The famous Mr. Joseph Addison.
The gentlemen ushers had a table at
Kensington, and the Guard a very splendid dinner daily
at St. James’s, at either of which ordinaries
Esmond was free to dine. Dick Steele liked the
Guard-table better than his own at the gentlemen ushers’,
where there was less wine and more ceremony; and Esmond
had many a jolly afternoon in company of his friend,
and a hundred times at least saw Dick into his chair.
If there is verity in wine, according to the old adage,
what an amiable-natured character Dick’s must
have been! In proportion as he took in wine he
overflowed with kindness. His talk was not witty
so much as charming. He never said a word that
could anger anybody, and only became the more benevolent
the more tipsy he grew. Many of the wags derided
the poor fellow in his cups, and chose him as a butt
for their satire: but there was a kindness about
him, and a sweet playful fancy, that seemed to Esmond
far more charming than the pointed talk of the brightest
wits, with their elaborate repartees and affected
severities. I think Steele shone rather than
sparkled. Those famous beaux-esprits of the coffee-houses
(Mr. William Congreve, for instance, when his gout
and his grandeur permitted him to come among us) would
make many brilliant hits half a dozen in
a night sometimes but, like sharp-shooters,
when they had fired their shot, they were obliged
to retire under cover till their pieces were loaded
again, and wait till they got another chance at their
enemy; whereas Dick never thought that his bottle companion
was a butt to aim at only a friend to shake
by the hand. The poor fellow had half the town
in his confidence; everybody knew everything about
his loves and his debts, his creditors or his mistress’s
obduracy. When Esmond first came on to the town,
honest Dick was all flames and raptures for a young
lady, a West India fortune, whom he married. In
a couple of years the lady was dead, the fortune was
all but spent, and the honest widower was as eager
in pursuit of a new paragon of beauty, as if he had
never courted and married and buried the last one.
Quitting the Guard-table one Sunday
afternoon, when by chance Dick had a sober fit upon
him, he and his friend were making their way down Germain
Street, and Dick all of a sudden left his companion’s
arm, and ran after a gentleman who was poring over
a folio volume at the book-shop near to St. James’s
Church. He was a fair, tall man, in a snuff-colored
suit, with a plain sword, very sober, and almost shabby
in appearance at least when compared to
Captain Steele, who loved to adorn his jolly round
person with the finest of clothes, and shone in scarlet
and gold lace. The Captain rushed up, then, to
the student of the book-stall, took him in his arms,
hugged him, and would have kissed him for
Dick was always hugging and bussing his friends but
the other stepped back with a flush on his pale face,
seeming to decline this public manifestation of Steele’s
regard.
“My dearest Joe, where hast
thou hidden thyself this age?” cries the Captain,
still holding both his friend’s hands; “I
have been languishing for thee this fortnight.”
“A fortnight is not an age,
Dick,” says the other, very good-humoredly.
(He had light blue eyes, extraordinary bright, and
a face perfectly regular and handsome, like a tinted
statue.) “And I have been hiding myself where
do you think?”
“What! not across the water,
my dear Joe?” says Steele, with a look of great
alarm: “thou knowest I have always ”
“No,” says his friend,
interrupting him with a smile: “we are not
come to such straits as that, Dick. I have been
hiding, sir, at a place where people never think of
finding you at my own lodgings, whither
I am going to smoke a pipe now and drink a glass of
sack: will your honor come?”
“Harry Esmond, come hither,”
cries out Dick. “Thou hast heard me talk
over and over again of my dearest Joe, my guardian
angel?”
“Indeed,” says Mr. Esmond,
with a bow, “it is not from you only that I
have learnt to admire Mr. Addison. We loved good
poetry at Cambridge as well as at Oxford; and I have
some of yours by heart, though I have put on a red
coat. . . . ‘O qui canoro blandius
Orpheo vocale ducis carmen;’
shall I go on, sir?” says Mr. Esmond, who, indeed,
had read and loved the charming Latin poems of Mr.
Addison, as every scholar of that time knew and admired
them.
“This is Captain Esmond who
was at Blenheim,” says Steele.
“Lieutenant Esmond,” says
the other, with a low bow, “at Mr. Addison’s
service.
“I have heard of you,”
says Mr. Addison, with a smile; as, indeed, everybody
about town had heard that unlucky story about Esmond’s
dowager aunt and the Duchess.
“We were going to the ‘George’
to take a bottle before the play,” says Steele:
“wilt thou be one, Joe?”
