Samuel Butler was born on the 4th December, 1835,
at the Rectory, Langar,
near Bingham, in Nottinghamshire. His father
was the Rev. Thomas Butler,
then Rector of Langar, afterwards one of the canons
of Lincoln Cathedral,
and his mother was Fanny Worsley, daughter of John
Philip Worsley of
Arno’s Vale, Bristol, sugar-refiner. His
grandfather was Dr. Samuel
Butler, the famous headmaster of Shrewsbury School,
afterwards Bishop of
Lichfield. The Butlers are not related either
to the author of
Hudibras, or to the author of the Analogy,
or to the present Master
of Trinity College, Cambridge.
Butler’s father, after being at school at Shrewsbury
under Dr. Butler,
went up to St. John’s College, Cambridge; he
took his degree in 1829,
being seventh classic and twentieth senior optime;
he was ordained and
returned to Shrewsbury, where he was for some time
assistant master at
the school under Dr. Butler. He married in 1832
and left Shrewsbury for
Langar. He was a learned botanist, and made
a collection of dried plants
which he gave to the Town Museum of Shrewsbury.
Butler’s childhood and early life were spent
at Langar among the
surroundings of an English country rectory, and his
education was begun
by his father. In 1843, when he was only eight
years old, the first
great event in his life occurred; the family, consisting
of his father
and mother, his two sisters, his brother and himself,
went to Italy. The
South-Eastern Railway stopped at Ashford, whence they
travelled to Dover
in their own carriage; the carnage was put on board
the steamboat, they
crossed the Channel, and proceeded to Cologne, up
the Rhine to Basle and
on through Switzerland into Italy, through Parma,
where Napoleon’s widow
was still reigning, Modena, Bologna, Florence, and
so to Rome. They had
to drive where there was no railway, and there was
then none in all Italy
except between Naples and Castellamare. They
seemed to pass a fresh
custom-house every day, but, by tipping the searchers,
generally got
through without inconvenience. The bread was
sour and the Italian butter
rank and cheesy often uneatable.
Beggars ran after the carriage all day
long, and when they got nothing jeered at the travellers
and called them
heretics. They spent half the winter in Rome,
and the children were
taken up to the top of St. Peter’s as a treat
to celebrate their father’s
birthday. In the Sistine Chapel they saw the
cardinals kiss the toe of
Pope Gregory XVI., and in the Corso, in broad daylight,
they saw a monk
come rolling down a staircase like a sack of potatoes,
bundled into the
street by a man and his wife. The second half
of the winter was spent in
Naples. This early introduction to the land
which he always thought of
and often referred to as his second country made an
ineffaceable
impression upon him.
In January, 1846, he went to school at Allesley, near
Coventry, under the
Rev. E. Gibson. He seldom referred to his life
there, though sometimes
he would say something that showed he had not forgotten
all about it. For
instance, in 1900, Mr. Sydney C. Cockerell, now the
Director of the
Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, showed him a medieval
missal, laboriously
illuminated. He found that it fatigued him to
look at it, and said that
such books ought never to be made. Cockerell
replied that such books
relieved the tedium of divine service, on which Butler
made a note ending
thus:
Give me rather a robin or a peripatetic
cat like the one whose loss the parishioners of
St. Clement Danes are still deploring. When I
was at school at Allesley the boy who knelt opposite
me at morning prayers, with his face not more than
a yard away from mine, used to blow pretty little
bubbles with his saliva which he would send sailing
off the tip of his tongue like miniature soap bubbles;
they very soon broke, but they had a career of
a foot or two. I never saw anyone else able
to get saliva bubbles right away from him and, though
I have endeavoured for some fifty years and more
to acquire the art, I never yet could start the
bubble off my tongue without its bursting. Now
things like this really do relieve the tedium of
church, but no missal that I have ever seen will
do anything except increase it.
In 1848 he left Allesley and went to Shrewsbury under
the Rev. B. H.
Kennedy. Many of the recollections of his school
life at Shrewsbury are
reproduced for the school life of Ernest Pontifex
at Roughborough in The
Way of All Flesh, Dr. Skinner being Dr. Kennedy.
During these years he first heard the music of Handel;
it went straight
to his heart and satisfied a longing which the music
of other composers
had only awakened and intensified. He became
as one of the listening
brethren who stood around “when Jubal struck
the chorded shell” in the
Song for Saint Cecilia’s Day:
Less than a god, they thought, there
could not dwell
Within the hollow of that shell
That spoke so sweetly and so well.
This was the second great event in his life, and henceforward
Italy and
Handel were always present at the bottom of his mind
as a kind of double
pedal to every thought, word, and deed. Almost
the last thing he ever
asked me to do for him, within a few days of his death,
was to bring
Solomon that he might refresh his memory as
to the harmonies of “With
thee th’ unsheltered moor I’d trace.”
He often tried to like the music
of Bach and Beethoven, but found himself compelled
to give them up they
bored him too much. Nor was he more successful
with the other great
composers; Haydn, for instance, was a sort of Horace,
an agreeable,
facile man of the world, while Mozart, who must have
loved Handel, for he
wrote additional accompaniments to the Messiah,
failed to move him. It
was not that he disputed the greatness of these composers,
but he was out
of sympathy with them, and never could forgive the
last two for having
led music astray from the Handel tradition, and paved
the road from Bach
to Beethoven. Everything connected with Handel
interested him. He
remembered old Mr. Brooke, Rector of Gamston, North
Notts, who had been
present at the Handel Commemoration in 1784, and his
great-aunt, Miss
Susannah Apthorp, of Cambridge, had known a lady who
had sat upon
Handel’s knee. He often regretted that
these were his only links with
“the greatest of all composers.”
Besides his love for Handel he had a strong liking
for drawing, and,
during the winter of 1853-4, his family again took
him to Italy, where,
being now eighteen, he looked on the works of the
old masters with
intelligence.
In October, 1854, he went into residence at St. John’s
College,
Cambridge. He showed no aptitude for any particular
branch of academic
study, nevertheless he impressed his friends as being
likely to make his
mark. Just as he used reminiscences of his own
schooldays at Shrewsbury
for Ernest’s life at Roughborough, so he used
reminiscences of his own
Cambridge days for those of Ernest. When the
Simeonites, in The Way of
All Flesh, “distributed tracts, dropping
them at night in good men’s
letter boxes while they slept, their tracts got burnt
or met with even
worse contumely.” Ernest Pontifex went
so far as to parody one of these
tracts and to get a copy of the parody “dropped
into each of the
Simeonites’ boxes.” Ernest did this
in the novel because Butler had done
it in real life. Mr. A. T. Bartholomew, of the
University Library, has
found, among the Cambridge papers of the late J. Willis
Clark’s
collection, three printed pieces belonging to the
year 1855 bearing on
the subject. He speaks of them in an article
headed “Samuel Butler and
the Simeonites,” and signed A. T. B. in the
Cambridge Magazine, 1st
March, 1913; the first is “a genuine Simeonite
tract; the other two are
parodies. All three are anonymous. At
the top of the second parody is
written ‘By S. Butler, March 31.’”
The article gives extracts from the
genuine tract and the whole of Butler’s parody.
Besides parodying Simeonite tracts, Butler wrote various
other papers
during his undergraduate days, some of which, preserved
by one of his
contemporaries, who remained a lifelong friend, the
Rev. Canon Joseph
M’Cormick, now Rector of St. James’s,
Piccadilly, are reproduced in The
Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912).
He also steered the Lady Margaret first boat, and
Canon M’Cormick told me
of a mishap that occurred on the last night of the
races in 1857. Lady
Margaret had been head of the river since 1854, Canon
M’Cormick was
rowing 5, Philip Pennant Pearson (afterwards P. Pennant)
was 7, Canon
Kynaston, of Durham (whose name formerly was Snow),
was stroke, and
Butler was cox. When the cox let go of the bung
at starting, the rope
caught in his rudder lines, and Lady Margaret was
nearly bumped by Second
Trinity. They escaped, however, and their pursuers
were so much
exhausted by their efforts to catch them that they
were themselves bumped
by First Trinity at the next corner. Butler
wrote home about it:
11 March, 1857. Dear Mamma:
My foreboding about steering was on the last day
nearly verified by an accident which was more deplorable
than culpable the effects of which would have been
ruinous had not the presence of mind of N in
the boat rescued us from the very jaws of defeat.
