The-Journals Text
The-Journals Text
The-Journals Text
PAPERS OF
OERARD MANLEY
HOPKINS
CiERARD MANLEY HOPKINS
Balliol,
THE JOURNALS AND
PAPERS OF
GERARD MANLEY
HOPKINS
Edited by
HUMPHRY HOUSE
SENIOR LECTURER IN ENGLISH LITERATURE
AND PFLLOW OF WADIIAM COLLEGE, OXFORD
Completed by
GRAHAM STOREY
TLLOW OF TRINITY HALL» CAMBRIDGE
CONTENTS
Preface ix
Abbreviations xxxiii
EARLY NOTE-BOOKS i
Notes 291
Appendixes
. i. Hopkins’s Drawings 453
ii. Hopkins as Musician 457
iii. Philological Notes 499
iv. Catalogue of Manuscripts 529
V. Hopkins’s Resolutions and ‘Slaughter of the innocents’ 537
vi. The Organization of the Society of Jesus 541
VI CONTENTS
Maps »
i. Oxford 544.
ii. Bovey Tracey 545
iii. Stonyhurst district 546
iv. Isle of Man 54^
V. St. Beuno’s district
548
Indexes:
i. First Lines of Poems and Fragments from the early
Diaries
^4g
ii. Index of Persons and Places
551
iii. Index of Words and Subjects
569
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PLATES
1. ‘North Road, Highgatc. March 12th 1862’
2. ‘Dandelion, Hemlock and Ivy. The Field, Blunt House, Croydon. April-
July 1862’
12. Waves. ‘Study from the cliff above, Freshwater Gate. July 23' (1863)
14. ‘Sun Corner, Cliffs near the Needles Point. July 23’ (1863)
15. ‘In hollow betw^een Apse and the American Woods. Near Shanklin.
Aug 8’. (1B63)
16. Coast-scene
18. ‘Beech, Godshill Church behind. Fr. Appledurcombc. July 25’ (? 1865)
19. ‘Sf. Bartholomew. Aug. 24. ’65. Betw. Ashburton and Newton Abbot’
2 1 . Man in a punt
* The NoU^Books and Papers of Gerard Manley HopkinSy edited by Hunipliry House,
OUP, 1937.
t These, mostly to Hopkins’s father and mother, were published by C, C. Abbott
in Further Letters of Gerard Manley HopkinSy 2nd edn, 1956.
though aware that I have often fallen short of his exacting standards.
The spade-work of the preparation of the new MS material had
already been done; as had a great deal of the new annotation. In
completing it, I have drawn freely on the mass of material House
had collected over the many years he had devoted to Hopkins, as
well as on his typescript of the biography. To the experience of
coming know Hopkins through his diaries and papers was added
to
that of following the mind of a remarkable editor at work. The only
• The Note~Books and Papers of Getard Manley Hopkins, edited by Humpliry House,
OUP, 1937.
t These, mostly to Hopkins’s father and mother, were published by C. C. Abbott
in Further Letters of Gerard Manley Hopkins, 2nd edn, 1956.
} All now in the Bodleian.
X PREFACE
of Hopkins s
addition to House’s original plan has .been the inclusion
music. The suggestion that this was the right time and place to
book that to keep the original Preface intact and add a new one
could only have confused the reader. House had clearly intended to
rewrite the Preface several notes and pointers towards
and had left
promised to do so, and said that Gerard had given instructions about his
papers &c. From this I think it very likely that whatever there is of per-
sonal interest will be sent to you, in which case I shd. not have much to
add. But I shall hear of this perhaps later on from Mr. Hopkins, and he will
tell me what you would wish.*
The only surviving letter from Fr Wheeler to Bridges is dated
27
October 1889 and must be in an.swer to a further request for Hop-
kins s papers. The full text, of which the most pertinent
sentences
have already been published,f is as follows:
F. Hopkins had a presentiment that he would
not recover but I am sure
he took no measure to arrange his papers, and gave
—
no instructions about
* RBto Mrs Hopkins: 19 June 1889.
t In LL, i. vi, reprinted in NB
[1937], p. xii.
:
PREFACE xi
And on 28 November:
There will be two books, and a folio case with loose things in it The two
br^hJ? ; SH . This
his is identical with the
B
album which
‘o ‘he
I
poems 2 the
made up at the
y
PREFACE xiii
—
time of Gerard’s death only that bk. having gone mouldy and rotten I have
procured a new bk. and had it lettered on the back. I have added one or two
MS to this collection, and I have tied into the end of it an envelope which
you will find to contain some MS notes which Gerard made of his medita-
tions in retreat. Time are very private^ and were certainly not intended to be
read: but they arc a valuable & unimpeachable testimony to the mental
trouble that he suffered from being obliged to witness the disloyal plotting of
his Society in Ireland— and together with his letters to me will some day be
wanted. In one of the records there is a very interesting & touching passage
about his prayers that his poems might be protected from abuse. I have
made and kept copies of the most important paragraphs. 3 is a folio case wh.
contains the two prize poems and other things lent to me. There is a list of
contents written on the inside of the cover.
pp. 253-4), and of the first part of the long note made at Tullabeg,
I January 1889 {Sermons^ pp. 261-4). Bridges copied out this second
extract on 9 May 1918, and added this note ‘All this which bears date
:
as these notes and those Sonnets. RB. I think 1888 is too late thoit
is January in the year and possible.’
Although the evidence is not explicit, the strong inference from
these two letters is that, with Kate Hopkins’s agreement, Bridges
burnt the ‘bundle of what is practically worthless’ Certsunly nothing
.
has survived that could be identified with it. The ‘schemes for dis-
covering the Structure of Greek choruses’ must have belonged to the
projected work on Greek metres, often mentioned in letters to Bridges.
But what other ‘beginnings of things’ were here it is impossible to
say. There may have been something on Homer {LL, i. 251) or
Sophocles {LLy i. 277) or Duns Scotus, whom Hopkins studied for
many years, or on the text of St Patrick’s Confession {LL, i. 195) but :
these can only be guesses. The letters make clear that a great deal of
the work Hopkins projected at different times could never have
advanced ver>' far; the mere number and variety of the schemes
W’ould make that impossible. These notes or rough drafts, sent to
Bridges after his death, may have been all that was achieved of many
XIV PREFACE
or, again, all there was left if he destroyed his
of Hopkins’s plans;
notes himself. .
actually ever since I was at school, destroying all but a very few, and growing
ever lother to destroy, but also to read, so that at last I' left off reading; and
there they lie and my old notebooks and beginnings of things, ever so many,
which it seems to me might well have been done, ruins and wrecks; but on
this theme I will not enlarge by pen and ink. However there were many of
.*
your letters among them and overflowing with kindness. . .
The implication is that up to within four years of his death his habit
PREFACE XV
Dublin.”•
Orby Shipley (19 May 1902): ‘The remains of Father Hopkins’
writings were left here, in Some passed into the hands of
**
could be found into his own hands. The result of his work was the valu-
able series of threearticles, ‘Impressions of Father Gerard Hopkins,
his mother. In the early Diaries are many of the verses once thought
to have been burnt ; the notes ‘Rhythm and the other structural parts
of Rhetoric’ fill the gap between the early immature poems and the
sudden appearance of Sprung Rhythm in full theory and practice
they explain the seven years’ silence ; while the book of sermons and
the notes on the Spiritual Exercises^ do more than the letters to give
some idea of his life as a busy priest on Jesuit Missions and to supple-
ment the religious tliought of the poems contemporary with them.
Besides this material there are many notes and fragments valuable
for adding to our knowledge of years already well knowm. These
BoesB b
,
XVI PREFACE
miscellaneous papers are all mentioned in Appendix IV. Those on
which the present texts are based must be discussed separately.
A. Early Diaries
is not extant; and we now know that on i June 1866 he burnt parts
few pages preserved loose. The moral and spiritual notes were scored
through in pencil by Hopkins, but are mostly quite legible.
The habits of mind shown in the poems and later Journal are
already far developed. He
has the same way of looking at clouds,
sunsets, trees, streams,and birds, and the same way of analysing
what he sees in them; the same passion for architectural detail; the
same interest in the remote applications of words, their ‘prepossession
of feeling’ and possible etymology.
All the verse from the two Diaries which was published in Note-
Books and Papers has been reprinted in the third edition ofPoems ( 1 948)
with the single exception of the continuation of Richard Garnett’s
The Nix (given at p. 64). That edition of the poems also contains
eight further pieces from C. II (listed at p. 276) and the fifth im-
;
pression, 1956, added, from C. I, three more: The Peacock*s Eye^ *Miss
PREFACE xvii
Story’s Character!* and lo. None of the more finished versions there
printed is repeated here; but references to Poems show the chrono-
logical place of each in the text. Earlier drafts or alternative readings
of some of those poems, however, seemed interesting enough to be
given. Drafts of The Peacock's Eye^ New Readings^ Heaven-Haven (under
the title Rest^ a similar version copied out by D. M. Dolben has the
title Fair Havens or The Convent)
* and Easter Communion^ are printed
\
‘Where art thou friend’ and ‘Myself unholy, from myself unholy’.
—
The remaining verse from the two note-books about 500 lines,
—
apart from variant readings is now printed for the first time. Much
of it is scrappy and experimental the forming of his poetic vocabu-
:
lary and the testing of images, often tried out in fragments only
a few lines long. The main interest of much, again, lies in showing
the bent and prepossessions of his mind in the first flush of writing
poetry. But many of the fragments have a characteristic beauty; and
in the constant trying out of fresh metres, alternate forms, positions
of words, we can watch him closely at work.
With all this, there are several interesting additions. The sonnet
‘Confirmed beauty will not bear a stress’ (27-30 April 1B65), al-
though perhaps not in its final shape, t can stand beside the other
sonnets written in the same fortnight, ‘Where art thou friend’ and
the sequence The Beginning of the End all are marked by a personal
:
feeling and energy rare in these early poems. The incomplete third
sonnet To Oxford^ given to V. S. S. Coles, was probably written as —
—
were the much better two sent to Addis during Lent 1865, al-
though not entered until 26 June.
Two and a half missing pages from the Diaries, traced and restored
to Campion Hall by Fr D. A. Bischoff, have added some further
verse. The half-page, cut out of C. I, is numbered 191 and belongs to
August 1864, when Hopkins was staying in North Wales with A. E.
Hardy and Edward Bond. On one side is the drawing ‘Gerard
Hopkins, reflected in a lake. Aug. 14’ (see Fig. 27); on the other,
a stanza of six lines, beginning ‘Glimmer’d along the square-cut
steep’, and three lines of a second stanza which, although of a
different rhyme-scheme and length, appears to be a continuation of
it. The other two pages (four sides), from C. II, can only be dated
xviii
PREFACE
Alexandrines, Proved Etherege
a pungent seven-line lampoon in
prudish, selfish, hypocrite, heartless,’
which linfe up with two Imes-
just above that is For
meaningless before-left in the Diary. Entered
a basket lined with grass ), the first of
a Picture of St. Dorothea (‘I bear
copied out for Bridges. It has no title here
the poems Hopkins later
variant. Before these two
and is written straight out with only one
pages came to light, House suggested that Hopkins’s note to Baillie
of March 1864, ‘I have written a thing I may send you called Grass is
my garland^ (of which there is no trace elsewhere) might refer to an
earlier poem on St Dorothea. It now seems more than likely that the
two poems are in fact the same; that this is a fair copy of the poem
which was written before or during March; and th^t it received its
final title only when written out for Bridges. The text is not printed,
as, except for minor variants mainly of punctuation, it is the same as
that given to Bridges and published in Poe ns, Later in C. II (March
7
and Castara Victrix or Castara Felix, and to two long narrative poems,
Richard and Stephen and Barberie. At Floris in Italy Hopkins worked
intermittently from at any rate July 1864 (see letter to Baillie: LL, iii,
213) to September 1865, and possibly longer: first as a narrative,
then as a play. Parts of the narrative version may have been on
twenty-one pages torn out of C. I after the first drafts of Pilate
(J unc
1864) but the fragments which certainly belong to the poem are all
;
in August 1864, and one back from the end of September. A comic
scene in indifferent prose follows and continues into C. 11 Astorm-
.
scene, also in prose, with a half-mad man outside the cave of a dead
hermit, may belong to a subplot; and this leads on directly to a pass-
age of twelve lines of blank verse, beginning ‘O Guinevere .*
. ,
‘Daphne’, the name of one of the characters (it is possibly a song for
her in the play); and immediately afterwards come the three
separate fragments of scenes, together making up fifty-five lines of
blank verse. Some of the remaining lines of verse may have been
meant to be incorporated in one or other of these four longer pieces;
or in some of the poems mentioned earlier.
In Appendix V, House has given his reasons for being all but certain
that Hopkins’s Journal entry for ii May 1868, ‘Slaughter of the
innocents’, refers to the burning of his poems on that day. No fresh
evidence has come to light to change House’s earlier conclusion
that these poems probably included material contemporary with
C. I and C. II (better drafts or finished versions). But the exceptions
to what Hopkins burnt of the poems written between January 1866
and May 1 868 have mounted up. In addition to Heaven-Haven, The
Nightingale, Nondum, Easter, The Habit of Perfection, and the various
versions of St, Dorothea, of all of which autograph MSS exist, we must
now add the six Latin poems and translations, together with a few
fragments, found inside the new Journal,* and published in Poems,
pp. 179-85. Of these, Inundatio Oxoniana may have been written in
1865 (see Poems, note at p. 263); one set of Latin Elegiacs was
written after 18 July 1867; and two (probably all) of the translations
during the following winter or early spring, when Hopkins was teach-
ing at the Oratory School, Edgbaston, and moving towards a decision
about his vocation.* Despite the burning, remarkably little of his
work known from letters or these two Diaries remains altogether un-
accounted for; and there are many indications that even in his later
time as an undergraduate Hopkins’s increasing piety led him to re-
strict his verse-writing.
Sec p. 534.
PREFACE
XX
the prose ^acts are the notes on
The most important additions to
examples could be given in
words of which only a few
in C. I, from Septeinber 1863 to the
edition. These are most frequent
following February, when Hopkins was working for Mods; and they
as a storehouse of memory
often fill pages at a time. Their importance
for future poetic use obvious; and many of the word-lists show in
is
Most of the dates in square brackets, in C. II, come from the same
source.
These Diaries were evidently used whenever the need or impulse
came to write anything down; one entry thus often occurs in the
middle of another, sometimes even breaking a sentence. The punctua-
tion and other details are very erratic and often far from clear. It
would have been a self-defeating project to attempt to give an exact
representation in type of such casual and various matter: even the
attempt to apply utterly consistent principles of transcription broke
down in practice. The patience of the most pedantic reader (or
editor) would be exhausted by descriptions of all the editorial changes
seriatim in the notes, or even by a full summary of them here. Yet
some explanations, mainly about the verse, are necessary.
Fragments of identifiable single poems (w ith the exception of those
from Floris in Italy, already discussed) have been brought together at
the earliest date of the entry. Not all the differing drafts of the frag-
ments are printed, nor all the variants in the drafts which are given;
fragments but on p. 53, for example, the four short entries printed
:
below the entry on De Quincey came after the first tw^o lines of that
note; and, on p. 56, the title of Meredith’s novel, Emilia in England,
w^as broken at Emilia and completed seven pages later in the Diary.
The entries, otherwise, are in chronological order. A few trivial
shopping lists, domestic memoranda, unconnected addresses and lists
XXll PREFACE
undergraduate have been added from his various Oxford note-books.
Although these were written for tutors (one for the Master of Balliol),
they show, like the dialogue, a fusion of ‘compulsory’ and spontaneous
mental life: a fusion also found in the lectures given at Roehampton
in 1873-4 (see p. xxvii), in which too he developed lines of argument
outlined in the dialogue and some of the essays. They are printed in
approximate chronological order, so far as it can be worked out.
1 On the Signs of Health and Decay in the Arts is the sixth essay from
.
c. Journal
* The High Church Essay Society at Oxford to which Hopkins belonged: see
p. 328. •[*
ITic two books described in Appendix IV as A, IV and A. V,
XXIV PREFACE
19 July 1868, in the middle of a holiday in Switzerland with Edward
Bond, immediately before Hopkins entered the Jesuit novitiate; and
the last surviving entries refer to the first months of 1875, soon after
he had gone to St Beuno’s for his theology.
The earlier Journal, now printed before it, was discovered in
February 1947 by Fr Bischoff, among the papers of the Jesuit Pro-
vinciate in Farm Street. The MS is in three thin black exercise-books,
described in Appendix IV as A. I, A. II, and A. III. Extracts from
it have appeared in the domestic Jesuit quarterly Letters and Notices
(ed.Fr Bischoff, May and September 1947; January and May 1948),
in The Month (December 1950), and in Gerard Manley Hopkins:
Poems and Prose, ed. W. H. Gardner, 1953 (Penguin Poets). It
is in two parts, with a gap of almost exactly a year between them.
The first part begins on 2 May 1866, during Hopkins’s last term at
Oxford and just over three months after the last entry in his second
Diary; and ends on 24 July of the same year, a week after he ‘saw
clearly the impossibility of staying in the Church of England’. The
second begins on 10 July 1867, with a holiday in Paris spent with a
Russian friend from Christ Church, Basil Poutiatine, and continues
into the original Journal. Hopkins's decisions about his vocation are
recorded here, and the cryptic resolution, already mentioned, to
destroy his poems. A back-reference to 28 June (see p. 149) shows
that a Journal was kept for at any rate part of the period 25 July
1866 to 9 July 1867: and it seems natural to assume that it was con-
tinuous. The biographical interest of this early Journal is
consider-
able, although its literary qualities are less striking than
those of the
later Journal. Many of the entries — like those of his first eighteen
months in the Society of
Jesus— are scrappy or short; and there are
fewer of the later confident and fully-explored landscapes
and cloud-
scapes. Towards the end of it Hopkins is
beginning to make regular
use of the words ‘inscape’ and ‘instress’: ‘instress'
appears first in the
Journal on 27 June 1868 (p. 168; ‘inscaped’ on
;
7 July m 170)
^ (p. / /» and ;
PREFACE XXV
‘taken from Whitaker’ show the bias of his mind towards public
affairs.
Hopkins normally made rough notes of what he saw at the time of
seeing it, and wrote the Journal some time later from these notes.
We now know that for his tour of Switzerland in July 1868 he took a
small pocket-book (4 by 2| inches) ol‘ thick plain white paper,
similar to his sketch-books. Three pages from this are stuck into his
written-up Journal opposite the entries for 5 and 6 July (see p. 169)
they contain, on one side, pencilled notes for those entries and other
jottings, and, on the other, very slight sketches of the Rhine hills he
was passing through. This, or a similar note-book, was probably ‘the
little book’ he refers to in the Journal on 30 July 1867 and 16 June
1 868. On one occasion at least he wrote up his notes more than a year
after he had made them —i.e. he is writing on 2 February 1870 about
6 December 1868 (see p. 189). Only rarely does the Journal contain
material quite contemporary with the writing of it, and sometimes
(e.g. p. 246) the entries are incomplete because either the notes were
lost or he had forgotten what he was going on to say. It is typical of
his meticulous accuracy that the note recording his conversion should
begin ‘It was this night I believe but possibly the next’ (see p. 146).
After the brief entries of his conversion and decisions about his
vocation, the material is almost entirely non-religious; further
references to religion or religious feeling are rare. Small crosses in
eight entries betw'cen 6 May and 22 July 1866 (see note on p. 135)
probably denote the taking of Holy Communion they are all Sun- ;
days or Holy Days, and Comyn Macfarlane records in his diary that
he, Hopkins and Garrett attended a Communion service together on
Sunday, 22 July, the last of these entries (see LL, iii. 397). Hopkins’s
three known sets of Retreat and Meditation notes are published in
full in Sermons. But ‘rny meditation papers’ (see p. 236) seem to refer
The first part was sent to us for insertion, with the full approval of Father
Thurston, by Father Darlington, of the Irish University and Province, the
second half comes as a result of an accidental discovery while discussing with
Father O’Donohoc in his room at Manresa the existence of another literary
relic of Father Hopkins which was at that very moment in his possession, and
;
xxvi PREFACE
had been received from the late Father John Gretton. The first thought, of
course, on both sides, was to bring the two note-books together, when it was
found that No. i not only distinctly referred to No. 2 as a continuation of
itself, but gave visible proof of the fact by an exact description of the form
and general appearance of each book even to such minute points as the
colour of the back and of the edges of the two.
Cardinal MacCabe
died Feb. ii. News of Gordon’s death and taking of
Khartoom about same time
The dynamite explosions when?
Winter in Ireland mild. Snow only in Feb.
Write to young Byrne, Fr. Rickaby, Mr. Patmore, Milicmt
I do not of course claim to have invented sprmg rhythms but only sprung
rhythm; I mean that single lines and single instances of'it are not uncommon
in Englishand I have pointed them out in lecturing—
e.g. ‘why should this:
desert be?’—which the editors have
variously amended; ‘There to meet;
wth Macbeth’ or ‘There to meet with Mac;beth’;
Campbell has some
hroughout tl^ Battle of the Baltic— 'and
their fleet along the deep: proudly
and 2 eiWamm— ‘as ye sweep: through
LI"' the deep’ etc; Moore has
Icannot rewll ; there is one in Grongar
Hill; and, not to speak of
Pom pom, m Nursery Rhymes, Weather Saws,
and Refrains they ' are very
common. ^
the deep ‘Why should this desert be?’ and ‘Home to his mother’s
.
.
would have been needed for any finished work on the principles of
Sprung Rhythm. The notes form a necessary introduction to the
statement of its principles printed by Bridges as the ‘Author’s Preface’
to the Poems, and clarify much of the metrical explanation in the
published letters.
