are heretics, that you alone are right ; some teach that rectitude consists in religious opinions, without which no morality is good. Some will tell you that you ought to divulge your secrets to one particular set of men. Beware, my friends, how you trust those who speak in this way. They will, I doubt not, attempt to rescue you from your present miserable state, but they will prepare a worse. It will be out of the frying-pan into the fire. Your present oppressors, it is true, will then AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 187 oppress you no longer, but you will feel the lash of a master a thousand times more bloodthirsty and cruel. Evil designing men will spring up who will prevent you thinking as you please will burn you if you do not think as they do. There are always bad men who take advantage of hard times. The monks and the priests of old were very bad men; take care no such abuse your confidence again. You are not blind to your present situation ; you are villanously treated ; you are badly used. That this slavery shall cease, I will venture to prophesy. Your enemies dare not to persecute you longer, the spirit of Ireland is bent, but it is not broken, and that they very well know. But I wish your views to embrace a wider scene I wish you to think for your children and your children's children ; to take great care (for it all rests with you) that whilst one tyranny is destroyed, another more terrible and fierce does not spring up. Take care then of smooth-faced impostors, who talk indeed of freedom, but who will cheat you into slavery. Can there be worse slavery than the depending for the safety of your soul on the will of another man ? Is one man more favoured than another by God ? No, certainly, they are all favoured according to the good they do, and not according to the rank and profession they hold. God values a poor man as much as a priest, and has given him a soul as much to himself. The worship that a kind Being must love, is that of a simple affec- tionate heart, that shows its piety in good works, and not in ceremonies, or confessions, or burials, or proces- sions, or wonders. Take care then that you are not led away. Doubt everything that leads you not to charity, and think of the word " heretic" as a word which some selfish knave invented for the ruin and i88 PERCY STSSHE SHELLEY. misery of the "world, to answer his own paltry and narrow ambition. Do not inquire if a man be a heretic, if he be a Quaker, a Jew, or a Heathen ; but if he be a virtuous man, if he loves liberty and truth, if he wish the happiness and peace of human kind. If a man be ever so much a believer and love not these things, he is a heartless hypocrite, a rascal, and a knave. Despise and hate him as ye despise a tyrant and a villain. Oh, Ireland ! thou emerald of the ocean, whose sons are generous and brave, whose daughters are honour- able and frank and fair, thou art the isle on whose green shores I have desired to see the standard of liberty erected a flag of fire a beacon at which the world shall light the torch of Freedom ! We will now examine the Protestant religion. Its origin is called the Reformation. It was undertaken by some bigoted men who showed how little they understood the spirit of reform by burning each other. You will observe that these men burnt each other, indeed they universally betrayed a taste for destroy- ing, and vied with the chiefs of the Roman Catholic religion in not only hating their enemies, but those men who least of all were their enemies, or anybody's enemies. Now do the Protestants or do they not hold the same tenets as they did when Calvin burnt Servetus ? They swear that they do. We can have no better proof. Then with what face can the Protestants object to Catholic Emancipation on the plea that Catholics once were barbarous ; when their own esta- blishment is liable to the very same objections, on the very same grounds ? I think this is a specimen of bare- faced intoleration, which I had hoped would not have disgraced this age ; this age, which is called the age of reason, of thought diffused, of virtue acknowledged, AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 189 and its principles fixed oh ! that it may be so. I have mentioned the Catholic and Protestant religions more to show that any objection to the toleration of the one forcibly applies to the non-permission of the other, or rather to show that there is no reason why both might not be tolerated ; why every religion, every form of thinking might not be tolerated. But why do I speak of toleration ? This word seems to mean that there is some merit in the person who tolerates : he has this merit if it be one, of refraining to do an evil act, but he will share the merit with every other peaceable person who pursues his own business, and does not hinder another of his rights. It is not a merit to tolerate, but it is a crime to be intolerant : it is not a merit in me that I sat quietly at home without murdering any one, but it is a crime if I do so. Besides, no act of a national representation can make anything wrong which was not wrong before ; it cannot change virtue and truth, and for a very plain reason : because they are unchangeable. An Act passed in the British Parliament to take away the rights of Catholics to act in that assembly, does not really take them away. It prevents them from doing it by force. This is in such cases the last and only efficacious way. But force is not the test of truth ; they will never have recourse to violence who acknow- ledge no other rule of behaviour but virtue and justice. The folly of persecuting men for their religion will appear if we examine it. Why do we persecute them ? to make them believe as we do. Can any- thing be more barbarous or foolish. For although we may make them say they believe as we do, they will not in their hearts do any such thing, indeed they ipo PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. cannot; this devilish method can only make them false hypocrites. For what is belief? We cannot believe just what we like, but only what we think to be true ; for you cannot alter a man's opinion by beating or burning, but by persuading him that what you think is right, and this can only be done by fair words and reason. It is ridiculous to call a man a heretic because he thinks differently from you; he might as well call you one. In the same sense the word orthodox is used ; it signifies ".to think rightly," and what can be more vain, presumptuous in any man or any set of men, to put themselves so out of the ordi- nary course of things as to say " What we think is right, no other people throughout the world have opinions anything like equal to ours." Anything short of unlimited toleration, and complete charity with all men, on which you will recollect that Jesus Christ principally insisted, is wrong, and for this reason. What makes a man to be a good man ? Not his religion, or else there could be no good men in any religion but one, when yet we find that all ages, countries, and opinions have produced them. Virtue and wisdom always so far as they went pro- duced liberty or happiness long before any of the religions now in the world have ever [been ?] heard of. The only use of a religion that ever I could see, is to make men wiser or better ; so far as it does this it is a good one. Now if people are good, and yet have sentiments differing from you, then all the purposes are answered which any reasonable man could want, and whether he thinks like you or not is of too little consequence to employ means which must be disgust- ing and hateful to candid minds ; nay, they cannot approve of such means. For, as I have before said, AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 191 you cannot believe or disbelieve what you like perhaps some of you may doubt this, but just try. I will take a common and familiar instance. Suppose you have a friend of whom you wish to think well ; he commits a crime which proves to you that he is a bad man. It is very painful to you to think ill of him, and you would still think well of him if you could. But mark the word, you cannot think well of him, not even to secure your own peace of mind can you do so. You try, but your attempts are vain. This shows how little power a man has over his belief, or rather, that he cannot believe what he does not think true. And what shall we think now ? What fools and tyrants must not those men be who set up a par- ticular religion, say that this religion alone is right, and that every one who disbelieves it ought to be deprived of certain rights which are really his, and which would be allowed him if he believed. Certainly if you cannot help disbelief, it is not any fault in you. To take away a man's rights and privileges, to call him a heretic, or to think worse of him, when at the same time you cannot help owning that he has committed no fault, is the grossest tyranny and intoleration. From what has been said I think we may be justified in concluding that people of all religions ought to have an equal share in the State, that the words heretic and orthodox were invented by a vain villain, and have done a great deal of harm in the world, and that no person is answerable for his belief whose actions are virtuous and moral, that the religion is best whose members are the best men, and that no person can help either his belief or disbelief. Be in charity with all men. It does not therefore signify what your religion was, or what the Protestant i 9 2 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. religion was, we must consider them as we find them. What are they now ? Yours is not intolerant ; indeed, my friends, I have ventured to pledge myself for you that it is not. You merely desire to go to Heaven in your own way, nor will you interrupt fellow travellers, although the road which you take may not be that which they take. Believe me that good- ness of heart and purity of life are things of more value in the eye of the Spirit of Goodness, than idle earthly ceremonies and things which may have anything but charity for their object. And is it for the first or the last of these things that you or the Protestants con- tend ? It is for the last. Prejudiced people indeed are they who grudge to the happiness and comfort of your souls, things which can do harm to no one. They are not compelled to shares in these rites. Irishmen ! knowledge is more extended than in the early period of your religion, people have learned to think, and the more thought there is in the world, the more happiness and liberty will there be : men begin now to think less of idle ceremonies and more of realities. From a long night have they risen, and they can perceive its darkness. I know no men of thought and learning who do not consider the Catholic idea of purgatory much nearer the truth than the Protestant one of eternal damnation. Can you think that the Mahometans and the Indians, who have done good deeds in this life, will not be rewarded in the next? The Protestants believe that they will be eter- nally damned, at least they swear that they do. I think they appear in a better light as perjurers than believers in a falsehood so hurtful and un- charitable as this. I propose unlimited toleration, or rather the destruction both of toleration and in- AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 193 toleration. The act permits certain people to worship God after such a manner, which, in fact, if not done, would as far as in it lay prevent God from hearing their address. Can we conceive anything more pre- sumptuous, and at the same time more ridiculous, than a set of men granting a licence to God to receive the prayers of certain of his creatures ? Oh, Irishmen ! I am interested in your cause ; and it is not because you are Irishmen or Roman Catholics that I feel with you and feel for you ; but because you are men and sufferers. Were Ireland at this moment peopled with Brahmins, this very same Address would have been suggested by the same state of mind. You have suffered not merely for your religion, but some other causes which I am equally desirous of remedying. The Union of England with Ireland has withdrawn the Protestant aristocracy and gentry from their native country, and with these their friends and connections. Their resources are taken from this country, although they are dissipated in another; the very poor people are most infamously oppressed by the weight of burden which the superior ranks lay upon their shoulders. I am no less desirous of the reform of these evils (with many others) than for the Catholic Emancipation. Perhaps you all agree with me on both these subjects. We now come to the method of doing these things. I agree with the Quakers so far as they disclaim violence, and trust their cause wholly and solely to its own truth. If you are convinced of the truth of your cause, trust wholly to its truth ; if you are not convinced, give it up. In no case employ violence ; the way to liberty and happiness is never to transgress the rules of virtue and justice. Liberty and happiness are founded upon virtue and justice ; if you o i 9 4 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. destroy the one you destroy the other. However ill others may act, this will be no excuse for you if you follow their example ; it ought rather to warn you from pursuing so bad a method. Depend upon it, Irishmen, your cause shall not be neglected. I will fondly hope that the schemes for your happiness and liberty, as well as those for the happiness and liberty of the world, will not be wholly fruitless. One secure method of defeating them is violence on the side of the injured party. If you can descend to use the same weapons as your enemy, you put yourself on a level with him on this score : you must be convinced that he is on these grounds your superior. But appeal to the sacred principles of virtue and justice, then how is he awed into nothing ? How does truth show him in his real colours, and place the cause of toleration and reform in the clearest light ? I extend my view not only to you as Irishmen, but to all of every persuasion, of every country. Be calm, mild, deliberate, patient ; recollect that you can in no measure more effectually forward the cause of reform than by employing your leisure time in reasoning or the cultivation of your minds. Think and talk and discuss : the only subjects you ought to propose are those of happiness and liberty. Be free and be happy, but first be wise and good. For you are not all wise or good. You are a great and a brave nation, but you cannot yet be all wise or good. You may be at some time, and then Ireland will be an earthly paradise. You know what is meant by a mob. It is an assembly of people who, without foresight or thought, collect themselves to disapprove of by force any measure which they dislike. An assembly like this can never do anything but harm ; tumultuous proceedings must retard the period AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 195 when thought and coolness will produce freedom and happiness, and that to the very people who make the mob. But if a number of human beings, after thinking of their own interests, meet together for any conversa- tion on them, and employ resistance of the mind, not resistance of the body, these people are going the right way to work. But let no fiery passions carry them beyond this point. Let them consider that in some sense the whole welfare of their countrymen depends on their prudence, and that it becomes them to guard the welfare of others as their own. Associa- tions for purposes of violence are entitled to the strongest disapprobation of the real reformist. Always suspect that some knavish rascal is at the bottom of things of this kind, waiting to profit by the confusion. All secret associations are also bad. Are you men of deep designs, whose deeds love darkness better than light ? Dare you not say what you think before any man ? Can you not meet in the open face of day in conscious innocence ? Oh, Irishmen, ye can ! Hidden arms, secret meetings, and designs violently to separate England from Ireland are all very bad. I do not mean to say the very end of them is bad ; the object you have in view may be just enough, whilst the way you go about it is wrong may be calculated to produce an opposite effect. Never do evil that good may come ; always think of others as well as yourself, and cautiously look how your conduct may do good or evil, when you yourself shall be mouldering in the grave. Be fair, open, and you will be terrible to your enemies. A friend cannot defend you, much as he may feel for your sufferings, if you have recourse to methods of which virtue and justice disapprove. No cause is in itself so dear to liberty as yours. Much O 2 196 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. depends on you ; far may your efforts spread either hope or despair : do not then cover in darkness wrongs at which the face of day and the tyrants who bask in its warmth ou^ht to blush. Wherever has violence succeeded ? The French Revolution, although undertaken with the best intentions, ended ill for the people, because violence was employed. The cause which they vindicated was that of truth, but they gave it the appearance of a lie by using methods which will suit the purposes of liars as well as their own. Speak boldly and daringly what you. think ; an Irish- man was never accused of cowardice, do not let it be thought possible that he is a coward. Let him say what he thinks ; a lie is the basest and meanest employment of men : leave lies and secrets to courtiers and lordlings. Be open, sincere, and single-hearted. Let it be seen that the Irish votaries of Freedom dare to speak what they think ; let them resist oppression, not by force of arms, but by power of mind and reliance on truth and justice. Will any be arraigned for libel will imprisonment or death be the conse- quences of this mode of proceeding ? Probably not. But if it were so ? Is danger frightful to an Irishman who speaks for his own liberty and the liberty of his wife and children ? No ; he will steadily persevere, and sooner shall pensioners cease to vote with their bene- factors than an Irishman swerve from the path of duty. But steadily persevere in the system above laid down, its benefits will speedily be manifested. Perse- cution may destroy some, but cannot destroy all, or nearly all ; let it do its will. Ye have appealed to truth and justice, show the goodness of your religion by persisting in a reliance on these things, which must be the rules even of the Almighty's conduct. But AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. itf before this can be done with any effect, habits of SOBRIET^ REGULARITY, and THOUGHT must be entered into, and firmly resolved upon. My warm-hearted friends "who meet together to talk of the distresses of your countrymen until social chat induces you to drink rather freely, as ye have felt passionately, so reason coolly. Nothing hasty can be lasting ; lay up the money with which you usually purchase drunkenness and ill-health to relieve the pains of your fellow sufferers. Let your children lisp of freedom in the cradle let your deathbed be the school for fresh exertions let every street of the city and field of the country be connected with thoughts which liberty has made holy. Be warm in your cause, yet rational and charitable and tolerant never let the oppressor grind you into justifying his conduct by imitating his meanness. Many circumstances, I will own, may excuse what is called rebellion, but no circumstances can ever make it good for your cause, and however honourable to your feelings, it will reflect no credit on your judg- ments. It will bind you more closely to the block of the oppressor, and your children's children, whilst they talk of your exploits, will feel that you have done them injury instead of benefit. A crisis is now arriving which shall decide your fate. The King of Great Britain has arrived at the evening of his days. He has objected to your eman- cipation ; he has been inimical to you ; but he will in a certain time be no more. The present Prince of Wales will then be king. It is said that he has promised to restore you to freedom : your real and natural right will, in that case, be no longer kept from you. I hope he has pledged himself to this act of 198 PEROT BYSSHE SHELLEY. justice, because there will then exist some obligation to bind him to do right. Kings are but too apt to think little as they should do : they think everything in the world is made for them ; when the truth is, that it is only the vices of men that make such people necessary, and they have no other right of being kings but in virtue of the good they do. The benefit of the governed is the origin and meaning of government. The Prince of Wales has had every opportunity of ^knowing how he ought to act about Ireland and liberty. That great and good man Charles Fox, who was your friend and the friend of freedom, was the friend of the Prince of Wales. He never flattered or disguised his sentiments, but spoke them openly on every occasion, and the Prince was the better for his instructive conversation. He saw the truth, and he believed it. Now I know not what to say; his staff is gone, and he leans upon a broken reed ; his present advisers are not like Charles Fox, they do not plan for liberty and safety, not for the happiness but for the glory of their country ; and what, Irishmen, is the glory of a country divided from their happiness ? It is a false light hung out by the enemies of freedom to lure the unthinking into their net. Men like these surround the Prince, and whether or no he has really promised to emancipate you whether or no he will consider the promise of a Prince of Wales binding to a King of England, is yet a matter of doubt. We cannot at least be quite certain of it : on this you cannot certainly rely. But there are men who, wherever they find a tendency to freedom, go there to increase, support, and regulate that tendency. These men, who join to a rational disdain of danger a practice of speaking the truth, AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 199 and defending the cause of the oppressed against the oppressor these men see what is right and will pursue it. On such as these you may safely rely : they love you as they love their brothers ; they feel for the un- fortunate, and never ask whether a man is an English- man or an Irishman, a catholic, a heretic, a Christian, or a heathen, before their hearts and their purses are opened to feel with their misfortunes and relieve their neces- sities : such are the men who will stand by you for ever. Depend then not upon the promises of princes, but upon those of virtuous and disinterested men : depend not upon force of arms or violence, but upon the force of the truth of the rights which you have to share equally with others, the benefits and the evils of government. The crisis to which I allude as the period of your emancipation is not the death of the present King, or any circumstance that has to do with kings, but something that is much more likely to do you good : it is the increase of virtue and wisdom which will lead people to find out that force and oppression are wrong and false ; and this opinion, when it once gains ground, will prevent government from severity. It will restore those rights which Government has taken away. Have nothing to do with force or violence, and things will safely and surely make their way to the right point. The Ministers have now in Parlia- ment a very great majority, and the Ministers are against you. They maintain the falsehood that, were you in power, you would prosecute [persecute ?] and burn, on the plea that you once did so. They maintain many other things of the same nature. They command the majority of the House of Commons, or rather the part of that assembly who receive pensions from Govern- 200 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. ment or whose relatives receive them. These men of course are against you, because their employers are. But the sense of the country is not against you ; the people of England are not against you they feel warmly for you in some respects they feel with you. The sense of the English and of their governors is opposite there must be an end of this ; the goodness of a Government con- sists in the happiness of the governed. If the governed are wretched and dissatisfied, the government has failed in its end. It wants altering and mending. It will be mended, and a reform of English government will produce good to the Irish good to all human kind, excepting those whose happiness consists in others' sorrows, and it will be a fit punishment for these to be deprived of their devilish joy. This I consider as an event which is approaching, and which will make the beginning of our hopes for that period which may spread wisdom and virtue so wide as to leave no hole in which folly or villany may hide themselves. I wish you, O Irishmen, to be as careful and thoughtful of your interests as are your real friends. Do not drink, do not play, do not spend any idle time, do not take everything that other people say for granted there are numbers who will tell you lies to make their own fortunes : you cannot more certainly do good to your own cause than by defeating the intentions of these men. Think, read, and talk; let your own condition and that of your wives and children fill your minds ; disclaim all manner of alliance with violence : meet together if you will, but do not meet in a mob. If you think and read and talk with a real wish of bene- fiting the cause of truth and liberty, it will soon be seen how true a service you are tendering, and how sincere you are in your professions ; but mobs and AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 201 violence must be discarded. The certain degree of civil and religious liberty which the usage of the English Constitution allows, is such as the worst of men are entitled to, although you have it not ; but that liberty which we may one day hope for, wisdom and virtue can alone give you a right to enjoy. This wisdom and this virtue I recommend on every account that you should instantly begin to practise. Lose not a day, not an hour, not a moment. Temperance, sobriety, charity, and independence will give you virtue; and reading, talking, thinking, and searching will give you wisdom; when you have those things you may defy the tyrant. It is not going often to chapel, crossing yourselves, or confessing that will make you virtuous ; many a rascal has attended re- gularly at mass, and many a good man has never gone at all. It is not paying priests or believing in what they say that makes a good man, but it is doing good actions or benefiting other people ; this is the true way to be good, and the prayers and confessions and masses of him who does not these things are good for nothing at all. Do your work regularly and quickly : when you have done, think, read, and talk ; do not spend your money in idleness and drinking, which so far from doing good to your cause, will do it harm. If you have anything to spare from your wife and children, let it do some good to other people, and put them in a way of getting \visdom and virtue, as the pleasure that will come from these good acts will be much better than the headache that comes from a drinking bout. And never quarrel between each other ; be all of one mind as nearly as you can ; do these things, and I will promise you liberty and happiness. But if, on the contrary of these things, you neglect to 202 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. improve yourselves, continue to use the word heretic, and demand from others the toleration which you are unwilling to give, your friends and the friends of liberty will have reason to lament the death-blow of their hopes. I expect better things from you : it is for yourselves that I fear and hope. Many English- men are prejudiced against you; they sit by their own firesides, and certain rumours artfully spread are ever on the wing against you. But these people who think ill of you and of jour nation are often the very men who, if they had better information, would feel for you most keenly. Wherefore are these reports spread ? How do they begin ? They originate from the warmth of the Irish character, which the friends of the Irish nation have hitherto encouraged rather than repressed ; this leads them in those moments, when their wrongs appear so clearly, to commit acts which justly excite displeasure. They begin therefore from yourselves, although falsehood and tyranny artfully magnify and multiply the cause of ofi'ence. Give no offence. I will for the present dismiss the subject of the Catholic Emancipation ; a little reflection will con- vince you that my remarks are just. Be true to your- selves, and your enemies shall not triumph. I fear nothing, if charity and sobriety mark your proceedings. Everything is to be dreaded you yourselves will be unworthy of even a restoration to your rights, if you disgrace the cause, which I hope is tbat of truth and liberty, by violence ; if you refuse to others the toleration which you claim for yourselves. But this you will not do. I rely upon it, Irishmen, that the warmth of your character will be shown as much in union with Eng- lishmen and what are called heretics, who feel for you AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 203 and love you, as in avenging your wrongs, or forward- ing their annihilation. It is the heart that glows and not the cheek. The firmness, sobriety, and consis- tence of your outward behaviour will not at all show any hardness of heart, but will prove that you are determined in your cause, and are going the right way to work. I will repeat that virtue and wisdom are necessary to true happiness and liberty. The Catholic Emancipation, I consider, is certain. I do not see that anything but violence and intolerance among yourselves can leave an excuse to your enemies for continuing your slavery. The other wrongs undsr which you labour will probably also soon be done away. You will be rendered equal to the people of England in their rights and privileges, and will be in all respects, so far as concerns the State, as happy. And now, Irishmen, another and a more wide prospect opens to my view. I cannot avoid, little as it may appear to have anything to do with your present situa- tion, to talk to you on the subject. It intimately concerns the well-being of your children and your children's children, and will perhaps more than any- thing prove to you the advantage and necessity of being thoughtful, sober, and regular ; of avoiding foolish and idle talk, and thinking of yourselves as of men who are able to be much wiser and happier than you now are ; for habits like these will not only conduce to the successful putting aside your present and im- mediate grievances, but will contain a seed which in future times will spring up into the tree of liberty, and bear the fruit of happiness. There is no doubt but the world is going wrong, or rather that it is very capable of being much improved. "What I mean by this improvement is, the inducement 204 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. of a more equal and general diffusion of happiness and liberty. Many people are very rich and many are very poor. Which do you think are happiest ? I can tell you that neither are happy, so far as their station is concerned. Nature never intended that there should be such a thing as a poor man or a rich one. Being put in an unnatural situation, they can neither of them be happy, so far as their situation is concerned. The poor man is born to obey the rich man, though they both come into the world equally helpless and equally naked. But the poor man does the rich no service by obeying him the rich man does the poor no good by commanding him. It would be much better if they could be prevailed upon to live equally like brothers they would ultimately both be happier. But this can be done neither to-day nor to-morrow ; much as such a -change is to be desired, it is quite impossible. Violence and folly in this, as in the other case, would only put off the period of its event. Mildness, sobriety, and reason are the effectual methods of forwarding the ends of liberty and happiness. Although we may see many things put in train during our life-time, we cannot hope to see the work of virtue and reason finished now ; we can only lay the foundation for our posterity. Government is an evil ; it is only the thoughtlessness and vices of men that make it a necessary evil. When all men are good and wise, government will of itself decay. So long as men continue foolish and vicious, so long will government, even such a Government as that of England, continue necessary in order to prevent the crimes of bad men. Society is produced by the wants, government by the wickedness, and a state of just and happy equality by the improvement and reason of man. It is in vain to AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 205 hope for any liberty and happiness without reason and virtue, for where there is no virtue there will be crime, and where there is crime there must be government. Before the restraints of government are lessened, it is fit that we should lessen the necessity for them. Before government is done away with, we must reform ourselves. It is this work which I would earnestly recommend to you. O Irishmen, REFORM YOURSELVES, and I do not recommend it to you particularly because I think that you most need it, but because I think that your hearts are warm and your feelings high, and you will perceive the necessity of doing it more than those of a colder and more distant nature. I look with an eye of hope and pleasure on the present state of things, gloomy and incapable of im- provement as they may appear to others. It delights me to see that men begin to think and to act for the good of others. Extensively as folly and selfishness have predominated in this age, it gives me hope and pleasure at least to see that many know what is right. Ignorance and vice commonly go together : he that would do good must be wise. A man cannot be truly wise who is not truly virtuous. Prudence and wisdom are very different things. The prudent man is he who carefully consults for his own good : the wise man is he who carefully consults for the good of others. I look upon Catholic Emancipation and the restora- tion of the liberties and happiness of Ireland, so far as they are compatible with the English Constitution, as great and important events. I hope to see them soon. But if all ended here, it would give me little pleasure. I should still see thousands miserable and wicked ; things would still be wrong. I regard then the io6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. accomplishment of these things as the road to a greater reform, that reform after which virtue and wisdom shall have conquered pain and vice when no govern- ment will be wanted but that of your neighbour's opinion. I look to these things with hope and pleasure, because I consider that they will certainly happen, and because men will not then be wicked and miserable. But I do not consider that they will or can immediately happen ; their arrival will be gradual, and it all depends upon yourselves how soon or how late these great changes will happen. If all of you to- morrow were virtuous and wise, government which to-day is a safeguard, would then become a tyranny. But I cannot expect a rapid change. Many are obsti- nate and determined in their vice, whose selfishness makes them think only of their own good, when in fact the best way even to bring that about is to make others happy. I do not wish to see things changed now, because it cannot be done without violence, and we may assure ourselves that none of us are fit for any change, however good, if we condescend to employ force in a cause which we think right. Force makes the side that employs it directly wrong, and as much as we may pity we cannot approve the headstrong and intolerant zeal of its adherents. Can you conceive, O Irishmen ! a happy state of society conceive men of every way of thinking living together like brothers ? The descendant of the greatest prince would then be entitled to no more respect than the son of a peasant. There would be no pomp and no parade; but that which the rich now keep to themselves would then be distributed among the people. None would be in magnificence, but the superfluities then taken from the rich would be sufficient AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 207 when spread abroad to make every one comfortable. No lover would then be false to his mistress, no mistress could desert her lover. No friend would play false ; no rents, no debts, no taxes, no frauds of any kind would disturb the general happiness : good as they would be, wise as they would be, they would be daily getting better and wiser. No beggars would exist, nor any of those wretched women who are now reduced to a state of the most horrible misery and vice by men whose wealth makes them villainous and hardened; no thieves or murderers, because poverty would never drive men to take away comforts from another when he had enough for himself. Vice and misery, pomp and poverty, power and obedience, would then be banished altogether. It is for such a state as this, Irishmen, that I exhort you to prepare. " A camel shall as soon pass through the eye of a needle, as a rich man enter the kingdom of heaven." This is not to be understood literally. Jesus Christ appears to me only to have meant that riches have generally the effect of hardening and vitiating the heart ; so has poverty. I think those people then are very silly, and cannot see one inch beyond their noses, who say that human nature is depraved ; when at the same time wealth and poverty, those two great sources of crime, fall to the lot of a great majority of people ; and when they see that people in moderate circumstances are always most wise and good. People say that poverty is no evil : they have never felt it, or they would not think so ; that wealth is necessary to encourage the arts but are not the arts very inferior things to virtue and happiness ? the man would be very dead to all generous feelings who would rather see pretty pictures and statues than a million free and happy men. 2o8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. It will be said that my design is to make you dis- satisfied with your present condition, and that I wish to raise a Rebellion. But how stupid and sottish must those men be who think that violence and uneasiness of mind have anything to do with forwarding the views of peace, harmony, and happiness. They should know that nothing was so well fitted to produce slavery, tyranny, and vice as the violence which is attributed to the friends of liberty, and which the real friends of liberty are the only persons who disdain. As to your being dissatisfied with your present condition, anything that I may say is certainly not likely to increase that dissatisfaction. I have advanced nothing concerning your situation but its real case ; but what may be proved to be true. I defy any one to point out a falsehood that I have uttered in the course of this Address. It is impossible but the blindest among you must see that everything is not right. This sight has often pressed some of the poorest among you to take some- thing from the rich man's store by violence, to relieve his own necessities. I cannot justify, but I can pity him. I cannot pity the fruits of the rich man's intempe- rance. I suppose some are to be found who will justify him. This sight has often brought home to a day-labourer the truth which I wish to impress upon you that all is not right. But I do not merely wish to convince you that our present state is bad, but that its alteration for the better depends on your own exertions and resolutions. But he has never found out the method of mending it who does not first mend his own conduct, and then prevail upon others to refrain from any vicious habits which they may have contracted, much less does the poor man suppose that wisdom as well as virtue is AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 209 necessary, and that the employing his little time in reading and thinking, is really doing all that he has in his power to do towards the state, when pain and vice shall perish altogether. I wish to impress upon your minds that without virtue or wisdom there can he no liberty or happiness ; and that temperance, sobriety, charity, and independence of soul will give you virtue, as thinking, inquiring, reading, and talking will give you wisdom. Without the first the last is of little use, and without the last the first is a dreadful curse to yourselves and others. I have told you what I think upon this subject, because I wish to produce in your minds an awe and caution necessary, before the happy state of which I have spoken can be introduced. This cautious awe is very different from the prudential fear which leads you to consider yourself as the first object, as, on the contrary, it is full of that warm and ardent love for others that burns in your hearts, O Irishmen ! and from which I have fondly hoped to light a flame that may illumine and invigorate the world. I have said that the rich command and the poor obey, and that money is only a kind of sign which shows that according to government the rich man has a right to command the poor man, or rather that the poor man being urged by having no money to get bread, is forced to work for the rich man, which amounts to the same thing. I have said that I think all this very wrong, and that I wish the whole business was altered. I have also said that we can expect little amendment in our own time, and that we must be contented to lay the foundation of liberty and happiness by virtue and wisdom. This then shall be my work ; let this be yours, Irishmen. Never shall that p a io PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. glory fail, which I am anxious that you shall deserve the glory of teaching to a world the first lessons of virtue and wisdom. Let poor men still continue to work. I do not wish to hide from them a knowledge of their relative con- dition in society, I esteem it next [to] impossible to do so. Let the work of the labourer, of the artificer let the work of every one, however employed, still be exerted in its accustomed way. The public communi- cation of this truth ought in no manner to impede the established usages of society, however it is fitted in the end to do them away. For this reason it ought not to impede them, because if it did, a violent and unac- customed and sudden sensation [cessation?] would take place in all ranks of men, which would bring on violence and destroy the possibility of the event of that which in its own nature must be gradual however rapid, and rational however warm. It is founded on the reform of private men, and without individual amendment it is vain and foolish to expect the amendment of a state or government. I would advise them, therefore, whose feelings this Address may have succeeded in affecting (and surely those feelings which charitable and tempe- rate remarks excite can never be violent and intole- rant), if they be, as I hope those whom poverty has compelled to class themselves in the lower orders of society, that they will as usual attend to their business and the discharge of those public or private duties which custom has ordained. Nothing can be more rash and thoughtless than to show in ourselves singular instances of any particular doctrine before the general mass of the people are so convinced by the reasons of the doctrine, that it will be no longer singular. That reasons as well as feelings may help the establishment AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. in of happiness and liberty, on the basis of wisdom and virtue, be our aim and intention. Let us not be led into any means which are unworthy of this end, nor, as so much depends upon yourselves, let us cease carefully to watch over our conduct, that when we talk of reform it be not objected to us, that reform ought to begin at home. In the interval that public or private duties and necessary labours allow, husband your time so that you may do to others and yourselves the most real good. To improve your own minds is to join these two views; conversation and reading are the principal and chief methods of awaking the mind to knowledge and goodness. Reading or thought will principally bestow the former of these the benevolent exercise of the powers of the mind in communicating useful knowledge will bestow an habit of the latter : both united will contribute so far as lies in your indi- vidual power to that great reform which will be per- fect and finished the moment every one is virtuous and wise. Every folly refuted, every bad habit con- quered, every good one confirmed, are so much gained in this great and excellent cause. To begin to reform the government is immediately necessary, however good or bad individuals may be; it is the more necessary, if they are eminently the latter, in some degree to palliate or do away [with ?] the cause, as political institution has even [ever ?] the greatest influence on the human character, and is that alone which differences the Turk from the Irishman. I write now not only with a view for Catholic Emancipation, but for universal emancipation; and this emancipation complete and unconditional, that shall comprehend every individual of whatever nation or principles, that shall fold in its embrace all that P 3 212 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. think and all that feel : the Catholic cause is subor- dinate, and its success preparatory to this great cause, which adheres to no sect but society, to no cause but that of universal happiness, to no party but the people. I desire Catholic Emancipation, but I desire not to stop here ; and I hope there are few who having perused the preceding arguments who will not concur with me in desiring a complete, a lasting, and a happy amendment. That all steps however good and salu- tary which may be taken, all reforms consistent with the English constitution that may be effectuated, can only be subordinate and preparatory to the great and lasting one which shall bring about the peace, the harmony, and the happiness of Ireland, England, Europe, the World. I offer merely an outline of that picture which your own hopes may gift with the colours of reality. Government will not allow a peaceable and reason- able discussion of its principles by any association of men who assemble for that express purpose. But have not human beings a right to assemble to talk upon what subject they please ? Can anything be more evident than that as government is only of use as it conduces to the happiness of the governed, those who are governed have a right to talk on the efficacy of the safeguard employed for their benefit ? Can any topic be more interesting or useful than on [one ?] discussing how far the means of government is or could be made in a higher degree effectual to producing the end? Although I deprecate violence, and the cause which depends for its influence on force, yet I can by no means think that assembling together merely to talk of how things go on I can by no means think that societies formed for talking on any subject, AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 113 however Government may dislike them, come in any way under the head of force or violence I think that associations conducted in the spirit of sobriety, regularity, and thought are one of the best and most efficient of those means which I would recommend for the production of happiness, liberty, and virtue. Are you slaves or are you men ? If slaves, then crouch to the rod and lick the feet of your op- pressors ; glory [in ?] your shame : it will become you, if brutes, to act according to your nature. But you are men : a real man is free, so far as circumstances will permit him. Then firmly yet quietly resist. When one cheek is struck, turn the other to the insulting coward. You will be truly brave : you will resist and conquer. The discussion of any subject is a right that you. have brought into the world with your heart and tongue. Resign your heart's blood before you part with this inestimable privilege of man. For it is fit that the governed should inquire into the pro- ceedings of government, which is of no use the moment it is conducted on any other principle but that of safety. You have much to think of. Is war neces- sary to your happiness and safety ? The interests of the poor gain nothing from the wealth or extension of a nation's boundaries, they gain nothing from glory, a word that has often served as a cloak to the ambition or avarice of statesmen. The barren victories of Spain, gained in behalf of a bigoted and tyrannical government, are nothing to them. The conquests in India, by which England has gained glory indeed, but a glory which is not more honourable than that of Buonaparte, are nothing to them. The poor pur- chase this glory and this wealth at the expense of their blood and labour and happiness and virtue. 