The scene is one which never can fade from my remembrance
and will be connected always with the gentlemanly
conduct of the crew in neither using opprobrious
language nor gesture towards your unfortunate son
but treating him with the most graceful forbearance;
for in most cases when an accident happens which
in itself is but slight, but is visited with serious
consequences, most people get carried away with
the impression created by the last so as to entirely
forget the accidental nature of the cause and if
we had been quite bumped I should have been ruined,
as it is I get praise for coolness and good steering
as much as and more than blame for my accident and
the crew are so delighted at having rowed a race
such as never was seen before that they are satisfied
completely. All the spectators saw the race
and were delighted; another inch and I should never
have held up my head again. One thing is
safe, it will never happen again.
The Eagle, “a magazine supported by members
of St. John’s College,”
issued its first number in the Lent term of 1858;
it contains an article
by Butler “On English Composition and Other
Matters,” signed “Cellarius”:
Most readers will have anticipated me
in admitting that a man should be clear of his
meaning before he endeavours to give it any kind of
utterance, and that, having made up his mind what
to say, the less thought he takes how to say it,
more than briefly, pointedly and plainly, the better.
From this it appears that, when only just over twenty-two,
Butler had
already discovered and adopted those principles of
writing from which he
never departed.
In the fifth number of the Eagle is an article,
“Our Tour,” also signed
“Cellarius”; it is an account of a tour
made in June, 1857, with a friend
whose name he Italianized into Giuseppe Verdi, through
France into North
Italy, and was written, so he says, to show how they
got so much into
three weeks and spent only 25 pounds; they did not,
however, spend quite
so much, for the article goes on, after bringing them
back to England,
“Next day came safely home to dear old St. John’s,
cash in hand 7d.”
Butler worked hard with Shilleto, an old pupil of
his grandfather, and
was bracketed 12th in the Classical Tripos of 1858.
Canon M’Cormick told
me that he would no doubt have been higher but for
the fact that he at
first intended to go out in mathematics; it was only
during the last year
of his time that he returned to the classics, and
his being so high as he
was spoke well for the classical education of Shrewsbury.
It had always been an understood thing that he was
to follow in the
footsteps of his father and grandfather and become
a clergyman;
accordingly, after taking his degree, he went to London
and began to
prepare for ordination, living and working among the
poor as lay
assistant under the Rev. Philip Perring, Curate of
St. James’s,
Piccadilly, an old pupil of Dr. Butler at Shrewsbury.
Placed among
such surroundings, he felt bound to think out for
himself many
theological questions which at this time were first
presented to him,
and, the conclusion being forced upon him that he
could not believe in
the efficacy of infant baptism, he declined to be
ordained.
It was now his desire to become an artist; this, however,
did not meet
with the approval of his family, and he returned to
Cambridge to try for
pupils and, if possible, to get a fellowship.
He liked being at
Cambridge, but there were few pupils and, as there
seemed to be little
chance of a fellowship, his father wished him to come
down and adopt some
profession. A long correspondence took place
in the course of which many
alternatives were considered. There are letters
about his becoming a
farmer in England, a tutor, a homoepathic doctor,
an artist, or a
publisher, and the possibilities of the army, the
bar, and diplomacy.
Finally it was decided that he should emigrate to
New Zealand. His
passage was paid, and he was to sail in the Burmah,
but a cousin of his
received information about this vessel which caused
him, much against his
will, to get back his passage money and take a berth
in the Roman
Emperor, which sailed from Gravesend on one of
the last days of
September, 1859. On that night, for the first
time in his life, he did
not say his prayers. “I suppose the sense
of change was so great that it
shook them quietly off. I was not then a sceptic;
I had got as far as
disbelief in infant baptism, but no further.
I felt no compunction of
conscience, however, about leaving off my morning
and evening
prayers simply I could no longer say them.”
The Roman Emperor, after a voyage every incident
of which interested
him deeply, arrived outside Port Lyttelton.
The captain shouted to the
pilot who came to take them in:
“Has the Robert Small arrived?”
“No,” replied the pilot, “nor yet
the Burmah.”
And Butler, writing home to his people, adds the comment:
“You may
imagine what I felt.”
The Burmah was never heard of again.
He spent some time looking round, considering what
to do and how to
employ the money with which his father was ready to
supply him, and
determined upon sheep-farming. He made several
excursions looking for
country, and ultimately took up a run which is still
called Mesopotamia,
the name he gave it because it is situated among the
head-waters of the
Rangitata.
It was necessary to have a horse, and he bought one
for 55 pounds, which
was not considered dear. He wrote home that
the horse’s name was
“Doctor”: “I hope he is a Homoeopathist.”
From this, and from the fact
that he had already contemplated becoming a homoeopathic
doctor himself,
I conclude that he had made the acquaintance of Dr.
Robert Ellis Dudgeon,
the eminent homoeopathist, while he was doing parish
work in London.
After his return to England Dr. Dudgeon was his medical
adviser, and
remained one of his most intimate friends until the
end of his life.
Doctor, the horse, is introduced into Erewhon Revisited;
the shepherd
in Chapter XXVI tells John Hicks that Doctor “would
pick fords better
than that gentleman could, I know, and if the gentleman
fell off him he
would just stay stock still.”
Butler carried on his run for about four and a half
years, and the open-
air life agreed with him; he ascribed to this the
good health he
afterwards enjoyed. The following, taken from
a notebook he kept in the
colony and destroyed, gives a glimpse of one side
of his life there; he
preserved the note because it recalled New Zealand
so vividly.
April, 1861. It is Sunday.
We rose later than usual. There are five of
us sleeping in the hut. I sleep in a bunk on
one side of the fire; Mr. Haast, a German who
is making a geological survey of the province,
sleeps upon the opposite one; my bullock-driver and
hut-keeper have two bunks at the far end of the
hut, along the wall, while my shepherd lies in
the loft among the tea and sugar and flour. It
was a fine morning, and we turned out about seven o’clock.
The usual mutton and bread for breakfast
with a pudding made of flour and water baked in
the camp oven after a joint of meat Yorkshire
pudding, but without eggs. While we were at
breakfast a robin perched on the table and sat
there a good while pecking at the sugar. We went
on breakfasting with little heed to the robin, and
the robin went on pecking with little heed to us.
After breakfast Pey, my bullock-driver, went to
fetch the horses up from a spot about two miles
down the river, where they often run; we wanted to
go pig-hunting.
I go into the garden and gather a few
peascods for seed till the horses should come up.
Then Cook, the shepherd, says that a fire has sprung
up on the other side of the river. Who could
have lit it? Probably someone who had intended
coming to my place on the preceding evening and
has missed his way, for there is no track of any sort
between here and Phillips’s. In a quarter
of an hour he lit another fire lower down, and
by that time, the horses having come up, Haast and
myself remembering how Dr. Sinclair had
just been drowned so near the same spot think
it safer to ride over to him and put him across the
river. The river was very low and so clear that
we could see every stone. On getting to the
river-bed we lit a fire and did the same on leaving
it; our tracks would guide anyone over the intervening
ground.
Besides his occupation with the sheep, he found time
to play the piano,
to read and to write. In the library of St.
John’s College, Cambridge,
are two copies of the Greek Testament, very fully
annotated by him at the
University and in the colony. He also read the
Origin of Species,
which, as everyone knows, was published in 1859.
He became “one of Mr.
