Complete Works of Wilkie Collins (2249 page)

BOOK: Complete Works of Wilkie Collins
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From the letters of his present Broadstairs visit, there is little further to add to their account of his progress with his story; but a couple more lines may be given for their characteristic expression of his invariable habit upon entering any new abode, whether to stay in it for days or for years. On a Monday night he arrived, and on the Tuesday (2d of June) wrote to me, “
Before
I tasted bit or drop yesterday, I set out my writing-table with extreme taste and neatness, and improved the disposition of the furniture generally.” He stayed till the end of June; when Maclise and myself joined him for the pleasure of posting back home with him and Mrs. Dickens, by way of his favorite Chatham and Rochester and Cobham, where we passed two agreeable days in revisiting well-remembered scenes. I had meanwhile brought to a close the treaty for repurchase of
Oliver
and surrender of
Barnaby
, upon terms which are succinctly stated in a letter written by him to Messrs. Chapman & Hall on the 2d of July, the day after our return:

“The terms upon which you advance the money to-day for the purchase of the copyright and stock
of
Oliver
on my behalf are understood between us to be these. That this 2250
l
. is to be deducted from the purchase-money of a work by me entitled
Barnaby Rudge
, of which two chapters are now in your hands, and of which the whole is to be written within some convenient time to be agreed upon between us. But if it should not be written (which God forbid!) within five years, you are to have a lien to this amount on the property belonging to me that is now in your hands, namely, my shares in the stock and copyright of
Sketches by Boz
,
The Pickwick Papers
,
Nicholas Nickleby
,
Oliver Twist
, and
Master Humphrey’s Clock;
in which we do not include any share of the current profits of the last-named work, which I shall remain at liberty to draw at the times stated in our agreement. Your purchase of
Barnaby Rudge
is made upon the following terms. It is to consist of matter sufficient for ten monthly numbers of the size of
Pickwick
and
Nickleby
, which you are, however, at liberty to divide and publish in fifteen smaller numbers if you think fit. The terms for the purchase of this edition in numbers, and for the copyright of the whole book for six months after the publication of the last number, are 3000
l
. At the expiration of the six months the whole copyright reverts to me.” The sequel was, as all the world knows, that Barnaby became successor to Little Nell, the money being repaid by the profits of the
Clock;
but I ought to mention also the more generous sequel that my own small service had, on my receiving from him, after not many days, an antique silver-mounted jug of great beauty of form and workmanship, but with a wealth far beyond jeweler’s chasing or artist’s design in the written words that accompanied it.
I accepted them to commemorate, not the help they would have far overpaid, but the gladness of his own escape from the last of the agreements that had hampered the opening of his career, and the better future that was now before him.

At the opening of August he was with Mrs. Dickens for some days in Devonshire, on a visit to his father, but he had to take his work with him; and, as he wrote to me, they had only one real holiday, when Dawlish, Teignmouth, Babbicombe, and Torquay were explored, returning to Exeter at night. In the beginning of September he was again at Broadstairs.

“I was just going to work,” he wrote on the 9th, “when I got this letter, and the story of the man who went to Chapman & Hall’s knocked me down flat. I wrote until now (a quarter to one) against the grain, and have at last given it up for one day. Upon my word it is intolerable. I have been grinding my teeth all the morning. I think I could say in two lines something about the general report with propriety. I’ll add them to the proof” (the preface to the first volume of the
Clock
was at this time in preparation), “giving you full power to cut them out if you should think differently from me, and from C. and H., who in such a matter must be admitted judges.” He refers here to a report, rather extensively circulated at the time, and which through various channels had reached his publishers, that he was suffering from loss of reason and was under treatment in an asylum.
I would have withheld from him the mention of it, as an absurdity that must quickly pass away, but against my wish it had been communicated to him, and I had difficulty in keeping within judicious bounds his extreme and very natural wrath.

A few days later (the 15th) he wrote, “I have been rather surprised of late to have applications from Roman Catholic clergymen, demanding (rather pastorally, and with a kind of grave authority) assistance, literary employment, and so forth. At length it struck me that, through some channel or other, I must have been represented as belonging to that religion. Would you believe that in a letter from Lamert, at Cork, to my mother, which I saw last night, he says, ‘What do the papers mean by saying that Charles is demented, and, further,
that he has turned Roman Catholic?’ — !
” Of the begging-letter-writers, hinted at here, I ought earlier to have said something. In one of his detached essays he has described, without a particle of exaggeration, the extent to which he was made a victim by this class of swindler, and the extravagance of the devices practiced on him; but he has not confessed, as he might, that for much of what he suffered he was himself responsible, by giving so largely, as at first he did, to almost every one who applied to him. What at last brought him to his senses in this respect, I think, was the request made by the adventurer who had exhausted every other expedient, and who desired finally, after describing himself reduced to the condition of a traveling Cheap Jack in the smallest way of crockery, that a donkey might be left out for him next day, which he would duly call for. This I perfectly remember, and I much fear that the applicant was the Daniel Tobin before mentioned.

Many and delightful were other letters written from Broadstairs at this date, filled with whimsical talk and humorous description relating chiefly to an eccentric friend who stayed with him most of the time, and is sketched in one of his published papers as Mr. Kindheart; but all too private for reproduction now. He returned in the middle of October, when we resumed our almost daily ridings, foregatherings with Maclise at Hampstead and elsewhere, and social entertainments with Macready, Talfourd, Procter, Stanfield, Fonblanque, Elliotson, Tennent, D’Orsay, Quin, Harness, Wilkie, Edwin Landseer, Rogers, Sydney Smith, and Bulwer. Of the genius of the author of
Pelham
and
Eugene Aram
he had, early and late, the highest admiration, and he took occasion to express it during the present year in a new preface which he published to
Oliver Twist
. Other friends became familiar in later years; but, disinclined as he was to the dinner-invitations that reached him from every quarter, all such meetings with those whom I have named, and in an especial manner the marked attentions shown him by Miss Coutts which began with the very beginning of his career, were invariably welcome.