Mr. Addison said his own lodgings
were hard by, where he was still rich enough to give
a good bottle of wine to his friends; and invited the
two gentlemen to his apartment in the Haymarket, whither
we accordingly went.
“I shall get credit with my
landlady,” says he, with a smile, “when
she sees two such fine gentlemen as you come up my
stair.” And he politely made his visitors
welcome to his apartment, which was indeed but a shabby
one, though no grandee of the land could receive his
guests with a more perfect and courtly grace than
this gentleman. A frugal dinner, consisting of
a slice of meat and a penny loaf, was awaiting the
owner of the lodgings. “My wine is better
than my meat,” says Mr. Addison; “my Lord
Halifax sent me the Burgundy.” And he set
a bottle and glasses before his friends, and ate his
simple dinner in a very few minutes, after which the
three fell to, and began to drink. “You
see,” says Mr. Addison, pointing to his writing-table,
whereon was a map of the action at Hochstedt, and
several other gazettes and pamphlets relating to the
battle, “that I, too, am busy about your affairs,
Captain. I am engaged as a poetical gazetteer,
to say truth, and am writing a poem on the campaign.”
So Esmond, at the request of his host,
told him what he knew about the famous battle, drew
the river on the table aliquo mero, and with
the aid of some bits of tobacco-pipe showed the advance
of the left wing, where he had been engaged.
A sheet or two of the verses lay already
on the table beside our bottles and glasses, and Dick
having plentifully refreshed himself from the latter,
took up the pages of manuscript, writ out with scarce
a blot or correction, in the author’s slim,
neat handwriting, and began to read therefrom with
great emphasis and volubility. At pauses of the
verse, the enthusiastic reader stopped and fired off
a great salvo of applause.
Esmond smiled at the enthusiasm of
Addison’s friend. “You are like the
German Burghers,” says he, “and the Princes
on the Mozelle: when our army came to a halt,
they always sent a deputation to compliment the chief,
and fired a salute with all their artillery from their
walls.”
“And drunk the great chiefs
health afterward, did not they?” says Captain
Steele, gayly filling up a bumper; he never
was tardy at that sort of acknowledgment of a friend’s
merit.
“And the Duke, since you will
have me act his Grace’s part,” says Mr.
Addison, with a smile, and something of a blush, “pledged
his friends in return. Most Serene Elector of
Covent Garden, I drink to your Highness’s health,”
and he filled himself a glass. Joseph required
scarce more pressing than Dick to that sort of amusement;
but the wine never seemed at all to fluster Mr. Addison’s
brains; it only unloosed his tongue: whereas
Captain Steele’s head and speech were quite overcome
by a single bottle.
No matter what the verses were, and,
to say truth, Mr. Esmond found some of them more than
indifferent, Dick’s enthusiasm for his chief
never faltered, and in every line from Addison’s
pen, Steele found a master-stroke. By the time
Dick had come to that part of the poem, wherein the
bard describes as blandly as though he were recording
a dance at the opera, or a harmless bout of bucolic
cudgelling at a village fair, that bloody and ruthless
part of our campaign, with the remembrance whereof
every soldier who bore a part in it must sicken with
shame when we were ordered to ravage and
lay waste the Elector’s country; and with fire
and murder, slaughter and crime, a great part of his
dominions was overrun; when Dick came to the lines
“In vengeance
roused the soldier fills his hand
With sword and fire,
and ravages the land,
In crackling flames
a thousand harvests burn,
A thousand villages
to ashes turn.
To the thick woods the
woolly flocks retreat,
And mixed with bellowing
herds confusedly bleat.
Their trembling lords
the common shade partake,
And cries of infants
found in every brake.
The listening soldier
fixed in sorrow stands,
Loth to obey his leader’s
just commands.
The leader grieves,
by generous pity swayed,
To see his just commands
so well obeyed;”
by this time wine and friendship had
brought poor Dick to a perfectly maudlin state, and
he hiccupped out the last line with a tenderness that
set one of his auditors a-laughing.
“I admire the license of your
poets,” says Esmond to Mr. Addison. (Dick, after
reading of the verses, was fain to go off, insisting
on kissing his two dear friends before his departure,
and reeling away with his periwig over his eyes.)
“I admire your art: the murder of the campaign
is done to military music, like a battle at the opera,
and the virgins shriek in harmony, as our victorious
grenadiers march into their villages. Do you
know what a scene it was?” (by this
time, perhaps, the wine had warmed Mr. Esmond’s
head too,) “what a triumph you are
celebrating? what scenes of shame and horror were enacted,
over which the commander’s genius presided,
as calm as though he didn’t belong to our sphere?
