A Publisher And His Friends (Fiscle Part-4) - Samuel Smiles (books like beach read TXT) 📗
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Produced It. When The Author Was Announced To Be Mr. Thomas Hope, Of
Deepdene, Some Incredulity Was Expressed By The _Literati_.
Chapter 20 (Hallam Basil Hall--Crabbe--Hope--Horace And James Smith-) Pg 24
The Countess Of Blessington, In Her "Conversations With Lord Byron,"
Says: "Byron Spoke To-Day In Terms Of High Commendation Of Hope's
'Anastasius'; Said He Had Wept Bitterly Over Many Pages Of It, And For
Two Reasons--First, That He Had Not Written It; And, Secondly, That Hope
Had; For That It Was Necessary To Like A Man Excessively To Pardon His
Writing Such A Book--A Book, He Said, Excelling All Recent Productions
As Much In Wit And Talent As In True Pathos. He Added That He Would Have
Given His Two Most Approved Poems To Have Been The Author Of
'Anastasius.'" The Work Was Greatly Read At The Time, And Went Through
Many Large Editions.
The Refusal Of The "Rejected Addresses," By Horace And James Smith, Was
One Of Mr. Murray's Few Mistakes. Horace Was A Stockbroker, And James A
Solicitor. They Were Not Generally Known As Authors, Though They
Contributed Anonymously To The _New Monthly Magazine_, Which Was
Conducted By Campbell The Poet. In 1812 They Produced A Collection
Purporting To Be "Rejected Addresses, Presented For Competition At The
Opening Of Drury Lane Theatre." They Offered The Collection To Mr.
Murray For L20, But He Declined To Purchase The Copyright. The Smiths
Were Connected With Cadell The Publisher, And Murray, Thinking That The
Ms. Had Been Offered To And Rejected By Him, Declined To Look Into It.
The "Rejected Addresses" Were Eventually Published By John Miller, And
Excited A Great Deal Of Curiosity. They Were Considered To Be The Best
Imitations Of Living Poets Ever Made. Byron Was Delighted With Them. He
Wrote To Mr. Murray That He Thought Them "By Far The Best Thing Of The
Kind Since The 'Rolliad.'" Crabbe Said Of The Verses In Imitation Of
Himself, "In Their Versification They Have Done Me Admirably." When He
Afterwards Met Horace Smith, He Seized Both Hands Of The Satirist, And
Said, With A Good-Humoured Laugh, "Ah! My Old Enemy, How Do You Do?"
Jeffrey Said Of The Collection, "I Take Them, Indeed, To Be The Very
Best Imitations (And Often Of Difficult Originals) That Ever Were Made,
And, Considering Their Extent And Variety, To Indicate A Talent To Which
I Do Not Know Where To Look For A Parallel." Murray Had No Sooner Read
The Volume Than He Spared No Pains To Become The Publisher, But It Was
Not Until After The Appearance Of The Sixteenth Edition That He Was Able
To Purchase The Copyright For L131.
Towards The End Of 1819, Mr. Murray Was Threatened With An Action On
Account Of Certain Articles Which Had Appeared In Nos. 37 And 38 Of The
_Quarterly_ Relative To The Campaign In Italy Against Murat, King Of
Naples. The First Was Written By Dr. Reginald (Afterwards Bishop) Heber,
Under The Title Of "Military And Political Power Of Russia, By Sir
Robert Wilson"; The Second Was Entitled "Sir Robert Wilson's Reply."
Colonel Macirone Occupied A Very Unimportant Place In Both Articles. He
Had Been In The Service Of Murat While King Of Naples, And Acted As His
Aide-De-Camp, Which Post He Retained After Murat Became Engaged In
Hostilities With Austria, Then In Alliance With England. Macirone Was
Furnished With A Passport For _Himself_ As Envoy Of The Allied Powers,
And Provided With Another Passport For Murat, Under The Name Of Count
Chapter 20 (Hallam Basil Hall--Crabbe--Hope--Horace And James Smith-) Pg 25Lipona, To Be Used By Him In Case He Abandoned His Claim To The Throne
Of Naples. Murat Indignantly Declined The Proposal, And Took Refuge In
Corsica. Yet Macirone Delivered To Murat The Passport. Not Only So, But
He Deliberately Misled Captain Bastard, The Commander Of A Small English
Squadron Which Had Been Stationed At Bastia To Intercept Murat In The
Event Of His Embarking For The Purpose Of Regaining His Throne At
Naples. Murat Embarked, Landed In Italy Without Interruption, And Was
Soon After Defeated And Taken Prisoner. He Thereupon Endeavoured To Use
The Passport Which Macirone Had Given Him, To Secure His Release, But It
Was Too Late; He Was Tried And Shot At Pizzo. The Reviewer Spoke Of
Colonel Macirone In No Very Measured Terms. "For Murat," He Said, "We
Cannot Feel Respect, But We Feel Very Considerable Pity. Of Mr. Macirone
We Are Tempted To Predict That He Has Little Reason To Apprehend The
Honourable Mode Of Death Which Was Inflicted On His Master. _His_
Vocation Seems To Be Another Kind Of Exit."
Macirone Gave Notice Of An Action For Damages, And Claimed No Less Than
L10,000. Serjeant Copley (Afterwards Lord Lyndhurst), Then
Solicitor-General, And Mr. Gurney, Were Retained For Mr. Murray By His
Legal Adviser Mr. Sharon Turner.