Darwin’s many enthusiastic admirers, and wrote
a philosophic dialogue
(the most offensive form, except poetry and books
of travel into supposed
unknown countries, that even literature can assume)
upon the Origin of
Species” (Unconscious Memory, close
of Chapter I). This dialogue,
unsigned, was printed in the Press, Canterbury,
New Zealand, on 20th
December, 1862. A copy of the paper was sent
to Charles Darwin, who
forwarded it to a, presumably, English editor with
a letter, now in the
Canterbury Museum, New Zealand, speaking of the dialogue
as “remarkable
from its spirit and from giving so clear and accurate
an account of Mr.
D’s theory.” It is possible that
Butler himself sent the newspaper
containing his dialogue to Mr. Darwin; if so he did
not disclose his
name, for Darwin says in his letter that he does not
know who the author
was. Butler was closely connected with the Press,
which was founded by
James Edward FitzGerald, the first Superintendent
of the Province, in
May, 1861; he frequently contributed to its pages,
and once, during
FitzGerald’s absence, had charge of it for a
short time, though he was
never its actual editor. The Press reprinted
the dialogue and the
correspondence which followed its original appearance
on 8th June, 1912.
On 13th June, 1863, the Press printed a letter
by Butler signed
“Cellarius” and headed “Darwin among
the Machines,” reprinted in The
Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912). The
letter begins:
“Sir: There are few things of which the
present generation is more justly
proud than of the wonderful improvements which are
daily taking place in
all sorts of mechanical appliances”; and goes
on to say that, as the
vegetable kingdom was developed from the mineral,
and as the animal
kingdom supervened upon the vegetable, “so now,
in the last few ages, an
entirely new kingdom has sprung up of which we as
yet have only seen what
will one day be considered the antediluvian types
of the race.” He then
speaks of the minute members which compose the beautiful
and intelligent
little animal which we call the watch, and of how
it has gradually been
evolved from the clumsy brass clocks of the thirteenth
century. Then
comes the question: Who will be man’s successor?
To which the answer is:
We are ourselves creating our own successors.
Man will become to the
machine what the horse and the dog are to man; the
conclusion being that
machines are, or are becoming, animate.
In 1863 Butler’s family published in his name
A First Year in Canterbury
Settlement, which, as the preface states, was
compiled from his letters
home, his journal and extracts from two papers contributed
to the
Eagle. These two papers had appeared
in the Eagle as three articles
entitled “Our Emigrant” and signed “Cellarius.”
The proof-sheets of the
book went out to New Zealand for correction and were
sent back in the
Colombo, which was as unfortunate as the Burmah,
for she was wrecked.
The proofs, however, were fished up, though so nearly
washed out as to be
almost undecipherable. Butler would have been
just as well pleased if
they had remained at the bottom of the Indian Ocean,
for he never liked
the book and always spoke of it as being full of youthful
priggishness;
but I think he was a little hard upon it. Years
afterwards, in one of
his later books, after quoting two passages from Mr.
Grant Allen and
pointing out why he considered the second to be a
recantation of the
first, he wrote: “When Mr. Allen does make
stepping-stones of his dead
selves he jumps upon them to some tune.”
And he was perhaps a little
inclined to treat his own dead self too much in the
same spirit.
Butler did very well with the sheep, sold out in 1864,
and returned via
Callao to England. He travelled with three friends
whose acquaintance he
had made in the colony; one was Charles Paine Pauli,
to whom he dedicated
Life and Habit. He arrived in August,
1864, in London, where he took
chambers consisting of a sitting-room, a bedroom,
a painting-room and a
pantry, at 15, Clifford’s Inn, second floor
(north). The net financial
result of the sheep-farming and the selling out was
that he practically
doubled his capital, that is to say he had about 8,000
pounds. This he
left in New Zealand, invested on mortgage at 10 per
cent., the then
current rate in the colony; it produced more than
enough for him to live
upon in the very simple way that suited him best,
and life in the Inns of
Court resembles life at Cambridge in that it reduces
the cares of
housekeeping to a minimum; it suited him so well that
he never changed
his rooms, remaining there thirty-eight years till
his death.
He was now his own master and able at last to turn
to painting. He
studied at the art school in Streatham Street, Bloomsbury,
which had
formerly been managed by Henry Sass, but, in Butler’s
time, was being
carried on by Francis Stephen Cary, son of the Rev.
Henry Francis Cary,
who had been a school-fellow of Dr. Butler at Rugby,
and is well known as
the translator of Dante and the friend of Charles
Lamb. Among his fellow-
students was Mr. H. R. Robertson, who told me that
the young artists got
hold of the legend, which is in some of the books
about Lamb, that when
Francis Stephen Cary was a boy and there was a talk
at his father’s house
as to what profession he should take up, Lamb, who
was present, said:
“I should make him an apo-po-pothe-Cary.”
They used to repeat this story freely among themselves,
being, no doubt,
amused by the Lamb-like pun, but also enjoying the
malicious pleasure of
hinting that it might have been as well for their
art education if the
advice of the gentle humorist had been followed.
Anyone who wants to
know what kind of an artist F. S. Cary was can see
his picture of Charles
and Mary Lamb in the National Portrait Gallery.
In 1865 Butler sent from London to New Zealand an
article entitled
“Lucubratio Ebria,” which was published
in the Press of 29th July,
1865. It treated machines from a point of view
different from that
adopted in “Darwin among the Machines,”
and was one of the steps that led
to Erewhon and ultimately to Life and Habit.
The article is
reproduced in The Note-Books of Samuel Butler
(1912).
Butler also studied art at South Kensington, but by
1867 he had begun to
go to Heatherley’s School of Art in Newman Street,
where he continued
going for many years. He made a number of friends
at Heatherley’s, and
among them Miss Eliza Mary Anne Savage. There
also he first met Charles
Gogin, who, in 1896, painted the portrait of Butler
which is now in the
National Portrait Gallery. He described himself
as an artist in the Post
Office Directory, and between 1868 and 1876 exhibited
at the Royal
Academy about a dozen pictures, of which the most
important was “Mr.
Heatherley’s Holiday,” hung on the line
in 1874. He left it by his will
to his college friend Jason Smith, whose representatives,
after his
death, in 1910, gave it to the nation, and it is now
in the National
Gallery of British Art. Mr. Heatherley never
went away for a holiday; he
once had to go out of town on business and did not
return till the next
day; one of the students asked him how he had got
on, saying no doubt he
had enjoyed the change and that he must have found
it refreshing to sleep
for once out of London.
“No,” said Heatherley, “I did not
like it. Country air has no body.”
The consequence was that, whenever there was a holiday
and the school was
shut, Heatherley employed the time in mending the
skeleton; Butler’s
picture represents him so engaged in a corner of the
studio. In this way
he got his model for nothing. Sometimes he hung
up a looking-glass near
one of his windows and painted his own portrait.
Many of these he
painted out, but after his death we found a little
store of them in his
rooms, some of the early ones very curious.
Of the best of them one is
now at Canterbury, New Zealand, one at St. John’s
College, Cambridge, and
one at the Schools, Shrewsbury.
This is Butler’s own account of himself, taken
from a letter to Sir
Julius von Haast; although written in 1865 it is true
of his mode of life
for many years:
I have been taking lessons in painting
ever since I arrived. I was always very fond
of it and mean to stick to it; it suits me and I am
not without hopes that I shall do well at it.
I live almost the life of a recluse, seeing very
few people and going nowhere that I can help I
mean in the way of parties and so forth; if my friends
had their way they would fritter away my time without
any remorse; but I made a regular stand against
it from the beginning and so, having my time pretty
much in my own hands, work hard; I find, as I am sure
you must find, that it is next to impossible to
combine what is commonly called society and work.
But the time saved from society was not all devoted
to painting. He
modified his letter to the Press about “Darwin
among the Machines” and,
so modified, it appeared in 1865 as “The Mechanical
Creation” in the
Reasoner, a paper then published in London
by Mr. G. J. Holyoake. And
his mind returned to the considerations which had
determined him to
decline to be ordained. In 1865 he printed anonymously
a pamphlet which
he had begun in New Zealand, the result of his study
of the Greek
Testament, entitled The Evidence for the Resurrection
of Jesus Christ as
given by the Four Evangelists critically examined.