They have been printed exactly as they stand because, although
they contain a lot of detail not essential to the argument (e.g. the list
of the names of the Greek feet and Latin examples of them), these
details are not easily remembered and Hopkins himself sometimes
;
Among the other papers there are scraps of notes on Greek metre,
and in the Dublin note-book jottings on scansion in Greek and
English, but nothing so far advanced as the work Hopkins speaks of
in the letters, and nothing substantial enough to publish now. A good
deal is missing.li
Apart from his year at Roehampton, Hopkins was teaching and
lecturing every year from September 1882 to his death in 1889, first
different sources which would need perhaps three lines for their dis-
play. The
biographies of Jesuit colleagues and friends are generally
taken from the obituary articles in Letters and Notices^ the domestic
quarterly of the English Province, occasionally supplemented by the
annual printed lists of appointments in the Society; such notes have
been kindly checked from the same sources by Fr Christopher Devlin,
SJ, and Fr Philip Caraman, SJ; but the Jesuit archives have not
been dug further into to correct or expand what is said in Letters and
J\fotices. Many of the former notes have been completely rewritten and
omissions are noticed. Omitted words are not inserted in the text of
informal notes.
Obvious slips of spelling are silently corrected but characteristic
5. ;
XXX PREFACE
consistent at any period each doubtful letter has been judged on its
merit.
Except in the early Diaries the punctuation of the MSS is
7.
e.g. at one point in the Journal (see p. 1 99
extremely careful and clear ;
said Clarke, and afterwards asked why he went no walks with me.
‘Because he never asks me’ said Strachey. Not wishing to compromise
Clarke, I first asked him the same question, to which he gave at once
the same ungrateful answer. Being thus master of the situation, I told
said all, the others came up to bed. I asked him if he had anything to
say. He objected that the others had come up to interrupt it. ‘But
should you have anything if they had not?’ I asked, ‘No, I don’t
think so’ he said with a cool smile, and I left him. Perhaps in my next
friendship I may be wiser.
4
EARLY DIARIES (1863)
The various lights under which a horn may be looked at have given
rise to a vast number of words in language. It may be regarded as a
projection, a climax, a badge of strength, power or vigour, a tapering
body, a spiral, a wavy object, a bow, a vessel to hold withal or to drink
from, a smooth hard material not brittle, stony, metallic or wooden,
something sprouting up, something to thrust or push with, a sign of
honour or pride, an instrument of music, etc. From the shape, kernel
and granum, grain, com^. From the curve of a horn, "^Kopcovi^, corona,
crown. From the spiral crinu, meaning ringlets, locks. From its being
the highest point comes our crown perhaps, in the sense of the top of
the head, and the Greek Ke'pag, horn, and Kcipa, head, were evidently
identical ;
then for its sprouting up and growing, compare keren, cornu,
Kepas, horn with grow, cresco, grandis, grass, great, groot. For its curving,
curvus is probably from the root horn in one of its forms. Kopwvrj in
Greek and corvus, comix in Latin and crow (perhaps also raven, which
may have been craven originally) in English bear a striking resemblance
to cornu, curvus. So also yepavos, crane, heron, herne. Why these birds
should derive their names from horn cannot presume to say. The tree
I
cornel, Latin comus is said to derive its name from the hard horn-like
nature of its wood, and the corns of the foot perhaps for the same reason.
Comer is so called from its shape, indeed the Latin is cornu. Possibly
(though this is rather ingenious than likely, I think) grin may mean to
curve up the ends of the mouth like horns. Mountains are called horn
in Switzerland now we know from Servius^ that herna meant saxum
;
whence the Hern id, Rock-men, derive their name hema is a horn-like ;
• Kopoivis is the name for the flourish at the end of a book, and also for the mark
over a crasis, shaped thus 5.
EARLY DIARIES (1863) 5
Lays and Ballads^ from English, Scottish etc History, by S.M. (Miss
Smedley.) i2mo, cloth, 2s. 6d.
See hom above. On the other hand the derivation of granun^^^, grain
may be referred to the head
Grinds gride ^ gird, grii^ g^oat^ Kpoveiv^ crush ^ crash^ Kporetp
etc.
Original meaning to strike^ ruby particularly together. That which is
produced by such means is the grity the groats or crumbs, like /ra-
gmentum from frangere, bit from bite. Crumby crumble perhaps akin. To
greet, to strike the hands together(?). Greet, grief, wesiring, tribulation.
scouts to the proof. Let us plot to surprise them when they wot not we
are near, and he whose serf is found most trusty he shall win the mead
of glory and his catechetics shall be written for him for the term.
And
to this they agreed. So when they were sitting down at the Room of
Woolcombe,t and were now tired with the length of the siege,+
feigning a sudden message from the Master of the Horse, they got
suddenly on foot and came to their rooms. Then one scout was found
is not,
as =* scr\'ant, slave. It
Scout. The word in the Legenda Oxoniana is used
however, found in ancient English, in any other place, in this sense, but rncaiu
outcast. (See, however, Lilius Gandens* De Arte Cric. sub vo. scout.) Some
derive it
from oK€voil>6pos (v. Aristoph, Frogs^ 15) aK€vr)d>op(cj, uKevr). But the real sense
first established in Miiddlcr’s Scotians. That writer show’s that a large
part of the
population of Ballioli was Scottish. This is proved by the frequent recurrence of
Scotch names in the Legends, and the fact that the Eponymous hero of the college
(John Balliol) is called a Scotchman. He believes that the original population w’as
Scotch, but that it was reduced to subjection by the arrival of the English, and the
Scots became slaves or attendants of the conquerors. Hence the name Scot or Scout
became synonymous for servant, as Geta was a common name for a slave at Rome,
and slave comes from the Slavonians or slaves, and Brutus an old word for a runaway
slave from the Bruttii. This view is ably combated by Madler in his excursus on the
subject. He shows incon trover tibly that the Scots in Ballioli were (as everywhere)
the dominant element, and that at the time when the events of the legend were
supposed to take place Robert the Scot is alleged to have held the chief magistracy.*
—
He asserts that Scout must be compared with scuttle one who attends to the coals
etc. Piizler compares it with to scuttle, skulk, skunk. At some public schoob he says
the fags were called skunks. Doltz in his Animadversions against PUzler compares it
with scathe, scot-ircc, so tliat it means a maimed or ill-used wretch. Muner and
Muller in their Lexicon Anglo-Neo Z^landicum make it from scutiger, scuti/efy armour-
bearer. In fact as the great Bcntleius long ago remarked, the whole subject is
wrapped in okotos.
t The Mcdiccan reads ‘the Room of Woolks’.** But omn. cod. hab. the Room, the
critical editors omit the, and understand Romam or Rome of Voices, which
Volsc 6 m is
another form of Volscians, as in Shakspere, ‘flattered the Voices in Corioli*.
{ Siege, it should be remembered = both seat and beleaguerment.
EARLY DIARIES (1863) 7
making away with coffee-cups that his master might get more of
Hopkins, and he have a percentage, and other was decanting port in
such wise that the decanter was but one third full, and another, who
was a clerk, was reading Bohn’s literal translations of the poet Ovid
Naso’s Art of Love on his master’s shelves, and another used his
master’s tooth-brush and yet another was idling his time in unseemly
dalliance with the washer-woman, and yet one more was quarrelling
with his wife whether it were safe to take the fifth pot of Apricot
Marmalade. But only one was found faithful, for he was not in the
rooms at all but all things were set forth and he was within call, and
the young gentlemen straightway adjudged that he had the prize
whose scout was not in, yet within call, and he being a Exhibitioner
they had him excused from paying for the Cumaean party. Now one
of the young gentlemen was seized with a guilty desire to have that
trusty scout upon his own staircase. So one day when as it chanced his
master was out he went to his rooms and having there found the good
scout tried him first with persuasions that he should leave that stair-
case and come to his. And thus* he said thou mayest contrive it. Say
that the work on this stair is too much for thee and pray to be allowed
to exchange with the scout on mine. Say to him the pay of the gende-
men is good and thou mayest freely steal no man forbidding, but the
work is hard now on thine both the pay and the work is light. And
;
and Henry Duke of Lancaster, at that time, it was said, engaged in the
battle. Being brought to see the king, Henry VII called him an ideot
knave but appointed him a maintenance in the kitchen; Being disliked
by the servants he probably feared for his life and said he should be
clammed to death, which did happen. This was the first time I met the
word which was much used in the time of the Lancashiric famine. The
connexion between clam and clammy seemed accidental or not easily
explained, if real, till I saw the above line of Shakspeare, there being
evidently the same connexion between the two senses of cling as be-
tween clam and clammy (The words are probably distantly akin to
claudere^ close^ kXcIs, clasp, etc, and cleave. The original idea that of
closing, or fastening together, having attached many terminations and
inflexions to itself.) In the two above words the notion seems to be that
of closing the throat with inanition, throttling etc. Wonder whether
was originally xAt/ids-. Its older form, I see, is Aci/xd?. Llmus may
be connected very probably with clammy, slime, and lime. Slum probably
connected with slime.
Note also that the family of words mentioned above, viz. claudo^^\
kXcis etc are connected with lig-o to bind, whence come limes, limen,
perhaps limus, an apron, tie.
Tt was nuts to him’^^l German nutz, use, profit. This was told me
by Baillie.^ The word is obsolete in its uncompounded form, except in
one phrase.
. . ,
and heart,
when liver, brain,
Those sovereign thrones, are all supplied, and fill d,
or light from the surface, while flake is a thin scale of surface. Flay is
I do not believe school^^^ is from schola viz. crxoX'q, but the Teuton
word meaning assemblage, collection, as shoal, a school of whales shell
(in a school of a form).
Hollow^^\ hull (of ships and plants), kolXo<s, skull (as Ke^aXy] and
caput that which holds, contains), hole, hold, etc. Hell, I believe both
caelum^’^^ and caena or cena to be from koIXov and koiv^,
Skip^^^, escape,
In Attid*^ XtTpov TrXevfiiov are for vlrpov Tirevpatv, Liddell and Scott cf.
Xvyrjand wf. In Doric tJA^ov ^tAraroff arc ‘^6ov <l>ivraros* So no doubt
^€vpa is for nXevfia connected with 7tX€lv, flare, blow, to which words
above add pluma that with which birds fly.
raAa*^J (yaXaKTos), yXayos, lac {lactis), leglin (pail), milk, i.e. mlik.
—
Douglas. British ^Blue water.
—
Eden. British Gliding stream.
——
Humber. Gaelic Confluence of two waters.
Ribble. British ^Tumultuous.
—
Dun. British Erse Dusky.
Derwent. —Fair water.
British
Dove. Erse—Black.
British
Greta. —
British Swift.
Nid. —^That
British whirls.
Wharfe. Gaelic —Rough.
British
Lazy^ lassus?
Clarty, North Country = sticky. See pp. 33, 35, 36*. Clay perhaps
may have same root from its clanuny clinging nature.
Hawk^^\ is sell about the streets. I had imagined this to be derived from
the bawling or screeching the hawkers made in proclaiming their
wares, to hawk meaning to make a noise in the throat, as before spit-
ting. But Kingsley uses a word to hawk of birds in sense of to move up
and down in a place, to haunt. The above sense may be derived from
this. He also uses a verb to howk in sense of to harry and with this per-
haps is connected the bird hawk.
Mucus, muck.
Jan. 27. Two swans flew high up over the river on which I was,
their necks stretched straight out and wings billowing.
Mamma^ said in a letter she was glad I had decided not to join the
B.H.T.,^ if afterwards I saw reason to enter it, I might do so, for I
should have had time to weigh it well.
Cornhill. Xanadu.^
Till in the eastern seas there rise the lustrous [or splendid) sails of
morn the seas being the sky^ not literal.
;
B M28 G
,8 EARLY DIARIES (1864)
he moves.
Water dangerous.
faces like lights and heard the laughter like the wind flapping thousands
of coarse fig-leaves. And when lately I tried for the who pitied
me,* yet I pitied them and loved them seeing all their case,
his soul will feel the roots of the grass warm, and while brilliant* air
waits on the capes and headlands and the skies swim bluely and the
gulfs are bare,* he be double-sighted and sec the sails standing in
will
the sea ofTTenedos and the Greeks sailing home. But no, he will not
have this, he cares not for them, he prefers visions of the plain of
Elysium.
Od. V,* Odysseus there says that he was in great danger when
.
he Trojans threw their darts at him, while Ajax bore off the body
)f ‘Peleion’.
Apoll, Rhod. IV, 771 rdjjLveiv (absolute) to go, ‘cut’. See Liddell
. and
Scott sub V, T€fjLV€iv, Probably 6Sov understood.
Note on green wheat. The difference between this green and that
of long grass is that first suggests silver, latter azure. Former more
opacit/, body, smoothness. It is the exact complement of carnation.
Nearest to emerald of any green I know, the real emerald stone. It is
lucent. Perhaps it has a chrysoprase bloom. Both blue greens.
There was neither rain nor snow, it was cold but not frosty it had :
been a gloomy day with all the painful dreariness which December
can wear over Clapham. M. C. came in, a little warmed by her walk.
She had made a call, she had met the Miss Finlaysons, she had done
some shopping, she had been round half the place and seen the naked-
ness of the land, and now it struck her how utterly hateful was Clap-
ham. Especially she abominated the Berlin wool shop, where Mrs.
Vandelinde and her daughter called her ‘Miss’ and there was a con-
tinual sound of sliding glass panels and a smell of Berlin wool.
207-9).]
Frederika’s photograph.^
Speke says* ‘the language of this people’ i.e. that between Zanquebar
and Lake Nyanza is based on euphony, from which cause it is
.
Note that the Wabembe (W. of Tanganyika Lake), The Masai, and
their cognates, the Wahumba’, (N. of Ugogo), ‘Wataturu,’ (N. of
Mgunda-Mkkali), ‘Wahasange,’ (where?) ‘Wanyaramba’, (where?)
and even the ‘Wagogo of Wakimbu,* (where?) circumcise.
The woman’s dirk worn among the Waganda is like the ancient
Egyptian.
move it.
etupsasti, etupsat.
Cyril’s declension of imperfect of Tvirruv—etupsay
Greek for our expression, Query, secondly as shewing, for the scholiast
goes on to say that Timakhidas said they were from Aeschylus’s
Telephos, Asklepiades from his Iphigeneia, the ignorance possible in the
scholiast’s time, which perhaps implies the loss or extreme rarity of
some of Aeschylus’s plays.
Sunday loth April. Walking with Addis^ in the fields from Cumnor
to the Witney Road, saw a snake glide through a hedge, thus
[Drawing given Fig. ^.] The curves being apparently formed by the
twigs etc round which he drew himself.
* Thus in MS,
EARLY DIARIES (1864) 23
had original tracery (see sketch book).' These others were 3-lightcd
square-headed ;
as far as I remember the lights were lancet-shaped
Also the upper sides of little grotted waves turned to the sky have
soft pale-coloured cobwebs on them, the under sides green.
Note that the beaded oar, dripping, powders or sows the smooth
with dry silver drops.
The Church
to Staunton* Harcourt.*
May Walked with Addis
with a Norman door and several win-
is cru^orm and rather large,
windows, wmdows m
dows etc, Early English East end and other
Thus in MS.
94 EARLY DIARIES (1864)
tower (probably) Decorated, a Decorated or more probably Perpen-
dicular parapet,and Perpendicular windows. The Early English is
certainly unattractive, however the Church is evidently in Egypt and
Churchwardenship. We did not go into it, nor into the tower (close to
water with leaves in it. Vertical shortish grass. Orchards with trunks
of trees smeared over with the common white mbeture, whatever it is,
rather pretty than otherwise. Primroses, large, in wet, cool, shady
place.—On way fields yellow with cowslip and dandelion. Found
purple orchis, which opens flowers from ground, then rises the
stem
pushing upward. Crossed Isis at Skinner’s Weir, or as people
about
call it. Wire. Beautiful elfect of cloud. Wild
apple(?) beautiful in
blossom. Caddis-flies on stones in clear stream, water-snails
and leeches.
Round-looldng glossy black fieldmouse of some kind or
water-rat in
ditch on Witney Road. Cuckoo. Peewits wheeling
and tumbling, just
as they are said to do, as if with a broken
wing. They pronounce
pretty distinctly, sometimes querulously,
with a slight metallic
tone like a bat’s cry. Their wings are
not pointed, to the eye, when
flymg, but broad, white and of a black
or reddish purple apparently
Snakes’-heads.*
Like i^ops of blood. Buds pointed
and like snakes’ heads, but the
reason of name from mottling
and scaly look.
Renew^^^ (see above) is perhaps from renovate and took its English
form from the analogy of new.
Gulf^\ golf. If this game has its name from the holes into which
the ball is put, they may be connected, both being from the root
meaning hollow. Gulp, gala, hollow, hold, hilt, icotAd?, caelare (to make
hollow, to make grooves in, to grave) caelum, which is therefore same
as though it were what once was supposed to be a translation of
it
KoiXov, hole, hell, (‘The hollow hell’) skull, shell, hull (of ships and
beans).
Boll, is, of its colour, decidedly A i Rose in colour, full in form, cupped,
.
AAAQKPATYNQNEinE
POPGAKOYElSQZEYnANT
ANAZZQNMHAAGOIZETAN"
8s. id.
us. 4d.
i6s. 9d.
the century, representing the most desired union of the classical and
mediaeval.
[Among the verses above come the drawings given Figs, 14, /j, / 5.]
June 30.
On this day the clouds were lovely. Opposite the sun between 10
and 1 1was the disshevelled* cloud on page opposite. The clouds were
repeatedly formed in horizontal ribs. At a distance their straightness
of line was wonderful. In passing overhead they were something as in
the (now) opposite page, the ribs granulated delicately the splits
fretted with lacy curves and honeycomb work, the laws of which were
exquisitely traced. They in the zenith thus. There were squared odd
disconnected pieces of cloud now and then seen thus [dramng], as if
cut out from a lost whole. The blue of the sky was very good. A web of
the thinnest lacy cloud near the sun had films of colour chiefly rose
(pale) and greenish blue in broad bars caught on its tissue. Torn wisps
of cloud prevailed later in the day like this [drawing] and so on.
Plots of blue sky. Tendrils and wisps of cloud
Damask clouds.
[The three pages of this description are given infacsimik, Fig. ly.]
* Thus in MS,
:
trunks in outline^ with the edges of two others on left; {vi) (?) Outline
of steep hills; (yii) In the margin beside the next written entry, a
cancelled drawing of the dome of a railway-engine.^
I
And break your pleasant meat.
And have your fill of meat.
I
I- are — -trees.
^
The seventy palms
,
[Among the drafts above are: (i) A very slight and faint sketch of
a sky with colours written in, dated July 10; («*) A tiny cancelled
sketchof a head; {Hi) A minute drawing of a rat. Then come drafts
of two of the following stanzas, the ist written around a cancelled
small sketch of a face; and the drawing ^July j6. Caen Wood\^
given Fig. ig. The other drawings are not reproduced.]
And holds
— keeps)|
breeze and clears the seas
Jeremy Taylor speaks of The Middle Ages. * Holy Living, Chap. II,
§ in,
The Evil Consequents of Uncleanness, 10.
[Here is the drawing of water lilies dated ^July i8\ given Fig, 20,]
— Hill,
Heaven and every field, are still
As a self-embraced sweet thought
I
I caress’d — —
And the thin stars tremble not.
I
I
— — lessen’d stars ray —
[Here is the drawing of trees dated ^July 22, ^64\ given Fig, 22,]
Distance
Dappled with diminish’d trees
Spann’d with shadow every one.
[
This is followed by the more finished version given in Poems,
below which is written Overloaded, apparently.]
Mem. To Mr
Burton* about picture-frames, price of models,
ask
whether the pictures by W. S. Burton^ in the Academy are his, about
the Preraphaelite Brotherhood, the French Preraphaelites, the Diissel-
dorf school etc.
SkilP^ etc.
Primary meaning, to divide, cut apart. Skill, discernment. To keel,
which cuts a way through the water.
to skim. Keel, that part of a ship
Skull, an oar which skims the water. Shell (in a school) a division.
32 EARLY DIARIES (1864)
a division of a pound. School and shoal as applied to Rshes, a
Shillings
division,company. See p. 123.* Shell^^"^ of a snail, bird etc, skull of the
head are from word meaning hollow and their likeness to the words
above is a coincidence only.
NEW READINGS.^
Altho’ God’s word has said \
Barbe, Quadrant.
Fau’s Anatomic.*
F. Madox Brown.
Seddon.*
REST.*
I have desired to go
Where springs not fail
• MS not clear, but GMH seems to have written the name Lluys : see noU at p. 5/5,
D
;
A Majesty.
From Papa £5. Umbrella £1, Book for Hardy 4s. Hair-cutting. 6d.
Cab. 3s. 6d. Ticket £2. los. Omnibus from Llangollen station. 4d.
Bill at Llangollen. £^, 9. Coachman, is. Porter. 6d.
[Here is the drawing given Fig. 26; beside it a small sketch of {?) trees
on a hillside^ not reproduced.']
[On a half-page cut out of the Diary here, p. igi recto, comes the
drawing "Gerard Hopkins, reflected in a lake. Aug. if, given
Fig. 27.]
: : ^
Maentwrog.
[Here are short further drafts of the ^Spfs Soliloquy, Poems, p. 23;
then some rough jottings of tracery, not reproduced; then come
Epigram (i), Poems, Tn the van between Ffes-
p, i2g, written
tiniog and Bala’, and drafts ofMiss Storf s character!^ Poems,
^
—
Her prime of life cut down too soon
—
By death as th ’morning flower at noon
Her loving husband lives t’ deplore
Yet hopes she’ll flourish evermore.
Jane Green.
Wife of Jonathan Green, of this Parish, Baker.
20th 184k
Aged 52 years.^
[Fragments from ^Floris in half begin herCy but have been moved
forward to p, 40.]
By Mrs. Hopley.*
He’s wedded to his theory, they say.
If that were true, it could not live a day.
And did he on the children of his brains
Bestow but half the pains
The children of his loins receive instead
There would not be a whole place in his head.*
or
And did the children of his brains enjoy
But half the pains he spends upon his boy,
You may depend that ere a week was fled.
There etc.
By one of the old school who was bid to follow Mr Browning’s flights.
To rise you bid me with the lark
With me ’tis rising in the dark.
