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Reminiscences of a Literary Life
CHAP. IX
WILLIAM GODWIN
INTRODUCTION & INDEXES
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INTRODUCTION
PREFACE
CONTENTS
CHAP. I
SHELLEY
CHAP. II
JOHN KEATS
THOMAS CAMPBELL
CHAP. III
GEORGE DOUGLAS
CHAP. IV
WILLIAM STEWART ROSE
CHAP. V
SAMUEL ROGERS
SAMUEL COLERIDGE
CHAP. VI
HARTLEY COLERIDGE
CHAP. VII
THOMAS MOORE
WILLIAM LISLE BOWLES
CHAP. VIII
THOMAS DE QUINCEY
JAMES MATHIAS
CHAP. IX
MISS MARTINEAU
‣ WILLIAM GODWIN
CHAP. X
LEIGH HUNT
THOMAS HOOD
HORACE SMITH
CHAP. XI
SIR JAMES MACKINTOSH
MRS. JAMESON
JANE AND ANNA PORTER
CHAP. XII
TOM GENT
CHAP. XIII
VISCOUNT DILLON
SIR LUMLEY SKEFFINGTON
JOHN HOOKHAM FRERE
CHAP. XIV
LORD DUDLEY
LORD DOVER
CHAP. XV
SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE
WILLIAM BROCKEDON
CHAP. XVI
SIR ROBERT PEEL
SPENCER PERCEVAL
CHAP. XVII
MOUNTSTUART ELPHINSTONE
MR. DAVIS
CHAP. XVIII
ELIJAH BARWELL IMPEY
CHAP. XIX
ALEXANDER I.
GEORGE CANNING
NAPOLEON
QUEEN HORTENSE
ROSSINI
CHAP. XX
COUNT PECCHIO
MAZZINI
COUNT NIEMCEWITZ
CHAP. XXI
CARDINAL RUFFO
CHAP. XXII
PRINCESS CAROLINE
BARONNE DE FEUCHÈRES
CHAP. XXIII
SIR SIDNEY SMITH
CHAP. XXIV
SIR GEORGE MURRAY
CHAP. XXV
VISCOUNT HARDINGE
CHAP. XXVI
REV. C. TOWNSEND
CHAP. XXVII
BEAU BRUMMELL
CHAP. XXVIII
AN ENGLISH MERCHANT
THE BRUNELS
APPENDIX
INDEX
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WILLIAM GODWIN

Old Godwin greatly preferred a quiet game of whist in a cosy corner, to conversation. In his manner he was a quiet, retiring, unpretentious old gentleman. At first I was rather surprised to discover how much he had modified many of his political opinions, and how completely he had changed others. Some of his books had been dogmatical and positive enough; but now he never dogmatized, and to his very utmost shunned argument and discussion. A flippant young man asked him one evening, “What are your fixed opinions?” “Sir,” said Godwin, “I have none; I left off my fixed opinions with my youth.”

During the season of the great combustion about the Reform Bill, little Martin, the painter, took violently to politics. He would insist upon pledges from every candidate, or from every member about to be returned to the House of Commons; he would have no man give his vote without being sure of the pledge that the honourable gentleman would vote in Parliament as his constituents required, or vacate his seat. Martin had, on the whole, a consentient audience, for the party (with a supper afterwards) was in his own house, and the listeners were either artists or second or third rate authors, a class about as radical as the artists. But Alaric Watts stood stoutly up in opposition. “How!” said Martin, “all that I have said is in Godwin’s ‘Political Justice,’ and here is Godwin, who will bear me out.” Godwin, who was just sitting down to his parti carré, said that he might forget, but he did not think he had written anything of the sort; that if he had done so he must have committed a great mistake, and that
CHAP. IX]A GAME OF WHIST99
the imposing of pledges would turn a Member of Parliament into a mere delegate. The little painter and engraver was taken aback, but he had too much vanity and vivacity to hold his tongue. “But, Mr. Godwin,” said he, “you will admit that your ‘Political Justice’ was all for knocking down the aristocracy and for throwing the whole power of the nation into the hands of the people?”

