"I never see a newspaper, and know nothing of England, except in a letter now and then from my sister" (1816).
But that did not at all suit his publisher, who set about sending him reviews, criticisms, and keeping him up to all that was going on in the literary and political world, thinking thus to stimulate and keep alive the pa.s.sions that kindle genius. Then it was that Lord Byron, considering this intellectual regime unwholesome for mind and heart, signified to Murray that their correspondence could not continue unless he consented to _six_ indispensable conditions. We regret not being able to give the whole of this beautiful letter, circ.u.mscribed as we are by certain necessary limits. Thus we shall only quote what more particularly relates to our subject:[134]--
"I have been thinking over our late correspondence, and wish to propose to you the following articles for our future:--
"1st. That you shall write to me of yourself, of the health, wealth, and welfare of all friends; but of _me (quoad me) little or nothing_.
"2dly....
"3dly....
"4thly. That you send me no periodical works whatsoever, no "Edinburgh,"
"Quarterly," "Monthly," or any review, magazine, or newspaper, English or foreign, of any description.
"5thly. That you send me no opinion whatsoever, either _good_, _bad_, or _indifferent_, of yourself, or your friends, or others, concerning any work of mine, past, present, or to come.
"6thly.... If any thing occurs so violently gross or personal as requires notice, Mr. Kinnaird will let me know; but of praise I desire to hear nothing.
"You will say, "To what tends all this?" I will answer--to keep my mind free, and unbiased by all paltry and personal irritabilities of praise or censure; to let my genius take its natural direction. All these reviews, with their praise or their criticism, have bored me to death, and taken off my attention from greater objects."
Byron wished, he said, to place himself in the position of a dead man, knowing nothing and feeling nothing of what is done and said about him.[135] At the same time he gave the greatest proof of the reality of the sentiments expressed in this letter by continuing to stay at Ravenna, where people were ignorant of his language, his genius, and his reputation, and where consequently he could only be remarked and appreciated for his external gifts and his deeds of benevolence. When he went from Ravenna to Pisa, Murray, who had not been discouraged by the six conditions, and who was really attached to Lord Byron more as a friend even than as a publisher, became alarmed at the angry feeling stirred up by "Cain," the "Vision of Judgment," "Don Juan," etc., and feared seeing him lose his popularity. So he wrote begging him to compose something in his first style, which had excited such general enthusiasm. But Lord Byron answered:--
"As to "a poem in the old way," I shall attempt of that kind nothing further. I follow the bias of my own mind, without considering whether women or men are or are not to be pleased."
His whole conduct in Greece was one long act of abnegation, of disinterested and sublime self-devotion. Let people read Parry, Gamba, even Stanhope.[136] He sacrificed for Greece all his revenue, his time, pleasures, comforts, even life itself, if necessary, and at the age of thirty-five; and then, after success, he refused every honor, satisfied with having deserved them.
"My intentions with regard to Greece," said he to Parry, at Missolonghi, "may be explained in a few words. I will remain here until Greece either throws off the Turkish yoke, or again sinks beneath it. All my revenue shall be spent in her service. All that can be done with my resources, and personally, I will do with my whole heart. But as soon as Greece is delivered from her external enemies, I will leave without taking any part in the interior organization of the government. I will go to the United States of America, and there, if requisite and they like it, be the agent for Greece, and endeavor to get that free and enlightened government to recognize the Greek federation as an independent State.
England would follow her example, and then the destiny of Greece would be a.s.sured. She would take the place that belongs to her as a member of Christendom in Europe."
One day, at Missolonghi, a Prussian officer came to complain to Lord Byron, saying, that his _rank_ would not allow him to remain under command of Mr. Parry, who was his inferior both in a civil and military capacity, and consequently that he was going to retire. After having done all he could to bring the German to more reasonable sentiments, after having even joked him on his quarterings of n.o.bility, and the folly of wishing to introduce such prejudices into a country like Greece, Lord Byron did not scruple adding:--
"As to me, I should be quite willing to serve as a simple soldier, in any corps, if that were considered useful to the cause."
But if Lord Byron"s absence of ambition under the two first categories, as established by Bacon, is well proved; the same can not be said with regard to the third. To deny it would be not only contrary to truth, but especially would it be contrary to all justice; for the third order of ambition ceases to be a fault; it is the love of glory, and, according to Bacon, that is a virtue. At least it is a quality pertaining to n.o.ble minds; and could it, then, be wanting in Lord Byron? He had always had a presentiment that glory would not fail him. But he was not satisfied with obtaining it, his special wish was to _deserve_ it with just and undeniable right. While yet a child in his fourteenth year, he wrote, in
A FRAGMENT.
