GREAT BRITAIN SIXTY YEARS AGO (Continued)
Carlyle Mrs. Baillie The
Young Queen Napoleon
One of the lions of whom I was in
pursuit was Thomas Carlyle. Very few Americans
at that time had ever seen him, for he lived a very
secluded and laborious life in a little brick house
at Chelsea, in the southwest of London; and he rarely
kept open doors. His life was the opposite to
that of Dickens and Macaulay, and he was never lionized,
except when he went to Edinburgh to deliver his address
before the University, years afterwards. I sent
him a note in which I informed him of the enthusiastic
admiration which we college students felt for him,
and that I desired to call and pay him my respects.
To my note he responded promptly: “You
will be welcome to-morrow at three o’clock, the
hour when I become accessible in my garret here.”
I found his “garret” to be a comfortable
front room on the second floor of his modest home.
It was well lined with books, and a portrait of Oliver
Cromwell hung behind his study chair. He was
seated at his table with a huge German volume open
before him. His greeting was very hearty, but,
with a comical look of surprise, he said in broad
Scotch: “You are a verrà young mon.”
I told him of the appetite we college boys had for
his books, and he assured me at once that while he
had met some of our eminent literary men he had never
happened to meet a college boy before. “Your
Mr. Longfellow,” said he, “called to see
me yesterday. He is a man skilled in the tongues.
Your own name I see is Dootch. The word ‘Cuyler’
means a delver, or one who digs underground.
You must be a Dutchman.” I told him that
my ancestors had come over from Holland a couple of
centuries ago, and I was proud of my lineage; for
my grandfather, Glen Cuyler, was a descendant of Hendrick
Cuyler, one of the early Dutch settlers of Albany,
who came there in 1667. “Ah,” said
he, “the Dootch are the brawvest people of modern
times. The world has been rinnin’ after
a red rag of a Frenchman; but he was nothing to William
the Silent. When Pheelip of Spain sent his Duke
of Alva to squelch those Dutchmen they joost squelched
him like a rotten egg aye, they did.”
I asked him why he didn’t visit
America, and told him that I had observed his name
registered at Ambleside, on Lake Windermere. “Nae,
nae,” said he, “I never scrabble my name
in public places.” I explained that it
was on the hotel register that I had seen “Thomas
Carlyle.” “It was not mine,”
he replied, “I never travel only when I ride
on a horse in the teeth of the wind to get out of
this smoky London. I would like to see America.
You may boast of your Dimocracy, or any other ’cracy,
or any other kind of political roobish, but the reason
why your laboring folk are so happy is that you have
a vast deal of land for a very few people.”
In this racy, picturesque vein he ran on for an hour
in the most cordial, good humor. He was then
in his prime, hale and athletic, with a remarkably
keen blue eye, a strong lower jaw and stiff iron gray
hair, brushed up from a capacious forehead; and he
had a look of a sturdy country deacon dressed up on
a Sunday morning for church. He was very carefully
attired in a new suit that day for visiting, and, as
I rose to leave, he said to me: “I am going
up into London and I will walk wi’ ye.”
We sallied out and he strode the pavement with long
strides like a plowman. I told him I had just
come from the land of Burns, and that the old man
at the native cottage of the poet had drunk himself
to death by drinking to the memory of Burns.
At this Carlyle laughed loudly, and
remarked: “Was that the end of him?
Ah, a wee bit drap will send a mon a
lang way.” He then told me that when
he was a lad he used to go into the Kirkyard at Dumfries
and, hunting out the poet’s tomb, he loved to
stand and just read over the name “Rabbert
Burns” “Rabbert Burns.”
He pronounced the name with deep reverence. That
picture of the country lad in his earliest act of
hero-worship at the grave of Burns would have been
a good subject for the pencil of Millais or of Holman
Hunt. At the corner of Hyde Park I parted from
Mr. Carlyle, and watched him striding away, as if,
like the De’il in “Tam O’Shanter,”
he had “business on his hand.”