“If ever I said so,” said Godwin, “I must have been under a mistake.” “Mr. Godwin,” rejoined the artist, now getting rather vexed, “I am afraid that you do not stick to your principles!” The old reformed revolutionist, who was taking up his cards and arranging his suit, said mildly and even meekly: “Principles and opinions! opinions and principles! perplexing things! When I really know what or which I am to stick to, I will think about making up my mind. It is very easy to stick when, like a mussel, one sticks to the side of a rock, or a copper-bottomed ship; when one doesn’t think.”

“But,” said Martin, “we have had march of intellect, progress of education, intellectual development, throwing off of prejudices; and now the Nation, the People, thinks!” Old Godwin, beginning to lead in trumps, and transparently annoyed at the interruption, yet still as calm and cool as a cucumber, said: “I don’t think that a whole People can think.” “Then,” said Martin, “you throw up the democratic principle?” “Perhaps I do,” said Godwin, making a trick.

I liked little Martin, not for his vapid politics, nor even very much for his phantasmagoric pictures; but I liked him very much for his kindliness of heart and other good qualities that were in him. I also liked old Godwin, and all the more for his tranquil mood, and for the ease and honesty with which he made confession of past errors. For two or three London seasons I met him rather frequently, and always found him the same quiet, composed, retiring
100WILLIAM GODWIN [CHAP. IX
man, averse to political or to any other sort of argumentation. There was no warmth or expansiveness about him, but I rather fancied that he liked me because I had known poor
Shelley and his wife, who was his only daughter by Mary Wollstonecraft.

Lord Dudley and Ward, who had been, more than once, a Quarterly Reviewer, was in the habit of calling rather frequently at Albemarle Street, for a gossip in King John’s drawing-room. One afternoon His Majesty told him that old William Godwin was in great difficulties and absolute distress. “I am sorry for that,” said Lord Ward, “very sorry. He wrote some wild, perilous political trash in his young days; but the author of ‘Caleb Williams’ is a man of genius, and ought not to know want. It is a shame! and in his old age too!” He went into an inner room, as if to look for something, and on his return put a cheque for £100, quite slily, into John’s hand, whispering him to get the cheque cashed, to send the money to Godwin, and to say nothing about it to anyone. And if King John had not babbled over his cups, and if his head clerk and “Fidus Achates,” Mr. Dundas, had not tattled, Godwin would never have known whence the money came, nor would the world have known anything about it.

Such acts of generosity, and acts still more munificent, were by no means uncommon with his lordship. Miss M. R., cousin and confidante to Lady Lyndhurst, told me of a good many which had come to her knowledge, either accidentally or through Lady L.’s revelations; and no doubt there were many that neither Lady L. nor her cousin had ever heard of.

This admiration for “Caleb Williams” was not peculiar to Lord Dudley and Ward. Mr. Canning told his cousin Stratford (not Lord Stratford de Redcliffe) that the first time he took up that book he was thrilled and riveted by it; and that, though much occupied at the time, he could scarcely lay the book
CHAP. IX]CALEB WILLIAMS101
down, or leave off reading, till he had finished it. I have heard
Lord Brougham, and many other first-rate men, make the same confession; but of this I knew nothing when, quite in my young days, “Caleb Williams” fell in my way. This was one summer morning, in 1815, at Gibraltar, in the Officers’ Garrison Library, which I did not leave until I had devoured the whole of the tale.

Nearly two years after this, I read it again at Naples, and was almost equally struck with it; yet, when I came to reperuse it last year (1855), I must confess that for me nearly all the charm was gone, that it hung heavily on hand, and that I could not imagine how it had ever so thrilled and excited me. I could no longer detect that life and very essence of reality for which it has been so long and universally applauded. How is this? It cannot be that my personal acquaintance with the author had anything to do with the matter; for, on the whole, I liked old Godwin, and much admired his old age gentleness. I can only say that so it is. Other works of fiction that amused me in 1815 divert and please me still, and among these are included Mrs. Radcliffe’s Romances, which, nowadays, nobody seems to care about—except Mountstuart Elphinstone, who can still read them with pleasure. Quite lately, I took up Godwin’s “Essay on Sepulchres,” and was quite as much delighted with it as ever I had been. It is a very choice bit of English writing, and has a reverential and even a devotional feeling about it, which leads me to hope and almost believe, without a knowledge of the fact, that Godwin after all his vacillations and changes in matters of faith or unbelief, must at last have died a Christian.

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