It is a
caricature
of the Devil
acknowledging Miss Sin in Milton.
acknowledging Miss Sin in Milton.
Byron
The lid was divided into three compartments by double rows of
silver-gilt nails, and in the compartment at the head, over a rich star
of the Order of the Garter was placed the Royal Arms of England,
beautifully executed in dead Gold. . . . In the lower compartment at the
feet was the British Lion _Rampant, regardant_, supporting a shield with
the letters G. R. surrounded with the garter and motto of the same order
in dead gold. . . . The handles were of silver, richly gilt of a massive
modern pattern, and the most exquisite workmanship. "--Ibid. , p. 126. ]
[507] {491}["The body of his Majesty was not embalmed in the usual
manner, but has been wrapped in cere-clothes, to preserve it as long as
possible. . . . The corpse, indeed, exhibited a painful spectacle of the
rapid decay which had recently taken place in his Majesty's
constitution, . . . and hence, possibly, the surgeons deemed it impossible
to perform the process of embalming in the usual way. "--Ibid. , p. 126. ]
[508] [The fact that George II. pocketed, and never afterwards produced
or attempted to carry out his father's will, may have suggested to the
scandalous the possibility of a similar act on the part of his
great-grandson. ]
[gl] {492}
/ _vices_ \
_In whom his_ < > _all are reigning still_. --[MS. erased. ]
\ _virtues_ /
[509] [Lady Byron's account of her husband's theological opinions is at
variance with this statement. (See _Diary_ of H. C. Robinson, 1869, iii.
436. )]
[gm] {493}
_But he with first a start and then a nod_. --[MS. ]
_Snored, "There is some new star gone out by G--d! "-_-[MS. erased. ]
[510] {493}[Louis the Sixteenth was guillotined January 21, 1793. ]
[gn] {494}_That fellow Paul the damndest Saint_. --[MS. erased. ]
[511] ["The blessed apostle Bartholomew preached first in Lycaonia, and,
at the last, in Athens . . . and there he was first flayed, and afterwards
his head was smitten off. "--_Golden Legend_, edited by F. S. Ellis,
1900, v. 41. ]
[512] {495}
"Then I beheld the King. From a cloud which covered the pavement
His reverend form uprose: heavenward his face was directed.
Heavenward his eyes were raised, and heavenward his arms were directed. "
_The Vision, etc. _, iii.
[513] [The reading of the MS. and of the _Liberal_ is "pottered. " The
editions of 1831, 1832, 1837, etc. , read "pattered. "]
[go] ----_his whole celestial skin_. --[MS. erased. ]
[gp] _Or some such other superhuman ichor_. --[MS. erased. ]
[gq] {496}_By Captain Parry's crews_----. --[_The Liberal_, 1822, i. 12. ]
[514] ["The luminous arch had broken into irregular masses, streaming
with much rapidity in different directions, varying continually, in
shape and interest, and extending themselves from north, by the east, to
north. The usual pale light of the aurora strongly resembled that
produced by the combustion of phosphorus; a very slight tinge of red was
noticed when the aurora was most vivid, but no other colours were
visible. "--_Sir E. Parry's Voyage in_ 1819-20, p. 135. ]
[515] [Compare "Methought I saw a fair youth borne with prodigious speed
through the heavens, who gave a blast to his trumpet so violent, that
the radiant beauty of his countenance was in part disfigured by
it. "--Translation of Quevedo's "Dream of Skulls," by G. Ticknor,
_History of Spanish Literature_, 1888, ii. 340. ]
[516] {497}[Joanna Southcott, born 1750, published her _Book of
Wonders_, 1813-14, died December 27, 1814. ]
[517]
["Eminent on a hill, there stood the Celestial City;
Beaming afar it shone; its towers and cupolas rising
High in the air serene, with the brightness of gold in the furnace,
Where on their breadth the splendour lay intense and quiescent.