214 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. They die in battle for this infernal cause. Their labour supplies money and food for carrying it into effect ; their happiness is destroyed by the oppression they undergo ; their virtue is rooted out by the de- pravity and vice that prevail throughout the army, and which under the present system are perfectly un- avoidable. Who does not know that the quartering of a regiment on any town will soon destroy the inno- cence and happiness of its inhabitants ? The advocates for the happiness and liberty of the great mass of the people, who pay for war with their lives and labour, ought never to cease writing and speaking until nations see, as they must feel, the folly of fighting and killing each other in uniform for nothing at all. Ye have much to think of. The state of your representation in the House, which is called the collective representation of the country, demands your attention. It is horrible that the lower classes must waste their lives and liberty to furnish means for their oppressors to oppress them yet more terribly. It is horrible that the poor must give in taxes what would save them and their families from hunger and cold ; it is still more horrible that they should do this to furnish further means of their own abjectedness and misery. But what words can express the enormity of the abuse that prevents them from choosing representatives with authority to inquire into the manner in which their lives and labour, their happiness and innocence, are expended, and what advantages result from their ex- penditure which may counterbalance so horrible and monstrous an evil ? There is an outcry raised against amendment ; it is called innovation and condemned by many unthinking people who have a good fire and plenty to eat and drink. Hard-hearted or thought- AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 215 less beings, how many are famishing whilst you deliberate, how many perish to contribute to your pleasures ? I hope that there are none such as these native Irishmen, indeed I scarcely believe that there are. Let the object of your associations (for I conceal not my approval of assemblies conducted with regu- larity, peaceableness, and thought for any purpose) be the amendment of these abuses, it will have for its object universal emancipation, liberty, happiness, and virtue. There is yet another subject, " the Liberty of the Press." The liberty of the Press consists in a right to publish any opinion on any subject which the writer may entertain. The Attorney-General in 1793, on tne * r ^ f Mr. Percy, said, " I never will dispute the right of any man fully to discuss topics respecting Government, and honestly to point out what he may consider a proper remedy of grievances." The liberty of the Press is placed as a sentinel to alarm us when any attempt is made on our liberties. It is this sentinel, oh, Irishmen, whom I now awaken ! I create to myself a freedom which exists not. There is no liberty of the Press for the subjects of British government. It is really ridiculous to hear people yet boasting of this inestimable blessing, when they daily see it successfully muzzled and outraged by the lawyers of the Crown, and by virtue of what are called ex- officio informations. Blackstone says, that " if a person publishes what is improper, mischievous, or illegal, he must take the consequences of his own temerity/' And Lord Chief Baron Comyns defines libel as " a contumely, or reproach, published to the defamation of the Government, of a magistrate, or of a private 3i6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. person. " Now I beseech you to consider the words mischievous, improper, illegal, contumely, reproach, or defamation. May they not make that mischievous or improper which they please ? Is not law with them as clay in the potter's hand? Do not the words contumely, reproach, or defamation express all degrees and forces of disapprobation ? It is impossible to express yourself displeased at certain proceedings of Government, or the individuals who conduct it, with- out uttering a reproach. We cannot honestly point out a proper remedy of grievances with safety, because the very mention of these grievances will be reproach- ful to the personages who countenance them; and therefore will come under a definition of libel. For the persons who thus directly or indirectly undergo reproach, will say for their own sakes that the ex- posure of their corruption is mischievous and im- proper ; therefore the utterer of the reproach is a fit subject for three years' imprisonment. Is there any- thing like the liberty of the Press in restrictions so positive yet pliant as these? The little freedom which we enjoy in this most important point comes from the clemency of our rulers, or their fear lest public opinion, alarmed at the discovery of its enslaved state, should violently assert a right to extension and diffusion. Yet public opinion may not always be so formidable, rulers may not always be so merciful or so timid ; at any rate, evils, and great evils, do result from the present system of intellectual slavery, and you have enough to think of if this grievance alone remained in the constitution of society. I will give but one instance of the present state of our Press. A countryman of yours is now confined in an English gaol. His health, his fortune, his spirits AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 217 suffer from close confinement. The air which comes through the bars of a prison-grate does not invigorate the frame nor cheer the spirits. But Mr. Finnerty, much as he has lost, yet retains the fair name of truth and honour. He was imprisoned for persisting in the truth. His judge told him on his trial that truth and falsehood were indifferent to the law, and that if he owned the publication, any consideration whether the facts that it related were well or ill-founded, was totally irrelevant. Such is the libel law : such the liberty of the Press there is enough to think of. The right of withholding your individual assent to war, the right of choosing delegates to represent you in the assembly of the nation, and that of freely opposing in- tellectual power to any measure of Government of which you may disapprove, are, in addition to the indifference with which the Legislative and the Execu- tive power ought to rule their conduct towards pro- fessors of every religion, enough to think of. I earnestly desire peace and harmony : peace, that whatever wrongs you may have suffered, benevolence and a spirit of forgiveness should mark your conduct towards those who have persecuted you : harmony, that among yourselves may be no divisions, that Pro- testants and Catholics unite in a common interest, and that whatever be the belief and principles of your countryman and fellow sufferer, you desire to benefit his cause at the same time that you vindicate your own. Be strong and unbiassed by selfishness or pre- judice for, Catholics, your religion has not been spotless, crimes in past ages have sullied it with a stain, which let it be your glory to remove. Nor, Protestants, hath your religion always been charac- terized by the mildness of benevolence which Jesus 8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Christ recommended. Had it anything to do with the present subject I could account for the spirit of intolerance which marked both religions ; I will, how- ever, only adduce the fact, and earnestly exhort you to root out from your own minds everything which may lead to uncharitableness, and to reflect that yourselves as well as your brethren may be deceived. Nothing on earth is infallible. The priests that pretend to it are wicked and mischievous impostors ; but it is an imposture which every one more or less assumes who encourages prejudice in his breast against those who differ from him in opinion, or who sets up his own religion as the only right and true one, when no one is so blind as to see that every religion is right and true which makes men beneficent and sincere. I therefore earnestly exhort both Protestants and Catholics to act in brotherhood and harmony, never forgetting because the Catholics alone are heinously deprived of religious rights, that the Protestants and a certain rank of people of every persuasion, share with them all else that is terrible, galling, and intole- rable in the mass of political grievance. In no case employ violence or falsehood. I cannot too often or too vividly endeavour to impress upon your minds that these methods will produce nothing but wretchedness and slavery that they will at the same time rivet the fetters with which ignorance and oppression bind you to abjectness, and deliver you over to a tyranny which shall render you incapable of renewed efforts. Violence will immediately render your cause a bad one. If you believe in a provi- dential God, you must also believe that he is a good one. And it is not likely a merciful God would befriend a bad cause. Insincerity is no less hurtful AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. 219 than violence; those who are in the habit of either, would do well to reform themselves. A lying bravo will never promote the good of his country he can- not be a good man. The courageous and sincere may at the same time successfully oppose corruption, by uniting their voice with that of others, or individually raise up intellectual opposition to counteract the abuses of Government and society. In order to bene- fit yourselves and your country to any extent, habits of sobriety, regularity, and thought are previously so necessary, that without these preliminaries all that you have done falls to the ground. You have built on sand ; secure a good foundation and you may erect a fabric to stand for ever the glory and the envy of the world. I have purposely avoided any lengthened discussion on those grievances to which your hearts are from custom and the immediate interest of the circum- stances, probably most alive at present. I have not, however, wholly neglected them. Most of all have I insisted on their instant palliation and ultimate re- moval ; nor have I omitted a consideration of the means which I deem most effectual for the accomplish- ment of this great end. How far you will consider the former worthy of your adoption, so far shall I deem the latter probable and interesting to the lovers of human kind. And I have opened to your view a new scene does not your heart bound at the bare possibility of your posterity possessing that liberty and happiness of which during our lives powerful exertions and habitual abstinence may give us a fore- taste ? Oh ! if your hearts do not vibrate at such as this, then ye are dead and cold ye are not men. I now come to the application of my principles, the conclusion of my Address ; and, O Irishmen, what- 210 PERCY BYSS3E SHELLEY. ever conduct ye may feel yourselves bound to pursue, the path which duty points to lies before me clear and unobscured. Dangers may lurk around it, but they are not the dangers which lie beneath the footsteps of the hypocrite or temporizer. For I have not presented to you the picture of hap- piness on which my fancy doats as an uncertain meteor to mislead honourable enthusiasm, or blindfold the judgment which makes virtue useful. I have not proposed crude schemes, which I should be incompe- tent to mature, or desired to excite in you any virulence against the abuses of political institution ; where I have had occasion to point them out, I have recommended moderation whilst yet I have earnestly insisted upon energy and perseverance ; I have spoken of peace, yet declared that resistance is laudable; but the intel- lectual resistance which I recommend, I deem essential to the introduction of the millennium of virtue, whose period every one can, so far as he is concerned, forward by his own proper power. I have not attempted to show that the Catholic claims, or the claims of the people to a full representation in Parliament, or any of these claims to real rights, which I have insisted upon as introductory to the ultimate claim of all, to universal happiness, freedom, and equality ; I have not attempted, I say, to show that these can be granted consistently with the spirit of the English Constitu- tion ;* this is a point which I do not feel myself in- clined to discuss, and which I consider foreign to my * The excellence of the Constitution of Great Britain appears to me to be its indefiniteness and versatility, whereby it may be unresistingly accommodated to the progression of wisdom and virtue. Such accommodation I desire ; but I wish for the cause before the effect. AN ADDRESS TO THE IRISH PEOPLE. ii\ subject. But I have shown that these claims have for their basis truth and justice, which are immutable, and which in the ruin of governments shall rise like a phoenix from their ashes. Is any one inclined to dispute the possibility of a happy change in society? Do they say that the nature of man is corrupt, and that he was made for misery and wickedness ? Be it so. Certain as are opposite conclusions, I will concede the truth of this for a moment. What are the means which I take for melioration ? Violence, corruption, rapine, crime ? Do I do evil that good may come ? I have recom- mended peace, philanthropy, wisdom. So far as my arguments influence, they will influence to these ; and if there is any one now inclined to say that " private vices are public benefits," and that peace, philan- thropy, and wisdom will, if once they gain ground, ruin the human race, he may revel in his happy dreams ; though were / this man I should envy Satan's hell. The wisdom and charity of which I speak are the only means which I will countenance for the redress of your grievances and the grievances of the world. So far as they operate, I am willing to stand responsible for their evil effects. I expect to be ac- cused of a desire for renewing in Ireland the scenes of revolutionary horror which marked the struggles of France twenty years ago. But it is the renewal of that unfortunate era which I strongly deprecate, and which the tendency of this Address is calculated to obviate. For can burthens be borne for ever, and the slave crouch and cringe the while ? Is misery and vice so consonant to man's nature that he will hug it to his heart? But when the wretched one in bondage beholds the emancipation near, will he not endure his ill PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. misery awhile with hope and patience, then spring to his preserver's arms, and start into a man ? It is my intention to observe the effect on your minds, O Irishmen, which this Address, dictated by the fervency of my love and hope, will produce. I have come to this country to spare no pains where expenditure may purchase you real benefit. The present is a crisis which of all others is the most valu- able for fixing the fluctuation of public feeling ; as far as my poor efforts may have succeeded in fixing- it to virtue, Irishmen, so far shall I esteem myself happy. I intend this Address as introductory to another. The organization of a society whose institution shall serve as a bond to its members for the purposes of virtue, happiness, liberty, and wisdom, by the means of intel- lectual opposition to grievances, would probably be useful. For the formation of such society I avow myself anxious. Adieu, my friends ! May every sun that shines on your green island see the annihilation of an abuse, and the birth of an embryon of melioration ! Your own hearts may they become the shrines of purity and freedom, and never may smoke to the Mammon of unrighteousness ascend from the unpolluted altar of their devotion ! No. 7, Lower Sackville Street, Feb. 22nd. POSTSCRIPT. I have now been a week in Dublin, during which time I have endeavoured to make myself more accurately acquainted with the state of the public mind on those great topics of grievances which induced me to select AN ADDRESS TO TEE IRISH PEOPLE. 223 Ireland as a theatre, the widest and fairest, for the operations of the determined friend of religious and political freedom. The result of my observations has determined me to propose an association for the purposes of restoring Ireland to the prosperity which she possessed before the Union Act ; and the religious freedom which the involuntariness of faith ought to have taught all monopolists of Heaven long, long ago, that every one had a right to possess. For the purpose of obtaining the emancipation of the Catholics from the penal laws that aggrieve them, and a repeal of the Legislative Union Act, and grounding upon the remission of the church-craft and oppression, which caused these grievances ; a plan of amendment and regeneration in the moral and political state of society, on a comprehensive and systematic phil- anthropy which shall be sure though slow in its pro- jects ; and as it is without the rapidity and danger of revolution, so will it be devoid of the time-servingness of temporizing reform which in its deliberate capacity, having investigated the state of the Government of England, shall oppose those parts of it, by intellectual force, which will not bear the touchstone of reason. For information respecting the principles which I possess, and the nature and spirit of the association which I propose, I refer the reader to a small pamphlet, which I shall publish on the subject in the course of a few days. I have published the above Address (written in England) in the cheapest possible form, and have taken pains that the remarks which it contains should be intelligible to the most uneducated minds. Men are not slaves and brutes because they are poor; it has 4 PEROT BYSSEE SHELLEY. been the policy of the thoughtless or wicked of the higher ranks (as a proof of the decay of which policy I am happy to see the rapid success of a comparatively enlightened system of education) to conceal from the poor the truths which I have endeavoured to teach them. In doing so I have but translated my thoughts into another language ; and as language is only useful as it communicates ideas, I shall think my style so far good as it is successful as a means to bring about the end which I desire on any occasion to accomplish. A Limerick paper, which I suppose professes to sup- port certain loyal and John Bullish principles of freedom, has in an essay for advocating the liberty of the Press the following clause : " For lawless licence of dis- cussion never did we advocate, nor do we now." What is lawless licence of discussion ? Is it not as indefinite as the words contumely, reproach, defamation, that allow at present such latitude to the outrages that are committed on the free expression of individual senti- ment? Can they not see that what is rational will stand by its reason, and what is true stand by its truth, as all that is foolish will fall by its folly, and all that is false be controverted by its own falsehood ? Liberty gains nothing by the reform of politicians of this stamp, any more than it gains from a change of Ministers in London. What at present is contumely and defama- tion, would at the period of this Limerick amendment be " lawless licence of discussion," and such would be the mighty advantage which this doughty champion of liberty proposes to effect. I conclude with the words of Lafayette, a name en- deared by its peerless bearer to every lover of the human race, " For a nation to love liberty it is sufficient that she knows it, to be free it is sufficient that she wills it." CHAPTER IX. 'T'HE allusion towards the end of this Address to Peter Finnerty who had been then twelve months a prisoner in the Castle of Lincoln, will arrest the attention of all readers who remember the singular story I have told of the poem which Shelley had pub- lished for his benefit a year before. It shows that his interest in him was undiminished, and strengthens the suggestion I have thrown out, that in the volume of poems which Shelley had proposed to publish in Dublin, The Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things would have been included. The Limerick paper which Shelley sarcastically al- ludes to as proposing " to support certain loyal and John Bullish principles of freedom," was The Limerick Evening Post, then recently established. The article was re- printed in The Dublin Freeman s Journal, Tuesday, February 1 8th, 1812, where Shelley must have seen it. It is thus introduced : " IRISH PRESS. The following judicious observations we have extracted from a newly established paper in Limerick namely, The Limerick Evening Post." Shelley it is evident formed a very different estimate of this article. He considered it lacked spirit. It is plain that at this period he thought it extremely probable that his own pamphlets which were about to appear would have to bear the brunt of a government prosecution. He must therefore have considered it Q 126 PERCY BYSSffE SHELLEY. rather unfortunate that a Liberal paper thus eulogized by a metropolitan journal of influence should, as it were, encourage the Executive in limiting the right of public discussion on political questions. The opening passages which provoked his comment may be given as a specimen of the article thus preserved from oblivion by the quotation of the poet : " The prosecutions so perseveringly continued against the Press of Ireland against the journals of the capital, deserving, we think, that title by pre- eminence, must anxiously interest every reflecting mind every feeling heart. So generally allowed and axiomatically fixed is the grand right of a Free Press in other words, of free thought and free discussion that the greatest enemies of that greatest bulwark of human privileges never dared to assail it but in disguise but under some factious colourable principle ; its bitterest foes, at least since the days of the Star Chamber, have uniformly avowed themselves as friends. For lawless licence of discussion never yet did we advocate, nor do we now," &c. "Whether the paper made any reply to the observa- tions of Shelley it is now impossible to say : its very name is almost forgotten in Limerick, although some files of it of a much later date are still preserved in the library of the Royal Dublin Society. The next important movement made by Shelley in his Dublin crusade took place three days after the publication of his Address to the Irish People. That pamphlet had appeared on Tuesday, the 25th of February, 1812, and on the Friday following, the 28th of the same month, the long announced Aggregate Meeting of the Catholics of Ireland took place in the TEE CATHOLIC COMMITTEE. 127 historic little theatre in Fishamble Street; Shelley at- tended that meeting, and spoke to an important resolution for the space of an hour. An outline of that speech, taken from three different reports in con- temporary journals, as well as his own remarks upon it extracted from one of his unpublished letters, will be given in due course. To understand the position of affairs at that period, and to show the absolute impossibility (even had he been more guarded in the expression of his anti-religious fanaticism) of being able to establish a new political association in Dublin when the Government was abso- lutely discussing the expediency of suppressing this one solitary meeting, it will be necessary to take a brief review of the attitude both of the Catholics and of the Executive. This is founded principally on original documents preserved among the State Papers in the Record Office. The insidious promises held out to the Catholics at the time of the Union had been abandoned, and a system of still stricter and more unconstitutional coercion perse- vered in. The Catholics were rapidly increasing in number and in wealth. Headed by every man of rank and by most of the men of talent of their own communion, and generously assisted by many enlightened Protestants of character and position, they were gradually forming into that compact organization which eventually triumphed. The powerful mind and the indomitable energy of O'Connell had already made themselves felt. The body known as the " Catholic Committee" was formed, which very soon attracted to itself the notice of the Government. It had no secrets. Had there been any- thing to conceal, dishonest and mercenary instruments were not wanting to betray it. The State Papers un- Q 2 -228 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. fortunately supply abundant proof of this treachery. Mr. Wellesley Pole, writing from Dublin Castle on the 1 9th of October, 1811, to the Right Hon. Richard Ryder, Secretary of State for the Home Department, in re- ference to one of the Meetings of the Committee, says, " I send you a report from one of our spies." The report is enclosed, signed "F. W." There is in the Record Office an elaborate paper consisting of twenty-six quarto pages, written closely on both sides, which is in part a com- plete history of the Catholic Committee for three years. It is called " Precis of the Formation and Proceedings of the Catholic Committee in Ireland, 1809, 1810, 1811." Referring to 1810 we have the following allusion to Mr. Peter Finnerty, the object of Shelley's poetical sympathy in 1811 : "On the and of November, 1810, an aggregate meeting took place : Mr. Finnerty recommended a Petition to Parliament for the Catholic Emancipation, one for Parliamentary Reform, and one for the Repeal of the Union. The thanks of the meeting were voted to Mr. Finnerty, and it was resolved, That the Catholic Committee should have the sole management of Catholic affairs" Another entry in the same Precis is as follows : " On the 9th of July (1811) the aggregate meeting assembled at the Private Theatre, Fishamble Street : it was very numerous." Among other resolutions it was resolved, " That the Committee be appointed ; that the Catholic Peers, Baronets, and the survivors of 1 793 have the management of Catholic affairs ; that 5OO/. be given to Mr. Hay (the Secretary); 500^. to Mr. W. Todd Jones; and that a subscription be made for Mr. Finnerty." The speech made by Mr. Finnerty at the Catholic LETTER OF MR. WELLESLET POLE. 729 meeting referred to in the first of these extracts, is a memorable one. But for it, Mr. Wellesley Pole in- formed the Imperial Parliament on the 4th of March 1811, the Convention Act would not have been, enforced in Ireland, and the proclamation of the Duke of Richmond would not have been issued. The speech was delivered at an adjourned meeting of the Catholics held at the Repository in St. Stephen's Green, Dublin, on Friday the 2nd of November, 1810. This speech was delivered at the request of the meeting, and pro- duced immense enthusiasm, and, what was more dange- rous in the eyes of Mr. Wellesley Pole, unanimity. Mr. Wellesley Pole subsequently notified to the Secretary of State that a subscription had been opened in Dublin for Mr. Finuerty. The following extract is taken from a letter in the Record Office : Ireland, 1811, January to June. No. 652. " Young Mr. Curran, son of the Master of the Rolls, has been very active in soliciting from the Catholics subscriptions for Mr. Finnerty, and letters from persons associated in London for promoting that object have been addressed to the Catholics here. " I have the honour to be, " &c. &c. &c. " W. W. POLE. " The Eight Honourable Richard Ryder." The speech of Mr. Finnerty formed the subject of debate in the House of Commons, March 4th, 1811. The debate is fully reported in the Examiner, March loth. Mr. Finnerty's speech is given at great length in The Dublin Weekly Messenger, November loth, 1810. A copy of the first two volumes of that paper a 3 o PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. is preserved in the library of Trinity College, Dublin. In a tract entitled Proceedings of the Catholic Com- mittee, as taken from their Accredited Papers, Dublin, 1811, a report of the speech fills ten pages. A more formidable personage than Mr. Peter Fin- nerty was at this time also under the watchful eye of Mr. Wellesley Pole.* In a letter dated " Irish Office, March nth, i8ii/' he sends to the Home Secretary, the Right Hon. Richard Ryder, a lengthy report of the proceedings at " the Aggregate Meeting of the Catholics held in Dublin on Friday last, the 8th in- stant/' Towards the end of it Mr. O'Connell is alluded to in the following words : " It would appear from Mr. O'Connell's speech as if a repeal of the Legislative Union was now become as serious an object to the Catholic Managers as general Emancipation. He expressed himself thus, ' That the country had been involved in deep calamity ever since the baneful measure of the Union had been forced upon distracted Ireland/ " This passage, it may * There is a still earlier allusion to Mr. O'Connell, and to the demand for a Repeal of the Union, in the State Papers. It is a private report of the Aggregate Meeting, September i8th, 1810. The document is marked " Enclosure No. 2 :" " Hutton, a trader (brother to the late Alderman), of the Pres- byterian Party, moved a petition to the King to insist on the Repeal of the Union. " Counsellor O'Connell seconded the motion (he is a Catholic). Motion carried unanimously." The only names given in this private report are those of Hutton, MacNally, and O'Connell. The following observation is added : " The people who have en- gaged in this business will persevere, and they ought to be attended to they ought to be watched." The benevolent gentleman who gave this advice seems to have been a certain Mr. " T. Mulock." [Ireland, 1810. August to December. No. 648.] SECRET AGENTS OF THE GOVERNMENT. 231 be remarked, reads amazingly like that which Shelley subsequently wrote in the advertisement of his first pamphlet. In language stronger than that of Mr. O'Connell, but yet resembling it, he calls the Union Act " the most successful engine that England ever wielded over the misery of fallen Ireland/' Mr. Pole, in the continuation of his letter to Mr. Ryder, thus refers to one of that useful class whom he had in more direct but less elegant language called " spies :" 11 One of the most intelligent and secret agents employed by the Irish Government states, that in his judgment their last meeting and debate has most evidently depressed the Protestant party, who have opposed the claims of the Catholics, and has increased their Protestant advocates. Many Protestants were present, and the Theatre was full in every part. It is remarkable, however, that there was no crowd at the door : great pains having been taken, particularly by the Catholic clergy, to keep the lower orders from attending in the streets. " I have the honour to be, &c. &c., " W. W. POLE. " Right Honourable Richard Ryder."* The morning of Friday the aSth of February, must have been an exciting one for the three propagan- dists of philanthropy Shelley, Harriet, and Eliza West- brook, as they met together in the drawing-room of No. 7, Lower Sackville Street, Dublin. The youthful Shelley was on that day to present himself before an * From State Papers, "Ireland, 1811, January to June. No. 652." 23 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. immense assembly, and to put to the test his power of addressing or influencing an audience. The ladies we may be sure had determined to accompany him to the meeting, and with all her confidence in the ability of Percy, we can have little doubt that the gentle Harriet was full of anxiety as to his success. The presence of ladies at these great gatherings of the rank and talent of the Irish Catholics was one of their most attractive features. The following descrip- tion of a meeting which took place a year before may serve for that at which Shelley spoke, and we have no doubt Harriet listened : " Fishamble Street Theatre, where the recent Ag- gregate Meeting of the Roman Catholics was held in Dublin," says the Morning Chronicle of March I4th, 1811, "was brilliantly illuminated, and had a most interesting effect. The boxes were filled with ladies full dressed, and the whole .is represented as having a very imposing effect. The presence of their fair country- women was certainly calculated to prolong the discus- sion, as the orators were all anxious to display their eloquence to the greatest advantage." Fishamble Street Theatre, where Shelley spoke and Handel played, where the deep tones of O'Connell's wonderful voice so often roused and controlled the people ; the scene of so much festivity, the centre of so many recollections, is now levelled to the ground, but a slight sketch of its history may not be uninteresting. The street itself, like that " Where London's column, towering to the skies, Ljke a tall bully lifts its head and lies," derives its name from being the place where fish was FISH AMBLE STREET, DUBLIN. 233 exposed for sale to the citizens. In old municipal documents the Dublin Fish-shamble Street is frequently styled " Vicus Piscariorum."* The boats could lie at the river's bank at the foot of the street, which rises in a zigzag direction, likelhe walls of a fortress, to the top of the slight hill or elevation on which " the Castle still stands." From its vicinity to the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity or Christ Church, to the Courts of Law, and to the Castle, Fishamble Street occupied an important position in the old city. The names of several famous hostelries are connected with it, in which for many years various clubs, musical, masonic, or simply convivial, were in the habit of assembling. The Protestant parish church of St. John still stands midway on the western side of the street, and nearly opposite to it, divided from Fishamble Street by a short and narrow lane, is the Catholic Church of SS. Michael and John, built upon the foundations of the celebrated Smock-alley Theatre.f In the first named Church of St. John, on the 3rd of July, 1746, was baptized a child destined to be for ever memorable in the history of Ireland Henry Grattan whose father and grandfather had long been residents in the then nourishing, but now desolate and still decaying Fish- amble Street. Five years before the birth of Henry Grattan, the building first called the new Music Hall, but subsequently the Private Theatre, was erected. The building owed its existence to the necessities of a * In a record of the ipth year of Richard II. it is called " Vicus Piscatorius, in parochia Sancti Johannis." t " The only vestige now existing of Smock-alley Theatre is a portion of an arched passage on the south-eastern side of this church." GILBEBT'S History of Dublin, vol. ii. p. ill. *34 PEROT BYSSHE SHELLE7. musical club called the " Bull's Head " Society, which after various migrations from .the old tavern from which it derived its name, finally settled in the new Music Hall. The " Bull's Head " Society always had hung upon the outskirts of the Cathedral of Christ Church, and from time to time decoyed to its reunions various of the minor dignitaries of that ancient foun- dation. So ancient indeed, that an inquisition in the reign of Richard the Second declared that it was " founded and endowed by divers Irish- men whose names were unknown, time out of mind, and long before the Conquest of Ireland." St. Patrick's Cathe- dral, which may be called the Cathedral founded by the Anglo-Norman colony in Ireland in a sort of rivalry to the old Irish Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, lay also in dangerous proximity to the head-quarters of the " Bull's Head " Society, and some of its worthy officers who had " music in their souls " joined their me- lodious brethren of Christ Church occasionally at their festive gatherings. A sort of whimsical anathema, called by him an " exhortation," was hurled at the heads of these delinquents in 1741 by Dean Swift, the Dean of St. Patrick's. It reads very like what Curran the " Prior" of "The Monks of the Screw " might have issued about forty years later to his rather lax community. In 1741 " the Dean " requested his sub-dean and Chapter to punish such vicars as should appear at the " Club of Fiddlers in Fishamble Street," " as songsters, fiddlers, pipers, trumpeters, drummers, drum-majors, or in any sonal quality, according to the flagitious aggravation of their respective disobedience, rebellion, perfidy, and ingratitude." " I also," adds Swift, " require my sub-dean to proceed to the ex- tremity of expulsion, if the said vicars should be found HANDEL IN DUBLIN. 335 ungovernable, impenitent, or self-sufficient, especially Taberner, Phipps, and Church, who, as I am informed, have in violation of my sub-dean's and Chapter's order in December last, at the instance of some obscure persons unknown, presumed to sing and fiddle at the Club above mentioned/'* In 1741 the President of the "Club of Fiddlers in Fishamble Street " was John O'Neil, or Neal, a pub- lisher of music. It was through his exertions the new Music Hall was erected. This is recorded in a contemporary poem, from which we may take the four following lines : " As Amphion built of old the Theban wall, So Neal has built a sumptuous Musick Hall : The one by pow'rful touches of his lute ; The other by the fiddle and the flute. " But the fiddle and the flute were not to be the only instruments to resound within the new structure. Six weeks after it was opened the hand of a great master was to awaken new harmonies within its walls, perhaps not thought of by the original projectors. Handel came to Dublin ; " banished to Ireland," says the index to the Dunciad, " by the English nobility" : " Strong in new arms, lo ! Giant Handel stands, Like bold Briareus, with a hundred hands ; To stir, to rouse, to shake the soul he comes, And Jove's own thunders follow Mars's drums. . Arrest him, empress, or you sleep no more She heard, and drove him to th' Hibernian shore." A year later than Handel's visit to Dublin, Pope paid a graceful compliment to Ireland in his lines to * GILBEBT'S History of Dublin, vol. i. pp. 69, 70. itf PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Southern. Alluding to the figure of the harp woven into the texture of the Irish linen tablecloth hospitably spread before the aged poet, who was himself a native of Dublin, he says : " And Ireland, mother of sweet singers, Presents her harp still to his fingers." The " mother of sweet singers " could not do less than give Handel a cordial reception. She had already presented her harp in some of its most attrac- tive utterances to that " sweet son of song/' The melodies of Ireland, half a century before Moore was born, delighted Handel. He is said to have declared that he would willingly resign the fame he had acquired by his most celebrated compositions for the glory of being the inventor of the air Aileen Aroon* From 1741, when the genius of Handel threw an un- expected glory over the new Music Hall in Fishamble Street, until 1812, when the apparition of Shelley within its walls " Bequeathed, like sunset to the skies, The splendour of its prime," a period of seventy-one years had elapsed. The gradual decay of the street had by this time advanced, and with it that of the theatre. This building lay almost out of view. It was approached by a wooden porch or verandah in an angle of the street as you descend from "VVerburgh Street and Hoey's Court (the birthplace of Swift) towards the river. Many changes * An Account of the Visit of Handel to Dublin ; with Incidental Notices of his Life and Character. By Horatio Townsend, Esq., Barrister-at-Law, p. 64. Dublin, 1852. FISH AMBLE STREET THEATRE. 237 had taken place in the locality. " Hell" itself was proved not to have been eternal. The famous passage or gateway so-called, surmounted by a black figure of the devil carved in oak, had stood nearly opposite the theatre in St. John's Lane. At the time of Shelley's visit, Burns, if he had been living, would have had to seek elsewhere for an illustration of the truth of the story he told in " Death and Doctor Hornbook" " But this that I am gaun to tell, Which lately on a night befell, Is just as true as the Deil's in Hell Or Dublin City." The " Deil" had disappeared or been metamorphosed into snuffboxes !"* Fishamble Street Theatre survived for something over half a century after Shelley's visit. In the de- caying street there was one flourishing establishment. To that exceptional sign of prosperity it owed its de- struction. The growing needs of an enterprising firm adjoining required larger accommodation. The theatre was taken down, and the open show-yard of a thriving iron factory now occupies the space on which it stood.f The vigilance exercised by the Irish Government in ascertaining through their secret agents the arrange- ments of the Catholics for the intended meeting of * One of these the author remembers having seen in his boy- hood. The box bore on a silver lid the following inscription, which was read with all due awe : " Prime your nose well, and I'd have you be civil, For this box it was made of a part of the Devil !" \ The site is well defined. It is in the angle of the street, and separates the two establishments of Messrs. Kennan and Sons. 738 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. February 28th, 1812, did not relax when the meeting took place. Two persons were sent to Fishamble Street Theatre to furnish special reports of the pro- ceedings. Both reporters were connected with the police one a chief constable, Mr. Michael Farrell, well known in the local history of the period; the other, a Mr. Manning, who held an inferior position. These reports are preserved among the State Papers in the Record Office. Unfortunately they give us little or no information on the subject of Shelley. In one he is not mentioned at all ; in the other he is barely alluded to. Of the two reports, that signed Thos. K. Manning is the longest. In this Shelley's name does not appear. Another young man, afterwards very distinguished, the late Sir Thomas Wyse, the English Ambassador in Greece, made his first appearance in public at the same meeting. He proposed the reso- lution to which Shelley spoke, and is thus described by Mr. Manning : " On this resolution, Mr. Wise, a young boy, de- livered a speech of considerable length and replete with much elegant language ; the principal matter it contained of notice was, that he lamented that the Regent should abandon Mr. Fox's principles and join in a shameful coalition, or that he had been so far womanized here he was interrupted by a question of order/' In 1812, Mr. Wyse was twenty-one years of age, having been born in 1791 ; the description "a young boy" could therefore be scarcely applicable to him. Shelley was nineteen years and six months old, but looked so young that his servant could give out with some appearance of truth that he was but fifteen. SIR THOMAS WYSE. 239 The full report of the elaborate speech of Mr. Wyse is now before us, and it contains no language in the slightest degree disrespectful to the Prince Regent, neither was the speaker called to order. In fact, the business of the meeting was to adopt an address to his Royal Highness, and the observations alluded to by the reporter could scarcely have been used by any one who had been selected by the managers to take an important part in its proceedings. Shelley's speech was volunteered. His strong feelings towards the Prince at this time we know from his own letters, and he may easily have strayed into the expression of them. In one of his letters, hitherto unpublished, an extract from which will presently be given, he tells us that some of his observations met with interruption. On the whole we think that Mr. Manning, in copying his notes, transferred the description from Shelley to Mr. Wyse. The second reporter, Mr. Farrell, the peace officer, mentions Shelley but very slightly. He says : " Lord Glentworth said a few words a Mr. Bennett spoke, also Mr. Shelley, who stated himself to be a native of England/' "With these manuscript reports the Lord Lieutenant forwarded to the Home Secretary a copy of The Dublin Evening Post of Saturday, the 29th February, 1812, containing a full report of the proceedings at the meeting which took place the day before. It is from this paper that the only version of Shelley's speech hitherto published has been taken. It was originally extracted by the present writer, from whose transcript it was copied into Mr. Middleton's Shelley and his Writings (vol. i. p. 212). There are two other versions 2 4 o PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. of the speech which have not previously been known. One of these is indeed very short, but as it expressly mentions the kind manner in which the youthful speaker was received by the meeting, it is very valuable as part' of the refutation of the calumnious statement made years after by Mr. Hogg, which has been so improperly repeated by others who reject Mr. Hogg's testimony when they dislike it, and adopt it when it is in accordance with their own prejudices. This brief report appeared on the morning after the meeting in The Freeman's Journal of Saturday, Feb. 29th, 1812. It was repeated in The Hibernian Journal, or Daily Chronicle of Liberty, Dublin, Monday, March 2nd, 1812. And again in a more accessible shape in Walker's Hibernian Magazine for February, 1812, p. 83. As it was the earliest report, it may be here given first : Shelley's Speech at Fishamble Street Theatre, Dublin, Feb. zSth, 1812. From The Freeman's Journal, Dublin, Feb. 2pth, 1812. "On the fifth [it should have been the sixth] resolution being proposed, Mr. Shelley, an English gentleman (very young), the son of a Member of Par- liament, rose to address the meeting. He was received with great kindness, and declared that the greatest misery this country endured was the Union Law, the Penal Code, and the state of the representation. He drew a lively picture of the misery of the country, which he attributed to the unfortunate Act of Legis- lative Union." On the evening of the same day, in the Dublin Evening Post of Saturday, the 29th of February, 1812, REPORTS OF SHELLEY'S SPEECH. 241 a fuller report of the speech is given. The italics are in the original. Shelley's Speech. From The Dublin Evening Post, Saturday, 2pth Feb. 1812. "Mr. Shelley requested a hearing. He was an Englishman, and when he reflected on the crimes com- mitted by his nation on Ireland, he could not but blush for his countrymen, did he not know that arbitrary power never failed to corrupt the heart of man. (Loud applause for several minutes.) " He had come to Ireland for the sole purpose of interesting himself in her misfortunes. He was deeply impressed with a sense of the evils which Ireland en- dured, and he considered them to be truly ascribed to the fatal effects of the legislative union with Great Britain. " He walked through the streets, and he saw the fane of liberty converted into a temple of Mammon. (Loud applause.) He beheld beggary and famine in the country, and he could lay his hand on his heart and say that the cause of such sights was the union with Great Britain. (Hear, hear.) He was resolved to do his utmost to promote a Repeal of the Union. Catholic Emancipation would do a great deal towards the amelioration of the condition of the people, but he was convinced that the Repeal of the Union was of more importance. He considered that the victims whose members were vibrating on gibbets were driven to the commission of the crimes which they expiated by their lives by the effects of the Union." The third and longest report of Shelley's speech is B i 4 i PERCY EYSSffE SHELLEY. as follows. It is taken from The Patriot, Dublin, 2nd March, 1812: " Mr. Shelly then addressed the Chair. He hoped he should not be accounted a transgressor on the time of the meeting. He felt inadequate to the task he had undertaken, but he hoped the feelings which urged him forward would plead his pardon. He was an Englishman; when he reflected on the outrages that his countrymen had committed here for the last twenty years he confessed that he blushed for them. He had come to Ireland for the sole purpose of interesting himself in the misfortunes of this country, and impressed with a full conviction of the necessity of Catholic Emancipation, and of the baneful effects which the union with Great Britain had entailed upon Ireland. He had walked through the fields of the country and the streets of the city, and he had in both seen the miserable effects of that fatal step. He had seen that edifice which ought to have been the fane of their liberties converted to a temple of Mammon. Many of the crimes which are daily com- mitted he could not avoid attributing to the effect of that measure, which had thrown numbers of people out of the employment they had in manufacture, and induced them to commit acts of the greatest despera- tion for the support of their existence. " He could not imagine that the religious opinion of a man should exclude him from the rights of society. The original founder of our religion taught no such doctrine. Equality in this respect was general in the American States, and why not here ? Did a change of place change the nature of man ? He would beg those in power to recollect the French Revolution : SHELLEY'S OWN COMMENT ON HIS SPEECH. 