After weighing this
evidence and comparing one account with another, he
came to the
conclusion that Jesus Christ did not die upon the
cross. It is
improbable that a man officially executed should escape
death, but the
alternative, that a man actually dead should return
to life, seemed to
Butler more improbable still and unsupported by such
evidence as he found
in the gospels. From this evidence he concluded
that Christ swooned and
recovered consciousness after his body had passed
into the keeping of
Joseph of Arimathaea. He did not suppose fraud
on the part of the first
preachers of Christianity; they sincerely believed
that Christ died and
rose again. Joseph and Nicodemus probably knew
the truth but kept
silence. The idea of what might follow from
belief in one single
supposed miracle was never hereafter absent from Butler’s
mind.
In 1869, having been working too hard, he went abroad
for a long change.
On his way back, at the Albergo La Luna, in Venice,
he met an elderly
Russian lady in whose company he spent most of his
time there. She was
no doubt impressed by his versatility and charmed,
as everyone always
was, by his conversation and original views on the
many subjects that
interested him. We may be sure he told her all
about himself and what he
had done and was intending to do. At the end
of his stay, when he was
taking leave of her, she said:
“Et maintenant, Monsieur, vous allez creer,”
meaning, as he understood
her, that he had been looking long enough at the work
of others and
should now do something of his own.
This sank into him and pained him. He was nearly
thirty-five, and
hitherto all had been admiration, vague aspiration
and despair; he had
produced in painting nothing but a few sketches and
studies, and in
literature only a few ephemeral articles, a collection
of youthful
letters and a pamphlet on the Resurrection; moreover,
to none of his work
had anyone paid the slightest attention. This
was a poor return for all
the money which had been spent upon his education,
as Theobald would have
said in The Way of All Flesh. He returned
home dejected, but resolved
that things should be different in the future.
While in this frame of
mind he received a visit from one of his New Zealand
friends, the late
Sir F. Napier Broome, afterwards Governor of Western
Australia, who
incidentally suggested his rewriting his New Zealand
articles. The idea
pleased him; it might not be creating, but at least
it would be doing
something. So he set to work on Sundays and
in the evenings, as
relaxation from his profession of painting, and, taking
his New Zealand
article, “Darwin among the Machines,”
and another, “The World of the
Unborn,” as a starting-point and helping himself
with a few sentences
from A First Year in Canterbury Settlement,
he gradually formed
Erewhon. He sent the MS. bit by bit,
as it was written, to Miss Savage
for her criticism and approval. He had the usual
difficulty about
finding a publisher. Chapman and Hall refused
the book on the advice of
George Meredith, who was then their reader, and in
the end he published
it at his own expense through Messrs. Trubner.
Mr. Sydney C. Cockerell told me that in 1912 Mr. Bertram
Dobell, second-
hand bookseller of Charing Cross Road, offered a copy
of Erewhon for 1
pounds 10s.; it was thus described in his catalogue:
“Unique copy with
the following note in the author’s handwriting
on the half-title: ’To
Miss E. M. A. Savage this first copy of Erewhon
with the author’s best
thanks for many invaluable suggestions and corrections.’”
When Mr.
Cockerell inquired for the book it was sold.
After Miss Savage’s death
in 1885 all Butler’s letters to her were returned
to him, including the
letter he wrote when he sent her this copy of Erewhon.
He gave her the
first copy issued of all his books that were published
in her lifetime,
and, no doubt, wrote an inscription in each.
If the present possessors
of any of them should happen to read this sketch I
hope they will
communicate with me, as I should like to see these
books. I should also
like to see some numbers of the Drawing-Room Gazette,
which about this
time belonged to or was edited by a Mrs. Briggs.
Miss Savage wrote a
review of Erewhon, which appeared in the number
for 8th June, 1872, and
Butler quoted a sentence from her review among the
press notices in the
second edition. She persuaded him to write for
Mrs. Briggs notices of
concerts at which Handel’s music was performed.
In 1901 he made a note
on one of his letters that he was thankful there were
no copies of the
Drawing-Room Gazette in the British Museum,
meaning that he did not
want people to read his musical criticisms; nevertheless,
I hope some day
to come across back numbers containing his articles.
The opening of Erewhon is based upon Butler’s
colonial experiences;
some of the descriptions remind one of passages in
A First Year in
Canterbury Settlement, where he speaks of the
excursions he made with
Doctor when looking for sheep-country. The walk
over the range as far as
the statues is taken from the Upper Rangitata district,
with some
alterations; but the walk down from the statues into
Erewhon is
reminiscent of the Leventina Valley in the Canton
Ticino. The great
chords, which are like the music moaned by the statues
are from the
prelude to the first of Handel’s Trois Lecons;
he used to say:
“One feels them in the diaphragm they
are, as it were, the groaning and
labouring of all creation travailing together until
now.”
There is a place in New Zealand named Erewhon, after
the book; it is
marked on the large maps, a township about fifty miles
west of Napier in
the Hawke Bay Province (North Island). I am
told that people in New
Zealand sometimes call their houses Erewhon and occasionally
spell the
word Erehwon which Butler did not intend; he treated
wh as a single
letter, as one would treat th. Among other traces
of Erewhon now
existing in real life are Butler’s Stones on
the Hokitika Pass, so called
because of a legend that they were in his mind when
he described the
statues.
The book was translated into Dutch in 1873 and into
German in 1897.
Butler wrote to Charles Darwin to explain what he
meant by the “Book of
the Machines”: “I am sincerely sorry
that some of the critics should have
thought I was laughing at your theory, a thing which
I never meant to do
and should be shocked at having done.”
Soon after this Butler was
invited to Down and paid two visits to Mr. Darwin
there; he thus became
acquainted with all the family and for some years
was on intimate terms
with Mr. (now Sir) Francis Darwin.
It is easy to see by the light of subsequent events
that we should
probably have had something not unlike Erewhon
sooner or later, even
without the Russian lady and Sir F. N. Broome, to
whose promptings, owing
to a certain diffidence which never left him, he was
perhaps inclined to
attribute too much importance. But he would
not have agreed with this
view at the time; he looked upon himself as a painter
and upon Erewhon
as an interruption. It had come, like one of
those creatures from the
Land of the Unborn, pestering him and refusing to
leave him at peace
until he consented to give it bodily shape.
It was only a little one,
and he saw no likelihood of its having any successors.
So he satisfied
its demands and then, supposing that he had written
himself out, looked
forward to a future in which nothing should interfere
with the painting.
Nevertheless, when another of the unborn came teasing
him he yielded to
its importunities and allowed himself to become the
author of The Fair
Haven, which is his pamphlet on the Resurrection,
enlarged and preceded
by a realistic memoir of the pseudonymous author,
John Pickard Owen. In
the library of St. John’s College, Cambridge,
are two copies of the
pamphlet with pages cut out; he used these pages in
forming the MS. of
The Fair Haven. To have published this
book as by the author of
Erewhon would have been to give away the irony
and satire. And he had
another reason for not disclosing his name; he remembered
that as soon as
curiosity about the authorship of Erewhon was
satisfied, the weekly
sales fell from fifty down to only two or three.
But, as he always
talked openly of whatever was in his mind, he soon
let out the secret of
the authorship of The Fair Haven, and it became
advisable to put his
name to a second edition.
One result of his submitting the MS. of Erewhon
to Miss Savage was that
she thought he ought to write a novel, and urged him
to do so. I have no
doubt that he wrote the memoir of John Pickard Owen
with the idea of
quieting Miss Savage and also as an experiment to
ascertain whether he
was likely to succeed with a novel. The result
seems to have satisfied
him, for, not long after The Fair Haven, he
began The Way of All
Flesh, sending the MS. to Miss Savage, as he did
everything he wrote,
for her approval and putting her into the book as
Ernest’s Aunt Alethea.
He continued writing it in the intervals of other
work until her death in
February, 1885, after which he did not touch it.
It was published in
1903 by Mr. R. A. Streatfeild, his literary executor.