Thirty years afterwards, in June,
1872, I felt an irrepressible desire to see the grand
old man once more, and I accordingly addressed him
a note requesting the favor of a few minutes’
interview. His reply was, perhaps, the briefest
letter ever written. It was simply:
“Three P.M.
T.C.”
He told me afterwards that his hand
had become so tremulous that he seldom touched a pen.
My beloved friend, the Rev. Newman Hall, asked the
privilege of accompanying me, as, like most Londoners,
he had never put his eye on the recluse philosopher.
We found the same old brick house, N Cheyne Row,
Chelsea, without the slightest change outside or in.
But, during those thirty years the gifted wife had
departed, and a sad change had come over the once
hale, stalwart man. After we had waited some
time, a feeble, stooping figure, attired in a long
blue flannel gown, moved slowly into the room.
His gray hair was unkempt, his blue eyes were still
keen and piercing, and a bright hectic spot of red
appeared on each of his hollow cheeks. His hands
were tremulous, and his voice deep and husky.
After a few personal inquiries the old man launched
out into a most extraordinary and characteristic harangue
on the wretched degeneracy of these evil days.
The prophet, Jeremiah, was cheerfulness itself in
comparison with him. Many of the raciest things
he regaled us with were entirely too personal for publication.
He amused us with a description of half a night’s
debate with John Bright on political economy, while
he said, “Bright theed and thoud with me for
hours, while his Quaker wife sat up hearin’ us
baith. I tell ye, John Bright got as gude
as he gie that night”; and I have no doubt
that he did.
Most of his extraordinary harangue
was like an eruption of Vesuvius, but the laugh he
occasionally gave showed that he was talking about
as much for his own amusement as for ours. He
was terribly severe on Parliament, which he described
as “endless babblement and windy talk the
same hurdy-gurdies grinding out lies and inanitiés.”
The only man he had ever heard in Parliament that
at all satisfied him was the Old Iron Duke. “He
gat up and stammered away for fifteen minutes; but
I tell ye, he was the only mon in Parliament
who gie us any credible portraiture of the facts.”
He looked up at the portrait of Oliver Cromwell behind
him, and exclaimed with great vehemence: “I
ha’ gone doon to the verrà bottom of Oliver’s
speeches, and naething in Demosthenes or in any other
mon will compare wi’ Cromwell in penetrating
into the veritable core of the fact. Noo, Parliament,
as they ca’ it, is joost everlasting babblement
and lies.” We led him to discuss the labor
question and the condition of the working classes.
He said that the turmoil about labor is only “a
lazy trick of master and man to do just as little
honest work and to get just as much for it as they
possibly can that is the labor question.”
It did my soul good, as a teetotaler, to hear his
scathing denunciation of the liquor traffic.
He was fierce in his wrath against “the horrible
and detestable damnation of whuskie and every kind
of strong drink.” In this strain the thin
and weird looking old Iconoclast went on for an hour
until he wound up with declaring, “England has
joost gane clear doon into an abominable cesspool
of lies, shoddies and shams down to a bottomless
damnation. Ye may gie whatever meaning
to that word that ye like.” He could not
refrain from laughing heartily himself at the conclusion
of this eulogy on his countrymen. If we had not
known that Mr. Carlyle had a habit of exercising himself
in this kind of talk, we should have felt a sort of
consternation. As it was we enjoyed it as a postscript
to “Sartor Resartus” or the “Latter
Day” pamphlets, and listened and laughed accordingly.
As we were about parting from him with a cordial and
tender farewell, my friend, Newman Hall, handed him
a copy of his celebrated little book, “Come
to Jesus,” Mr. Carlyle, leaning over his table,
fixed his eye upon the inscription on the outside of
the booklet, and as we left the room, we heard him
repeating to himself the title “Coom to Jesus Coom
to Jesus.”
