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Lady Morgan’s Memoirs
Chapter XIX
INTRODUCTION & INDEXES
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Preface
Vol. I Contents.
Prefatory Address
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter VI
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
‣ Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXIX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter XXXIV
Chapter XXXV
Chapter XXXVI
Chapter XXXVII
Chapter XXXVIII
Vol. I Index
Vol. II Contents
Chapter I
Chapter II
Chapter III
Chapter IV
Chapter V
Chapter IV
Chapter VII
Chapter VIII
Chapter IX
Chapter X
Chapter XI
Chapter XII
Chapter XIII
Chapter XIV
Chapter XV
Chapter XVI
Chapter XVII
Chapter XVIII
Chapter XIX
Chapter XX
Chapter XXI
Chapter XXII
Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIV
Chapter XXV
Chapter XXVI
Chapter XXVII
Chapter XXVIII
Chapter XXIX
Chapter XXX
Chapter XXXI
Chapter XXXII
Chapter XXXIII
Chapter XXXIV
Chapter XXXV
Chapter XXXVI
Chapter XXXVII
Chapter XXXVIII
Chapter XXXIX
Chapter XL
Vol. II Index
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CHAPTER XIX.
PERIOD OF 1801.

The autobiography, it will be remembered, closes abruptly with Miss Owenson’s adventures in search of a publisher. On her return to Dublin, with the Featherstone family, she one day accompanied Mrs. Featherstone to visit a friend, who was an invalid. Whilst Mrs. Featherstone went upstairs to the sick room, Miss Owenson was left to amuse herself in the parlour. Seeing a book lying in the window-seat, she took it up and found it to be her own St. Clair!

The publisher excused himself for not having communicated with her, by reminding her that she had left him no address. He presented her with four copies, which, for that time, was all the remuneration she received. Afterwards she re-wrote the work, and it was published, improved and enlarged, in England.

Her father, at this period, 1801, was for some time stationary at Coleraine, and he wished to have both his daughters with him—he had been a long time separated from Sydney. He had never cordially liked the idea
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of his daughter going out as a governess to earn her living; or, as her imagination presented it, “to make her fortune,” though his necessity had consented to it. For the present, at any rate, he had a home to offer her, and he wished her to give up her engagement.

In the latter end of April or the beginning of May, 1801, Sydney Owenson left the Featherstones, who, through life, continued her constant admirers and attached friends.

The following letter, addressed to Mrs. Featherstone, tells its own story:

Sydney Owenson to Mrs. Featherstone.
Coleraine, May 4th, 1801.

Here I am, dearest Madam, safely and happily arrived on the shores of the vast Atlantic, after a journey, tedious indeed, but amusing from its novelty, and comparatively delightful from the unexpected circumstance which attended it, namely, my father and Olivia meeting me sixty miles from Dublin. Just as I had given Colonel Lindsey (who was extremely pleasant and attentive,) warning not to be frightened at the sight of a withered duenna, he saw me leap into the arms of a man six feet high and armed at all points for conquest (for my father never travels without the apparatus of the toilet); he looked as if he thought this the most extraordinary duenna that ever waited to give a young lady convoy. I found these dear beings perfectly well, never looking better, and my father at least ten years younger than when I parted with him. After a survey of the beauties and
PERIOD OF 1801.207
curiosities natural and artificial of Ardmagh (where we met) we proceeded to Coleraine. After a journey through a country in some respects the wildest and most savage, nothing can appear more delightful than the situation of this town, which is in the highest degree picturesque and romantic I cannot say much for the town, less for the town’s people. They are almost all traders; rich and industrious, honest and methodical; these are not the result of my own experience or observation, but are taken from the experience and observation of others. The military and their families form the only society worth cultivating, and even for these there is not much to be said. But you know that is a subject on which I am not easily pleased. Now for matters more substantial: meat and bread are at Dublin prices; fish of the finest and choicest kind almost for nothing; poultry very, very cheap; and vegetables scarce altogether; notwithstanding being reduced to one course, I contrive to live, and still bear such visible testimonies of your good table as will enable me to keep up a good appearance for a month at least. And now, my dearest madam, having so long pestered you with myself, let me speak a little of my kind friends in Dominic Street. Neither my restoration to my family, my present happiness, nor the distance which divides us can soften the regret I felt at parting from your good family, nor obliterate the remembrance of the many happy hours I spent in it, or the kindness and affection which I experienced from every member of it. Though my many negligences and those faults inseparable from human na-
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ture, must have frequently excited your disapprobation, yet the interest I felt for you and my little friends was always unvariable, and always more than I could or would express—and this interest promises to exist when probably she who cherishes it will no longer live in your remembrance. The benefits I derived from my residence with you were many, but they never exceeded the gratitude they inspired, nor the sincere attachment with which I remain,