Part with a fierier glow, and a short thick tremulous motion
Like the burning pyropus; and turrets and pinnacles sparkled,
Playing in jets of light, with a diamond-like glory coruscant. "
_The Vision, etc. ,_ iv. ]
[518] {498}[See _The Book of Job_ literally translated from the original
Hebrew, by John Mason Good, F. R. S. (1764-1827), London, 1812. In the
"Introductory Dissertation," the author upholds the biographical and
historical character of the Book of Job against the contentions of
Professor Michaelis (Johann David, 1717-1791). The notes abound in
citations from the Hebrew and from the Arabic version. ]
[519] {499}["The gates or gateways of Eastern cities" were used as
"places for public deliberation, administration of justice, or audience
for kings and nations, or ambassadors. " See _Deut_. xvi. 18. "Judges and
officers shall thou make thee in all thy gates . . . and they shall judge
the people with just judgment. " Hence came the use of the word "Porte"
in speaking of the Government of Constantinople. --Smith's _Diet, of the
Bible_, art. "Gate. "]
[gr] _Crossing his radiant arms_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[gs] _But kindly; Sathan met_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[520] ["No saint in the course of his religious warfare was more
sensible of the unhappy failure of pious resolves than Dr. Johnson; he
said one day, talking to an acquaintance on this subject, 'Sir, hell is
paved with good intentions. '" Compare "Hell is full of good meanings and
wishes. " _Jacula Prudentum,_ by George Herbert, ed. 1651, p. 11;
Boswell's _Life of Johnson,_ 1876, p. 450, note 5. ]
[521] {501}[Compare--
"Not once or twice in our rough Island's story
The path of duty has become the path of glory. "
Tennyson's _Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. _]
[522] [John Stuart, Earl of Bute (1713-1792), was Secretary of State
March 25, 1761, and Prime Minister May 29, 1762-April, 1763. For the
general estimate of the influence which Bute exercised on the young
king, see a caricature entitled "The Royal Dupe" (Wright, p. 285),
_Dict. of Nat. Biog. _, art. "George III. "]
[gt] {502}_With blood and debt_----. --[MS. ]
[gu] _A_ part _of that which they held all of old_. --[MS. erased]
[523] {503}[George III. resisted Catholic Emancipation in 1795. "The
more I reflect on the subject, the more I feel the danger of the
proposal. "--Letter to Pitt, February 6, 1795. Again, February 1, 1801,
"This principle of duty must therefore prevent me from discussing any
proposition [to admit 'Catholics and Dissenters to offices, and
Catholics to Parliament'] tending to destroy the groundwork [that all
who held employments in the State must be members of the Church of
England] of our happy constitution. " Finally, in 1807, he demanded of
ministers "a positive assurance that they would never again propose to
him any concession to the Catholics. "--See _Life of Pitt_, by Earl
Stanhope, 1879, ii. 434, 461; _Dict. of Nat. Biog. _, art. "George III. "]
[gv] _Than see this blind old_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[gw] {504}_And interruption of your speech_. --[MS. erased. ]
[524]
["Which into hollow engines long and round,
Thick-rammed at th' other bore with touch of fire
Dilated and infuriate," etc.
_Paradise Lost_, vi. 484, sq. ]
[525] [A gold key is part of the insignia of office of the Lord
Chamberlain and other court officials. In Plate 17 of Francis Sandford's
_History of the Coronation of James the Second_, 1687, Henry Mordaunt,
Earl of Peterborow, who carries the sceptre of King Edward, is
represented with a key hanging from his belt. He was First Groom of the
Stole and Gentleman of Bedchamber. The Queen's Vice-chamberlain, who
appears in another part of the procession, also carries a key. ]
[gx] _Stuck in their buttocks----. --[MS. erased. _]
[gy] {505}_For theirs are honours nobler far than these_. --[MS. erased. ]
[526] [It is possible that Byron was thinking of Horace Walpole's famous
quip, "The summer has set in with its usual _severity_. " But, of course,
the meaning is that, owing to excessive and abnormal fogs, the _summer_
gilding might have to be pretermitted. ]
[gz] _Before they make their journey, ere begin it_. --[MS. erased. ]
[527] [For the invention of the electric telegraph before the date of
this poem, see _Sir Francis Ronalds, F. R. S. , and his Works in
connection with Electric Telegraphy in 1816_, by J. Sime, 1893. But the
"Telegraph" to which Byron refers was, probably, the semaphore (from
London to Portsmouth), which, according to [Sir] John Barrow, the
Secretary of the Admiralty, rendered "telegraphs of any kind now wholly
unnecessary" (_vide ibid. _, p. 10). ]
[528] {506}[Compare, for similarity of sound--
"It plunged and tacked and veered. "
_Ancient Mariner_, pt. iii. line 156. ]
[ha]
----_No land was ever overflowed_
_By locusts as the Heaven appeared by these_. --[MS. erased. ]
[hb] _And many-languaged cries were like wild geese_. --[Erased. ]
[529] [Compare--
"Wherefore with thee
Came not all Hell broke loose? "
_Paradise Lost_, iv. 917, 918. ]
[hc] _Though the first Hackney will_----. --[MS. ]
[hd] {507}_Ready to swear the cause of all their pain_. --[Erased. ]
[530] [In the game of ombre the ace of spades, _spadille_, ranks as the
best trump card, and basto, the ace of clubs, ranks as the third best
trump card. (For a description of ombre, see Pope's _Rape of the Lock_,
in. 47-64. )]
[531] {508}["'Caitiffs, are ye dumb? ' cried the multifaced Demon in
anger. "
_Vision of Judgement_, v. ]
[532]
["Beholding the foremost,
Him by the cast of his eye oblique, I knew as the firebrand
Whom the unthinking populace held for their idol and hero,
Lord of Misrule in his day. "
_Ibid. _, v.
In Hogarth's caricature (the original pen-and-ink sketch is in the
"Rowfant Library:" see Cruikshank's frontispiece to _Catalogue_, 1886)
Wilkes squints more than "a gentleman should squint. " The costume--long
coat, waistcoat buttoned to the neck, knee-breeches, and stockings--is
not unpleasing, but the expression of the face is something between a
leer and a sneer. Walpole (_Letters_, 1858, vii. 274) describes another
portrait (by Zoffani) as "a delightful piece of Wilkes looking--no,
squinting tenderly at his daughter.