To speak here of the pleasure his society afforded, would anticipate the fitter mention to be made hereafter. But what in this respect distinguishes nearly all original men, he possessed eminently. His place was not to be filled up by any other. To the most trivial talk he gave the attraction of his own character. It might be a small matter, — something he had read or observed during the day, some quaint odd fancy from a book, a vivid little out-door picture, the laughing exposure of some imposture, or a burst of sheer mirthful enjoyment, — but of its kind it would be something unique, because genuinely part of himself. This, and his unwearying animal spirits, made him the most delightful of companions; no claim on good-fellowship ever found him wanting; and no one so constantly recalled to his friends the description Johnson gave of Garrick, as the cheerfulest man of his age.

Of what occupied him in the way of literary labour in the autumn and winter months of the year, some description has been given; and, apart from what has already thus been said of his work at the closing chapters of
The Old Curiosity Shop
, nothing now calls for more special allusion, except that in his town-walks in November, impelled thereto by specimens recently discovered in his country-walks between Broadstairs and Ramsgate, he thoroughly explored the ballad literature of Seven-Dials, and took to singing himself, with an effect that justified his reputation for comic singing in his childhood, not a few of these wonderful productions. His last successful labour of the year was the reconciliation of two friends; and his motive, as well as the principle that guided him, as they are described by himself, I think worth preserving. For the first: “In the midst of this child’s death, I, over whom something of the bitterness of death has passed, not lightly perhaps, was reminded of many old kindnesses, and was sorry in my heart that men who really liked each other should waste life at arm’s length.” For the last: “I have laid it down as a rule in my judgment of men, to observe narrowly whether some (of whom one is disposed to think badly) don’t carry all their faults upon the surface, and others (of whom one is disposed to think well) don’t carry many more beneath it. I have long ago made sure that our friend is in the first class; and when I know all the foibles a man has, with little trouble in the discovery, I begin to think he is worth liking.” His latest letter of the year, dated the day following, closed with the hope that we might, he and I, enjoy together “fifty more Christmases, at least, in this world, and eternal summers in another.” Alas!

CHAPTER XIV.

 

BARNABY RUDGE.

 

1841.

 

Advantage in beginning
Barnaby
— Birth of Fourth Child and Second Son — The Raven — A Loss in the Family — Grip’s Death — C. D. describes his Illness — Family Mourners — Apotheosis by Maclise — Grip the Second — The Inn at Chigwell — A
Clock
Dinner — Lord Jeffrey in London — The
Lamplighter
— The
Pic Nic Papers
— Character of Lord George Gordon — A Doubtful Fancy — Interest in New Labour — Constraints of Weekly Publication — The Prison-Riots — A Serious Illness — Close of
Barnaby
— Character of the Tale — Defects in the Plot — The No-Popery Riots — Descriptive Power displayed — Leading Persons in Story — Mr. Dennis the Hangman.

 

 

The letters of 1841 yield similar fruit as to his doings and sayings, and may in like manner first be consulted for the literary work he had in hand.

He had the advantage of beginning
Barnaby Rudge
with a fair amount of story in advance, which he had only to make suitable, by occasional readjustment of chapters, to publication in weekly portions; and on this he was engaged before the end of January. “I am at present” (22d January, 1841) “in what Leigh Hunt would call a kind of impossible state, — thinking what on earth Master Humphrey can think of through four mortal pages. I added, here and there, to the last chapter of the
Curiosity Shop
yesterday, and it leaves me only four pages to write.” (They were filled by a paper from Humphrey introductory of the new tale, in which will be found a striking picture of London from midnight to the break of day.) “I also made up, and wrote the needful insertions for, the second number of
Barnaby
, — so that I came back to the mill a little.” Hardly yet; for after four days he writes, having meanwhile done nothing, “I have been looking (three o’clock) with an appearance of extraordinary interest and study at
one leaf
of the
Curiosities of Literature
ever since half-past ten this morning — I haven’t the heart to turn over.” Then on Friday the 29th better news came. “I didn’t stir out yesterday, but sat and
thought
all day; not writing a line; not so much as the cross of a t or dot of an i. I imaged forth a good deal of
Barnaby
by keeping my mind steadily upon him; and am happy to say I have gone to work this morning in good twig, strong hope, and cheerful spirits. Last night I was unutterably and impossible-to-form-an-idea-of-ably miserable. . . . By-the-by, don’t engage yourself otherwise than to me for Sunday week, because it’s my birthday. I have no doubt we shall have got over our troubles here by that time, and I purpose having a snug dinner in the study.” We had the dinner, though the troubles were not over; but the next day another son was born to him. “Thank God,” he wrote on the 9th, “quite well. I am thinking hard, and have just written to Browne inquiring when he will come and confer about the raven.” He had by this time resolved to make that bird, whose accomplishments had been daily ripening and enlarging for the last twelve months to the increasing mirth and delight of all of us, a prominent figure in
Barnaby;
and the invitation to the artist was for a conference how best to introduce him graphically.

The next letter mentioning
Barnaby
was from Brighton (25th February), whither he had flown for a week’s quiet labour: “I have (it’s four o’clock) done a very fair morning’s work, at which I have sat very close, and been blessed besides with a clear view of the end of the volume. As the contents of one number usually require a day’s thought at the very least, and often more, this puts me in great spirits. I think — that is, I hope — the story takes a great stride at this point, and takes it well. Nous verrons. Grip will be strong, and I build greatly on the Varden household.”

BOOK: Complete Works of Wilkie Collins
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