My dear madam,
Your very sincere friend,
S. Owenson.

PS.—I must say a word to you, my dear little girls, though but to tell you I dream of you every night; that I long to hear from you, that I request you will coax mamma to write to me, and remember me most affectionately to the boys. Olivia thanks mamma a thousand times for her present, of which she has just made a handsome cap. I am in hopes of getting a piano from Londonderry, which will save me great expense in the carriage. You will have the goodness to mention this, that I may not prevent him selling his.

Although Mr. Owenson was a true Irishman in the art of getting into difficulties, he was a careful parent in all that concerned his daughters. He had made great efforts to give them both the education of gentlewomen. He had kept them carefully from all contact with whatever was undesirable in his
PERIOD OF 1801.209
own position and environments as an actor. In his own manners and bearing he was, by the testimony of all who knew him, a polished Irish gentleman. But, though full of the social talents which made him a delight at every mess-table and barrack-room of the places where he played, he had always been very careful with whom he allowed his daughters to associate. As children, he seldom allowed them to go to the theatre, and was strict in obliging them to go regularly to church, whether he accompanied them or not; he considered it a sign of steady and correct deportment, which showed they had a proper pride in themselves. In spite of his constant embarrassments about money matters, he had fine rollicking Irish spirits and was full of fun and geniality. For some time past he had contrived to keep his youngest daughter with him under his own eye, and under the guardianship of the faithful
Molly. So far as he knew how and was able, he had always taken great care of her.

There never was the most passing thought of allowing either of his daughters to go upon the stage. So far as Sydney was concerned, with all her cleverness, she was incapacitated by the total want of what is called “study;” she could invent, she could improvise, she could play all manner of droll pantomime of her own invention, but she could not commit to memory anything out of a book beyond an epigrammatic quotation.

St. Clair had some success. It was translated into German with a biographical notice prefixed; a remarkable production, which asserted that the authoress
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had strangled herself with an embroidered cambric handkerchief, in a fit of despair and disappointed love! In spite of faults and absurdities, St. Clair contains the promise of better things.
The Sorrows of Werter was her model, but there is an idea of drawing characters and inventing situations far from hackneyed or conventional; and, in spite of the pedantry, there is an eloquence and passion which redeems its impossibility. The characters are shadows of ideas and utterly unlike human beings, but each personage has a character and supports it; the work abounds in high-flown discourse and discussion upon the topics of love, music, poetry and literature in general. The authoress talked out her own impressions and opinions of the books she had read, and though the display of her reading hinders the action and spoils the story, there is a freshness and enthusiasm which only needed time and practice to turn to profit. The extent of her reading is quite wonderful for so young a girl; it consists of solid works and standard authors, requiring careful and painstaking study. She had a strong passion for acquiring knowledge, stronger even than her love of displaying it. She revelled in allusions to her favourite books, in quotations, and in fine-sounding words. In all her early works, her heroes and heroines indulge in wonderful digressions, historical, astronomical and metaphysical, in the very midst of the most terrible emergencies where danger, despair and unspeakable catastrophes, are imminent and impending. No matter what laceration of their finest feelings they may be suffering, the chief characters have
PERIOD OF 1801.211
always their learning at their finger ends, and never fail to make quotations from favourite authors appropriate to the occasion!