It is a caricature of the Devil
acknowledging Miss Sin in Milton. "]
[533] {509}[For the "Coan" skirts of the First Empire, see the fashion
plates and Gillray's and Rowlandson's caricatures _passim_. ]
[he] _It shall be me they'll find the trustiest patriot_. --[MS. erased. ]
[hf] _Said Wilkes I've done as much before_. --[MS. erased. ]
[534] {510}[On his third return to Parliament for Middlesex, October 8,
1774, Wilkes took his seat (December 2) without opposition. In the
following February, and on subsequent occasions, he endeavoured to
induce the House to rescind the resolutions passed January 19, 1764,
under which he had been expelled from Parliament, and named as
blasphemous, obscene, etc. Finally, May, 1782, he obtained a substantial
majority on a division, and the obnoxious resolutions were ordered to be
expunged from the journals of the House. ]
[535] [Bute, as leader of the king's party, was an open enemy; Grafton,
a half-hearted friend. The duke (1736-1811) would have visited him in
the Tower (1763), "to hear from himself his own story and his defence;"
but rejected an appeal which Wilkes addressed to him (May 3) to become
surety for bail. He feared that such a step might "come under the
denomination of an insult on the Crown. " A writ of _Habeas Corpus_ (see
line 8) was applied for by Lord Temple and others, and, May 6, Wilkes
was discharged by Lord Chief Justice Pratt, on the ground of privilege.
Three years later (November 1, 1766), on his return from Italy, Wilkes
sought to obtain Grafton's protection and interest; but the duke, though
he consulted Chatham, and laid Wilkes's letter before the King, decided
to "take no notice" of this second appeal. In his _Autobiography_
Grafton is careful to define "the extent of his knowledge" of Mr.
Wilkes, and to explain that he was not "one of his intimates"--a
_caveat_ which warrants the statement of Junius that "as for Mr. Wilkes,
it is, perhaps, the greatest misfortune of his life, that you should
have so many compensations to make in the closet for your former
friendship with him. Your gracious Master understands your character;
and makes you a persecutor because you have been a friend" ("Letter
(xii. ) to the Duke of Grafton," May 30, 1769). --_Memoirs of Augustus
Henry, Third Duke of Grafton_, by Sir W. Anson, Bart. , D. C. L. , 1898, pp.
190-197. ]
[536] {511}[In 1774 Wilkes was elected Lord Mayor, and in the following
spring it fell to his lot to present to the King a remonstrance from the
Livery against the continuance of the war with America. Walpole (April
17, 1775, Letters, 1803, vi. 257) says that "he used his triumph with
moderation--in modern language with good breeding. " The King is said to
have been agreeably surprised at his demeanour. In his old age (1790) he
voted against the Whigs. A pasquinade, written by Sheridan, Tickell, and
Lord John Townshend, anticipated the devil's insinuations--
"Johnny Wilkes, Johnny Wilkes,
Thou greatest of bilks,
How changed are the notes you now sing!
Your famed 'Forty-five'
Is prerogative,
And your blasphemy 'God save the King'!
Johnny Wilkes,
And your blasphemy, 'God save the King '! "
_Wilkes, Sheridan, Fox_, by W. F. Rae, 1874, pp. 132, 133. ]
[hg] _Where Beelzebub upon duty_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[537] ["In consequence of Kyd Wake's attack upon the King, two Acts were
introduced [the "Treason" and "Sedition Bills," November 6, November 10,
1795], called the Pitt and Grenville Acts, for better securing the
King's person "(_Diary of H. C. Robinson_, 1869, i. 32). "'The first of
these bills [_The Plot Discovered, etc. _, by S. T. Coleridge, November
28, 1795, _Essays on his own Times_, 1850, i. 56] is an attempt to
assassinate the liberty of the press; the second to smother the liberty
of speech. " The "Devil" feared that Wilkes had been "gagged" for good
and all.
[538] {512}
["Who might the other be, his comrade in guilt and in suffering,
Brought to the proof like him, and shrinking like him from the trial?
Nameless the Libeller lived, and shot his arrows in darkness;
Undetected he passed to the grave, and leaving behind him
Noxious works on earth, and the pest of an evil example,
Went to the world beyond, where no offences are hidden.
Masked had he been in his life, and now a visor of iron,
Rivetted round his head, had abolished his features for ever.