A candied confession.
Fast days I have found slow days ; you do not know how long short
commons will last.
Church Times,
— — —
[Of the fragments from ‘Floris in Italy' which follow^ thm have been
moved forward 12-15 pages in MS^ and one back from d. //, to link
up with the prose scene that continues into the 2nd Diary. See p. 56
and Preface^ p. xviii,']
—Lately I fear'd
it so. It loves the innocent tinkle of the bells, and only speaks by the
September g. 1864
You are doing that thing a woman can never forgive, and which, in your way
They came
Next to meadows abundant, pierced with flowers.
With sulphur-colour’d lilies, brittle in stalk,
rAnd seals of red carnation which had each
I — live
I — vive
Two tongues like butterflies.
Above
The vast of heaven stung with brilliant stars.
A. You see it isn’t how it pleases me, but how it pleased your god-
fathers and godmothers —how many years ago?
B. What, Sir?
A. Why, how old are you ? '
B. Fourteen. \
[Here come the lines ^How looks the night ?\ Poems, p. 144,^
Night’s lantern
Pointed with piercfed lights, and breaks of rays
Discover’d everywhere.
Scene. A
cave in a quarry. Evening, Gabriel comes to ask the advice
of the hermit, who has however died. He is half-mad. He runs out and
finds some night-shade berries which he cats. These make him deli-
rious. A shepherd and his wife take refuge in the cave from the violence
of the rain; she crouching in the corner, he standing at the door. Re-
enter Gabriel.
;
G. Gabrielle I know you. But you are under a cloud. Ay, they say
!
so ’tis the talk of the whole court. Yes, I know your husband good
:
;
but weak. They say he still loves her very, very, very much. Oh the
misery. It is a weakness. The last time I saw him he lay in a quarry
bleeding. I am cold : cover me up.
W, wicked to laugh, but he does
It is talk wild. Dear, dear, poor
soul. There put your hands down.
G. See, it rains blood. The moon
be turned into blood. ^Why
shall —
if all the jealous husbands run their horns at us as you did, shepherd,
there’ll be no gallantry left in these latter days.
S. Best leave him. We can do nought for him. He is clean mad.
W, Now John, how can be so hard-hearted. Come, I’ll not stir; so
you may do as you like.
G. No, never leave her. And yet I have been bitterly, horribly,
—
horribly wronged. ^Well the tale runs thus. The husband went away,
his friend committed adultery with his wife, the husband comes back,
does nothing, but goes as near madness as the scalp is to the scull,*
—
and the devil has a good find of souls. ^Well ’tis the story of Launcelot
and Guinevere again. Some call her Guinevera, some Guinevere, but
the story is the same.
Guinevere —O
Iread that the recital of thy sin.
Like knocking thunder all round Britain’s welkin,
Jarr’d down the balanced storm the bleeding heavens ;
Sept 14. Grey clouds in knops. A curious fan of this kind of cloud
radiating from a crown, and covering half the sky.
They take up almost the whole of eight pages of the Diary: the next
two entries come between them. The drafts on the third and fourth
pages are badly smudged. The next page has on it, longways, a very
rough sketch of a sky and horizon of {?)trees blocked in. Underneath
it is written: Blue (delicate) and dark grey. No intermediate
— —
Magdalen October. Balliol November. Corpus March. Tri- —
nity — —
June or earlier. Exeter ? Lincoln? Ch. Ch. 2nd Saturday in
—
Lent. Merton Spring. Brasenose —
Twig^^^ (pinch), tweak, twitch, twit, to give one a wigging, earwig,
wicker, twig (small branch), twist, twine, twire(?), twy, two, Svw, 8vo,
duo etc etc, tolxos, wick (of candle), oi/co?, wick (Hackney Wick etc),
wich, (Harwich etc) wig (Schleswig etc), weak, wicked.
Nankin 900 years ago (964) contained 4,000,000 souls, and the
just
walls are said tohave been of such huge extent that two horsemen
riding round them and starting from same point in opposite directions
would not meet before the evening. I believe however the walls remain.
[Here comes *
The cold whip-adder\ Poems, p. 132.']
We live to see
How Shakespeare’s England weds with Dante’s Italy.
EARLY DIARIES (1864; 49
[Fair copy of the last two and a half stanzas of ^Pilate\ Poems,
p. 120,]
Butterfield’s new church^ built for £Soo on the Nine Mile Road
between Finchampstead and Ascot.
Cover isa good word, and row^ both verb and noun, though I
mean no connection curiously.
Spring from the branch-heads ordering the bright rows— the leaves,
chiefly of the elm
[Here are copied out the first six lines of the last stanza of Keats's
'‘Ode to Psyche'^ '‘Yes^ I will be thy priest^ . .
j
Her showy leaves staid watchet counterfoiling
IHer showy leaves with gentle watchet foiling
Even so my thought the rose and grey disposes
Letter to Wood."^
Furius wrote®
Henry V. iii. v.
Rush on his host, as doth the melted snow
Upon the valleys whose low vassal seat
;
De Quincey translates
‘Nec licuit populis parvum te, Nile, videre’®
‘No license there was to the nations of earth for seeing thee,
O Nile! in a condition of infant imbecillity.’
And he good) essay on ‘Homer and the Homeridae’
thus
— ‘Andends athe(rather
affirmation of that question’ (he
for asserting is ‘the
existence of Homer’) presume myself to
‘in that interesting sense, I
have offered perhaps more and weightier arguments than all which
any German army of infidels has yet been able to muster against it.’
— ——
Palmer noticed in his sermon yesterday (Jan. 29.) that our language
with respect to character is that of morality, not of religion we say ;
Latin weather-proverb.
Si sol splendescat Maria purificante,
Major erit glacies post festum quam fuit ante.
Union subscription.
a standing fell
Of hyacinths .
Dolben’s® carte.
Waistcoat.
5^
EARLY DIARIES (1865)
Dawn that the low-down pebbly East
Covers with shallow the lock of clouds
silver,
I
The proper sweet re-attributing above.
I That sweetness re-attributing above.
February-March 1865
Whorled wave, whelkfed wave, —and drift.
—
Books to be read Bacon’s essays; Browning’s Paracelsus The
Apocryphal New Testament; King Henry V, VI (part i, ii, and iii),
Richard 111 and Henry VIII; Wordsworth; The Spiritual Combat;^
,
life of Lacordaire^ ;
Matthew Arnold’s Essays ;
Hain Friswell’s Life-
portraits of Shakspere ^ Modern Painters ; The Newcomes Dombey and Son ;
; ;
Our Mutual Friend The Story of Elizabeth^ Silas Mamet The Mill on
; ; ;
*
I
*Emilia\ but is continued y pages later in the
tana has been moved back from there.
MS (see p, 6o): *in Eng-
: ; —
Spent. Not accounted for id. Beggar id. Gill and Ward’s bill
//, 3-6, You whom the pursuant cold so wastes and nips,
To ask about lay baptism (in the Tract.) About justification etc.
About betting. About mortification.
Letter to Harrison.
Butterfield has restored Ottery St. Mary church*^ for John Duke
Coleridge, and painted his drawing-room, whom he knows. Bill high.
I was wrong about Merton.^ The sexton says the font, with its cover
(Diosc.*
Mastich-tree, Pistacia terebinthus (and Lentiscus?)
acTrdXados
Greece and Sicily.
**
and prob. Theoc,), spartium villosum found in
t /. 6 follows 1.
7 in MS; but GMH marked the two lines to be transposed.
: ;
theEnd" Poems, pp. 30-31, After the first comes the fragment
given below,]
i
Point-feather elms.
and write the name of the bankers and the person you send it to to
get paid, so that no one else can use it if lost.
[Here is copied into the Diary John Clarets poem 7 am! yet what
I am who cares or knows?" as ‘Quoted in the Spectator".]
Pencil 3d. Oriel photo. 6d. Michell’s poem is.* Cripps’ bill £i 14s.
Harris’ bill 2s. Share in cab is. 6d. Ticket ns. Telegram is. Porter
5s. Messenger 5s. Scout £2.
[June 24. Drafts of the sonnet ^Myself unholy, from myself unholy"
Poems, p. 33. Cancelled variants are given below.]
[Here follow copies of the two so7inets ^To Oxford. Low Sunday
and Monday, i86f, Poems, pp. 33-34, and the revised version of
^Easter Communion", dated ^Lent, 1863", Poems,/?. 33. Above them is
written:The two following sonnets were sent to Addis, also
that on Easter Communion, but I have now only the rough
copies of the first two, which are not quite right. Then comes
a third incomplete so fine t ‘
To Oxford", given to V. S. S, Coles, and
printed below. Immediately after it comes ^See how Spring opens
with disabling cold", dated June 26, Poems, p. 35. ]
Given to Coles.^
TO OXFORD.
As Devonshire letters, earlier in the year
Than we in the East dare look for buds, disclose
Smells that are sweeter-memoried than the rose.
And pressed violets in the folds appear,
So is it with my friends, I note, to hear
News from Belleisle, even such a sweetness blows
(I know it, knowing not) across from those
Mems. The opposite sunset. The barrow clouds. The valves. The
rail. Mallowy. Peace. Valved eyes. Bats’ wings and images. Lobes of
leaf. Theory of trees. Temper in art.
Castara Victrix or Casiara Felix, Silvian, the king, and his two sons
Areas and Valerian, Garindel. The fool. Carabella. Pirellia. Piers
Sweetgate. Daphnis. Daphne.
[On the next two pages of the note-book are two very slight sketches,
longways on the page, of a sunset with clouds, not reproduced. Above
the first is written Blue with rosy clouds; in the middle, left to
Purplish grey, Greyish blue, Salmon web-work or net-
right,
work, Green under the red; in the bottom right corner, above the
word *Horizon\ Pale purple clouds with mysterious rosy edges,
the coming between of which caused the spokes of light on the
cloud above; underneath. Sunset, July 20, copied from a
rougher drawing made at the time on the torn out page.
Above the lower sketch is written On a smaller scale thus; and
underneath: The clouds in the horizon caused the spokes. It
B 6628 F
66 EARLY DIARIES (1865)
was a wonderfully symmetrical band or skein of cloud on
which they fell. Unfortunately I cannot be quite sure which
is the dark and which the light part now. One of the most
B. What
spirit is that makes stillness obsolete
With ear-caressing speech? Where is the tongue
Which drives the stony air to utterance ?
Who is it ? how come to this forgotten land ?
Rainbow almost invisible when looked at with one eye. Cf. what
they say about the telescope.
* This and the next eniry have been transposed from 4 entries later, as clearly belonging
to the fragment they now follow.
t The MS is badly smudged here, and the words are illegible,
September i. 1865
Daphne.
Who loves me here and has my love,
I think he will not tire of me,
But sing contented as the dove
That comes again to the woodland tree.
For Castora.
Scene: a bare hollow between hills. Enter Castara and her Esquire
C. What was we should strike the road again ?
it
For Castara,
Valerian^ Daphnis,
V. Come, Daphnis.
D, Good Valerian, I will come. {Exit V,
Why should I go because Castara goes ?
I do not, but to please Valerian.
But why then should Castara weigh with me?
Why, there’s an interest and sweet soul in beauty
Which makes us eye-attentive to the eye
That has and she is fairer than Colomb,
it ;
Mem. The view from the fields with psychological value. The sunset.
[Here come the lines ‘ Trees by their yield\ Poems, pp, 144-5;
written above them: A verse or more has to be prefixed. Between
them and the next entry is copied out in full Newman^ s ^Lsad,
kindly light\']
Note that if ever I should leave the English Church the fact of
Provost Fortescue^ (Oct. 16 and 18, 1865) is to be got over.
[Here follow the sonnet ^Let me be to Thee as the circling bird'' and
‘
The Half-way House', Poems, p. 57.]
Peyrat^
‘Les R6formateurs avant La Reformation.’*
[Here come the poems ^Moonless darkness stands between' and The *
Drops of rain hanging on rails etc seen with only the lower rim
and twines. Soft chalky
lighted like nails (of fingei s). Screw's of brooks
look with more sliadowy middles of the globes of cloud on a night
with a moon faint or (uncealed. Mealy clouds with a not brilliant
moon. Blunt buds of the ash. Pencil buds of the beech. Lobes of the
trees. Cups of the eyes. Gathering back the lightly hinged eyelids.
Bows of the eyelids. Pencil of eyelashes. Juices of the eyeball. Eyelids
like leaves, petals, caps, tufted hats, handkerchiefs, sleeves, gloves.
Also of the bones sleeved in flesh. Juices of the sunrise. Joins and veins
of the same. Vermilion look of the hand held against a candle with the
darker parts as the middles of the fingers and especially the knuckles
covered with ash.
when he abdicated.
o'
s
5
I
8 8
o p 5
erq
8 o 3
i86q 1869 1869
when?*
[On the back of this page, in the top-left corner, is a small drawing
of pari of a column with a leaf design, given Fig, 2g,^
;;
Truth and Beauty then are the ends of Art but wfien this is said it :
two of these classes sometimes with the third, sometimes with both
;
the third and fourth. The pleasure given by the presence of Truth in
Art may, if the classification above be rightly made, be referred to the
third head. It lies in a (not sensuous but purely intellectual) compari-
son of the representation in Art with the memory of the true thing
and the truer it is, the more exact the parallel between the two, the
—
lism to that of deliberate Beauty. Besides this old division a new one
should be made which is much needed to express two kinds of Beauty.
Proportion having been found to be the source or the seat of Beauty,
it will appear that accordingly as proportion is expressed is the charac-
ter of tlie beauty which follows from it. And it can be expressed in two
;
76 EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
ways, by interval or by continuance. Both seem really to be expressions
of proportion, though it is generally associated with the former, to our
ideas. The division then is of abrupt and gradual, of parallelistic and
continuous, of intervallary and chromatic, of quantitative and qualita-
tive beauty. The beauty of an infinite curve is chromatic, of a system
of curves parallelistic of deepening colour or of a passing from one
;
{Continued,)
Some such grounds as these must be supposed for Art criticism the :
ever the beginnings made for this desired scientific criticism, they must
be carefully and by reasoning arrived at. Then taking the above as a
starting place, we may conclude first that the preponderance of one of
our two great elements of Art in any marked degree to the setting aside
of the other is destroying the balance and therefore the success of Art,
— the two elements namely of Truth and of Beauty. The enquiry to
follow out would be, whether any order is discernible in the change of
relations of these two things in the history of Art. Let us see the charac-
ter of Art near its beginning. We might reasonably suppose men would
begin with copies made to the best of their ability from the things
round them, that these would be rough but exact, and that the deliberate
pursuit of beauty would be entered on when some facility in giving truth
had been attained. But it will be best to see in the remains of archaic
art we possess how far this is true. First let us look at Eg)q)tian and
Assyrian art in these no advance beyond a certain point is made, and
:
right ear the string is not allowed to cross and break the lines of the
face, but ends suddenly when it reaches the outline of the profile, and
seems to go behind. Again the winged beasts have, as is well known,
five legs, so that looked at either in profile or in full they may be
always seen to have four. These things shew a remarkably clear con-
ception of Art as Art using its own language and appealing to a critical
body of its own state of civilization to accept and allow its conventio-
nalities. Egyptian figures are all made on a fixed proportion they were ;
Wv'a
78 EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
but without truth of detail. That a developed Art requires some such
power of rapid generalizing treatment for its less finished* is true, but
the principle always goes further and in the hands of inferior men, of
imitators of manner not of spirit, of a declining Art, it degenerates
into mere touch, trick and mannerism. It is apparent that early Art
conventionalises by representing carefully the chief, the characteristic
points of a thing, the prominent details; all besides is set aside and
implied in the spectator it purports on the face of it to be a conven-
;
{Continued,)
This difference between early and late Art is caused by the desire
for Perfection: that is, when any art is established and strong, the
desire to see all harmonious, to blend all the elements, to treat all
the subject matter with the same amount of realism and to raise it to the
same pitch of idealism, not to distribute these things arbitrarily, comes
into play and rules its progress. It was just and it was inevitable that
the wish should arise not to give a tree by a typical outline and a few
careful representative leaves, but by a natural irregular outline and
the confusion and mass of many leaves. The sense of perfection is
strong with us all once attained all which wants it becomes painful
;
it is this which gives the Parthenon and Sophocles’ plays their distin-
guished excellence they might have been richer but then they must
;
have been different ; they fulfil, we feel, the laws of their being. How
then is it that decline in Art sets in ? It need not of course set in with ;
cannot change except for the worse. The decline sets in no doubt from
external causes, but it attacks the weak points of an Art which has reached
the state of perfection, thatis, of established harmony. The old conven-
pretence of a realism which keeps all things in the due mutual pro-
* Thus in MS.
I Here initialled {the and reader was possibly W, L, Newman; see p. 55 and n.)
;
art to look to they would no doubt have spent the century of the renais-
sance and succeeding years in harmonizing their old materials, but per-
fection was already to be found in Greek art, and they closed with it.
We may perhaps conclude from the instances given above that con-
ventionalism is not the confession of incapability but on the other
;
hand it will not express the truth to say it is absolutely chosen for its
own sake without reference to the conditions and difficulties of Art.
But as the metre and rhymes, conditions and restrictions of verse, are
the unexpected cause of the rise of all that we call poetry, so do the
conditions of painting, sculpture, and the rest of the arts contain their
greatness, their strength and their decline. The arts present things to
us in certain modes which in the higher shape we call idealism, in the
lower conventionalism. The character of these idealisms is the best
guide to the health of any age of Art, but to develop these characters
isa work requiring the instancing of many examples. One example
however may be given of the truth of this criterion it is this, the love
:
Three theories are proposed, the first that of innate ideas or of one
innate idea which attaches itself to some of the voluntary acts of the
The diction t
iye and subjective morality must here shew
y fell more readily into some such fonn.
Ou wderlimngs in this tssyi are
in pencil, (.’) done by Pater.
THE ORIGIN OF OUR MORAL IDEAS 8x
Justice for instance, which in a sense covers the whole field of morality
as Aristotle says, stands in requital, and this implies antecedents and
consequent action it is a sequence of action on antecedent conditions.
:
In the general case logic without any medium determines the mind,
as if there is no way into a field but by a gate, we go in by the gate.
It only does not do so supposing there is reason the other side, making
the conclusion uncertain. In other words the premises are not pro-
perly made out, or the logic is not perfect. If two lines of reasoning
seem incompatible the difficulty is got rid of by closer attention, and
from their composition follows a result. But in morals the logic may be
perfect and action not follow. If however we use logic in the truer sense
for everything which determines the mind to act, we find the phenomena
of morals are those of two incompatible logics, for it is notorious in
casuistry that the attraction of some sins is greater the greater the
attention of the mind, and it cannot be said that this holds in the same
way with every train of reasoning because the essence of right and
wrong lies in our consciousness of the contradiction between them.
This being the phenomenon we are able to see the questions into
which the discussion of the spring of moral ideas will throw itself. Since
there are two (in the broad sense) logics putting stress on the mind,
one belonging to virtue, one to vice, (i) does the one, the moral,
differ from the other in having (in the strict sense) a correct logical form ?
(ii) what are its universals? since not all logic touches morals.
If so,
And why does it seem to differ in kind from other trains of thought?
(ill) Or arc the two motives alike, both receiving trains of reasoning
or propositions and impressing each its own character on them ?
To take the second first — morally good is what
utilitarians say the
attains the good, that is the advantageous, and that of course the
greatest such, and that, they add, for the greatest number. Accord-
mgly the difficulty of the rise of our moral ideas is got over by the a
posteriori definition. The difference from other forms of thought might be
said perhaps to come from moral action with its specific elements having
B 0028 o
—
82 EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
become more and more definite and *accidented* in our minds by its
perpetual occurrence and not at least to be more strange than that
the difference between green and purple should turn on the different
speed of vibrations of light in striking our retinas.
But the utilitarian formula requires much exception As . it stands it
quite plain from the wording of devotions and from the popular sort of
sayings ascribed to St. Thomas and indeed prima facie. And if* this
morality is yet called imperfect nevertheless has been historically
it
lity a posteriori arc better because simpler and from being so generally
recognised. These, though less signally, seem not to answer to the
historical conditions of morality. The second reason remains —that
the happiness of the greatest number fulfils an ideal in the mind. This
seems to give a new starting point.
All thought is of course in a sense an effort an unity. This may be
pursued analytically as in science or synthetically as in art or morality.
In art it is essential to recognise and strive to realise on a more or less
wide basis this unity in some shape or other. It seems also that the
desire for unity, for an ideal, is the only definition which will satisfy the
historicalphenomena of morality. There is an important difference
to be noted here. In art we strive to realise not only unity, permanence
of law, likeness, but also, with it, difference, variety, contrast : it is
rhyme we like, not echo, and not unison but harmony. But in morality
the highest consistency is the highest excellence. The reason of this
seems to be that the desire of unity is prior to that of difference and
whereas in art both are in our power, in moral action our utmost
efforts never result in its perfect realisation, in perfect consistency.
But why do we desire unity ? The first answer would be that the ideal,
the one, is our only means of recognising successfully our being to
ourselves, it unifies us, while vice destroys the sense of being by dissi-
pating thought. €(jTt yap rj KaKia (f>dapT(,Krj apxqs,^ wickedness breaks up
unity of principle. If this be thought mysticism further explanation
may be given.
—
POETIC DICTION
[An essay mitten for the Master of Balliol
If the best prose and the best poetry use the same language
(Coleridge^ defined poetry as the best thoughts in the best words)
why not use unfettered prose of the two? Because, it would be an-
swered, of the beauty of verse. This is quite insufficient then bald
:
It was at the beginning of the Long Vacation, and Oxford was nearly
empty. The Professor of the newly founded chair of Aesthetics, whose
lectures had been unattended during the term, came one day in the
evening to New College gardens and found John Hanbury a sfcholar
of the college walking there. They knew each other, and hadltaken
two or three turns under the chestnuts together, when a stranger came
up to them and asked if these were Worcester Gardens. \
No, the stranger said, he had only wished to know the naipe
cester ?’
and, then shewing a sketching-block, he asked if there would be any
objection to his sketching there. ‘Not at all’ said Hanbury : ‘shall I
‘But mine is not a good paradox’ said Hanbury ‘it is hardly one at ;
all: at all events I do not see how to avoid the conclusion it brings me
to. I was saying that in poetry purely common-sense criticism was not
‘Certainly.’