You talk of the ‘listening soldier fixed in sorrow,’
the ‘leader’s grief swayed by generous
pity;’ to my belief the leader cared no more
for bleating flocks than he did for infants’
cries, and many of our ruffians butchered one or the
other with equal alacrity. I was ashamed of my
trade when I saw those horrors perpetrated, which came
under every man’s eyes. You hew out of your
polished verses a stately image of smiling victory;
I tell you ’tis an uncouth, distorted, savage
idol; hideous, bloody, and barbarous. The rites
performed before it are shocking to think of.
You great poets should show it as it is ugly
and horrible, not beautiful and serene. Oh, sir,
had you made the campaign, believe me, you never would
have sung it so.”
During this little outbreak, Mr. Addison
was listening, smoking out of his long pipe, and smiling
very placidly. “What would you have?”
says he. “In our polished days, and according
to the rules of art, ’tis impossible that the
Muse should depict tortures or begrime her hands with
the horrors of war. These are indicated rather
than described; as in the Greek tragedies, that, I
dare say, you have read (and sure there can be no
more elegant specimens of composition), Agamemnon is
slain, or Medea’s children destroyed, away from
the scene; the chorus occupying the stage
and singing of the action to pathetic music. Something
of this I attempt, my dear sir, in my humble way:
’tis a panegyric I mean to write, and not a
satire. Were I to sing as you would have me, the
town would tear the poet in pieces, and burn his book
by the hands of the common hangman. Do you not
use tobacco? Of all the weeds grown on earth,
sure the nicotian is the most soothing and salutary.
We must paint our great Duke,” Mr. Addison went
on, “not as a man, which no doubt he is, with
weaknesses like the rest of us, but as a hero.
’Tis in a triumph, not a battle, that your humble
servant is riding his sleek Pegasus. We college
poets trot, you know, on very easy nags; it hath been,
time out of mind, part of the poet’s profession
to celebrate the actions of heroes in verse, and to
sing the deeds which you men of war perform. I
must follow the rules of my art, and the composition
of such a strain as this must be harmonious and majestic,
not familiar, or too near the vulgar truth. Si
parva licet: if Virgil could invoke
the divine Augustus, a humbler poet from the banks
of the Isis may celebrate a victory and a conqueror
of our own nation, in whose triumphs every Briton
has a share, and whose glory and genius contributes
to every citizen’s individual honor. When
hath there been, since our Henrys’ and Edwards’
days, such a great feat of arms as that from which
you yourself have brought away marks of distinction?
If ’tis in my power to sing that song worthily,
I will do so, and be thankful to my Muse. If I
fail as a poet, as a Briton at least I will show my
loyalty, and fling up my cap and huzzah for the conqueror:
“’Rheni
pacator et Istri
Omnis in hoc uno
variis discordia cessit
Ordinibus; laetatur
eques, plauditque senator,
Votaque patricio
certant plebeia favori.’”
“There were as brave men on
that field,” says Mr. Esmond (who never could
be made to love the Duke of Marlborough, nor to forget
those stories which he used to hear in his youth regarding
that great chiefs selfishness and treachery) “there
were men at Blenheim as good as the leader, whom neither
knights nor senators applauded, nor voices plebeian
or patrician favored, and who lie there forgotten,
under the clods. What poet is there to sing them?”
“To sing the gallant souls of
heroes sent to Hades!” says Mr. Addison, with
a smile. “Would you celebrate them all?
If I may venture to question anything in such an admirable
work, the catalogue of the ships in Homer hath always
appeared to me as somewhat wearisome; what had the
poem been, supposing the writer had chronicled the
names of captains, lieutenants, rank and file?
One of the greatest of a great man’s qualities
is success; ’tis the result of all the others;
’tis a latent power in him which compels the
favor of the gods, and subjugates fortune. Of
all his gifts I admire that one in the great Marlborough.
To be brave? every man is brave. But in being
victorious, as he is, I fancy there is something divine.
In presence of the occasion, the great soul of the
leader shines out, and the god is confessed. Death
itself respects him, and passes by him to lay others
low. War and carnage flee before him to ravage
other parts of the field, as Hector from before the
divine Achilles. You say he hath no pity; no more
have the gods, who are above it, and superhuman.
The fainting battle gathers strength at his aspect;
and, wherever he rides, victory charges with him.”
A couple of days after, when Mr. Esmond
revisited his poetic friend, he found this thought,
struck out in the fervor of conversation, improved
and shaped into those famous lines, which are in truth
the noblest in the poem of the “Campaign.”