Speechless the slanderer stood, and turned his face from the Monarch,
Iron-bound as it was . . . so insupportably dreadful
Soon or late to conscious guilt is the eye of the injured. "
_Vision of Judgement_, v. i]
[hh] _Or in the human cholic_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[hi] _Which looked as 'twere a phantom even on earth_. --[MS. erased. ]
[hj] _Now it seemed little, now a little bigger_. --[MS. erased. ]
[539] {513}[The Letters of Junius have been attributed to more than
fifty authors. Among the more famous are the Duke of Portland, Lord
George Sackville, Sir Philip Francis, Edmund Burke, John Dunning, Lord
Ashburton, John Home Tooke, Hugh Boyd, George Chalmers, etc. Of Junius,
Byron wrote, in his _Journal_ of November 23, 1813, "I don't know what
to think. Why should Junius be yet dead? . . . . the man must be alive, and
will never die without the disclosure" (_Letters_, 1893, ii. 334); but
an article (by Brougham) in the _Edinburgh Review_, vol. xxix. p. 94, on
_The Identity of Junius with a Distinguished Living Character
established_ (see _Letters_, 1900, iv. 210), seems to have almost
persuaded him that "Francis is Junius. " (For a _resume_ of the arguments
in favour of the identity of Junius with Francis, see Mr. Leslie
Stephen's article in the _Dict. of Nat. Biography_, art. "Francis. " See,
too, _History of England in the Eighteenth Century_, by W. E. H. Lecky,
1887, iii. 233-255. For a series of articles (by W. Fraser Rae) against
this theory, see _Athenaeum_, 1888, ii. 192, 258, 319. The question is
still being debated. See _The Francis Letters_, with a note on the
Junius Controversy, by C. F. Keary, 1901. )]
[hk] _A doctor, a man-midwife_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[hl] {514}_Till curiosity became a task_. --[MS. erased. ]
[540] [The "Man in the Iron Mask," or, more correctly, the "Man in the
Black Velvet Mask," has been identified with Count Ercole Antonio
Mattioli, Secretary of State at the Court of Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga,
Duke of Mantua. Mattioli was convicted of high treason, and at the
instance of Louis XIV. was seized by the Marechal Catinat, May 2, 1679,
and confined at Pinerolo. He was deported to the Iles Sainte-Marguerite,
March 19, 1694, and afterwards transferred to the Bastille, September
18, 1698. He died November 19, 1703. Baron Heiss was the first to solve
the mystery. Chambrier, Roux-Fazillac, Delort, G. A. Ellis (see a notice
in the _Quart. Rev_. , June, 1826, vol. xxxiv. p. 19), and others take
the same view. (See, for confirmation of this theory, an article
_L'Homme au Masque de Velours Noir_, in the _Revue Historique_, by M.
Frantz Funck-Brentano, November, December, 1894, tom. 56, pp. 253-303. )]
[541] [See _The Rivals_, act iv. sc. II]
[hm] _It is that he_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[542] {515}[The Delta of the Niger is a vast alluvial morass, covered
with dense forests of mangrove. "Along the whole coast . . . there opens
into the Atlantic its successive estuaries, which navigators have
scarcely been able to number. "]
[543] [The title-page runs thus: "_Letters of Junius, Stat Nominis
Umbra_. " _That_, and nothing more! On the title-page of his copy, across
the motto, S. T. Coleridge wrote this sentence, "As he never dropped the
mask, so he too often used the poisoned dagger of the
assassin. "--_Miscellanies_, etc. , by S. T. Coleridge, ed. T. Asle, 1885,
p. 341. ]
[hn]
_My charge is upon record and will last_
_Longer than will his lamentation_. --[MS. erased. ]
[544] {516}[John Horne Tooke (1736-1812), as an opponent of the American
War, and as a promoter of the Corresponding Society, etc. ; and Benjamin
Franklin (1706-1790), as the champion of American Independence, would
have been cited as witnesses against George III. ]
[545] [In the _Diable Boiteux_ (1707) of Le Sage, Don Cleofas, clinging
to the cloak of Asmodeus, is carried through the air to the summit of
San Salvador. Compare--
"Oh! could Le Sage's demon's gift
Be realiz'd at my desire,
This night my trembling form he'd lift,
To place it on St. Mary's spire. "
_Granta, a Medley_, stanza 1. , _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 56, note 2. ]
[546] ["But what he most detested, what most filled him with disgust,
was the settled, determined malignity of a renegado. "--_Speech of
William Smith, M. P. , in the House of Commons_, March 14, 1817. (See,
too, for the use of the word "renegado," _Poetical Works_, 1900, iii.
488, note i. )]
[547] [For the "weight" of Southey's quartos, compare Byron's note (1)
to _Hints from Horace_, line 657, and a variant of lines 753-756. "Thus
let thy ponderous quarto steep and stink" (_Poetical Works_, 1898, i.
435, 443). ]
[ho] {517}_And drawing nigh I caught him at a libel_. --[MS. erased. ]
[548] [Compare--
"But for the children of the 'Mighty Mother's,'
The would-be wits, and can't-be gentlemen,
I leave them to their daily 'tea is ready,'
Smug coterie, and literary lady. "
_Beppo_, stanza lxxvi. lines 5-8, _vide ante_, p. 183. ]
[hp]
_And scrawls as though he were head clerk to the "Fates,"_
_And this I think is quite enough for one_. --[Erased. ]
[549] {518}[Compare--
"One leaf from Southey's laurels may explode
All his combustibles,
'An ass, by God! '"
_A Satire on Satirists, etc. _, by W. S. Landor, 1836, p. 22. ]
[550] ["There is a chaunt in the recitation both of Coleridge and
Wordsworth, which acts as a spell upon the hearers. "--Hazlitt's _My
First Acquaintance with Poets_; _The Liberal_, 1823, ii. 23, 46. ]
[551] [Compare the attitude of Minos to the "poet" in Fielding's
_Journey from This World to the Next_: "The poet answered, he believed
if Minos had read his works he would set a higher value on them. [The
poet had begged for admittance to Elysium on the score of his 'dramatic
works. ' Minos dismissed the plea, but relented on being informed that he
had once lent the whole profits of a benefit-night to a friend. ] He was
then beginning to repeat, but Minos pushed him forward, and turning his
back to him, applied himself to the next passengers. "--_Novelist's
Magazine_, 1783, vol. xii. cap. vii. p. 17. ]
[552]
[" . . . Mediocribus esse poetis
Non homines, non di, non concessere columnae. "
Horace, _Ars Poetica_, lines 372, 373.