‘And criticism is not advocacy : it is rather judicial, is it not?’
‘Judicial, it should be.’
‘And judgments depend on laws, on established laws. Now taste has
few rules, and those not scientific and easily disputed, and I might add,
often disputed. Am I right?’
‘At least, go on’ said the Professor.
‘If a man disputes your judgment in taste,
how can you prove he is
wrong? If a man what you think bad, you must
thinks beautiful
believe he is sincere when he tells you so and if he is educated how
;
are you to say that his judgment is worse than yours? In fact de
gustibus non est disputandum. Criticism therefore in matters of taste can*-
not be judicial. And purely common-sense criticism is not enough, we
’
not quite think you have proved your point. However I will not answer
you directly, for do you know I am not so sure about de gusiibus, which
is going further back?’
‘Indeed’ said Hanbury. ‘Well if you think there are ascertainable
laws, I should be glad of it for one for when one is morally sure that
;
one’s belief.’
have my theory’ said the Professor; ‘but I am afraid
‘I
—
‘Do let me hear it’ said Hanbury: ‘I shall be a disciple I am sure.’
‘My first’ said the Professor ‘it will be then. But may I pursue the
Socratic method ? May I take up the dialectic battledore which you
have just laid down ?’
‘The dialectic battledore do you call it? I shall be so glad to be the
— ^v^^hat is that called now ? I have been about thirteen years out of the
‘Both have symmetry ; yet, as you say, the six-leaved one seenis the
more so, supposing it of course to be really symmetrical, whica this
specimen is not.’ \
‘Is not this’ asked the Professor ‘because it is naturally divided into
two equal parts of three leaves each, while the seven-leaved is not, and
cannot be symmetrical in the same way unless we physically cut the
greatest leaf down the middle.’
‘Yes that is it; I Hanbury.
see’ said
‘And so you judge the markedly symmetrical to be the hand-
less
somer. Still the seven-leaved one has much symmetry. But now look
at the tree from which I pulled it. Do you like it better as it is, or
would you have the boughs start from the trunk at the same height
on opposite sides, symmetrically pair and pair?’
‘As it is, certainly.’
‘Or again look at the colouring of the sky.’
‘But’ put in Hanbury ‘colouring is not a thing of symmetry.’
‘No: but now what is symmetry? Is it not regularity?’
‘I should say, the greatest regularity’ said Hanbury.
‘So it is. But is it not that sort of regularity which is measured by
more, if you please, I must send my shuttlecock up to the sky. You will
no doubt with your feathers of vantage see better than I can, consider-
ing how my view is cut off by the buildings of the College, that rows
of level cloud run along the west of the sky.’
‘At all events’ said he ‘I can see them.’
‘Do you think they would be better away ?’ asked the Professor.
‘No: they add to the beauty of the sunset sky.’
‘Notice however that they are pretty symmetrical. They are straight,
and parallel with the sky-line and with each other, and of a uniform
colour, and other things in them are symmetrical. Should you admire
them more if they were shapeless ?’
‘I think not’ said Hanbury.
correctness ?’
‘Dear me, is it indeed so ? No, I had never noticed it, but now that
law or regularity about the leaf to make one side like the other. Or if
the leaf of a tree were altogether irregular, supposing such a thing
were to be found in nature, yet all the leaves on the tree were ex-
actly like it, having precisely that same irregularity, then you would
recognise the presence of law about the tree.’
‘Yes: I understand perfectly now.’
‘Then regularity is likeness or agreement or consistency, and irregu-
larity is the opposite, that is difference or disagreement or change or
variety. Is it so?’
‘Certainly.’
‘Then the beauty of the oak and the chestnut-fan and the sky is a
mixture of likeness and difference or agreement and disagreement or
consistency and variety or symmetry and change.’
‘It seems so, yes.’
‘And if we did not feel the likeness we should not think them so
beautiful, or if we did not feel the difference we should not think them
so beautiful. The beauty we find is from the
comparison we make of
;
not?’
‘Yes. But me think a little. This may be the nature of the beauty
let
in the things you have spoken of and of many others, but I do not at
all yet see how it applies to all things, and I should like to ask you to
account for some of them. Let me collect some instances.’
He stood looking out through a loophole in one of the towers of the
old wall. Meanwhile the sketcher, who had long been drawing in a
desultory way, moved from the stand he had taken up, as though
meaning to walk about. He had become more interested in this
philosophy of the Gardens than in his sketching, for in the clear air of
the evening he had heard almost everything that was said, and the
questioner and answerer had raised their voices he was loath to lose
:
the end of the debate. Hanbury hearing him move turned and asked
if he would come in and have some tea. He thanked him and accepted
the offer. It was then debated whether the party should go in at once
or no, and it was agreed they should for the present at least continue
to walk about. Hanbury in courtesy began to talk on indifferent sub-
jects, but the stranger begged the discussion might be continued.
‘I am afraid’ he said T have heard more than I had any business
‘Excuse me’ said the painter ; T have come up to paint those frescos,
so perhaps you would find me too much prejudiced, for them to serve
your purpose as examples.’
‘Indeed’ said the others ‘then your name is Middleton, we are to
presume.’
92 EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
‘Yes’ said he; ‘but pray do not let the discussion be interrupted on
account of my frescos. You will, I am sure, find another instance.’
‘I will return then to the chestnut-fan’ said the Professor. Hanbury
—
‘But yet it would not have lost its beauty, would it? But i am
really ashamed to ask these questions.’
‘Not at all, not at all’ said Middleton ‘I beg you will not be so.
;
No, it would not have lost its beauty. It is in fact one of the most
beautiful natural shapes at the disposal of Art.’
‘And what was said of the whole fan is also true of each leaf of it,
that symmetrical but now let us see what this symmetry comes to.
it is :
For first one side answers to the other, but yet there is a leaf, the middle
one, which belongs to neither one side nor the other. Hanbury and I
had agreed that this contrast of two opposite things, symmetry and
the violation of it, was here preferable to pure symmetry. Next it
radiates, but the radiation of leaves is not carried all the way round.
Would it be improved by more regular radiation, do you think?’
*0 no: whatever the beauties of regular radiation may be, the
particular beauty of the chestnut-fan depends on its not being so
radiated.’
‘Here again then contrast is preferred to agreement. Then the
isthe slimmest thing belonging to the fan ; then the two next greatest,
which are nearest to the middle one, are opposite to the two smallest,
which are nearest to the stalk ; only the two between these two last-
mentioned pairs are both opposite and answering to each other. All
this I see and I understand that you would point out the contrast
;
‘Yes,’
‘Nor the likeness of the leaves, but their likeness as thrown up by
their difference in size.’
‘Yes.’
‘Nor their inequality, but the inequality as tempered by their
regular diminishing.’
‘Yes.’
‘Nor their each having a diametrical opposite, but that opposite
being the least answering to themselves in the whole fan.’
‘Yes.’
‘I might say even more. It seems then that it is not the excellence
of any two things (or more) in themselves, but those two things as
viewed by the light of each other, that makes beauty. Do you under-
stand.’
think so, but might I ask you still further to explain?’
‘I
had reserved what I think will be my best proof for the last’ said
‘1
as it wasbe beautiful when both masses were put in, we might sup-
to
pose the beauty must lie all in that mass which was yet to come when :
‘And things which have relation are near enough to have something
in common, but not near enough to be one and the same, are they not ?’
‘Yes.’
‘And to perceive the likeness and difference of things, or their rela-
tion, we must compare them, must we not?’
‘Yes.’
‘Beauty therefore is a relation, and the apprehension of it a com-
parison. The sense of beauty in fact is a comparison, is it not ?’
‘So it would appear.’
‘I have not yet said w/iat the relation is’ said the Professor, when he
am now going to put forward I will then believe it w^ill apply to every-
thing else. But now where is the relation you speak of, and the com-
parison, in this for instance ?
‘Now’ said the Professor, when they were settled down at the tea-
table, ‘am I to consider the stanza you have quoted by itself or with
reference to the rest of the poem ?’
‘How do you mean?’ said Hanbury.
‘It is rather an important point, and I must explain a little. You
without exception now do you mean the same thing in saying The
:
things being equal, I suppose versatility would put one great man above
another. That by the way however. In any case the remaining poems
would seem neither more nor less beautiful. But now if from a play
you leave out two or three scenes, should you admire the remainder
as much as when taken together with them?’
‘No. But of course the plot would be destroyed by their being left
out, or mangled at all events ;
and a plot is so necessary to a play that
—but in fact it is plain a play is almost nothing at all without its plot
worked out.’
‘Ah yes, but it is a great deal more than that’ said the Professor.
‘What I mean would apply to omissions which would not harm the
plot, and I could make such omissions in many plays. For instance one
hears a great deal about the tragic irony of the Greek playwriters, and
the spirit which is meant by that phrase will run through a play and
be developed in particular scenes, but yet have so little directly to do
with the story, that a child would understand the play just as well if
all expressions of this spirit were left out. The misconceptions, the
‘The unity which is needed for every work of art and especially for
and so on, looks beyond the time of the Aeneid to Hannibal’s war,
quite external therefore to the plot. You feel, I am sure, how great its
loss would be.’
‘Oh yes’ said Hanbury.
‘This of course’ went on the Professor ‘implies a knowledge in the
reader ; but almost all works of art imply knowledge of things external
to themselves in the mind of the critic —
in fact all do; but this is a
wide field I must not now enter on. All I want to shew is that there is
a relation between the parts of the thing to each other and again of the
parts to the whole, which must be duly kept. If from the volume of
poems we take a dozen away, we agreed there is no difference, the
remainder are neither better nor worse. But if from one single work of
art, one whole, we take anything appreciable away, a scene from a
play, a stanza from a short piece, or whatever it is, there is a change,
it must be better or worse without it in a great man’s work it will be
;
‘And’ said Middleton ‘is not this to be explained in the same way ?
I mean the oddness or new character a passage has which we have
seen quoted and now come on wdth its context. It is not in this case
that we imagined the thing to be a whole in itself and found it was
only a part of the whole, because one generally sees at once that a
quotation is something detached, but that our vague conception of
what the drift of the context must be is found wrong. I must say that
Wordsworth often disappoints me when I come upon a passage I knew
by quotation it seems less pointed, less excellent, with its context than
:
without.’
‘It is the case with Virgil, I think’ said Hanbury.
‘With regard to that’ said the Professor, ‘you see the few words of a
quotation are impressed on us with a much greater intensity than the
text of a long piece we are reading continuously. This intensity there-
fore is incongruous, it makes the quotation almost shine out from the
page it seems a new patch on an old garment, a purpureas pannus. As
;
B 6028 H
——
98 EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
you read a poet you are more and more raised to his level, you breathe
his air, you accustom yourself, till things seem less striking and beautiful
than when sharply contrasted with a lower, at all events a different,
style, as they were in the quotation. All this is intimately akin to what
I have been thinking about beauty. I need do no more than ask you
to see it is again a question of comparison, for we must not wander on
to first principles just now, till our present point is settled.’
Now if one imagined this stanza was a single thought and the whole
poem, or what, though opposite to that, would in another way be as
bad, four lines namely out of some piece in the metre of his lines
written among the Euganean hills, how greatly would the effect lose,
unless I am mistaken, of that beauty it has when you add the next
stanza
Rose-leaves when the rose is shed
Are heap’d for the beloved’s bed
And so thy thought when thou art gone
Love himself shall slumber on.
character of the one to the other you misapprehend it and the beauty
is partly lost — I allow.’
and so I quoted only one verse. It is the spirit which I want to hear
treated on your system, and that runs through all the poem. However,
that being understood, I suppose it will be shorter to examine one
stanza than the whole poem.’
‘Well then’ said the Professor, ‘before we pass on, we understand
that the collective efTect of a work of art is due to the effect of each
part to the rest, in a play of each act to the rest, in a smaller poem each
stanza to the rest, and so on, and that the addition or loss of any act
or stanza will not be the addition or loss of the intrinsic goodness of
that act or stanza alone, but a change on the whole also, either for the
better or for the worse necessarily. It depends however on the nature
of the work what will be the importance of a gain or loss of this kind
I suppose that it will be greatest where the connection is strong, where
the unity is strongly marked, that is a unity not of spirit alone but a
structural one, —
‘Stay’ said Hanbury, ‘what is structural unity?’
‘Well, a sonnet is an instance. It must be made up of fourteen lines
’
accentual, quantity does play some not very well recognised part in it,
and this makes perhaps less regular than classical poetry, though
it
indeed very likely accent may have played the same part in that. For
this reason and also because it is made of two words, the foot when
sweet is not exactly the counterpart of odours or sicken.^
‘That is very good, but I did not mean that. I will consider them as
strictly regular as you like. Nothing else ?’
‘Except that violets is not a trochee at all but a dactyl. That is a
licence.’
‘An alternative foot merely’ said the Professor; ‘much as in the
hexameter you may use the dactyl and spondee as alternatives in the
first four places. I do not mean that either. Now you remember I
I wonder.’
‘And the beauty of rhythm is traced to the same causes as that of the
clicstnut-fan, is it not so?’
‘Yes it is.’
ment joined with agreement which the car finds most pleasurable.
—
own and these have to be explained yet. I would put it if you liked in
an unrhythmical, unmetrical, unrhyming shape, and it would then
be beautiful prose, except so far as my clumsiness might spoil it in the
conversion.’
‘Ah, that is more than I ever asked of you’ said the Professor. ‘No
one’s thoughts need be expected to look well if the channel he chose to
Blithe New-comer, I have heard thee, even now I hear thee and my
heart rejoices. O Cuckoo! is it Bird I must call thee or a wandering
Voice?*
expression, but not so much of it, I fear, as I shall hope to make you
give up before we come to the ultimate feeling and spirit of the poem.’
‘Well, attack your own way.’
it
course either be close to other things or not close to them. But I do not
understand the drift of the question,’
ON THE ORIGIN OF BEAUTY 103
‘No, I will explain’ said the Professor. ‘Take some simple figures,
or of both.’
‘Have you not forgotten dots?’ asked Middleton. ‘You may orna-
ment by means of dots alone, and though you might not be able to do
much that is complex in that way, you may help and touch up and
emphasise more elaborate pictures by means of dots.’
‘How could one ornament in dots?’ asked Hanbury.
‘Out of five dots arranged in a particular way you make a cross, may
—
you not ? There is what I was thinking of in especial a very simple —
and pretty pattern to be made out of dots, by arranging them, as it
were, at the three angles of a triangle, thus’ —
and he dotted his mean-
ing down on paper — —
‘in fact making the sign of because in
.
‘Yes. We may consider then that all figures are made of continuous
or of non-continuous lines or of both. And the same will apply to
colours they must either pass into one another or else be immediately
:
say the same. Sounds must either pass from note to note, as wind does
in a cranny or as may be done with the string of a violin, or notes\may
follow each other without transition as on the piano. Well this\will
apply to all things I suppose. Never mind for the time what this h^s to
do with my theory: you can allow, whatever theory is true about
beauty, and whatever importance you attach to the fact, much or
little, that it is a. fact, namely that any change in things, any difference
is but that you will understand. Now therefore we may arrange under
:
however like, have some difference from each other, as, if they are
absolutely like in all other respects, they cannot be in the same place
at the same time. Is it not so?’
‘Quite so.’
— ;
‘Yes I understand.’
‘By the way’ said the Professor ‘what makes those lines doubly
ingenious is not generally knowm and
by their being quoted
is lost
alone. It is that there is a further comparison: he says he wishes his
verse might be like his theme, ‘though deep yet clear’ and so on. But
to return. When two things are marked as being like in poetry they
are understood to have been considered unlike before, and when
tliey are contrasted they are understood to have been viewed as like
before. Is it not so ?’
‘Yes I see. If I may interrupt, is not this a good instance of that third
kind of comparison you spoke of?
tism, if you will f)ardon the words. Talking of the latter, it is hard from
the nature of the thing to lay one’s finger on examples but I think you ;
expands and dedicates its beauty to the sun there, there is Poetry, and
that I am a Positivist (as I do not object to be called in a way), and
that I am a fingering slave and would peep and botanise upon my
mother’s grave, and that I am the carrion vulture and wait, or do not
wait, to tear the Poet’s heart before the crowd, and that I am a
Philistine of an aggravated specious kind, knd that Shakspere and
Wordsworth and Tennyson and many others have uttered curses on
rne, and that my only reward will be that I shall be cankered and
rivelled together and crisped up by the hate of hate, the scorn of scorn,
which the Poet, the emphatic authentic ideal Poet, will treat me with.
Dear me, I seem to myself to have become poetically and vividly
descriptive of that last effect in my energetic forecast. Yes, I see it all
with a glassy countenance. And you who made such flattering pro-
mises have cast the first stone. But do your worst let me spell poet
:
with a little p and perish. This is a shuttlecock that once did not dis-
dain in the intervals of its flights to tread the vellum now, flown with
;
tarian prose. Beyond this all prose is in some degree or other artificial,
aims at beauty, I presume, and uses, as our friend himself pointed out,
the same unstructural forms as poetry does for that end. The truth I
believe was that Hanbury thought of noble verse (or as some people
say poetry, who call what is inferior only verse\^ of noble verse, the work
of genius, with common uninteresting prose the work of a common-
place or utilitarian pen ; and with that view no wonder he thought
my words unworthy and levelling. But at that rate one might just as
fairly compare doggrel or commonplace verse with noble and elo-
poetry you mean only noble verse, then let us define verse as above,
and merely add that poetry is a particular case of it, namely the case
of its being noble or successful. As for the nature of the artificial
structure, from what we agreed before I think I may conclude you
io8 EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
will say that rhythm, metre, rhyme, alliteration, assonance, and what-
ever other structural properties may belong to verse, are cases of
strictly regular parallelisms. Is it not so?’
‘Quite so’ said Middleton.
‘Verse and artificial prose then’ said the Professor ‘are arts using
the medium of words, and verse is distinguished from prose as employ-
ing a continuous structural parallelism, ranging from the technically
so-called parallelism of the Psalms to the intricate structure of Greek
or Italian or English verse.’
‘Of course’ saidHanbury ‘I do not object to this. All this k very
true, I dare say. But there is one thing which you do not seem td allow
or account for at all. You seem to think that the difference between
the best prose, we will say, and the best verse is only that one his the
advantage of a continuous artificial structure, in fact that the advan-
tage of poetry over prose may be expressed by the intrinsic valine of
that structure, that is, of verse. But now is it not always assumed that
the highest literary efforts, creative of course I mean, have been made
in verse and not in prose? If you want examples of the deepest pathos
and sublimity and passion and any other kind of beauty, do you not
look for them in verse and not in prose? Surely this is not because one
thinks one may as well have the pathos or sublimit)' or whatever it is
with verse as without, just as one would say the best of tea was better
with sugar than without.’
‘I had not in fact overlooked this' said the Professor; ‘but you are
quite right to bring it forward. You sec, as others have seen, that
genius works more powerfull)' under the constraints of metre and rhyme
and so on than without, tliat it Ls more effective when conditioned than
when unconditioned. It is on a discussion
far too late tonight to enter
of this subject, but I think be able to make good my defence for
I shall
considering the difference between prose and poetry what I have done.
I was giving, if you remember, only a definition, a scientific definition,
of poetry now the fact you speak of is very striking no doubt, but it is
:
is useless to write in metre, for instance, if you are only to say the same
as you might without it. Besides the emphasis which metre gives calls
for point and emphasis of expression. I think this is enough for the
present, and we may turn to our enquiries again. Let me see where :
so far that, even if I disagree, I should l:>e anxious to hear how all
things are accounted for on your system. Perhaps I might hear at any
rate what I want to know in your next term’s lectures, for I shall have
leisure then.’
‘Earlier, if you wish; as early as you like. We are all only too glad
to get a listener. A
though! 1 should say a shuttlecock, an
listener
interlocutor, an anything that has all the arduous part of the business
of system-making, all the tossing to and fro, while I sit at ease and do
myself the listening. But for these parallelisms I may choose a few :
examples only tonight but perhaps when I have shewn you how to
;
‘Very well. Then if the first, out of all the conceivable ways which
might have been taken to express a fertile idea he chose this one so :
the antithesis of ‘thy thoughts, when thou art gone” pleased him more
‘
‘Yes. The idea of the piece then is thrown into the shape of an
antithesis. Now this is illustrated in three metaphors, making with the
couplet in which the idea is expressed a system of parallelisms in four
members, the metaphors being taken from music, scented flowers, and
rose-leaves. But now see further the subordination of parallelism to
parallelism. Each of these metaphors contains an antithesis within
itself
—
“Music, when sweet voices die”, “Odours, when sweet violets
sicken”, and “Rose-leaves, when the rose is shed” and answer to the
antithesis in “thy thoughts, when thou art gone.” And you must not
say that the antithesis is necessary to their intelligil)ility, for one
answers at once that it is part of the substance of their beauty besides.’