As the two gentlemen sat engaged in talk, Mr. Addison
solacing himself with his customary pipe, the little
maid-servant that waited on his lodging came up, preceding
a gentleman in fine laced clothes, that had evidently
been figuring at Court or a great man’s levee.
The courtier coughed a little at the smoke of the
pipe, and looked round the room curiously, which was
shabby enough, as was the owner in his worn, snuff-colored
suit and plain tie-wig.
“How goes on the magnum opus,
Mr. Addison?” says the Court gentleman on looking
down at the papers that were on the table.
“We were but now over it,”
says Addison (the greatest courtier in the land could
not have a more splendid politeness, or greater dignity
of manner). “Here is the plan,” says
he, “on the table: hac ibat Simois, here
ran the little river Nebel: hic est
Sigeia tellus, here are Tallard’s quarters,
at the bowl of this pipe, at the attack of which Captain
Esmond was present. I have the honor to introduce
him to Mr. Boyle; and Mr. Esmond was but now depicting
aliquo proelia mixta mero, when you came
in.” In truth, the two gentlemen had been
so engaged when the visitor arrived, and Addison,
in his smiling way, speaking of Mr. Webb, colonel
of Esmond’s regiment (who commanded a brigade
in the action, and greatly distinguished himself there),
was lamenting that he could find never a suitable
rhyme for Webb, otherwise the brigade should have
had a place in the poet’s verses. “And
for you, you are but a lieutenant,” says Addison,
“and the Muse can’t occupy herself with
any gentleman under the rank of a field officer.”
Mr. Boyle was all impatient to hear,
saying that my Lord Treasurer and my Lord Halifax
were equally anxious; and Addison, blushing, began
reading of his verses, and, I suspect, knew their weak
parts as well as the most critical hearer. When
he came to the lines describing the angel, that
“Inspired repulsed
battalions to engage,
And taught the doubtful
battle where to rage,”
he read with great animation, looking
at Esmond, as much as to say, “You know where
that simile came from from our talk, and
our bottle of Burgundy, the other day.”
The poet’s two hearers were
caught with enthusiasm, and applauded the verses with
all their might. The gentleman of the Court sprang
up in great delight. “Not a word more,
my dear sir,” says he. “Trust me with
the papers I’ll defend them with my
life. Let me read them over to my Lord Treasurer,
whom I am appointed to see in half an hour. I
venture to promise, the verses shall lose nothing
by my reading, and then, sir, we shall see whether
Lord Halifax has a right to complain that his friend’s
pension is no longer paid.” And without
more ado, the courtier in lace seized the manuscript
pages, placed them in his breast with his ruffled
hand over his heart, executed a most gracious wave
of the hat with the disengaged hand, and smiled and
bowed out of the room, leaving an odor of pomander
behind him.
“Does not the chamber look quite
dark?” says Addison, surveying it, “after
the glorious appearance and disappearance of that gracious
messenger? Why, he illuminated the whole room.
Your scarlet, Mr. Esmond, will bear any light; but
this threadbare old coat of mine, how very worn it
looked under the glare of that splendor! I wonder
whether they will do anything for me,” he continued.
“When I came out of Oxford into the world, my
patrons promised me great things; and you see where
their promises have landed me, in a lodging up two
pair of stairs, with a sixpenny dinner from the cook’s
shop. Well, I suppose this promise will go after
the others, and fortune will jilt me, as the jade has
been doing any time these seven years. ‘I
puff the prostitute away,’” says he, smiling,
and blowing a cloud out of his pipe. “There
is no hardship in poverty, Esmond, that is not bearable;
no hardship even in honest dependence that an honest
man may not put up with. I came out of the lap
of Alma Mater, puffed up with her praises of me, and
thinking to make a figure in the world with the parts
and learning which had got me no small name in our
college. The world is the ocean, and Isis and
Charwell are but little drops, of which the sea takes
no account. My reputation ended a mile beyond
Maudlin Tower; no one took note of me; and I learned
this at least, to bear up against evil fortune with
a cheerful heart. Friend Dick hath made a figure
in the world, and has passed me in the race long ago.
What matters a little name or a little fortune?
There is no fortune that a philosopher cannot endure.
I have been not unknown as a scholar, and yet forced
to live by turning bear-leader, and teaching a boy
to spell. What then? The life was not pleasant,
but possible the bear was bearable.
Should this venture fail, I will go back to Oxford;
and some day, when you are a general, you shall find
me a curate in a cassock and bands, and I shall welcome
your honor to my cottage in the country, and to a
mug of penny ale. ’Tis not poverty that’s
the hardest to bear, or the least happy lot in life,”
says Mr. Addison, shaking the ash out of his pipe.