Soon after The Fair Haven Butler began to be
aware that his letter in
the Press, “Darwin among the Machines,”
was descending with further
modifications and developing in his mind into a theory
about evolution
which took shape as Life and Habit; but the
writing of this very
remarkable and suggestive book was delayed and the
painting interrupted
by absence from England on business in Canada.
He had been persuaded by
a college friend, a member of one of the great banking
families, to call
in his colonial mortgages and to put the money into
several new
companies. He was going to make thirty or forty
per cent, instead of
only ten. One of these companies was a Canadian
undertaking, of which he
became a director; it was necessary for someone to
go to headquarters and
investigate its affairs; he went, and was much occupied
by the business
for two or three years. By the beginning of
1876 he had returned finally
to London, but most of his money was lost and his
financial position for
the next ten years caused him very serious anxiety.
His personal
expenditure was already so low that it was hardly
possible to reduce it,
and he set to work at his profession more industriously
than ever, hoping
to paint something that he could sell, his spare time
being occupied with
Life and Habit, which was the subject that
really interested him more
deeply than any other.
Following his letter in the Press, wherein
he had seen machines as in
process of becoming animate, he went on to regard
them as living organs
and limbs which we had made outside ourselves.
What would follow if we
reversed this and regarded our limbs and organs as
machines which we had
manufactured as parts of our bodies? In the
first place, how did we come
to make them without knowing anything about it?
But then, how comes
anybody to do anything unconsciously? The answer
usually would be: By
habit. But can a man be said to do a thing by
habit when he has never
done it before? His ancestors have done it,
but not he. Can the habit
have been acquired by them for his benefit?
Not unless he and his
ancestors are the same person. Perhaps, then,
they are the same person.
In February, 1876, partly to clear his mind and partly
to tell someone,
he wrote down his thoughts in a letter to his namesake,
Thomas William
Gale Butler, a fellow art-student who was then in
New Zealand; so much of
the letter as concerns the growth of his theory is
given in The Note-
Books of Samuel Butler (1912).
In September, 1877, when Life and Habit was
on the eve of publication,
Mr. Francis Darwin came to lunch with him in Clifford’s
Inn and, in
course of conversation, told him that Professor Ray
Lankester had written
something in Nature about a lecture by Dr.
Ewald Hering of Prague,
delivered so long ago as 1870, “On Memory as
a Universal Function of
Organized Matter.” This rather alarmed
Butler, but he deferred looking
up the reference until after December, 1877, when
his book was out, and
then, to his relief, he found that Hering’s
theory was very similar to
his own, so that, instead of having something sprung
upon him which would
have caused him to want to alter his book, he was
supported. He at once
wrote to the Athenaeum, calling attention to
Hering’s lecture, and then
pursued his studies in evolution.
Life and Habit was followed in 1879 by Evolution
Old and New, wherein
he compared the teleological or purposive view of
evolution taken by
Buffon, Dr. Erasmus Darwin, and Lamarck with the view
taken by Charles
Darwin, and came to the conclusion that the old was
better. But while
agreeing with the earlier writers in thinking that
the variations whose
accumulation results in species were originally due
to intelligence, he
could not take the view that the intelligence resided
in an external
personal God. He had done with all that when
he gave up the Resurrection
of Jesus Christ from the dead. He proposed to
place the intelligence
inside the creature ("The Deadlock in Darwinism,”
post).
In 1880 he continued the subject by publishing Unconscious
Memory.
Chapter IV of this book is concerned with a personal
quarrel between
himself and Charles Darwin which arose out of the
publication by Charles
Darwin of Dr. Krause’s Life of Erasmus Darwin.
We need not enter into
particulars here, the matter is fully dealt with in
a pamphlet, Charles
Darwin and Samuel Butler: A Step towards
Reconciliation, which I wrote
in 1911, the result of a correspondence between Mr.
Francis Darwin and
myself. Before this correspondence took place
Mr. Francis Darwin had
made several public allusions to Life and Habit;
and in September,
1908, in his inaugural address to the British Association
at Dublin, he
did Butler the posthumous honour of quoting from his
translation of
Hering’s lecture “On Memory,” which
is in Unconscious Memory, and of
mentioning Butler as having enunciated the theory
contained in Life and
Habit.
In 1886 Butler published his last book on evolution,
Luck or Cunning as
the Main Means of Organic Modification?
His other contributions to the
subject are some essays, written for the Examiner
in 1879, “God the
Known and God the Unknown,” which were republished
by Mr. Fifield in
1909, and the articles “The Deadlock in Darwinism”
which appeared in the
Universal Review in 1890 and some further notes
on evolution will be
found in The Note-Books of Samuel Butler (1912).
It was while he was writing Life and Habit
that I first met him. For
several years he had been in the habit of spending
six or eight weeks of
the summer in Italy and the Canton Ticino, generally
making Faido his
headquarters. Many a page of his books was written
while resting by the
fountain of some subalpine village or waiting in the
shade of the
chestnuts till the light came so that he could continue
a sketch. Every
year he returned home by a different route, and thus
gradually became
acquainted with every part of the Canton and North
Italy. There is
scarcely a town or village, a point of view, a building,
statue or
picture in all this country with which he was not
familiar. In 1878 he
happened to be on the Sacro Monte above Varese at
the time I took my
holiday; there I joined him, and nearly every year
afterwards we were in
Italy together.
He was always a delightful companion, and perhaps
at his gayest on these
occasions. “A man’s holiday,”
he would say, “is his garden,” and he set
out to enjoy himself and to make everyone about him
enjoy themselves too.
I told him the old schoolboy muddle about Sir Walter
Raleigh introducing
tobacco and saying: “We shall this day
light up such a fire in England as
I trust shall never be put out.” He had
not heard it before and, though
amused, appeared preoccupied, and perhaps a little
jealous, during the
rest of the evening. Next morning, while he
was pouring out his coffee,
his eyes twinkled and he said, with assumed carelessness:
“By the by, do you remember? wasn’t
it Columbus who bashed the egg down
on the table and said ’Eppur non si muove’?”
He was welcome wherever he went, full of fun and ready
to play while
doing the honours of the country. Many of the
peasants were old friends,
and every day we were sure to meet someone who remembered
him. Perhaps
it would be an old woman labouring along under a burden;
she would smile
and stop, take his hand and tell him how happy she
was to meet him again
and repeat her thanks for the empty wine bottle he
had given her after an
out-of-door luncheon in her neighbourhood four or
five years before.
There was another who had rowed him many times across
the Lago di Orta
and had never been in a train but once in her life,
when she went to
Novara to her son’s wedding. He always
remembered all about these people
and asked how the potatoes were doing this year and
whether the
grandchildren were growing up into fine boys and girls,
and he never
forgot to inquire after the son who had gone to be
a waiter in New York.
At Civiasco there is a restaurant which used to be
kept by a jolly old
lady, known for miles round as La Martina; we always
lunched with her on
our way over the Colma to and from Varallo-Sesia.
On one occasion we
were accompanied by two English ladies and, one being
a teetotaller,
Butler maliciously instructed La Martina to make the
sabbaglione so
that it should be forte and abbondante,
and to say that the Marsala,
with which it was more than flavoured, was nothing
but vinegar. La
Martina never forgot that when she looked in to see
how things were
going, he was pretending to lick the dish clean.
These journeys provided
the material for a book which he thought of calling
“Verdi Prati,” after
one of Handel’s most beautiful songs; but he
changed his mind, and it
appeared at the end of 1881 as Alps and Sanctuaries
of Piedmont and the
Canton Ticino with more than eighty illustrations,
nearly all by Butler.
Charles Gogin made an etching for the frontispiece,
drew some of the
pictures, and put figures into others; half a dozen
are mine. They were
all redrawn in ink from sketches made on the spot,
in oil, water-colour,
and pencil. There were also many illustrations
of another kind extracts
from Handel’s music, each chosen because Butler
thought it suitable to
the spirit of the scene he wished to bring before
the reader. The
introduction concludes with these words: “I
have chosen Italy as my
second country, and would dedicate this book to her
as a thank-offering
for the happiness she has afforded me.”