‘Yes’ said Hanbury, ‘that poem is made up of parallelisms. All
poetry however is not so artificially constructed, 1 am sure. Well, well,
I remember you are at present only shewing their importance in
painter's own which yet in no way draws aside the expression of the
sentiment of its text. It was full of what one calls poetry in painting and
other arts : it is not in fact that the quality belongs to poetry and is
least am in the position to do this. I must hope you will go along with
me in my admiration, for of course, in case you should not see beauty
in it, it will be no good to analyse it to shew how its beauty is brought
into being. But if I am allowed to presume on your feelings, I say, as
postulate for my after reasonings, that it is a charming poem. But the
feeling that is borne in upon me first about it is this, that k is so
essentially poetry. I will explain : it is not the power of the writer that I
am impressed with— that is what one feels before all things beades in
Dryden, who seems to take thoughts that are not by nature poetical,
stubborn, and opaque, but under a kind of living force like firi they
are powerfully changed and incandescent Dean Milman’s poetty" is :
of this kind —
nor is it the nobleness of the thoughts or the splendour of
;
the images brought forward, which might except for their concentra-
tion and elaboration perhaps have been put in prose but I seem to see ;
that the author has things put before him in a light that is precisely
that of poetry, that he is an absolute and unembarrassed instance of a
poet, or if we may put it in another way that he is a workman come
from with the Muses skilled to perfection in his
his apprenticeship
trade and having made himself master of all that the science has to
give him. The poem is artificial, you see, but with that exquisite arti-
fice which does not in truth belong to artificial but to simple expres-
sion, and which, except in point of polish, is found in natural and
national ballad-making. This therefore is why I considered this piece
a good and a typical example out of many, because I seemed to feel
it was what a poet expressed as a poet, in the transparent, almost
central idea which critics say is what makes the essence of lyrical poetry,
in its most concrete pictorial light, wt shall find it is that of the trans-
formation of the golden hair and azure eyes with the black hair and
eyes of flame. This is the central idea and it is enforced also several
times in the expression of the poem. Then let us see the parallelisms
individually : is “more false than fair”, heightened of course
first there
by the always an aid in that way. Then the latter two
alliteration,
lines of that first stanza are a marked case they are, to avail myself of
;
what Mr. Middleton was saying, a rhyme only the relative position —
—
light in one clause, using more detail, but the nature of his subject,
the instinctive feeling of the requirements of the precise pitch of ideal-
ism in which that poem is written, led him to put it into a parallelism.
As soon as composition becomes formal and studied, that is as soon as
it enters the bounds of Art, it is curious to see how it falls into parallel-
isms. Read for instance the Exhortation in the Prayerbook, which
they say of repetitions, meaning by that, as we may now see, that
is full
The last line being made of an independent parallelism of its own. And
there we see why we use or and or and nor and nor in that way in poetry
only and not in prose for prose has need sometimes to express alterna-
;
1
14 EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
and neither and nor, which put the parallelism of sense strongly, but not
so strongly the parallelism of expression.’
‘Repeat the next stanza’ said Hanbury ; and when it was done he
said ‘One needs no analysis of that, I think, now go on to the last.’:
‘It is not made up merely’ said the Professor ‘of detached consecu-
of art arc composite, having unity and subordination are they pot so ?’ ;
is just like
except that in that the absence of and gives more antithesis. And then
the antitheses of the last couplet how charming they are! how the
irony of her unhappiness is summed up in the eyes of fire being
quenched in tears! And darksome locks being undone, you
for the
know how much use poetry makes of negative words and just for the
reason that they express an antithesis.
the more striking and in others the opposition, but without a want of
balance either in themselves or in their contemporaries being implied.
Does Shakspere express most the complexity and profusion of thought
given by the mixture of two systems in the revival which ended the
Middle Ages or the distress given by the loss of unity in the Reforma-
tion? We may say the first most, and this was what the world in
England generally alone felt for the time. On the other hand Words-
worth is felt rather to express the contradiction to the spirit of his times,
than to represent their tendency. In all such cases the same sequence of
feeling or thought makes them like their contemporaries, while their
reaching and exhibiting the conclusions sooner makes the opposition.
It is these contrasts and disparities which give complexity and interest to
the lives or writings of great thinkers soclearly beyond what they would
otherwise have had, making for instance their enthusiasm not free
from pathos or, if the proportions be the other way, their denunciations
from hope. What can be a better case of this than the position of Plato ?
As are found to be full of thoughts which are not recon-
his writings
ciledand have since acquired definiteness in opposite systems, so his
philosophy and mind as compared with the Greek contemporary world
seem to offer opportunities for endless balancing, antithesis as well as
parallel.
It would be possible only to shew the directions in which such trains of
the old method and the pointing a new way than the specific plan he
recommended which benefited the world. For under narrow conditions
dialectic in the hands of Socrates and in his own seemed to yield
marvellous results, but it is said that Plato himself ceased in the end
to insist on the only safety of this kind of enquiry. But its use was to
have shewn how to apply searching intelligence to all kinds of matter
Plato's sense was used no longer he refined with intelligence the atmo-
sphere of thought for Aristotle to breathe.
Then for his system, one side of the truth is represented by the say-
ing that he asked the questions which philosophy has since been trying to
answer. For Platonism is that philosophy which never could be a system.
Again his relations to hisage are expressed by this, for the Sophists had
systems and his successors and Aristotle had systems, but between
these it was necessary for the whole field of speculation to be flooded
and for the older forms to be quite fused before they could satisfy the
advance of philosophy. Not of course that he did not have his own
systems in logic, ethics, politics etc, but their use was not as defensible
deductions from premises, as systems are understood to be, and as
systems he himself almost discredits them; and accordingly as systems
Aristotle treats them with the same literality as Plato used with the
Sophists, both of them legitimately as needful for disposing of philo-
sophies not so much really opposed to their own as belonging to
another attitude or another feeling of mind.
Another side of Plato’s bearing to the Greek world would allow too of
much example and counter-statement. He cuts short the rhetoricians
and shews how oratory covers fallacies and he puts tlie poets out of
his commonwealth; yet how deeply his teaching Ls associated with
that which goes beyond rhetoric into poetry and the indefinite sug-
gestions of metaphor and even the half rhythmical diction mentioned
by Aristotle and the ideals he wishes us to accept, as the unearthly
:
Initialled
THE PROBABLE FUTURE OF METAPHYSICS
{An essay written during the Hilary Term (Jan.-March) i8S;]
The Positivists foretell and many other people begin to fear, the end of
all metaphysics is at hand. Purely material psychology is the rpta/cr^p*
foretold and feared.
But others point out that these are shortsighted expectations. The
things differ in kind and neither can be made to fall under the (other.
Material explanation cannot be refined into explaining thought and
it is all to no purpose to show an organ for each faculty and a Jjierve
vibrating for each idea, because this only shows in the last detail \vhat
broadly no one doubted, to wit that the activities of the spirit are ^on-
veyed in those of the body as scent is conveyed in spirits of wine,
remaining still inexplicably distinct. Indeed it would be necessary first
in the material world to resolve force and matter into one thing and
then aftcrw’ards to approach that which to all appearance alone has
the power of disposing force itself, that is mind, and subsume that
too under the head of the material.
Still a second worst forecast, a view which will make future
there is
laws and sequences and causes and developments— things which stand
in a position so peculiar that we can neither say of them they hold in
nature whether the mind sees them or not nor again that they are
found by the mind because it first put them there.
The tide we may foresee will always run and turn between idealism
and materialism : this is clear from history, and historical generalisations
are true if anywhere in tracing the phases of speculation but it is pos- :
sible todraw wrong inferences from this. We should turn to the analogy
of the individual and that even the physical analogy. There is a parti-
THE PROBABLE FUTURE OF METAPHYSICS ”9
cular refinement, pitch, of thought which catches all the most subtle
and true influences the world has to give : this state or period is the
—
orthodoxy of philosophy there is just such an orthodoxy in art the
sway of which is nothing comparative or a matter of words but real
and absolute and its decline may be dated to within a few years. This
orthodoxy lasts but a limited time it is like the freshness and strain
;
different things.
But the opposition of the two schools or two tempers of thought
(under whatever names) will continue to be more intelligent as time
goes on, illusions about the bearing and import of lines of speculations
be less possible : the past indeed must have less and less power to hit
the needs of the present; still Hume’s reasoning perhaps will have
settledsomething and people will have a foresight even at the first
hint, when
they come upon that kind of thought which runs upon the
concrete and the particular, which disintegrates and drops towards
atomism in some shape or other, to what this may be carried, how far
a seeming victory is likely to be final, and perhaps what sort of things
transcendent idealism will say in reasserting itself.
ideas Facts and Law and even its highest, its most formal expressions
are half physical and concrete the third is led by the ideas of Historical
;
ideas so rife now of a continuity without fixed points, not to say saltus
or breaks, of development in one chain of necessity, of species having
no absolute types and only accidentally fixed, all this is a philosophy
of flux opposed to Platonism and can call out nothing but Platonism
against it. And this, or to speak more correctly Realism, is perhaps
soon to return.
One may even speaking hazardously, some points ^three main
see,
—
—
points in which it will challenge the prevalent philosophy 6{ con-
tinuity or flux. The first is that of type or species. To the prevalent
philosophy and science nature is a string all the differences in Which
are really chromatic but certain places in it have become accidentally
fixed and the series of fixed points becomes an arbitrary scale\ The
new Realism will maintain that in musical strings the roots of chbrds,
to use technical wording, are mathematically fixed and give a standard
by which to fix all the notes of the appropriate scale when points
:
which have a great hold on the mind and are always reappearing and
seem imperishable, such as the designs of Greek vases and lyres, the
cone upon Indian shawls, the honeysuckle moulding, the fleur-de-lys,
while every day we see designs both simple and elaborate which do not
live and are at once forgotten and some pictures we may long look
;
the part to the whole. Realism will undoubtedly once more maintain
that the Idea is only given —
whatever may be the actual form educa-
tion takes —
from the whole downwards to the parts.
The last principle traverses modern thought generally and is wider
than the philosophy of continuity. A form of atomism like a stiffness or
sprain seems to hang upon and hamper our speculation it is an over- :
is not to know the whole. In the same way the first knowledge of natural
history came altogether from the hunting and pastoral life and the
animals which engage its attention. This knowledge is exact in pro-
portion to its interest, and it might have been maintained once that it
was the science of shepherds and graziers and hunters; when they
gave names to the successive years of the stag brocket, pricket, and —
the rest; but now these ages have lost any importance above other
facts of growth.
But however neither is strictly true. It is not true historically because
it explains only the general morality and the steps and slow changes
for the better, not the more brilliant side of ethical history, the
impulses of single men, and all the attractive difierence of the
subject.
And under the same head they overlook this, that personal morality
conditions political before political personal. The future of a perfectible
would say, is when all
race, all moralists men will be good and happy.
By good you mean men who obey a good conscience. But political
morality has no business with a good conscience; w^hen its ideal is
attained then morality in itself will be worth least this is not its future, ;
what pure political ethics ought to aim at. But in fact there is the
historical carrying out of all this. A morality too simply political and
objective, as that of the ancients, does end in amusement. It hap-
pened with Athens and with the Roman empire, e.specially with the
Hellenised Levant. Amusement is what one means when one ventures
—
nine days’ wonder; Stoicism threw out men like Cato who were
portents the schemes which turned on brotherly love like those of
;
in its success.
no one would deny that the political virtues were the first, and
Still
that the unwinding of the idea of disinterested goodness from the com-
plex intercourse of men is the most important thing in the history of
ethics, only it is not quite the whole of it.
And no more will the political relations explain the whole of mora-
lity as it stands now. But this has to be remembered, that, if one takes
any premiss whatever which is true, the whole sum of deductions which
—
can be made from it that is, its applications to all the matter of ethics
will be the whole duty of man. Anyone who was possessed with the
Roman sense of duty to the father of the family or the Chinese awe for
parents or patriotism or universal love or sensibility to suffering or self-
one, as holding together its own parts and conditions an ideal is the
;
you mean of man as other than brutes and have to see that morality
does not lie in the intercourse merely of living beings but of such beings,
and so are thrown back from what is relative to what is absolute and
substantive. And it is of course generally true that a knowledge of any
relation is barren without a knowledge of the terms of the relation in
themselves. Man comes into relation with other men but bringing with
him and his accidents. Morality has already begun
his properties
—
with him before relations with others arise scarcely in time but in
thought. Conscience or the Imperative working outwards find its
first matter in the man himself: a man can compare his today with
his yesterday, his aims with his results many things follow from man
;
being his own object. Gluttony and drunkenness are social vices too,
but this gives but a slight impulse of abhorrence they make him not
:
himself; not a natural mind, for he is heavy and sleepy, not a natural
body, for he cannot keep his feet.
NOTES: FEB. 9, 1868
All words mean either things or relations of things you may also say :
prepossession of feeling ;
its definition, abstraction, vocal expression or
other utterance ;
and its application, ‘extension’, the concrete things
coming under it.
* That is when deliberately formed or when a thought is recalled, for when pro-
duced by sensation from without or when as in dreams etc it presents itself unbidden
it comes from the involuntary working of nature.
isG EARLY NOTE-BOOKS
which the mind is absorbed (as far as that may be), taken up by, dwells
upon, enjoys, a single thought : we may call it contemplation, but it
however true that in the successive arts with their greater complexity
and length the whole’s unity retires, is less important, serves rather for
the framework of that of the parts.
The more intellectual, less physical, the spell of contemplation the
more complex must be the object, the more close and elaborate must
be the comparison the mind has to keep making between the whole
and the parts, the parts and the whole. For this reference or compari-
son is what the sense of unity means; mere sense that such a thing is
for very sharp and pure dialectic or, in other matter, hard and telling
art-forms ; in fact we have in them the two axes on which rhetoric turns.
—
PARMENIDES'
[From same note-book as last.']
Being^ is
—
and Not-being is not ^which perhaps one can say, a little
over-defining his meaning, means that all things are upheld by instress
and are meaningless without it. An undetermined Pantheist idealism
runs through the fragments which makes it hard to translate them
satisfactorily in a subjective or in a wholly outward sense. His feeling
for instress, for the flush and foredrawn, and for inscape /
is most
striking and from this one can understand Plato’s reverence for him
as the great father of Realism
Tj S’, (l)s ovK cart re /cat cij p^peeSv e’errt piTj etvat,
ovre (f>pd(TaLS*
Blood is red/ but only/ This blood is red/ or/ The last blood I saw was
red/ nor even that, for in later language not only universals would not
be true but the copula would break down even in particular judgments.
He goes on
ovSd TTOT '^v ouS’ ecrrat, cVet vvv eoriv ofiov rrdv^
€V (JVV€X€£.
It could not come from not-being nor can being come from being.
‘Nor yet is there any force of faith will grant that from Being can ever
come anything sideby side with
It is the unextended, foredrawn
— ‘Look* at
it.’
and everywhere through all the world nor to come together from here
and there and everywhere’ . . .
things by’ —
shewing the mixture of real with logical in the thought
‘and it lies by itself the selfsame thing abiding in the selfsame place :
* *
€K TOV ’
is Karstcn’s conj, Simplicius quotations give ‘ ye pij * and ‘ e*K juij
*.
PARMENIDES 129
To be andto know or Being and thought are the same. The truth
inthought is Being, stress, and each word is one way of acknowledging
Being and each sentence by its copula is (or its equivalent) the utter-
ance and assertion of it.
iv (p TT. i ’
Ritter and Preller translate ‘in quo enuntiatum est sive a
quo quid cogitatur*, referring it to the subject. Perhaps it would be
better referred to the object and Parmenides
mind’s will say that the
grasp voetv, the foredrawing act blood or that blood is—that this is
red is to be looked for in Being, the foredrawn, alone, not in the thing
we named blood or the blood we worded as being red. ^ari^eoBai is to
‘give it a name’, to come out with something, to word or put a
thought or thing.) Everything else is but a name (‘tw iravr' ovop
ioTLv ’) or disguise for it —
coming to be or perishing, Yes and No
€Lval T€ Kal ovKL ’), change of place, change of colour.
The way men judge in particular is determined for each by his own
inscape, which depends on the mingling of the two elements, those in
which the heat-principle predominates having the finer wits, ov p-qv ‘
{de sens,
3) and then he quotes
Violante
In the pantry^
Gnawing at a mutton bone.
How she gnawed it.
of vivid green slanting away beyond the skyline, against which the
clouds shewed the slightest tinge of rose or purple. Copses in grey-
—
red or grey-yellow the tinges immediately forerunning the opening
of full leaf. Meadows skirting Seven-bridge road voluptuous green.
Some oaks are out in small leaf Ashes not out, only tufted with
their fringy blooms. Hedges springing richly. Elms in small leaf, with
more or less opacity. White poplars most beautiful in small grey
crisp spray-like leaf Cowslips capriciously colouring meadows in
creamy purple orchis. Over the green water of the
drifts. Bluebells,
river passing the slums of the town and under its bridges swallows
shooting, blue and purple above and shewing their amber-tinged
breasts reflected in the water, their flight unsteady with wagging
wings and leaning first to one side then the other. Peewits flying.
Towards sunset the sky partly swept, as often, with moist white cloud,
tailing off across which are morsels of grey-black woolly clouds. Sun
seemed to make a bright liquid hole in this, its texture had an upward
northerly sweep or drift from the W, marked softly in grey. Dog violets.
Eastward after sunset range of clouds rising in bulky heads moulded
softly in tufts or bunches of snow —
^so it looks —
and membered some-
what elaborately, rose-coloured. Notice often imperfect fairy rings.
Apple and other fruit trees blossomed beautifully. A. talking about
the whole story of the home affairs. His idea was (when he went down
three years ago and was all the Long preparing for confession) that
7 years was a moderate time during which to fast within the boundaries
of life and abstain from communicating. Being not allowed to read he
took long walks, and it must have been on one of these that he fainted
as he once told me.
Yellow and green in the fields charming. Ferryman said T can’t
justly tell you’, and they call weir as if wire,
I think that thread in smooth rivers is made by water being drawn
or retained at right angles to the current.
May 4. Fine. Alone in Powder Hill wood. Elms far off have that
flaky look now
but nearer the web of springing green with long curls
moulds off the skeleton of the branches. Fields pinned with daisies.
Buds of apple blossoms look like nails of blood. Some ashes are out. I
reckon the spring is at least a fortnight later than last year for on
Shakspere’s birthday, April 21, it being the tercentenary,* Ilbert*
crowned a bust of Shakspere with bluebells and put it in his window,
and they are not plentiful yet. Beauty of hills in blue shadow seen
through lacy leaf of willows.
At Skinner’s Weir yesterday they were peeling osiers which gave
out a sweet smell.
Valuation of my old rooms is 3(^44. 3s. deducting 13s. for valuer.^
May 5. Fine. Walk with Urquhart to Wood Eaton. Saw a gull
JOURNAL (1866) 135
t Hinkeys.
136 JOURNAL (1866)
soft blue, and rolling reefs shaded with pearl grey hanging from this to
the earthline. +
Children with white rods beating bounds of St. Michael’s parish.*
May 1 1 Heavy showers in night and morning. Afternoon fine and
.
deal out of the upright, the curved type is easily seen in multiplicity
which in one might be unnoticed. A brown tulip is a noble flower, the
curves and close folding of the petals delightful. Anthers thick furry
black. Young copper beech leaves seen against the sky pale brown with
rosy blush along the ribs of each leaf. Solomon’s .seal.
May 15. Fair or fine and cold, evening remarkably so and very
clear. Walking in Magdalen walks. Green-white of lower leafage
especially in elms and beeches of course in the beeches it is almost
:
May 16. Fair and cold. Called at night on HalF at Ch. Ch.
Hawthorn when thrown up with may is very clearly type-
especially
marked.
May 1 7. Fine and warm. Confession.
May 18. As Charming to see in the Garden Quadrangle
yesterday.
the strong relief of the dark green and the balls of light in the close
grass and the mixture of sunlit leaf and dewy-looking shadow in the
chestnuts high up and moving in the wind. Squares of green out-of-
doors, as a window or garden-door, are delightful and the green then
suggests rose inan unusually recondite way, as if it were a translation
of rose or rose in another key. Plane in full leaf but not sycomore.
—
Mulberry budding. Lilac in full blow. ^Things look sad and difficult.
May 19. Summer. Draughts of warm wind through doors or win-
dows are pleasanter than out of doors.
May 20, Whitsunday. As yesterday, hot yet fresh with wind. Dr.
Pusey preached.^ After Hall walk witli Nettleship* to Bablock Hythe,
round by an untried way into the Appleton road up to Cumnor, and
home by moonlight. Beautiful blackness and definition of elm tree
branches in evening light (from behind).** Cuckoos calling and answer-
ing to each other, and the calls being not equally timed they over-
lapped, making the triple cuckoo^ and crossed.
May 21. As yesterday unless the wind was E. With Addis in
meadows beyond Binsey. Stocks® and Hall dined with me. Meadows
yellow all over with buttercups. Strong dark shadows of trees through
grass and buttercup stems chequering the effect. Heard corncrake.
May 22. As yesterday, cold wind, -f Whit Tuesday.
.
May 23. Fine. There has been much E. wind this May.
May 24. Grey in morning, then fine. Cold, with E. wind, skin
being parched and lips cut. Buttercups in Magdalen meadow put out
the green in their yellow and from their just visible distinction and
countlcssness throw the trees of the Walks ‘to finer distance*. Some of
the chestnuts have blooms touched with bright rose, not faint and at a
distance confused and put out by the yellow as in the common ones,
but shining with red and white purely and beautifully.
May 25. Fine, with E. wind. Agra Bank still in great danger, Cyril
says.
May 26. Mostly dull, chinky clouds, in afternoon curdled and
moulded. Towards evening the North much striped. Clouds of dust.
Matthew Arnold lectured on the Celtic element in English poetry.^
—
May 27. Trinity Sunday. 4-. ^Warm, grey brightening to blue
sky, but a haze all day. —
Walked with Urquhart to Cuddesdon’ by
Shotover. Charming view of Horsepath in hazy light with upright
growth of elms, boughs parting regularly and unweathered. There was
an ordination, at which Awdry® was ordained deacon. Wood joined
—
US and we went home by Garsington, a very pretty way, and saw the
church.
May28. Fine.—Last night the St. Giles’ gate of the college was
forced open from within, the locks being carried away. £50 reward
is offered for the doers of this.’
May 29. Fine and warm. Evening colder, with high lawn valences
of clouds gracefully twirled at the ends, as usual. Addis, M’Farlane,^
Garrett^ Case, and Fletcher^ at breakfast.
May 30. Mostly fine. Some more of those streamer clouds in the
morning. Breakfasted with Bickersteth.^ Philip Simeon^ dined with me.
