Yesterdays with Authors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 572 pages of information about Yesterdays with Authors.

Yesterdays with Authors eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 572 pages of information about Yesterdays with Authors.
her a living art full of laughter and tears.  How often have I heard her describe John Kemble, Mrs. Siddons, Miss O’Neil, and Edmund Kean, as they were wont to electrify the town in her girlhood!  With what gusto she reproduced Elliston, who was one of her prime favorites, and tried to make me, through her representation of him, feel what a spirit there was in the man.  Although she had been prostrated by the hard work and increasing anxieties of forty years of authorship, when I saw her she was as fresh and independent as a skylark.  She was a good hater as well as a good praiser, and she left nothing worth saving in an obnoxious reputation.

I well remember, one autumn evening, when half a dozen friends were sitting in her library after dinner, talking with her of Tom Taylor’s Life of Haydon, then lately published, how graphically she described to us the eccentric painter, whose genius she was among the foremost to recognize.  The flavor of her discourse I cannot reproduce; but I was too much interested in what she was saying to forget the main incidents she drew for our edification, during those pleasant hours now far away in the past.

“I am a terrible forgetter of dates,” she used to say, when any one asked her of the time when; but for the manner how she was never at a loss.  “Poor Haydon!” she began.  “He was an old friend of mine, and I am indebted to Sir William Elford, one of my dear father’s correspondents during my girlhood, for a suggestion which sent me to look at a picture then on exhibition in London, and thus was brought about my knowledge of the painter’s existence.  He, Sir William, had taken a fancy to me, and I became his child-correspondent.  Few things contribute more to that indirect after-education, which is worth all the formal lessons of the school-room a thousand times told, than such good-humored condescension from a clever man of the world to a girl almost young enough to be his granddaughter.  I owe much to that correspondence, and, amongst other debts, the acquaintance of Haydon.  Sir William’s own letters were most charming,—­full of old-fashioned courtesy, of quaint humor, and of pleasant and genial criticism on literature and on art.  An amateur-painter himself, painting interested him particularly, and he often spoke much and warmly of the young man from Plymouth, whose picture of the ‘Judgment of Solomon’ was then on exhibition in London.  ‘You must see it,’ said he, ’even if you come to town on purpose.’”—­The reader of Haydon’s Life will remember that Sir William Elford, in conjunction with a Plymouth banker named Tingecombe, ultimately purchased the picture.  The poor artist was overwhelmed with astonishment and joy when he walked into the exhibition-room and read the label, “Sold,” which had been attached to his picture that morning before he arrived.  “My first impulse,” he says in his Autobiography, “was gratitude to God.”

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Yesterdays with Authors from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.