silver-gilt nails, and in the compartment at the head, over a rich star
of the Order of the Garter was placed the Royal Arms of England,
beautifully executed in dead Gold. . . . In the lower compartment at the
feet was the British Lion _Rampant, regardant_, supporting a shield with
the letters G. R. surrounded with the garter and motto of the same order
in dead gold. . . . The handles were of silver, richly gilt of a massive
modern pattern, and the most exquisite workmanship. "--Ibid. , p. 126. ]
[507] {491}["The body of his Majesty was not embalmed in the usual
manner, but has been wrapped in cere-clothes, to preserve it as long as
possible. . . . The corpse, indeed, exhibited a painful spectacle of the
rapid decay which had recently taken place in his Majesty's
constitution, . . . and hence, possibly, the surgeons deemed it impossible
to perform the process of embalming in the usual way. "--Ibid. , p. 126. ]
[508] [The fact that George II. pocketed, and never afterwards produced
or attempted to carry out his father's will, may have suggested to the
scandalous the possibility of a similar act on the part of his
great-grandson. ]
[gl] {492}
/ _vices_ \
_In whom his_ < > _all are reigning still_. --[MS. erased. ]
\ _virtues_ /
[509] [Lady Byron's account of her husband's theological opinions is at
variance with this statement. (See _Diary_ of H. C. Robinson, 1869, iii.
436. )]
[gm] {493}
_But he with first a start and then a nod_. --[MS. ]
_Snored, "There is some new star gone out by G--d! "-_-[MS. erased. ]
[510] {493}[Louis the Sixteenth was guillotined January 21, 1793. ]
[gn] {494}_That fellow Paul the damndest Saint_. --[MS. erased. ]
[511] ["The blessed apostle Bartholomew preached first in Lycaonia, and,
at the last, in Athens . . . and there he was first flayed, and afterwards
his head was smitten off. "--_Golden Legend_, edited by F. S. Ellis,
1900, v. 41. ]
[512] {495}
"Then I beheld the King. From a cloud which covered the pavement
His reverend form uprose: heavenward his face was directed.
Heavenward his eyes were raised, and heavenward his arms were directed. "
_The Vision, etc. _, iii.
[513] [The reading of the MS. and of the _Liberal_ is "pottered. " The
editions of 1831, 1832, 1837, etc. , read "pattered. "]
[go] ----_his whole celestial skin_. --[MS. erased. ]
[gp] _Or some such other superhuman ichor_. --[MS. erased. ]
[gq] {496}_By Captain Parry's crews_----. --[_The Liberal_, 1822, i. 12. ]
[514] ["The luminous arch had broken into irregular masses, streaming
with much rapidity in different directions, varying continually, in
shape and interest, and extending themselves from north, by the east, to
north. The usual pale light of the aurora strongly resembled that
produced by the combustion of phosphorus; a very slight tinge of red was
noticed when the aurora was most vivid, but no other colours were
visible. "--_Sir E. Parry's Voyage in_ 1819-20, p. 135. ]
[515] [Compare "Methought I saw a fair youth borne with prodigious speed
through the heavens, who gave a blast to his trumpet so violent, that
the radiant beauty of his countenance was in part disfigured by
it. "--Translation of Quevedo's "Dream of Skulls," by G. Ticknor,
_History of Spanish Literature_, 1888, ii. 340. ]
[516] {497}[Joanna Southcott, born 1750, published her _Book of
Wonders_, 1813-14, died December 27, 1814. ]
[517]
["Eminent on a hill, there stood the Celestial City;
Beaming afar it shone; its towers and cupolas rising
High in the air serene, with the brightness of gold in the furnace,
Where on their breadth the splendour lay intense and quiescent.
Part with a fierier glow, and a short thick tremulous motion
Like the burning pyropus; and turrets and pinnacles sparkled,
Playing in jets of light, with a diamond-like glory coruscant. "
_The Vision, etc. ,_ iv. ]
[518] {498}[See _The Book of Job_ literally translated from the original
Hebrew, by John Mason Good, F. R. S. (1764-1827), London, 1812. In the
"Introductory Dissertation," the author upholds the biographical and
historical character of the Book of Job against the contentions of
Professor Michaelis (Johann David, 1717-1791). The notes abound in
citations from the Hebrew and from the Arabic version. ]
[519] {499}["The gates or gateways of Eastern cities" were used as
"places for public deliberation, administration of justice, or audience
for kings and nations, or ambassadors. " See _Deut_. xvi. 18. "Judges and
officers shall thou make thee in all thy gates . . . and they shall judge
the people with just judgment. " Hence came the use of the word "Porte"
in speaking of the Government of Constantinople. --Smith's _Diet, of the
Bible_, art. "Gate. "]
[gr] _Crossing his radiant arms_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[gs] _But kindly; Sathan met_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[520] ["No saint in the course of his religious warfare was more