May 31. Grey, the clouds interesting to some degree, especially a
range, say in the N.W., ropy, the coiled folds being taken back across
it from bottom to top westwards. A little rain and at evening and night \
— —
hard rain. Pater talking two hours against Xtianity.*^ ^Breakfasted
with Russell® of Wadham, dined with Bond.
—
June I. Cloudy, with thundershowers in which Eaglesim’ and I
—
were caught on Port Meadow. I read today the journal I kept in
1862, burning parts. —Cyril came up.
June —2. and
^Bright strong blue with bright changing clouds,
hot,
besides the high thin grassy —
tails. ^Yesterday, I instance
think, for
rain clouds were broken into mackerel at sunset (which then were an
illuminated dun-colour parted by pale blue) and near midnight had
become smaller fleecy spots which in the moonlight silvered the sky.
Karslake spent the day here. Aunt Kate also came up and I forgot
to meet her.
June 3. Showers, but mostly bright and hot. Clouds growing in
beauty at end of the day. In the afternoon a white rack of two parallel
spines, vertebrated as so often. At sunset, when the sky had charm and
beauty, very level clouds, long pelletted sticks of shade-softened grey
in the West, with gold-colour splashed sunset-spot, then more to the
S. grey rows rather thicker and their oblique flake or thread better
marked, above them on a ground of indistincter grey a drift of spotty
tufts or drops, a ‘dirty’ looking kind of clouds, scud-like, rising. With
Garrett in Binsey Lane. The green was softening with grey. The
meadows yellow with buttercups and under-reddened with sorrel and
containing white of oxeyes and puff-balls. The cuckoo singing one side,
on the other from the ground and unseen the wood-lark, as I suppose,
most sweetiy with a song of which the structure is more definite than
the skylark’s and gives the link with that of the rest of birds.’® —^Yellow
—
meadows shining through the willow-rods pretty. The last Bampton, * ’
somewhere on the skyline in the S. or S.W., and the other rows were
meteorologically parallel but perspectively converging and diverging
with respect to this, clear sky being between. Wafts of very warm
wind came now and then all day.
June 4. Rain the night before. Grey with some rain. Miss Lloyd* —
and Aunt Kate came to dinner. Aunt Kate and Cyril went down
together. — wind. Much rain at night. The sky oyster-shell during
the day.
—
June 5. Grey and chilly, with rain. Puller^ and young Wharton
dined with me.
June 6. Grey, with some rain. Evening fine. Aspens thick in leaf
but not so the sycamores even yet, or possibly they are this summer or
at this time of the summer very thin. A
mass of buttercup floating
down under one of the Godstow bridges. A barge, I find, not only
wrinkles smooth water by a wedge outlined in parallel straight lap-
waves but also, before and without these, shallower ones running,
say midway, between those of the wedge and a perpendicular to the
current.
June 7. Grey, I believe, brightening in the evening.
June 8. Saw sunrise from about half past had great charm.
three. It
Described in sketches for Pilkie and Mostly bright with wisps
and washes. Hot.
June 9. Bright. There was one long sweeping waving spine very
dimly vertebrated and with gauzes flying from it. The sky is now (nine
o’clock, evening) sad grey with dirty darker patterning, scud spots
etc, and some very faintly made out mackerelling —
^Western openings
pale yellow. —
On Friday or Saturday, I think, the Agra broke^
(June i3).s
in which sheep grazed between the rise and the lane, was Goderich
castle of red sandstone on the height. Close by the river was a fine
oak with long lunging boughs. The country is full of fine trees, espe-
cially oaks, and is, like Devonshire, on red soil. We crossed the river
JOURNAL (1866) 141
things from Goderich castle etc showing the green mossy mould which
covers some facets of the sandstone, but he has definitely given himself
to a mannered tree touch although the departure from simplicity is
slight. —^Was at the Academy too lately. Prinsep® -shews breadth. He
had a portrait of Gordon costume of mandarin of the yellow jacket
in
and ‘La Festa di Lido’ in the Venice public gardens in October.
A. Hughes^ illustrated ‘My heart is like a singing bird*. There was an
atmosphere study of midsummer midnight by a certain Raven**^
who might turn out something. Brett" had a landscape of Capri.
* Gap in MS,
:
another the notched edge curls up and so is darked, which gives them
:
inwards upon the centre, some are globed and with the inner petals
drawn geometrically across each other like laces of boddices at the
opera with chipped-back little tight rolls at the edge. —
Grandmamma
looking thin but pretty, this bringing out the delicacy of her features.
. '
hedge of Finchley wood and just before its slough in the road or at all —
events a slough. Oats hoary blue-green sheaths and stalks, prettily
:
worked round, a little and this is what keeps up the illusion of the tree
the leaves are rounded inwards and figure out ball-knots. Oaks differ
much, and much turns on the broadness of the leaf, the narrower
giving the crisped and starry and Catherine-wheel forms, the broader
the flat-pieced mailed or shard-covered ones, in which it is possible to
see composition in dips etc on wider bases than the single knot or
cluster. But I shall study them further. See the 19th.
—
July 12. Fine and hot, somewhat muggy. In the battle of Sadowa
fought on the 3rd. the Austrians, it is said, lost in killed, wounded,
missing, and prisoners 80,000 men.
July 13. Fine. All day faint long tails, getting thicker as the day
went on, and at one time there were some like long ringlets, namely
curls shaping out a hollow screw. Rows of cloud lay across sky at sun-
set, their lit below which was the curious opaque blue
parts yellow,
—
one sometimes sees with that colour. To Midhurst,* then walked to
West Lavington* and back, seeing the church, built 15 years ago. I
should like to see it again for it looked immature and strange. The
bowered lanes to Lavington skirting Cowdery* Park^ were charming
and the gloom in the thicket of the park, where yews shewed and
—
chestnut leaves hoary opaque green. Walked again later towards the
downs, heard more woodlarks, and found a glowworm. Just beyond
the town (of Midhurst) runs the canal water looking like a river and
on the steeper-rising further side the park trees make a towering and
noble wall which runs along to the left and turns and embays a quarter
of a mile away, the whole having the blocky short cresting which
freely grown park trees show. There were oaks and other trees, one
beech I noticed especially scattering forwards from the press brown
point-sprays, but the great feature is the Spanish chestnuts, their round
knots tufted with white heaps of flour-and-honey blossom : this gives
splendour and difference to such a growth of trees. I know now too
what a tinkling brook is.
July 14. Sultry, pale sunlight, hazy distance. The sky was chiefly
overcast, at one time with tufted silver down clouds suffused with light
—
hurting one’s eyelids. ^Walked through Lord Egramont’s* park^
passing the ruins of Cowdery caistle to Petworth, whence by train to
Horsham, where I met Garrett. Fine limes in the park thick with leaves
and richly and regularly hung blossoms sounding from top to bottom
with the fremitus of bees. There were also some big sycomores with the
lightscreen of leaf covering them, from a distance, with glistening
tangles. —
Garrett and I got recommended to a Mr. Ing^ at Whiting’s
fann in the parishes of Horsham and Nuthurst, where we afterwards
went. We went to see the place and came back to the inn.
—
July 15. Bright, thunderstorm at evening. In Denne Park,^ Mr.
Thus in MS.
L
;;
Evcrsfield’s place, where inUr alia are several great ashes and beautiful.
There is a long grove chiefly of elm and ash very tall on the brow
also
of the height over which the park stands a little further on the slope
;
below this whole is well marked and the short tops and the straight
clefts between the trees give the character which park trees have the :
bushes when the wind blows it the backs of the sprays, which are
:
silvery, look like combs of fish-bones, the leaves where they border
their rib-stem appearing, when in repetition all jointed on one rib, to
be angularly cut at the inner end. The two bindweeds are in blossom.
July 22. Bright, sky a beautiful blue.
July 23. The same, but blighty in morning.
July 24. Dull, sky breathing open in blue splits and a little sunlight.
—
Spoke to Macfarlane, foolishly.* ^The wild parsley (if it is that)
growing in clumps by the road side a beautiful sight, the leaf being
delicately cut like rue. There is a tree that has a leaf like traveller’s-
joy,^ curled, and with brick-like veinings. It has clusters of berries
which are flattened like some tight-mouthed jars, yellow when unripe,
then cherry-coloured, then quickly turning glossy black if gathered.
The traveller’s-joy winds over it and they then are hard to tell apart,
unless that it has rougher duller leaves. There was a graceful bit, a
stile, with this tree hanging over on the left side, hazel and large-
leaved ash on the right, and a spray of the ash stood forward like a
bright blind of leaves drawing and condensing the light. Under the
bushes on each side was suggestive woolly darkness (and giving on
one hand onto the dry stoned bed of a streamlet, where on looking
under one saw more light filtering in) and soft round-bladed tufts of
grass grew in half-darkness under the stone at the foot of the stile.
No, the berries belong, I now remember, to a rough round-leaved tree
(the underside being white). Merely^ the white-beam, I believe.
—
This is written since the word rue on Aug. 6. Noticed in a slightly
rising cornfield fenced with oaks the deep foursquare blocks of the
—
wheat, blunt-edged at the furrows and hedges. Golden Drop one of
the best kinds of the red wheat.
[Aug. 31, 1867]^
July 10, 1867.^ Flames of mist rose from the French brooks and mea-
dows, and sheets of mist at a distance led me to think I saw the sea
at sunrise it was fog. Morning star and peach-coloured dawn. The
scales of colour in the landscape were more appreciable before than
after sunrise : was ‘frank’. The trees were irregular, scarcely ex-
all
pressing form, and the aspens blotty, with several concentric outlines,
and as in French pictures. In the facing sunlight there was very little
colour but bright grey shine and glister, with trees interposing in their
stems and leafage poles and strokes of bluish shadow. The day was
fine,everything bright even the iron rings in the walls of the Seine
:
oyster-shell mouldings.
To the Exposition early, for the last time ;
amongst other things to
the Bavarian pictures."^
July 17. Sharp showers in morning; in afternoon fine, scarves of
cloud evening grey.
;
The Admiral went off early for St. Petersburg, then B. Poutiatine
for Bayeux to meet Baillie and Browne® and go on to Arromanches,
and I went home by Dieppe and Newhaven. Rough passage, great
waves. Got soaked with spray and cheeks frosted with brine, but
I saw the waves well. In the sunlight they were green-blue, flinty
sharp, and rucked in straight lines by the wind under their fore-
;
band edged by and ending in violet, though not the broadest, is the
deepest expression of colour in the bow and so becomes the most
decisive and emphatic feature there. —
^At sunset the air rinsed after
the rain.
1 —; ;
I found a from Coles, which had been waiting since the day I
letter
tell me of Dolben’s death.’ See June 28.^
started for Paris, to
July 19. Dull and threatening; a little rain and sun.
July 20. Dull and threatening a little rain showers at night.
; ;
July 21. Fair, with moving clouds; at sunset fine changing clouds
with apple-green and rose tints.
July 22. Fine, with graceful clouds ; sky silver-blue clear distances ;
rain at night.
July 23. Rain in morning; fine in afternoon; bright sunset.
July 24. Fair.
July 25. Fair, but threatening in afternoon.
July 26. Rain.
Milicent has now got Schumann’s Slumber-song,
July 27. Dull chiefly.
Slept at Villas and went with Aunt Kate to Foreign
Westbourne
Paintings.^ —
Alma-Tadema^ ^Tibullus’ visit to Delia and Honeymoon
temp. Augustus Auguste Bonheur
;
—
forest scene Bonnat St. Vincent ;
—
—
of Paul and the galley-slave Devriendt Guillebert de Lannoy re-
;
—
by Lambinet; Gerome Gate of the Mosque El Assaneyn, Cairo,
where were exposed the heads of the Beys sacrificed by Salek-Kachef
Idyl (children at a basin of fountain-water) —
Lt^vy and a country ;
lane, Avith a woman leading a cow, by Weber (Otto) which for several
reasons was very good, especially the way in which a tree a little way
off against the light has its boughs broken into antler-like sprays by the
globes of the sunbeams or daylight.
July 28 . —
am three and twenty. ^Bright extremely, though a shower
or more fell distances all fine blues the sky working blue-silver the
; ; ;
clouds, which far off were in chains, were there covered in a blue
light and shaded with blue shadow, and in the afternoon indeed
shewed silver lips only and then were indistinguishable from blue sky
—
below that sunset bright an edge of gold shewing amidst wet sandy
gold ;
;
* MS reads Yonghc.
;
the dressing and toss of the tree but from inside were rather insigni-
ficant. —
Elms at end of twilight are very interesting, their delicacy is
so great against the sky they make crisp scattered pinches of soot.
:
—
At the Dugmores’. We went Horace and I into Wild Wood (as —
it is called) at the foot of their field, where the oaks have more of both
—
grace and charm than in Bishop’s Wood. Brambles make a sort of
—
mail and look very grey in the light they take. H.D. shewed me his
brother’s hawks.
Aug. 9. Bright; bright sunset, chiefly from chalky gold feathers
—
square-blown at their ravelled ends. ^Walked to the Palace at Mus-
—
well Hill.** Odd white-gold look of short grass in tufts: noticed it
especially on the opposite bank of the G.N.R. at Muswell Hill you :
sunk to the earth they were somewhat bright and gaily waved in
diminishing pieces: as time went on through all the rack the parts
—
seemed to close up more and form yokes ^whether this was really so
or only that the shadows, which continued to grow and run up, bound
them together in mackerelling to the eye this sort of sky they say fore-
:
rain within 24 hours post hoc certainly, for see next day.
tells
—
:
gracefully curved and the leaves looping over edge them, as it looks,
with rows of scales. In something the same way I saw some tall young
slender wych-elms of thin growth the leaves of which enclosed the
light in successive eyebrows. From the spot where I sketched under —
an oak, beyond a brook, and reached by the above green lane between
—
a park-ground and a pretty field there was a charming view, the
field, on the right of the lane, being a close-shaven smoothly-
lying then
rounded shield of bright green ended near the high road by a row of
—
viol-headed or flask-shaped elms not rounded merely but squared
—
of much beauty dense leafing, rich dark colour, ribs and spandrils
of timber garlanded with leaf between tree and tree. But what most
* MS reads July.
152 JOURNAL (1867)
Struck me was a pair of ashes in going up the lane again. The further
—
one was the finer a globeish just-sided head with one launching-out
member on thf right; the nearer one was more naked and horny. By
t2iking a few steps one could pass the further behind the nearer or make
the stems close, either coincidingly, so far as disagreeing outlines will
coincide, or allowing a slit on either side, or again on either side
making a broader stem than either would make alone. It was this
—
which was so beautiful making a noble shaft and base to the double
tree, which was crested by the horns of the nearer ash and shaped on
the right by the bosom of the hinder one with its springing bough. The
outline of the double stem was beautiful to whichever of the two sides
—
you slid the hinder tree in one (not, I think, in both) shaft-like and
narrowing at the ground. Besides I saw how great the richness and
subtlety is of the curves in the clusters, both in the forward bow men-
tioned before and in some most graceful hangers on the other side it :
in this point more rudimentary than that of oak, ash, beech, etc that
the leaves lie in long rows and do not subdivide or have central knots
but tooth or cog their woody twigs.
For July 6, 1866^ I have a note on elm-leaves, that they sit crisp,
dark, glossy, and saddle-shaped along their twigs, on which at that
time an inner frill of soft juicy young leaves had just been run they
;
chip the sky, and where their waved edge turns downwards they
gleam and blaze like an underlip sometimes will when seen against the
light.
—
Aug. 23. Fine and cloudless fiery sunset. Some wych-elms seem
;
to have leaves smaller, others bigger, than the common elm: see
Sept. I.
—
Aug. 24. Bright. In the middle of, I think, this day Lionel had a
piece of sky-blue gauze for butterfly-nets lying on the grass in the
garden. It was a graceful mixture of square folds and winding tube-
folds. But the point was the colour as seen by sunlight in a transparent
material. The folds, which of course doubled the stuff, were on the
sun’s side bright light blue and on the other deep blue — not shadow--
;:;
modified^ but real blue, as in tapestries and some paintings. Then the
shadowed sides had cobweb-streaks of paler colour across, and in
other parts became transparent and shewed the grass below, which
was lit by the sun through the gauze.
To Richmond and the river with Cyril. What I most noticed was
the great richness of the membering of the green in the elms, never
however to be expressed but by drawing after study. The children —
went off to Rothingdean.
Aug. 25. Fine; in evening stormy-looking mottlings, and striped
sunset.
Aug. 26. Grey morning; rain in middle of the day; afterwards
and cobweb and blown-flix feather clouds
bright, with silver lights
—
then white sweep very level-ranked sunset. To Urquhart’s at Bovey
;
Tracey.* —
On the way I saw red cliffs and near them copses with slim
bare stems, sometimes leaning and falling apart elms too I saw with;
tall and upright, sided well and ricked distinctly, the focus (?) of their
enclosing parabola being near the top instead of leaning over to the
N.E. ;
trunks white and clean ;
isles of leaf all ricked and beaked.
Up Shap Tor.
Aug. 28. Dull; rain spitting on the moor. ^The hazels here are
—
remarkable from the sharpness of the type both in leaf and in spraying
the latter spring boldly out, browing over above, looking up below
the former are broad paddles tightly necked and drawn up on to their
stem.
On the Black Moor and in Colhays woods, where we saw a squirrel
with a very long curling tail.
Aug. 29. Dull, fairing in afternoon; bright sunset. —On the way
to Bullaton Rocks farm-yard there was a wonderful elm, whether
in a
wych-elm or not I cannot say, which turned out to have four you —
— —
might say five stems but ^op<l>r] p,ia,^ It had a thick-leaved round
head, the masses well membered. The leaf was neater and the sprays
lighter and more wirily curled than in the common kind.
We met Miss Warren^ and her nephew^ at a tryst and went with
them to Bullaton Rocks. The sun came out in gleams over the tors
and vallies. We then went to tea with the Miss Warrens, who shewed
us some old water-colours by their father, once vicar of Edmonton.
Charles Lamb® came to live there in his time, and they said he was a
drunkard, going from one public to another. Home by starlight and
Jupiter, stumbling down steep dark lanes.
Miss Warren told me that she had heard the following vision of an
— :
—
each wing or comb finally curled inwards, that is upwards. Putting
my hand up against the sky whilst we lay on the grass I saw more
richness and beauty in the blue than I had known of before, not
brilliance but glow and colour. It was not transparent and sapphire-
like but turquoise-like, swarming and blushing round the edge of the
hand and in the pieces clipped in by the fingers, the flesh being some-
times sunlit, sometimes glassy with reflected light, sometimes lightly
shadowed in that violet one makes with cobalt and Indian red.
Aug. 31. Gloomy early; then bright, with mottlings; then high
grey moulded clouds and spitting rain later hard rain.
;
By the river, the West Teign, when Urquhart lost his ring. Chat—
with Mr. Cleave,^
Sept. I Bright and beautiful great climbing white wool clouds, and
.
;
kind ^with the stem a long way bare. There were wych-elms of which
some leaves were as long as my hand. Of the other forest trees I say
nothing. The chalky light was striking up, and in the strawberry-tree
the leaves were yellow-green below and in the sky-light above blue.
— —
One tree a beech, I think I saw on which the ground cast up white
reflection like glass or water and so far as I could see this could only
come from the spots of sunlight amidst the shade.
Back to Benediction then to Bovey by Gappath^ (which they pro-
;
nounce Gappa).
When I got to the middle of the common they call Knighton Heath-
heaths they call heathfields here) I saw the wholeness of the
fields (for
sky and the sun like its ace ; the colours of Dartmoor were pale but
—; — ;
the common was edged wth a frieze of trees of the brightest green
else
and crispest shadow.
Mr. Cleave says they call a wooden bridge over the river a clamp.
Sept. 2. Fair, sometimes sunny, sometimes grey with mouldings;
bright sand frettings at sunset.
Drive over the moor ; up Hay Tor.
The furze* on the moor is thick in bloom. The composition of the
bloom is —the head of a spike
this us has, let
eight thesay, flowers,
nibs of which— do not know the botanical name—point outwards,
I
arranged as below, thus suggesting a square by way of Union Jack;
the wings or crests rising behind make a little square with
four walls, as in the drawing, these crests being those of the
bigger flowers and those of the smaller, I fancy, being sup-
pressed ; these are like the partitions in honeycombs
little walls
ately solidand high for the rest indeed it half blinds the west aisle-
;
windows query its object. The church is in good early third Pointed
:
—
and now in the very worst condition Moses and Aaron at the east
end, the cieling falling in, a piece of a handsome painted rood-screen
cut down and put in a pew etc. From Widecombe we drove on to
—
Manaton. In the cultivated vale which runs up the moor and in
which Widecombe stands are many sycomores, now browning.
Everywhere here hollies abound and flourish, growing into sided
rocky shapes. —
At Manaton^ I saw through the church windows a
handsome rood-screen standing and in good repair, perhaps restored.
There I sketched a hanger of ash. On the way back we sketched Houn
Tor and saw Becky Falls.'*
Past two o’clock at night sheet lightning and thunder, both increas-
ing in vividness and going on till dawn; hard rain came too. The
lightning was coloured violet, but afterwards as I lay in bed it was
sometimes yellow, sometimes red and blue.
Sept. 3. Fog, and in afternoon rain.
To the flower-show and ‘Industrial Exhibition’^ ^N.B. handsome —
green earthenware Russian jug ; jug of, I suppose, 17th century I do —
not know the name of the ware — and brown richly
in dark blue
patterned, with cover and purchase dish of Palissy ware with a pike
;
Walked to Newton for Mass, for I missed the train. Mass was said
:
woman he saw who had been three days starving he was going to give
:
her something but she said our Lord had spoken one little word to her
from the altar and it was enough she wanted nothing. But this he told
;
—
me about himself:^ he was in consumption, dying the sisters had a :
novena for him and he was drinking water from St. Winifred’s well one :
In walking back saw a Scotch fir with pale and very thin foliage all
except one tuft high up, which was as dark and thick as velvet and
freshly edged with bright green.