It is easy to laugh at all this; but it were devoutly to be wished that the young authors of the present day would read a little before they begin to write so much.

Sydney Owenson’s reading was truly miscellaneous—pursued under every circumstance of difficulty and disadvantage. She never had any one to guide or direct her—in all things, intellectual as well as practical, she was left entirely to herself.

A home picture when she returned for a short time to her father and sister after leaving Bracklin, may be extracted from a scrap-book in which she made her multifarious extracts from the works she read, wrote out the rough draughts of poems, and entered (very sparingly) her own thoughts and impressions:—

September 12th.—Indisposition confines Olivia to her room; it is, thank God, but slight, yet sufficient to awake my anxiety and tenderness. We are seated at our little work-table, beside a cheerful turf fire, and a pair of lights; Livy is amusing herself at work, and I have been reading out a work of Schiller’s to her, whilst Molly is washing up the tea-things in the background, and Peter is laying the cloth for his master’s supper—that dear master!—in a few minutes we shall hear his rap at the door and his whistle under the window, and then we shall circle round the fire and chat and laugh over the circumstances of the day. These are the scenes in which my heart ex-
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pands, and which I love to sketch on the spot. Ah! I must soon leave them.”


The following commentary on that universal text—Love—is curious as coming from a girl. It comes from the same scrap-book, and bears her initials after it:—


Burns says, ‘If anything on earth deserves the name of rapture or transport, it is the feelings of green eighteen in the company of the mistress of his heart, when she repays him with an equal return of affection.’

“I do not agree with Burns; at eighteen the passion is but a simple sensation of nature, unmingled, unenriched by those superadded ideas which constitute its purer and more elevated charms. Other sentiments mingle with love, as other metals amalgamate with gold—the sympathy of congenial tastes—the blandishments of the imagination—the graces of intellectual perfection—the exaggeration of fancy, glowing with poetic images, and the refinement of taste to apply them to the object beloved—all these heighten and sublimate the passion which has its origin in Nature.

“S. O.”

The indomitable energy and indefatigable industry which characterized her both as Sydney Owenson and Lady Morgan, are even more remarkable than her genius, and gave her the coherence and persistence
PERIOD OF 1801.213
essential to success. Her tenacity of purpose through life was unrelaxing—whatever project of work she had in hand nothing turned her aside; with her, the idea of Work was the first object in life. All other things, whether they appertained to love, amusement, society, or whatever else, were all subordinate to her work. Intellectual labour was the one thing she thoroughly respected and reverenced. She never wasted a moment of time, and wherever she went, and whatever she saw, she turned it to practical use in her profession.

In spite of her romantic love for her father, and her sincere attachment to her sister, the beautiful illusion of living a domestic life with them soon wore off.

Accustomed as she had so long been to the plentiful comfort and regularity of the Featherstones’ well-ordered household, she felt the difference between that and the scrambling poverty and discomfort of life in an Irish lodging. Her father’s financial difficulties increased rather than diminished. Sydney’s virtues were not of a patient, home-staying, household kind; she could go out into the world—she loved the adventure of it. Whatever she saw, or did, or said, was always to her like a scene in a novel, the denouement of which could not be foreseen. She was capable of working hard in her own way, and she worked from the honest stimulus of wishing to earn money to help her father out of his difficulties; but she could not endure dulness or discomfort.

In the course of a very few months after her return
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to her father and sister, she quitted them to take another situation as governess in the family of Mr. Crawford, at Fort William, in the North of Ireland. The following is a fragment of a letter addressed to her sister from her new home; the first few lines are torn off:—


——“After all, I can meet with nothing to recompense me for the loss of your’s and papa’s society, nor would I hesitate a moment to return to you were I to consult happiness only. You do me great injustice in supposing I was not happy when last with you. It is true, my spirits sank beneath the least appearance of discord, and I have hitherto glided on through life so much at peace with all the world, that it would give me pain to excite ill-temper or ill-humour in the most indifferent person in existence; and though I was not so fortunate as to please every member of my own dear family, you best know with what heartbreaking regret I left it.

