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Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron
Leigh Hunt and The Liberal
INTRODUCTION & INDEXES
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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.


Leigh Hunt, Byron & his Contemporaries

“I have got Hunt with me,” said he. “I will tell you how I became acquainted with him.

260 CONVERSATIONS OF

“One of the first visits I paid to Hunt was in prison. I remember Lady Byron was with me in the carriage, and I made her wait longer than I intended at the gate of the King’s Bench.

“When party feeling ran highest against me, Hunt was the only editor of a paper, the only literary man, who dared say a word in my justification. I shall always be grateful to him for the part he took on that occasion. It was manly in him to brave the obloquy of standing alone.

Shelley and myself furnished some time ago a suite of apartments in my house for him, which he now occupies. I believe I told you of a plan we had in agitation for his benefit. His principal object in coming out was to establish a literary journal, whose name is not yet fixed.

“I have promised to contribute, and shall probably make it a vehicle for some occasional poems;—for instance, I mean to translate Ariosto. I was strongly advised by Tom Moore, long ago, not to have any connection with such a company as Hunt, Shelley, and Co.; but I
LORD BYRON261
have pledged myself, and besides could not now, if I had ever so great a disinclination for the scheme, disappoint all Hunt’s hopes. He has a large family, has undertaken a long journey, and undergone a long series of persecutions.

Moore tells me that it was proposed to him to contribute to the new publication, but that he had declined it. You see I cannot get out of the scrape. The name is not yet decided upon,—half-a-dozen have been rejected.

Hunt would have made a fine writer, for he has a great deal of fancy and feeling, if he had not been spoiled by circumstances. He was brought up at the Blue-coat foundation, and had never till lately been ten miles from St. Paul’s. What poetry is to be expected from such a course of education? He has his school, however, and a host of disciples. A friend of mine calls ‘Rimini,’ Nimini Pimini; and ‘Foliage,’ Follyage. Perhaps he had a tumble in ‘climbing trees in the Hesperides!’* But

* The motto to his book entitled ‘Foliage.’

262CONVERSATIONS OF
‘Rimini’ has a great deal of merit. There never were so many fine things spoiled as in ‘Rimini.’”


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