24 J. the suddenness, the violence with which it burst forth, and the causes which gave rise to it. " Both the measures of Emancipation and a Repeal of the Union should meet his decided support, but he hoped many years would not pass over his head when he would make himself conspicuous at least by his zeal for them."* In these versions of the speech, which are the only ones I have been able to find in the Irish papers of the period, or rather in those of them that are still extant, there is no suggestion that Shelley met with the slightest discourtesy from those he addressed. Indeed, it would be strange if he had. His youth, his enthusiasm, his eloquence, as we will find, delighted the assembly by which, as we are told in The Freeman's Journal, " he was received with great kindness/" Some slight interruption he did meet with at the beginning, but that was, as he tells us himself in the unpublished letter we have referred to, when he spoke of " religion." In this letter, which is dated "17, Grafton Street, Dublin, March 14, 1812," he says : " My speech was misinterpreted. I spoke for more than an hour. The hisses with which they greeted me when I spoke of religion, though in terms of respect, were mixed with applause when I avowed my mission. The newspapers have only noted that which did not excite disapprobation." Without attributing any over-sensitiveness to the * I find that this version of the speech appeared first in Saunders's Neivs-Letter, Saturday, February ipth, 1812, the day after the meeting. R 2 244 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. meeting, we may well imagine that Shelley's mode of speaking of religion, " though in terms of respect/' was not that which would recommend itself very favourably to an assembly of Irishmen who had not been " educated" (to use the expression of a modern statesman) in the higher mysteries of philanthropy. In his second pamphlet, which was issued four days after he delivered this speech, there are passages which, if spoken amid the excitement of a public meeting, would indeed run some chance of being " misinterpreted/' People could not have time to decide with accuracy as to what he exactly meant by "the eyeless monster Bigotry, whose throne has tottered for two hundred years" (p. 3). Perhaps they would only have laughed if he had exclaimed as he has written, " I hear the teeth of the palsied beldame Superstition chatter, and I see her descending to the grave ! Reason points to the open gates of the Temple of Religious Freedom, Philanthropy kneels at the altar of the common God" (p. 3). By the "pal- sied beldame Superstition" Shelley of course under- stood the "religion" of the great majority of the people he addressed, and which he spoke of in such " terms of respect." That, however, is not the view which Mr. Hogg, the poet's biographer, takes of the matter, and here we shall give that veracious gentleman's statement in full. AVe must remind the reader of the mysterious affair at York, of which something has been said in the earlier portion of this book. Owing to that event a total estrangement for a while took place between Shelley and his college friend. At the time we speak of (February, 1812) no intercourse whatever had existed between them for several preceding months, nor was it ALLEGED STATEMENT OF SHELLEY. 745 renewed for nearly a year afterwards. Shelley had not sent his late friend his Irish pamphlets, he did not write to him on any subject, he gave him no account of his proceedings. At a later period, which Mr. Hogg does not particularize, when his injured friend had gene- rously forgiven him, and let him a little into his con- fidence once more, he says that Shelley spoke to him " twice, not oftener," he believed, " of his Irish mission. " Before this conversation recurred to Mr. Hogg's memory he had made a statement as if on his own authority concerning this very mission. "There was one meeting of philanthropists," says the truthful biographer, " for it was reported in a newspaper, and probably puffed a little, perhaps for a valuable con- sideration. Whether there were more meetings does not appear. Poor Bysshe made a speech, and pro- posed his scheme, but it did not succeed." (Life of Shelley, vol. ii. p. 108.) It is scarcely necessary to say that there is not one word of truth in all this. There was no " meeting of philanthropists ;" it was never " puffed a little in a newspaper ;" Shelley never made a speech at a meeting of " philanthropists," and never " proposed his scheme/' It is no wonder there- fore, under these circumstances, that " it did not succeed." After pages of malevolent and ill-concealed contempt for Shelley, and openly avowed hatred of Ireland, Mr. Hogg resumes his narrative. In the passage quoted he had drawn on his imagination for his facts ; he now draws on his memory for his imagi- nation : " Twice not oftener, I believe he spoke to me of his Irish mission. On one occasion he told me that at a meeting probably at the meeting of 246 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. philanthropists so much ill-will was shown towards the Protestants, that thereupon he was provoked to remark that the Protestants were fellow Christians, fellow subjects, and as such were entitled to equal rights, to equal charity, toleration, and the rest. He was forthwith interrupted by savage yells ; a tre- mendous uproar arose, and he was compelled to be silent. At the same meeting and afterwards he was even threatened with personal violence. This un- reasonable display of Popish and party bigotry went far to disgust him with his rash enterprise, to open his eyes, and to convince him that Irish grievances consisted not in a denial of equal rights these the Philanthropic Association did not seek but the power and opportunity to tyrannize over and oppress their Protestant brethren/" (Hogg's Life of Shelley, vol. ii. pp. 113, 114.) Out of the pages of the much maligned Ferdinand Mendez Pinto that " liar of the first magnitude," who must have been indeed but " the type " of this cynical biographer there could not be found within the same space a greater number of reckless misre- presentations than these, if we must not call them by a shorter and more emphatic title. That Shelley ever made them is incredible. They are contradicted by his own letters at the time, by the facts of the case, by the evidence already adduced, and by the important letter of an unimpeachable witness who happened to be present at the meeting, and whose unwilling testimony to the cordiality of Shelley's reception, and the enthusiasm he produced, puts an end for ever to the monstrous fable of Mr. Hogg. That fable has unfortunately been adopted by others From, a Lithograph by Haverty, _ft.(X>. 1.829. Jtf.r Wyse, subsequently the Flight Hon. Sir Thomas Wyse, K.Q.., late British Jtfinister at flthens, commenced public life at the meeting- in FishamUe Street Theatre, (Lublin, Feb. SSth ll. He seconded, the resolution to which Shelley spoke. See p. V REFUTATION OF MR. HOGG'S CALUMNIES. 247 who have publicly impeached the veracity of the authority on which it is founded. It would be easy to point out the injury that is done to society by disseminating statements which a slight examination would prove to be untrue, particularly when such calumnies have no result except in perpetuating and keeping alive national and religious animosities. The subject would however be painful, and perhaps out of place here. It is to be hoped that in future " Shelley Memorials " and " Memoirs " a very different account from that which disfigures those at present in existence will be given of the manner in which the poet was received by those he went to serve. The Resolution to which Shelley spoke would in itself disprove the story of Mr. Hogg. " RESOLVED, That the grateful thanks of this Meeting are due, and hereby returned to Lord Glent- worth, the Right Hon. Maurice Fitzgerald, and the other DISTINGUISHED PROTESTANTS who have this day honoured us with their presence." This Resolution, which was passed by acclamation by the assembly, was spoken to by Lord Glentworth, a Protestant nobleman, as well as by the philanthropic Shelley, and was seconded by the distinguished gentle- man already referred to, the late Sir Thomas Wyse then Mr. Wyse a Catholic. The eloquent speech of Mr. Wyse is given at great length in the Dublin newspaper sent by Shelley to Godwin on the 8th of March, i8j2. The concluding passage seems as if it were addressed to the young poet and philanthropist who stood by his side. We print it exactly as it is given in the newspaper. i 4 8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. "On that day of Peace/' said Mr. Wyse, "when national animosity is sepulchred beneath the trophies of national harmony, we shall remember with gratitude the PROTESTANT who stood by us in our struggle, and bore our broken standard to the front of the battle, whilst we prepare the Sacrifice to the Spirit of UN- DISTINGUISHED BROTHERHOOD AND UNIVERSAL EMANCI- PATION." The Weekly Messenger, Saturday, March 7th, 1812.* * This, the maiden speech of the late Sir Thomas Wyse, which fills nearly four columns of The Weekly Messenger, March yth, 1812, is thus introduced by the editor of that journal : " MB. WISE, JUNE. " The report which we now give of the speech delivered by this gentleman, at the late aggregate meeting of the Catholics of Ireland, will be observed by our readers to be the most correct and most accurate as yet presented to the public. It will be found, we hope, that some justice is done to those talents which excited such general applause. That the lover of his country, and the admirer of the growing genius of our Island, will find great satisfaction in the perusal of the following speech, we have no doubt. We trust that every effort which shall hereafter be made by our countrymen will rival the talents which we have already witnessed, and that the eloquence of our young advocate may be a presage of the advantages which the British empire shall hereafter reap from their full and unqualified possession." CHAPTER X. PHE following important letter, now for the first time given in connexion with the life of Shelley, while it disposes of the calumny so readily believed and so recklessly diffused as to his reception at a public meeting, referred to in the preceding chapter, settles also the interesting question, which has often been raised, of Shelley's probable success as an orator had he devoted himself to the cultivation of eloquence instead of poetry. Medwin, Trelawny, and Captain Williams the partner of his fate, speak highly of the elevation of Shelley's ordinary conversation, which rose occasio- nally into an unstudied eloquence. But they never heard him address a public assembly. The only one hitherto recorded except the anonymous writers subsequently to be mentioned who had this oppor- tunity, and made some allusion to it, was the late Chief Baron Woulfe. His description leaves the impression that Shelley was a cold, methodical, and ineffective speaker. Chief Baron Woulfe was in bad health when he is reported to have mentioned his recollection of Shelley's manner. Many years had elapsed, and Shelley could have scarcely been recalled to his memory except by an effort. Of far different value is the testimony wrung most reluctantly at the moment from an unwilling witness. That testimony 250 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. is contained in the following letter, which was pub- lished in the Government organ of the day, The Dublin Journal, a paper originally started by George Faulkner, the publisher of Swift : SHELLEY AS AN ORATOR, DESCRIBED BY "Ax ENGLISHMAN " IN 1812. " To the Editor of The Dublin Journal. "Saturday, March yth, 1812. " Sir, Our public meetings now-a-days, instead of exhibiting the deliberations of men of acknowledged wisdom and experience, resemble mere debating so- cieties, where unfledged candidates for national dis- tinction rant out a few trite and commonplace obser- vations with as much exultation and self-applause as if they possessed the talents or eloquence of a Saurin or a Burke. This remark is particularly applicable to almost the whole of the meetings which have been assembled within the last twelve months by the Catholics ; at which young gentlemen of this descrip- tion have constantly intruded themselves upon the public notice, and by the unseasonable and injudicious violence of their language, have not a little prejudiced the cause they attempted to support. Curiosity and the expected gratification of hearing a display of oratory by some of the leading members of the Catholic body led me on Friday, for the first time, to the Aggregate Meeting in Fishamble Street. Being rather late I missed the orations of Mr. Connell [sic] and the leading orators, and only heard a dry mono- tonous effusion from Counsellor , and, to me, a most disgusting harangue from a stripling, with whom 1 am unacquainted, but who, I am sorry to say, styled SHELLEY AS AN ORATOR IN 1812. 251 himself my countryman an Englishman. This young gentleman, after stating that he had been only a fortnight in Ireland, expatiated on the miseries which this country endured in consequence of its con- nexion with his own, and asserted (from the know- ledge, I presume, which his peculiar sagacity enabled him to acquire in so short a period) that its cities were depopulated, its fields laid waste, and its in- habitants degraded and enslaved ; and all this by its union with England. If it revolted against my prin- ciples, Mr. Editor, to hear such language from one of my own countrymen, you will readily conceive that my disgust was infinitely heightened to observe with what transport the invectives of this renegade Englishman against his native country were hailed by the assembly he addressed. Joy beamed in every countenance and rapture glistened in every eye at the aggravated detail : the delirium of ecstasy got the better of prudential control ; the veil was for a moment withdrawn. I thought I saw the purpose, in spite of the pretence, written in legible characters in each of their faces, and though emancipation alone flowed from the tongue, separation and ascendancy were rooted in the heart. "As for the young gentleman alluded to, I con- gratulate the Catholics of Ireland on the acquisition of so patriotic and enlightened an advocate; and England, I dare say, will spare him without regret. I must, however, remark that as the love of his country is one of the strongest principles implanted in the breast of man by his Maker, and as the affec- tions are more ardent in youth than in maturer years, that this young gentleman should at so early an age have overcome the strongest impulses of nature, seems to me a complete refutation of the hitherto 5* PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. supposed infallible maxim that Nemo fuit repents turpissimus. "AN ENGLISHMAN." Thus it will be seen that instead of being "interrupted by savage yells/' as Mr. Hogg and Lady Shelley would have us believe, this " stripling," this " renegade Eng- lishman/' as he is called by his indignant countryman, " was hailed with delight" by his Irish audience ; "joy beamed in every countenance and rapture glistened in every eye " and if there was disposition to " threaten him with personal violence," we may now safely infer from what quarter it would be likely to have come. The same day, the yth of March, 1812, on which The Dublin Journal published this sarcastic allusion to the speech of "a stripling" it does not condescend to name, is memorable in the life of Shelley as that on which he is first spoken of openly in terms of enthusiastic admira- tion and praise. With the exception of his appearing among the subscribers to the Poems of Janetta Philipps, and to the Oxford Fund in Sustainment of Peter Fin- nerty, as previously mentioned, the following is the earliest public allusion to him that can be discovered. It appeared in The Weekly Messenger, another Dublin journal, but differing very widely in politics from that which contains the letter of "An Englishman." Shelley seems to have been rather proud of the notice, as he sent it at once to Godwin. Writing to the philosopher on the following day, he says, " You will see the account of ME in the newspapers. I am vain, but not so foolish as not to be rather piqued than gratified at the eulogia of a journal." The following is this very interesting article, the FIRST PUBLIC NOTICE OF SHELLEY. 253 first public notice of Shelley. It is printed exactly as in the original : From The Weekly Messenger, Dublin, Saturday, March 7th, i8i2. " PIERCE BYSHE SHELLY, ESQ. " The highly interesting appearance of this young gentleman at the late Aggregate Meeting of the Catholics of Ireland, has naturally excited a spirit of enquiry, as to his objects and views, in coming forward at such a meeting; and the publications which he has circulated with such uncommon industry, through the Metropolis, has set curiosity on the wing to ascertain who he is, from whence he comes, and what his preten- sions are to the confidence he solicits, and the character he assumes. To those who have read the productions we have alluded to, we need bring forward no evidence of the cultivation of his mind the benignity of his principles or the peculiar fascination with which he seems able to recommend them. " Of this gentleman's family we can say but little, but we can set down what we have heard from respect- able authority. That his father is a member of the Imperial Parliament, and that this young gentleman, whom we have seen, is the immediate heir of one of the first fortunes in England. Of his principles and his manners we can say more, because we can collect from conversation, as well as from reading, that he seems devoted to the propagation of those divine and Christian feelings which purify the human heart, give shelter to the poor, and consolation to the unfortunate. That he is the bold and intrepid advocate of those principles which are calculated to give energy to truth, and to depose from their guilty eminence the bad and 54 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. vicious passions of a corrupt community; that a universality of charity is his object, and a perfectibility of human society his end, which cannot be attained by the conflicting dogmas of religious sects, each priding itself on the extinction of the other, and all existing by the mutual misfortunes which flow from polemical war- fare. The principles of this young gentleman em- brace all sects and all persuasions. His doctrines, political and religious, may be accommodated to all ; every friend to true Christianity will be his religious friend, and every enemy to the liberties of Ireland will be his political enemy. The weapons he wields are those of reason, and the most social benevolence. He deprecates violence in the accomplishment of his views, and relies upon the mild and merciful spirit of tole- ration for the completion of all his designs, and the consummation of all his wishes. To the religious bigot such a missionary of truth is a formidable op- ponent, by the political monopolist he will be considered the child of Chimera, the creature of fancy, an ima- ginary legislator who presumes to make laws without reflecting upon his materials, and despises those con- siderations which have baffled the hopes of the most philanthropic and the efforts of the most wise. It is true, human nature may be too depraved for such a hand as Mr. Shelly's to form to anything that is good, or liberal, or beneficent. Let him but take down one of the rotten pillars by which society is now propped, and substitute the purity of his own princi- ples, and Mr. Shelly shall have done a great and lasting service to human nature. To this gentleman Ireland is much indebted, for selecting her as the theatre of his first attempts in this holy work of human regenera- tion ; the Catholics of Ireland should listen to him with FIRS!' PUBLIC NOTICE OF SHELLEY. 355 respect, because they will find that an enlightened Englishman has interposed between the treason of their own countrymen and the almost conquered spirit of their country ; that Mr. Shelly has come to Ireland to demonstrate in his person that there are hearts in his own country not rendered callous by six hundred years of injustice ; and that the genius of freedom, which has communicated comfort and content to the cottage of the Englishman, has found its way to the humble roof of the Irish peasant, and promises by its presence to dissipate the sorrows of past ages, to obliterate the remembrance of persecution, and close the long and wearisome scene of centuries of human de- pression. We extract from Mr. Shelly' s last production, which he calls " PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION, &c." A long quotation from this pamphlet follows, which, as it is printed entire in this book, need not be given. The writer in The Weekly Messenger concludes his observations with the following important paragraph : " We have but one word more to add. Mr. Shelly, commiserating the sufferings of our distinguished countryman Mr. Finerty, whose exertions in the cause of political freedom he much admired, wrote a very beautiful poem, the profits of which we under- stand, from undoubted authority, Mr. Shelly remitted to Mr. Finerty; we have heard they amounted to nearly an hundred pounds. This fact speaks a volume in favour of our new friend." Here then is the statement which has led to the whole of this investigation. It seemed incredible that a poem thus mentioned to the writer of the foregoing article, evidently by Shelley himself, should have re- 756 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. mained unknown to every one who lived in familiar intimacy with the poet, or who has written about him since his death. The fact of Shelley sending this statement to Godwin without a word of correction con- firms i*s truth. The name of the poem is not given. There was no clue but the fact that the profits of the sale were remitted to Mr. Finnerty. That however, as I have shown, proved sufficient to enable me to identify this " very beautiful poem" with the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things, published, as it is stated, for the purpose of " assisting to maintain in prison Mr. Peter Finnerty, imprisoned for a libel." Before alluding to the probable writer of this article in The Weekly Messenger, I will here give a letter reflecting upon it, and upon Shelley, who is still not named, which appeared a fortnight later in Faulk- ner's Dublin Journal. The "stripling's" pretensions to be a poet, on the strength of this poem about Finnerty, are sarcastically referred to. The writer now calls himself " a Dissenter" instead of "an Englishman." " To the Editor of The Dublin Journal. " Saturday, March 2 1 st, 1812. " Sir, T question the propriety of contributing to the public introduction of those literary nondescripts and political adventurers who figure occasionally on the Catholic stage. Men there are who, preferring dis- tinction procured by infamy to inglorious obscurity, do not hesitate at the violation of any law, civil or sacred, in .order to attain it : swimming at the surface by their own putrescence, these merit not our attention ; silence and contempt are all we owe to the individual whose sole ambition is to become the idol of a mob, and who A DUBLIN "DISSENTER," 1812, ON SHELLEY. itf like Herostratus, could fire a temple the wonder of the world, merely for the sake of transmitting to posterity a name which might otherwise rot. " Through the medium of your paper, however, the attention of the public has been called to another of the Catholic performers, and a late worthy correspondent has obliged you with some deserved and judicious animadversions upon his debut. In a weekly paper, the appearance ,of this ' very interesting' personage is announced with as much parade as if Dogberry, Verges, and the Watch graced the scene. ' Oh, a stool and a cushion for the sexton/ ' An two men ride of a horse, one must ride behind/ f The ewe that will not hear her lamb when it baes, will never answer a calf when he bleats/ His panegyrist has described him with the minuteness of an interested biographer ; the prospects and the talents of the ' stranger' and his generosity, his amazing generosity to an incarcerated individual [Mr. Peter Finnerty] , whose crime was not loyalty, are made the subjects of commendation ; and in illustration of the excellence of this modern Apollonius, who travels but for the improvement of the human race, a specimen of his composition is printed and circulated. I do not find that he, like the Cappadocian, has laid claims to mira- culous powers, but he is a poet, and his very prose is so full of poetic fire, so vivid, so redundant with words, which, like those often used by a celebrated female novelist, were probably never intended to represent any specific idea one is tempted to think he must now and then compose under the influence of the moon. Now, sir, though I really can neither ' make occasions/ nor ' improve those that offer/ for perusing the whole of a production which is scarcely to be paralleled in the ravings of Diderot, the rhapsodies of Rousseau, or the s 258 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. soft sentimental stuff of the Prebend of York, I have read enough of this specimen to confirm me in the old-fashioned but honest and conscientious prejudices which it is evidently the wish of its author to eradicate. He proposes to ' exterminate the eyeless monster Bigotry/ and ' make the teeth of the palsied beldame Superstition chatter/ This, which is doubtless de- signed as an allegorical allusion to the Romish Church, must, if actually accomplished, be its death ; and when ' the teeth of the beldame chatter/ her brats may go beg ; he proposes to make us all ' kneel at the altar of the common God/ and to ' hang upon that altar the garland of devotion/ figures which Deism borrows from the old Heathen mythology, which are mere poetic smoke, and resemble most the steams of a perfumer's shop, or the smock of an Eastern bride smelling of ' myrrh, aloes, and cassia/ "In a style less elevated and Heliconian this modern annihilator of moral and political evil roundly proposes an association throughout Ireland for the attainment of ' Catholic Emancipation and the repeal of the Union Act/ That the abolition of the aris- tocracy of the country is a feature in his picture of Utopian amelioration, though, for reasons obvious, but lightly touched, and as yet kept in the shade, is evi- dent from the manner and connexion in which he disapproves ' of other distinctions than those of virtue and talent ' a disapproval specious indeed, worthy the head of him who expects a new Jerusalem on earth, or seeks divine perfection among created beings. But ignorant, shamefully ignorant, must they be of human nature, and of the awful events which have taken place in Europe of late years, who can be gulled by such a pretext now. It is ' Vox et praeterea nihil' SATIRICAL ALLUSIONS TO SHELLEY IN 1812. 259 the very cant of republicans. I would suspect the cause which recommends itself by such a pretext, as I would the chastity of a wanton assuming the dress of a nun the loyalty of a friar or a presbyter armed with a pike, or the honesty of a beggar with a casquet of jewels. 'No distinctions but those of virtue and talent ' was the pretext of Monsieur Egalite, of Legendre the butcher, of the bloody Roland, and of that monster in human shape Marat, who proposed, and was applauded by a banditti of ruffians calling themselves a National Convention for professing, the cutting off one hundred and fifty thousand heads as a sovereign specific for the disorders of France. " It is said in a book to whose pages the ' very in- teresting ' Philanthropist seems not to be a stranger, that ' burning lips and a wicked heart ' are ' like a potsherd covered with silver/ the man I mean has himself quoted the phrase ' a tree is known by its fruits/ and if I mistake not, such expressions warrant the opinion that from certain noisy but worthless characters nothing but what is noxious can be ex- pected. Men whose private life and known habits make them the refuse of the political, and the terror or the stain of the moral world, would make but sorry reformers of public abuse. I need not whisper ' whence I steal the waters ' when I say, ' Physician, heal thy- self. 3 It is usual to commend the Catholic body for their loyalty ; that they are generally loyal is sometimes acknowledged even by those who, in their official situations, reprobate the proceedings of the Catholic Committee. That there are loyal Catholics, both lay and clerical, is, I believe, probable, but it would puzzle a conjuror to reconcile with loyalty, as it is by loyalists understood, some of the Catholic S 2 *6o PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. measures." [Some passages not referring to Shelley are here omitted.] " Leaving this 'interesting stranger' to amuse the admirers of the Catholic Drama by puff- ing at ' the meteors ' of his own creation, ' which play over the loathsome pool ' of his own pantomimic invention, I will ask you, sir, what has the Protestant cause, and what has that consummation of political wisdom the British constitution, to fear from a party which has to shelter in the shade of such paltry and unmeaning bombast ? The Philanthropist talks bigly of ' blossoms to be matured by the summer sun of improved intellect and progressive virtue/ but if his root be rotten his blossoms will be dust. . . . From such corrections and such apologists, and from the machinations of all pseudo-philanthropists, may the good Lord deliver us ! '' I have the honour to be, Sir, " Yours, &c., " A DISSENTER."* This letter finally disposes of Mr. Hogg's absurd story, and shows the quarter from which alone Shelley received any actual opposition when in Dublin. The " hint from the police" is equally apocryphal. Shelley's and Harriet's letters prove that he received none. This may be the most suitable place to reprint the second pamphlet. As a publication it differs in one important particular from the other. It has the printer's name. I have not been able to find an " I. Eton, Winetavern Street," in any of the Dublin Directories. Shelley was greatly interested in the notorious Daniel Isaac Eaton, of London, as proved * Extracted from Faulkner's Dublin Journal, Saturday, March zist, 1812. A DUBLIN STOCK DALE. 261 by the Letter to Lord Ellenborough. He would scarcely have invented his Irish namesake. It is, however, a rather curious coincidence to have not only a Dublin Stockdale, but a Dublin Eaton or Eton. Mr. John Stockdale was the actual printer of The Press news- paper, the celebrated organ of the United Irishmen in 1797. The registered printer was Peter Finnerty. On the arrest and imprisonment of the latter, December 23rd, 1797, the name of Arthur O'Connor was sub- stituted as printer, and continued until the suppression of the paper, March I3th, 1798.* * On Tuesday, the 27th of February, 1798, Mr. John Stockdale was brought for the second time to the bar of the Irish House of Lords. On the preceding Saturday he had been before the same tribunal, and declining to answer the question of the Lord Chan- cellor as to whether The Press newspaper was printed at his house, 62, Abbey Street, Dublin, was discharged. On being summoned for the second time, no time was lost in putting superfluous ques- tions. He was directly charged with being the publisher of The Press; was sentenced to six months' imprisonment, and to pay a fine of 500^. As the editor of The Press said, " His accusation, his trial, his conviction, his sentence and its execution were de- spatched with the rapidity of a cabalistic charm." Beauties of The Press. London: Printed 1800, p. 555. Dr. Madden tells us that Mr. Stockdale died in Abbey Street, Dublin, January nth, 1813. The United Irishmen, Second Series, p. 246. - PROPOSALS ASSOCIATION OF THOSE PHIL ANT RE OPISTS, WHO CONVINCED OF THE INADEQUACY OF THE MORAL AND POLITICAL STATE OF IRELAND TO PRODUCE BENEFITS WHICH ARE NEVERTHELESS ATTAINABLE ARE WILLING TO UNITE TO ACCOMPLISH ITS RE- GENtRATION. BY PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. PRINTED BY I. ETON, WINETAVERN-STREET. [1812.] PEOPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION, &c. I propose an association which shall have for its immediate objects, Catholic Emancipation, and the Repeal of the Act of Union between Great Britain and Ireland ; and grounding on the removal of these grievances, an annihilation or palliation, of whatever moral or po- litical evil, it may fee within the compass of human power to assuage or eradicate. MAN cannot make occasions, but he may seize those that offer. None are more interesting to philanthropy than those which excite the benevolent passions, that generalize and expand private into public feelings, and make the hearts of individuals vibrate not merely for themselves, their families, and their friends, but for posterity, for a people ; till their country becomes the world, and their family the sensitive creation. A recollection of the absent, and a taking into con- sideration the interests of those unconnected with our- selves, is a principal source of that feeling which generates occasions wherein a love for human kind may become eminently useful and active. Public topics of fear and hope, such as sympathize with general grievance, or hold out hopes of general amend- ment, are those on which the philanthropist would dilate with the warmest feeling. Because these are 266 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. accustomed to place individuals at a distance from self; for in proportion as he is absorbed in public feeling, so will a consideration of his proper benefit be generalized. In proportion as he feels with or for a nation or a world, so will man consider himself less as that centre to which we are but too prone to believe that every line of human concern does or ought to converge. I should not here make the trite remark, that selfish motive biasses, brutalizes, and degrades the human mind, did it not thence follow, that to seize those occasions wherein the opposite spirit predo- minates, is a duty which Philanthropy imperiously exacts of her votaries ; that occasions like these are the proper ones for leading mankind to their own interest by awakening in their minds a love for the interest of their fellows. A plant that grows in every soil, though too often it is choked by tares before its lovely blossoms are expanded. Virtue produces plea- sure, it is as the cause to the effect; I feel pleasure in doing good to my friend, because I love him. I do not love him for the sake of that pleasure. I regard the present state of the public mind in Ireland to be one of those occasions which the ardent votary of the religion of Philanthropy dare not leave unseized. I perceive that the public interest is excited, I perceive that individual interest has, in a certain degree, quitted individual concern to generalize itself with universal feeling. Be the Catholic Emancipation a thing of great or of small misfortune [importance ?] , be it a means of adding happiness to four millions of people, or a reform which will only give honour to a few of the higher ranks, yet a benevolent and disin- terested feeling has gone abroad, and I am willing that PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 167 it should never subside. I desire that means should be taken with energy and expedition in this impor- tant yet fleeting crisis, to feed the unpolluted flame at which nations and ages may light the torch of Liberty and Virtue ! It is my opinion that the claims of the Catholic inhabitants of Ireland, if gained to-morrow, would in a very small degree aggrandize their liberty and happiness. The disqualifications principally affect the higher orders of the Catholic persuasion, these would principally be benefited by their removal. Power and wealth do not benefit, but injure the cause of virtue and freedom. I am happy, however, at the near approach of this emancipation, because I am inimical to all disqualifications for opinion. It gives me plea- sure to see the approach of this enfranchisement, not for the good which it will bring with it, but because it is a sign of benefits approaching, a prophet of good about to come; and therefore do I sympathize with the inhabitants of Ireland in this great cause ; a cause which though in its own accomplishment will add not one comfort to the cottager, will snatch not one from the dark dungeon, will root not out one vice, alleviate not one pang, yet it is the foreground of a picture, in the dimness of whose distance I behold the lion lay down with the lamb, and the infant play with the basilisk. For it supposes the extermination of the eyeless monster Bigotry, whose throne has tottered for two hundred years. I hear the teeth of the palsied beldame Superstition chatter, and I see her descending to the grave ! Reason points to the open gates of the Temple of Religious Freedom, Philanthropy kneels at the altar of the common God ! There, wealth and poverty, rank and abjectness, are names known but as 268 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. memorials of past time : meteors which play over the loathsome pool of vice and misery, to warn the wan- derer where dangers lie. Does a God rule this illi- mitable universe? Are you thankful for his benefi- cence do you adore his wisdom do you hang upon his altar the garland of your devotion ? Curse not your brother, though he hath en wreathed with [it ?] his flowers of a different hue ; the purest religion is that of Charity, its loveliness begins to proselyte the hearts of men. The tree is to be judged of by its fruit. I regard the admission of the Catholic claims and the Repeal of the Union Act as blossoms of that fruit which the summer sun of improved intellect and pro- gressive virtue is destined to mature. I will not pass unreflected on the Legislative Union of Great Britain and Ireland, nor will I speak of it as a grievance so tolerable or unimportant in its own nature as that of Catholic disqualification. The latter affects few, the former affects thousands. The one disqualifies the rich from power, the other impoverishes the peasant, adds beggary to the city, famine to the country, multiplies abjectedness, whilst misery and crime play into each other's hands, under its withering auspices. I esteem, then, the annihilation of this second grievance to be something more than a mere sign of coming good. I esteem it to be in itself a substantial benefit. The aristocracy of Ireland (for much as I may disapprove other distinctions than those of virtue and talent, I consider it useless, hasty, and violent, not for the present to acquiesce in their continuance) the aristocracy of Ireland suck the veins of its inhabitants and consume the blood in England. I mean not to deny the unhappy truth that there is much misery and vice in the world. I PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 269 mean to say that Ireland shares largely of both. England has made her poor; and the poverty of a rich nation will make its people very desperate and wicked. I look forward then to the redress of both these grievances, or rather, I perceive the state of the public mind, that precedes them as the crisis of beneficial innovation. The latter I consider to be the cause of the former, as I hope it will be the cause of more compre- hensively beneficial amendments. It forms that occasion which should energetically and quickly be occupied. The voice of the whole human race ; their crimes, their miseries, and their ignorance, invoke us to the task. For the miseries of the Irish poor, exacerbated by the union of their country with England, are not peculiar to themselves. England, the whole civilized world, with few exceptions, is either sunk in dispro- portioned abjectness, or raised to unnatural elevation. The Repeal of the Union Act will place Ireland on a level, so far as concerns the well-being of its poor, with her sister nation. Benevolent feeling has gone out in this country in favour of the happiness of its inha- bitants ; may this feeling be corroborated, methodized, and continued ! May it never fail ! But it will not be kept alive by each citizen sitting quietly by his own fireside, and saying that things are going on well, be- cause the rain does not beat on him, because he has books and leisure to read them, because he has money and is at liberty to accumulate luxuries to himself. Generous feeling dictates no such sayings. When the heart recurs to the thousands who have no liberty and no leisure, it must be rendered callous by long con- templation of wretchedness, if after such recurrence it can beat with contented evenness. Why do I talk 270 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. thus ? Is there any one who doubts that the present state of politics and morals is wroug? They say show us a safe method of improvement. There is no safer than the corrohoration and propagation of gene- rous and philanthropic feeling, than the keeping con- tinually alive a love for the human race, than the putting in train causes which shall have for their con- sequences virtue and freedom, and because I think that individuals acting singly, with whatever energy, can never effect so much as a -society; I propose that all those whose views coincide with those that I have avowed, who perceive the state of the public mind in Ireland, who think the present a fit opportunity for attempting to fix its fluctuations at Philanthropy, who love all mankind, and are willing actively to engage in its cause, or passively to endure the perse- cutions of those who are inimical to its success ; I propose to these to form an association for the pur- poses, first, of debating on the propriety of whatever measures may be agitated ; and secondly, for carrying, by united or individual exertion, such measures into effect when determined on. That it should be an association for discussing [diffusing?] knowledge and virtue throughout the poorer classes of society in Ire- land, for co-operating with any enlightened system of education ; for discussing topics calculated to throw light on any methods of alleviation of moral and poli- tical evil, and, as far as lays in its power, actively in- teresting itself, in whatever occasions may arise for benefiting mankind. "When I mention Ireland, I do not mean to confine the influence of the association to this or to any other country, but for the time being. Moreover, I would recommend that this association should attempt to PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 271 form others, and to actuate them with a similar spirit, and I am thus indeterminate in my description of the association which I propose, because I conceive that an assembly of men meeting to do all the good that opportunity will permit them to do, must be in its nature as indefinite and varying as the instances of human vice and misery that precede, occasion, and call for its institution. As political institution and its attendant evils con- stitute the majority of those grievances which philan- thropists desii'e to remedy, it is probable that existing Governments will frequently become the topic of their discussions, the results of which may little coincide with the opinions which those who profit by the supineness of human belief desire to impress upon the world. It is probable that this freedom may excite the odium of certain well-meaning people, who pin their faith upon their grandmother's apron-string. The minority in number are the majority in intellect and power. The former govern the latter, though it is by the sufferance of the latter that this originally delegated power is exercised. This power is become hereditary, and hath ceased to be necessarily united with intellect, It is certain, therefore, that any questioning of established principles would excite the abhorrence and opposition of those who derived power and honour (such as it is) from their continuance. As the association which I recommend would ques- tion those principles (however they may be hedged in with antiquity and precedent) which appeared ill adapted for the benefit of human kind, it would pro- bably excite the odium of those in power. It would be obnoxious to the Government, though nothing 272 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. would be farther from the views of associated philan- thropists than attempting to subvert establishments forcibly, or even hastily. Aristocracy would oppose it, whether oppositionists or ministerialists (for philan- thropy is of no party), because its ultimate views look to a subversion of all factitious distinctions, although from its immediate intentions I fear that aristocracy can have nothing to dread. The priesthood would oppose it, because a union of Church and State con- trary to the principles and ^practice of Jesus, contrary to that equality which he fruitlessly endeavoured to teach mankind is of all institutions that from the rust of antiquity are called venerable, the least quali- fied to stand free and cool reasoning, because it least conduces to the happiness of human kind; yet did either the minister, the peer, or the bishop know their true interest, instead of that virulent opposition which some among them have made to freedom and philan- thropy, they would rejoice and co-operate with the diffusion and corroboration of those principles that would remove a load of paltry equivocation, paltrier grandeur, and of wigs that crush into emptiness the brains below them, from their shoulders, and by per- mitting them to reassume the degraded and vilified title of man would preclude the necessity of mystery and deception, would bestow on them a title more ennobling, and a dignity which, though it would be without the gravity of an ape, would possess the ease and consistency of a man. For the reasons above alleged, falsely, prejudicedly, and narrowly will those very persons whose ultimate benefit is included in the general good, whose promo- tion is the essence of a philanthropic association, will they persecute those who have the best intentions towards them, malevolence towards none. PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 173 I do not, therefore, conceal that those who make the favour of Government the sunshine of their moral day, confide in the political creed makers of the hour, are willing to think things that are rusty and decayed venerable, and are uninquiringly satisfied with evils as these are, because they find them established and un- questioned as they do sunlight and air when they come into existence; that they had better not even think of philanthropy. I conceal not from them that the discountenance which Government will show to such an association as I am desirous to establish will come under their comprehensive definition of danger : that virtue, and any assembly instituted under its auspices, demands a voluntariness 011 the part of its devoted individuals to sacrifice personal to public benefit ; and that it is possible that a party of beings associated for the purposes of disseminating virtuous principles, may, considering the ascendancy which long custom has conferred on opposite motives to action, meet with inconveniences that may amount to personal danger. These considerations are, however, to the mind of the philanthropist as is a drop to an ocean ; they serve by their possible existence as tests whereby to discover the really virtuous man from him who calls himself a patriot for dishonourable and selfish purposes. I propose then, to such as think with me, a Philan- thropic Association, in spite of the danger that may attend the attempt. I do not this beneath the shroud of mystery and darkness. I propose not an Associa- tion of Secrecy. Let it [be ?] open as the beam of day. Let it rival the sunbeam in its stainless purity, as in the cxtensivencss of its effulgence. I disclaim all connexion with insincerity and con- cealment. The latter implies the former, as much as 274 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. the former stands in need of the latter. It is a very latitudinarian system of morality that permits its professor to employ bad means for any end whatever. Weapons which vice can use are unfit for the hands of virtue. Concealment implies falsehood ; it is had, and can therefore never be serviceable to the cause of philanthropy. I propose therefore that the association shall be established and conducted in the open face of day, with the utmost possible publicity. It is only vice that hides itself in holes and corners, whose effrontery shrinks from scrutiny, whose cowardice lets I dare not wait upon I would, like the poor cat in the adage. But the eye of virtue, eagle-like, darts through the undazzling beam of eternal truth, and from the un- diminished fountain of its purity gathers wherewith to vivify and illuminate a universe. I have hitherto abstained from inquiring whether the association which I recommend be or be not con- sistent with the English Constitution. And here it is fit, briefly to consider what a constitution is. Government can have no rights, it is a delegation for the purpose of securing them to others. Man becomes a subject of