"When to their airy hall my fathers" voice Shall call my spirit * * * * * * *
Oh! may my shade behold no sculptured urns To mark the spot where earth to earth returns!
No lengthen"d scroll, no praise-enc.u.mber"d stone; My epitaph shall be my name alone: If _that_ with honor fail to crown my clay, Oh! may no other fame my deeds repay!
_That_, only _that_, shall single out the spot; By that remember"d, or with that forgot."
Another time, replying in verse to a poetic composition of one of his comrades which spoke of _the common lot of mortals as lying in Lethe"s wave_, Lord Byron, after some charming couplets, ends thus:--
"What, though the sculpture be destroy"d, From dark oblivion meant to guard; A bright renown shall be enjoy"d By those whose virtues claim reward.
"Then do not say the common lot Of all lies deep in Lethe"s wave; Some few, who ne"er will be forgot, Shall burst the bondage of the grave."
Several other compositions belonging to the same period prove that this child, who was so unambitious, and devoid of the usual sort of emulation, did, however, desire to excel in great and virtuous things.
In his adieu to the seat of his ancestors, he says, that,--
"Far distant he goes, with the same emulation, The fame of his fathers he ne"er can forget.
That fame, and that memory still will he cherish; He vows that he ne"er will disgrace your renown; Like you will he live, or like you will he perish."
And when the Rev. Mr. Beecher, his friend and guide during the college vacation pa.s.sed at Southwell, reproached him with not going enough into the world, young Byron answered, that retirement suited him better, but that when his boyhood and years of trial should be over, if the senate or the camp claimed his presence, he should endeavor to render himself worthy of his birth:--
"Oh! thus, the desire in my bosom for fame Bids me live but to hope for posterity"s praise; Could I soar with the phoenix on pinions of flame, With him I could wish to expire in the blaze."
But the fame to which he aspired was not literary fame. Garlands weaved on Mount Parna.s.sus had no perfume for him, and to seek after them would have appeared in his eyes a frivolous, unmeaning pastime. This severe and unjust judgment, this sort of antipathy, could they have been a presentiment of the dangers with which the glory obtained by literary fame threatened his repose? However that may be, it is certain that he endured rather than sought after it; and we may be equally sure that the glory to which his soul aspired was such as could be reaped in the senate, the camp, or amid the difficulties of an active, virtuous life.
At sixteen he wrote:--
"For the life of a Fox, of a Chatham the death, What censure, what danger, what woe would I brave!
Their lives did not end when they yielded their breath; Their glory illumines the gloom of their grave." 1806.
We find the following in his examination of conscience, written when he was given up to fashionable London life, and in the heyday of his poetic fame:--
"To be the first man--not the dictator, not the Sylla, but the Washington or the Aristides--the leader in talent and _truth_--is next to the Divinity!" (1813.)
These lines show that he did not feel himself in the position he could have wished to occupy, and that he would fain have achieved other success.
But the destiny that was evidently contrary to his tastes, and which through a thousand circ.u.mstances carried him away both from a military and a parliamentary career, to keep him almost perforce in the high walks of literature, was this destiny in accordance at least with his nature? Lord Byron"s brilliant debut in the senate, and his whole conduct in Greece when that country was one great military camp, prove certainly that he might have reaped full harvest in other fields, if fate had so allowed. But nevertheless when we see how prodigious were his achievements, concentrated within the domain of poetry; when we see that, despite himself, despite the resolution he occasionally took of writing no more, that yet, tortured by the energy of his genius, there was no remedy for him but to seize his pen; that he wrote sometimes under the influence of fever; that sleep did not still his imagination, nor travelling interrupt his works; that sorrow did not damp his ardor, nor amus.e.m.e.nt and pleasure weaken his wondrous energy. When we think that he united to this formidable vigor of genius such a luxuriant poetic vein; that his poems, unrivalled for depth of thought, conciseness, and magic beauty of style, were composed with all the ease of ordinary prose; that he could write them while conversing, interrupt his thread of ideas, and take it up again without difficulty, carry on his theme without previous preparation, not stay his pen except to turn the leaf, not change a single word in whole pages, generally only correcting when the proof-sheets came. When we know that a poem like the "Bride of Abydos" was written in four nights of a London season, the "Corsair" in ten days, "Lara" in three weeks, his fourth Canto of "Childe Harold" in twenty days, the "Lament of Ta.s.so" in the s.p.a.ce of time requisite for going from Ferrara to Florence; the "Prisoner of Chillon" by way of pastime during the day bad weather forced him to spend at a hotel on the borders of the Lake of Geneva; when we know that he wrote the "Siege of Corinth" and "Parisina" amid the torments caused by his separation, and when besieged with creditors; that at Ravenna, in the s.p.a.ce of one year, while torn by many sorrows, and annoyed by conspiracies, though he generously aided the conspirators, he yet found leisure to write "Marino Faliero," the "Foscari," "Sardanapalus,"
"Cain," the "Vision of Judgment," and many other things; that the fifth act of "Sardanapalus" was the work of forty-eight hours, and the fifth act of "Werner" of one night; that during another year pa.s.sed between Pisa and Genoa, in the midst of annoyances, sorrows, perpetual changes, he wrote ten cantos of "Don Juan," his admirable mystery of "Heaven and Earth," his delightful poem of the "Island," the "Age of Bronze," etc.