sensible of the unhappy failure of pious resolves than Dr. Johnson; he
said one day, talking to an acquaintance on this subject, 'Sir, hell is
paved with good intentions. '" Compare "Hell is full of good meanings and
wishes. " _Jacula Prudentum,_ by George Herbert, ed. 1651, p. 11;
Boswell's _Life of Johnson,_ 1876, p. 450, note 5. ]
[521] {501}[Compare--
"Not once or twice in our rough Island's story
The path of duty has become the path of glory. "
Tennyson's _Ode on the Death of the Duke of Wellington. _]
[522] [John Stuart, Earl of Bute (1713-1792), was Secretary of State
March 25, 1761, and Prime Minister May 29, 1762-April, 1763. For the
general estimate of the influence which Bute exercised on the young
king, see a caricature entitled "The Royal Dupe" (Wright, p. 285),
_Dict. of Nat. Biog. _, art. "George III. "]
[gt] {502}_With blood and debt_----. --[MS. ]
[gu] _A_ part _of that which they held all of old_. --[MS. erased]
[523] {503}[George III. resisted Catholic Emancipation in 1795. "The
more I reflect on the subject, the more I feel the danger of the
proposal. "--Letter to Pitt, February 6, 1795. Again, February 1, 1801,
"This principle of duty must therefore prevent me from discussing any
proposition [to admit 'Catholics and Dissenters to offices, and
Catholics to Parliament'] tending to destroy the groundwork [that all
who held employments in the State must be members of the Church of
England] of our happy constitution. " Finally, in 1807, he demanded of
ministers "a positive assurance that they would never again propose to
him any concession to the Catholics. "--See _Life of Pitt_, by Earl
Stanhope, 1879, ii. 434, 461; _Dict. of Nat. Biog. _, art. "George III. "]
[gv] _Than see this blind old_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[gw] {504}_And interruption of your speech_. --[MS. erased. ]
[524]
["Which into hollow engines long and round,
Thick-rammed at th' other bore with touch of fire
Dilated and infuriate," etc.
_Paradise Lost_, vi. 484, sq. ]
[525] [A gold key is part of the insignia of office of the Lord
Chamberlain and other court officials. In Plate 17 of Francis Sandford's
_History of the Coronation of James the Second_, 1687, Henry Mordaunt,
Earl of Peterborow, who carries the sceptre of King Edward, is
represented with a key hanging from his belt. He was First Groom of the
Stole and Gentleman of Bedchamber. The Queen's Vice-chamberlain, who
appears in another part of the procession, also carries a key. ]
[gx] _Stuck in their buttocks----. --[MS. erased. _]
[gy] {505}_For theirs are honours nobler far than these_. --[MS. erased. ]
[526] [It is possible that Byron was thinking of Horace Walpole's famous
quip, "The summer has set in with its usual _severity_. " But, of course,
the meaning is that, owing to excessive and abnormal fogs, the _summer_
gilding might have to be pretermitted. ]
[gz] _Before they make their journey, ere begin it_. --[MS. erased. ]
[527] [For the invention of the electric telegraph before the date of
this poem, see _Sir Francis Ronalds, F. R. S. , and his Works in
connection with Electric Telegraphy in 1816_, by J. Sime, 1893. But the
"Telegraph" to which Byron refers was, probably, the semaphore (from
London to Portsmouth), which, according to [Sir] John Barrow, the
Secretary of the Admiralty, rendered "telegraphs of any kind now wholly
unnecessary" (_vide ibid. _, p. 10). ]
[528] {506}[Compare, for similarity of sound--
"It plunged and tacked and veered. "
_Ancient Mariner_, pt. iii. line 156. ]
[ha]
----_No land was ever overflowed_
_By locusts as the Heaven appeared by these_. --[MS. erased. ]
[hb] _And many-languaged cries were like wild geese_. --[Erased. ]
[529] [Compare--
"Wherefore with thee
Came not all Hell broke loose? "
_Paradise Lost_, iv. 917, 918. ]
[hc] _Though the first Hackney will_----. --[MS. ]
[hd] {507}_Ready to swear the cause of all their pain_. --[Erased. ]
[530] [In the game of ombre the ace of spades, _spadille_, ranks as the
best trump card, and basto, the ace of clubs, ranks as the third best
trump card. (For a description of ombre, see Pope's _Rape of the Lock_,
in. 47-64. )]
[531] {508}["'Caitiffs, are ye dumb? ' cried the multifaced Demon in
anger. "
_Vision of Judgement_, v. ]
[532]
["Beholding the foremost,
Him by the cast of his eye oblique, I knew as the firebrand
Whom the unthinking populace held for their idol and hero,
Lord of Misrule in his day. "
_Ibid. _, v.
In Hogarth's caricature (the original pen-and-ink sketch is in the
"Rowfant Library:" see Cruikshank's frontispiece to _Catalogue_, 1886)
Wilkes squints more than "a gentleman should squint. " The costume--long
coat, waistcoat buttoned to the neck, knee-breeches, and stockings--is
not unpleasing, but the expression of the face is something between a
leer and a sneer. Walpole (_Letters_, 1858, vii. 274) describes another
portrait (by Zoffani) as "a delightful piece of Wilkes looking--no,
squinting tenderly at his daughter.