About Carlyle’s voluminous works,
his glorious eulogies of Luther, Knox and Cromwell,
his vivid histories, his pessimistic utterances, his
hatred of falsehood and his true, pure and laborious
life, I have no time or space to write. He was
the last of the giants in one department of British
literature. He will outlive many an author who
slumbers in the great Abbey. I owe him grateful
thanks for many quickening, stimulating thoughts,
and shall always be thankful that I grasped the strong
hand of Thomas Carlyle.
One of the literary celebrities to
whom I had credentials was the venerable Mrs. Joanna
Baillie, not now much read, but then well known from
her writings and her intimacy with Sir Walter Scott,
and to whom Lockhart devotes a considerable space
in the biography. Her residence was in Hampstead,
and I was obliged, after leaving the omnibus, to walk
nearly a mile across open fields which are now completely
built over by mighty London. The walk proved
a highly profitable one from the society of an intelligent
stranger who, like every true English gentleman, when
properly approached, was led to give all the information
in his power. When I reached the suburban village
of Hampstead, after passing over stiles and through
fields, I at last succeeded in finding her residence,
a quiet little cottage, with a little parlor which
had been honored by some of the first characters of
our age. “The female Shakespeare,”
as she was sometimes called in those days, was at
home and tripped into the room with the elastic step
of a girl, although she was considerably over three
score years and ten. She was very petite and fair,
with a sweet benignant countenance that inspired at
once admiration and affection. Almost her first
words to me were: “What a pity you did not
come ten minutes sooner; for if you had you would
have seen Mr. Thomas Campbell, who has just gone away.”
I was exceedingly sorry to have missed a sight of
the author of “Hohenlinden” and the incomparable
“Battle of the Baltic,” but was quite
surprised that he was still seeking much society;
for in those days he was lamentably addicted to intoxicants.
On more than one public occasion he was the worse
for his cups; and when, after his death, a subscription
was started to place his statue in Westminster Abbey,
Samuel Rogers, the poet, cynically said, “Yes,
I will gladly give twenty pounds any day to see dear
old Tom Campbell stand steady on his legs.”
It is a matter of congratulation that the most eminent
men of the Victorian era have not fallen into some
of the unhappy habits of their predecessors at the
beginning of the last century. Mrs. Baillie entertained
me with lively descriptions of Sir Walter Scott, and
of her old friend, Mr. Wordsworth, who was her guest
whenever he came up to London. She expressed
the warmest admiration for the moral and political,
though not all of the religious, writings of our Dr.
Channing, whom she pronounced the finest essayist of
the time. She also felt a curious interest (which
I discovered in many other notable people in England)
to learn what she could in regard to our American Indians,
and expressed much admiration when I gave her some
quotations from the picturesque eloquence of our sons
of the forest.
Every American who visited London
in those days felt a laudable curiosity to see the
young Queen, who had been crowned but four years before.
I went up to Windsor Castle, and after inspecting it,
joined a little group of people who were standing
at the gateway which leads out to the Long Drive and
Virginia Water. They were waiting to get a look
at the young Queen, who always drove out at four o’clock.
Presently the gate opened and a low carriage, preceded
by three horsemen, passed through. It contained
a plump baby, nearly two years of age, wrapped in
a buff cloak and held up in the arms of its nurse.
That baby became the Empress Dowager of Germany, the
mother of the present Kaiser and of Prince Henry,
who has lately been our guest. In a few minutes
afterwards a pony phaeton, with two horses, passed
through the gate and we all doffed our hats.
It was driven by handsome young Prince Albert, dressed
in a gray overcoat and silk hat. To this day I
think of him as about the most captivating young husband
that I have ever seen. By his side sat his young
wife, dressed in a small white bonnet with pink feather
and wrapped in a white shawl. Her complexion
was exceedingly fresh and fair. Her light brown
hair was dressed in the “Grecian” style,
and as she bowed gracefully I observed the peculiarity
of her smile that she showed her teeth
very distinctly. This resulted from the shortness
of her upper lip. “A pretty girl she is
too” was the remark I heard from the visitors
as the carriage went on down the drive. That was
my first glimpse of royalty, and I little dreamed
that she was to be the longest lived sovereign that
ever sat on the British throne, and the most popular
woman in all modern times.