“See, my pipe is smoked out. Shall we have
another bottle? I have still a couple in the
cupboard, and of the right sort. No more? let
us go abroad and take a turn on the Mall, or look in
at the theatre and see Dick’s comedy. ’Tis
not a masterpiece of wit; but Dick is a good fellow,
though he doth not set the Thames on fire.”
Within a month after this day, Mr.
Addison’s ticket had come up a prodigious prize
in the lottery of life. All the town was in an
uproar of admiration of his poem, the “Campaign,”
which Dick Steele was spouting at every coffee-house
in Whitehall and Covent Garden. The wits on the
other side of Temple Bar saluted him at once as the
greatest poet the world had seen for ages; the people
huzza’ed for Marlborough and for Addison, and,
more than this, the party in power provided for the
meritorious poet, and Addison got the appointment of
Commissioner of Excise, which the famous Mr. Locke
vacated, and rose from this place to other dignities
and honors; his prosperity from henceforth to the end
of his life being scarce ever interrupted. But
I doubt whether he was not happier in his garret in
the Haymarket, than ever he was in his splendid palace
at Kensington; and I believe the fortune that came
to him in the shape of the countess his wife was no
better than a shrew and a vixen.
Gay as the town was, ’twas but
a dreary place for Mr. Esmond, whether his charmer
was in or out of it, and he was glad when his general
gave him notice that he was going back to his division
of the army which lay in winter-quarters at Bois-lé-Duc.
His dear mistress bade him farewell with a cheerful
face; her blessing he knew he had always, and wheresoever
fate carried him. Mistress Beatrix was away in
attendance on her Majesty at Hampton Court, and kissed
her fair fingertips to him, by way of adieu, when
he rode thither to take his leave. She received
her kinsman in a waiting-room, where there were half
a dozen more ladies of the Court, so that his high-flown
speeches, had he intended to make any (and very likely
he did), were impossible; and she announced to her
friends that her cousin was going to the army, in as
easy a manner as she would have said he was going
to a chocolate-house. He asked with a rather
rueful face, if she had any orders for the army? and
she was pleased to say that she would like a mantle
of Mechlin lace. She made him a saucy curtsy
in reply to his own dismal bow. She deigned to
kiss her fingertips from the window, where she stood
laughing with the other ladies, and chanced to see
him as he made his way to the “Toy.”
The Dowager at Chelsey was not sorry to part with
him this time. “Mon cher, vous étés
triste comme un sermon,”
she did him the honor to say to him; indeed, gentlemen
in his condition are by no means amusing companions,
and besides, the fickle old woman had now found a much
more amiable favorite, and raffoled for her darling
lieutenant of the Guard. Frank remained behind
for a while, and did not join the army till later,
in the suite of his Grace the Commander-in-Chief.
His dear mother, on the last day before Esmond went
away, and when the three dined together, made Esmond
promise to befriend her boy, and besought Frank to
take the example of his kinsman as of a loyal gentleman
and brave soldier, so she was pleased to say; and
at parting, betrayed not the least sign of faltering
or weakness, though, God knows, that fond heart was
fearful enough when others were concerned, though
so resolute in bearing its own pain.
Esmond’s general embarked at
Harwich. ’Twas a grand sight to see Mr.
Webb dressed in scarlet on the deck, waving his hat
as our yacht put off, and the guns saluted from the
shore. Harry did not see his viscount again,
until three months after, at Bois-lé-Duc,
when his Grace the Duke came to take the command,
and Frank brought a budget of news from home:
how he had supped with this actress, and got tired
of that; how he had got the better of Mr. St. John,
both over the bottle, and with Mrs. Mountford, of
the Haymarket Theatre (a veteran charmer of fifty,
with whom the young scapegrace chose to fancy himself
in love); how his sister was always at her tricks,
and had jilted a young baron for an old earl.
“I can’t make out Beatrix,” he said;
“she cares for none of us she only
thinks about herself; she is never happy unless she
is quarrelling; but as for my mother my
mother, Harry, is an angel.” Harry tried
to impress on the young fellow the necessity of doing
everything in his power to please that angel; not
to drink too much; not to go into debt; not to run
after the pretty Flemish girls, and so forth, as became
a senior speaking to a lad. “But Lord bless
thee!” the boy said; “I may do what I
like, and I know she will love me all the same;”
and so, indeed, he did what he liked. Everybody
spoiled him, and his grave kinsman as much as the
rest.