It is a caricature of the Devil
acknowledging Miss Sin in Milton. "]
[533] {509}[For the "Coan" skirts of the First Empire, see the fashion
plates and Gillray's and Rowlandson's caricatures _passim_. ]
[he] _It shall be me they'll find the trustiest patriot_. --[MS. erased. ]
[hf] _Said Wilkes I've done as much before_. --[MS. erased. ]
[534] {510}[On his third return to Parliament for Middlesex, October 8,
1774, Wilkes took his seat (December 2) without opposition. In the
following February, and on subsequent occasions, he endeavoured to
induce the House to rescind the resolutions passed January 19, 1764,
under which he had been expelled from Parliament, and named as
blasphemous, obscene, etc. Finally, May, 1782, he obtained a substantial
majority on a division, and the obnoxious resolutions were ordered to be
expunged from the journals of the House. ]
[535] [Bute, as leader of the king's party, was an open enemy; Grafton,
a half-hearted friend. The duke (1736-1811) would have visited him in
the Tower (1763), "to hear from himself his own story and his defence;"
but rejected an appeal which Wilkes addressed to him (May 3) to become
surety for bail. He feared that such a step might "come under the
denomination of an insult on the Crown. " A writ of _Habeas Corpus_ (see
line 8) was applied for by Lord Temple and others, and, May 6, Wilkes
was discharged by Lord Chief Justice Pratt, on the ground of privilege.
Three years later (November 1, 1766), on his return from Italy, Wilkes
sought to obtain Grafton's protection and interest; but the duke, though
he consulted Chatham, and laid Wilkes's letter before the King, decided
to "take no notice" of this second appeal. In his _Autobiography_
Grafton is careful to define "the extent of his knowledge" of Mr.
Wilkes, and to explain that he was not "one of his intimates"--a
_caveat_ which warrants the statement of Junius that "as for Mr. Wilkes,
it is, perhaps, the greatest misfortune of his life, that you should
have so many compensations to make in the closet for your former
friendship with him. Your gracious Master understands your character;
and makes you a persecutor because you have been a friend" ("Letter
(xii. ) to the Duke of Grafton," May 30, 1769). --_Memoirs of Augustus
Henry, Third Duke of Grafton_, by Sir W. Anson, Bart. , D. C. L. , 1898, pp.
190-197. ]
[536] {511}[In 1774 Wilkes was elected Lord Mayor, and in the following
spring it fell to his lot to present to the King a remonstrance from the
Livery against the continuance of the war with America. Walpole (April
17, 1775, Letters, 1803, vi. 257) says that "he used his triumph with
moderation--in modern language with good breeding. " The King is said to
have been agreeably surprised at his demeanour. In his old age (1790) he
voted against the Whigs. A pasquinade, written by Sheridan, Tickell, and
Lord John Townshend, anticipated the devil's insinuations--
"Johnny Wilkes, Johnny Wilkes,
Thou greatest of bilks,
How changed are the notes you now sing!
Your famed 'Forty-five'
Is prerogative,
And your blasphemy 'God save the King'!
Johnny Wilkes,
And your blasphemy, 'God save the King '! "
_Wilkes, Sheridan, Fox_, by W. F. Rae, 1874, pp. 132, 133. ]
[hg] _Where Beelzebub upon duty_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[537] ["In consequence of Kyd Wake's attack upon the King, two Acts were
introduced [the "Treason" and "Sedition Bills," November 6, November 10,
1795], called the Pitt and Grenville Acts, for better securing the
King's person "(_Diary of H. C. Robinson_, 1869, i. 32). "'The first of
these bills [_The Plot Discovered, etc. _, by S. T. Coleridge, November
28, 1795, _Essays on his own Times_, 1850, i. 56] is an attempt to
assassinate the liberty of the press; the second to smother the liberty
of speech. " The "Devil" feared that Wilkes had been "gagged" for good
and all.
[538] {512}
["Who might the other be, his comrade in guilt and in suffering,
Brought to the proof like him, and shrinking like him from the trial?
Nameless the Libeller lived, and shot his arrows in darkness;
Undetected he passed to the grave, and leaving behind him
Noxious works on earth, and the pest of an evil example,
Went to the world beyond, where no offences are hidden.
Masked had he been in his life, and now a visor of iron,
Rivetted round his head, had abolished his features for ever.
Speechless the slanderer stood, and turned his face from the Monarch,
Iron-bound as it was . . . so insupportably dreadful
Soon or late to conscious guilt is the eye of the injured. "
_Vision of Judgement_, v. i]
[hh] _Or in the human cholic_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[hi] _Which looked as 'twere a phantom even on earth_. --[MS. erased. ]
[hj] _Now it seemed little, now a little bigger_. --[MS. erased. ]
[539] {513}[The Letters of Junius have been attributed to more than
fifty authors. Among the more famous are the Duke of Portland, Lord
George Sackville, Sir Philip Francis, Edmund Burke, John Dunning, Lord
Ashburton, John Home Tooke, Hugh Boyd, George Chalmers, etc. Of Junius,
Byron wrote, in his _Journal_ of November 23, 1813, "I don't know what
to think. Why should Junius be yet dead? . . . . the man must be alive, and
will never die without the disclosure" (_Letters_, 1893, ii. 334); but
an article (by Brougham) in the _Edinburgh Review_, vol. xxix. p. 94, on
_The Identity of Junius with a Distinguished Living Character
established_ (see _Letters_, 1900, iv. 210), seems to have almost
persuaded him that "Francis is Junius. " (For a _resume_ of the arguments
in favour of the identity of Junius with Francis, see Mr. Leslie
Stephen's article in the _Dict. of Nat. Biography_, art. "Francis. " See,
too, _History of England in the Eighteenth Century_, by W. E. H. Lecky,
1887, iii. 233-255. For a series of articles (by W. Fraser Rae) against
this theory, see _Athenaeum_, 1888, ii. 192, 258, 319. The question is
still being debated. See _The Francis Letters_, with a note on the
Junius Controversy, by C. F. Keary, 1901. )]
[hk] _A doctor, a man-midwife_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[hl] {514}_Till curiosity became a task_. --[MS. erased. ]
[540] [The "Man in the Iron Mask," or, more correctly, the "Man in the
Black Velvet Mask," has been identified with Count Ercole Antonio
Mattioli, Secretary of State at the Court of Ferdinando Carlo Gonzaga,
Duke of Mantua. Mattioli was convicted of high treason, and at the
instance of Louis XIV. was seized by the Marechal Catinat, May 2, 1679,
and confined at Pinerolo. He was deported to the Iles Sainte-Marguerite,
March 19, 1694, and afterwards transferred to the Bastille, September
18, 1698. He died November 19, 1703. Baron Heiss was the first to solve
the mystery. Chambrier, Roux-Fazillac, Delort, G. A. Ellis (see a notice
in the _Quart. Rev_. , June, 1826, vol. xxxiv. p. 19), and others take
the same view. (See, for confirmation of this theory, an article
_L'Homme au Masque de Velours Noir_, in the _Revue Historique_, by M.