The Case Came On, And On The Bench Were Seated The Duke Of Wellington,
Lord Liverpool, And Other Leading Statesmen, Who Had Been Subpoenaed As
Witnesses For The Defence. One Of The Ridgways, Publishers, Had Also
Been Subpoenaed With An Accredited Copy Of Macirone's Book; But It Was
Not Necessary To Produce Him As A Witness, As Mr. Ball, The Counsel For
Macirone, _Quoted_ Passages From It, And Thus Made The Entire Book
Available As Evidence For The Defendant, A Proceeding Of Which Serjeant
Copley Availed Himself With Telling Effect. He Substantiated The Facts
Stated In The _Quarterly_ Article By Passages Quoted From Colonel
Macirone's Own "Memoirs." Before He Had Concluded His Speech, It Became
Obvious That The Jury Had Arrived At The Conclusion To Which He Wished
To Lead Them; But He Went On To Drive The Conclusion Home By A Splendid
Peroration. [Footnote: Given In Sir Theodore Martin's "Life Of Lord
Lyudhurst," P. 170.] The Jury Intimated That They Were All Agreed; But
The Judge, As A Matter Of Precaution, Proceeded To Charge Them On The
Evidence Placed Before Them; And As Soon As He Had Concluded, The Jury,
Without Retiring From The Box, At Once Returned Their Verdict For The
Defendant.
Although Mr. Murray Had Now A House In The Country, He Was Almost
Invariably To Be Found At Albemarle Street. We Find, In One Of His
Letters To Blackwood, Dated Wimbledon, May 22, 1819, The Following: "I
Have Been Unwell With Bile And Rheumatism, And Have Come To A Little
Place Here, Which I Have Bought Lately, For A Few Days To Recruit."
Chapter 20 (Hallam Basil Hall--Crabbe--Hope--Horace And James Smith-) Pg 26
The Following Description Of A Reception At Mr. Murray's Is Taken From
The "Autobiography" Of Mrs. Bray, The Novelist. She Relates That In The
Autumn Of 1819 She Made A Visit To Mr. Murray, With Her First Husband,
Charles Stothard, Son Of The Well-Known Artist, For The Purpose Of
Showing Him The Illustrations Of His "Letters From Normandy And
Brittany."
"We Did Not Know," She Says, "That Mr. Murray Held Daily From About
Three To Five O'clock A Literary Levee At His House. In This Way He
Gathered Round Him Many Of The Most Eminent Men Of The Time. On Calling,
We Sent Up Our Cards, And Finding He Was Engaged, Proposed To Retreat,
When Mr. Murray Himself Appeared And Insisted On Our Coming Up. I Was
Introduced To Him By My Husband, And Welcomed By Him With All The
Cordiality Of An Old Acquaintance. He Said Sir Walter Scott Was There,
And He Thought That We Should Like To See Him, And To Be Introduced To
Him. 'You Will Know Him At Once,' Added Mr. Murray, 'He Is Sitting On
The Sofa Near The Fire-Place.' We Found Sir Walter Talking To Mr.
Gifford, Then The Editor Of The _Quarterly Review_. The Room Was Filled
With Men And Women, And Among Them Several Of The Principal Authors And
Authoresses Of The Day; But My Attention Was So Fixed On Sir Walter And
Mr. Gifford That I Took Little Notice Of The Rest. Many Of Those Present
Were Engaged In Looking At And Making Remarks Upon A Drawing, Which
Represented A Venetian Countess (Guiccioli), The Favourite, But Not Very
Respectable Friend Of Lord Byron. Mr. Murray Made His Way Through The
Throng In Order To Lead Us Up To Sir Walter. We Were Introduced. Mr.
Murray, Anxious To Remove The Awkwardness Of A First Introduction,
Wished To Say Something Which Would Engage A Conversation Between
Ourselves And Sir Walter Scott, And Asked Charles If He Happened To Have
About Him His Drawing Of The Bayeux Tapestry To Show To Sir Walter.
Charles Smiled And Said 'No'; But The Saying Answered The Desired End;
Something Had Been Said That Led To Conversation, And Sir Walter,
Gifford, Mr. Murray, And Charles Chatted On, And I Listened.
"Gifford Looked Very Aged, His Face Much Wrinkled, And He Seemed To Be
In Declining Health; His Dress Was Careless, And His Cravat And
Waistcoat Covered With Snuff. There Was An Antique, Philosophic Cast
About His Head And Countenance, Better Adapted To Exact A Feeling Of
Curiosity In A Stranger Than The Head Of Sir Walter Scott; The Latter
Seemed More A Man Of This World's Mould. Such, Too, Was His Character;
For, With All His Fine Genius, Sir Walter Would Never Have Been So
Successful An Author, Had He Not Possessed So Large A Share Of Common
Sense, United To A Business-Like Method Of Conducting His Affairs, Even
Those Which Perhaps I Might Venture To Call The Affairs Of Imagination.
We Took Our Leave; And Before We Got Further Than The First Landing, We
Met Mr. Murray Conducting Sir Walter Downstairs; They Were Going To Have
A Private Chat Before The Departure Of The Latter." [Footnote: "Mrs.
Bray's Autobiography," Pp. 145-7.]
Chapter 21 (Memoirs Of Lady Hervey And Horace Walpole--Belzoni--Milman--Southey --Mrs. Rundell, Etc.) Pg 27
About The Beginning Of 1819
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