“Here I am, almost an object of idolatry among the servants, and am caressed by all ranks of people. You know one of my maxims is, never to let anything in the world ruffle my temper, and by this means I continue to keep others in good humour with me.

“Accept my compliments of congratulation on your cloak. I have a correspondent in Dublin (Miss Harrold), who wrote me a long letter to-day, full of the fashions. I wrote to her for a cloak, for I have still some of the money left that papa sent me. The cloak
PERIOD OF 1801.215
is made like a Spanish cloak, of lace, and trimmed with the same; some of them with full sleeves—plaids all the fashion. Mrs. Crawford has given me a very pretty plaid handkerchief and ribbons, and a gold ring—which I mentioned before. Crops are all the rage, as savage as possible—you never saw such a curly-headed little rascal as I am. Margaret Ryan sent me a plait of her hair, a yard long, for a locket string; the most beautiful thing I ever saw, and the most admired—it is as broad as a fourpenny ribbon. We had a very pressing invitation sent us for a ball at Clough-Jordan, given by a club there—mine was, as usual, separate, but Mrs. Crawford would not go; it is the third she has refused—is it not provoking? Be content with your situation. You are young, you are beautiful, you are admired, and foolish women do not torment you. Work well at your music—music is a passe-partout. Be economical. The people here, I believe, love me with all their hearts, and I am well and happy.

“I wish you would read history. My little folks are going on charmingly; they are the dearest children in the world, and dote on me as I do on them. They would amaze you at geography, and history, and music Write soon. S. O.

“We are expecting the handsome, fat Count d’Alton here, every day.”

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From Thomas Dermody to Sydney Owenson.
My best Sydney,

I have just come to town, and sent your father the answer to his commands. Your letter was highly interesting, and your lines to the Quaker, “Ah! why do I sigh?” extremely beautiful. You are, indeed, my Anthenæ, and let the following verses convince you. My poems are printing at Bristol in a most elegant style—this makes one of them.

“There lurks within thy lyre a dangerous spell,
That lures my soul from Wisdom’s dauntless aim;
Yet if I know thy generous bosom well,
Thou would’st not dash me from the steeps of Fame.
Trust me, thy melting, plaint, melodious flow,
Could animate to love the icy grave;
And yet, if thy pure feelings well I know,
Thou would’st not sink me to an amorous slave!
Graced with no vantage, nor of birth nor wealth,
That to Ambition’s happier sons belong;
E’en at the price of my sole treasure—health,
I own that I would be renown’d for song!
For this I wander from the world aside,
Muttering wild descants to the boiling deep,
’Mid the lone forest’s leafy refuge hide,
And slight the blessings of inactive sleep.”

Now, considering that this comes neither from a “very old” nor “very ugly fellow,” you might excuse some warmth of colouring. To use another quotation of my own—

“Why, though thy tender vow recal another.
May not my rapt imagination rove,
Beyond the solemn softness of a brother,
And live upon thy radiant looks of love?”
PERIOD OF 1801. 217

In reply to your desire of knowing why I thought Moore intended you, I can only repeat that it was mere supposition, founded on the idea that he could not be in your company without poetic emotion. But on my soul, I think you are be-rhymed enough for one lady!

Thomas Dermody appears to have been something more than a poetical lover. He loved Sydney Owenson, as well as so wayward and egotistical a fellow could love anything except himself.

In the midst of his reckless life he retained for her sentiments of respect and attachment; and he cherished the memory of Mrs. Owenson as his best and tenderest friend.

