Volume I Part 10 (1/2)
[28] The first issue of the _Daily News_ was a sad failure, as to printing.
[29] The birth, at Lausanne, of Mr. Thompson's eldest daughter, Elizabeth Thompson, now Mrs. Butler, the celebrated artist.
[30] In the dramatised ”Battle of Life.”
1847.
[Sidenote: Sir Edward Bulwer Lytton.]
DEVONs.h.i.+RE TERRACE, _January 12th, 1847._
MY DEAR SIR EDWARD,
The Committee of the General Theatrical Fund (who are all actors) are anxious to prefer a pet.i.tion to you to preside at their next annual dinner at the London Tavern, and having no personal knowledge of you, have requested me, as one of their Trustees, through their Secretary, Mr. Cullenford, to give them some kind of presentation to you.
I will only say that I have felt great interest in their design, which embraces all sorts and conditions of actors from the first, and it has been maintained by themselves with extraordinary perseverance and determination. It has been in existence some years, but it is only two years since they began to dine. At their first festival I presided, at their second, Macready. They very naturally hold that if they could prevail on you to reign over them now they would secure a most powerful and excellent advocate, whose aid would serve and grace their cause immensely. I sympathise with their feeling so cordially, and know so well that it would certainly be mine if I were in their case (as, indeed, it is, being their friend), that I comply with their request for an introduction. And I will not ask you to excuse my troubling you, feeling sure that I may use this liberty with you.
Believe me always, very faithfully yours.
[Sidenote: Countess of Blessington.]
48, RUE DE COURCELLES, PARIS, _January 24th, 1847._
MY DEAR LADY BLESSINGTON,
I feel very wicked in beginning this note, and deeply remorseful for not having begun and ended it long ago. But _you_ know how difficult it is to write letters in the midst of a writing life; and as you know too (I hope) how earnestly and affectionately I always think of you, wherever I am, I take heart, on a little consideration, and feel comparatively good again.
Forster has been cramming into the s.p.a.ce of a fortnight every description of impossible and inconsistent occupation in the way of sight-seeing. He has been now at Versailles, now in the prisons, now at the opera, now at the hospitals, now at the Conservatoire, and now at the Morgue, with a dreadful insatiability. I begin to doubt whether I had anything to do with a book called ”Dombey,” or ever sat over number five (not finished a fortnight yet) day after day, until I half began, like the monk in poor Wilkie's story, to think it the only reality in life, and to mistake all the realities for short-lived shadows.
Among the mult.i.tude of sights, we saw our pleasant little bud of a friend, Rose Cheri, play Clarissa Harlowe the other night. I believe she does it in London just now, and perhaps you may have seen it. A most charming, intelligent, modest, affecting piece of acting it is, with a death superior to anything I ever saw on the stage, except Macready's Lear. The theatres are admirable just now. We saw ”Gentil Bernard” at the Varietes last night, acted in a manner that was absolutely perfect.
It was a little picture of Watteau, animated and talking from beginning to end. At the Cirque there is a new show-piece called the ”French Revolution,” in which there is a representation of the National Convention, and a series of battles (fought by some five hundred people, who look like five thousand) that are wonderful in their extraordinary vigour and truth. Gun-cotton gives its name to the general annual jocose review at the Palais Royal, which is dull enough, saving for the introduction of Alexandre Dumas, sitting in his study beside a pile of quarto volumes about five feet high, which he says is the first tableau of the first act of the first piece to be played on the first night of his new theatre. The revival of Moliere's ”Don Juan,” at the Francais, has drawn money. It is excellently played, and it is curious to observe how different _their_ Don Juan and valet are from our English ideas of the master and man. They are playing ”Lucretia Borgia” again at the Porte St. Martin, but it is poorly performed and hangs fire drearily, though a very remarkable and striking play. We were at Victor Hugo's house last Sunday week, a most extraordinary place, looking like an old curiosity shop, or the property-room of some gloomy, vast, old theatre.
I was much struck by Hugo himself, who looks like a genius as he is, every inch of him, and is very interesting and satisfactory from head to foot. His wife is a handsome woman, with flas.h.i.+ng black eyes. There is also a charming ditto daughter of fifteen or sixteen, with ditto eyes.
Sitting among old armour and old tapestry, and old coffers, and grim old chairs and tables, and old canopies of state from old palaces, and old golden lions going to play at skittles with ponderous old golden b.a.l.l.s, they made a most romantic show and looked like a chapter out of one of his own books.
[Sidenote: Mr. Edward Chapman.]
CHESTER PLACE, _Monday, 3rd May, 1847._
MY DEAR SIR,
Here is a young lady--Miss Power, Lady Blessington's niece--has ”gone and been” and translated a story by Georges Sand, the French writer, which she has printed, and got four woodcuts engraved ready for. She wants to get it published--something in the form of the Christmas books.
I know the story, and it is a very fine one.