government, not that he may be in a worse, but that he may be in a better state than that of unorganized society. The strength of govern- ment is the happiness of the governed. All govern- ment existing for the happiness of others is just only so far as it exists by their consent, and useful only so far as it operates to their well-being. Constitu- tion is to government what government is to law. Constitution may, in this view of the subject, be defined to be not merely something constituted for the benefit of any nation or class of people, but some- PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 275 thing constituted by themselves for their own benefit. The nations of England and Ireland have no con- stitution, because at no one time did the individuals that compose them constitute a system for the general benefit. If a system determined on by a very few, at a great length of time ; if Magna Charta, the Bill of Rights, and other usages for whose influence the im- proved state of human knowledge is rather to be looked to, than any system which courtiers pretend to exist, and perhaps believe to exist a system whose spring of agency they represent as something secret, undiscoverable, and awful as the law of nature; if these make a constitution, then England has one. But if (as I have endeavoured to show they do not) a constitution is something else, then the speeches of kings or commissioners, the writings of courtiers, and the journals of Parliament, which teem with its glory, are full of political cant, exhibit the skeleton of national freedom, and are fruitless attempts to hide evils in whose favour they cannot prove an alibi. As therefore, in the true sense of the expression, the spot of earth on which we live is destitute of constituted government, it is impossible to offend against its principles, or to be with justice accused of wishing to subvert what has no real existence. If a man was accused of setting fire to a house, which house never existed, and from the nature of things could not have existed, it is impossible that a jury in their senses would find him guilty of arson. The English Consti- tution then could not be offended by the principles of virtue and freedom. In fact, the manner in which the Government of England has varied since its earliest establishment, proves that its present form is the result of a progressive accommodation to existing principles. T 2 376 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. It has been a continual struggle for liberty on the part of the people, and an uninterrupted attempt at tightening the reins of oppression, and encouraging ignorance and imposture by the oligarchy to whom the first William parcelled out the property of the aborigines at the conquest of England by the Normans. I hear much of its being a tree so long growing which to cut down is as bad as cutting down an oak where there are no more. But the best way, on topics similar to these, is to tell the plain truth, without the confusion and ornament of metaphor. I call ex- pressions similar to these political cant, which, like the songs of " Rule Britannia" and " God save the King," are but abstracts of the caterpillar creed of courtiers, cut down to the taste and comprehension of a mob ; the one to disguise to an alehouse politician the evils of that devilish practice of war, and the other to inspire among clubs of all descriptions a certain feel- ing which some call loyalty and others servility. A Philanthropic Association has nothing to fear from the English Constitution, but it may expect danger from its government. So far, however, from thinking this an argument against its institution, establishment, and augmentation, I am inclined to rest much of the AV eight of the cause, which my duties call upon me to support, on the very fact that government forcibly in- terferes when the opposition that is made to its pro- ceedings is profoundly and undeniably nothing but intellectual. A good cause may be shown to be good, violence instantly renders bad what might before have been good. " Weapons that falsehood can use are unfit for the hands of truth " truth can reason, and falsehood cannot. A political or religious system may burn and im- PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 277 prison those who investigate its principles; but it is an invariable proof of their falsehood and hollowness. Here there is another reason for the necessity of a Philanthropic Association, and I call upon any fair and rational opponent to controvert the argument which it contains; for there is no one who even calls himself a philanthropist that thinks personal danger or dishonour terrible in any other light than as it affects his usefulness. Man has a heart to feel, a brain to think, and a tongue to utter. The laws of his moral as of his phy- sical nature are immutable, as is everything of nature ; nor can the ephemeral institutions of human society take away those rights, annihilate or strengthen the duties that have for their basis the imperishable rela- tions of his constitution. Though the Parliament of England were to pass a thousand bills, to inflict upon those who determined to utter their thoughts a thousand penalties, it could not render that criminal which was in its nature innocent before the passing of such bills. Man has a right to feel, to think, and to speak, nor can any acts of legislature destroy that right. He will feel, he must think, and he ought to give utterance to those thoughts and feelings with the readiest sincerity and the strictest candour. A man must have a right to do a thing before he can have a duty ; this right must permit before his duty can enjoin him to any act. Any law is bad which attempts to make it criminal to do what the plain dictates within the breast of every man tell him that he ought to do. The English Government permits a fanatic to as- semble any number of persons to teach them the most 278 PERCY BYSSEE SHELLEY. extravagant and immoral systems of faith ; but a few men meeting to consider its own principles are marked with its hatred and pursued by its jealousy. The religionist who agonizes the death-bed of the cottager, and by picturing the hell which hearts black and narrow as his own alone could have invented, and which exists but in their cores, spreads the un- charitable doctrines which devote heretics to eternal torments, and represents fceaven to be what earth is, a monopoly in the hands of certain, favoured ones whose merit consists in slavishness, whose success is the reward of sycophancy. Thus much is permitted, but a public inquiry that involves any doubt of their rectitude into the principles of government is not per- mitted. "When Jupiter and a countryman were one day walking out, conversing familiarly on the affairs of earth, the countryman listened to Jupiter's asser- tions on the subject for some time in acquiescence, at length happening to hint a doubt, Jupiter threatened him with his thunder. " Ah, ah," says the country- man, " now, Jupiter, I know that you are wrong ; you are always wrong when you appeal to your thunder." The essence of virtue is disinterestedness. Disinte- restedness is the quality which preserves the character of virtue distinct from that of either innocence or vice. This, it will be said, is mere assertion. It is so : but it is an assertion whose truth, I believe, the hearts of philanthropists are disinclined to deny. Those who have been convinced by their grandam of the doctrine of an original hereditary sin, or by the apostles of a degrading philosophy of the neces- sary and universal selfishness of man, cannot be phil- anthropists. Now as an action, or a motive to action, is only virtuous so far as it is disinterested, or par- PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 279 takes (I adopt this mode of expression to suit the taste of some) of the nature of generalized self-love, then reward or punishment, attached even by omni- potence to any action, can in no wise make it either good or bad. It is no crime to act in contradiction to an English judge or an English legislator, but it is a crime to transgress the dictates of a monitor which feels the spring of every motive, whose throne is the human seusorium, whose empire the human conduct. Con- science is a government before which all others sink into nothingness ; it surpasses, and where it can act supersedes, all other as nature surpasses art, as God surpasses man. In the preceding pages, during the course of an investigation of the possible objections which might be urged by philanthropy to an association such as I recommend, as I have rather sought to bring forward than conceal my principles, it will appear that they have their origin from the discoveries in the sciences of politics and morals which preceded and occasioned the revolutions of America and France. It is with openness that I confess, nay, with pride I assert, that they are so. The names of Paine and Lafayette will out- live the p[o]etic aristocracy of an expatriated Jesuit,* as the executive of a bigoted policy will die before the disgust at the sycophancy of their eulogists can sub- side. It will be said perhaps that much as principles such as these may appear marked on the outside with peace, liberty, and virtue, that their ultimate tendency is to a Revolution which, like that of France, will end * See Memoires de Jacobinisme, par 1'Abbe Baruel. *8o PERC Y B YSSHE SHELLE Y. in bloodshed, vice, and slavery. I must offer there- fore my thoughts on that event which so suddenly and so lamentably extinguished the overstrained hopes of liberty which it excited. I do not deny that the Revolution of France was occasioned by the literary labours of the encyclopaedists. When we see two events together, in certain cases we speak of one as the cause, the other the effect. We have no other idea of cause and effect but that which arises from necessary connexion; it "-is therefore still doubtful whether D'Alembert, Boulanger, Condorcet, and other celebrated characters, were the causes of the overthrow of the ancient monarchy of France. Tims much is certain, that they contributed greatly to the extension and diffusion of knowledge, and that knowledge is incompatible with slavery. The French nation was bowed to the dust by ages of uninterrupted despotism. They were plundered and insulted by a succession of oligarchies, each more bloodthirsty and unrelenting than the foregoing. In a state like this her soldiers learned to fight for Freedom on the plains of America, whilst at this very conjuncture a ray of science burst through the clouds of bigotry that obscured the moral day of Europe. The French were in the lowest state of human degradation, and when the truth, unaccus- tomed to their ears, that they were men and equals, was promulgated, they were the first to vent their indignation on the monopolizers of earth, because they were most glaringly defrauded of the immunities of nature. Since the French were furthest removed by the so- phistications of political institution from the genuine condition of human beings, they must have been most unfit for that happy state of equal law which proceeds PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 281 from consummated civilization, and which demands habits of the strictest virtue before its introduction. The murders during the period of the French Re- volution, and the despotism which has since been established, prove that the doctrines of philanthropy and freedom were but shallowly understood. Nor was it until after that period that their principles became clearly to be explained, and unanswerably to be established. Voltaire was the flatterer of kings, though in his heart he despised them so far has he been instru- mental in the present slavery of his country. Rousseau gave licence by his writings to passions that only in- capacitate and contract the human heart so far hath he prepared the necks of his fellow-beings for that yoke of galling and dishonourable servitude which at this moment it bears. Helvetius and Condorcet established principles, but if they drew conclusions, their conclusions were unsystematical, and devoid of the luminousness and energy of method. They were little understood in the Revolution. But this age of ours is not stationary. Philosophers have not de- veloped the great principles of the human mind that conclusions from them should be unprofitable and impracticable. We are in a state of continually pro- gressive improvement. One truth that had been dis- covered can never die, but will prevent the revivifi- cation of its apportioned opposite falsehood. By promoting truth and discouraging its opposite, the means of philanthropy are principally to be forwarded. Godwin wrote during the Revolution of France, and certainly his writings were totally devoid of influence with regard to its purposes. Oh ! that they had not ! In the Revolution of France were engaged men whose ?82 PER Y B YSSHE SHELL E Y. names are inerasable from the records of Liberty. Their genius penetrated with a glance the gloom and glare which Church-craft and State-craft had spread before the imposture and villany of their establish- ments. They saw the world. Were they men ? Yes! They felt for it ! They risked their lives and happi- ness for its benefit ! Had there been more of those men France would not now be a beacon to warn us of the hazard and horror of Revolutions, but a pattern of society rapidly advancing to a state of perfection, and holding out an example for the gradual and peaceful regeneration of the world. I consider it to be one of the effects of a Philanthropic Association to assist in the production of such men as these, in an extensive development of those germs of excellence whose favourite soil is the cultured garden of the human mind. Many well-meaning persons may thiuk that the attainment of the good which I propose as the ulti- matum of philanthropic exertion is visionary and inconsistent with human nature; they would tell me not to make people happy for fear of overstocking the world, and to permit those who found dishes placed before them on the table of partial nature to enjoy their superfluities in quietness, though millions of wretches crowded around but to pick a morsel,* which morsel was still refused to the prayers of agonizing famine. I cannot help thinking this an evil, nor help en- deavouring, by the safest means that I can devise, to palliate at present, and in fine to eradicate this evil. War, \ ice, and misery are undeniably bad, they embrace * See Malthus on Population. PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 283 all that we can conceive of temporal and eternal evil. Are we to be told that these are remediless, because the earth would, in case of their remedy, be over- stocked? That the rich are still to glut, that the ambitious are still to plan, that the fools whom these knaves mould, are still to murder their brethren and call it glory, and that the poor are to pay with their blood, their labour, their happiness, and their inno- cence for the crimes and mistakes which the here- ditary monopolists of earth commit ? Rare sophism ! How will the heartless rich hug thee to their bosoms, and lull their conscience into slumber with the opiate of thy reconciling dogmas ! But when the philosopher and philanthropist con- templates the universe, when he perceives existing evils that admit of amendment, and hears tell of other evils, which, in the course of sixty centuries, may again derange the system of happiness which the amend- ment is calculated to produce, does he submit to pro- long a positive evil, because if that were eradicated, after a millennium of 6oco years (for such space of time would it take to people the earth) another evil would take place. To how contemptible a degradation of grossest credu- lity will not prejudice lower the human mind ! We see in winter that the foliage of the trees is gone, that they present to the view nothing but leafless branches we see that the loveliness of the flower decays, though the root continues in the earth. What opinion should we form of that man who, when he walked in the freshness of the spring, beheld the fields enamelled with flowers, and the foliage bursting from the buds, should find fault with all this beautiful order, and murmur his contemptible discontents because winter 284 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. must come, and the landscape be robbed of its beauty for a while again? Yet this man is Mr. Malthus. Do we not see that the laws of nature perpetually act by disorganization and reproduction, each alternately becoming cause and effect. The analogies that we can draw from physical to moral topics are of all others the most striking. Does any one yet question the possibility of inducing radical reform of moral and political evil ? Does h % object from that impossibility to the association which I propose, which I frankly confess to be one of the means whose instrumentality I would employ to attain this reform. Let them look to the methods which I use. Let them put my object out of their view and propose their own, how would they accomplish it ? By diffusing virtue and knowledge, by promoting human happiness. Palsied be the hand, for ever dumb be the tongue that would by one expression convey sentiments differing from these : I will use no bad means for any end whatever. Know then, ye philan- thropists, to whatever profession of faith, or whatever determination of principles, chance, reason, or educa- tion may have conducted you, that the endeavours of the truly virtuous necessarily converge to one point, though it be hidden from them what point that is, they all labour for one end, and that controversies con- cerning the nature of that end serve only to weaken the strength which for the interest of virtue should be consolidated. The diffusion of true and virtuous principles (for in the first principles of morality none disagree) will pro- duce the best of possible terminations. I invite to an Association of Philanthropy those of whatever ultimate expectations, who will employ the PROPOSALS FOR AN ASSOCIATION. 285 same means that I employ; let their designs differ as much as they may from mine, I shall rejoice at their co-operation ; because if the ultimatum of my hopes be founded on the unity of truth, I shall then have auxiliaries in its cause, and if it be false I shall rejoice that means are not neglected for forwarding that which is true. The accumulation of evil which Ireland has for the last twenty years sustained, and considering the un- remittingness of its pressure I may say patiently sus- tained ; the melancholy prospect which the unforeseen conduct of the Regent of England holds out of its continuance, demands of every Irishman whose pulses have not ceased to throb with the life-blood of his heart, that he should individually consult, and unitedly determine on some measures for the liberty of his countrymen. That those measures should be pacific though resolute, that their movers should be calmly brave and temperately unbending, though the whole heart and soul should go with the attempt, is the opinion which my principles command me to give. And I am induced to call an association such as this .occasion demands, an Association of Philan- thropy, because good men ought never to circum- scribe their usefulness by any name which denotes their exclusive devotion to the accomplishment of its signification. When I began the preceding remarks I conceived that on the removal of the restrictions from the Regent a ministry less inimical than the present to the interests of liberty would have been appointed. I am deceived, and the disappointment of the hopes of freedom on this subject affords an additional argument towards the necessity of an Association. 286 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. I conclude these remarks, which I have indited principally with a view of unveiling my principles, with a proposal for an Association for the purposes of Catholic Emancipation, a repeal of the Union Act, and grounding upon the attainment of these objects a reform of whatever moral or political evil may be within its compass of human power to remedy. Such as are favourably inclined towards the iusti- tution would highly gratify the Proposer if they would personally communicate with him on this important subject, by which means the plan might be matured, errors in the Proposer's original system be detected, and a meeting for the purpose convened with that resolute expedition which the nature of the present crisis demands. No. 7, Lower Sackville Street. FINIS. * # * The two allusions to the " unforeseen conduct" of the Prince Regent with which in the preceding page Shelley concludes this pamphlet, are identical in spirit with the observations attributed to one of the speakers at the meeting in Fishanlble Street Theatre on the 28th of February, 1812, four days before the pamphlet ap- peared. The report, which I have extracted from the State Papers in the Record Office, has already been given at p. 238. The private Reporter for the Government, referring to a certain resolution, thus writes: " On this resolution, a young boy delivered a speech of considerable length and replete with much elegant language," Ale. At p. 239 I have suggested that in transcribing his notes the Re- porter substituted by accident the name of " Mr. Wyse" for " Mr. Shelley." The passages in the pamphlet establish almost conclu- sively that this surmise is correct. CHAPTER XL some unpublished letters of Shelley and Har- riet Shelley, particularly from that most interest- ing one from Harriet seized at Holyhead, which the present writer discovered in the Record Office, and which hitherto has been unknown, a tolerably com- plete account can be given of Shelley's remaining stay in Dublin. The letters to Godwin, which may be seen in the second volume of Mr. Hogg's incom- plete Life of the poet, are extremely vague, and give no precise details. Both poet and philosopher were merely showing off to each other in profound and ab- stract essays. Mr. Godwin could scarcely have been the friend of Curran if he was not in favour of that " political justice " to Ireland which he advocated for all mankind. The great point with him in his replies to the young " Philanthropist " was to show that Shelley had no right to deduce the principle, or at least the expediency of " association" from the pages of Political Justice. His only allusion to the affairs of Ireland was a comparison of Shelley with Robert Emmett, which I dare say gave intense enjoyment to the poet. Shelley died before the peaceful triumph of the " Catholic Association " proved that he was right and Godwin wrong as to the mode of obtaining political amelioration under the British Constitution. Mr. Godwin himself received the office, which happily 288 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. made his latter days comfortable, from a Government which was mainly floated into power by the Reform League. The duties of yeoman-usher of the Exche- quer were not so excessive as to prevent him looking occasionally into his collection of old letters. It would be curious to have seen him read the following passage from one of them addressed to him in 1812 from Dublin, by the young man in whose " letters and history" " all the females of his family, Mrs. G., and three daughters " were so niticli interested (Hogg, vol. ii. p. 100). Shelley, writing from Sackville Street, Dublin, March 8th, 1812, says, " I am not forgetful or unheeding of what you said of association. But Political Justice was first published in 1793; nearly twenty years have elapsed since the general diffusion of its doctrines. What has followed ? Have men ceased to fight ? Have vice and misery vanished from the earth? Have the fireside communications which it recommends taken place ? Out of the many who have read that inestimable book, how many have been blinded by prejudice ? How many, in short, have taken it up to gratify an ephemeral vanity, and when the hour of its novelty had passed, threw it aside, and yielded with fashion to the arguments of Mr. Mal- thus?" Hogff,\o\. ii. p. 92.* * In Shelley's second pamphlet, Proposals for an Association, &c , there is, as we have seen, the following brief allusion to Godwin, which that philosopher must have read with amazement in the copy presented to himself. Perhaps the whole pamphlet may not have been sent to Godwin, Shelley confining himself to those parts extracted in The Weekly Messenger, March 7th, 1812, the receipt of which Godwin acknowledged : " Godwin wrote during the Revolution of France, and certainly his writings were totally devoid of influence with regard to its purposes Oh ! that they had not !" Propo- sals fur an Association, &c., p. 14. INTEREST OF GODWIN'S FAMILY IN SHELLEY. 289 These unpleasant allusions were too much for the philosopher. So in his next letter he addresses his young catechist in these abrupt terms : " Shelley, you are preparing a scene of blood/' &c. " I wish to my heart you would come immediately to London. I have a friend who has contrived a tube to convey pas- sengers sixty miles an hour. Be youth your tube ! I have a thousand things I could say orally, more than I can say in a letter on this important subject. Away ! You cannot imagine how much all the females of my family, Mrs. G-. and three daughters, are interested in your letters and your history." Hogg, vol. ii. pp. 99, ico. The most interesting part of Godwin's letter is that which gives a sort of foreshadowing of the atmospheric mode of locomotion and the swiftness of the " Irish Mail," which latter " conveys passengers" without the aid of " a tube" (except the bridge at Bangor) exactly in the time calculated on by Godwin's friend. Before the loth of March, 1812, Shelley had re- moved from 7, Lower Sackville Street, Dublin, to 17, Grafton Street, in the same city. In 1812 the house 17, Grafton Street, was occupied by " Robert Williams, goldsmith and jeweller." It now forms part of the large establishment of Messrs. Brown, Thomas, and Co. Long as the following extracts are, they form but a portion of an exceedingly interesting and hitherto un- published letter, the joint composition of Shelley and Harriet, which was addressed to their friend at Hurst- pierpoint. I shall give the extracts first, and then offer such explanations as may seem necessary : *go PERCY EYSSHE SHELLEY. Shelley to Miss Hiichener. "17, Grafton Street, March loth, 1812. " MY DEAR FRIEND, .... I cannot recount all the horrible instances of unrestricted and licensed tyranny that have met my ears : an Irishman has been torn from his wife and family in Lisbon because he was a patriot, and compelled to serve as a common soldier in the Portuguese army by that monster of anti-patriotic in- humanity, Beresford, the idol of the belligerents. You will soon see a copy of his letter, and soon hear of my and Sir F. Burdett's exertion in his favour "We shall be free ; this nation shall awaken It is attended with circumstances singularly characteristic of cowardice and tyranny. My blood boils to think of it. A poor boy, whom I found starving in a hiding- place of unutterable filth and misery, whom I rescued and was about to teach to read, has been snatched on a charge of false and villanous effrontery to a magis- trate of Hell, who gave him the alternative of the [illegible ; perhaps " treadmill"] or military servitude. He preferred neither, yet was compelled to be a soldier. This has come to my knowledge this evening. I am resolved to present this business to the very jaws of Government, snatching if possible the poison from its fangs I am sick of this city, and long to be with you in peace. The rich grind the poor into ab- jectedness, and then complain that they are abject. They grind them to famine, and hang them if they steal a loaf. .... Your new suggestion of our join- ing you at Hurst is divine. It shall be so. I have not shown Harriet or E. your letter yet; they are walking with a Mr. Lawless (a valuable man) whilst I write this In a day or two I shall make up SHELLEY ON THE SOCIAL STATE OF DUBLIN, 291 a parcel to you which will come per coach ; it is a terrible mistake that of the last the blundering honest Irishman we have came without it. Send me the Sussex papers. Insist or make them insert the account of me. It may have a good effect on the mind of the people as a preparation. I send you two [probably " papers"] to-night. The association pro- ceeds slowly, and I fear will not be established I may succeed, but I fear I shall not in the main object [i.e., of establishing an association.] Dublin is the most difficult of all. In Wales I fear not. In Lewes fear is ridiculous." Harriet's Postscript. " Has Percy mentioned to you a very amiable man of the name of Lawless ? He is very much attached to the cause, yet not in it We have this morning been introduced to his wife. She is a very nice woman, though not equal to him What has the Duke of Norfolk been saying of us ? Now tell me, as I think I can confute his Lordship We have heard from Godwin. Such letters ! You must long to read them, I am sure But I know you now, and this blessing I should not have had if I had never been to Clapham. So I must be content, and think myself very happy that I did go, though I was not aware of the happiness that would result." The page is signed "P. B. S." Except for the date and place, " Keswick, Jan. 7th, 1812," assigned by Mr. Rossetti to the poem entitled Mother and Son, which is published by him in his edition of Shelley (vol. ii. p. 526), we should have 292 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. attributed the inspiration of that effusion to the inci- dents recorded in the foregoing letter written from Dublin, March ioth, 1812. The compulsory enlist- ment of the Irish patriot in Lisbon and the treatment of the boy seem to be referred to in the following lines : " But when the tyrant's bloodhounds forced the child For his cursed power unhallowed arms to wield." It may, however, have been the former incident alone, which perhaps he* heard of at Keswick, that formed the subject of the poem Mother and Son. The charge against the boy referred to in Shelley's letter of March loth, was for stealing a roll, " value one penny." The "magistrate of hell" may have been the famous Major Sirr. The allusion to Sir Francis Burdett is curious. A year later, as is evident from the interesting papers in the Record Office referring to Shelley's proceedings at Lymouth, he was in constant correspondence with that celebrated per- sonage. In fact his letters to Sir Francis Burdett were so numerous as to attract the notice of the post- master at Barnstaple, who communicated the circum- stance to Mr. subsequently Sir Francis Freeling. These letters, if preserved, would possess a singular interest. After the lapse of so many years, and the settlement of most of the questions discussed therein, no impropriety would be involved in their being made public. From some inquiries, however, which I have made, I am inclined to believe that the letters are not now in existence. The mention of Mr. Lawless is important. This remarkable man, who is still well remembered even in England under his popular title of " Honest Jack," seems to have been the only friend of any literary or social position (of course excepting MR. JOHN LA WLESS. 293 Curran, with whom he dined twice) that Shelley made in Dublin. Lawless was, we have little doubt, the writer of the article in The Weekly Messenger* which appeared on the Saturday preceding the day on which Harriet and Eliza Westbrook were introduced to his wife. Shelley's and Harriet's liking for Mr. and Mrs. Lawless was shared even by the cynical Mr. Hogg, as we find from that eccentric gentleman's account- of his own visit to Dublin in 1813. At present we can only refer to Mr. Lawless in connexion with Shelley's first visit. Before doing so it will be more convenient to conclude our explanation of the remaining allusions in Shelley's and Harriet's letter of March I oth. The mistake in sending the pamphlets by post both to Miss Kitchener and Godwin has already been men- tioned. The "blundering honest Irishman" was Daniel Hill, who, as we afterwards shall find, suffered six months imprisonment at Barnstaple for distri- buting some of Shelley's political broadsides there, though he had done precisely the same thing in Dublin without any hindrance. The two papers sent to Miss Kitchener were pro- bably The Weekly Messenger and The Dublin Journal of March 7th, 1812. "The account of me" which he requests his friend to get inserted in the Sussex papers, was doubtless the same " account of ME" referred to by Shelley in his letter to Godwin of * The first editor of The Weekly Messenger was Frederick William Conway, subsequently the well-known editor and pro- prietor of The Dublin Evening Post. Mr. Lawless was after- wards editor of The Weekly Messenger, to which he had been a contributor from the beginning. For a curious statement of Mr. Conway in reference to Shelley's visit to Dublin, see post, p. 304. 294 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. March 8th the article headed " Pierce Byshe Shelly, Esq.," which we have already given. The following letter of Harriet Shelley, which is now printed for the first time, will be read with pain- ful interest. One cannot help regretting that the peaceful future she once pictured to herself was not her fate. The letter may be considered something in the light of a general confession made to one who was singularly ill-suited and incompetent to be her directress : Harriet Shelley to Miss Hitchener ; from an unpublished letter. " 17, Grafton Street, Dublin, March I4th, 1812. "... When I lived with my father I was not likely to gain much knowledge, as our circle of acquaintances was verylimited,he not thinking it proper that we should mix much with society. In short, we very seldom visited those places of fashionable amusement which for our age might have been expected : 'twas but seldom I visited my home, school having witnessed the greater part of my life ; but do not think from this I was ignorant of what was passing in the great world. Books and newspapers were sufficient to inform me of these. Though then a silent spectator, yet did I look with a fearful eye upon the vices of the great, and thought to myself 'twas better to gain my bread with my needle than be the inhabitant of those great houses where misery and famine howl around. I will tell you my faults, knowing what I have to expect from your friend- ship. Remember my youth, and if any excuse can be made let that suffice. In London, you know, there are military as everywhere else; when quite a child I admired these red-coats, and I thought the military AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF HARRIET. 295 the best and most fascinating men in the world, though at the same time I used to declare my determination never to marry one. This was not so much on account of their vices, as from the idea of their being killed. I thought if I married any one it should be a clergyman. Strange idea this, was it not? But being brought up in the Christian religion, 'twas this first gave rise to it. You may conceive with what horror I first heard that Percy was an atheist. At first I did not comprehend the meaning of the word, therefore when it was explained I was truly petrified. I wondered how he could live a moment professing such prin- ciples, and solemnly declared that he never should change mine/' The remainder of this autobiographical sketch may be given at another time. I pass on to that portion of it referring to Shelley. The following passage fixes the date at which the poet first began to abstain from the use of animal food. In this, as in every- thing else, poor Harriet adopted the views of her hus- band. The change in their mode of living, which on the whole must be considered to have been an unwise one for both, commenced at Dublin on or about the ist of March, 1812. Harriet, continuing her letter to Miss Kitchener, says : " You do not know that we have forsworn meat and adopted the Pythagorean system ; about a fortnight has elapsed since the change, and we do not find our- selves the worse for it. ... Have you heard any- thing of the Habeas Corpus Act being suspended ? I have been very much alarmed at the intelligence, though I hope it is ill-founded. If it is not, where we shall be is not known, as from Percy's having made ig6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. himself so busy in the cause of this poor country, he has raised himself many enemies who would take advantage of such a time and instantly exercise their vengeance upon him." . . . In the same letter Shelley writes : " I do not like Lord Fingal or any of the Catholic aristocracy. Their intolerance can be equalled by nothing but the hardy wickedness and falsehood of the Prince. My speech was misinterpreted. I spoke for more than an hour. The hisses with which they greeted me when I spoke of religion, though in terms of respect, were mixed with applause when I avowed my mission. The newspapers have only noted that which did not excite disapprobation. As to an Asso- ciation, my hopes daily grow fainter on this subject, as my perception of its necessity strengthens. I shall soon, however, have the command of a newspaper with Mr. Lawless, of whom I shall tell more. This will be a powerful engine of amelioration. Mr. L., though he regards my ultimate hope as visionary, is willing to acquiesce in my views. He is a republican. Adieu. Believe that we are yours. We will live with you at Hurst. What think you of a journey to Italy in the autumn ?" There is little requiring explanation in this post- script of Shelley. The few hisses which he received at the meeting in Fishamble Street Theatre seemed to have rested on his mind more than the enthusiastic applause which we learn from " An Englishman" he received. Southey mentions an Eastern proverb which declares that the feeling of pain produced by the smallest thorn of the rose far exceeds that of pleasure which its sweetest perfume can bestow. So it was SHELLEY ENGAGED ON A HISTORY OF IRELAND. 297 with the sensitive young orator. As to the "intole- rance" of Lord Fingal and the Catholic aristocracy, we may safely limit it to a disinclination to listen to Shelley's mode of speaking of "religion" even " though in terms of respect." The expectation of having a newspaper at his com- mand in conjunction with Mr. Lawless is very curious. It was evidently a part of the same project alluded to in the following letter, written six days later, to Mr. Medwin senior, which has hitherto been a puzzle to Shelley's numerous biographers : " Dublin, No. 17, Graflon Street, " March 2oth, 1812. " MY DEAR SIR, The tumult of business and travelling has prevented my addressing you before. " I am now engaged with a literary friend in the publication of a voluminous History of Ireland, of which two hundred and fifty pages are already printed, and for the completion of which I wish to raise two hundred and fifty pounds. I could obtain undeniable security for its payment at the expiration of eighteen months. Can you tell me how I ought to proceed ? The work will produce great profits. As you will see by the Lewes paper, I am in the midst of overwhelming engagements. My kindest regards to all your family. Be assured I shall not forget them or you. " My dear Sir, yours very truly, " P. B. SHELLEY. " T. C. Medwin, Esq., Horsham, Sussex, England." The name of this " literary friend" of Shelley has hitherto baffled inquiry. There can be no doubt that he was Mr. John Lawless, and that the History of Ireland alluded to by Shelley, of which two hundred and fifty pages were printed in 1812, was the Compen- 198 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. dium of the History of Ireland, published by Mr. Law- less in 1 8 [4.* A sketch of the life of this remarkable man would be interesting and valuable, but the limits of this pub- lication preclude the possibility of my entering npon it at present. An account of his death, and an interesting letter from his son Philip Lawless, Esq., Barrister-at- law, to the author, with some extracts from the State Papers, will be found at the end of this volume, Appen- dix No. 2. One fact, however, must be mentioned in this place, not for its possible reference to Mr. Lawless, though that he was the person alluded to by the writer about to be quoted there can be little doubt, but for the singular interest it possesses of being the first instance recorded of Shelley's pecuniary generosity to his friends few in number indeed, but making up by their concentrated avidity for the more diffuse vo- raciousness of a wider circle. To what extent those inroads not only on Shelley's purse, but occasionally on the very furniture of his house, were carried, may be learned from the curious statement in the second series of Miss Mitford's Letters, recently published. * " Compendium of the History of Ireland, from the Earliest Period to the Reign of George I. By John Lawless, Esq., a Member of the Catholic Bor.rd. Dublin: 1814." The work, though not published till that year, was well known to be in preparation shortly after Shelley left Dublin. The following curious allusion to it will be found in Dr. Brenan's Milesian Magazine for July, 1812, p. 87. " Jack Squintura" was the sobriquet of John Lawless in this scurrilous publication : "JACK SQUINTCM'S HISTORY OF IRELAND. The public will learn, with much attention, that a history of Ireland, from the Creation to the present hour, is about to be published by that illus- trious literator Jack Squintum." THE PHILOSOPHERS STONE. 299 From this suggestive picture of the domestic life of Shelley it will be seen that the airy and pleasant Mr. Harold Skirapole that self-denying sybarite, content indeed with " claret and Naples biscuits," but pocket- ing in one sum a thousand pounds of his friend's money as if it were a delicious bit of pleasantry quite a trifle indeed where two such men of genius were concerned could carry off the same friend's chairs and tables when the more direct resources of his purse were exhausted. Another well-drawn figure in Miss Mitford's View of an Interior is that of the philosophical Mr. Godwin. In 1807, as we have seen, the author of Political Justice had some difficulty about his " little bills/' and applied to an Irish Judge, the Right Honourable John Philpot Curran, for the modest sum of 3007., which he probably obtained. If St. Leon did not discover the Elixir of Life, he certainly found the Philosopher's Stone, and contrived to turn the enthusiasm of his friends into a good deal of solid gold. In 1817, Shelley stood in a nearer re- lationship to Godwin than he had done in 1812, when he received from his future father-in-law the letter of in- troduction to Curran. The Philosopher's Stone had by that time lost a little of its virtue, perhaps from over use, so that the author of Mandeville had to work on the original of that character by a more potent talisman. After mentioning the clean sweep of Shelley's " chairs and tables and bedsteads \" by Mr. Skimpole, the merciless Miss Mitford thus continues : " And Mr. Godwin, his papa-in-law, was much worse : he used to threaten to stab himself if his dutiful son-in-law would not accept his bills. Only fancy him down on his knees, flourishing a drawn dagger, and talking tragedy \" Miss Mitford' s Letters, Second Series. 300 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Miss Mitford adds to these curious details the pithy remark, " But it was no joke to poor Mr. Shelley ." It certainly was not. There was very little comedy on his side in the intercourse between himself and his friends. On the whole it was rather tragic. Speak- ing of one of the earliest chosen and the most boastful of the number, Shelley, in a letter still extant, thus wrote within three months after his marriage with Harriet Westbrook " He attempted to seduce my wife \" That attempt, it is to be feared, was the beginning of his greatest misfortune, if it had not a more direct bearing on the catastrophe of Harriet's suicide. It is to be hoped that this deliberate inten- tion to " filch" from him his " good name," and what ought to be dearer to him almost than that, was a solitary crime ; but of the rest of lago's speech one line was certainly applicable to Shelley. Of the " trash" which was seldom allowed to remain long in the purse of the poet, he might well have said, alluding to almost any of his friends : " 'Twas mine, 'tis his, and has been slave to thousands." We have seen that it was in Dublin Shelley received his first recognition as a poet. That was in the interest- ing article in The Weekly Messenger of March 7th, 1812. It is a curious fact that the earliest introduction of Shelley's name to the English public did not take place until four years and nine months after this date ! If the reader refers to the article alluded to, p. 253 of the present volume, and compares its warm and generous tone with the frigid and half-apologetic terms in which so late as December, 1816, Leigh Hunt for the first time mentions the name of Shelley, he will not only be surprised, but perhaps enlightened as to the popular YOUNG POETS. 301 fallacy of Hunt's early knowledge and appreciation of Shelley's genius. Nearly six years after Shelley wrote to him from Oxford more than five years after Shelley had published a poem in sustainment of a man whose story had been told at such length by Leigh Hunt himself more than three years after Queen Mab had been printed and presumably presented to the editor of The Examiner, and more than two years after the author of that poem is represented as visiting the in- carcerated editor " the wit in the dungeon/' as Lord Byron in a sudden fit of good humour called him we find Shelley thus spoken of by Leigh Hunt. It will be seen that Shelley had sent some poetical con- tributions to The Examiner, which the editor had not thought worth preserving. The article is devoted to three " YOUNG POETS." It is curious that as much space is given to the only one of the three that failed to realize the expectations formed of him as to the other two. These were Shelley and Keats. Eleven timid lines are given to Shelley. It will be perceived that Leigh Hunt confesses he had seen no specimen of Shelley's poetry up to December ist, 1816, except those manuscript contributions offered to The Exa- miner, which speedily found their way to the waste- paper basket. It is thus " With bated breath and whispering humbleness" that Leigh Hunt introduces to the British public the name of Percy Bysshe Shelley : " YOUNG POETS. " The object of the present article is merely to no- tice three young writers, who appear to us to promise a considerable addition of strength to the new school. 303 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Of the first who came before us, we have, it is true, yet seen only one or two specimens, and these were no sooner sent us than we unfortunately mislaid them ; but we shall procure what he has published, and if the rest answer to what we have seen, we shall have no hesitation in announcing him for a very striking and original thinker. His name is PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY, and he is the author of a poetical work, entitled Alastor, or the Spirit of Solitude" The Examiner, Dec. ist, 1816. It is sad to think that the deplorable suicide of Harriet Shelley must in all probability have occurred a day or two after the appearance of this first public recognition (in England) of her husband. Shelley legalized his connexion with Mary Godwin on the 3Oth of December, 1816. The article in The Examiner appeared on the ist December. Harriet's suicide took place in the same month. "In December, 1816," says Mr. Peacock, " Harriet drowned herself in the Serpentine river, and to her father's house in Chapel- street his daughter's body was carried" (Eraser's Magazine, January, 1860, p. 100). The exact date is not given, but it is almost certain that the catastrophe occurred very early in the month. The commonest decency or humanity, not to speak of legal impedi- ments, including the holding of a coroner's inquest, which doubtless took place, though no report of it has been yet discovered, might be supposed to have neces- sitated a delay of over three weeks before the formal ceremony of marriage was gone through by Shelley and his second wife. This brings us very near the ist of December, on which day this perhaps fatal notice of " a very striking and original thinker" and SUICIDE OF HARRIET. 