To Miss Owenson, when at Fort William, he again wrote:—

My volume is already in the press, and I hope will soon be published, for I abhor correcting proofs. Let me inform you how far you are connected with it. The sonnet to you is to be published with a note, and another long, and perhaps not despicable poem, called “An Epistle to a Young Lady after many years Absence.” I did not think it might be agreeable or prudent to affix your name. I will also confess that in writing the verses to Anthenæ (a Greek name of my own, signifying flowery, and in a figurative sense amiable,) you were not entirely absent from my imagination. Between friends, this is my chef-d’œuvre, and I have no small hopes of its future success, with a little patience. I feel a sensible and refined delight in
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paying this tribute of the purest affection to an object so worthy of every emotion, and mostly on that account I should be elevated with the applause that must consequently be shared. I had the honour of a letter from
Mr. Addington (the Prime Minister) on receiving a copy of my ode—he has behaved well and promises much. You see I am a little favoured by the great as well as by the fair. You are mistaken if you imagine I have not the highest respect for your friend Moore. I have written the review of his poems in a strain of panegyric to which I am not frequently accustomed. I am told he is a most worthy young man, and I am certain myself of his genius and erudition. Did you not laugh at and think some of my letters extremely romantic? They were so, I allow, but on my soul it is impossible to write to my dear sister without being so. I would willingly not increase the crowd of idle flatterers that surround a young woman of sense, and accomplishments and beauty; however, I should not be displeased that you could conceive how much I value you. I often converse with you in fancy, and feel my heart lighter and better after this imaginary tête-à-tête. I am not often in the company of females, and when I am, I turn with disgust from their odious affectation and insensibility, to the “celestial visitant” which my own rapturous melancholy forms. I certainly esteem, I may almost say love, you more than I actually should in your presence. Absence so softens and breathes such a delicious languor over the truly tender heart! I remember a tune (excuse me, lady,) when I thought you affected,
PERIOD OF 1801.219
haughty and unkind! Do I think you so now? No! I undoubtedly place your single approbation above all the vain trophies which mortals hoard, “by wit, by valour, or by wisdom won!” and your unimpassioned and delicate attachment with “glorious fumes intoxicates my mind.” But how is our father? I need not inquire, you would have told me had there been any material occurrence. Happy evenings! I cannot but remember such things were most dear to me. Miss
Livy (what an historical abbreviation!) and Miss Sydney too (how heroic!) might have spared their laughter,—beneath the dignity of a Laura or a Stella. You had no determinate description of the sylph to animate your pencil; try this subject at your leisure, though I fear it is too wild and horrible. My Car of Death is finely dreadful, but my only copy is with the printer. It is in the “extravaganza.”

Conceive how I idolise your remembrance. Were you Venus I should forget you; but you are a Laura, a Leonora, an Eloisa, all in one delightful assemblage! My idea of your literary merit is very exalted indeed; this in a woman, a beautiful woman, whom I must ever esteem, what magic can be so irresistible in this world!

Pray did you not mistake my meaning in some passage where you say I seem to boast of an affected libertinism? certainly, my fair monitress, you did.

I have been a libertine but never a hypocrite, for which reason my failings have been more noted than my few deserts. I detest and despise the false taste and false wit of modern infidelity. I have written
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some very pretty lines to a “
Brown Beauty;” you will see them in my volume. There are two imitations of Spenser which I am sure you will like; besides the extravaganza, which is entirely in obsolete English, and on which rests my reputation. But, perhaps, you would rather have some of “my dear prose” than my d—d poetry!

When the publication of this volume is complete, I am determined to have one month’s happiness in Ireland; but it must be when you are at home. What a meeting it will be, if I do not deceive myself! Then I may share (another quotation of mine from the epistle to you by name):—
“the exalted power
Of social converse o’er the social hour.”

How I long for you to read my next volume; you make so sweet a part of it yourself. It is my pride to be publicly allied to you in fame as I am privately in the fondest friendship. Adieu.

Thos. Dermody.
September 14th, 1801.