In the spring of 1883 he began to compose music, and
in 1885 we published
together an album of minuets, gavottes, and fugues.
This led to our
writing Narcissus, which is an Oratorio Buffo
in the Handelian
manner that is as nearly so as we could
make it. It is a mistake to
suppose that all Handel’s oratorios are upon
sacred subjects; some of
them are secular. And not only so, but, whatever
the subject, Handel was
never at a loss in treating anything that came into
his words by way of
allusion or illustration. As Butler puts it
in one of his sonnets:
He who gave eyes to ears and showed
in sound
All thoughts and things in earth
or heaven above
From fire and hailstones running
along the ground
To Galatea grieving for her love
He who could show to all unseeing
eyes
Glad shepherds watching o’er
their flocks by night,
Or Iphis angel-wafted to the skies,
Or Jordan standing as an heap upright
And so on. But there is one subject which Handel
never treated I mean
the Money Market. Perhaps he avoided it intentionally;
he was twice
bankrupt, and Mr. R. A. Streatfeild tells me that
the British Museum
possesses a MS. letter from him giving instructions
as to the payment of
the dividends on 500 pounds South Sea Stock.
Let us hope he sold out
before the bubble burst; if so, he was more fortunate
than Butler, who
was at this time of his life in great anxiety about
his own financial
affairs. It seemed a pity that Dr. Morell had
never offered Handel some
such words as these:
The steadfast funds maintain their
wonted state
While all the other markets fluctuate.
Butler wondered whether Handel would have sent the
steadfast funds up
above par and maintained them on an inverted pedal
with all the other
markets fluctuating iniquitously round them like the
sheep that turn
every one to his own way in the Messiah.
He thought something of the
kind ought to have been done, and in the absence of
Handel and Dr. Morell
we determined to write an oratorio that should attempt
to supply the
want. In order to make our libretto as plausible
as possible, we adopted
the dictum of Monsieur Jourdain’s Maitre a danser:
“Lorsqu’on a des
personnes a faire parler en musique, il faut bien
que, pour la
vraisemblance, on donne dans la bergerie.”
Narcissus is accordingly a
shepherd in love with Amaryllis; they come to London
with other shepherds
and lose their money in imprudent speculations on
the Stock Exchange. In
the second part the aunt and godmother of Narcissus,
having died at an
advanced age worth one hundred thousand pounds, all
of which she has
bequeathed to her nephew and godson, the obstacle
to his union with
Amaryllis is removed. The money is invested
in consols and all ends
happily.
In December, 1886, Butler’s father died, and
his financial difficulties
ceased. He engaged Alfred Emery Cathie as clerk,
but made no other
change, except that he bought a pair of new hair brushes
and a larger
wash-hand basin. Any change in his mode of life
was an event. When in
London he got up at 6.30 in the summer and 7.30 in
the winter, went into
his sitting-room, lighted the fire, put the kettle
on and returned to
bed. In half an hour he got up again, fetched
the kettle of hot water,
emptied it into the cold water that was already in
his bath, refilled the
kettle and put it back on the fire. After dressing,
he came into his
sitting-room, made tea and cooked, in his Dutch oven,
something he had
bought the day before. His laundress was an
elderly woman, and he could
not trouble her to come to his rooms so early in the
morning; on the
other hand, he could not stay in bed until he thought
it right for her to
go out; so it ended in his doing a great deal for
himself. He then got
his breakfast and read the Times. At 9.30 Alfred
came, with whom he
discussed anything requiring attention, and soon afterwards
his laundress
arrived. Then he started to walk to the British
Museum, where he arrived
about 10.30, every alternate morning calling at the
butcher’s in Fetter
Lane to order his meat. In the Reading Room
at the Museum he sat at
Block B ("B for Butler”) and spent an hour “posting
his notes” that is
reconsidering, rewriting, amplifying, shortening,
and indexing the contents of the little note-book
he always carried in his pocket. After the notes
he went on till 1.30 with whatever book he happened
to be writing.
On three days of the week he dined
in a restaurant on his way home, and on the other
days he dined in his chambers where his laundress had
cooked his dinner. At two o’clock Alfred
returned (having been home to dinner with his wife
and children) and got tea ready for him. He then
wrote letters and attended to his accounts till 3.45,
when he smoked his first cigarette. He used
to smoke a great deal, but, believing it to be bad
for him, took to cigarettes instead of pipes, and gradually
smoked less and less, making it a rule not to begin
till some particular hour, and pushing this hour later
and later in the day, till it settled itself at 3.45.
There was no water laid on in his rooms, and every
day he fetched one can full from the tap in the court,
Alfred fetching the rest. When anyone expostulated
with him about cooking his own breakfast and fetching
his own water, he replied that it was good for him
to have a change of occupation. This was partly
the fact, but the real reason, which he could not
tell everyone, was that he shrank from inconveniencing
anybody; he always paid more than was necessary when
anything was done for him, and was not happy then
unless he did some of the work himself.
At 5.30 he got his evening meal, he
called it his tea, and it was little more than a facsimile
of breakfast. Alfred left in time to post the
letters before six. Butler then wrote music till
about 8, when he came to see me in Staple Inn, returning
to Clifford’s Inn by about 10. After a
light supper, latterly not more than a piece of toast
and a glass of milk, he played one game of his own
particular kind of Patience, prepared his breakfast
things and fire ready for the next morning, smoked
his seventh and last cigarette, and went to bed at
eleven o’clock.
He was fond of the theatre, but avoided
serious pieces. He preferred to take his Shakespeare
from the book, finding that the spirit of the plays
rather evaporated under modern theatrical treatment.
In one of his books he brightens up the old illustration
of Hamlet without the Prince of Denmark by
putting it thus: “If the character of Hamlet
be entirely omitted, the play must suffer, even though
Henry Irving himself be cast for the title-rôle.”
Anyone going to the theatre in this spirit would be
likely to be less disappointed by performances that
were comic or even frankly farcical. Latterly,
when he grew slightly deaf, listening to any kind
of piece became too much of an effort; nevertheless,
he continued to the last the habit of going to one
pantomime every winter.
There were about twenty houses where
he visited, but he seldom accepted an invitation to
dinner it upset the regularity of his life;
besides, he belonged to no club and had no means of
returning hospitality. When two colonial friends
called unexpectedly about noon one day, soon after
he settled in London, he went to the nearest cook-shop
in Fetter Lane and returned carrying a dish of hot
roast pork and greens. This was all very well
once in a way, but not the sort of thing to be repeated
indefinitely.
On Thursdays, instead of going to
the Museum, he often took a day off, going into the
country sketching or walking, and on Sundays, whatever
the weather, he nearly always went into the country
walking; his map of the district for thirty miles
round London is covered all over with red lines showing
where he had been. He sometimes went out of town
from Saturday to Monday, and for over twenty years
spent Christmas at Boulogne-sur-Mer.
There is a Sacro Monte at
Varallo-Sesia with many chapels, each containing life-sized
statues and frescoes illustrating the life of Christ.
Butler had visited this sanctuary repeatedly, and
was a great favourite with the townspeople, who knew
that he was studying the statues and frescoes in the
chapels, and who remembered that in the preface to
Alps and Sanctuaries he had declared his intention
of writing about them. In August, 1887, the
Varallesi brought matters to a head by giving him
a civic dinner on the Mountain. Everyone was
present, there were several speeches and, when we
were coming down the slippery mountain path after
it was all over, he said to me:
“You know, there’s nothing
for it now but to write that book about the Sacro
Monte at once. It must be the next thing
I do.”
Accordingly, on returning home, he
took up photography and, immediately after Christmas,
went back to Varallo to photograph the statues and
collect material. Much research was necessary
and many visits to out-of-the-way sanctuaries which
might have contained work by the sculptor Tabachetti,
whom he was rescuing from oblivion and identifying
with the Flemish Jean de Wespin. One of these
visits, made after his book was published, forms the
subject of “The Sanctuary of Montrigone.”
