The Diary and Letters of Madame D'Arblay
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Chapter 171 : "How do you do, Captain Burney?""My lord, I should be glad to be employ
"How do you do, Captain Burney?"
"My lord, I should be glad to be employed."
" You must be sensible, Captain Burney, we have many claimants just now, and more than it is possible to satisfy immediately."
"I am very sensible of that, my lord; but, at the same time, I wish to let your lords.h.i.+p know what I should like to have--a frigate of thirty-two guns."
"I am very glad to know what you wish, sir."
He took out his pocket-book, made a memorandum, and wished James a good morning.
Whether or not it occurred to Mr. Windham, while I told this, that there seemed a shorter way to Lord Chatham, and one more in his own style, I know not: he was too delicate to let such a hint escape, and I would not for the world intrust him with my applications and disappointments.
BURKE'S SPEECH ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION.
But I have found," cried I afterwards, "another newspaper praise for you now, 'Mr. Windham, with his usual vein of irony."'
"O, yes," cried he, "I saw that! But what can it mean?--I use no 'vein of irony;'--I dislike it, except for peculiar purposes, keenly handled, and soon pa.s.sed over."
" Yet this is the favourite panegyric you receive continually,-- this, or logic, always attends your name in the newspapers."
"But do I use it?"
"Nay, not to me, I own. As a manner, I never found it out, at least. However, I am less averse now than formerly to the other panegyric--close logic,--for I own the more frequently I come hither the more convinced I find myself that that is no character of commendation to be given universally."
He could say nothing to this; and really the dilatory,
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desultory style of these prosecutors in general deserved a much deeper censure.
"If a little closeness of logic and reasoning were observed by one I look at now, what a man would he be, and who could compare with him!" Mr. Burke you are sure was here my object; and his entire, though silent and unwilling, a.s.sent was obvious.
"What a speech," I continued, "has he lately made!(337) how n.o.ble, how energetic, how enlarged throughout!"
"O," cried he, very unaffectedly, "upon the French Revolution?"
"Yes; and any party might have been proud of it, for liberality, for feeling, for all in one--genius. I, who am only a reader of detached speeches, have read none I have thought its equal."
"Yet, such as you have seen it, it does not do him justice. I was not in the House that day ; but I am a.s.sured the actual speech, as he spoke it at the moment, was highly superior to what has since been printed. There was in it a force--there were shades of reflection so fine--allusions so quick and so happy-- and strokes of satire and observation so pointed and so apt,-- that it had ten times more brilliancy when absolutely extempore than when transmitted to paper."
"Wonderful, wonderful! He is a truly wonderful creature!" And, alas, thought I, as wonderful in inconsistency as in greatness!
In the course of a discussion more detailed upon faculties, I ventured to tell him what impression they had made upon James, who was with me during one of the early long speeches. "I was listening," I said, " with the most fer-
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vent attention to such strokes of eloquence as, while I heard them, carried all before them, when my brother pulled me by the sleeve to exclaim, 'When will he come to the point?"'
The justness, notwithstanding his characteristic conciseness, of this criticism, I was glad thus to convey. Mr. Windham however, would not subscribe to it; but, with a significant smile, coolly said, "Yes, 'tis curious to hear a man of war's ideas of rhetoric."
"Well," quoth I, to make a little amends, "shall I tell you a compliment he paid you?"
"Me?"
"Yes. 'He speaks to the purpose,' he cried."
AN AWKWARD MEETING.
Some time after, with a sudden recollection, he eagerly exclaimed, "O, I knew I had something I wished to tell you! I was the other day at a place to see Stuart's Athenian architecture, and whom do you think I met in the room?"
I could not guess.
"Nay, 'tis precisely what you will like--Mr. Hastings!"
"Indeed!" cried I, laughing; "I must own I am extremely glad to hear it. I only wish you could both meet without either knowing the other."
"Well, we behaved extremely well, I a.s.sure you ; and looked each as if we had never seen one another before. I determined to let you know it." . . .
A NEW VISIT FROM MRS. FAIRLY.
The day after the birthday I had again a visit from Mrs. Fairly.
I was in the midst of packing, and breakfasting, and confusion - for we left town immediately, to return no more till next year, except to St. James's for the Drawing-room. However, I made her as welcome as I was able, and she was more soft and ingratiating in her manners than I ever before observed her. I apologised two or three times for not waiting upon her, representing my confined abilities for visiting.
ONE TRAGEDY FINISHED AND ANOTHER COMMENCED.
August.-As I have only my almanac memorandums for this month, I shall hasten immediately to what I think my dear partial lecturers will find most to their taste in the course of it.
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Know then, fair ladies, about the middle of this August, 17 90, the author finished the rough first draft and copy of her first tragedy. What species of a composition it may prove she is very unable to tell; she only knows it was an almost spontaneous work, and soothed the melancholy of imagination for a while, though afterwards it impressed it with a secret sensation of horror, so like real woe, that she believes it contributed to the injury her sleep received about this period.
Nevertheless, whether well or ill, she is pleased to have done something at last, she had so long lived in all ways as nothing.
You will smile, however, at my next trust; but scarce was this completed,-as to design and scenery I mean, for the whole is in its first rough state, and legible only to herself,- scarce, however, had this done with imagination, to be consigned over to correction, when imagination seized upon another subject for another tragedy.
The first therefore I have deposited in my strong-box, in all its imperfections, to attend to the other; I well know correction may always be summoned, Imagination never will come but by choice. I received her, therefore, a welcome guest,--the best adapted for softening weary solitude, where only coveted to avoid irksome exertion.
MISS BURNEY's RESIGNATION MEMORIAL.