This roving, clever, inconsequential and rather silly young gentleman died of consumption in July of the following year. Sydney Owenson felt a good deal for him—not in the way of love, but of old fellowship and pity. She thought highly of his talents; too highly, no doubt; but the weakness was in her very natural and commendable. She was as warm a friend to him when he was gone as she had always been to him
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when he was living; and her friendship was, in fact, very much required.

It must be borne in mind, that Thomas Dermody and Sydney Owenson wrote their poetry before Lord Byron had introduced a more direct and rigorous style. Women were then “nymphs,” who were “coy,” “cruel,” “unkind,” “disdainful;” and men in poetry made believe to be “shepherds,” “swains,” adoring the charms of their mistresses with a freedom of expression which would be deemed highly indecorous, but which the nymphs in question took as a matter of course. Dermody got very little mercy from the reviewers; but, in strict truth, he was no more a poet than Sydney Owenson was a poetess.

The days of Sydney Owenson when she was an instructor of youth did not pass over in sadness nor in looking at the world out of back windows. Her genius and spirit made her a fascinating acquisition in a country house. Few governesses have her social talents, and possibly in a steady-going English family they would scarcely be allowed the scope for displaying them, if they had them. Her experiences are in curious contrast to poor Charlotte Bronté’s; but Sydney Owenson knew how to make herself agreeable. She was always grateful for kindness, and she possessed the rare gift of knowing how to accept kindness gracefully, so as to make it a pleasure to the bestower. She was not prone to take offence—she took benefits as they were intended, and she brightened all that surrounded her with the sunshine that emanated from herself.

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The following letters to Mrs. Featherstone contain all that is known of Miss Owenson in the year 1802. The first letter refers to Dermody’s death:—

Miss Owenson to Mrs. Featherstone.
Fort William,
Oct. 8th, 1802.

It is well if even this original scribble will serve to call to the minds of my dear Bracklin friends, that little body who often thinks on them with many pleasant recollections.

On my return from Enniskillen I wrote you, my dear madam, a long letter, with a full and true account of my northern expedition, and all the Dublin chit-chat I could collect. This was two months back, and yet not a line from Westmeath. I will, however, gladly compound for a little neglect and unkindness, provided no domestic misfortune has prevented me hearing from you. If Mr. Featherstone and the dear little ones are well and happy—I shall pout a little to be sure—but a line from you will settle all difference between us. I must, however, say, I think the girls both unkind and ungrateful, but I know the world too well not to be more hurt than surprised at it. I believe I often told you it was what I expected, nor was I a false prophetess. Let me hope, however, that your and Mr. Featherstone’s friendship is still in my possession, and I shall be satisfied. I saw Mrs. Praval very often when in Dublin—as stiff as ever. I met also the
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M.’s, O.’s, and B.’s. The country is a pleasant security to me, and I was not sorry to return to it. My little girls are going on charmingly; they really astonish me at music; they read it almost at sight, yet they barely knew their notes when I came to them. My situation becomes daily more pleasant. I never was more my own mistress, at the same time I am exceedingly anxious to return to my father; but when I mentioned it there was so much persuasion and kindness to induce me to change my determination, that, for the present, I gave it up. At all events I will go and pay him another visit as soon as I can, and will so arrange it to go to town when I shall have a chance of seeing you; and if you have a spare garret that you could bundle me into for a night or two, I will invite myself to spend a couple of days with Mr. Featherstone, if he has no objection.