Ex Voto, the book about Varallo, appeared
in 1888, and an Italian translation by Cavaliere Angelo
Rizzetti was published at Novara in 1894.
“Quis Desiderio . . . ?”
(The Humour of Homer and Other Essays) was
developed in 1888 from something in a letter from Miss
Savage nearly ten years earlier. On the 15th
of December, 1878, in acknowledging this letter, Butler
wrote:
I am sure that any tree or flower nursed
by Miss Cobbe would be the very first to
fade away and that her gazelles would die long before
they ever came to know her well. The
sight of the brass buttons on her pea-jacket would
settle them out of hand.
There was an enclosure in Miss Savage’s
letter, but it is unfortunately lost; I suppose it
must have been a newspaper cutting with an allusion
to Moore’s poem and perhaps a portrait of Miss
Frances Power Cobbe pea-jacket, brass buttons,
and all.
On the 10th November, 1879, Miss Savage,
having been ill, wrote to Butler:
I have been dipping into the books of
Moses, being sometimes at a loss for something
to read while shut up in my apartment. You know
that I have never read the Bible much, consequently
there is generally something of a novelty that
I hit on. As you do know your Bible well, perhaps
you can tell me what became of Aaron. The account
given of his end in Numbers xx. is extremely ambiguous
and unsatisfactory. Evidently he did not come
by his death fairly, but whether he was murdered
secretly for the furtherance of some private ends,
or publicly in a State sacrifice, I can’t
make out. I myself rather incline to the
former opinion, but I should like to know what the
experts say about it. A very nice, exciting
little tale might be made out of it in the style
of the police stories in All the rear Round
called “The Mystery of Mount Hor or What became
of Aaron?” Don’t forget to write to
me.
Butler’s people had been suggesting
that he should try to earn money by writing in magazines,
and Miss Savage was falling in with the idea and offering
a practical suggestion. I do not find that he
had anything to tell her about the death of Aaron.
On 23rd March, 1880, she wrote:
Dear Mr. Butler: Read the subjoined
poem of Wordsworth and let me know what you understand
its meaning to be. Of course I have my opinion,
which I think of communicating to the Wordsworth
Society. You can belong to that Society for
the small sum of 2/6 per annum. I think of joining
because it is cheap.
“The subjoined poem” was
the one beginning: “She dwelt among the
untrodden ways,” and Butler made this note on
the letter:
To the foregoing letter I answered
that I concluded Miss Savage meant to imply that Wordsworth
had murdered Lucy in order to escape a prosecution
for breach of promise.
Miss Savage to Butler.
2nd April, 1880: My dear Mr. Butler:
I don’t think you see all that I do in the
poem, and I am afraid that the suggestion of a DARK
SECRET in the poet’s life is not so very
obvious after all. I was hoping you would
propose to devote yourself for a few months to reading
the Excursion, his letters, &c., with a
view to following up the clue, and I am disappointed
though, to say the truth, the idea of a crime
had not flashed upon me when I wrote to you.
How well the works of great men repay attention
and study! But you, who know your Bible so
well, how was it that you did not detect the plagiarism
in the last verse? Just refer to the account
of the disappearance of Aaron (I have not a Bible
at hand, we want one sadly in the club) but I am sure
that the words are identical [I cannot see what
Miss Savage mean. S. B.] Cassell’s
Magazine have offered a prize for setting the
poem to music, and I fell to thinking how it could
be treated musically, and so came to a right comprehension
of it.
Although Butler, when editing Miss
Savage’s letters in 1901, could not see the
resemblance between Wordsworth’s poem and Numbers
xx., he at once saw a strong likeness between Lucy
and Moore’s heroine whom he had been keeping
in an accessible pigeon-hole of his memory ever since
his letter about Miss Frances Power Cobbe. He
now sent Lucy to keep her company and often spoke
of the pair of them as probably the two most disagreeable
young women in English literature an opinion
which he must have expressed to Miss Savage and with
which I have no doubt she agreed.
In the spring of 1888, on his return
from photographing the statues at Varallo, he found,
to his disgust, that the authorities of the British
Museum had removed Frost’s Lives of Eminent
Christians from its accustomed shelf in the Reading
Room. Soon afterwards Harry Quilter asked him
to write for the Universal Review and he responded
with “Quis Desiderio . . . ?” In this
essay he compares himself to Wordsworth and dwells
on the points of resemblance between Lucy and the book
of whose assistance he had now been deprived in a
passage which echoes the opening of Chapter V of Ex
Voto, where he points out the resemblances between
Varallo and Jerusalem.
Early in 1888 the leading members
of the Shrewsbury Archaeological Society asked Butler
to write a memoir of his grandfather and of his father
for their Quarterly Journal. This he undertook
to do when he should have finished Ex Voto.
In December, 1888, his sisters, with the idea of
helping him to write the memoir, gave him his grandfather’s
correspondence, which extended from 1790 to 1839.
On looking over these very voluminous papers he became
penetrated with an almost Chinese reverence for his
ancestor and, after getting the Archaeological Society
to absolve him from his promise to write the memoir,
set about a full life of Dr. Butler, which was not
published till 1896. The delay was caused partly
by the immense quantity of documents he had to sift
and digest, the number of people he had to consult,
and the many letters he had to write, and partly by
something that arose out of Narcissus, which
we published in June, 1888.
Butler was not satisfied with having
written only half of this work; he wanted it to have
a successor, so that by adding his two halves together,
he could say he had written a whole Handelian oratorio.
While staying with his sisters at Shrewsbury with
this idea in his mind, he casually took up a book
by Alfred Ainger about Charles Lamb and therein stumbled
upon something about the Odyssey. It was
years since he had looked at the poem, but, from what
he remembered, he thought it might provide a suitable
subject for musical treatment. He did not, however,
want to put Dr. Butler aside, so I undertook to investigate.
It is stated on the title-page of both Narcissus
and Ulysses that the words were written and
the music composed by both of us. As to the music,
each piece bears the initials of the one who actually
composed it. As to the words, it was necessary
first to settle some general scheme and this, in the
case of Narcissus, grew in the course of conversation.
The scheme of Ulysses was constructed in a
more formal way and Butler had perhaps rather less
to do with it. We were bound by the Odyssey,
which is, of course, too long to be treated fully,
and I selected incidents that attracted me and settled
the order of the songs and choruses. For this
purpose, as I out-Shakespeare Shakespeare in the smallness
of my Greek, I used The Adventures of Ulysses
by Charles Lamb, which we should have known nothing
about but for Ainger’s book. Butler acquiesced
in my proposals, but, when it came to the words themselves,
he wrote practically all the libretto, as he had done
in the case of Narcissus; I did no more than
suggest a few phrases and a few lines here and there.
We had sent Narcissus for review
to the papers, and, as a consequence, about this time,
made the acquaintance of Mr. J. A. Fuller Maitland,
then musical critic of the Times; he introduced
us to that learned musician William Smith Rockstro,
under whom we studied medieval counterpoint while
composing Ulysses. We had already made
some progress with it when it occurred to Butler that
it would not take long and might, perhaps, be safer
if he were to look at the original poem, just to make
sure that Lamb had not misled me. Not having
forgotten all his Greek, he bought a copy of the Odyssey
and was so fascinated by it that he could not put
it down. When he came to the Phoeacian episode
of Ulysses at Scheria he felt he must be reading the
description of a real place and that something in
the personality of the author was eluding him.
For months he was puzzled, and, to help in clearing
up the mystery, set about translating the poem.
In August, 1891, he had preceded me to Chiavenna,
and on a letter I wrote him, telling him when to expect
me, he made this note:
It was during the few days that I was
at Chiavenna (at the Hotel Grotta Crimee)
that I hit upon the feminine authorship of the Odyssey.
I did not find out its having been written at Trapani
till January, 1892.
He suspected that the authoress in
describing both Scheria and Ithaca was drawing from
her native country and searched on the Admiralty charts
for the features enumerated in the poem; this led
him to the conclusion that the country could only
be Trapani, Mount Eryx, and the AEgadean Islands.