Thirty years rolled away and I saw
the good Queen again. The Albert Memorial, erected
to the handsome Prince Consort, whom she idolized,
had just been completed, and one morning the Queen
came incognito to make her first private inspection
of the memorial. Through the intimation of a
friend I hurried at once to the Park, and found a small
company of people gathered there. Her Majesty
had just come, accompanied by Prince Arthur, the Princess
Louise and the young Princess Beatrice; and they were
examining the gorgeous new structure. The Queen
wore a plain black silk dress and her children were
very plainly attired, so that they looked like a group
of good, honest republicans. The only evidence
of royalty was that the company of gentlemen who were
pointing out to the Queen the various beauties of
the monument just completed were careful not to turn
their backs upon Her Majesty. I observed that
when her children bade her “good morning”
they kneeled and kissed her hand. She remained
sitting in her carriage for some time, chatting and
laughing with her daughter Beatrice. Her countenance
had become very florid and her figure very stout.
The last time that I saw her driving in the Park her
full, rubicund face made her look not only like the
venerable grandmother of a host of descendants, but
of the whole vast empire on which the sun never sets.
Last year the most beloved sovereign that has ever
occupied the British throne was laid in the gorgeous
mausoleum at Frogmore beside the husband of her youth
and the sharer of twenty-two years of happy and holy
wedlock. All Christendom was a mourner beside
that royal tomb.
From London I went on a very brief
visit to Paris, at the time when Louis Phillipe was
at the height of his power and apparently securely
seated on his throne. Within a half a dozen years
from that time he was a refugee in disguise, and the
kingdom of France was followed by the Republic of
Lamartine. My brief visit to Paris was made more
agreeable by the fact that my kinsman, the Hon. Henry
Ledyard, was then in charge of the American Embassy,
in the absence of his father-in-law, General Lewis
Cass, our Ambassador, who had returned to America for
a visit. The one memorable incident of that brief
sojourn in Paris that I shall recall was a visit to
the tomb of Napoleon, whose remains had been brought
home the year before from the Island of St. Helena.
Passing through the Place de la Concord and crossing
the Seine, a ten minutes’ walk brought me to
the Hospital des Invalides. I reached
it in the morning when the court in front was filled
with about three hundred veterans on an early parade.
Many of them were the shattered relics of Napoleon’s
Grand Army glorious old fellows in cocked
hats and long blue coats, and weather-beaten as the
walls around them. After a few moments I hurried
into the Rotunda, which is nearly one hundred feet
in height, surrounded by six small recesses, or alcoves.
“Where is Napoleon?” said I to one of
the sentinels. “There,” said he, pointing
to a recess, or small chapel, hung with dark purple
velvet and lighted by one glimmering lamp. I
approached the iron railing and, there before me, almost
within arm’s length, in the marble coffin covered
by his gray riding coat of Marengo, lay all that was
mortal of the great Emperor. At his feet was a
small urn containing his heart, and upon it lay his
sword and the military cap worn at the battle of Eylau.
Beside the coffin was gathered a group of tattered
banners captured by him in many a victorious fight.
Three gray-haired veterans, whose breasts were covered
with medals, were pacing slowly on guard in front
of the alcove. I said to them in French:
“Were you at Austerlitz?” “Oui, oui,”
they said. “Were you at Jena?” “Oui,
oui.” “At Wagram?” “Oui,
oui,” they replied. I lingered long at
the spot, listening to the inspiring strains of the
soldiery without, and recalling to my mind the stirring
days when the lifeless clay beside me was dashing
forward at the head of those very troops through the
passes of the Alps and over the bridge at Lodi.
It seemed to me as a dream, and I could scarcely realize
that I stood within a few feet of the actual body
of that colossal wonder-worker whose extraordinary
combination of military and civil genius surpassed
that of any other man in modern history. And
yet, when all shall be summoned at last before the
Great Tribunal, a Wilberforce, a Shaftesbury, or an
Abraham Lincoln will never desire to change places
with him.