Edgeworth told me,
and she had been letting the tumble-down shed to a large family for
1s. 4d. This sub-let was forcibly put an end to, but the landlady
still stops there, and there she will stay until the roof tumbles
down upon her head. The old creature passed on through the
sunshine, a decrepit, picturesque figure carrying her pail to the
stream, defying all the laws of progress and political economy and
civilisation in her feebleness and determination.
Most of the women came to their doors to see us go by. They all
looked as old as the hills—some dropt curtseys, others threw up
their arms in benediction. From a cottage farther up the road
issued a strange, shy old creature, looking like a bundle of hay,
walking on bare legs. She came up with a pinch of snuff, and a
shake of the hand; she was of the family of the man who had once
saved Edgeworthstown from being destroyed by the rebels. 'Sure it
was not her father,' said old Peggy,' it was her grandfather did
it!' So she explained, but it was hard to believe that such an old,
old creature had ever had a grandfather in the memory of man.
The glebe lands lie beyond the village. They reach as far as the
church on its high plateau, from which you can see the Wicklow
Hills on a fine day, and the lovely shifting of the lights of the
landscape. The remains of the great pew of the Edgeworth family,
with its carved canopy of wood, is still a feature in the bare
church from which so much has been swept away. The names of the
fathers are written on the chancel walls, and a few medallions of
daughters and sisters also. In the churchyard, among green elder
bushes and tall upspringing grasses, is the square monument erected
to Mr. Edgeworth and his family; and as we stood there the quiet
place was crossed and recrossed by swallows with their beating
crescent wings.
III
Whatever one may think of Mr. Edgeworth's literary manipulations
and of his influence upon his daughter's writings, one cannot but
respect the sincere and cordial understanding which bound these two
people together, and realise the added interest in life, in its
machinery and evolutions, which Maria owed to her father's active
intelligence. Her own gift, I think, must have been one for
perceiving through the minds of others, and for realising the value
of what they in turn reflected; one is struck again and again by
the odd mixture of intuition, and of absolute matter of fact which
one finds in her writings.
It is difficult to realise, when one reads the memoirs of human
beings who loved and hated, and laughed and scolded, and wanted
things and did without them, very much as we do ourselves, that
though they thought as we do and felt as we do (only, as I have
said, with greater vehemence), they didn't LOOK like us at all; and
Mr. Edgeworth, the father of Maria Edgeworth, the 'gay gallant,'
the impetuous, ingenious, energetic gentleman, sat writing with
powdered hair and a queue, with tights and buckles, bolt upright in
a stiff chair, while his family, also bequeued and becurled and
bekerchiefed, were gathered round him in a group, composedly
attentive to his explanations, as he points to the roll upon the
table, or reads from his many MSS. and notebooks, for their
edification.
To have four wives and twenty-two children, to have invented so
many machines, engines, and curricles, steeples and telegraph
posts, is more than commonly falls to the lot of one ordinary man,
but such we know was Mr. Edgeworth's history told by his own
lips.
I received by chance an old newspaper the other day, dated the
23rd July 1779. It is called the LONDON PACKET, and its news, told
with long s's and pretty curly italics, thrills one even now as one
looks over the four short pages. The leading article is entitled
'Striking Instance of the PERFIDY of France.' It is true the
grievance goes back to Louis XIV., but the leader is written with
plenty of spirit and present indignation. Then comes news from
America and the lists of New Councillors elected:
'Artemus Ward, Francis Dana, Oliver Prescott, Samuel Baker,
while a very suitable sermon on the occasion is preached by the
Rev. Mr. Stillman of Boston.' How familiar the names all sound!
Then the thanks of the Members of Congress are given to 'General
Lee, Colonel Moultrie, and the officers and soldiers under their
command who on the 28th of June last Repulsed with so much Valour
the attack that was made that day on the State of South Carolina by
the fleet and army of his Britannic Majesty.'
There is an irresistible spirit of old-world pigtail decorum and
dash about it all. We read of our 'grand fleet' waiting at Corunna
for the Spanish; of 80,000 men on the coast of Brittany supposed to
be ready for an invasion of England; of the Prince of Conde playing
at cards, with Northumberland House itself for stakes
(Northumberland House which he is INTENDING to take). We read the
list of Lottery Prizes, of the L1000 and L500 tickets; of the
pressing want of seamen for His Majesty's Navy, and how the
gentlemen of Ireland are subscribers to a bounty fund. Then comes
the narrative of James Caton of Bristol, who writes to complain
that while transacting his business on the Bristol Exchange he is
violently seized by a pressgang, with oaths and imprecations. Mr.
Farr, attempting to speak to him, is told by the Lieutenant that if
he does not keep off he will be shot with a pistol. Mr. Caton is
violently carried off, locked up in a horrible stinking room,
prevented from seeing his friends; after a day or two he is forced
on board a tender, where Mr. Tripp, a midshipman, behaves with
humanity, but the Captain and Lieutenant outvie each other in
brutality; Captain Hamilton behaving as an 'enraged partisan.' Poor
Mr.
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