My novel is publishing this month back, in Dublin, and will be out early next month. You will be surprised to hear the work I composed at Bracklin I have given to oblivion, and that this one I wrote in the evenings of last winter, though I went out a great deal. It is inscribed to Lady Clonbrock, and its title, St. Clair, or First Love. You will probably see it in the papers. I have already disposed of every copy, except a few books I have kept for my own immediate friends. My poor friend Dermody, the poet, died last July, of a rapid decay, at five-and-twenty. We corresponded constantly for two years previous to his death, which affected me and my father very sensibly. We have got his picture (done a few hours before his death).
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There is a life of him published in last month’s magazine—every syllable false. I am told his life and works are now publishing in London, by subscription, in a very splendid style. Adieu, my dear madam; pray let me hear from you soon, and give me a circumstantial account of the little boys. Take the trouble of presenting my best respects to the Riversdale and Grange families, and to believe me ever yours,

Sydney Owenson.
Miss Owenson to Mrs. Featherstone.
Fort William, Nenagh,
December 29, 1801.

Many happy Christmases and New Years to all the family of Bracklin, and very many thanks to my dearest Margo for her welcome and charmingly written letter, which nearly equals C.’s in style (who, however, promises to be the Sevigné of the family), and surpasses it in writing. Here we are, singing, playing, and dancing away as merry as crickets, and ushering in the seasons with all due merriment. So now for some little account of our festivals. The other day we had upwards of forty people to dinner; among others, Lord Dunally, Lord and Lady Clonbrock, Honourable Miss Dillon, the Vaughans, of “Golden Grove,” whom I think I heard mamma mention to a great many other fine people. We began dancing, without the gentlemen, almost immediately after tea. I had the felicity of opening our female ball with Miss
PERIOD OF 1801.225
Dillon—the nicest girl I have seen anywhere—gentle, humble, and unaffected. I was most heroically gallant, and played the beau in the first style. We sang and played a good deal too, and the night finished most pleasantly with my Irish jig, in which I put down my man completely. This has produced an ode to a jig, which I will send, when I can get a frank, to your papa; for I know it will please him. Well, the other night we were at an immense row at Lady Clonbrock’s, to whom I owe so many obligations for her marked attention to me since my residence here that I am at a loss how to mention them. It was quite a musical party, and (give me joy), on the decision of
Lord Norbury (who was of the party), I bore away the palm from all their Italian music by the old Irish airs of “Ned of the Hills,” and the “Cooleen,” to which I had adapted words, and I was interrupted three times by plaudits in “The Soldier Tired.” Now, I know you will all laugh at me, but the people here are setting me mad, and so you must bear up with the effects of it for a little while, until I become accustomed to the applause of the great. This is the Athens of Ireland, music and literature carry everything before them; and Lady Clonbrock who is one of the leading women here, is an enthusiast in both. It is to this, I believe, as well as to the conduct of Mr. and Mrs. Crawford that I received such kind attentions from all the first people here. My invitations are always separate from theirs, and I have long been forced to consider myself as their child and friend. Miss D. draws nicely, and has just sent me some transparent screens to copy, which I wish you
226 LADY MORGAN'S MEMOIR.  
had. At present there is staying with them an old friend of mine who spends many of his mornings here—a Mr. Wills, you have heard me mention him and his sisters as being among my earliest friends.

Nothing can be pleasanter than our life at present; to-morrow we are to have Lord Norbury, and all the world to dinner, and music in the evening. We got a delightful piano and tambourine, and I do nothing but sing and play, and am much improved in voice and singing since you heard me. Do you know our house is not much more than half the size of Bracklin—everything in the simplest style; neither can I say much for Lord Clonbrock’s mode of living—there was a thousand times more show at Bracklin on a gala-day than we had at Latteville. My little girls are the best and most attentive creatures in the world, and if mamma and papa do not flatter, are making a wonderful progress; but you shall see them in spring, for we all go for two or three months to Dublin, from that to Ballyspellin Spa, and then make a tour to Killarney, and so back home; such is the plan laid down for the present; but give me Fort William, and I am content. Why do you force me to tell you my pupil’s names, or why cannot I answer you by writing Rosabella or Angelica? Alas! no, I must stain this sublime epistle by confessing their names are——Miss Bridget and Miss Kate: after that can you ask me to write more than that I am,

Dearest Margo’s attached friend,
Sydney Owenson.
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