303 actor was published. " His name is PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY," says Leigh Hunt, introducing with rather faint eulogy his recently discovered friend to the English public. There was one at least in England who, unhappily for herself, knew that name too well. For five years she had borne it. Three years before this " young poet" was openly spoken of in an English journal, she had been " the inspiration of his song" and his sole public. Who can doubt the bitterness of her recollection if she read (as there can be but little doubt that she did read) the paragraph in The Exa- miner ? What a contrast to the pride and joy with which more than four years earlier she must have drank in with delighted eyes the far more emphatic praises of her husband in The Dublin Weekly Mes- senger of 7th March, 1812! She was then the associate in his plans, the sharer of his dreams and of his hopes his " purer mind." Well might Shelley say, as if alluding to that period, and addressing her (though the lines are capable of another interpre- tation) " That time is dead for ever, child, Drowned, frozen, dead for ever !" And what was she in December, 1816? As yet we do not fully know. But the end is given in the line just quoted, written nearly a year afterwards " Drowned, frozen, dead for ever!" That is the practical answer which we have to those frenzied questionings which doubtless drove the poor abandoned " child" to despair. It is no mere fancy to read in the paragraph of The Examiner the death warrant of Harriet Shelley. Nearly five years before this period Shelley had 304 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. been publicly proclaimed in Dublin not only " a very striking and original thinker/' but A POET. At about the same date, and in the same city, it would appear from the following statement that another fact was discovered, more interesting to Shelley's personal friends than to himself. The amiable weakness of the poet in leaving not only his purse but his credit to the discretion, or indiscretion, of his associates was first exhibited in Dublin. The curious fact transpired about thirty years ago in a correspondence which the present writer had with the editor of The Dublin Evening Post on the poetical genius of Shelley. Roused by a slighting allusion to a poet, whom I may say I had discovered for myself about eleven years previously, which had appeared in that paper, I wrote several letters in defence of Shelley, which may be found in The Dublin Evening Post, Nov. 24th, 1842, Dec. 6th, 1842, and Dec. 8th, 1842. I had made reference to Shelley's visit to Dublin in 1812, and to this the editor, after some courteous allusions to the enthusiasm of my letters, the authorship of which he was not aware of, thus alludes : " As to the rest, we need say nothing. Politics with Shelley was a sentiment, and we honour him for the clothing it assumed. We knew him a little at the time mentioned. And we know also that he was made the pecuniary dupe of a person not less sincere in his politics, but in money matters less honest." - The Dublin Evening Post, Thursday Evening, Nov. i/th, 1842. The editor of The Dublin Evening Post in 1842 had been the editor of The Weekly Messenger in 1812. Frederick William Conway and John Lawless had life-long differences, which commenced about the CURIOUS STATEMENT ABOUT SHELLEY. 305 latter period, and ended only with the death of Mr. Lawless in 1837. There can be little doubt that Lawless was the writer of the article on Shelley so frequently alluded to. In Shelley's hitherto unpublished letters, from which so many interesting extracts have been taken, there is no mention of Conway, while Lawless is spoken of frequently in terms of affection. Con way, as editor of the paper, must have known something, though perhaps inaccurately, of the efforts made by Shelley, as proved by the letter to Mr. Medwin, to assist Lawless in bringing out his History of Ireland. Captain Medwin, with his usual incompleteness and often inaccuracy of detail, does not inform us whether Shelley's instructions to Mr. Medwin, senior, to raise the sum of 250^ for the completion of this work were or were not carried out. From a circumstance in connexion with the affair at Lymouth in the August of the same year, and from the fact that it was to the house of Mr. John Lawless Shelley and Harriet fled, as it were, in March, 1813, after the extraordinary affair at Tanyrallt, there is a strong probability that tha money, or some portion of it, was advanced to Mr. Lawless. Knowing what we now know of similar and less excusable transactions the iooo/. given in a lump to Leigh Hunt the rather doubtful 500^. to Mr. Madocks for the breakwater at Tremadoc the lool. a year to Mr. Peacock the bills accepted at the dagger's point for Mr. Godwin the proceeds of carted furniture for Mr. Skimpole, and many other acts of unreflecting and extorted generosity, this contribution to the History of Ireland by Mr. Lawless, which Shelley was sure would be repaid " at the expiration of eighteen months/' looks in comparison more like a clever speculation, a safe investment of the poet, than x 3 o6 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. a deliberate intention to defraud on the part of the historian. Mr. Lawless died in 1837, and was there- fore unable to return the fire of his old antagonist. His explanation of all the circumstances of his acquain- tance with Shelley would have been most interesting. There can be no chance of such explanation now. He would probably have demurred to the right of his assailant to sit in judgment on his private intercourse with Mr. Shelley until the censor had explained his own secret correspondence with Lord Sidmouth. In any case Mr. Lawless would have read " with a wild surmise" the following letter, the original of which is to be found in the Record Office : STATE PAPERS, " Ireland, 18 12. August December. No. 657." " Dublin, November 2jt\i, 1812. " MY LOUD, I have the honour of enclosing the 'Address' which will be published to-morrow by the Catholic Bishops. I think the Document important, as although your Lordship may have received a Manuscript Copy previously, yet lest that should not prove to be the case I have ventured to trouble you with the only copy that has yet left the Printer's possession. " I shall have the honour of resuming my corre- spondence to-morrow with Mr. Beckett. " I have the honour to be, my Lord, " Your Lordship's most obedient and " most faithful Servant, " F. W. CONWAY." " Eight Hon. Lord Sidmouth:" The document referred to in the foregoing letter is MR. CON WAY, LORD SIDMOUTff, AND MR. BECKETT. 307 also preserved in the Record Office. It is a small pamphlet, the title of which is as follows : "The Address of the Roman Catholic Prelates, assem- bled in Dublin on the i8th of November, 1812. To the Clergy and Laity of the Roman Catholic Church in Ireland. Published by Authority. Dublin. Printed and Published by H. Fitzpatrick, Capel Street." By another memorandum in a separate letter it appears that the opinion of the Attorney General and Solicitor General was taken as to the legality of the publication in question. It was also under the con- sideration of the Chancellor. The paper containing these facts is not signed. It contains the following observations : " The course of proceedings with re- gard to these publications appears to be a matter of much public importance and of some delicacy/'' Leaving Mr. Conway to resume his secret corre- spondence with Lord Sidmouth and- Mr. Beckett, we return with a sense of relief to our more immediate subject. On the 1 8th of March, 1812, Shelley wrote to Godwin as follows : " MY DEAR SIR, I have said that I acquiesce in your decision, nor has my conduct militated with the assertion. I have withdrawn from circulation the publications in which I erred, and am preparing to quit Dublin." Two days after this open recantation we find Shelley negotiating for a loan of two hundred and fifty pounds for the completion of a History of Ireland. That pro- ject he kept a profound secret from his vigilant director. The Declaration of Rights, a broadside X 2 3 o8 PEECT BYSSHE SHELLEY. which Shelley had printed in Dublin for the purpose of being " posted on the farmers' walls/' and which was the last of his political experiments, he seems not to have had the courage to send to Godwin. It was, however, forwarded to his friend at Hurstpierpoint, and to that circumstance we owe its preservation. On the 1 8th of March, 1812, the day on which Shelley wrote his last letter from Dublin to Godwin, " a large deal box" had been filled by him with all the copies of his two pamphlets and Declaration of Rights then remaining in his possession, which was for- warded by the Holyhead packet, with the address " Miss Kitchener, Hurstpierpoint, Sussex." Shelley could only pay the freight to Holyhead; he expected the box would have been forwarded to Hurst, when the additional charges would have been paid. After remaining some days at Holyhead, no one ap- pearing to pass the box, the Surveyor of Customs opened it, as was his duty, in order to ascertain if it contained any excisable articles, the ports of England and Ireland being then watched for this purpose with greater vigilance than are those of France and Eng- land at the present day. The discovery of a case of Orsini shells, had such instruments been then invented, could scarcely have created a greater amount of con- sternation among all the officials of the quiet little harbour of Holyhead than did the contents of the box. The discovery was first made by Pierce Thomas, the Surveyor of Customs. He at once communicated the fact to William D. Fellowes, who, in the Almanac for 1811 and 1813, under the heading of the General Post Office, is described as "agent for the Packet Boats" at Holyhead. This will account for the narrative THE PAMPHLETS SEIZED AT HOLYffEAD. 309 of the seizure having been forwarded both to the Secretary of the Post Office and to the Secretary of State. The letters and documents sent to Mr. after- wards Sir Francis Freeling remained in his private possession for many years, and appear to have been sold after his death. In 1870 they were advertised in the catalogue of a London bookseller, and were for- tunately bought by the Right Hon. Chichester For- tescue, M.P., President of the Board of Trade, who in the kindest manner confided them to my hands for the purpose of transcription and incorporation into this work. The letter of Pierce Thomas, the Surveyor of Customs, was not sent to the head of his own de- partment, but to the Right Hon. Richard Ryder, Secretary of State. In this way it has been preserved in the Record Office, where it rewarded my search in December, 1870. I am not aware that any allusion has ever been made to it or to the exceedingly inte- resting letter of Harriet Shelley, a copy of which it contains. There is with this communication a copy of the Declaration of Rights. Another copy is also in the Record Office in connexion with the affair at Barnstaple in the following year. The third and only remaining copy now known to be in existence is in the collection already alluded to, purchased by the Right Hon. Chichester Fortescue, M.P., which also contains a copy of the Proposals for an Association (Shelley's second Irish pamphlet), as well as the autograph letters of Mr. Fellowes and Lord Chichester. This collection is properly inscribed by one of its possessors, certainly not by Sir Francis Freeling, " Percy Bysshe Shelley," " Inflammatory Irish Papers/' &c. &c. a phrase bor- rowed from the letter of poor Harriet. Although the letter of Pierce Thomas in the Record 310 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Office is dated a day earlier, it will perhaps be more satisfactory to give the documents forwarded to the Postmaster General, Lord Chichester, as well as his own contribution to the materials which he uncon- sciously contributed to the biography of Percy Bysshe Shelley. All the letters are given as they were written, no correction of names or spelling being made. Letter of William D. Fellowes, Esq., Post Office Agent at Holy head, to Francis Freeling, Esq., Secretary of the General Post Office, London. "Most Private" "Holyhead, March Jist, 1812. " MY DEAR SIR, The Surveyor of the Customs consulted me yesterday on having discovered in the Custom House, a few days since, a Large deal box, directed to ' Miss Kitchener, Hurst per pier, Brighton, Sussex, England/ which had been landed from one of the Packets from Ireland. It contained, besides a great quantity of Pamphlets and printed papers, an open letter, of a tendency so dangerous to Govern- ment, that I urged him to write without further loss of time, a confidential letter, either to the Secretary of State, or to Mr. Percival, and enclose the letter, and one of each of the Pamphlets and printed Decla- rations (as they are styled), which he accordingly did by yesterday's Post, to Mr. Percival. " As the Letter in question, which the Surveyor gave me to read contained a paragraph injurious to the revenue of the P. Office, I think it my duty to make you acquainted with it it is as follows : " 'Percy has sent you a box full of inflammatory* matter, therefore I think I may send this/ * The word is " inflammable" in Mr. Pierce Thomas's tran- script of Harriet's letter. CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE POST OFFICE. 311 " 'I sent you two letters in news Papers, which I hope you received safe from the Intrusion of Post Masters. I sent a Pamphlet to my Father some time since in the same way/ " 'Disperse the Declarations, Percy says the Farmers are fond of having them stuck on their walls.' " Mr. Thomas, the gentleman who gave me this information, having acted by my advice, in order to avoid the delay of reporting to the Custom House, and the possibility of its being considered as a common seizure, of which there are a great many every year has requested that I would not mention it and I therefore request you to consider this as confidential. I will send you a Pamphlet in the course of a day or two, but I trust in the mean time this communication may enable the office to detect any future corre- spondence between the parties under the cover of a news Paper. " I have the honour to remain, " Dear Sir, " Your faithful humble servant, "WILLIAM D. FELLOWES. " Francis Freeling, Esq." " It is a very common custom with the people in Ireland to write in news Papers. I open all that come through my hands, and have charged many from being written in. " The Person whose letter I have quoted from appears to be English, and to have lately gone to Ireland. I have no doubt but an extensive corre- spondence will be attempted in the way mentioned. There is no signature to the letter or address." This letter is endorsed by Sir Francis Freeling in 312 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. his well-known autograph, of which there are nume- rous specimens among the State Papers. "31 March, 1812, Holyhead, W. D. Fellowes, Esq. Most Private." " No. i " is added in another hand. The next document in this collection of " Inflam- matory Irish Papers " is a short note of Mr. Fellowes, which explains itself: W. D. Fellowes, Esq., to Francis Freeling, Esq. ^ "April ist, 1812. "MY DEAR SIR, I send you the Pamphlet, and Declaration of Rights, which I mentioned in my letter of yesterday, and remain yours faithfully, " WILLIAM D. FELLOWES." Endorsed by Mr. Freeling : "April ist, 1812, Holyhead, W. D. Fellowes, Esq. (2.)" These letters of Mr. Fellowes, the copy of Shelley's second pamphlet and of the Declaration of Riyhts, were duly forwarded by Mr. Francis Freeling, the Secretary of the Post Office, to his chief, the Earl of Chichester, one of the Postmasters General. His Lordship, though ex officio a m,an of letters, was a little defective in his orthography, but I have thought it better to give the letter precisely as it is, than to attempt any corrections. The opinions formed upon the social position of Shelley's wife by the magnates of Sussex are very curious, as is also the sketch of the antecedents of Miss Kitchener. Altogether the letter is full of interest. The Earl of Chichester, Postmaster General, to Francis Freeling, Esq., Secretary to the General Post Office. "Stanmer, April 5th, 1812. " DEAR FREELING, I return the Pamphlet and De- LETTER OF THE EARL OF CHICH ESTER. 313 claration, the writer of the first is son of Mr. Shelley, member for the Rape of Bramber, and is by all accounts a most extraordinary man. I hear that he has married a Servant, or some person of very low birth ; he has been in Ireland some time, and I heard of his speak- ing at the Catholic Convention. " Miss Hichener, of Hurstperpoint, keeps a school there, and is well spoken of: her Father keeps a Publick House in the neighbourhood, he was origi- nally a smugler,* and changed his name from Yorke to Tichener [Kitchener], before he took the publick House. '' I shall have a watch upon the Daughter, and dis- cover whether there is any connexion between her and Shelley. " I shall come to Town on Wednesday. " As I am to see Mr. Scott to-morrow, I shall keep the Brighton Papers untill I have seen him. " Yours most sincerely, " CHICHESTER. " I send my Receipt enclosed ; you will be so good as to pay the salary to Messrs. Hoare's." This letter is endorsed by Mr. Freeling: " 5th April, 1812. Stanmer. Earl of Chichester. 'Inflammatory Irish Papers addressed to Hurst Pel-point, seized at Holy- head.' " Mr. Freeling's private address, " Rotting- dean," &c., is added. The Earl of Chichester, by whom the foregoing letter was written, was joint Postmaster General with the Earl of Sandwich. The letter is dated from Stanmer Park, Sussex. This will account for Lord Chichester knowing something, though incorrectly, of the private * So written. 3 1 4 PERC Y YSSHE SHELLEY. affairs of the Shelleys. Why he mistook the place for which Mr. Timothy Shelley was Member of Parlia- ment, was strange. Mr. Shelley, I believe, never sat for any place but Shoreham. William Wilberforce, who had been member for Yorkshire in 1 811, was mem- ber for Bramber in 1813, having probably been elected for the latter place at the general election of 1812. " The Brighton Papers" mentioned by Lord Chi- chester, probably had no reference to Shelley's affair. It should be remembered, however, that in Shelley's unpublished letter to Miss Kitchener (March loth, 1812), from which I have given a few extracts, he was most anxious that the " Sussex papers" should report his proceedings in Dublin. " Send me the Sussex papers," he says. " Insert, or make them insert the account of me :" evidently referring to the account of " Pierce Byshe Shelly, Esq.,". which had appeared three days be- fore in The Weekly Messenger of March 7th, 1810. The following letters in the Record Office, which have hitherto been unknown, refer to the same seizure at Holyhead as described in the foregoing papers. They are, I think, of greater interest than those already given. Documents in the State Paper Office, referring to Shelley, not previously published. "IRELAND. January to April, 1812. No. 655." Letter of the Surveyor of Customs at Holyhead to the Secretary of State for the Home Department. , " Confidential:' "Holyhead, March 3Oth, 1812. " SIB, The important contents of the enclosed letter, with a Pamphlet and a Declaration of rights LETTERS IN STATE PAPER OFFICE ON THE SEIZURE. 315 (forming part of the contents of a box detained by me), which I feel it my duty to transmit to you, will, I trust, be a sufficient apology for addressing myself to you in the first instance. Holding as I do an official situation under the Board of Customs, it would , perhaps have been more strictly regular to have first communicated them to my own Board, and if the not having done it should appear to you to be informal, I must trust to your candour in not implicating me for my zealous intentions. Some days since a large deal box, directed to Miss Kitchener, Hurstpierpoint, Brighton, England, was landed from on board one of the Holyhead Packets, and brought to the Custom House, where, as Surveyor and Searcher of the Cus- toms, I opened it, and found the enclosed open letter the tendency of which at this moment I need not point out; and it still remains in my custody. If it should be your desire to have them transmitted to London, and withheld from the person to whom they are addressed, I should be glad to be honoured with your confidential opinion and commands in what way I ought to forward it, consistent with my public duty as an officer of the Customs, and the respect due to my Board. " I have the honour to be, " Your very obedient servant, " PIERCE THOMAS." " Private. " The Eight Honble. E. Eyder, Secretary." The communication forwarded by Mr. Pierce Thomas to the Secretary of State was a copy of the " open letter" found in the box containing so much " inflammable matter" in the shape of pamphlets and Declarations of Rights. This letter, which was written 316 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. by Harriet Shelley, seems to have been considered by the officials at Holyhead as a far more dangerous document than the printed Address to the Irish People, and the other papers that accompanied it. This per- haps arose from the fact that the letter was not signed by the writer, and that the person to whom it was written was addressed under the disguise of a classical nume. By the " Portia" of poor Harriet's letter was of course meant Portia, the daughter of Cato and tht wife of Brutus. This famous name was given to Miss Kitchener by " Percy's little circle" (to borrow a phrase from one of Shelley's unpublished letters), not only in compliment to the republicanism of their cor- respondent at Hurstpierpoint, but to escape a diffi- culty which arose from Miss Kitchener's Christian name being the same as Miss Westbrook's they were both Elizas. In Shelley's hitherto unpublished letter from Whitehaven, Feb. 3rd, 1812, written on his Avay to Dublin, from which we have quoted largely in an earlier portion of this book, he alludes to this incon- venience. At that time he was urging Miss Kitchener at any risk to join him in Dublin " resign your school, all, everything for us and the Irish cause." He concludes his letter of February 3rd, 1812, in these words, which I have reserved in order to explain the circumstance of Harriet addressing Miss Kitchener by an adopted name. Shelley says " Pray what are you to be called when you come to us, for Eliza's name is Eliza, and Miss Kitchener is too long, too broad, and too deep ? Adieu. " Your "P. B. SHELLEY." MISS HITCHENER ADDRESSED AS "PORTIA." 517 To prevent this clashing of Eliza Westbrook and Eliza Hitchener, the heroic name of Porcia was adopted for the latter. Had Shelley known as much of his fair and philosophical friend at Hurstpierpoint as did the Earl of Chichester, perhaps her real name of " Yorke" would not have been found " too long," "too broad," or "too deep" either for friendly intercourse or correspondence. It would, however, have wanted the delicious romance of suggesting a certain resem- blance in principle at least between the heroine of Hurst and the wife of Brutus. By that name, though slightly misspelt by the good and gentle Harriet, she was addressed in the following most interesting letter : RECORD OFFICE. "Ireland. January to April, 1812. No. 655." Harriet Shelley to Eliza Hitchener. "Dublin, March i8th [1812.] " MY DEAR PORTIA, As Percy has sent you such a large Box so full of inflammable matter, I think I may be allowed to send a little but not [of] such a nature as his. I sent you two letters in a newspaper, which I hope you received safe from the intrusion of Post masters. I sent one of the Pamphlets to my Father in a newspaper, which was opened and charged, but which was very trifling when compared to what you and Godwin paid. " I believe I have mentioned a new acquaintance of ours, a Mrs. Nugent, who is sitting in the room now and talking to Percy about Virtue. You see how little I stand upon ceremony. I have seen her but twice before, and I find her a very greeable, sensible woman. She has felt most severely the miseries of 3 i8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. her country in which she has been a very active mem- ber. She visited all the Prisons in the time of the Rebellion to exhort the people to have courage and hope. She says it was a most dreadful task ; but it was her duty, and she would not shrink from the performance of it. This excellent woman, with all her notions of Philanthropy and justice, is obliged to work for her subsistence to work in a shop which is a furrier's ; there she is every day confined to her needle. Is it not a thousand pities that such a woman should be so dependent upon others? She has visited us this evening for about three hours, and is now returned home. The evening is the only time she can get out in the week ; but Sunday is her own, and then we are to see her. She told Percy that her country was her only love, when he asked her if she was married. She called herself Mrs. I suppose on account of her age, as she looks rather old for a Miss. She has never been out of her own country, and has no wish to leave it. " This is St. Patrick's night,"* and the Irish always get very tipsy on such a night as this. The Horse Guards are pacing the streets and will be so all the night, so fearful are they of disturbances, the poor people being very much that way inclined, as Provi- sions are very scarce in the southern counties. Poor Irish People, how much I feel for them. Do you know, such is their ignorance that when there is a drawing-room held they go from some distance to see the people who keep them starving to get their * This shows that Harriet's letter was written on the i/th of March, and not on the " i8th," as she has dated it. Unless, indeed, the usual St. Patrick's Ball at the Castle of Dublin was for some reason held on the i8th of March instead of the zyth in the year 1812. ST. PA THICK'S NIGHT DESCRIBED B7 HARRIET. 319 luxuries ; they will crowd round the state carriages in great glee to see those within who have stripped them of their rights, and who wantonly revel in a profusion of ill-gotten luxury whilst so many of those harmless people are wanting Bread for their wives and children. What a spectacle ! People talk of the fiery spirit of these distressed creatures, but that spirit is very much broken and ground down by the oppressors of this poor country. I may with truth say there are more Beggars in this city than any other in the world. They are so poor they have hardly a rag to cover their naked limbs, and such is their passion for drink that when you relieve them one day you see them in the same deplorable situation the next. Poor crea- tures, they live more on whiskey than anything, for meat is so dear they cannot afford to purchase any. If they had the means I do not know that they would, whiskey being so much cheaper and to their palates so much more desirable. Yet how often do we hear people say that Poverty is no evil. I think if they had experienced it they would soon alter their tone. To my idea it is the worst of all evils, as the miseries that flow from it are certainly very great ; the many crimes we hear of daily are the consequences of Poverty, and that, to a very great degree ; 1 think, the Laws are extremely unjust they condemn a Person to Death for stealing 13 shillings and 4 pence. " Disperse the Declarations. Percy says the farmers are very fond of having something posted upon their walls. "Percy has sent you all his Pamphlets with the Declaration of Rights, which you will disperse to advantage. He has not many of his first Address, having taken great pains to circulate them through this city. 320 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " All thoughts of an Association are given up as impracticable. We shall leave this noisy town on the 7th of April, unless the Habeas Corpus Act should be suspended, and then we shall be obliged to leave here as soon as possible. Adieu." Note on the "Declaration of Sights." On this interesting subject it may be useful to supplement what has been already said by a N fact of some importance. Of the original broadside containing the Declaration of Rights there are probably but four copies in existence. Three of these I have seen. Two of them are in the Record Office, one in the papers connected with the seizure at Holyhead in 1812, the other with those describing the affair at Barnstaple in 1813. The papers are marked respectively, " Ireland, January to April, 1812. No. 655." " Domestic. George III. Nos. 239, 240." A third copy, in the possession of the Right Hon. Chichester Fortescue, M.P., also formed a part of the seizure at Holyhead. It was sent to Mr. Freeling, the Secretary of the Post Office, and remained in his hands. Mention is made of a fourth copy in Lowndes' Bib- liographical Manual, Bohn's ed. p. 2374, as follows: " Queen Mab, by Percy Bysshe Shelley. Privately printed without a title page, with a hand-biy, called Declaration of Riyhts, drawn up by Shelley and distributed in Ireland." What has become of this interesting volume is unknown. It is extremely probable that Clark's and Carlile's editions of Queen Mab, 1821, 1822, were printed from this copy. It is a singular fact, not previously known, that during the life-time of Shelley the Declaration of Rights was reprinted by the same Carlile, apparently without his knowing who was the writer. It will be found in the fifth number of The Republican, London, Friday, Sept. 24th, 1819. R. Carlile, Printer, 55, Fleet Street, London, p. 75. I am indebted to Mr. John Wilson, Great Russell Street, for a copy of this interesting number of The Republican. CHAPTER XII. TT would appear from an endorsement in the hand- writing of Mr. Wellesley Pole, that the copy of Harriet's letter given in the last chapter, with the communication of Mr. Pierce Thomas, were forwarded from the Home Secretary's office in London to the office of the Secretary for Ireland in Dublin. " Mr. Goulburn" is also written on one of them, he being 1 the joint under-secretary with Mr. Beckett. All the documents, on which no action seems to have been taken, were sent back to London in an envelope, which still retains the seal with the motto " Toilet virtus." The only observation made by Mr. Wellesley Pole is as follows : " The enclosed are returned with Mr. Pole's com- pliments. "Irish Office, April 8th, 1812." The chief interest of poor Harriet's letter lies in the additional evidence which it gives of her intelli- gence, good nature, and innocence. Other matters, however, are decided by it. The abandonment of the Association seems in no way to have been affected by the remonstrances of Godwin. The project was given up because it was found to be " impracticable." The letters of Godwin did not accelerate the departure of Shelley from Dublin by one day. He left that city at the precise time he had originally arranged to leave 322 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. it. The police had nothing to do with his movements. He received no intimation from them that he should " quit the country." The laconic observation of Mr. Wellesley Pole as to the wonderful mare's-nest dis- covered by Mr. Pierce Thomas at Holyhead, shows the profound indifference of the Irish Government to his proceedings. What became of the large box of pamphlets is uncertain. It was probably forwarded to Miss Kitchener, who doubtless brought it with her when she joined " Percy's little circle/' either in Wales or Devonshire a 'few months later. At Ly- mouth, in August, 1812, according to the letter of the town clerk of Barnstaple, " Mr. Shelley had with him large chests, which were so heavy that scarcely three men could lift them, which were supposed to contain papers." These "papers" must have been some copies of the Address to the Irish People, a larger supply of the Proposals for an Association, possibly the whole impression of the Declaration of Rights, also of the poem called The Devil's Walk, which like the former was printed as a broadside, but on larger paper. Those " large chests," too, may have contained the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things, the Verses on Robert Emmett, and all the other materials for the edition of his poems which Shelley had pro- jected bringing out in Dublin. As the Declaration of Rights was printed in Dublin, and as it formed part of the seizure made at Holy- head, it may appropriately be introduced here as the concluding exploit of Shelley's wonderful expedition to Ireland in 1812. It has been recently printed by Mr. Rossetti* from a transcript made in the Record * In The Fortnightly Review for January, 1871. But see note to last chapter, page 320. "DECLARATION" AN ABRIDGMENT OF "PROPOSALS." 323 Office, not from the Holyhead documents, but from those connected with the Lymouth and Barnstaple affair of August, 1812, which are also preserved among the State Papers. These will be subsequently referred to, and some corrections and additional information supplied. The transcript from which Mr. Eossetti has printed the Declaration of Rights was made by a foreigner, which will account for some of the mistakes which have crept into the published version. There is also an attempt here and there to correct the grammar of the original : occasionally a word is omitted, capital letters and italics, not used by Shelley, are introduced capriciously. Altogether the reprint is unsatisfactory : the Declaration of Rights is here repro- duced faithfully without any wilful deviation from the original. Mr. Rossetti has drawn attention to certain resemblances between Shelley's Declaration of Rights and " the two most famous of similar documents in the history of the great French Revolution the one adopted by the Constituent Assembly in August, 1789, and the other proposed in April, 1793, by Robespierre." For this ingenious parallel, the reader is referred to the pages of the Review in which it appeared. It is, how- ever, probable that Shelley manufactured his Declara- tion of Rights out of materials nearer to his hand. It is a mere condensation or abridgment of what he had already printed at greater length in his second pam- phlet, the Proposals for an Association. "The open- ing thunder-clap " of the Declaration, as Mr. Rossetti calls it, is given almost in the same words as in the Proposals. " Government has no rights ; it is a delegation from several individuals for the purpose of securing their own/" says the Declaration. Y 2 3H PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " Government can have no rights ; it is a delegation for the purpose of securing them to others/' says the pamphlet. Most of the other apothegms of the Declaration of Rights may be found in the Proposals for an Associa- tion, the inspiration of both being doubtless the famous historical documents referred to by Mr. Rossetti. DECLARATION OF RIGHTS, i. GOVERNMENT has no rights ; it is a delegation from several individuals for the purpose of securing their own. It is therefore just, only so far as it exists by their consent, useful only so far as it operates to their well-being. 2. If these individuals think that the form of govern- ment which they or their forefathers constituted is ill adapted to produce their happiness, they have a right to change it. 3- Government is devised for the security of Rights. The rights of man are liberty, and an equal participa- tion of the commonage of Nature. 4- As the benefit of the governed is, or ought to be, the origin of government, no men can have any autho- rity that does not expressly emanate from their will. 5- Though all governments are not so bad as that of Turkey, yet none are so good as they might be. The DEO LA RA TION OF RIGHTS. 325 majority of every country have a right to perfect their government. The minority should not disturb them ; they ought to secede, and form their own system in their own way. 6. All have a right to an equal share in the benefits and burdens of Government. Any disabilities for opinion imply, by their existence, barefaced tyranny on the side of Government, ignorant slavishness on the side of the governed. 7- The rights of man, in the present state of society, are only to be secured by some degree of coercion to be exercised on their violator. The sufferer has a right that the degree of coercion employed be as slight as possible. 8. It may be considered as a plain proof of the hollow- ness of any proposition if power be used to enforce instead of reason to persuade its admission. Govern- ment is never supported by fraud until it cannot be supported by reason. 9- No man has a right to disturb the public peace by personally resisting the execution of a law, however bad. He ought to acquiesce, using at the same time the utmost powers of his reason to promote its repeal. 10. A man must have a right to act in a certain manner, before it can be his duty. He may, before he ought. 326 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. II. A man has a right to think as his reason directs ; it is a duty he owes to himself to think with freedom, that he may act from conviction. 12. A man has a right to unrestricted liberty of dis- cussion. Falsehood is a scorpion that will sting itself to death. 13- A man has not only a right to express his thoughts, but it is his duty to do so. 14. No law has a right to discourage the practice of truth. A man ought to speak the truth on every occasion. A duty can never be criminal; what is not criminal cannot be injurious. Law cannot make what is in its nature virtuous or innocent to be criminal, any more than it can make what is criminal to be innocent. Government cannot make a law; it can only pronounce that which was the law before its organisation; viz., the moral result of the imperishable relations of things. 1 6. The present generation cannot bind their posterity : the few cannot promise for the many. No man has a right to do an evil thing that good may come, DECLARATION OF RIGHTS. 327 18. Expediency is inadmissible in morals. Politics are only sound when conducted on principles of morality : they are, in fact, the morals of nations. 19. Man has no right to kill his brother. It is no excuse that he does so in uniform : he only adds the infamy of servitude to the crime of murder. 20. Man, whatever be his country, has the same rights in one place as another the rights of universal citizenship. 21. The government of a country ought to be perfectly indifferent to every opinion. Religious differences, the bloodiest and most rancorous of all, spring from partiality. 22. A delegation of individuals, for the purpose of securing their rights, can have no undelegated power of restraining the expression of their opinion. 2 3- Belief is involuntary ; nothing involuntary is meri- torious or reprehensible. A man ought not to be considered worse or better for his belief. 24. A Christian, a Deist, a Turk, and a Jew, have equal rights : they are men and brethren. 3*8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. 25. If a person's religious ideas correspond not with your own, love him nevertheless. How different would yours have been had the chance of birth placed you in Tartary or India ! 26. Those who believe that Heaven is, what earth has been, a monopoly in the hands of a favoured few, would do well to reconsider their opinion; if they find that it came from their priest or their grand- mother, they could not do better than reject it. 27. No man has a right to be respected for any other possesssions but those of virtue and talents. Titles are tinsel, power a corruptor, glory a bubble, and exces- sive wealth a libel on its possessor. 28. No man has a right to monopolise more than he can enjoy ; what the rich give to the poor, whilst millions are starving, is not a perfect favour, but an imperfect right. 29. Every man has a right to a certain degree of leisure and liberty, because it is his duty to attain a certain degree of knowledge. He may before he ought. 3- Sobriety of body and mind is necessary to those who would be free ; because, without sobriety, a high sense of philanthropy cannot actuate the heart, nor cool and determined courage execute its dictates. DECLARATION OF RIGHTS. 329 3 T - The only use of government is to repress the vices of man. If man were to-day sinless, to-morrow he would have a right to demand that government and all its evils should cease. Man ! thou whose rights are here declared, be no longer forgetful of the loftiness of thy destination. Think of thy rights, of those possessions which will give thee virtue and wisdom, by which thou mayest arrive at happiness and freedom. They are declared to thee by one who knows thy dignity, for every hour does his heart swell with honorable pride in the con- templation of what thou mayest attain by one who is not forgetful of thy degeneracy, for every moment brings home to him the bitter conviction of what thou art. Awake ! arise ! or be for ever fallen. Mr. Hogg says, in complete ignorance of what he was writing about, " The Irish dream which com- menced so abruptly being brought as abruptly to an end, the youthful dreamer awoke; then suddenly vanished, and reappeared in Wales " (vol. ii. p. 1 18). We have proved the reverse of all these statements. The Irish dream did not commence " abruptly " it was not brought to an end " abruptly/' and if the youthful dreamer awoke, he did not " suddenly" vanish. Every step that Shelley took in his Irish dream had been taken with his eyes open. The time of his coming, the time of his leaving, had all been pre-arranged, while the period devoted to his preparation for the enterprise and its accomplishment exceeded in length the whole time of his then intercourse with Mr. 330 PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. Hogg. But that gentleman makes one statement which cannot be controverted, Shelley " reappeared in Wales." It was not, however, to Mr. Hogg that he announced his resurrection ; it was to his philo- sophical friends Miss Kitchener and Mr. Godwin. The following unpublished letter to the former, though undated, appears to have been the first he wrote after leaving Dublin on the yth of April, 1812 : Shelley to Miss Hitchener. " Nantgwilt, Rhayader, Radnorshire. " We left Dublin and arrived at Holyhead after a passage of unusual length You have ere this received our box and its contents. I paid the car- riage as far as I could, that is, across the Channel, and I am positive that it did not come by the post. The Declaration of Rights would be useful in farmhouses. It was by a similar expedient that Franklin promulgated his commercial opinions among the Americans. Your letter enjoined us to leave Dublin; we received it a short time before we had settled to depart. The Habeas Corpus Act has not been suspended ; nor probably will they do it. We left Dublin because I had done all that I could do. If its effects were beneficial, they were not greatly so. I am dissatisfied with my success, but not with the attempt. Although the expense of our journey was considerable, I ever bear in my mind that ' economy is the best generosity/ I have written some verses on Robert Emmett, \vhich you shall see, and which I will insert in my book of poems. We are now embosomed in the soli- tude of mountains, woods, and rivers, silent, solitary, and old, far away from any town, six miles from Rhayader, which is nearest. A ghost haunts this DESCRIPTION OF NANTGWILT. 331 house, which has frequently been seen by the servants. We have several witches in our neighbourhood, and are quite stocked with fairies and hobgoblins of every description. Well, my dearest friend, I have no larger paper, and therefore must say adieu. Recollect that I am still your friend completely and unalterably. Harriet and Eliza send their love ; Harriet is now writing to Mrs. Nugent, an excellent woman whom we discovered in Dublin, and of whom she will tell you. Adieu ! " Yours eternally, " P. B. SHELLEY." Shelley was not at this time aware of the fate which had befallen his box at Holyhead, and that Harriet's descriptive letter of Mrs. Nugent had been under the inspection of the Secretary of State for the Home De- partment in England, and the Irish Secretary in Dublin. I have endeavoured to ascertain something about this Mrs. Nugent, but without success. It is pleasant to find that both Shelley and Harriet retained a kindly feeling towards this benevolent woman after they had left Ireland. The first published letter of Shelley from Nantgwilt is dated April 25th, 1812, eighteen days after he left Dublin. It is to Godwin, and seems to have been written after the preceding. This letter contains a reference to his Dublin experience, which, as faithful chroniclers of this period of his history, we cannot omit : " We are no longer in Dublin. Never did I behold in any other spot a contrast so striking as that which grandeur and misery form in that unfortunate country. How forcibly do I feel the remark which you put into 332 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. the mouth of Fleetwood, that the distress which in the country humanizes the heart by its infrequency, is calculated in a city, by the multiplicity of its demands for relief, to render us callous to the contemplation of wretchedness ! Surely the inequality of rank is not felt so oppressively in England ! Surely something might be devised for Ireland, even consistent with the present state of politics, to ameliorate its condition ! Curran at length called on me. I dined twice at his house. Curran is certainly a man of great abilities, but it appears to me that he under- values his powers when he applies them to what is usually the subject of his conversation. 1 may not possess sufficient taste to relish humour, or his inces- sant comicality may weary that which I possess. He does not possess that mould of mind which I have been accustomed to contemplate with the highest feel- ings of respect and love. In short, though Curran indubitably possesses a strong understanding and a brilliant fancy, I should not have beheld him with the feelings of admiration which his first visit excited had he not been your intimate friend." Letter to Godwin, Hogg, vol. ii. pp. 122, 123. In the poetic organization of Shelley there was one great want. He had no genuine humour. Anything he has written in this way never raised a laugh, never perhaps produced a smile. In this respect he was unlike some of the great poets whom in their serious moods he rivalled. The greatest poets, with the ex- ception of Dante, were as remarkable for their playful humour as for their sublimity or their pathos. Homer, Chaucer, Shakspeare, Calderon, Goethe, what would they have been without the comic element ? What in Byron is likely to last but his humour the GODWIN'S ESTIMATE OF CURRAN. 333 humour of his letters as well as of his poems ? Shelley had nothing of this either in his conversation or in his writings. All was pervaded by a dignified but rather grave seriousness. The poor jaded Master of the Rolls, after a day of exhausting judicial drudgery, thought perhaps that at his dinner-table he might bid a momentary adieu to " Wrangling courts and stubborn law." There at least he might have hoped to escape for a brief interval " The tedious forms, the solemn prate, The pert dispute, the dull debate" and all the other horrors conjured up by the graceful Muse of Sir William Blackstone. But that would not suit Shelley. He evidently expected that the expe- diency of his political pamphlets, and the wisdom of his Declaration of Rights, would have been the chief topic of conversation at the table of the Master of the Rolls, and we dare say he looked even a shade graver while Curran cracked his jokes, than on the memorable occasion when he poked a pamphlet into the hood of an old woman's cloak. Godwin, who knew much more of Curran than Shelley did, and who was not himself particularly jocular, thus speaks both of the convivial as well as forensic talents of John Philpot Curran. The following appeared two days after the death of Mr. Curran in The Morning Chronicle of the 1 6th of October, 1817: " Mr. Curran is almost the last of that brilliant phalanx, the contemporaries and fellow-labourers of Mr. Fox, in the cause of general liberty. Lord Erskine in this country, and Mr. Grattan in Ireland, still survive. 334 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " Mr. Curran is one of those characters which the lover of human nature and its intellectual capacities delights to contemplate : he rose from nothing ; he derived no aid from rank and fortune; he ascended by his own energies to an eminence which throws rank and fortune into comparative scorn. Mr. Curran was the great ornament of his time of the Irish bar, and in forensic eloquence has certainly never been exceeded in modern times. His rhetoric was the pure emana- tion of his spirit, a warming and a lighting up of the soul, that poured conviction and astonishment on his hearers. It flashed in his eye, and revelled in the melodious and powerful accents of his voice. His thoughts almost always shaped themselves into imagery, and if his eloquence had any fault, it was that his images were too frequent ; but they were at the same time so exquisitely beautiful, that he must have been a rigorous critic that could have determined which of them to part with. His wit was not less exuberant than his imagination, and it was the peculiarity of Mr. Curran' s wit, that even when it took the form of a play on words, it acquired dignity from the vein of imagery that accompanied it. Every jest was a meta- phor. But the great charm and power of Mr. Curran's eloquence lay in its fervour. It was by this that he animated his friends and appalled his enemies, and the admiration which he thus excited was the child and brother of love " Mr. Curran had his foibles and his faults ; which of us has not? At this awful moment it becomes us to dwell on his excellences : and as his life has been illustrious, and will leave a trail of glory behind, this is the part of him that every man of a pure mind will choose to contemplate. We may any of us have his GODWIN INVITED TO WALES. 