Frantz Funck-Brentano, November, December, 1894, tom. 56, pp. 253-303. )]
[541] [See _The Rivals_, act iv. sc. II]
[hm] _It is that he_----. --[MS. erased. ]
[542] {515}[The Delta of the Niger is a vast alluvial morass, covered
with dense forests of mangrove. "Along the whole coast . . . there opens
into the Atlantic its successive estuaries, which navigators have
scarcely been able to number. "]
[543] [The title-page runs thus: "_Letters of Junius, Stat Nominis
Umbra_. " _That_, and nothing more! On the title-page of his copy, across
the motto, S. T. Coleridge wrote this sentence, "As he never dropped the
mask, so he too often used the poisoned dagger of the
assassin. "--_Miscellanies_, etc. , by S. T. Coleridge, ed. T. Asle, 1885,
p. 341. ]
[hn]
_My charge is upon record and will last_
_Longer than will his lamentation_. --[MS. erased. ]
[544] {516}[John Horne Tooke (1736-1812), as an opponent of the American
War, and as a promoter of the Corresponding Society, etc. ; and Benjamin
Franklin (1706-1790), as the champion of American Independence, would
have been cited as witnesses against George III. ]
[545] [In the _Diable Boiteux_ (1707) of Le Sage, Don Cleofas, clinging
to the cloak of Asmodeus, is carried through the air to the summit of
San Salvador. Compare--
"Oh! could Le Sage's demon's gift
Be realiz'd at my desire,
This night my trembling form he'd lift,
To place it on St. Mary's spire. "
_Granta, a Medley_, stanza 1. , _Poetical Works_, 1898, i. 56, note 2. ]
[546] ["But what he most detested, what most filled him with disgust,
was the settled, determined malignity of a renegado. "--_Speech of
William Smith, M. P. , in the House of Commons_, March 14, 1817. (See,
too, for the use of the word "renegado," _Poetical Works_, 1900, iii.
488, note i. )]
[547] [For the "weight" of Southey's quartos, compare Byron's note (1)
to _Hints from Horace_, line 657, and a variant of lines 753-756. "Thus
let thy ponderous quarto steep and stink" (_Poetical Works_, 1898, i.
435, 443). ]
[ho] {517}_And drawing nigh I caught him at a libel_. --[MS. erased. ]
[548] [Compare--
"But for the children of the 'Mighty Mother's,'
The would-be wits, and can't-be gentlemen,
I leave them to their daily 'tea is ready,'
Smug coterie, and literary lady. "
_Beppo_, stanza lxxvi. lines 5-8, _vide ante_, p. 183. ]
[hp]
_And scrawls as though he were head clerk to the "Fates,"_
_And this I think is quite enough for one_. --[Erased. ]
[549] {518}[Compare--
"One leaf from Southey's laurels may explode
All his combustibles,
'An ass, by God! '"
_A Satire on Satirists, etc. _, by W. S. Landor, 1836, p. 22. ]
[550] ["There is a chaunt in the recitation both of Coleridge and
Wordsworth, which acts as a spell upon the hearers. "--Hazlitt's _My
First Acquaintance with Poets_; _The Liberal_, 1823, ii. 23, 46. ]
[551] [Compare the attitude of Minos to the "poet" in Fielding's
_Journey from This World to the Next_: "The poet answered, he believed
if Minos had read his works he would set a higher value on them. [The
poet had begged for admittance to Elysium on the score of his 'dramatic
works. ' Minos dismissed the plea, but relented on being informed that he
had once lent the whole profits of a benefit-night to a friend. ] He was
then beginning to repeat, but Minos pushed him forward, and turning his
back to him, applied himself to the next passengers. "--_Novelist's
Magazine_, 1783, vol. xii. cap. vii. p. 17. ]
[552]
[" . . . Mediocribus esse poetis
Non homines, non di, non concessere columnae. "
Horace, _Ars Poetica_, lines 372, 373.