I think^ it was the same day I saw where rainwater had run through
one of the cuttings made to carry it off in the turf by the side of the road,
and the gully being sandy, it had carried the sand down into the road,
throwing it in clear expression into a branched root or, if you looked
at it from above downwards, a ‘treated’ tree head it ended definitely,
:
To the Potteries.^
though a little rain fell; yellow streaming sunset,
Sept. 10. Fine,
rain, ;
—
and rainbow feeling cold at night. Rainbow on dark ground
of cloud crimson and green on light ground it is the dun red and blue.
;
Through the slowness of the Bovey clocks missed the train and had
to walk to Newton ; thence to the Oratory.
Sept.1 1 Dull a little rain.
.
;
Occasionally, when Stokes*® was away, I had the second too. I did a
great deal of work, clinched with the exam, papers, and am much tired.
JOURNAL (1867-8) 159
and Wallace Dear of St. Johns, Gent, Markheim, and Wharton also
:
The other Oxford news has been O’Hanlon *s^ suicide and that Philli-
—
more got a History First one of two Jayne of Wadham had the
—
:
at her call she supposed, aloud, that Susan did not hear but finding
she had she said ‘Baby said to Baby, ’Pose Minnie not hear Baby
—Mary (and Maries) she Mungoach and Jane Munksh.
call.* all calls
—Being mimicked by Mabel she cried not mock Baby! Baby ‘Sissie
good mind to cut Sissie.’ Did be logo = was going to go Baby^uts =
little scissors Church-pockie — alms’-box.
Jan. 19. Showers and wind and light,
To an instrument concert.*
Feb. 14. Dull.
Valentines.
Feb. 15. Fine.
—
Feb. 16. Fine. Green buds.
Feb. 17. Fine, then dull. On these three days delicate clouding,
especially grasses.
Feb. 18. Fine first, I think, then dull. —Catkins hanging; bluebell
leavescoming up.
Feb. 19. Dull, I believe.
Feb. 20. Dull, with some rain.
—
Feb. 21. Fine. Never saw the crimson nut-buds on the hazel till
today, when F. John pointed them out, and then nothing else but
them. He says as boys they used to call the catkins lambs" tails.
Dr. Newman’s 67th birthday.
Feb. 22. Fine and windy, with a little rain or sleet or snow.
Feb. 23. Fine.
Feb. 24. Fine.
Feb. 25. Shrove Tuesday. Fine and very warm; at night the new
moon almost on her back and Venus, very bright,
a little to the left above —
the old moon very
visible.
Feb. 26. This evening they were as opposite, both
very bright and the dark part of the moon remark-
ably clear —
and milky. ^Fine and warm, with wind.
— Ash Wednesday.
Feb. 27. Grey but clear. —
Leaves in hawthorn hedges I found out.
Mar. 2. Dull and damp. At night sky swept with mare’s-tail clouds
in bold strange comit* shapes, stars scattered, Venus —
now very
—
bright with a watery nimbus and like a lamp, moon with a milky-
blue iris. NB. Both the edges of this blue are amber and sometimes
rosy; the floor between the iris and the moon’s disk passes (inwards
from the amber) from yellowish to bluish green.
F. Joseph left the Oratory.
—
Mar. 3. Dull. ^A green daylight in the hedges. Lilac trees have big
green buds.
Mar. 4, Cold but sunny, I believe.
Mar. 5. Bright between showers.
Mar. 6. Fine, with a shower or two, and cold.
Mar. 7. Dull and then wet.
• Thus in MS,
B mA M
i 62 JOURNAL (1868)
Mar. with some snow or sleet showers, and bitter strong
8. Fine,
wind. —To see the convent of
St. Paul at Selly Oak.^
palpable nimbus today at least, the sky being musky rather. ^Took —
home some frog-spawn.
Some evening^ before Mar. 10. Scum in standing milk.
Mar. 1 1 Wet..
Mar. 26. Mild and dull. Chestnuts hanging out their leaves.
—
Mar. 29. Fine but thick, I believe, like the day before.
Mar. 30. Very dim sunlight.
Mar. 31. Dim sunlight. Elm leaves low down out.
Ap. I. Dim sunlight.
Ap. 2. Dull then fine but not bright.
;
not know how long the was but the latter may have lasted hours.
first
A budded lime against the field wall turn, pose, and counterpoint in
:
Ap. 21. Fine and windy; in afternoon wind cold; some rain.
To see Aunt Kate.
Ap. 22. Wet
morning, dull afternoon.
Ap. with April showers.
23. Bright,
Ap. 24. Dull, with some rain.
Ap. 25. Dull early; then fine; then smoke came over.
To the French® and Flemish, Bischoff’s things most interesting.^
Ap. 26. Fine, but smoke came over.
To see Baillie,
Ap. 27. Generally fine between hard showers; some hail, which
made the evening very cold, a flash of lightning, a clap of thunder,
and a bright rainbow some grey cloud between showers ribbed and
;
draped and some wild bright big blown flix at the border of a great
—
rack with blue rising behind though it was too big in character to
be called flix.
To Roehampton into retreat.'^
Ap. 28. Dull and (till evening) cold, with rain.
Ap. day delicate clouding wind.
29. Beautiful ; ;
a month earlier than last, they say. Corn is in some places in ear and
the forwardness of the grass is noticeable.
June 1 Sunlight thick, 1 think.
.
crests coiled back into a crown, the tongues or spurs curled at heel,
the lashes (anthers) giving off all round: this is their time of greatest
beauty. They look gold or honey colour. —Gold too the colour of is
the fringes in the middle of the syringa. —^The passage of the roses
through the following scale of colours, perhaps from the dryness of the
season, most marked —
scarlet, blood-colour, crimson, purple, then the
red retiring to the shaded or inner part of the petal the outer or coiled
part bleaches lilac or greenish.
Papa has succeeded in winding up Mrs. Thwaites’ affairs.* Mr.
Hewitt the Tebbitts’ solicitor highly complimented him on his manage-
ment. j(^40000 was to be paid down by the Tebbitts.
Cyril was on the river a little time back with his friend Mr. Ford
and his friend Mr. Peebles. The latter was drowned at Marlow, last
Saturday I believe.
(his three daughters), Stella, Rosalind and Celia, Pilgrims to St. PauVs
(Nelson’s tomb), and Souvenir of Velasquez which I did not hear;*
Leighton^ Ariadne, Aciaea, Jonathan's token to David, Acme and Sep-
timius; Walker’s® Vagrants; Hemy’s^ THe de Flandre, near Antwerp;
Christmas morning 1866 (sea-piece) —
^Brett; Prinsep’s and Calderon’s
things not so interesting as usual Poynter’s^ Catapult Moore’s® (A)
; ;
Azaleas ;
Sandys^ —a study of a head, long hair fully detailed ;
she bites
one lock —
Watts’*® Clytie, a remarkable bust, and paintings too
;
Esau and Jacob, the Wife of Pygmalion; Legros** The Refectory and
Henry VIII being shewn Holbein’s pictures by Sir Thomas More
(quite Holbeinesque) Walker’s and Mason’s things most interesting.
.
In Spain they say the harvest will be two thirds below the average,
in S. France there is drought, in eastern counties no rain for 8 weeks.
* Thus in MS,
—
rather wild ;
cool.
June 23. Raining.
June 24. Cloudy. Letter^ from Bridges, who is now home.
June 25. Fine.
To the Coleridges’^ at Hanwell and then to an evening party at the
Husbands’.^
June 26. Bright but dark-in-bright, sky painted and with faint
curdling vapour rolling over, distances dim blue, and yet, near, the
edges all sharpened, every grain in the sky-line of Caen wood and all
the slant cards of the Dugmores’ limes being crisply given on such :
days the body there is in the air gives depth and projection to the
landscape ; sheet, moistness, and bloom to the shadows sobriety at ;
once and richness to the colours; and especially as I saw with one
ricked oak in the foreground of Caen wood an opaque, solid, gummy
tone to the dark picked oak crests.
June 27. Silver mottled clouding, and clearer; else like yesterday.
At the National Gallery.^ That Madonna by Beltraffio. Query
has not Giotto the inslress of loveliness ? Mantegna’s draperies.
June 28. Fine.
To Aunt Kate’s, who had just seen Miss Dolben.^
June 29. Fine.
—
June 30. Fine; evening clouded and easterly. Spanish chestnuts
in thickest honey-white meal.
July I. After a little rain fine.
—
Poor Cyril! The same day a letter from Edgell^ to say he was
received into the Church the day before.
July 2. Fine; delicate clouding — w^hite rose cloud there was which
July 3. Dull morning; then fine; rain in evening. ^The sea under —
—
dark clouds became quite black fat and black but not dark and —
when we were over a bank took white crests. Saw some hops —
trellised. The Belgian hop-poles much higher than ours. ^The leafage —
in England this year picked, nice, and scanty.
Started with Ed. Bond for Switzerland. We went by Dover and
Ostende to Brussels.
July 4. Dull, with rain. After sunset, when we were on the further
side of the river at Cologne, spanning the town the cathedral, and
other towers long girders or meridians of pale grey cloud, one within
the other.
JOURNAL (1868) 169
‘blue bow’.^ That evening^ saw a shepherd leading his flock through
the town.
By railway to Basel. Beautiful view from the train of the hills near
Miilheim They were clothed with wood and at the openings in
etc.
this and indeed all upward too they were charactered by vertical
stemming, dim in the distance. Villages a little bare like Brill rise in
blocks of white and deep russet tiling. The nearer hills terraced with
vine-yards deep and vertical, the pale grey shaven poles close on the
railway leaning capriciously towards one another. Here we met the—
young Englishman who had been to see Charlotte Bronte’s school in
Brussels. —The whole country full of walnut and cherry trees olean- ;
ders in bloom creeper is trained on houses and even the stations and
;
the two thieves, especially the good thief—a young man with a
—
moustache and modern air ^were in the wholeness and general scape
of the anatomy original and interesting. (The prominence of the
peculiar square-scaped drapery etc in
Holbein and his contemporaries is
bottle blue; from some way up we saw it with the sea shoaling
colours, purple and blue, the purple expressing the rose of the chord
to the eye ( — in the same way as the same colour in a rose fading
expresses the blue of the chord —the converse case: in fact it may
perhaps be generalised that when this happens the modulation in
question is the flat of the next term and not the sharp of the former
one). From the top the lakes egg-blue, blue strongly modulated to
green. —At sunset featherbed sky with a fluffy and jointed rib-cloud
I noticed one ‘flock’ of which I made a drawing was a long time with
little change. —Huddling and precipitation of the fir woods down one
side of the Rossberg following the fall of water like the sheepflock at
Shanklin did.
July 9. Before sunrise looking out of window saw a noble scape of
stars —the Plough all golden falling, Cassiopeia on end with her
bright quains pointing to the right, the graceful bends of Perneus
underneath her, and some great star whether Capella or not I am not
brow of the mountain. Sunrise we saw well the
sure risen over the :
north landscape was blighty but the south, the important one, with
JOURNAL (1868) 171
the Alps, clear lower down all was mist and flue of white cloud, which
;
grew thicker as day went on and like a junket lay scattered on the
lakes. The sun lit up the bright acres of the snows at first with pink but
afterwards clear white the snow of the Bernese Highland remained
:
—
from its distance pinkish all day. ^The mountain ranges, as any series
or body of inanimate like things not often seen, have the air of persons
and of interrupted activity they are multitudinous too, and also they
;
—
be a rose hue suppressed in the white ( purpurea candidior nive^) ?
Alpine cows dun-coloured and very well made. Melodious lines of a
cow’s dewlap.
The stations^ painted all the way down.
Down the Rigi, entering the mist soon, to Waggis, where we
lunched under thick low plane By steamer to Fliielen and then
trees.
to Lucerne again. On the way back rain fell and then a very low
rainbow against the sides of the lake colouring the trees, red, green,
and purple, and the red being prominent it looked like a slice of melon.
The straight quains and planing of the Alps were only too clear.
When the short bubbling crest of a ripple is dropped or slipped
behind, the undulation advancing but not its angular edge, it makes a
little crease in the water and this is just visibly fringed with little tucks.
Hard rain in evening and then fine, when I walked with Mr. Cold-
well to the Three Lindens.^
July 10. Dull; then fine.
it would be easy to become For every cliff and limb and edge and
I
glistening black like the cases of our veins when dry and heated from
without ;
and herbage enthronged with every fingered
others. All the
or fretted leaf. —Firs very
with the swell of the branching on the
tall,
outer side of the slope so that the peaks seem to point inwards to the
mountain peak, like the lines of the Parthenon, and the outline melo-
dious and moving on many focuses. I wore my pagharec^ and—
turned it with harebells below and gentians in two rows above like
—
double pan-pipes. In coming down we lost our way and each had a
dangerous slide down the long wet grass of a steep slope.
Waterfalls not only skeined but silky too one saw it from the inn—
across the meadows at one quain of the rock the water glistened above
:
and took shadow below, and the rock was reddened a little way each
side with the wet, which sets off the silkiness.
Goat-flocks, each goat with its bell.
Ashes here are often pollarded and look different from ours and they
give off their sprays at the outline in marked parallels justifying the
Italian painters.
July 12. how the trees shone in the Briinig
Bright in the morning:
pass ! Dim
over the lake of Brienz in the afternoon and threatening,
and in the night lightning and violent rain.
To mass at the church. It was an odd sight: all the women sat on
one and you saw hundreds of headdresses all alike. The hair is
side
taken back and (apparently) made into one continuous plait with
narrow white linen, which crosses the lock of hair not always the same
JOURNAL (1868) 173
way but zigzag (so that perhaps there must be more than one linen
strip), and the alternation of lock and linen gives the look of rows of
regular teeth. The fastening is by a buckle (Badeker calls it) or plate
of silver generally broadened at the ends or sometimes by a silver
or gold pin, wavy and headed by a blunted diamond-shaped piece
gracefully enamelled. Over the middle of the pin or buckle or just
above it the linen is broadened out and covers the inside of the two
concentric circles which the plaits of hairmake and, below, one of the
plaits looped up in the middle. The rest of the Oberwalden dress I
is
like the wax gutturings* on a candle and nearer, losing solidity, like
rockets when they dissolve and head their way downwards.
When we were in the plain of the valley approaching Brienz lake
saw some small plots or fields of very slender but thick-grown grass,
vertical, dark green, and very rich: it shimmered as if looked at
through glass windows.
In the frets and floral mouldings of the houses, often of much beauty,
there lies all the spring of a national mode.
E.B. says the grasshoppers are like a thousand fairy sewing-
machines.
Idyllic tea-garden at Brienz. —^From there we crossed by row-boat
to the Giessbach.* At night it was illuminated.
July 13. The Giessbach falls like heaps of snow or like lades of
shining rice. The smaller falls in it shew gaily sprigged, fretted, and
curled edges dancing down, like the crispiest endive.
By steamer to Interlaken, whence we walked to Lauterbrunnen up
the valley of the Liitschine all in foam, with a Frenchman, a man of
cultivation and a great mountaineer, as our companion for most of
the way.
Thus in MS.
: .
drops being looped to each other or to the main water by tiny tapering
necks.
Beauty of the sycomores here, native to the soil, soft-horned, and
falling apart like ashes. The cherry-trees too have a graceful growth,
falling over and so shewing the wood of the branches uppermost and
with the droop and outward pointing of the curling leaves making
pinions which trail to the ground.
July 17. Up the Faulhorn* with Mr. Wilson, a young American.
178 JOURNAL (1868)
—
cindcry lily-white stones. In or near one of these openings the guide
cries out ‘Voulez-vous une Alp-rose?’ and up he springs the side of the
hill and brings us each bunches of flowers down.
In one place over a smooth table of rock came slipping down a
blade of water looking like and as evenly crisped as fruitnets let drop
and falling slack.
We saw Handeck waterfall. It is in fact the meeting of two waters,
the right the sallow and jade-coloured, the left a smaller stream
Aar
of clear lilac foam. It is the greatest fall we have seen. The lower half
is hidden in spray. I watched the great bushes of foam-water, the
irregular black rubies, carelessly thrown aside and lying in jutty bends,
—
with a black clasp of the same stone at the top for those were the
biggest blocks, squared, and built up, as it happened, in lessening
stories, and the cascade enclosed them on the right and left hand with
its foam or once more like the skin of a white snake square-pied with
;
black.
July 20. Fine.
Walked down to the Rhone glacier. It has three stages— first a
smoothly-moulded bed in a pan or theatre of thorny peaks, swells of
ice rising through the snow-sheet and the snow itself tossing and fretting
into the sides of the rock walls in spray-like points
this is the first stage
:
was a ruck of horned waves steep and narrow in the gut now in the :
ing the plain, shaped like the fan-fin of a dolphin or a great bivalve
shell turned on its face, the flutings in either case being suggested by
the crevasses and the ribs by the risings between them, these being
swerved and inscaped strictly to the motion of the mass. Or you may
compare the three stages to the heel, instep, and ball or toes of a foot.
— ^The second stage looked at from nearer appeared like a box of
plaster of Paris or starch or toothpowder, a little moist, tilted up and
then struck and jarred so that the powder broke and tumbled in
shapes and rifts.
We went into the grotto and also the vault from which the Rhone
—
flows. It looked like a blue tent and as you went further in changed to
lilac. As you come out the daylight glazes the groins with gleaming
rosecolour. The ice inside has a branchy wire texture. The man
shewed us the odd way in which a little piece of ice will stick against
—
the walls as if drawn by a magnet.
Standing on the glacier saw the prismatic colours in the clouds, and
worth saying what sort of clouds it was fine shapeless skins of fretted
:
make, full of eyebrows or like linings of curled leaves which one finds
in shelved corners of a wood.
I had a trudge over the glacier and a tumble over the side moraine,
which was one landslip of limestone. It was neighboured however
by hot sweet smells and —
many flowers small crimson pinks, the
brown tulip-like flower* we have seen so often, another which we first
saw yesterday like Solomon’s seaP but rather coarser with a spike of
greenish veiny-leaved blossom, etc.
At the table d^hdte of the inn there I first saw that repulsive type of
French face. It is hard to seize what The
outline is oval but cut
it is.
tending the head large the skin fair white and scarlet colour.
; ;
—
We drove down the Rhone valley to Visp and soon entered a
Catholic canton. The churches here have those onion steeples nearly
all, the onion being in some cases newly covered with bright tin or
and skirting the Zermatt valley are concave, cusped they run like ;
—
waves in the wind, ricked and sharply inscaped ^first on the left and
furthest the Dent Blanche next in two crests which gracefully accent
;
a shell head the Gabelhorn ; then the Rothhorn, a rickety crest pitch-
ing over, acutely leaved or notched ; then the Weisshom, of which the
lines are the ideal inflexions of a mountain-peak after that, across the
;
itself, the upward-looking faces taking shade, the vertical light, like
;
Weisshorn ridge.
Note that a slender race of fine flue cloud inscaped in continuous
eyebrow curves hitched on the Weisshorn peak as it passed this shews :
the height of this kind of cloud, from its want of shadow etc not other-
wise discoverable.
July 25. But too bright.
Up at two to ascend the Breithorn^. Stars twiring^ brilliantly. Taurus
up, a pale light stressily edging the eastern skyline, and lightning
mingled with the dawn. In the twilight we tumbled over the moraine
and glacier until the sunrise brightly fleshed the snow of the Breithorn
before us and then the colour changing through metallic shades of
yellow recovered to white.
Wewere accompanied by a young Mr. Pease of Darlington, his
guide Gasser, and ours Wclchen.
From the summit the view on the Italian side was broken by endless
ranges of part-vertical dancing cloud, the highest and furthest flaked
or foiled like fungus and coloured pink. But, as the Interlaken French-
man said, the mountain summits are not the places for mountain
views, the things do not look high when you are as high as they are
:
besides Monte Rosa, the Lyskamm, etc did not make themselves shape
;
as weU went then the cold feet, the spectacles, the talk, and the
as size :
lunching came in. Even with one companion ecstasy is almost ban-
ished you want to be alone and to feel that, and leisure all pressure
:
—
taken oif.
From the chalet on the Col St. Theodule an Italian guide took us
over the glacier and down to Breil. So we entered Italy. At Breil E.B.
was sick. Tyndal’ we found there preparing to climb the Matterhorn
he very kindly saw E.B. and prescribed a treatment.
The valley is beautiful. The mountains bounding it give one more
the impression of height than I have seen in any other valley. I was —
noticing on each side of a buttress of rock two fan-shaped slant tables
of green, flush with one another and laced over with a plant or root-
work of zigzag brooks ravelled out and shining.
July 26. Sunday. There was no church nearer than Valtournanches,
but there was to be mass said in a little chapel for the guides going up
with Tyndal at two o’clock in the morning and so I got up for this,
my burnt face in a dreadful state and running. We went down with
lanterns. It w'as an odd scene; two of the guides or porters served the ;
saw very little of it. It was facing the sun the whole way and very
hot. Aosta is a pleasant place beautifully situated.
;;
Day fine.
July 28. First fine then on the road a thunderstorm with hard rain,
;
the thunder musical and like gongs and rolling in great floors of sound
this cleared but at St. Remy was rain and thunderstorm again when ;
pierced with pair-lights first, higher with a triplet. The spire, which is
not acute, has a coronet part-way up pierced with small lights. The
arches were round. Badeker calls it ‘a remarkable and very ancient
tower like that of St. Pierre’, of which the date is loio. This we had
passed without noticing. So far as I understand, the prevalence of
these deep round-headed triplets of windows in the church towers is
due to the perpetuation of this type after its common extinction and
to imitation in fact down to this time they appear both in Switzer-
:
briglit metal.
After lunching at Orsieres we walked down the valley of the Dranse
to Martigny.
We had left the Hospice in dropping cloud ;
in the valley it was fine
at Orsieresit rained but was clear when we clouded started ;
then it
two arches near the door we came in by were very beautiful and
elaborate and wanted long study, which I could not give there was ;
ghost had the mound opened and a beautiful suit of golden Roman-
British armour was found in it. She quotes it to shew the persistency
of tradition.
Aug. 20. Dull, with wet.
To Garrett’s, where I met Baillie, and as he is staying at Hampstead
we went home together.