335 faults it is his excellences that we could wish, for the sake of human nature, to excite every man to copy in his proportion to do so." Had Mr. Godwin lived to read the attempted bio- graphy of his illustrious son-in-law, he would scarcely '' have found in the immaculate biographer Mr. Hogg one of those men of " pure mind " who choose to con- template the brighter rather than the darker side of an illustrious man's character. One other passage may be given from Shelley's letter to Godwin, April 25th, 1812. Speaking of the country near Rhayader, he says : " The cheapness, beauty, and retirement make this place in every point of view desirable. Nor can I view this scenery mountains and rocks seeming to form a barrier round this quiet valley, which the tumult of the world may never overleap ; the guileless habits of the Welsh without associating your presence with the idea, that of your wife, your children, and one other friend, to complete the picture which my mind has drawn to itself of felicity. Steal, if possible, my revered friend, one summer from the cold hurry of business, and come to Wales. Adieu \" Hogg, vol. ii. pp. 123, 124. Careless readers of Mr. Hogg's book might imagine that the " one other friend" referred to in this passage was Mr. Hogg himself. No one who has accompanied us so far can fall into that mistake ; the " one other friend" was Miss Kitchener. The interest which Shelley took in Miss Kitchener was altogether intellectual and ideal, arising exclu- sively from the identity of their opinions, and his ad- 336 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. miration of the courage with which she avowed and maintained her principles. It was no wonder, however, that a Platonic affection of this kind should be mis- understood. An unpublished letter of Shelley, dated "Nantgwilt, April 29th, 1812," refers to some gossip on the subject which had been circulating at Cuckfield, the authorship of which he attributes to Mrs. Pilford, the 'wife of his uncle. He was indignant at these misrepresentations, which he communicated to Miss Kitchener in the most undisguised manner, and ex- claimed, in the remarkable passage already quoted : " I unfaithful to my Harriet ! You a female H g \" [The reader can easily supply the missing letters written fully in the original.] "Common sense should laugh such an idea to scorn, if indignation would wait till it could be looked upon \" In the same letter he says, as the most convincing proof of the innocence of his motives : " My Harriet's attachment to you will even exceed mine." Finally, he entreats his correspondent to disregard such calumnies. The opinions of others should be in- different to her. If any doubt arose in her mind as to these matters, her course was simple : " Ask what would Percy's little circle say to this ?" Mr. Rossetti, epitomizing the supposed facts of Shelley's life at this period, says : " Somewhere about the end of March, the Shelleys and Eliza left Dublin. They passed through the Isle of Man; ranged about North and South Wales in search of a residence ; paused at, and again left a ABSURD STORY OF CAPTAIN MEDWIN. 337 haunted' house at Nant-Gwilt, near Rhayader ; flitted through Cwm Elan ; and at last, from the 5th of J uly, settled down for a short while at Lymouth, in North Devonshire." Memoir of Shelley, p. Ixii. A year later, iu the Fortnightly Review, January, 1871, Mr. Rossetti makes the date of Shelley's depar- ture from Dublin a little earlier. " Towards the middle of March, the Shelleys and Miss Westbrook left Ire- land." These misstatements were of course uninten- tional on the part of Mr. Rossetti, they seemed neces- sary to him to sustain the reckless assertions of Mr. Hogg as to the " abrupt" termination of Shelley's "Irish dream/' and his "sudden" vanishing out of Dublin. Harriet's letter of the i8th March, 1812, in the Record Office, shows that this " sudden " flight took three weeks to prepare for. " We shall leave this noisy town on the yth of April," says Harriet; and accordingly they left Dublin on that day, and reached Holy head after a somewhat longer passage than the average. " We left Dublin, and arrived at Holyhead," writes Shelley to Miss Kitchener, " after a passage of unusual length." The absurdity of making Shelley " pass through the Isle of Man," on his way from Dublin to Holyhead, originated with Captain Medwin. Anything more ludicrously untrue than the following story by the gallant captain was never written : " His departure from Ireland was occasioned, as he told me, by a hint from the police, and he, in haste, took refuge in the Isle of Man that then imperium in imperio that extra-judicial place where the debtor was safe from his creditors, and the political refugee found an asylum in his obscurity from the myrmidons of the law. He remained, however, at Douglas but a z 338 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. short time, and on his passage to some port in Wales had a very narrow escape from his fatal element. He had embarked in a small trading vessel which had only three hands on board. It was the month of November, and the weather, boisterous when they left the harbour, increased to a dreadful gale. The skipper attributed to Shelley's exertions so much the safety of the vessel, that he refused on landing to accept his fare."- JMedwin's Life of Shelley, vol. i. pp. 176, jjy. Making every allowance for Captain Medwin having confounded something which he may have heard rela- tive to the storm which Shelley encountered when going to Ireland, with the return voyage in April, it is im- possible, unless Shelley was guilty of a deliberate un- truth, that he could have told Captain Medwin the other circumstances of this marvellous narrative. He received no hint from the police ; he never " took refuge " in the Isle of Man, either " in haste " or with delibera- tion. Travelling from Whitehaven to Dublin in Feb- ruary, he " passed through the Isle of Man," because it was his direct route. He never crossed the Channel in the " mouth of November."" The time at which he actually left Dublin was the balmy season of early April. " We left Dublin and arrived at Holyhead after a passage of unusual length," is the simple fact out of which Captain Medwin has constructed " a political refugee " " a small trading vessel with only three hands on board " an apocryphal " month of November " an imaginary " skipper " the undaunted Shelley and the generous refusal of the " fare." And yet this absurd story, and these unfounded state- ments, have been repeated with a sort of parrot-like iteration by every subsequent writer who has under- MISTAKES OF ME. PEACOCK. 339 taken to give us an account of Shelley's life, except indeed Mr. Hogg, who generally commits himself to no one's nonsense but his own. They are adopted without the slightest hesitation by Lady Shelley and Mr. Rossetti (not to speak of Mr. Middleton) ; but what is stranger still, they are given with several other inaccuracies by Mr. Peacock. This gentleman's remarkable papers in Fr user's Magazine were written, as he tells us, for the purpose of " Commenting on what has been published by others " about Shelley, and for " correcting errors." In the following passage of his own paper there is an error almost in every word. " They then went to Ireland, landed at Cork, visited the lakes of Killarney, and stayed some time in Dublin, where Shelley became a warm repealer and eman- cipator. They then went to the Isle of Man/' Fraser's Magazine, June, 1858. Shelley never landed at Cork ; he visited the lakes of Killarney a year later from Dublin ; he was a repealer and emancipator before he went to Ireland ; and he did not go to the Isle of Man at all at the time referred to. So much for the correction of previous errors by Mr. Peacock. Shelley, who had spent something less than a fort- night in traversing ' f the whole of North, and part of South Wales fruitlessly" in search of. a house, was " at length in a manner settled " at Nantgwilt, near Rhayader, in Radnorshire, about the aist of April, 1812. We have had already his own description of this house in the playful letter to Miss Kitchener, which he wrote from Nantgwilt shortly after his arrival there. Mr. Peacock, who visited Wales in 1813, gives the following minute particulars about the place : Z 2 340 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. "Nant Gwillt, the Wild Brook, flows into the Elan (a tributary of the Wye), about five miles above Rhayader. Above the confluence, each stream runs in a rocky channel, through a deep narrow valley. In each of these valleys is or was a spacious mansion, named from the respective streams. Cwm Elan House was the seat of Mr. Grove, whom Shelley had visited there before his marriage in 18 1 1. Nant Gwillt House, when Shelley lived in it in 1812, was inhabited by a farmer, who let some of the best rooms in lodgings. At a subsequent period/' continues Mr. Peacock, " I stayed a day in Rhayader, for the sake of seeing this spot. It is a scene of singular beauty." Eraser's Magazine, June, 1858, p. 652. Shelley resided at Nantgwilt for seven weeks. He changed his residence, not through any restlessness of disposition, for it is evident he was reluctant to leave it, but perhaps owing to the doubts of the " farmer" as to the security of his rent. Such is the interpreta- tion I put upon the following passage in a letter to Godwin, dated " Cwm-Rhayader, June nth, 1812 : " We are unexpectedly compelled to quit Nantgwilt. I hope, however, before long time has elapsed to find a home. These accidents are unavoidable to a minor." Hoffff^ vol. ii. p. 129. CHAPTER XIII. A FTER the date of the letter with which the last chapter concludes, the Shelleys could have stopped but a day or two longer in Wales., as we find them settled at Lynton, near Lymouth, seventeen miles from Barnstaple, North Devonshire, at the beginning of July. It would seem that Godwin having heard from Shelley that he was " compelled" to leave Nant- gwilt, had recommended to him the house of a friend of Mrs. Godwin, a Mr. Eton, in the neighbourhood of Lymouth. Shelley, who was at this time expecting the visit not only of his long-looked-for friend and correspondent, Miss Kitchener, but of Godwin and his " estimable family," found Mr. Eton's house too small. He selected another residence which, though less imposing in appearance, had more accom- modation. Writing to Godwin on the 5th of July from Lymouth, after some days had been spent in this fruitless negotiation with Mr. Eton, he says, " We now reside in a small cottage, but the poverty and humbleness of the apartments is compensated for by their number, and we can invite our friends with a consciousness that there is enclosed space wherein they may sleep, which was not to be found at Mr. Eton's The climate is so mild that myrtles of an immense size twine up our cottage, and roses blow 34 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. in the open air in winter." " Come, thou venerated and excellent friend/' he says in a letter dated two days later, " and make us happy/' Hogg, vol. ii. PP- *34, *37 '> J 4- For some reason or another the rejection of Mr. Eton's house seems to have ruffled the philosopher more than might be expected from so slight a cause. He is absolutely sharp and sarcastic in his reply to the first letter. There is the faintest trace of a sneer in the phrase, " This would sound well to Mr. Eton from the eldest son of a gentleman of Sussex, with ample fortune" (p. 142). The secret of his displeasure may be found in the following passages of Shelley's letter of July 5th, 1812: " I have a friend ; but first I will make you in some measure acquainted with her. She is a woman with whom her excellent qualities made me acquainted. Though deriving her birth from a very humble source, she contracted, during youth, a very deep and refined habit of thinking ; her mind, naturally inquisitive and penetrating, overstepped the bounds of prejudice. She formed for herself an unbeaten path of life. " By the patronage of a lady whose liberality of mind is singular, this woman, at the age of twenty, was enabled to commence the conduct of a school. She concealed not the uncommon modes of thinking which she adopted, and publicly instructed youth as a Deist and a Republican. When I first knew her, she had not read Political Justice, yet her life appeared to me in a great degree modelled upon its precepts. Such is the woman who is about to become an inmate of our family. She will pass through London, and I shall take the liberty of introducing her to you, one MISS HITCH EN EE AND MR. GODWIN. 343 whom I do not consider unworthy of the advantage." Hogg, vol. ii. pp. 135, 136. There was something in this proposed introduction of the estimable " Deist and Republican" of Hurst- pierpoint, who imparted openly to the little girls of her school the same " useful knowledge" that Mr. Godwin had been surreptitiously inculcating under the pseudonym of Edward Baldwin, that evidently dis- pleased the philosopher. In his next letter he passes over the allusion to Miss Kitchener in complete silence. Possibly he could not forgive her for having practised the principles of Political Justice without having read the book. The Prophet Joe Smith would probably have condemned a bigamist who ventured to take a second wife without having been strengthened, if not in his faith, at least in his practice, by the Book of Mormon. In the very letter which contains the suggestion that Godwin should take the strong-minded Miss Hitchener under his wing and fly away to Lymouth to make " Percy and his little circle" happy, Shelley writes : " As soon as we recover our financial liberty we mean to come to London." There is a slight flavour of Mr. Micawber's euphuistic eloquence in the expression " financial liberty/' It seemed in Mr. Godwin's estimation a strange way to " recover" it to fill his cottage at Lymouth with " a Deist and Republican" from Hurstpierpoint, accom- panied doubtless by " the dear little Americans," of whom we have already heard, and a Sage from Snow Hill, surrounded by his " estimable family." The philosopher was too old a bird to be caught by chaff, and so let the ci-devant schoolmistress find her way to 344 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Lymouth alone, as we shall find she was very well able to do. She got the start of Godwin himself, who eventually paid a solitary visit to Lymouth, with what result will be told in due course. Another member of Shelley's household at Ly- mouth was Daniel Hill, the Irish servant who had so " improved " the success of his master's political efforts in Dublin, by giving out that the projector of the Philanthropic Association was only fifteen years of age. The distribution of* the pamphlets in Dublin had been doubtless a very amusing occupation for Daniel ; he found to his cost that it was rather a serious matter to do the same thing in Devonshire. Between the first week in July when Shelley was settled at Lymouth, and the I9th of August when this man Daniel Hill was arrested in the streets of Barnstaple for circulating the Declaration of Rights, Miss Kitchener must have arrived at the poet's cot- tage, bringing with her the " large deal box " contain- ing the Irish pamphlets and other printed papers of Shelley opened at Holyhead by the surveyor of Customs, but doubtless forwarded to its address on the full charges being paid. She evidently was the persou supposed to be a foreigner, who was Shelley's companion among the rocks at Lymouth when he sent his frail navy afloat, freighted with " inflammable " matter so graphically described by the town-clerk of Barnstaple in 1812. The curious papers in the Record Office, referring to this extraordinary episode in Shelley's life at Ly- mouth, have been published by Mr. Rossetti in the fortnightly Review for January, 1871, and therefore need not be further referred to here. Mr. Rossetti was not aware that an outline of this very singular LITERARY HISTORY OF BARNSTAPLE. 345 story, derived from local information, was published some years ago, before the existence of the papers in the Record Office was known. It is given in the fol- lowing very interesting work : "SKETCHES OF THE LITERARY HISTORY OF BARNSTAPLE, &c. BY JOHN ROBEETS CHANTER. Barnstaple: Printed and sold by E. J. Arnold, High-street." [1866.] A correspondence with the author of this attractive volume, Mr. Chanter, as well as with Lionel Bencraft, Esq., the present town-clerk of Barnstaple, who in the most obliging manner responded to my inquiries, en- ables me to correct previous errors, as well as to supply some additional information of a very interesting kind relative to other literary ventures of Shelley at this period. The following extract from Mr. Chanter's work shows that the Letter to Lord Ellenborough was not printed "in London," as Mr. Hogg says, giving as a quotation from a letter of Shelley a paragraph which is not to be found in it, but at Barnstaple. Of Mr. Syle, the printer of this pamphlet, Mr. Chanter thus speaks : " Mr. Syle, whose name appears as the publisher of the works before mentioned, and who, by the assis- tance and encouragement he afforded to young authors, and in helping forward the literary aspirations of that day, may well be called the l John Murray' of Barn- staple, was also a cultivator of the muses himself, having contributed several poems and sketches to the pages of the periodicals he published, and the news- paper he subsequently edited. He was the principal bookseller at Barnstaple for a long period of years. 346 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " In connexion with Mr. Syle, I would here intro- duce an interesting local episode, referring to that exquisite poet and wild dreamer, ' Percy. Bysshe Shelley/ "About the year 1812, just after [a year after] his ill-omened marriage with Harriet Westbrook, Shelley and his wife took up their residence at Lynton. He was then notorious for favouring the most wild and absurd ideas on religious and political freedom, and had been expelled from Oxford for publishing a pamphlet On the Necessity of Atheism. During this period Shelley came into Barnstaple, and called at Mr. Syle's print- ing-office, bringing with him a bundle of MSS., of which he desired Mr. Syle to have one thousand copies printed. This was done, Shelley coming in from time to time to read the copy and correct the press. The pamphlet was entitled 'A Letter to Lord Ellen- borough, Chief Justice of the King's Bench, on the prosecution of Daniel Isaac Eaton for the publication of Paine' s Age of Reason' " This Daniel Isaac Eaton was a bookseller ; he was sentenced to stand in the pillory for one hour, which sentence was carried into effect. The contents of the pamphlet were of the most extreme, not to say violent character; but the language was, as is the case in all Shelley's works, forcible and grand, and full of strong and indignant remarks on the prosecution, or as Shelley considered it, persecution of the mere pub- lisher of a work on a theological subject. I am enabled by the kindness of Mr. Barry to give a line as a specimen. The writer is drawing a contrast between error and truth, and at the close of it exclaims, ' Error skulks in holes and corners, letting I dare not wait upon I would, like the poor cat i' th' ARREST OF DANIEL HILL. 347 adage, but the eagle eye of trutL darts through the undazzling sunbeam of the immutable and just, gathering wherewith to vivify and illumine the uni- verse \'* Shelley had about fifty copies as they were printed; but before publication a strange circum- stance occurred. A poor labouring manf of the neighbourhood was taken up for posting bills about the town and neighbourhood, headed ' Government has no Rights/ It being seditious, he was tried and sentenced to three months' imprisonment. J His defence was, that a gentleman between Lynton and Barnstaple had given him the bills to post, and paid him 2S. 6d. for doing the job. This gentleman was Percy Bysshe Shelley. Mr. Brooke, who has fur- nished some of these particulars, and who superintended the printing of the pamphlet, has one of these bills, which was printed in London and brought down here by * See note on this passage, p. 349. f This, of course, is a mistake. The papers in the Record Office show that the person arrested was Daniel Hill, the Irish servant of Shelley, the same who had distributed the pamphlets in Dublin, and who had given out that his master was only fifteen years of age. J The sentence was six months' imprisonment or a penalty of 200?. The Town Clerk of Barnstaple, writing to Lord Sidmouth, says : " Daniel Hill has been convicted by the Mayor in ten penalties of 2ol. each, for publishing and dispersing Printed Papers without the printer's name being on them, under the Act of 39 George III. c. 79, and is now committed to the common Gaol of this Borough for not paying the penalties, and having no goods on which they could be levied." State Papers, Domestic, George III. No. 240. The Declaration of Rights was printed in Dublin, as shown by the hitherto unpublished letters of Shelley already given. Shelley was not in London between his leaving Dublin, on the 7th of April, 1812, and his residence of a few days at the St. James's Coffee House in the November of the same year. 348 PERCY BYSSHE SHEILE7. Shelley, who had at that time very wild and crude notions as to government and the regeneration of society. " This circumstance naturally alarmed Mr. Syle, as the pamphlet was quite as seditious in its tone and contents. He at once suppressed and destroyed the remaining sheets, and had several interviews with Shelley to endeavour to get back the ones previously delivered, but unsuccessfully, as they had been mostly distributed.* One copy came into the hands of Mr. Barry, and was given by him a few years since to Leigh Hunt, the friend and biographer of Shelley, though, I believe, neither the circumstances I have narrated nor the pamphlet itself have ever been noticed or included in any biography of the poet or collection of his works ; but the incident as stated is strictly correct." Literary History of Barnstaple, PP- 55, 56' The documents recently discovered in the Record Office confirm substantially the whole of this interest- ing statement, which Mr. Chanter gave from the recol- lection of some of his fellow-townsmen of Barnstaple. Some of the mistakes and discrepancies have been pointed out in the notes I have appended to Mr. Chanter's narrative. A few more remain to be men- tioned. The copy of the Letter to Lord Ellenborovgh, presented by Mr. Barry to Leigh Hunt, was probably the one from which Lady Shelley has printed the greater portion of it in her Shelley Memorials. The " omitted portions," we are informed, " are the pas- * The fifty copies received from Mr. Syle were, as we have seen, sent up to Mr. Hookham, of New Bond Street, on the i8th of August, the day before the arrest of Daniel Hill. NOTES TO QUEEN MAB. 349 sages which Shelley introduced into the notes to Queen Mab, and which are printed in the collected edition of his works." But the striking passage quoted by Mr. Chanter in his Literary History of Barnstaple cannot be found either in the "'greater part" of the Letter published by Lady Shelley, or " the omitted portions " introduced into the notes to Queen Mab* We have therefore as yet no complete copy of the Letter to Lord Ellenborough. The notes to Queen Mab are said also to contain the whole of the tract entitled The Necessity of Atheism, but the quota- tion alleged to be taken from Lord Bacon's treatise De Augmentis, given in the solitary advertisement of the tract which I have discovered, is not to be met with in the notes to Queen Mab, neither have I been able to find it in the treatise itself. As the Barnstaple papers deserve to be reprinted whenever a faithful and detailed Life of Shelley shall * It is very singular to find that this passage alleged by Mr. Chanter to be quoted from the Letter to Lord Ellenborough, is substantially the same as that in Shelley's second Irish pamphlet, the Proposals, which the reader will find at p. 2/4 of the present volume. Shelley may possibly have introduced it again, with some verbal alterations, into the Letter, but that is not likely. It will be recollected, that along with the fifty copies of the Letter to Lord Ellenborough, Shelley had also sent Mr. Hookham the " two pamphlets " which he had " printed and distributed in Ireland" (Shelley Memorials, p. 38). It may have been that a copy of the Irish pamphlet, the Proposals, was left by Shelley with the Barnstaple printer as a guide or pattern for the Letter, In this way the passage may have remained in the memory of Mr. Brooke, the actual printer, or of Mr. Barry, who is mentioned as the direct authority, and been quoted years after by either of them as having been contained in the Letter to Lord Ellen- borough, when in reality it was in the Proposals for an Associa- tion. 350 PERCY BYSSBE SHELLEY. be published, I may be permitted to point out one or two mistakes in Mr. Rossetti's edition of these papers, into which he was led by the occasionally unfaithful transcript used by him. The following is perhaps the most important. Speaking of the Declaration of Rights, Mr. Rossetti says, " On the back of the copy in HilPs possession was written ' Samuel Brembridge, of Barn- staple, i9th August, 18 1 2/ being, I presume, the person to whom Shelley intended this copy to be delivered." The Fortnightly Review, January, 1871, PP- 72, 73- This is in every way a mistake. In the first place, the name is not " Brembridge," but " Bremridge," and secondly, Daniel Hill had many copies of the Declaration of Rights in his possession. Evidence was taken on one, and this one endorsed by the magistrate before whom Hill was in the first instance taken, was sent up to London to Lord Sidmouth. Lionel Ben- craft, Esq., the present town-clerk of Barnstaple, informs me that " Samuel Bremridge was clerk to the county justices in 1812." Mr. Chanter has kindly supplemented this information by the following fact : "Samuel Bremridge was junior alderman in 1812, and as such would be also an acting magistrate." In the letter of Henry Drake, town- clerk (Fortnightly Review, p. 79, line 3), " some of these small boxes " is printed for " one of these small boxes," a mistake which the context itself plainly points out. The letter of Henry Drake was referred to " Mr. Litchfield" for his advice. Mr. Rossetti suggests that he may have been " the standing counsel em- ployed by the Home Office." The position held by Mr. Litchfield was that of " Solicitor to the Treasury." Among the papers found on the person of Daniel " THE DEVIVS WALK:' 351 Hill when arrested, was a second printed broadside containing a poem called The Devil's Walk. A Ballad. It is printed in three columns, and contains 143 lines. Mr. Rossetti, who reproduces it in the Fortnightly Review (not without two or three trifling errors of the press), says, ' ' Probably The Devil's Walk was written only a short time before Daniel Hill was commissioned to distribute it, in August, 1 8 1 2 ; if so, Shelley had now already begun the writing of Queen Mab." Unless Shelley had commenced the writing of Queen Mab in Dublin this is incorrect. Miss Kitchener had been living with Shelley at Lymouth for some time when Daniel Hill was arrested, pro- bably from the first week or two of his residence there. Now there is in existence a long unpublished letter addressed to her previously, containing the greater part of The Devil's Walk, in manuscript. Speaking of the stanzas he sends, he says, " perhaps they may amuse you." It is plain from Mr. Brooke's silence that The Devil's Walk was not printed at Mr. Syle's office in Barnstaple. It was probably printed, as well as written, in Dublin. The poem itself has little merit : composed almost avowedly in imitation of the well-known pieces of Southey and Coleridge, it lacks the humour and the lyrical felicity of its models. There is occa- sionally a vigorous line. The following stanza is quite in the spirit of the motto from The Curse of Kehama prefixed to the Poetical Essay on the Existing State of Things. In the first line Mr. Rossetti has omitted " the '' from before " death-birds." The allusion seems to be to the same subject as that on which the verses Mother and Son were written. The poet is describing no less a personage than " the first gentleman in Europe :" 352 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. " Fat as the death-birds on Erin's shore, That glutted themselves in her dearest gore, And flitted round Castlereagh,* When they snatched the Patriot's heart, that his grasp Had torn from its widow's maniac clasp, And fled at the dawn of day." The prison books now existing at Barnstaple do not go back so far as 1812, and therefore there is no record of the time at which Daniel Hill was discharged. The matter is not of much importance, except that Mr. Hogg tells us that " the penalty was paid/' and that, " marvellous to relate, Bysshe took the released bill- sticker into his service" (vol. ii. p. 213). The latter observation shows how completely ignorant Mr. Hogg was of this period of his friend's life. It is not likely that Shelley could have raised 2oo/. to release his ser- vant, when he had to leave Lymouth in debt to his landlady, who kindly borrowed 3^. also for him from a neighbour. For this debt and this loan, Godwin tells us that Shelley left with the " good creature, the woman of the house," " a draft upon the Honourable Mr. Lawleys [Lawless], brother to Lord Cloncurry." Unfortunately Lord Cloncurry had no brother. We * Perhaps there was hut one point on which Shelley and Lord Castlereagh ever agreed, and that was in extravagant admiration of Lady Morgan's Missionary, which was published by John Joseph Stockdale in 1811. Lady Morgan's literary executor in her Memoirs says that " His lordship was, perhaps, the greatest admirer the Missionary ever found," vol. i. p. 424. He had a formidable rival in Shelley, who several times speaks of " Miss Owenson's Missionary, an Indian Tale." " It is really a divine thing," he writes in one of his letters. " Luxima, the Indian, is an angel. What a pity that we cannot incorporate these creations of fancy ; the very thoughts of them thrill the soul ! Since I have read this book I have read no other." Hogg, vol. i. p. 397 ; see also pp. 392 and 407. SHELLEY AT TANYRALLT. 353 have no doubt that the draft was on Mr. John Law- less, Shelley's " literary friend" in Dublin, not the brother, but a distant relation of Lord Cloncurry. We trust that the good Mrs. Hooper at Lymouth was not kept out of her money until the " enormous pro- fits" which Shelley so sanguinely expected from the publication of The History of Ireland were realized. We hear no more of Daniel Hill until six months later a period which exactly coincides with the term of his imprisonment when he turned up at Tanyrallt, in North Wales, the day preceding the night on which the celebrated so-called attempted assassination took place there. As soon as Shelley could make his arrangements after this untoward affair about his servant, he left Lymouth, and crossing the Bristol Channel proceeded to Wales, where, after moving about a little, he at length settled near Tremadoc in a handsome lodge called Tan-yr-allt, built by W. A. Madocks, M.P. for Boston.* Three weeks after the Shelleys left Lymouth, poor Godwin paid the long-expected visit. " The Shelleys were gone \" as he himself exclaims in a letter addressed to his wife, which will be found in Lady Shelley's Memorials. Mr. Hogg, who suffered a disappointment precisely similar six months later in Dublin, describes the philosopher's bewilder- ment with some humour. But the facts, as stated by * In an interesting portrait of this gentleman in my possession, painted by J. Kamsay, engraved by C. Turner, he is called " W. A. Madocks, Esq., Fellow of All Souls College, and M.P. for Boston." Through the open window there is a pleasing view of the sea and the little town of Tremadoc. Mr. Madocks is repre- sented pointing to the " plan of the embankment at Tre-Madoc, &c.," which lies outspread before him. A A 354 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. him, are all invented, as may be seen by reading Godwin's own account of the matter. Shelley, speaking of his new residence, says : " We simple people live here in a cottage extensive and tasty enough for the villa of an Italian prince. The rent, as you may conceive, is large, but it is an object with us that they allow it to remain unpaid till I am of age." Tanyrallt seems to ha?e been a favourite resting- place for other wandering bards besides Shelley. Rogers passed a night in it the year before. Writing to Moore from Aberystwith, Sept. I9th, 1811, the author of The Pleasures of Memory says : "I slept a night at Wm. Madocks's. He is a great lord in his little city of Tre-Madoc has built a church, and a market-place, and a town-hall, and a square, and a street, where the sea roared a year or two ago; and this week holds an Eysteddfodd, or Meeting of Bards. The comet is very brilliant here, and every evening makes a brilliant path across the water." Moore's Memoirs, vol. viii. p. 94. In 1812 the sea roared again so dreadfully around this creation of Mr. Madocks's taste and public spirit as to threaten it with destruction. Shelley exerted himself in the most praiseworthy manner in endea- vouring to raise a fuud for the preservation of the breakwater, on the stability of which the existence of new Tremadoc depended. He even went to London, it is said, to use his influence with the Duke of Nor- folk and others for the same good object. It is stated that Shelley headed the subscription list with one from himself of 500^. This is scarcely credible, unless indeed it was understood that the subscription, like his rent, THE EMBANKMENT AT TEE-MA DOC. 355 was not to be paid till he came of age. We shall find that in addition to the ordinary expenses of his house- hold and the cost of going up to London with Harriet and the two Elizas on this and perhaps other business, he had to pay, " with a heavy heart and an unwilling hand," the " stipend" of the amiable " Deist and Re- publican," whom he had disturbed in her self-support- ing, if not very useful, calling at Hurstpierpoint. It is surely impossible that Shelley could have allowed his servant Daniel Hill to remain all this time con- fined as a criminal in the gaol of Barnstaple, when perhaps a third of the sum alleged to be so generously presented to Mr. Madocks would have relieved him. Daniel Hill had been Shelley's agent, and was vica- riously suffering for his master's indiscretion. If, after spending six months in prison, he heard of such an uncalled-for and, in Shelley's circumstances at the time, extravagant outlay, one would be disposed to forgive him if, as has been argued, he got up the so- called attempted assassination at Tanyrallt, not for the purpose of doing Shelley any positive harm, but of frightening him a little of " paying him out/' as it has been called, for the scrape into which he had been brought by his philanthropic young master. In November, 1812, Shelley went up to London to forward the subscription for the Tremadoc embank- ment. He had another object, perhaps not less impor- tant to him namely, to get rid of Miss Kitchener. That lady, with Harriet and Eliza Westbrook, accom- panied Shelley on this short visit. They all put up at the St. James's Coffee House, in St. James's Street. Mr. Hogg says he visited them there, and witnessed the departure of Miss Kitchener from this hotel on a certain Sunday evening. " The chronology of such A A 2 356 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. an interview," says Mr. Hogg, " need not be exact." Exact chronology is certainly not the failing of Mr. Hogg's book ; and so we have two events which must have occurred on the same day and in the same place, separated in his book by two hundred pages.* These are his dining with Bysshe, Harriet, and Eliza West- brook at " a hotel near St. James's Palace" " during Shelley's brief visit to London in November, 1812," and the departure or dismissal of Miss Kitchener. I have made ample notes of all the discrepancies of his story, but they would take up too much space here. Mr. Hogg tells us, that after the departure of Miss Kitchener from the hotel, on the evening he dined with Shelley, Harriet and Eliza Westbrook withdrew to pack up for their journey next day to Tanyrallt. He also tells us that the day was Sunday ; but from Shelley's letter of the 7th November to Mr. Williams (vol. ii. p. i 75), we know that it must have been Wed- nesday, the nth. The Shelley s and Eliza Westbrook returned to Tanyrallt on the 1 2th. Thus the " brief visit" lasted little more than a week, and Miss Kitch- ener was with them up to the eve of their departure. And yet we have the following curious statement by Lady Shelley: " During his visit to London, Shelley made the personal acquaintance of Godwin, with whom he lived for a time ; and to the philosopher's daughter Fanny he addressed the subjoined letter, after having rather abruptly left their house." Shelley Memorials, p. 43. * It is amusing to compare the two descriptions. See Hogg, vol. ii. p. 171, and the same volume, p. 365. WHO WAS "FANNY GODWIN"? 357 The reader is referred to the letter in the Memorials : it is a very singular one. But how could Shelley have " lived with Godwin for a time" during this brief visit ? Did he go alone, leaving " Harriet and the ladies " (who must have been Eliza Westbrook and Eliza Kitchener) at the St. James's Coffee House ?* Or did the whole party migrate together to Skinner Street? The latter supposition is scarcely probable. Another curious matter is, that Lady Shelley calls " Fanny Godwin" " the philosopher's daughter." This she certainly was not, as any one who reads attentively the Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of the Rights of Woman will see. Fanny, or Frances, was the daughter of Mary Wollstonecraffc and Gilbert Imlay. She was born at Havre, on the 1 4th of May, 1794; so that when she wrote to Shelley in 1812, she had just passed her eighteenth year. This mistake about " Fanny Godwin" is now corrected for the first time. The latest and on the whole the most correct biographer of Shelley thus repeats it : " The household of Godwin consisted, besides him- self, of his second wife, who had been previously mar- ried to a Mr. Clairmont ; Mary, his daughter by his first wife ; Fanny, his daughter by his second wife ; and Clare and Charles Clairmont, the children of the second wife by her first marriage." Rossetti's Memoir of Shelley, p. Ixxviii. This list is inaccurate in two ways. In addition to the mistake about Fanny, it omits the only child of Godwin by his second marriage, William his son, who died of cholera in 1832, and a memoir of whom has * Letter to Mr. Williams, the agent of Mr. Madocks, St. James's Coffee House, Nov. 7th, 1812. See Hogg, vol. ii. p. 175. . ' 3S 8 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. been written by his father. This second marriage of Godwin took place in 1801. Were Fanny even his eldest child by that marriage, she could only have been ten years of age in 1812. It is evident that Shelley's letter published in the Memorials was not written to a child of that age. This is but a sample of the incredible number of mistakes that disfigure all the published Lives of Shelley, and destroy their authen- ticity. As to Mr. Hogg, it is doubtful if he has told one single fact truly. It is a most melancholy thought if we recall the fact that this poor Fanny Imlay or Godwin, like Har- iet Shelley, committed suicide by drowning. Less i sa( ^ but a l mos * equally singular, is it to remember that her mother, Mary Wollstonecraft, when abandoned, or at least neglected by Imlay, attempted the same fate ^ *jf from Putney Bridge.* When we add to these the cata- strophe of Shelley himself, we have a series of coin- * This event occurred in October, i79j- The details, as pub- lished by Mr. Godwin, may be here given. " She resolved to plunge herself in the Thames ; and, not being satisfied with any spot nearer to London, she took a boat, and rowed to Putney. Her first thought had led her to Battersea Bridge, but she found it too public. It was night when she arrived at Putney, and by that time had begun to rain with great violence. The rain suggested to her the idea of walking up and down the bridge, till her clothes were thoroughly drenched and heavy with the wet, which she did for half-an-hour without meeting a human being. She then leaped from the top of the bridge, but still seemed to find a difficulty in sinking, which she endeavoured to counteract by pressing her clothes closely round her. After some time she became insensible ...... After having been for a considerable time insensible, she was recovered by the exertions of those by whom the body was found." Memoirs of the Author of a Vindication of the Bights of Woman. By William Godwin. London, 1798, pp. 132, 133, 134. THE BROWN DEMON. 359 cidences that is exceedingly painful, if not awful to reflect on. But we must draw this investigation to a close, not indeed through any defect of matter, but from want of space. We shall briefly allude to what is called " the Tanyrallt Mystery/' and suggest an explanation not previously given. Three weeks after Shelley's return to Tanyrallt, he thus writes to Mr. Hogg, whose offence at York in the preceding year had by this time been forgiven. " The Brown Demon" was of course Miss Kitchener, who but nine months before Shelley had invited to " give up her school, abandon everything, and live with him for ever/' " Tanyrallt, Dec. 3rd, 1812. " . . . . The Brown Demon, as we call our late tor- mentor and schoolmistress, must receive her stipend ; I pay it with a heavy heart and an unwilling hand ; but it must be so. She was deprived by our misjudging haste of a situation where she was going on smoothly ; and now she says that her reputation is gone, her health ruined, her peace of mind destroyed by my barbarity. This is not all fact ; but certainly she is embarrassed and poor, and we being in some degree the cause, we ought to obviate it. She is an artful, superficial, ugly, hermaphroditical beast of a woman, and my astonishment at my fatuity, inconsistency, and bad taste was never so great as after living four months with her as an inmate. What would Hell be, were such a woman in Heaven?" Hogg, vol. ii. p. 194. We have here the position in which the parties stood towards each other on the 3rd of December, 1812: the lady asserting that her reputation was gone, 360 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. her health ruined, and her peace of mind destroyed by the barbarity of the poet, the poet using towards the lady nearly the most offensive language that could be applied to a woman. What Shelley said to Mr. Hogg he may have repeated to others, perhaps to Miss Kitchener herself. In any case she must have known the utter loathing felt for her by her late admirer. We are not told what was the amount of the " stipend," or if it was ever paid. She was dismissed, as we have seen, on the nth of November. It is plain that Shelley's letter of the 3rd of December alludes only to a promise to pay. On the I ith of February three months stipend would be due. Between the 1 1 th and 26th there is just sufficient time for repeated demands, threats, &c., until the crisis came. That Shelley had received some threats is certain from Harriet's well-known letter, written from the house of Mr. John Lawless, 35, Cuffe Street, Dublin.* " On * It has been conjectured by Dr. Madden in his Life of Lady Blessington (second edition, vol. iii. p. 418), that Shelley's selec- tion of this locality arose from his straitened circumstances at the time. Mr. Middleton, in his Shelley and his Writings, quoting the passage says, " He took up his abode at No. 35, Cuffe Street, Stephen's Green, a locality sufficient to show the nature of the pecuniary circumstances in which Shelley was placed." This is an entire mistake. Shelley did not go to Cuffe Street because it was a cheap place of residence, which it scarcely could have been. He went there because his friend Mr. John Lawless resided there. We have seen how intimately he had been connected with him the year before. The History of Ireland, the efforts to raise money for its production, the curious assertion of the editor of The Dublin Evening Post, and the draft on Mr. Lawless given by Shelley to his landlady at Lymouth, all show how intimate that connexion had been. But the reflection on the street itself is unfounded. In 1813 it was inhabited chiefly by professional people, barristers, proctors, and attorneys. The house was a pri- vate one, and when Mr. Hogg called there in March, 1813, the THE MYSTERIOUS OUTRAGE AT TANYRALLT. 361 Friday night, the 26th of February, we retired to bed between ten and eleven o'clock. We had been in bed about half an hour, when Mr. Shelley heard a noise proceeding from one of the parlours. He imme- diately went downstairs with two pistols, which he had loaded that night, expecting to have occasion for them." The circumstances of the attack are too well known to be repeated here. Mrs. Shelley continues : " We all assembled in the parlour, where we remained for two hours. Mr. S. then advised us to retire, thinking it impossible he would make a second attack. We left Bysshe and one man-servant [Mr. Hogg's version of the letter gives " our man-servant "~\ , who had only arrived that day, and who knew nothing of the house, to sit up/' Three hours after this, when " Bysshe had sent Daniel to see what hour it was," the second attack was made. The would-be assassin fired at Shelley, the ball passing through his flannel gown. Bysshe fired at his assailant, but the pistol would not go off. "He then aimed a blow at him with an old sword which we found in the house. The assassin attempted to get the sword from him, and just as he was getting it away, Dan rushed into the room, when he made his escape." Shelley Memorials, p. 59. By some writers the whole of this alleged attack is supposed to be an entire delusion on the part of door was opened by " a man-servant." And yet the most recent biographer of Shelley improves upon his authority by transferring the mistaken description of the street to the house. " After a short stay in an uninviting house, No. 35, Great Cuffe Street, Dublin," &c. (Rossetti's Memoir, p. Ixvi.). That it was not " an uninviting house " in one sense at least, Mr. Hogg had some pleasant reasons for remembering, as the reader will find by refer- ring to the second volume of the Life of Shelley, p. 238. 362 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Shelley; but Harriet's letter is too circumstantial to admit of such an explanation. It is said that Eliza Westbrook in after life spoke frequently with terror of the events of this night. Shelley himself it is plain expected an attack, having loaded his pistols that night, " expecting to have occasion for them." A later solu- tion of the difficulty is, that the whole thing was a practical joke on the part of Daniel Hill, who had arrived on that day, probably after the expiration of his imprisonment, at Barnstaple, the whole term of which would have expired on the i8th of February. In this case he must have had a confidant, who ran the risk of being shot by Shelley ; or if he escaped that fate, of being detected and prosecuted for the outrage. It is much more probable that the attack was made in ignorance of the addition to the Tany- rallt garrison, occasioned by the unexpected arrival of Daniel Hill, and that it was frustrated by that fortu- nate circumstance. The attack then seems to have been a real one. Shelley evidently had reason for believing that he had provoked the enmity of some one. This hostility was not confined to himself. Harriet says in her post- script to Shelley's first letter of two lines to Mr. Hookham " It is no common robber we dread, but a person who is actuated by revenge, and who threatens my life, and my sister's as well." All this shows that Shelley and Harriet had been anticipating for some time the violence of a person who was meditating re- venge against the whole party. This person was one who had some private injury to revenge. The injury was one for which Shelley, Harriet, and Eliza West- brook were equally responsible. The strange threats of their assailant which Harriet so courageously re- PROBABLE SOLUTION OF THE MYSTERY. 