LORD  BYRON  and  his  TIMES
Byron
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Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron
Byron's acquatic exploits
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JOURNAL

OF THE

CONVERSATIONS

OF

LORD BYRON:

NOTED DURING A RESIDENCE WITH HIS LORDSHIP

AT PISA,

IN THE YEARS 1821 AND 1822.


BY THOMAS MEDWIN, ESQ.

OF THE 24TH LIGHT DRAGOONS,

AUTHOR OF “AHASUERUS THE WANDERER.”


LONDON:
PRINTED FOR HENRY COLBURN, NEW BURLINGTON STREET.
1824.


Talking after dinner of swimming, he said:—

* I am corroborated in this opinion lately by a lady, whose brother received them many years ago from Lord Byron, in his Lordship’s own hand-writing.

LORD BYRON 115
J. C. Hobhouse, in Westminster Magazine

Murray published a letter I wrote to him from Venice, which might have seemed an idle display of vanity; but the object of my writing it was to contradict what Turner had asserted about the impossibility of crossing the Hellespont from the Abydos to the Sestos side, in consequence of the tide.

J. C. Hobhouse, in Westminster Magazine

“One is as easy as the other; we did both.” Here he turned round to Fletcher, to whom he occasionally referred, and said, “Fletcher, how far was it Mr. Ekenhead and I swam?” Fletcher replied, “Three miles and a half, my Lord.” (Of course he did not diminish the distance.) “The real width of the Hellespont,” resumed Lord Byron, “is not much above a mile; but the current is prodigiously strong, and we were carried down notwithstanding all our efforts. I don’t know how Leander contrived to stem the stream, and steer straight across; but nothing is impossible in love or religion. If I had had a Hero on the other side, perhaps I should have worked harder. We were to have undertaken this feat some time before, but put it off in consequence of the coldness of the water; and it was chilly enough when we performed it. I know I should have made a bad Leander, for it gave me an ague that I did not so easily get rid of. There were some
116CONVERSATIONS OF
sailors in the fleet who swam further than I did—I do not say than I could have done, for it is the only exercise I pride myself upon, being almost amphibious.

“I remember being at Brighton many years ago, and having great difficulty in making the land,—the wind blowing off the shore, and the tide setting out. Crowds of people were collected on the beach to see us. Mr. —— (I think he said Hobhouse) was with me; and,” he added, “I had great difficulty in saving him—he nearly drowned me.

“When I was at Venice, there was an Italian who knew no more of swimming than a camel, but he had heard of my prowess in the Dardanelles, and challenged me. Not wishing that any foreigner at least should beat me at my own arms, I consented to engage in the contest. Alexander Scott proposed to be of the party, and we started from Lido. Our land-lubber was very soon in the rear, and Scott saw him make for a Gondola. He rested himself first against one, and then against another, and gave in before we got half way to St. Mark’s Place. We saw no more of him, but continued our course through the Grand Canal, landing at my palace-stairs. The water of the Lagunes is dull, and not very clear or agreeable to
LORD BYRON117
bathe in. I can keep myself up for hours in the sea: I delight in it, and come out with a buoyancy of spirits I never feel on any other occasion.

“If I believed in the transmigration of your Hindoos, I should think I had been a Merman in some former state of existence, or was going to be turned into one in the next.”


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