Part 27 (2/2)
CVI
Donne's eyes gave him a good deal of trouble in the winter of 1613-14; this letter, as well as LXVII, above, may belong to this period.
CVII
”In August, 1630,” says Walton, ”being with his eldest daughter, Mrs.
Harvy, at Abury Hatch in Ess.e.x, he there fell into a fever, which, with the help of his constant infirmity (vapours from the spleen,) hastened him into so visible a consumption, that his beholders might say, as St. Paul said of himself, 'He dies daily.'” This letter was written from Abury (or Aldeburgh) Hatch. ”Mrs. Harvy” is Donne's daughter Constance, the widow of Edward Alleyn, and now the wife of Samuel Harvey. Donne's son George, the soldier, was taking part in the campaign in Spain. Lord Carlisle was the old friend whom, as Lord Doncaster, Donne had attended in his German emba.s.sy. Lord Percy was Algernon Percy, soon to become fourth Earl of Northumberland.
CVIII
Written apparently before Donne had entered the church, and probably in 1614, while Donne was still living in Drury House. George Gerrard was at court. His ”hopeful designs upon worthy widows” seem to have been the cause of much pleasantry. (See XIX.)
CIX
There is no certain indication of the date of this letter. Mr. Gosse a.s.signs it conjecturally to 1622. It seems to me more likely that it belongs to the period of Donne's residence at Mitcham, and is of 1609, or earlier date. ”My house” would then be Donne's lodgings in the Strand.
CX
Written not long after the date of CVII, above, and presumably from Aldeburgh Hatch. ”The Lady of the Jewel” (obviously ”the Diamond Lady” of CVII) remains a mystery. Apparently she had placed her jewels in Donne's keeping, thus charging him with a responsibility which he seems to have found exceedingly irksome.
CXI
Donne was ordained in January, 1615, a ”very few days” before the date of this letter.
CXII
This letter may safely be a.s.signed to 1613. Rochester was made Earl of Somerset in December of this year, a few days before his marriage to Lady Frances Howard. Surely none of the letters to Somerset for which Sir Francis Bacon has been so severely condemned expresses a more complete submission than is here offered.
CXIV
To George Gerrard. Probably written from France, and, if so, presumably to be a.s.signed to 1612, when Donne was in Paris with Sir Robert Drury. ”This book of French _Satyrs_” Mr. Gosse takes to be the first authoritative edition of Regnier's _Satyres et autres [oe]uvres folastres_, 1612.
CXV
The allusion to Pierre du Moulin, the French theologian, who preached before the Court in June, 1615, gives the approximate date of this letter.
Sir Thomas Grymes, the husband of Donne's sister Jane, we have already met. Donne says _father-in-law_ where we should say _step-father_.
<script>