363 peats prove this. The enemy was " no common robber," but one who was " actuated by revenge/' who threatened her own life and her sister's as well as Shelley's. Now in Shelleyan history up to this period, as far as it has yet been revealed to us, there was but one person who had any grounds of complaint against Shelley, Harriet Shelley, and Eliza Westbrook. That person was Miss Kitchener. We know the terms in which Shelley spoke of her, and the charges of " bar- barity" she brought against Shelley. Mr. Hogg un- consciously unites the three in the indictment which Miss Kitchener had evidently framed in her mind against them. Speaking of the " Brown Demon," he says : "At first she possessed some influence over the young couple : but the charming Eliza would not tole- rate any influence but her own. She had worked upon Harriet's feelings, and the good Harriet had succeeded in making his former favourite odious to Bysshe." Vol. ii. p. 366. Here we have the three persons against whom the mysterious assailant at Tanyrallt declared open war, all united in an actual depreciation and an implied injury against Miss Kitchener. She declared in some way which Shelley could not misunderstand, that by his conduct towards her she had lost her health, her re- putation, and her peace of mind. She was promised some compensation, but we have no evidence that it was paid. Even if it were, the sense of injury would have remained. On her expulsion from " Percy's little circle" in London on the nth of November, j8.i2, she returned in all likelihood to her father's 364 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. house. The Earl of Chichester has told us in his letter to Sir Francis Freeling, that Miss Kitchener's father, whose original name was Yorke, had been a smuggler, and was then a publican at Hurstpierpoiut. Surely here is material enough for the romance of Tanyrallt, without dragging in poor Daniel Hill and an imaginary confederate of his a " gaol-bird" from Barnstaple, who had travelled all the way to Tremadoc, and ran the imminent risk of being shot or hanged merely to oblige " Dan/' The wrongs of Miss Kitch- ener we can have little doubt were discussed around the paternal bar at Hurstpierpoint. The "stipend" may not have been paid. Who knows but that it was after an ineffectual demand, by an agent either of the father or the daughter, for the first quarter's instal- ment, which was due a few days before the memorable 26th of February, and the threats that may have fol- lowed the disappointment, that Shelley may have thought it expedient to load his pistols, " expecting to have occasion for them ?" This may not be the solu- tion of the mystery, but it is the most reasonable that has been yet suggested. This investigation for the present must terminate here. It extends only over the period of a few years, and yet has resulted in the discovery of some new facts of great importance, and the correction of many errors. If it contained nothing but the history of the Poetical Essay, the facts and circumstances connected with which have been so curiously discovered and traced by the present writer, it would form no unimportant addi- tion to our previous knowledge of the poet's life. Many notes referring to the subsequent career of Shelley have already been compiled by the author, the result SHELLETS HOUSE NEAR LERICI. 365 of much investigation not only in England but in Italy.* The publication of these notes is for the pre- sent postponed, in the hope that they may include at no distant day a review of the long-promised justifica- tion or apologia of Shelley for that circumstance which his warmest admirers must, for the present, consider the most unhappy and the least excusable event of his life. * As an example of the careless way in which the Italian portion of Shelley's life has been written, it may be mentioned that the name of the village near Lerici, beside which stands the celebrated house Casa Magni, in which Shelley last resided, has never been correctly given in any Life of the poet. From Mrs. Shelley to Mr. Kossetti it has been called " Sant' Arenzo." Its real name, S. Te- renzio, is given in the following quotation from the Guida Pit- tonca del Golfo della Spezia, which I bought at Spezia (June 15, 1862) in one of two visits which I paid to this interesting house : " Presso 8. Terenzio, sulla punta che chiude il seno di Lerici, s'innalza la fortezza di S. Teresa, che incrocicchia con 1'opposta di S. Maria. " Sulle alture circostanti osservasi la Merigola, amena ville- giatura del Marchese Olandini. Ornbrosi boschetti le fanno roman- tico serto ; sorprendente e il panorama del Golfo che di lassu si presenta allo sguardo. Nel 1822 su quei verdi poggi sedevano due celebri cantori di Albione, vaghi di contemplare la magnificenza del migliore tra i golfi, Byron cioe coll amico Shelley ; ma oime, che quest' ultimo era destinato a perire miseramente traquelli stessi tratti di mare, che allora in estasi di ammirazione il rapivano." p. 40. Spezia, 1861. The allusion to Shelley in the foregoing extract is in itself very interesting. SUPPLEMENT, CONTAINING SHELLEY'S POLITICAL PAMPHLETS PUBLISHED IN ENGLAND. IN order to render this collection of Shelley's Political Pamphlets complete, it has been thought advisable to include in the present volume the two tracts which he published in 1817 under the name of The Hermit of Marlow. The pamphlets have been sometimes con- founded with each other, and are nearly as scarce as those which Shelley printed in Ireland. & JJroposal FOB P0TTING EEFOEM TO THE VOTE THROUGHOUT THE KINGDOM. BY THE HERMIT OF MARLOW. LONDON : PRINTED FOR C. AND J. OLLIER, 3, WELBECK STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE; By C. H. Reynell, 21, Piccadilly. 1817. B B A PKOPOSAL, &c. A GREAT question is now agitating in this nation, which no man or party of men is competent to decide ; indeed there are no materials of evidence which can afford a foresight of the result. Yet on its issue depends whether we are to be slaves or free men. It is needless to recapitulate all that has been said about Reform. Every one is agreed that the House of Commons is not a representation of the people. The only theoretical question that remains is, whether the people ought to legislate for themselves, or be governed by laws and impoverished by taxes originat- ing in the edicts of an assembly which represents somewhat less than a thousandth part of the entire community. I think they ought not to be so taxed and governed. An hospital for lunatics is the only theatre where we can conceive so mournful a comedy to be exhibited as this mighty nation now exhibits : a single person bullying and swindling a thousand of his comrades out of all they possessed in the world, and then trampling and spitting upon them, though he were the most contemptible and degraded of mankind, and they had strength in their arms and courage in their hearts. Such a parable realized in political society is a spectacle worthy of the utmost indignation and abhorrence. B B a 37* PEROT BYSSHE SHELLEY. The prerogatives of Parliament constitute a sove- reignty which is exercised in contempt of the People, and it is in strict consistency with the laws of human nature that it should have been exercised for the People's misery and ruin. Those whom they despise, men instinctively seek to render slavish and wretched, that their scorn may be secure. It is the object of the Reformers to restore the People to a sovereignty thus held in their contempt. It is my object, or I would be silent now. Servitude is sometimes voluntary. Perhaps the People choose to be enslaved ; perhaps it is their will to be degraded and ignorant and famished; perhaps custom is their only God, and they its fanatic wor- shippers will shiver in frost and waste in famine rather than deny that idol, perhaps the majority of this nation decree that.they will not be represented in Parliament, that they will not deprive of power those who have reduced them to the miserable condition in which they now exist. It is their will it is their own concern. If such be their decision, the cham- pions of the rights and the mourners over the errors and calamities of man, must retire to their homes in silence, until accumulated sufferings shall have pro- duced the effect of reason. The question now at issue is, whether the majority of the adult individuals of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland desire or no a complete representation in the Legislative Assembly. I have no doubt that such is their will, and I believe this is the opinion of most persons conversant with the state of the public feeling. But the fact ought to be formally ascertained before we proceed. If the majority of the adult population should solemnly PROPOSAL FOR PUTTING REFORM TO THE VOTE. 373 state their desire to be, that the representatives whom they might appoint should constitute the Commons House of Parliament, there is an end to the dispute. Parliament would then be required, not petitioned, to prepare some effectual plan for carrying the general will into effect ; and if Parliament should then refuse, the consequences of the contest that might ensue would rest on its presumption and temerity. Parlia- ment would have rebelled against the People then. If the majority of the adult population shall, when seriously called upon for their opinion, determine on grounds, however erroneous, that the experiment of innovation by Reform in Parliament is an evil of greater magnitude than the consequences of mis- government to which Parliament has afforded a con- stitutional sanction, then it becomes us to be silent; and we should be guilty of the great crime which I have conditionally imputed to the House of Commons, if after unequivocal evidence that it was the national will to acquiesce in the existing system we should, by partial assemblies of the multitude, or by any party acts, excite the minority to disturb this decision. The first step towards Reform is to ascertain this point. For which purpose I think the following plan would be effectual : That a Meeting should be appointed to be held at the Crown and Anchor Tavern on the of , to take into consideration the most effectual measures for ascertaining whether or no, a Reform in Parlia- ment is the will of the majority of the individuals of the British Nation. That the most eloquent and the most virtuous and the most venerable among the Friends of Liberty, should employ their authority and intellect to per- 374 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. suade men to lay aside all animosity and even dis- cussion respecting the topics on which they are dis- united, and by the love which they bear to their suffering country conjure them to contribute all their energies to set this great question at rest whether the Nation desires a Reform in Parliament or no ? That the friends of Reform, residing in any part of the country, be earnestly entreated to lend perhaps their last and the decisive effort to set their hopes and fears at rest ; that those who can should go to London, and those who cannot, but who yet feel that the aid of their talents might be beneficial, should address a letter to the Chairman of the Meeting, explaining their sentiments : let these letters be read aloud, let all things be transacted in the face of day. Let Re- solutions, of an import similar to those that follow be proposed. 1. That those who think that it is the duty of the People of this nation to exact such a Reform in the Commons House of Parliament, as should make that House a complete representation of their will, and that the People have a right to perform this duty, assemble here for the purpose of collecting evidence as to how far it is the will of the majority of the People to acquit themselves of this duty, and to exer- cise this right. 2. That the population of Great Britain and Ireland be divided into three hundred distinct portions, each to contain an equal number of inhabitants, and three hundred persons be commissioned, each personally to visit every individual within the district named in his commission, and to inquire whether or no that indi- vidual is willing to sign the declaration contained in the third Resolution, requesting him to annex to his PROPOSAL FOR PUTTING REFORM TO THE VOTE. 375 signature any explanation or exposure [exposition ?] of his sentiments which he might choose to place on record. That the following Declaration be proposed for signature : 3. That the House of Commons does not represent the will of the People of the British Nation ; we the undersigned therefore declare, and publish, and our signatures annexed shall be evidence of our firm and solemn conviction that the liberty, the happiness, and the majesty of the great nation to which it is our boast to belong, have been brought into danger and suffered to decay through the corrupt and inadequate manner in which Members are chosen to sit in the Commons House of Parliament; we hereby express, before God and our country, a deliberate and unbiassed persuasion, that it is our duty, if we shall be found in the minority in this great question, incessantly to petition ; if among the majority, to require and exact that that House should originate such measures of Reform as would render its Members the actual Re- presentatives of the Nation. 4. That this Meeting shall be held day after day, until it determines on the whole detail of the plan for collecting evidence as to the will of the nation on the subject of a Reform in Parliament. 5. That this Meeting disclaims any design, however remote, of lending their sanction to the revolutionary and disorganizing schemes which have been most falsely imputed to the Friends of Reform, and declares that its object is purely constitutional. 6. That a subscription be set on foot to defray the expenses of this Plan. In the foregoing proposal of Resolutions, to be submitted to a National Meeting of the Friends of 376 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. Reform, I have purposely avoided detail. If it shall prove that I have in any degree afforded a hint to men who have earned and established their popularity by personal sacrifices and intellectual eminence such as I have not the presumption to rival, let it belong to them to pursue and develope all suggestions relating to the great cause of liberty which has been nurtured (I am scarcely conscious of a metaphor) with their very sweat, and blood, and tears : some have tended it in dungeons, others have cherished it in famine, all have been constant to it amidst persecution and calumny, and in the face of the sanctions of power : so accomplish what ye have begun. I shall mention therefore only one point relating to the practical part of my Proposal. Considerable expenses, according to my present conception, would be necessarily incurred : funds should be created by subscription to meet these demands. I have an income of a thousand a year, on which I support my wife and children in decent comfort, and from which I satisfy certain large claims of general justice. Should any plan resembling that which I have proposed be deter- mined on by you, I will give ioo/., being a tenth part of one year's income, towards its object : and I will not deem so proudly of myself, as to believe that I shall stand alone in this respect, when any rational and consistent scheme for the public benefit shall have received the sanction of those great and good men who have devoted themselves for its preservation. A certain degree of coalition among the sincere Friends of Reform, in whatever shape, is indispensable to the success of this proposal. The friends of Uni- versal or of Limited Suffrage, of Annual or Triennial Parliaments, ought to settle these subjects on which PROPOSAL FOR PUTTING REFORM TO THE VOTE. 377 they diagsree, when it is known whether the Nation desires that measure on which they are all agreed. It is trivial to discuss what species of Reform shall have place, when it yet remains a question whether there will be any Reform or no. Meanwhile, nothing remains for me but to state explicitly my sentiments on this subject of Reform. The statement is indeed quite foreign to the merits of the Proposal in itself, and I should have suppressed it until called upon to subscribe such a requisition as I have suggested, if the question which it is natural to ask, as to what are the sentiments of the person who originates the scheme, could have received in any other manner a more simple and direct reply. It appears to me that Annual Parliaments ought to be adopted as an immediate measure, as one which strongly tends to preserve the liberty and happiness of the Nation ; it would enable men to cultivate those energies on which the performance of the political duties belong- ing to the citizen of a free state as the rightful guar- dian of its prosperity essentially depends ; it would familiarize men with liberty by disciplining them to an habitual acquaintance with its forms. Political in- stitution* is undoubtedly susceptible of such improve- ments as no rational person can consider possible, so long as the present degraded condition to which the vital imperfections in the existing system of govern- ment has reduced the vast multitude of men, shall subsist. The securest method of arriving at such beneficial innovations, is to proceed gradually and with caution ; or in the place of that order and free- * Shelley uses the same phrase in the second Irish pamphlet, the Proposals. See p. 2/1. 378 PERCY BYSSBE SHELLEY. dom which the Friends of Reform assert to be violated now, anarchy and despotism will follow. Animal Parliaments have my entire assent. I will not state those general reasonings in their favour which Mr. Cobbett and other writers have already made familiar to the public mind. With respect to Universal Suffrage, I confess I consider its adoption, in the present unprepared state of public knowledge and feeling, a measure fraught with peril. I think that none but those who register their names as paying a certain small sum in direct taxes ought at present to send Members to Parlia- ment. The consequences of the immediate extension of the elective franchise to every male adult, would be to place power in the hands of men who have been rendered brutal' and torpid and ferocious by ages of slavery. It is to suppose that the qualities belonging to a demagogue are such as are sufficient to endow a legislator. I allow Major Cartwright's arguments to be unanswerable ; abstractedly it is the right of every human being to have a share in the government. But Mr. Paine's arguments are also unanswerable ; a pure republic may be shown, by inferences the most obvious and irresistible, to be that system of social order the fittest to produce the happiness and promote the genuine eminence of man. Yet nothing can less consist with reason, or afford smaller hopes of any beneficial issue, than the plan which should abolish the regal and the aristocratical branches of our con- stitution, before the public mind, through many gra- dations of improvement, shall have arrived at the maturity which can disregard these symbols of its childhood. "WE PITY THE PLUMAGE, BUT FORGET THE DYING BIRD." AN ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE ON The Death of the Princess Charlotte. BY permit of JWarlofo. AN ADDRESS, &o. I. THE Princess Charlotte is dead. She no longer moves, nor thinks, nor feels. She is as inani- mate as the clay with which she is about to mingle. It is a dreadful thing to know that she is a putrid corpse, who but a few days since was full of life and hope ; a woman young, innocent, and beautiful, snatched from the bosom of domestic peace, and leaving that single vacancy which none can die and leave not. II. Thus much the death of the Princess Charlotte has in common with the death of thousands. How many women die in childbed and leave their fami- lies of motherless children and their husbands to live on, blighted by the remembrance of that heavy loss ? How many women of active and energetic virtues ; mild, affectionate, and wise, whose life is as a chain of happiness and union, which once being broken, leaves those whom it bound to perish, have died, and have been deplored with bitterness, which is too deep for words ? Some have perished in penury or shame, and their orphan baby has sur- vived, a prey to the scorn and neglect of strangers. Men have watched by the bedside of their expiring wives, and have gone mad when the hideous death- 3 8a PERCY BTSSHE SHELLEY. rattle was heard within the throat, regardless of the rosy child sleeping in the lap of the unobservant nurse. The countenance of the physician had been read by the stare of this distracted husband, till the legible despair sunk into his heart. All this has been and is. You walk with a merry heart through the streets of this great city, and think not that such are the scenes acting all around you. You do not number in your thought the mothers who die in childbed. It is the most horrible of ruins : In sickness, in old age, in battle, death comes as to his own home ; but in the season of joy and hope, when life should succeed to life, and the assembled family expects one more, the youngest and the best be- loved, that the wife, the mother she for whom each member of the family was so dear to one another, should die ! Yet thousands of the poorest poor, whose misery is aggravated by what cannot be spoken now, suffer this. And have they no affec- tions ? Do not their hearts beat in their bosoms, and the tears gush from their eyes ? Are they not human flesh and blood ? Yet none weep for them none mourn for them none when their coffins are carried to the grave (if indeed the parish furnishes a coffin for all) turn aside and moralize upon the sadness they have left behind. III. The Athenians did well to celebrate, with public mourning, the death of those who had guided the republic with their valour and their understand- ing, or illustrated it with their genius. Men do well to mourn for the dead : it proves that we love some- thing beside ourselves ; and he must have a hard heart who can see his friend depart to rottenness and WE PITY THE PLUMAGE. 383 dust, and speed him without emotion on his voyage to " that bourne whence no traveller returns." To lament for those who have benefited the State, is a habit of piety yet more favourable to the cultivation of our best affections. When Milton died it had been well that the universal English nation had been clothed in solemn black, and that the muffled bells had tolled from town to town. The French nation should have enjoined a public mourning at the deaths of Rousseau and Voltaire. We cannot truly grieve for every one who dies beyond the circle of those especially dear to us ; yet in the extinction of the objects of public love and admiration, and gratitude, there is something, if we enjoy a liberal mind, which has departed from within that circle. It were well done also, that men should mourn for any public calamity which has befallen their country or the world, though it be not death. This helps to main- tain that connexion between one man and another, and all men considered as a whole, which is the bond of social life. There should be public mourning when those events take place which make all good men mourn iu their hearts, the rule of foreign or domestic tyrants, the abuse of public faith, the wrest- ing of old and venerable laws to the murder of the innocent, the established insecurity of all those, the flower of the nation, who cherish an unconquerable enthusiasm for public good. Thus, if Home Tooke and Hardy had been convicted of high treason, it had been good that there had been not only the sorrow and the indignation which would have filled all hearts, but the external symbols of grief. When the French Republic was extinguished, the world ought to have mourned. 3?4 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. IV. But this appeal to the feelings of men should not be made lightly, or in any manner that tends to waste, on inadequate objects, those fertilizing streams of sympathy, which a public mourning should be the occasion of pouring forth. This solemnity should be used only to express a wide and intel- ligible calamity, and one which is felt to be such by those who feel for their country and for man- kind ; its character ought to be universal, not par- ticular. V. The news of the death of the Princess Charlotte, and of the execution of Brandreth, Ludlam, and Turner, arrived nearly at the same time. If beauty, youth, innocence, amiable manners, and the exer- cise of the domestic virtues could alone justify public sorrow when tht-y are extinguished for ever, this in- teresting Lady would well deserve that exhibition. She was the last and the best of her race. But there were thousands of others equally distinguished as she, for private excellences, who have been cut off in youth and hope. The accident of her birth neither made her life more virtuous nor her death more worthy of grief. For the public she had done nothing either good or evil ; her education had rendered her incapable of either in a large and comprehensive sense. She was born a Princess ; and those who are destined to rule mankind are dispensed with acquir- ing that wisdom and that experience which is neces- sary even to rule themselves. She was not like Lady Jane Grey, or Queen Elizabeth, a woman of profound and various learning. She had accomplished no- thing, and aspired to nothing, and could understand nothing respecting those great political questions BUT FORGET THE DYING BIRD. 38,5 which involve the happiness of those over whom she was destined to rule. Yet this should not be said in blame, but in compassion : let us speak no evil of the dead. Such is the misery, such the impotence of royalty Princes are prevented from the cradle from becoming anything which may deserve that greatest of all rewards next to a good conscience, public ad- miration and regret. VI. The execution of Brandreth, Ludlam, and Turner is an event of quite a different character from the death of the Princess Charlotte. These men were shut up in a horrible dungeon for many months, with the fear of a hideous death and of everlasting hell thrust before their eyes ; and at last were brought to the scaffold and hung. They too had domestic affections, and were remarkable for the exercise of private virtues. Perhaps their low station permitted the growth of those affections in a degree not consistent with a more exalted rank. They had sons, and brothers, and sisters, and fathers, who loved them, it should seem, more than the Princess Char- lotte could be loved by those whom the regulations of her rank had held in perpetual estrangement from her. Her husband was to her as father, mother, and brethren. Ludlam and Turner were men of mature years, and the affections were ripened and strength- ened within them. What these sufferers felt shall not be said. But what must have been the long and various agony of their kindred may be inferred from Edward Turner, who, when he saw his brother dragged along upon the hurdle, shrieked horribly and fell in a fit, and was carried away like a corpse by two men. How fearful must have been their agony, sitting in c c 386 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. solitude on that day when the tempestuous voice of horror from the crowd, told them that the head so dear to them was severed from the body ! Yes they listened to the maddening shriek which burst from the multitude : they heard the rush of ten thousand terror-stricken feet, the groans and the hootings which told them that the mangled arid dis- torted head was then lifted into the air. The sufferers were dead. What is death ? Who dares to say that which will come after the grave ?* Brandreth was calm, and evidently believed that the consequences of our errors were limited by that tremendous barrier. Ludlam and Turner were full of fears, lest God should plunge them in everlasting fire. Mr. Pickering, the clergyman, was evidently anxious that Brandreth should not by a false confidence lose the single op- portunity of reconciling himself with the Ruler of the future world. None knew what death was, or could know. Yet these men were presumptuously thrust into that unfathomable gulf, by other men, who knew as little and who reckoned not the present or the future sufferings of their victims. Nothing is more horrible than that man should for any cause shed the life of man. For all other calamities there is a remedy or a consolation. When that Power through which we live ceases to maintain the life which it has con- ferred, then is grief and agony, and the burthen which must be borne : such sorrow improves the heart. But when man sheds the blood of man, revenge, and hatred, and a long train of executions, and assassinations, and proscriptions, is perpetuated to remotest time. * " Your death has eyes in his head mine is not painted so." Cymbeline. WE PITY THE PLUMAGE, 387 VII. Such are the particular, and some of the general considerations depending on the death of these men. But however deplorable, if it were a mere private or customary grief, the public as the public should not mourn. But it is more than this. The events which led to the death of those unfortunate men are a public calamity. I will not impute blame to the jury who pronounced them guilty of high treason, perhaps the law requires that such should be the denomination of their offence.. Some restraint ought indeed to be imposed on those thoughtless men who imagine they can find in violence a remedy for violence, even if their oppressors had tempted them to this occasion of their ruin. They are instruments of evil, not so guilty as the hands that wielded them, but fit to inspire caution. But their death, by hang- ing and beheading, and the circumstances of which it is the characteristic and the consequence, constitute a calamity such as the English nation ought to mourn with an unassuageable grief. VIII. Kings and their ministers have in every age been distinguished from other men by a thirst for ex- penditure and bloodshed. There existed in this country, until the American war, a check, sufficiently feeble and pliant indeed, to this desolating propensity. Until America proclaimed itself a Republic, England was perhaps the freest and most glorious nation subsisting on the surface of the earth. It was not what is to the full desirable that a nation should be, but all that it can be, when it does not govern itself. The conse- quences, however, of that fundamental defect soon became evident. The government which the imper- fect constitution of our representative assembly threw c c 2 388 PERCY BTtSHE SHELLEY. into the hands of a few aristocrats, improved the method of anticipating the taxes by loans, invented by the ministers of William III., until an enormous debt had been created. In the war against the Republic of France, this policy was followed up, until now, the mere interest of the public debt amounts to more than twice as much as th'e lavish expenditure of the public treasure, for maintaining the standing army, and the royal family, and the pensioners, and the placemen. The effect of this debt is to produce such an unequal distribution of the means of living, as saps the foun- dation of social union and civilized life. It creates a double aristocracy, instead of one which was suffi- ciently burthensome before, and gives twice as many people the liberty of living in luxury and idleness on the produce of the industrious and the poor. And it does not give them this because they are more wise and meritorious than the rest, or because their leisure is spent in schemes of public good, or in those exercises of the intellect and the imagination, whose creations ennoble or adorn a country. They are not like the old aristocracy, men of pride and honour, sans peur et sans tacke, but petty peddling slaves ^ho have gained a right to the title of public creditors, either by gambling in the funds, or by subserviency to government, or some other villainous trade. They are not the " Co- rinthian capital of polished society," but the petty and creeping weeds which deface the rich tracery of its sculpture. The effect of this system is, that the day labourer gains no more now by working sixteen hours a day than he gained before by working eight. I put the thing in its simplest and most intelligible shape. The labourer, he that tills the ground and manufac- tures cloth, is the man who has to provide, out of BUT. FORGET THE DYING BIRD. 389 what he would bring home to his wife and children, for the luxuries and comforts of those whose claims are represented by an annuity of forty-four millions a year levied upon the English nation. Before, he supported the army and the pensioners, and the royal family, and the landholders ; and this is a hard neces- sity to which it was well that he should submit. Many and various are the mischiefs flowing from oppression, but this is the representative of them all namely, that one man is forced to labour for another in a degree not only not necessary to the support of the subsisting distinctions among mankind, but so as by the excess of the injustice to endanger the very foun- dations of all that is valuable in social order, and to provoke that anarchy which is at once the enemy of freedom, and the child and the chastiser of misrule. The nation, tottering on the brink of two chasms, began to be weary of a continuance of such dangers and degradations, and the miseries which are the con- sequence of them ; the public voice loudly demanded a free representation of the people. It began to be felt that no other constituted body of men could meet the difficulties which impend. Nothing but the nation itself dares to touch the question as to whether there is any remedy or no to the annual payment of forty - four millions a year, beyond the necessary expenses of State, for ever and for ever. A nobler spirit also went abroad, and the love of liberty, and patriotism, and the self-respect attendant on those glorious emo- tions, revived in the bosoms of men. The government had a desperate game to play. IX. In the manufacturing districts of England dis- content and disaffection had prevailed for many years ; 390 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. this was the consequence of that system of double aristocracy produced by the causes before mentioned. The manufacturers, the helots of our luxury, are left by this system famished, without affections, without health, without leisure or opportunity for such instruc- tion as might counteract those habits of turbulence and dissipation, produced by the precariousness and insecurity of poverty. Here was a ready field for any adventurer who should wish for whatever purpose to incite a few ignorant men to acts of illegal outrage. So soon as it was plainly seen that the demands of the people for a free representation must be conceded if some intimidation and prejudice were not conjured up, a conspiracy of the most horrible atrocity was laid in train. It is impossible to know how far the higher members of the government are involved in the guilt of their infernal agents. It is impossible to know how numerous or how active they have been, or by what false hopes they are yet inflaming the untutored mul- titude to put their necks under the axe and into the halter. But thus much is known, that so soon as the whole nation lifted up its voice for parliamentary re- form, spies were sent forth. These were selected from the most worthless and infamous of mankind, and dis- persed among the multitude of famished and illiterate labourers. It was their business if they found no discontent to create it. It was their business to find victims, no matter whether right or wrong. It was their business to produce upon the public an impres- sion, that if any attempt to attain national freedom, or to diminish the burthens of debt and taxation under which we groan, were successful, the starving multi- tude would rush in, and confound all orders and dis- tinctions, and institutions and laws, in common ruin. WE PITY THE PLUMAGE, 391 The inference with which they were required to arm the ministers was, that despotic power ought to be eternal. To produce this salutary impression, they betrayed some innocent and unsuspecting rustics into a crime whose penalty is a hideous death. A few hungry and ignorant manufacturers, seduced by the splendid promises of these remorseless blood-conspira- tors, collected together in what is called rebellion against the State. All was prepared, and the eighteen dragoons assembled in readiness, no doubt, conducted their astonished victims to that dungeon which the) left only to be mangled by the executioner's hand. The cruel instigators of their ruin retired to enjoy the great revenues which they had earned by a life of vil- lany. The public voice was overpowered by the timid and the selfish, who threw the weight of fear into the scale of public opinion, and Parliament confided anew to the executive government those extraordinary powers which may never be laid down, or which may be laid down in blood, or which the regularly consti- tuted assembly of the nation must wrest out of their hands. Our alternatives are a despotism, a revolution, or reform. X. On the yth of November, Brandreth, Turner, and Ludlam ascended the scaffold. We feel for Bran- dreth the less, because it seems he killed a man. But recollect who instigated him to the proceedings which led to murder. On the word of a dying man, Brandreth tells us, that " OLIVER brought him to this" that, " but for OLIVER he would not have been there." See, too, Ludlam and Turner, with their sons, and brothers, and sisters, how they kneel toge- ther in a dreadful agony of prayer. Hell is before 392 PEROT BYSSHE SHELLEY. their eyes, and they shudder and feel sick with fear, lest some unrepented or some wilful sin should seal their doom in everlasting fire. With that dreadful penalty before their eyes with that tremendous sanc- tion for the truth of all he spoke, Turner exclaimed loudly and distinctly, while the executioner was putting the rope round his neck, " THIS is ALL OLIVER AND THE GOVERNMENT." What more he might have said we know not, because the chaplain prevented any further observations. Troops of horse, with keen and glitter- ing swords, hemmed in the multitudes collected to witness this abominable exhibition. " When the stroke of the axe was heard, there was a burst of horror from the crowd.* The instant the head was exhibited, there was a tremendous shriek set up, and the multitude ran violently in all directions, as if under the impulse of sudden frenzy. Those who re- sumed their stations, groaned and hooted." It is a national calamity, that we endure men to rule over us, who sanction for whatever ends a conspiracy which is to arrive at its purpose through such a frightful pouring forth of human blood and agony. But when that purpose is to trample upon our rights and liberties for ever, to present to us the alternatives of anarchy and oppression, and triumph when the astonished nation accepts the latter at their hands, to maintain a vast standing army, and add year by year to a public debt, which already, they know, cannot be dis- charged ; and which, when the delusion that supports it fails, will produce 'as much misery and confusion through all classes of society as it has continued to * These expressions are taken from The Examiner, Sunday, Nov. pth. Author 's Xote. BUT FORGET THE DYING BIRD. 393 produce of famine and degradation to the undefended poor; to imprison and calumniate those who may offend them at will ; when this, if not the purpose, is the effect of that conspiracy, how ought we not to mourn ? XI. Mourn then people of England. Clothe your- selves in solemn black. Let the bells be tolled. Think of mortality and change. Shroud yourselves in soli- tude and the gloom of sacred sorrow. Spare no symbol of universal grief. Weep mourn lament. Fill the great city fill the boundless fields, with lamentation and the echo of groans. A beautiful Princess is dead : she who should have been the Queen of her beloved nation, and whose posterity should have ruled it for ever. She loved the domestic affections, and cherished arts which adorn, and valour which defends. She was amiable and would have be- come wise, but she was young, and in the -flower of youth the destroyer came. LIBERTY is dead. Slave ! I charge thee disturb not the depth and solemnity of our grief by any meaner sorrow. If One has died who was like her that should have ruled over this land, like Liberty, young, innocent, arid lovely, know that the power through which that one perished was God, and that it was a private grief. But man has murdered Liberty, and whilst the life was ebbing from its wound, there descended on the heads and on the hearts of every human thing, the sympathy of an universal blast and curse. Fetters heavier than iron weigh upon us, because they bind our souls. We move about in a dungeon more pestilential than damp and narrow walls, because the earth is its floor and the heavens are its roof. Let us follow the corpse of 394 PERCY BYSSHE SHELLEY. British Liberty slowly and reverentially to its tomb : and if some glorious Phantom should appear, and make its throne of broken swords and sceptres and royal crowns trampled in the dust, let us say that the Spirit of Liberty has arisen from its grave and left all that was gross and mortal there, and kneel down and worship it as our Queen. . FINIS. ** "Whence Shelley derived the curious title of this pamphlet, " We pity the plumage, but forget the dying bird," has not previously been pointed out. It is possible that he found it in the first number of The Reflector, which appeared in October, 1810, the month of his matriculation at Oxford. The Reflector was a quarterly magazine, edited by Leigh Hunt, of which I have two volumes, to December, 181 1. The original passage will probably be found in one of Paine' s tracts, of which, since I alluded to them at page 134, I have recently seen a Dublin edition. " It was pertinently said of the pathetic language which Mr. Burke, in his later writings, occasionally held on constitutional topics, that he pitied the plumage, but neglected the wounded and suffering bird." The Reflector, vol. i. p. 17. APPENDIX. No. I. "THE LATE ME. From the Morning Chronicle, May i$th, 1812. IT is with no ordinary regret that we announce the death of Mr. Peter Finnerty, twenty years a Parlia- mentary reporter on this journal. For some time his health had been on the decline, but always solicitous to perform his duties, it was only within the last month that the violence of his complaint compelled him to withdraw himself from the more active duties of his situation. " Mr. Finnerty, from the strength of his mind and the warmth of his feelings, has either so acted or suffered in the public events of his country that such a man ought not to be allowed to descend to his grave as a common individual. He was the son of a tradesman in the town of Loughrea, in the county of Galway, who with slender means had reared and educated a numerous family. Mr. Finnerty, the eldest son, was in early age cast upon his fortunes in the metro- polis of Ireland ; brought up a printer, he, at the awful crisis of 1798, succeeded [preceded] Mr. Arthur O'Connor as the [registered] printer of the most popular and ably conducted paper which ever appeared in that country The Press. Such a situation naturally brought Mr. Fin- nerty into perilous contact with the irritated and coercive Government of that day. It was no ordinary predicament in which so young a man, being then scarcely of age, was placed. Under the process of the laws as then administered in Ireland, he was visited with all the penalties of a vin- 396 APPENDIX. dictive prosecution, and the property of the establishment was ultimately demolished by military force. On his trial he had the honour of being defended by Mr. Curran, an advocate whose powers rose with the demands of his country for their exertion, and who seemed to have been destined to the great but dangerous distinction of displaying talents in defence of virtue commensurate to the wrongs which had called them forth. In that court he charged the Government of that day with a vindictive warfare against the only printer who dared to whisper the liberties of Ireland. Mr. Finnerty \Vas sentenced to a punishment more ignominious to the law than to the criminal, but had the honour of being attended by Lord Edward Fitzgerald and many other public characters. The sentence was exe- cuted also under the bayonets of a large military force, but could not repress that burst of popular sympathy which attended the first address that he ever made to his suffering countrymen. He passed those dreadful years of '98 and '99 in the prison of A'ewgate, Dublin, when too frequently the guest of the breakfast-table, as he himself has often described, was hurried forth to sudden execution. Such was the persecution with which he had to contend in consequence of the subversion of his establishment, that he remained for mouths unemployed before he could obtain a passport for England! Arrived in London, lie entered into an engagement on the press, and commenced Parlia- mentary reporter. The faithful and able manner in which he discharged the important duties of such a trust is well known to all who have had any connexion witb the press of the metropolis. Having professionally attended the court-martial which was held at Portsmouth, he became acquainted with Sir Home Popham, and an intimacy com- menced which terminated only by his death.* \V hen the expedition to AValcheren took place, Mr. Finnerty, at the * A copy of The Trial of Sir Home Popham, probably edited by Peter Finnerty, is iu the London Institution, Finsbury Circus. A Memoir of Sir Home Riggs Pophatn is given in Public C/iuracters of 1806. London, 1806, p. 399. APPENDIX. 397 request of Sir Home, sailed with Captain Bartholomew from Woolwich for the avowed purpose of writing the history of that expedition. An order had, however, been circulated through the squadron in the Downs to send Mr. Finnerty on shore if found on board this fleet. This order was ineffectual, as Mr. Finnerty, unaware of its existence, had arrived at "Walcheren, and on being made acquainted with it, immediately waited upon the naval commander-in-chief. He was received with great kind- ness, and after a delay of some weeks, he returned to Eng- land in a frigate. Under the irritation of feelings natu- rally excited by such a strange exercise of authority, he addressed, through this paper, a letter to a noble member of the Administration who held a conspicuous place in the recent and melancholy history of Ireland. That noble person immediately commenced a prosecution against the publisher of this journal. Mr. Finnerty, who had been frequently warned by the late Mr. Perry as to the conse- quences which would result from the publication of the letter, with the frankness and decision of character which belonged to him, immediately requested that the manu- script should be given up, that the prosecution might affect only the real author. He allowed judgment to go by default ; but on being brought up for judgment, he defended the libel on the ground of the provocations which he had received, as well as the truth of his allegations, which he was then prepared with affidavits to sustain. He was sentenced to a long term of imprisonment, that was so rigorously carried into effect, that his constitution received a shock from which it never recovered. While in prison, by an appeal to Parliament he procured an inquiry,* the * It may perhaps be interesting to mention, that the whole report on this very curious inquiry, with the original affidavits of the parties con- cerned, is preserved in the Record Office. (Domestic, George III., January to March, i8u. No. 226.) The original petition to the Prince Regent, signed in the remarkable autograph of Peter Finnerty, is in the collection of papers, No. 227. Domestic, Geo. III., April to May, 1 8 n. See also p. 93 of this volume. 398 APPENDIX. result of which not only led to a mitigation of his own suf- ferings, but to the general amelioration of the prison dis- cipline. On his liberation, he resumed his duties with this paper. His mind, naturally strong and original, was invigorated by an experience of the world that enabled him, with no common acuteness, to perceive both the sub- stance and form of truth, and detect the sophistries of the most specious imposition. He had a natural eloquence of a vivid and masculine character, and his colloquial powers were peculiar and fascinating. But his leading charac- teristic was an instinctive hatred of oppression whatever shape it assumed, or by whatever influence it was attempted to be enforced. We will mention one instance. In the recent State Trials Mr. Finnerty was the individual who first discovered that the infamous Thomas Eeynolds, per- sonally unknown to his brother-jurors, was actually a member of the grand jury of the metropolitan court of England. No sooner was the fact ascertained, and pend- ing the trials in Westminster Hall, than he communicated the circumstance to a member of the House of Commons, who in consequence made a disclosure, the electric effect of which upon the House was only equalled by the indigna- tion that it excited throughout the country. " From the original information of his mind, his un- bending devotedness to the interests of his country, and hatred of its oppressors, he had drawn upon himself much political hostility ; but for that he was highly compensated by having the good fortune to enjoy the proud distinction of being known to Mr. Fox, Mr. Whitbread, and Sir Samuel Komilly, and of having as his personal and inti- mate friends Mr. Curran, Mr. Sheridan, and Mr. Grattan, as well as some of the most eminent public men now living. Having made this plain and simple statement, we nave only to add that while the memory of Mr. Finnerty is identified with the history of his country, it will long be cherished by those associates, who having had the best opportunity of knowing his good qualities, have the most reason to deplore him." The respect thus entertained for Mr. Finnerty by those APPENDIX. 