When we see all that, it must be acknowledged that if Lord Byron, in devoting himself to poetry, took a false step for his own happiness, it did not mar the manifestation of his genius. But if the world had cause to applaud, he did not share this sentiment. It might almost be said that he always wrote unwillingly; and certainly it may be added that fame never inspired him with vanity. That n.o.ble desire might, doubtless, have made his heart beat for a while, but it yielded to his philosophical spirit. If at twenty-six, being repelled from public business by the political bias of the day, and from a military career by other circ.u.mstances, he could write in his memoranda "I am not ambitious," how much more disposed did he feel to renounce every kind of ambition two years later, when he was leaving England, full of disgust, and having sounded all the depths of the human soul.
"The wise man is cured of ambition by ambition itself," says La Bruyere; "he tends toward such great things that he can not confine himself to what are called treasures, high posts, fortune, and favor. He sees nothing in such poor advantages _good_ or _solid_ enough to fill _his heart_, to deserve his cares and desires; and it even requires strong efforts for him not to disdain them too much. The only good capable of tempting him is that sort of fame which ought to be the meed of pure, simple virtue; but men are not wont to give it, and he is fain to go without it."
The only advantage Lord Byron wished to derive from his reputation was to render it subservient to his heart--the true focus of his n.o.ble existence. Even in the first days of youth, when his pulses beat strongly for glory, it is evident that he would make it tributary to heart--a means rather than an end. But this became more and more conspicuous when he had really attained to fame. In Italy especially he had become quite indifferent to the pompous praise accorded by reviews, while a single word emanating from the heart made an impression on him, ofttimes causing tears to start. He wrote to Moore from Ravenna, in 1821:--
"I have had a curious letter to-day from a girl in England (I never saw her), who says she is given over of a decline, but could not go out of the world without thanking me for the delight which my poesy for several years, etc., etc., etc. It is signed simply N.N.A., and has not a word of "cant" or preachment in it upon my opinions. She merely says that she is dying, and that, as I had contributed so highly to the pleasure of her existence, she thought that she might say so, begging me to _burn_ her _letter_--which, by the way, I can _not_ do, as I look upon such a letter in such circ.u.mstances as better than a diploma from Gottingen.
"I once had a letter from Drontheim, in Norway (but not from a dying woman), in verse, on the same score of gratulation. These are the things which make one at times believe one"s self a poet."[137]
And in "Detached Thoughts," which he wrote at Ravenna, we find:--
"A young American, named Coolidge, called on me not many months ago. He was intelligent, very handsome, and not more than twenty years old, according to appearance; a little romantic--but that sits well upon youth--and mighty fond of poesy, as may be suspected from his approaching me in my cavern. He brought me a message from an old servant of my family (Joe Murray), and told me that he (Mr. Coolidge) had obtained a copy of my bust from Thorwaldsen at Rome, to send to America.
I confess I was more flattered by this young enthusiasm of a solitary trans-Atlantic traveller, than if they had decreed me a statue in the Paris Pantheon (I have seen emperors and demagogues cast down from their pedestals even in my own time, and Grattan"s name razed from the street called after him in Dublin); I say that I was more flattered by it, because it was _simple, unpolitical, and was without motive or ostentation_, the pure and warm feeling of a boy for the poet he admired."
The lines written on the road between Ravenna and Pisa, scarcely two years before his death, beginning with--
"Oh, talk not to me of a name great in story,"
would alone suffice to prove that his love of fame had both its source and its sole gratification in his heart. These charming verses end thus:--
III.
"Oh FAME!--if I e"er took delight in thy praises, "Twas less for the sake of thy high-sounding phrases, Than to see the bright eyes of the dear one discover She thought that I was not unworthy to love her.
IV.