As soon as he could after this discovery he went to
Sicily to study the locality and found it in all respects
suitable for his theory; indeed, it was astonishing
how things kept turning up to support his view.
It is all in his book The Authoress of the Odyssey,
published in 1897 and dedicated to his friend Cavaliere
Biagio Ingroja of Calatafimi.
His first visit to Sicily was in 1892,
in August a hot time of the year, but it
was his custom to go abroad in the autumn. He
returned to Sicily every year (except one), but latterly
went in the spring. He made many friends all
over the island, and after his death the people of
Calatafimi called a street by his name, the Via Samuel
Butler, “thus,” as Ingroja wrote when
he announced the event to me, “honouring a great
man’s memory, handing down his name to posterity,
and doing homage to the friendly English nation.”
Besides showing that the Odyssey was written
by a woman in Sicily and translating the poem into
English prose, he also translated the Iliad,
and, in March, 1895, went to Greece and the Troad
to see the country therein described, where he found
nothing to cause him to disagree with the received
theories.
It has been said of him in a general
way that the fact of an opinion being commonly held
was enough to make him profess the opposite.
It was enough to make him examine the opinion for
himself, when it affected any of the many subjects
which interested him, and if, after giving it his
best attention, he found it did not hold water, then
no weight of authority could make him say that it
did. This matter of the geography of the Iliad
is only one among many commonly received opinions which
he examined for himself and found no reason to dispute;
on these he considered it unnecessary to write.
It is characteristic of his passion
for doing things thoroughly that he learnt nearly
the whole of the Odyssey and the Iliad
by heart. He had a Pickering copy of each poem,
which he carried in his pocket and referred to in
railway trains, both in England and Italy, when saying
the poems over to himself. These two little
books are now in the library of St. John’s College,
Cambridge. He was, however, disappointed to find
that he could not retain more than a book or two at
a time and that, on learning more, he forgot what
he had learnt first; but he was about sixty at the
time. Shakespeare’s Sonnets, on which he
published a book in 1899, gave him less trouble in
this respect; he knew them all by heart, and also
their order, and one consequence of this was that he
wrote some sonnets in the Shakespearian form.
He found this intimate knowledge of the poet’s
work more useful for his purpose than reading commentaries
by those who are less familiar with it. “A
commentary on a poem,” he would say, “may
be useful as material on which to form an estimate
of the commentator, but the poem itself is the most
important document you can consult, and it is impossible
to know it too intimately if you want to form an opinion
about it and its author.”
It was always the author, the work
of God, that interested him more than the book the
work of man; the painter more than the picture; the
composer more than the music. “If a writer,
a painter, or a musician makes me feel that he held
those things to be lovable which I myself hold to
be lovable I am satisfied; art is only interesting
in so far as it reveals the personality of the artist.”
Handel was, of course, “the greatest of all
musicians.” Among the painters he chiefly
loved Giovanni Bellini, Carpaccio, Gaudenzio Ferrari,
Rembrandt, Holbein, Velasquez, and De Hooghe; in poetry
Shakespeare, Homer, and the Authoress of the Odyssey;
and in architecture the man, whoever he was, who designed
the Temple of Neptune at Paestum. Life being
short, he did not see why he should waste any of it
in the company of inferior people when he had these.
And he treated those he met in daily life in the same
spirit: it was what he found them to be that
attracted or repelled him; what others thought about
them was of little or no consequence.
And now, at the end of his life, his
thoughts reverted to the two subjects which had occupied
him more than thirty years previously namely,
Erewhon and the evidence for the death and resurrection
of Jesus Christ. The idea of what might follow
from belief in one single supposed miracle had been
slumbering during all those years and at last rose
again in the form of a sequel to Erewhon.
In Erewhon Revisited Mr. Higgs returns to
find that the Erewhonians now believe in him as a god
in consequence of the supposed miracle of his going
up in a balloon to induce his heavenly father to send
the rain. Mr. Higgs and the reader know that
there was no miracle in the case, but Butler wanted
to show that whether it was a miracle or not did not
signify provided that the people believed it be one.
And so Mr. Higgs is present in the temple which is
being dedicated to him and his worship.
The existence of his son George was
an afterthought and gave occasion for the second leading
idea of the book the story of a father trying
to win the love of a hitherto unknown son by risking
his life in order to show himself worthy of it and
succeeding.
Butler’s health had already
begun to fail, and when he started for Sicily on Good
Friday, 1902, it was for the last time: he knew
he was unfit to travel, but was determined to go,
and was looking forward to meeting Mr. and Mrs. J.
A. Fuller Maitland, whom he was to accompany over the
Odyssean scenes at Trapani and Mount Eryx. But
he did not get beyond Palermo; there he was so much
worse that he could not leave his room. In a
few weeks he was well enough to be removed to Naples,
and Alfred went out and brought him home to London.
He was taken to a nursing home in St. John’s
Wood where he lay for a month, attended by his old
friend Dr. Dudgeon, and where he died on the 18th
June, 1902.
There was a great deal he still wanted
to do. He had intended to revise The Way
of All Flesh, to write a book about Tabachetti,
and to publish a new edition of Ex Voto with
the mistakes corrected. Also he wished to reconsider
the articles reprinted in The Humour of Homer,
and was looking forward to painting more sketches
and composing more music. While lying ill and
very feeble within a few days of the end, and not knowing
whether it was to be the end or not, he said to me:
“I am much better to-day.
I don’t feel at all as though I were going to
die. Of course, it will be all wrong if I do
get well, for there is my literary position to be
considered. First I write Erewhon that
is my opening subject; then, after modulating freely
through all my other books and the music and so on,
I return gracefully to my original key and write Erewhon
Revisited. Obviously, now is the proper moment
to come to a full close, make my bow and retire; but
I believe I am getting well, after all. It’s
very inartistic, but I cannot help it.”
Some of his readers complain that
they often do not know whether he is serious or jesting.
He wrote of Lord Beaconsfield: “Earnestness
was his greatest danger, but if he did not quite overcome
it (as indeed who can? it is the last enemy that shall
be subdued), he managed to veil it with a fair amount
of success.” To veil his own earnestness
he turned most naturally to humour, employing it in
a spirit of reverence, as all the great humorists
have done, to express his deepest and most serious
convictions. He was aware that he ran the risk
of being misunderstood by some, but he also knew that
it is useless to try to please all, and, like Mozart,
he wrote to please himself and a few intimate friends.
I cannot speak at length of his kindness,
consideration, and sympathy; nor of his generosity,
the extent of which was very great and can never be
known it was sometimes exercised in unexpected
ways, as when he gave my laundress a shilling because
it was “such a beastly foggy morning”;
nor of his slightly archaic courtliness unless
among people he knew well he usually left the room
backwards, bowing to the company; nor of his punctiliousness,
industry, and painstaking attention to detail he
kept accurate accounts not only of all his property
by double entry but also of his daily expenditure,
which he balanced to a halfpenny every evening, and
his handwriting, always beautiful and legible, was
more so at sixty-six than at twenty-six; nor of his
patience and cheerfulness during years of anxiety
when he had few to sympathize with him; nor of the
strange mixture of simplicity and shrewdness that
caused one who knew him well to say: “Il
sait tout; il ne sait rien; il
est poète.”
Epitaphs always fascinated him, and
formerly he used to say he should like to be buried
at Langar and to have on his tombstone the subject
of the last of Handel’s Six Great Fugues.
He called this “The Old Man Fugue,” and
said it was like an epitaph composed for himself by
one who was very old and tired and sorry for things;
and he made young Ernest Pontifex in The Way of
All Flesh offer it to Edward Overton as an epitaph
for his Aunt Alethea. Butler, however, left off
wanting any tombstone long before he died. In
accordance with his wish his body was cremated, and
a week later Alfred and I returned to Woking and buried
his ashes under the shrubs in the garden of the crematorium,
with nothing to mark the spot.