399 who best knew him, seems to have been shared even by Lord Castlereagh himself. The Examiner, August 26th, 1822, p. 533, in an article on the unhappy suicide of that nobleman has the following passage : " The Tyne Mercury says, ' The late Mr. Finnerty, who was for many years at known declared and active enmity with the Marquis of Londonderry, has often mentioned to us that his lordship was accustomed to bow to him as he passed him.' " Mr. Finnerty died on the nth of May, 1822, at "West- minster. In the affidavits prefixed to the report of his trial in 181 1, he is described as Peter Finnerty, of' Clement's Inn, in the county of Middlesex, gentleman. His age at the time of his death is stated by some writers to have been fifty-six years ; but this must be a mistake. In his letter to The Morning Chronicle, published in that journal Tuesday, January 23rd, iBio, which was the alleged libel for which he suffered his second imprisonment, he has the following passage referring to the period subsequent to the expiration of his sentence at the end of ^799, when he sought for a passport to go into England, and was refused : " What will the public think of Castlereagh's feelings, when I state that at the period of which I am writing I was not twenty-one years of age ?" At the time of his death therefore, in 1822, Mr. Fin- nerty was only forty -three years old. Twelve years before Percy Bysshe Shelley conferred upon Peter Finnerty the honour of publishing a poem for his benefit, the following lines appeared in the 43rd No. of The Press, January 6th, 1798. With this early tribute to his worth, we may take our leave of a man who is likely to obtain a new lease of fame from the singular connexion with Shelley, which it has been the good fortune of the present writer to discover, and his anxious effort to explain to the best of his ability in this book : 400 APPENDIX. " LINES ADDBESSED TO MR. FINEBTY. " Array' d in virtue, and in freedom's cause, What honest breast but pays to thee applause ? Who thee beholds, amid a dungeon's gloom, For years incarcerated (awful doom !) Who, but, in sorrow, heaves the pitying sigh ! Victim to sickness, or perhaps to die ! Then nor lament, nor wail a patriot's fate, You far superior to the empty great ! A grateful race shall homage pay to thee, Thou firm, undaunted friend of Liberty ; Tho" juries triumph, judges judgment give, In honour's records thou shall ever live. January 6th, 1 798." Extracts from The Press, Philadelphia, 1802, p. 281. No. II. ME. JOHN LAWLESS. The following correspondence between the Earl of Moira and the Eight Honourable Eichard Eyder, Secretary of State for the Home Department, is extracted from the Collection of State Papers in the Eecord Office, labelled "Domestic, George III. 1811. No. 231." The ori- ginal letters are endorsed by Mr. Eyder, " 27th October, 1811. Lord Moira and Mr. Lawless." The Earl of Moira to the Sight Honourable Richard Ryder. " Donington, Oct. 27th, 1811. " MY DEAB SIB, A Mr. Lawless, brother to an officer of high rank in Bonaparte's army, left Ireland secretly last year and went to Paris ; about a month ago he returned privately to Dublin, and took care to be as little seen as possible. He has just now quitted Ireland in the same mysterious way, and as he took that route, very probably is still in London. My informant did not obtain the know- ledge of this in due time. I am not at liberty to disclose from whom I have the communication, but you may depend APPENDIX. 401 upon its accuracy. Lawless's object is probably to get to Heligoland, that having been his former track to the Continent. The arresting him would not be likely to lead to any discovery. But if you could make him out, there would be a chance of getting at his business by fixing a spy upon him. He is a shallow, incautious man, therefore any clever person pretending to go to Heligoland to sell guineas, might worm himself into Lawless's confidence, and find out to whom in Ireland he has been the bearer of messages or letters. Q-reat secrecy must be observed or it might be traced how I got the information, and the source is one which it is important to preserve. " I have the honour, my dear Sir, " To remain your very obedient and humble servant, " MOIEA. "The Eight Hon. R. Ryder, &c." The Right Honourable Richard Ryder to the Earl of Moira. "Private. "Whitehall, Oct. 3ist, 1811. " MY DEAH LOED, I am much obliged to your Lordship for your communication upon the subject of Mr. Lawless. I have since taken all the steps in rny power to ascertain when such a person embarks for Heligoland, if he should take that route, with a view to any ulterior measures that may be thought advisable ; but no circumstances being mentioned by your informant from which either the time of his arrival here, or the part of the town where he may be, or the places he may be supposed to frequent, or his person can be described, or even the fact known whether he is in London or not can be learnt, I much doubt, after the inquiries I have made, whether there are any [means] except the chances of accident to take advantage of his information." [The remainder of the letter is taken up with the case of a certain " William Richmond," and con- cludes], " I am, &c. &c., "RICHABD BTDEB. "The Earl of Moira, &c." D D 402 APPENDIX. Should Mr. John Lawless have been the person alluded to by the Earl of Moira, the description certainly is not flattering. It is one, however, that might easily be drawn from the hostile allusions to Mr. Lawless in the satirical publications of the day. These attacks commenced with the Right Honourable John "Wilson Croker, in his Familiar Epistles, and culminated in the scurrility of Dr. Brenan, in The Milesian, and Watty Cox, in the Irish Magazine. A certain airiness, not to say flightiness, of manner was always very unfairly seized on by Mr. Lawless's enemies as a point of attack. An instance of this occurred so late as 1821, on the occasion of George IV. 's visit to Ireland. " It appears," saya a journal of the period, " by a letter from Mr. John Lawless, of The Irishman, published in a contemporary print, that that gentleman did not leap into the sea to shake hands with his Majesty, as stated in one of the papers " Jack Lawless says it was not he Clung to the Royal Boat, Yet surely wonder should not be That things so light should float." There is, however, a slight difficulty in identifying with absolute certainty the "Mr. Lawless" of Lord Moira's letter with John Lawless. This arises from the fact that the latter had two relatives who were " officers in Bona- parte's army." One was his uncle and one his brother. In the Memoirs of Miles Byrne, Chef de Bataillon in the service of France, Officer of the Legion of Honour, Knight of St. Louis, fyc., Paris, 1836, we have a good account of both. Of the two, his uncle attained the higher rank. At the battle of Lowenberg, in Silesia, on the 1 9th of August, 1813, Colonel Lawless commanded the Irish Regiment. " On the 2 1st of August, the second day after," says Miles Byrne, " Colonel Lawless, at the passage of the Bober, at the town of Lowenberg, and in the pre- sence of Napoleon, had his leg shot off by a cannon ball " (torn. iii. p. 36). Colonel Lawless was subsequently made General, and died on the 25th of December, 1824. The phrase " an officer of high rank in the army' of APPENDIX. 403 Bonaparte," would of course apply especially to Colonel Lawless ; but I do not find any allusion to a brother of his residing in Dublin at the period mentioned. The officer referred to by Lord Moira must, I think, have been Luke Lawless, the brother of John Lawless. He too held a commission in the French service, but of inferior rank to his uncle. Colonel Miles Byrne devotes several pages to him in his Memoirs. He was a Lieutenant and subse- quently Captaiu on the Staff of the Duke of Feltre. After the downfall of Napoleon, in 1815, the Irish Regiment was disbanded, and Captain Lawless with other officers emigrated to America. He resumed his profession as an. advocate, greatly distinguished himself at the American bar, and was eventually raised to the rank of Judge at Saint Louis. See Memoirs of Miles Byrne, t. iii. pp. 97, 9 8. As there is nothing further on this affair of" Mr. Law- less" in the State Papers, Lord Moira perhaps soon disco- vered that his informant's zeal had outrun his discretion in the officious communication he had made to him. Mr. John Lawless, if he was the person alluded to, had pro- bably gone to London on private business, and returned shortly after, as we find him in Dublin at the end of February, 1812, the associate of Shelley. The reply of the Eight Honourable Eichard Eyder to Lord Moira's letter is studiously polite, but unmistakably satirical. " Poor Lord Moira," says Moore in one of his letters, when he began to perceive that his noble patron* was * Lord Moira seems to have played the amiable part of patron-general to young poets and romance writers, before he accepted the more sub- stantial position of Governor-General of India. In 1804 we find "Monk" Lewis dedicating to him Tlie Bravo of Venice a singular offering to a statesman. A copy of this curious book, presented "with Mr. Lewis' compliments" to one of his friends is in my possession. It seems to have been the model on which Shelley constructed his not more absurd Romances of Zastrozzi and St. Irvyne. Monk Lewis seems to have been as fond of the letter Z as Shelley himself. We have Parozzi, Struzza, and Buluzzo names that may well pair with the Zastrozzi and Verezzi of his imitator. 4 o 4 APPENDIX. about to proceed to " India's coral strand" without him " poor Lord Moira ! his good qualities have been the ruin of him ! " Que lea vertus sont dangerenses Dans un homme tans jugement." Letter to Mis Godfrey, Nov. 6th, 1813. Moore' $ Mtnoirt, vol. i. page 317. "Whether the Eight Honourable Richard Ryder considered the suggestion that a spy should be placed on the move- ments of a man whose only crime seemed to have been his want of caution (a strange defect in a supposed confiden- tial agent of Xapoleon), was a sample of those " good qualities" that "ruined" Lord Moira, or not, it is impos- sible to say ; but he certainly must have seen in the letter of his lordship, which supplied not the slightest fact that could be acted on, a remarkable proof of his want of "judgment." I have been favoured with the following interesting letter from Philip Lawless, Esq., Barister-at-law, the only surviving son of Shelley's "literary friend" in Dublin. "February.! 6th, 1870. " I have to apologize to you for not sooner acknowledging yours of the I ith iiist., and thanking you for your kind ex- pressions about my father. I would be happy to give you any particulars bearing on the subject of your inquiries, but unfortunately anything of the kind in my possession are not worth mentioning. I have a perfect recollection of my father describing the agreeable society which he enjoyed with the poet P. B. Shelley, chiefly, I think, at the house of our great countryman, John Philpot Curran. I think he said it was about the time you mention, 18 1 2 or 1813. My father unfortunately seldom ever kept papers or documents. You are perhaps aware that he was prevented by Lord Clare going to the bar, and this clouded and surrounded with difficulties his after life. I ought to mention that I also recollect my father stating that Shelley lived or lodged in the same street as himself, Cuffe Street, or in its im- mediate neighbourhood. The first edition of The History APPENDIX. 405 of Ireland must have come out in 1812 or 1813.* I have a copy of the second edition published in 1815. In 1819 he commenced the publication of The Irishman in Belfast, and continued it there for about eight years, when he removed to Dublin, and resumed the publication of it. I am sorry I cannot give you some more assistance as to my father's acquaintance with the poet. I have often thought of putting together in a memoir shape whatever materials I could collect, with the hope of doing some justice to my father's memory, and of showing the important and pro- minent part taken by him, but I have always been deterred by the meagreness of the information in my hands. Again begging you to excuse my delay in writing, " I am, &c. &c., " PHILIP LAWLESS. "D.F. M. C.,Esq." DESCEIPTION OF JOHN LAWLESS. " Jack Lawless had many distinguished qualifications as a public speaker. His voice was deep, round, and mellow, and was diversified by a great variety of rich and harmo- nious intonations. His action was exceedingly graceful and appropriate ; he had a good figure, which by a pur- posed swell and dilation of the shoulders, and an elaborate exactness, he turned to good account, and by dint of an easy fluency, of good diction, a solemn visage, an aquiline nose of no vulgar dimensions, eyes glaring underneath a shaggy brow with a certain fierceness of emotion, a quiz- zing-glass, which was gracefully dangled in any pause of thought or suspension of utterance, and above all by a cer- tain attitude of dignity which he assumed in the crisis of eloquence, accompanied with a flinging back of his coat, which rounded his periods beautifully, ' Honest Jack' soon became one of the most popular and efficient speakers at the Catholic Board." Life and Times of Daniel O'Connell, with Sketches of some of his Contemporaries, by C. M. O'Keefe. Dublin, 1864, vol. ii. p. 23. * The History of Ireland was not published until 1814, as previously stated. 406 APPENDIX. DEATH OF MB. LAWLESS. From The Morning Chronicle, Thursday, August loth, 1837. " This gentleman, who for many years has occupied so large a space in the public view, as connected with the politics of Ireland, has terminated his earthly career. He was taken ill on Saturday last, and died on Tuesday, at twenty minutes past twelve, at his lodgings in Cecil Street. Mr. Lawless was at all times a most energetic and uncom- promising advocate of his principles, which were decidedly of a liberal character." The following account of the death of Mr. Lawless is quoted in The Times of the same date, from a " Ministerial paper." It is erroneous in two particulars. Mr. Lawless was never called to the bar, and did not receive, he pro- bably would not have accepted, " a small appointment in Ireland." The article in the "Ministerial paper " is as follows : " DEATH or MB. LAWLESS. " "We regret to announce the death of this gentleman, familiarly known in Ireland as ' Honest Jack Lawless.' This event took place yesterday afternoon, at his lodgings in Cecil Street, Strand. Mr. Lawless was early in life a law student, but the Irish Lord Chancellor (Clare) prevented his call on account of his political principles. Later in life, however, he was called in times of less trouble and more freedom. He was one of the leading agitators of the Irish associations, and also connected with the Liberal press, both in Dublin and Belfast. Mr. Lawless had in his declining years, shortly since, obtained some small appointment in Ireland. His eloquence was sometimes declamatory, but ever sincere, and in all the actions of his life John Lawless deserved well of his countrymen." The following passage is taken from an article on the death of Mr. Lawless in The Morning Herald of the same period. As Mr. Lawless had never been called to the bar, the story of the prominent high " legal " appointment is probably unfounded. " It is strongly rumoured that the ' sickening pangs of APPENDIX. 407 hope deferred,' which Mr. Lawless was doomed to expe- rience had a considerable effect in hastening his end. A few days prior to his decease intelligence was commu- nicated to Mr. Lawless by an illustrious individual that a high legal appointment would shortly be conferred on him, and by many his rather sudden decease is attributed to the excess of joy caused by this announcement." FUNEBAL OF JOHN" LAWLESS. From The Morning Chronicle, Friday, August i8th, 1837. " The mortal remains of ' Honest Jack ' were yesterday deposited in the vault attached to the Catholic chapel in Moorfields. Several friends of the deceased wished to offer the Irish patriot the tribute of a public funeral ; but the absence of almost all his political confreres from town in- duced those more immediately interested to adopt a different course. Our readers are aware that Mr. Lawless died on Tuesday, the 8th inst., at his apartments in Cecil Street ; but those who were invited to follow him to the grave met at the residence of Henry Williams, Esq., 14, Lin- coln's Inn Fields, whence they proceeded to Cecil Street in three mourning coaches. The hearse being in readiness, the procession moved slowly along the Strand. " The first coach contained Philip Lawless, the eldest son of the deceased, Captain Lawless (his brother), Henry Williams, Esq., and Dr. Best ; in the second were Sheridan Knowles, Mr. J. O. Gumming Hill, Mr. Witham, and Mr. Ireland ; while the third was occupied by Captain Eoberts, E.N., Dr. Alley, Mr. Eoberts, and Mr. Shee. The funeral rites were solemnized by the Hon. and Eev. Mr. Spencer, brother of Earl Spencer, and the Eev. Mr. Hall. The ceremony was highly affecting, every individual present having for years been ' linked in bonds of closest amity ' with the departed. " Strangulated hernia was the proximate cause of poor Lawless's death, and the disease, though iiltimately acute, had been (if we may be pardoned the expression) consti- tutionally chronic for some time. When Dr. Lawrence, his medical attendant, suggested the absolute necessity of 4 o8 APPENDIX, submitting to an operation, the patient inquired ' whether it was an affair of life or death ?' Dr. Lawrence answered, ' That it might become BO if prompt measures were not adopted.' ' Then proceed, sir,' said Lawless ; ' delays are dangerous, and I'm quite ready. I did hope that I might have had time to write to my wife and the boys ; but go on, sir I am prepared.' "After the operation had been performed, the sufferer ral- lied for a short time, and said, 'That Lawrence is a wonderful fellow; I am a, better man by a thousand pounds.' His 'ruling passion strong in death ' was powerfully developed. He raised himself from his pillow, and with his wonted anima- tion reprobated the conduct of the Middlesex electors towards Hume, at the same time expressing his firm convic- tion that 'The Boys of Kilkenny' would do their duty. A friend who sat by his bedside delicately hinted that other subjects ought to engross his attention, and inquired whether the reading of a prayer would be agreeable. Lawless thanked the gentleman, and while in this com- munion with his God he expired. " No groan, no sigh to speak his soul's release." It would be curious, considering the connexion which existed between Shelley and John Lawless in 1812 and 1813, if the Captain Roberts, E.N., who attended the funeral of Lawless in 1837, was the same Captain Roberts, E.N., who from the top of the lighthouse at Leghorn, on the fatal 8th of July, 1822, watched with his eyeglass the homeward track of Shelley's vessel until it disappeared in the sudden storm which overwhelmed it. THE EKD. 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By EDWARD LEGGE, Correspondent at the Seat of War. Cloth, as. 6d. ; paper, is. NEVER CAUGHfrThe'thWnng Narrative of a Blockade Runner during the American War. is. CHIPS FROM A ROUGH LOG. Amusing Account of a Voyage to the Antipodes, is. THACKERAY, the Humourist and Man of Letters. A Story of his Life. By the Author of the " Life of Dickens." is. HOWARD PAUL'S New Story Booh, Lord BYRON in LOVE, &C. IS. MYSTERY OF MR E. DROOD. A delightful Adaptation. By ORPHEUS C. KERR. is. POLICEMAN Y : His Opinions on War and the Millingtary. With Illustrations by SODEN. Cloth, 2$. 6d. ; paper, is. %* Readers of Thackeray's " Policeman X Ballads " mill be much, amused with tht " Opinions " of his brother officer, " Policeman Y." BIGLOW PAPERS. By J. R. LOWELL. Tlie lest and fullest edition of these Humorous and very Clever Verses, is. ORPHEUS C. KERR [Office^Seeher-] PAPE~RS. By ETs~. NEWELL. A most mirth-provoking work. is. JOSH BILLINGS: His Booh of Sayings. Exceedingly droll, and of world-wide reputation, is. MERE VEREKER'S VENGEANCE. By TOM HOOD. A de- lightful piece of humour. Idiotically illustrated by BRTJNTON. i WIT AND HUMOUR. Verses by O. W. HOLMES, Author of the " Autocrat of the Breakfast Table." is. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Bookc. THE STANDARD EDITION. ROBINSON CRUSOE. Profusely Illustrated by ERNEST GRISET. Edited, with a New Account of the Origin of Eobinson Crusoe, by WILIIAM LEE, Esq. Crown 8vo, 55. *** This edition deserves special attention from the fact that it is the only correct one thai has been printed since the time of Defoe. Sy the kindness of Mr. Lee a copy of the rare and valuable original, in three vols., was deposited with the printers during the progress of the work, and all those alterations and blunders which have been dis- covered in every recent edition are in this case avoided. There is no living artist better fdapted to the task of illustrating Crusoe than Ernest Griset. LEGENDS OFSAVAGE LIFE. By JAMES GREENWOOD, the famous Author of " A Night in a Workhouse." With 36 inimitably droll Illustrations, drawn and coloured by ERNEST GRISET, the English. Gustave Dore. 4to, coloured, 75. 6d. ; plain, 53. % The pictures are among the most surprising which have come from this artist' 's pencil. " A Munchausen sort of book. The drawings by M. Griset are very power- ful and eccentric." Saturday Review. Walk up ! Walk up ! and see the POOL'S PARADISE ; with the Many Wonderful Adven- tures there, as seen in the strange, surprising PEEP-SHOW OF PROFESSOR WOLLEY COBBLE, Raree Showman these Five-and-Twenty Years. 2T.B. Money Returned if the Performance not Approved of. Private Parties attended on the Shortest Notice. Price ys. 6d. Crown 410, with nearly 200 immensely funny Pictures, all beautifully Coloured. THE PEOFESSOE'S LEETLE Music LESSOK. * t * One of the drollest, most comical books ever published. THE HATCHET-THROWERS. With Thirty-six Illustra- tions, coloured after the inimitably grotesque Drawings of ERNEST GRISET. 4/to, cloth gilt, js. 6d. ; plates uncoloured, 55. ** Comprise! the astonishing adventures of Three Ancient Mariners, the Sroth ff t Brass of Bristol, Mr. Corker, and Mungo Midge. JOUN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. WORKS BY BRET HARTE. WIDSLY KNOWN FOE THEIR EXQUISITE PATHOS AMD DELIGHTFUL HrmorE. (S* BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINB^O into rapturet over this Author, and givet page after page to prove that he it a literary itar of undoubted brilliancy. 1. LUCK OF ROARING CAMP, and. other Stories. By BRET HARTE. Crown 8vo, toned paper, 35. 6d. ; a paper edition, is. %* The " Saturday Review " derated three columns to the praise of these marvel- tout storiei. " Chambers' s Journal " gives several pages under the heading, " A Nem Transatlantic Genius." The "Spectator" is delighted with this new author ; and readers are everywhere aslcingfor hit books. 2. THA T HE A THEN CHINEE, and other Humorous Poems. By BRET HARTE. Cloth, very neat, 25. 6d. ; paper, is. 6d. *,* An entirely new style of humour. Since the publication of these poems in this country, extracts from them have been copied andre-copied into every newspaper through- out the country, giving the public an infinity of delight. 3. SENSATION NOVELS. Condensed by BEET HARTE. Price 2s. 6d., cloth, neat ; or, in paper, is. 6d. * A mott enjoyable book. Sere are the titles of some of the " Sensation Ifooelt : " SBLINA SEDILIA : by Miss M. E. B-dd-n and Mrs. H-n-y W-d. FANTINE : after the French of Victor Hugo. TERENCE DEUVILLB : by Ch-l-s L-v-r. THK DWSLLBB ON THE THRESHOLD : by Sir Ed-d L-tt-n B-lw-r. THB NINETY-NINB GUABDSMBN : by Al-x-a-d-r D-m-s. MB. MIDSHIPMAN BREEZY, A Naval Officer: by Captain M-rry-t, R.N. GUY HBAVYSTONE ; or, " ENTIRE :" A Muscular Novel : by the Author of " Sword and Gun." THE HAUNTED MAN : A Christ- mas Story : by Ch-r-s D-c-k-ns. MARY McGiLLUp : A Southern Novel : after Belle Boyd. Miss Mix : by Ch-l-tte Br-nte. No TITLE : by W-lk-e C-ll-ns. 4. LOTH AW : or, The Adventures of a Young Gentleman in Search of a Religion. By Mr. BENJAMINS (Bret HarteJ. Price 6d. Curiously Illustrated. %* A most mirth-making little volume. Headers of a ref ent popular novel mill enjoy it with considerable relish. It is so droll, so entirely new, that it cannot fail to amuse. 5. Illustrated Edition offHArHEATHEN CHINEE^and Poems. By BRET HARTE. With " That Heathen Chinee " set to Music by STEPHEN TUCKER, Author of " Beautiful Isle of the Sea." Cloth, very neat, 35. 6d. * t * These are the Illustrations which have so tickled our American cousins. There'* a sort of "kick-up-your-heelt" delight about them. In a word, they're immense ! 6. EAST AND WEST. The New VohmTe"of 'Verse."" By BRET HARTE, Author of "That Heathen Chinee." Cloth, very neat, 23. 6d. ; or in paper, is. 6d. *,* Readers who found pleasure in reading this Author's first books will not be disappointed with this new work. COMPANION TO BRET HARTE'S " HEATHEN CHINEE." LITTLE BREECHES, and other Pieces, Descriptive and PatJietic. By Col. JOHN HAT. Cloth, neat, as. 6d. ; in paper, is. 6d. *,* The dramatic fire and rigour of these PIKE COUNTY BALLADS will startle Engluh readers. The last lines of the first ballad are simply terrific, something entirely different from what any English author would dream of, much less put on paper. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. NEW BOOK ON THE LONDON PARKS. THE STORY OF THE LONDON PARKS. By JACOB LARWOOD. With numerous Illustrations, COLOURED AND PLAIN. Vol. I., Hyde Park ; Vol. II., St. James's Park and the Green Park. Prico i8s. the Two Volumes. *" This is a news and most interesting mark, giving a complete History of then favourite out-of-door resorts, from the earliest period to the present time. The fashions, the promenades, the rides, the reviews, and other displays in the Parks, from the merry days of Charles II. down to the present airings in Rotten Horn and drives " around the ring," are. all fully given, together with the exploits of bold highwaymen and the duels of rival lovers, and other appellants to the Code of Honour. SKETCHES OF IRISH CHARACTER. By Mrs. S. C. HALL. With numerous Illustrations on Steel and Wood, by DANIEL MACLISE, E.A., JOHN GILBERT, W. HARVEY, and G. CRUIKSHANK. 8vo, pp. 450, cloth, gilt edges, ys. 6d. %* One of the most delightful of this favourite Author's works. As a picture of Irish domestic life it has no superior. " The Irish Sketches of this lady resemble Miss Mitford's beautiful English Sketches in ' Our Village,' but they are far more vigorous and picturesque and bright." SlacTcwood 's Magazine. DROLLS OF OLD~CORNWALL ; or, Popular Romances of the West of "England. Collected and Edited by EGBERT HUNT, F.E.S. New Popular Edition, complete in one vol., with Hlustrfc- tions by GEORGE CRUIKSHANK. Price 75. 6d. \ ** " Mr. Hunt's charming book on the Drolls and Stories of the West of England." Saturday Review. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. WORKS BY MARK TWAIN WIDELY KNOWH FOE THKIE FEESH AND DELIGHTFUL HUMOFB. I. PLEASURE TRIP ON THE CONTINENT OF EUROPE. By MARK TWAIN. 500 pages, zs. ; or in cloth, 35. *** TWAIN'S PLEASURE TRIP is also issued in two-vol. form under the title of 2. "77/ INNOCENTS ABROAD." By MARK TWAIN. THE VOYAGE OUT. Cloth, neat, fine toned paper, "SUPERIOR EDITION," 35. 6d. ; or in paper, is. 3. THE NEW PILGRIM'S PROGRESS. By MARK TWAIN. THE VOYAGE HONE. Cloth, neat, fine toned paper, " SUPERIOR EDITION," 35. 6d. ; or in paper, is. ** Readers who approved of this Author's quaint story of " The Jumping Frog," will be very well satisfied with the " New Pilgrim's Progress : " there has been no work like it issued here for years. 4_ BURLESQUE "AUTOBIOGRAPHY," ''FIRST ME- DIMVAL ROMANCE," AND "ON CHILDREN." By MARK TWAIN. 6d. 5. THE JUMPING FROG, and other Humorous Sketches. By MARK TWAIN, is. " An inimitably funny book." Saturday Review. 6. EYE-OPENERS. A volume of immensely Funny Sayings, and Stories that will bring a smile upon the gruffest countenance. By the celebrated MARK TWAIN. Cloth, neat, 25. 6d. ; Cheap Paper Edition, is. 7._ SCREAMERS. A Gathering of Delicious Bits and Short Stories, by the renowned MARK TWAIN. Cloth, neat, 25. 6d. ; Cheap Paper Edition, is. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY LONDON. Very Important New Books. MAGICIAN'S OWN BOOK. Containing Ample Instructions for PERFORMANCE in LEGERDEMAIN, CUPS and BALLS, EGGS, HATS, HANDKERCHIEFS, &c. By the Author of " The Secret Out." All from Actual Experience, and Edited by W. H. CR'EMER, Jun., of Regent Street. With 200 Illustrations, 45. 6d. THE SECRET OUT; or, One Thousand Tricks with Cards, and other Recreations ; with Entertaining Experiments in Drawing- Room or " White Magic." By the Author of the " Magician's Own Book." Edited by W. H. CREMER, Jun., of Eegent Street. With 300 Engravings. Crown 8vo, cloth, 45. 6d. *,* These Boobs are complete Cyclopedias of Legerdemain. Under the title of " Le Magicien des Salons " the first has long been a standard Magic Book with all French and German Professors of the Art. The tricks are described so carefully, with engravings to illustrate them, that anybody can easily learn how to perform them. "ENTIRELY NEW GAMES. THE MERRY CIRCLE. A Book of NEW, GRACEFUL, and INTELLECTUAL GAMES and AMUSEMENTS. Edited by Mrs. CLARA BELLEW. Crown 8vo, numerous Illustrations, 45. 6d. ** A new and capital book of Household Amusements. These are in every way Intellectual Games, and will please both old and young. It ii an excellent book to consult before going to an evening party. THE ART OF AMUSING. A Collection of Graceful Arts, Games, Tricks, Puzzles, and Charades, intended to amuse every- body, and enable all to amuse everybody else. By FRANK BELLEW With nearly 300 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 4s. 6d. ** One of the most entertaining handbooks for amusement ever published, NOTICE. Of the four books offered above, the first is the most Advanced in the Mysteries of White Magic. The second is a capital Beginner^ Book on the Wonderful Art of Conjuring. The third work, " The Merry Circle," is a book of an Advanced Character in Family Amusements, and requires considerable judgment on the part of the players. The last work is a capital introductory book to the Art of Amusing generally. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. WOKKS OF THE LATE AETEMUS WARD. New Edition, price i. ; by post i. id. ARTEMUS WARD : HIS BOOK. The Author's Enlarged Edition. With Notes and Introduction by the Editor of the " Biglow Papers." One of the wittiest, and certainly one of the most mirth-provok- ing, books published for many years. Containing the whole of the Original, with the following extra chapters : Babes in the Wood ; Tavern Accom- modation, Betsy-Jain-Be-Orgunized; A. Ward's First Umbrella ; Brig- ham Young's Wives ; Artemus Ward's Brother ; Mormon Bill of Fare. NOTICE. Mr. Hotten' s Edition is the only one published in thi country with the function of the Author. The Saturday Review says of Mr. Hotten's edition: "The author combines the powers of Thackeray with those of Albert Smith. The salt is rubbed in by a native hand one which bag the gift of tickling " " We never, not even in the pages of our best humorists, read anything so laughable and so shrewd as we nave seen in this book by the mirthful Artemus." Public Opinion. ARTEMUS WARD: His Travels Among the Mormons and on the Rampage. Edited by E. P. KINGSTON-, the Agent and Companion of A. WAKD whilst "on the Rampage." New Edition, price is. *** Some of Artemus' 's most mirth-provoking papers are to be found in thig book. Tht chapters upon the Mormons will unbend the sternest countenance. At bits of fun tiny are IJTMENSE ! ARTEMUS WARD AMONG THE FENIANS: with the Showman's Experiences of Life at Washington, and Military Ardour at Saldins- ville. Toned paper, price 6d. ; by post, -}d. ARTEMUS WARD'S LECTURE AT THE EGYPT/ AN HAH', with the Panorama. Edited by the late T. W. ROBERTSON (Author of "Caste," "Ours," "Society," &c.) and E. P. KINGSTON. Small 4to, exquisitely printed, bound in green and gold, with NUMEROUS TINTED ILLUB- TKATIONS, price 6s. " Mr. Hotten has conceived the happy idea of printing Artemus Ward's ' Lecture ' in such a way as to afford the reader an accurate notion of the emphasis, by-play, &c., with which it was delivered. We have no hesitation in saying that Mr. Hotten has almost restored the great humourist to the flesh." Daily Telegraph. "The tomahawk fell from our hands as we roared with laughter the pipa of peace slipped from between our lips as our eyes filled with tears ! Laughter for Artemus's wit tears for his untimely death! This book is a record of both. Those who never saw Artemus in the flesh, let them read of him in the spirit." Tomahawk. " It actually reproduces Ward's Lecture, which was brimful of first-class wit and humour." Daily News. "It keeps yon in fits of laughter." Leader. "One of the choice and curious volumeafor the issue of which Mr. Hotten has become famous." City Frets. " Tke Lecture is not alone droll : it is full of information." Examiner. "It adds one to our books of genuine fun." Sunday Times. lamo, 200 pages, i*. 6d. ; or cloth, neat, 2*. ARTEMUS WARD IN LONDON. Comprising the Letters to "Punch," and other Humorous Papers, now first collected. ** Contains some quaint and humorous compositions which were found upon the father's table after his decease. ARfEMUS~WARD, Complete. The Works of CHARLES FARBER BROWNE, better known as "ARTBMUS WARD," now first collacted. Crown 8vo, with fine Portrait, facsimile of handwriting, &c., 540 pages, cloth neat, 7*. 6d. ** Comprises all that the humourist <*as written in England or America. Admirer* of poor Artemus Ward will be glad to possess his writings in a complete form. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. FLAGELLATION and the FLAGELLANTS; A History of the Rod in all Countries, from the Earliest Period to the Present Time. By the Rev. WILLIAM COOPEK, B.A. With numerous Illustra- tions. Thick crown 8vo, 125. 6d. THE ROD IN THE CHUBCH, CONVENT, MONASTERY, PBISON, ABMY, NAVY, IN PUBLIC AND IN PHIVATE. THE BIRCH IN THE FAMILY, LADIES' SEMIN ABIES, BOYS' SCHOOLS, COLLEGES, THE BOUBOIB, Ancient and Modern. ** " A very remarkable, and certainly a very readable volume. Those who care for quaint stories of the birch will find much matter for reflection, and not a little amusement, in Mr. Cooper's 'Flagellation' Book.'-' Daily Telegraph. The ENGLISHMAN'S HOUSE, from a Cottage toa Mansion. A Practical Guide to Members of Building Societies, and all inte- rested in Selecting or Building a House. By C. J. RICHARDSON, Architect, Author of " Old English Mansions," &c. Second Edition, Corrected and Enlarged, with nearly 600 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, 550 pages, cloth, 73. 6d. _ *** This Work might not inappropriately be ~. termed "A Hook of ^ Houses." It gives every variety of house, from a workman's cottage to a nobleman's palace. The look is intended to supply a want long felt, viz., a plain non-ttchnical ac- count of every style of house, with the cost and manner of building. JOHN CAMDEN HCTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. RUSKIN AND CRUIKSHANK. " German Popular Stories. " Collected by the Brothers GRIMM. Translated by EDGAR TAYLOR. Edited by JOHN EUSKIN. With Twenty-two Illustrations after the inimitable designs of GEORGE CRUIKSHANK. BOTH SERIES COM- PLETE. Cloth, 8vo, 6s. 6d. ; gilt leaves, 75. 6d. ** Thete are the designs which Mr. Buskin hat praised to highly, placing them far above all Cruikshank's other works of a similar character. So rare had the original book (published in 1823-1826^ become, that 5 to 6 per copy teat an ordinary price. " FAMILY FAIRY TALES;" or, Glimpses of Elfland at Heatherston Hall. Edited by CHOLMONDELEY PENNELL, Author of " Puck on Pegasus," &c. Adorned with beautiful Pictures of " My Lord Lion," " King Uggermugger," and other Great Folks. Hand- somely printed on toned paper, in cloth, green and gold, price 45. 6d. plain, 55. 6d. coloured. %* This charming volume has been universally praised by the critical press. SCHOOL LIFE AT WINCHESTER COLLEGE; or, The Eeminiscences of a Winchester Junior. By the Author of " The Log of the Water Lily," and ' The Water Lily on the Danube." Second Edition, Revised, COLOURED PLATES, 73. 6cL ** This look does for Winchester what " Tom Brovn's School Days" did for Sugby. PRINCE UBBELY BUB^TE^NEW^STORY BOOK. The Dragon all Covered idtK Spikes ; The Long-tailed Nag ; The Three One-legged Men; The Old Fly and the Young Fly; Tom and the Ogre; and many other Tales. By J. TEMPLETON LUCAS. With numerous Illustrations by MATT MORGAN, BARNES, GORDON THOMPSON, BRUXTON, and other Artists. In small 4to, green and gold, 45. 6d. ; gilt leaves, 55. 6d. ** The Times devoted a special column in praise of this Few Story Hook. "MADGE ANDTHE FAIRY~!MNTENT~ A charming child's Story. By BLANCHARD JERROLD. Intended to inculcate a spirit of Contentment. With nearly 100 Pictures of the Industry requisite to produce the Christmas Pudding. 45. 6d. LITTLE CHARUE'S LIFE OF HIMSELF. Edited by the Rev. W. E. CLARK, M.A., Vicar of Taunton. 4to, cloth, full of curious Illustrations, 35. 6d. *,* A most amusing Present for a child. It is an exact facsimile of the autobiography of a boy between six and seven years of age, as written by himself in his copy-book. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. CHARLES DICKENS The Story of his Life. By the Author of "The Life of Thackeray." Price 75. 6d., with NUME- ROUS PORTRAITS AND ILLUSTRATIONS, 370 pp. " Anecdotes seem to have poured in upon the author from all quarters. . . Turn vrhere.we will through these 370 pleasant pages, some- thing worth reading is sure to meet the eye." The Stan- dard. Dichens's Life : An* other Edition, without Illustrations, uniform with the "CHARLES DICKENS EDITION," aud forming a Supple- mentary Volume to that favourite issue, crimson cloth, 35. 6d. SUMMER HOUSB. Dichens's Life. CHEAP POPULAR EDITION, in paper, 2s. DICKENS'S SPEECHES, Literary and Social. Now first collected. With Chapters on " Charles Dickens as a Letter Writer, Poet, and Public Eeader." Price 75. 6d., with Fine Portrait by Count D'ORSAY, 370 pages. *** " His capital speeches. Every one of them reads like a page of ' Pickwick.' " The Critic. " His speeches are as good as any of his printed writings." The Times. Dickens's Speeches. Uniform with the " CHARLES DICKENS EDI- TION," and forming a Supplement- ary Volume to that favourite issue, crimson cloth, 33. 6d. Dichens's Speeches. CHEAP EDITION, without Portrait, in paper wrapper, 23. HUNTED DOWN. A Story by CHARLES DICKENS. With some Account of Wainewright, the Poisoner. Price 6d. ** A powerful and intensely thrilling story, now first printed in look-form in this country. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. For Gold and Silversmiths. PRIVATE BOOK OF USEFUL ALLOYS AND MEMORANDA for GOLDSMITHS and JEWELLERS. By JAMES E. COLLINS, C.E., of Birmingham. Eoyal i6mo, 35. 6d. ** The iecretg of the Gold and Silversmiths' Art are here giren, for the benefit of young Apprentices and Practitioners. It it an invaluable book to the Tritde. THE STANDARD WORK ON DIAMONDS AND PRECIOUS STONES : their History, Value, and Properties ; with Simple Tests for ascertaining their Reality. By HARRY EMANUEL, F.R.G.S. With numerous Illustrations, tinted and plain. New Edition. Prices brought down to the present time, full gilt, 6s. "Will be acceptable to many readers." Times' review of three columns. "An invaluable work for buyers and sellers." Spectator. ** This Second Edition is greatly superior to the previous one. It gicei the latest market value for Diamonds and Precious Stones of every size. GUTTER'S MODERN CONFECTIONER. The Best Book on Confectionery and Desserts. An Entirely New Edition of this Standard Work, adapted for Private Families or Large Establish- ments. By WILLIAM JEANES, Chief Confectioner at Messrs. GUNTER'S, Berkeley Square. With Plates, 8vo, cloth, 6s. 6d. " All housekeepers should have it." Daily Telegraph. ** This work has icon for itself the reputation of being the Standard Englith 'Book on the preparation of all kinds of Confectionery, and on the arrangement of Dessert*. HOUSEKEEPER'S ASSISTANT. A Collection of the most valuable Recipes, carefully written down for future use by Mrs. B , during her Forty Years' active Service. Cloth, price 2s. 6d. *** Ai much at two guineas have been paid for a copy of this invaluable little work. THE YOUNG~BOTANIST: A Popular Guide~to Elemen- tary Botany. By T. S. RALPH, of the Linnsean Society. In i vol., with 300 Drawings from Nature, 2s. 6d. plain ; 45. Coloured by hand. ** An excellent book for the young beginner. The objects selected as illuslratiant are either easy of access as specimens of wild plants, or are common in gardens. CHAMPAGNE: its History, Manufacture, Properties, Sfc. By CHARLES TOVET, Author of " Wine and Wine Countries," "British and Foreign Spirits," &c.,Cr. 8vo, numerous illustrations, 55. ** A practical work, by one of the largest champagne merchants in London. BRIGHAM'S (Dr. A.) MENTAL EXERTION: Its In- fluence on Health. With Notes and Remarks on Dyspepsia of Literary Men. By ARTHUR LEAKED, M.D. 8vo, boards, is. 6d. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. NAPOLEON III., THE MAN OF HIS TIME: PART I. The STORY OF THE LIFE OF NAPOLEON III., as told by JAS. W. HASWELL. PART II. The SAME STORY, as told by the POPULAR CARICATURES of the past Thirty-five Years. Crown 8vo, 400 pages, js. 6d. *** The object of this Work it to give Both Sides of the Story. The Artist has gon over the entire ground of Continental and English Caricatures for the Last third of a century, and a very interesting look is the result. CRUIKSHANK'S COMIC ALMANACK. ^Nineteen Years' gathering of the BEST HUMOUR, the WITTIEST SAYINGS, the Drollest Quips, and the Best Things of THACKERAY, HOOD, MAY- HEW, ALBERT SMITH, A'BECKETT, ROBERT BROUGH, 1835-1853. With nearly Two Thousand Woodcuts and Steel Engravings by the inimitable CRUIKSHANK, HINE, LANDELLS, &c. Two Series, Crown 8vo, each of 600 pages, price 7$. 6d. each. ** Amost ex- traordinary ga- thering of the best wit and humour of the past half - cen- tury. Readers can purchase one Series and judge for themselves. The work forms a " Comic His- tory of Eng- and" for twenty years. JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. Original Edition of the Famous JOE MILLER'S JESTS; the politest Repartees, most elegant Bon-Mots, and most pleasing short Stories in tlie English Language. London : printed by T. Head, 1739. Remarkable facsimile. 8vo, half morocco, price gs. 6d. * * ONLY A VERT FEW COPIES OF THIS HUMOROUS AND RACY OLD BOOK HAVE BEEN REPRODUCED. CARDS. With Sixty curious Illus- trations, 550 pp., price 75. 6d. "A highly interesting volume." Morning Post. ANECDOTES, ANCIENT AXD 3IODEBN GAMES, G'ONjriUNG, FOBTUNB- TELLING AND CAKD- SHABPIXG, SKILL AND SLEIGHT OF HAND, GAMBLING AND CAL- CULATION, CABTOMANCY AND CHEATING, OLD GASILS AND GAMING- HOUSES, CARD REVELS AND BLIND HOOKEY, PlCQUET AND VlNGT- ZT-UN, WHIST AND CBIBBAGB, OLD-FASH- IONED TBICKS. SLANG DICTIONARY; or, The Vulgar Words, Street Phrases, and " Fast " Expressions of High and Low Society ; many with their Etymology, and a few with their History traced. WITH CURIOUS ILLUSTRATIONS. A New Dictionary of Colloquial English. Pp. 328, in 8vo, price 6s. 6d. " It may bo doubted if there exists a more amusing volutt e in the English language." Spec- aiiap as a Hieroglyphic cerS, v ama .s a Jo bf dnink , ju^ng t h e ampu~ workof reference. faP^ifflsyr Fllre of tnis book? beauty of the ^^*jffiyMr?-~ ^S We do not envy \ ne thoughts that pos- 4?^' /y%/^ -^' i^^W man wno > reading sessed her soul, and ^^^=^^ /&$*_-. it, has only a sneer found expression in ^__^^ y^-sfepSfc/^fovftil F~- for i* 8 writer ; nor language at once Jr~ ^ a/^vQjIUipia the woman who finds pure and melodi- ^ J^SjpiP//ffJSSL ic m ner heart * ous." Press. ^sSE^/x/^/flSfiE^- ^ turn awaywith aver- sionate richness ,^^7^^^^^^^~ Hound Table. about many of the ^Z^fa^jlfyy'^^:? "An amusing lit- poems which is al- //'"^7s%s ~~~ ^ e book, unhappily most startling." U^.^^^^ posthumous, which Sunday Times. //^/"^ a distinguished wo- " What can we \i!/s man has left as a say of this gifted V/ legacy to mankind and wayward wo- '^""v a tne a ^ e -" ^ a ~ man, the existence ' turday Review. Fcap. 8vo, 450 pages, with fine Portrait and Autograph, 75. 6d. WALT WHITMAN'S POEMS. (Leaves of Grass, Drum- Taps, Sfc.) Selected and Edited by WILLIAM MICHAEL EOSSETTI. " Whitman is a poet who bears and needs to be read HS a whole, and then the volume and torrent of his power carry the -disfigurements along with it and away. He is really a fine fellow." Chambers's Journal, in a. very long notice. THE~EARTHWARD PILGRIMAGE. By MONCURE CONWAY. Cr. 8vo, 400 pages, cloth, neat, 75. 6d. ** This volume has excited considerable discussion, as it advances many entirely new views upon the life hereafter. The titles to some of the chapters will convey an idea of the contents of the work: "How I left the world to come for that which is." JOHN CAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. MR. SWINBURNE'S ESSAY. *** " A wonderful literary performance." "Splendour of style and majestic beauty of diction never surpassed." WILLIAM BLAKE: A Critical Essay. With facsimile Paintings, Coloured by Hand, from the Original Drawings painted by Blake and his Wife. Thick 8vo, pp. 350, i6s. "An extraordi- nary work : violent, extravagant, per- verse, calculated to startle, to shock, and to alarm many readers.but abound- g incf in beauty, and characterized by in- "- tellectual grasp. . . . His power of word-painting is often truly wonder- ful sometimes, it must be admitted, in excess, but always full of matter, form, and colour, and instinct with a sense of vitality." Daily News, Feb. 12, 1868. "It is in every way worthy of Mr. Swinburne's high fame. In no prose work can be found passages of keener poetry, or more finished grace, or more impressive harmony. Strong, vigorous, and mu- sical, the style sweeps on like a river." The Sunday Times, Jan. 12, 1868. MR. SWINBURNE'S SONG OF ITALY. Fcap. 8vo, toned paper, cloth, price 35. 6d. ** The Athenaeum remarks of this poem " Seldom has such a chant been heard, BO full of glow, strength, and colour." MR. SWINBURNE'S POEMS AND BALLADS. FOURTH EDITION. Price gs. MR. SWINBURNE'S NOTES ON HIS POEMS, and on the Reviews which have appeared upon them. Price is. MR. SWINBURNE'S ATALANTA IN CALYDON. New Bdi- tion. Fcap. 8vo, price 6s. MR. SWINBURNE'S GHASTELARD. A Tragedy. New Edition. Price 73. MR. SWINBURNE'S QUEEN MOTHER AND ROSAMOND. New Edition. Fcap. 8yo, price 55. MR. SWINBURNE'S BOTHWELL A Neuj^Poem. [In preparation. JOHN GAMDEN HOTTEN, 74 AND 75, PICCADILLY, LONDON. Very Important New Books. * portant assistance to all interested in Genealogical Inquiries, difficult Pedigree Researches, or in the compilation of Family Histories. He has the following FAMILY HISTORIES FOR SALE: FORSTER and FOSTER FAMILIES. 4to. Illustrations, 315. 6cZ. BAIRD FAMILY. Royal 8vo. Facsimiles. IDS. 6d. CHICHESTER and RALEIGH FAMILIES. 4to. Illustrations, 2is. ; with Arms emblazoned, 315. 6c7. MILLAIS FAMILY. With Etchings by Millais. 28s. WASHINGTON FAMILY. Preparing. COLE FAMILY. STUART FAMILY. 8vo, half morocco. 8s. 6d. CHICHELE FAMILY. (Contains Pedigrees of many other Families.) 4to. ijs. 6d. ROLL OF CAERLAVEROCK, with the Arms of the Knights and others present at the Siege of the Castle in Scotland, A.D. 1300. Emblazoned in Gold and Colours, 4to, 125. MAGNA CHARTA. EXACT FACSIMILE of the Original Docu- ment in the British Museum. With ARMS AND SEALS OF THE BAKONS EMBLAZONED IN GOLD AND COLOURS. A.D. 1215. 55. ** Copied by express permission, and the only correct drawing of the Great Charter ever taken. A full translation, tcith notes, price 6d. The Charter framed and glazed in carved oak, 22*. 6d. POLL OF BATTLE ABBEY: A List of the Normans who came over ivith William the Conqueror, and settled in this Country, A.D. 1066-67. WITH AKMS OF THE BARONS EMBLAZONED IN GOLD AND COLOURS. Price ss. %* A most curious document, and of the greatest interest to all of Norman descent. Framed and glazed in carved oak, 22*. 6d. WARRANT TO EXECUTE CHARLES I. Exact Facsimile, with the 59 Signatures of Begicides, and Seals. Price 2s. ; by post, as. 4