:
—
some beautiful conventionalised leafage behind palmate leaves dis-
posed along an equally-waved stem a third Lord Surrey with a lady
;
—
(who holds a red pear) small. Portraits of Keats and Shelley. But I
was turned out before I had seen all.
Aug. 22. Violent gale, with showers.
Aug. 23. Fine, cold, clear, and windy.
—
Aug. 24. Fresh and mostly fine ^baggy cobweb clouds sometimes ,
isvery green and set with good trees. The abbey is, I suppose, the least
injured in England. It stands high, with a great massive Norman
tower now empoverished in look by brown plaster, in which the tym-
—
pana of the highest window-arches otherwise flush and blind: the
—
tympana I mean are pierced oddly with three-cornered pigeon-
holes. The nave is very long, the roof, Third-Pointed, very low, in-
visible in fact, except at the end. The nave divides itself accidentally
at the points where the work of conversion of style began or ended
thus, on the S. side all the Norman work is converted —
in the clear-
story the western part to First, the eastern to Second Pointed; the
triforium I forget; the aisle windows are wide and well traceried but
small below these are the blind traceried arches of the inner side of
;
the cloisters (not now standing)—these last and some windows in the
antechapel to the east between the church and the lady-chapel are
beautiful and in the purest style —on the N. side the clearstory is in the
western part converted to First Pointed, the rest remains Norman the ;
rest I forget. None of this side has any Middle Pointed. The outside on
the whole is plain and, where Norman, barbarous. The great number
of the clearstory windows gives it character and beauty. Inside the
whitewash has been cleared and the carving is fresh to a degree,
the stone, which comes from not far off, being when covered from the
weather durable though soft. The conversion is very perceptible in-
side. In the depth of the round arches has been laid bare some simple
and broad diaper painting (chequers, stripes, etc) and on piers on the
western side of the pillars (above altars now gonoJrom their places)
frescos of the crucifixion —the same subject differently treated in each
— and, below, sometimes, other subjects. Note that one of the crosses
was a tree, as at Godshill, Isle of Wight. The deling with its old paint-
ing is complete from end to end that of the choir was Middle Pointed
;
and the effect of the slant stripes on the ribs of the groining, especially
where they met, was noticeable. The Third-Pointed altar-screen,
JOURNAL (1868) 187
especially behind, and the choir screen of the same character were
beautiful in design and proportion. So also are two chantries, one on
the N. side of the high altar, the other Duke Humphrey’s on the S.
behind. The abbot’s passage so called is remarkable for the curious
astragalus moulding of the interlaced wall-tracery. There is a little
Saxon work, like rude turning in carpentry, merely barbarous. The
building is mostly of tiles taken from the Roman walls of Verulam. It
is perhaps worth noticing that the little curled ends of some corbels
Bridges came up and Rover^ bit him. After this we went down to
town together and talked in Hyde Park, And in Oxford Street^ saw
an Irish lad and woman and he had the national light tail coat, knee-
breeches, hat, and shillelagh.
Aug. 26. Dull.
Aug. 27. Fine.
Aug. 28. Dull.
Aug, 29. Fine, I think.
To sec Aunt Kate.^ We went over the building of Mr. West’s^ church,
by Street.^ Then to Croydon.
Aug. 30. Grey till past four then fine.
;
were huddled and shaking open as they passed outwards they behaved
as the drops would do (or a handful of shot) in reaching the brow of a
rising and running over.
M. David’s erement, leprosy instructive.
Aug. 31. Fine; clouds delicately crisped.
Home. Saw Addis on the way and was introduced to Moncrieff
Smith^ (they call him F. Dominic).
Sept. I. Fine.
To Ely.^ Noticed on the way that the E. counties trees are upright
in character, not squat. The country more burnt than at Hampstead.
In the cathedral the great Norman tower is fine in effect otherwise
;
the Norman work (transitional) is not striking but some of the foliate
trailing on the capitals etc remains and has been repainted it is in
:
fact the loss of this correction that madees the style heavy and bar-
barous. The First Pointed work has not much that is very good unless
the large and taper corbels in the choir, some of them ribbed with long
slant stems alternately leaved wound across them. The Flowing work
is the middle interest of the building. In this the lantern and three bays
that window with the border of tracery enclosing a smaller arch), but
I did not see it inside.
Sept. 2. Fine; at Hampstead dim.
Home. I had to start too early to see the cathedral again. The
galilee is full of good detail, the door seeming beautiful especially two
mouldings of the arch, looking like the bending down of leafy rods, but
scaffolding broke it up and hid it.
Sept. 3. Fine sunlight dim.
;
evening when I had said goodbye at home I found my train did not
go for three quarters of an hour, so I walked to Victoria Road in the
meantime and Aunt Annie came back with me to the train.’ ^Then —
to the Novitiate, Roehampton.^
Sept. 8. Dull, thick, and with East wind.
Sept. 9. Fine.
Sept. 10. Fine but dim, as several days about this time.
Sept. 1 1 . And so this day.
Sept. 12. Dull.
Sept. 13. Fine, I think.
Sept. 14. Fine.
Sept. 15. Blighty. —
One of these days there was a solar halo.
Remember the solar halo as an illustration.
The cedars at the bottom have their flakes so modulated from the
horizontal and so taking one another up
along the row that they
all
when you look across it
look like the swaling or give of water in a river
and moonlight, say, picks out the different faces with light and dark.
Sept. 16. Blighty, turning to fine.
The Long Retreat^ began.
Sept. 1 7. Fine. —
Chestnuts as bright as coals or spots of vermilion.
Sept. 18. Thunderstorm and rain but not all day.
Henceforth I keep no regular weather-journal but only notes.
Sept. 27. The (clouded) sky at dawn was, I noticed, quite purple.
There followed a thunderstorm I saw one flash of lightning rose-
:
weather, more and more remarkably mild, with sun, gales, and much
rain. Feb. 5 and 6 were almost hot. Daffodils have been in bloom for
some days. A weeping-willow here is all green. The elms have long
been in red bloom and yesterday (the nth) I saw small leaves on the
brushwood at their roots. Some primroses out. But a penance which I
was doing from Jan. 25 to July 25 prevented my seeing much that
half-year.
Feb. 22. The first snow of the year, but not lying. Hitherto the
weather has been as before.
Br. Goupe^ calls a basket a whiskeL —
One day when we were gather-
ing stones and potsherds from the meadow Br. Wells^ said we were not
to do it at random but ‘in braids’.
March 14. About this time the weather raw and easterly, and some
snow but scarcely whitening the ground. Since then (24th) dark and
wet but milder.
March 27. Sun between snowstorms. In the afternoon the snow
whitened the trees and grass but not the roads.
April mild but dark till the loth, which was misty and sultry, the
mist rolling in here and there by fits and quite blotting out that part
of the landscape. The nth was a The
12 th was hot and
little lighter.
fine, so were the 13th and 14th, both beginning, especially the 14th,
with fog or blight. On the 13th the cuckoo. Today (14th) lower parts
of the ebns out and the chestnut fans rising into shape.
Yesterday heard of Mrs. Plow’s death.
April 30.^ Br. Wm. Kerr® told me some days ago that in Australia(?)
the English trees introduced had driven out the natives, mostly diffe-
rent kinds of gum-trees, and that he had seen a park planted with
them, which were dying or dead. In particular our furze, which thrives
wonderfully and grows into great hedges, has driven the native
vegetation before it.
—
A cold May, and in fact no such hot weather as we had in April till
the beginning ofJune and the haymaking, and then again cold winds.
Br. Wells calls a grindstone a grindlestone.
To
lead north-country for to carry (a field of hay etc). Geet north-
country preterite of get ‘he geet agate agoing’.
:
Trees sold ‘top and lop’ Br. Rickaby* told me and suggests top is
:
the higher, outer, wood good for firing only, lop the stem
and lighter
and bigger boughs when the rest has been lopped off used for timber.
Br. Wells calls white bryony^ Dead Creepers, because it kills what
it entwines.
Fr. Gasano's^ pronunciation of Latin instructive. (He is a Sicilian
but has spent many years in Spain.) Quod he calls c"od and quae hora
—
becomes almost c'ora the u disappearing in a slight apostrophe;
Deus sounds like da~us or do-us^ the e being kept quite open ; meis is
—
almost a diphthong like mace ; m in omnis and, if I am not mistaken,
final ms less strongly he gives the metallic nasal sound and the first
syllable of sanctus he calls as if it were French. Feb. 4, ’70. Fr. —
Goldie"* gives long e like short e merely lengthened or even opener
(the broad vowel between broad a and our closed a, the substitute for
e, i, or u followed by r). Fr. Morris® gives long u very full {Luca) ;
he
emphasises the semi-consonant and the vowel before it where two
vowels meet Pio becomes Pi-jo and tuam tu-vam (that is peeyo and
too‘Wam) — but in tuum the vowel simply repeated. This morning I
is
noticed Fr. Sangalli saying mass give the ms very slightly or bluntly.
The sunset June 20 was wine-coloured, with pencillings of purple,
and next day there was rain.
June 27. The weather turned warm again two or three days ago
and today is wanner still. Before that there had been cold, rain, and
gloom.
Br. Sidgreaves^ has heard the high ridges of a field called folds and
the hollow between the drip,
June 28. The cuckoo has changed his tune the two notes can scarcely
:
stairs bedroom —
long skeins of meshy grey cloud a little ruddled
:
underneath, not quite level but aslant, rising from left to right, and
down on the left one more solid balk or bolt than the rest with a high-
blown crest of flix or fleece above it.
About the same time a fine sunset, which, looked at also from the
upstairs windows, cut out the yews all down the approach to the
house in bright flat pieces like wings in a theatre (as once before I
noticed at sunrise from Magdalen tower), each shaped by its own
shadow falling on the yew-tree next behind it, since they
sharp>-cut
run E. and W. Westward under the sun the heights and groves in
Eichmond Park looked like dusty velvet being all flushed into a piece
by the thick-hoary golden light which slanted towards me over them.
Also that autumn my eye was suddenly caught by the scaping of
the leaves that grow in allies and avenues I noticed it first in an elm
:
and then in limes. They fall from the two sides of the branch or spray
in two marked planes which meet at a right angle or more. This
comes from the endeavour to catch the light on either side, which falls
left and right but not all round. Thus each branch is thatched with a
double blade or eave of leaves which run up to a coping like the roof-
crest all along its stem, and seen from some places these lie across one
another all in chequers and X’s.
I was at Kew Gardens somewhere about that time. I have these
notes :
—
the leaves of the Victoria region are on the under side deeply
groined by red bladed ribs and these again fretted across; in the —
same house the nymphoea scutifolia^ lying on the water like a Maltese
cross and the Egyptian sacred bean,^ the leaves dimpled in the middle
and beautifully wimpled at the edge, the flower a water lily with the
petals flagging and falling apart, edged with purplish red, the seed-
vessels truncated urns; — several kinds of hibiscus^ one with a most
vivid scarlet-carnation flower.
JOURNAL (1869) *93
and looped and waved all in waterings what more I have forgotten.
:
Nov. 17 there was a very damp fog, and the trees being drenched
with wet a sharp frost which followed in the night candied them with
ice. Before the sun, which melted the ice and dried the trees altogether,
had struck it I looked at the cedar on the left of the portico and found
every needle edged with a blade of ice made of fine horizontal bars
or spars all pointing one way, N. and S. (if I am not mistaken, all on
the S. side of the needles). There was also an
edging of frost on the clematis up the railings
and, what is very striking, the little bars of
which the blades or pieces of frost were made
up though they lay all along the hairy threads
with which the seed-vessels of the clematis are
set did not turn with their turnings but lay all
in parallels N. and S.
Nov. 20 —Two large planets, the one an even-
ing star, the other distant today from itas in the
diagram, both nearly of an altitude and of one
size — such counterparts that each seems the re-
flection of the other in opposite bays of the sky^
and not two distinct things.
—
Dec. 23 ^Yesterday morning I was dreaming I was with George
Consciousness of Simeox^ and was considering how to get away in time
dreaming to ring the bells here which as porter I had to ring (I
was made porter on the 1 2th of the month, I think, and had the ofiice
for a little more than two months). I knew that I was dreaming and
made this odd dilemma in my dream: either I am not really with
Simcox and then it does not matter what I do, or if I am, waking will
—
carry me off without my needing to do anything and with this I was
satisfied.
Another day in the evening after Litanies as Father Rector was
giving the points for meditation I shut my
eyes, being very tired, and
without ceasing to hear him began to dream. The dream-images
seemed to rise and overlie those which belonged to what he was saying
—
and I saw one of the Apostles he was talking about the Apostles as —
if pressed against by a piece of wood about half a yard long and a
few inches across, like a long box with two of the long sides cut off.
Lven then I could not understand what the piece of wood did en-
cumbering the apostle. Now this piece of wood I had often seen in an
B 6028 o
—
jg^
JOURNAL (l86g)
outhouse and being that week ‘A Secretis’' I
had seen it longer to-
gcther and had been that day wondering what it was; in reality it is
used to hold a Jitde heap of cinders against the waJJ which keep from
the frost a piece of earthenware pipe which there comes out and goes
in again making a projection in the wall. It is just the things which
produce dead impressions, which the mind, either because you cannot
make them out or because they were perceived across other more
engrossing thoughts, has made nothing of and brought into no scaping,
that force themselves up in this way afterwards. —
It seems true what
Ed. Bond said, that you can trace your dreams to something or other
in your waking life, especially of things that have been lately —
I wouldj
not say this universally however. But the connection may be capricious,
almost punning I remember in one case to have detected a real pun
;
and those seen as these are ‘between our eyelids and our eyes’
though this is not all, for we also sec the colours, brothy motes and
figures, and at all events the positive darkness, made by the shut eyelids
by the ordinary use of the function of sight, but these images are
brought upon that dark field, as I imagine, by a reverse action of the
visual nerves (the same will hold of the sounds, sensations of touch,
etc of dreams) —orby other nerves, but it seems reasonable to suppose
—
impressions of sight belong to the organ of sight and once lodged
there are stalled by the mind like other images only you cannot make
:
them at will when awake, for the veiy effort and advertence would be
destructive to them, since the eye in its sane waking office kens only
impressions brought from without, that is to say either from beyond
the body or from the body itself produced upon the dark field of the
eyelids. Nevertheless I have seen in favourable moments the images
brought from within lying there like others if I am not mistaken they
:
are coarser and simpler and something like the spectra made by bright
things looked hard at. I can therefore believewhat Chandler told E.B.,
that at waking he could see — which is a step beyond seeing them on
the field of the eyelids —the images of his dream upon the wall of his
room.
It is not in reality harder for the mind to have ken at the same time
of what the eye sees and also of the belonging images of our thoughts
without ever or almost ever confounding them than it is for it to
multiply the pictures brought by the two eyes into one without ever
or almost ever separating them (March 23, ’70).
One day towards the end of that year, a holiday on which I went
JOURNAL (1869-70) *95
ibis way a knife may pierce the flesh which it had happened only to
—
greyish) it came to turret-like clusters or like broken shafts of basalt. In
the Park in the afternoon the wind was driving little clouds of snow-dust
1
which caught the sun as they rose and delightfully took the eyes:
flying up the slopes they looked like breaks of sunlight fallen through
ravelled cloud upon the hills and again like deep flossy velvet blown
to the root by breath which passed all along. Nearer at hand along the
road it was gliding over the ground in white wisps that between
trailing and flying shifted and wimpled like so many silvery worms to
and from one another.
The squirrel was about in our trees all the winter. For instance
about Jan. 2 I often saw it.
Feb. 12
—^The slate slabs of the urinals even are frosted in graceful
sprays. [Dec. 31, 1870 . have noticed it here also at the seminary; it
earth opened and swallowed them, and then the water sprang up at
the spot perhaps the bull is from some confusion in my account.
:
His account, given since, is that the plough-horses were taken there to
drink, were swallowed up, and the spring much greater since its :
give the size or depth]. There are in it two broad stones, in one of
which is the hoof-mark of one of the horses, and you may put your
arm to the shoulder down it and feel no bottom.
He also knew a crazy woman who had dealing with ‘the good
people’. She would go out and bring back her apron full of straws,
which appears to have had something to do with them. Her brother
to stop her gave her a beating and the poor thing being sore with the
blow^ the fairies missed her at the accustomed time. But they paid the
brother for it, for they pulled him out of bed and gave him such a
threshing he could not go out for a week.
Br. Byrne^ :
—
Hockey and football are much played in Ireland and
the great day is Shrove Tuesday, on which the ‘merits’ are awarded.
A player v/ho had greatly distinguished himself at football was that
day going in a lonely field a ball came rolling to his feet
home when
he kicked was kicked back, and soon he found himself playing
it, it
the game with a fieldfull of fairies and in a place which was strange to
him. The fairies would not let him go but they did their best to amuse
they danced and wrestled before him so that he should never
yant for entertainment, but they could not get him to eat, for know-
ing that if he eat what they gave him they would have a claim upon
— — — — '
a man who had gone to cut a stick in one and come back with his
finger hanging off. A man was one day ploughing in a field by one of
these forths and as he came up the furrow he heard a clatter of plates
and knives and forks by which he guessed that the fairies were at
dinner. This was enough to make him hungry and he wished for some
of that dinner that they were eating. They heard him and as the plough
came by again he saw a plate with knife and fork and a good dinner
ready laid on the headland at the very spot where he had uttered the
wish. But when he saw it he repented, for he had heard that if you
eat what the fairies give you you will belong to them for good and he
would not touch the food. But in an instant before he turned away one
of his eyes was thrust out and lay on the plate before him and he was a
one-eyed man for life because he had shuffled in dealing with the fairies.
Br. Slattery knew of a woman who had buried three children, one
unbaptised, at whose wake three lights or ‘candles’ were seen in the
yard (the grave-yard?), one weaker than the two others: these were
her children’s souls come to accompany hers. These ‘candles’ seem to
be the recognised form of apparition for departed souls.
Later Br. Yates* gave me the following Irish expressions—-7 wouldnH
Irish p^t it past you or 1 wouldn't doubt you —
It is just what I should
phrases expect of you That you mightn't^ expression of disapproval
Mend you or Sorrow mend you or 0 then the sorrow nwndyou — Serves you
right Soak it almost = Lump it I haven't got it = I don’t know it—
Crackawly = simpleton Johnny Magoreys /
seeds of the hip — (from
i
— ::
Br. Considine’) Boyo\ Lodo* = Boy and a half etc From Bn Wood
li puis me to th pin of my collar it is all I can do to bear —As weak as a
bee's knee
Spring began in the first week of April^
A day or two before May 14 the burnished or embossed forehead of
sky over the sundown of beautiful
; ‘clear’
Perhaps^ the zodiacal light
May 14 Wych-elms not out till today. ^The chestnuts down by St. —
Joseph’s were a beautiful sight each spike had its own pitch, yet each
:
followed in its place in the sweep with a deeper and deeper stoop.
When the wind tossed them they plunged and crossed one another
without losing their inscape. (Observe that motion multiplies inscape
only when inscape is discovered, otherwise it disfigures)
—
May 18 Great brilliancy and projection: the eye seemed to fall
perpendicular from level to level along our trees, the nearer and further
Park ; all things hitting the sense with double but direct instrcss
Devotion to our Lady not only in particular but under particular
attributes —
There is this in Spain to our Lady of Mt. Carmel. Br,
Gordon'* heard a man blaspheming in the street (I think in Seville)
when he came to her name he said ‘Against her I have nothing to say
she is not like the rest she knows what she is about’
;
think, almost dz =
This was later. One day when the bluebells were in bloom I wrote
the following. I do not think I have ever seen anything more beautiful
than the bluebell I have been looking at. I know the beauty of our
Lord by it. It[s inscape]^ is [mixed of] strength and grace, like an ash
[tree]. The head is strongly drawn over [backwards] and arched down
like a cutwater [drawing itself back from the line of the keel]. The lines
of the bells strike and overlie this, rayed but not symmetrically, some
lie parallel. They look steely against [the] paper, the shades lying
between the bells and behind the cockled petal-ends and nursing up
the precision of their distinctness, the petal-ends themselves being
delicately li^. Then there is the straightness of the trumpets in the bells
softened by the slight entasis and [by] the square splay of the mouth.
One bell, the lowest, some carried on a longer
way detached and
footstalk, touched out with theof the petals an oval / not like the
tips
rest in a plane perpendicular of the axis of the bell but a
little atilt, and so with [the] square-in-rounding turns of
same that was seen at Rome (shortly after its seizure by the Italian
government) and taken as a sign of God’s anger. It gathered a little
—
below the zenith, to the S.E. I think a knot or crown, not a true
circle, of dull blood-coloured horns and dropped long red beams down
the sky on every side, each impaling its lot of stars. An hour or so
later its colour was gone but there was still a pale crown in the same
place: the skies were then clear and ashy and fresh with stars and
there were flashes of or like sheet-lightning. The day had been very
bright and clear, distances smart, herds of towering pillow clouds, one
great stack in particular over Pendle was knoppled all over in fine
snowy tufts and pencilled with bloom-shadow of the greatest delicacy.
In the sunset all was big and there was a world of swollen cloud
holding the yellow-rose light like a lamp while a few sad milky blue
slips passed below it. At night violent hailstorms and hail again next
day, and a solar halo. Worth noticing too perhaps the water-runs
were then mulled and less beautiful than usual
Dec. 1 9 or thereabouts a very fine sunrise the higher cloud was
:
same colour and so on, down to a wavy wisp or rather seam above
the rest — and this made by the sun shining from the West instead of
the East. It was not so brilliant though
The winter was long and hard. I made many observations on
freezing. For instance the crystals in mud. —
Hailstones are shaped
like the cut of diamonds called brilliants. —
I found one morning the
gum on wood. Also the smaller crumbs and clods were lifted fairly
up from the ground on upright ice-pillars, whether they had dropped
these from themselves or drawn them from the soil it was like a little
:
—
Stonehenge Looking down into the thick ice of our pond I found the
imprisoned air-bubbles nothing at random but starting from centres
and in particular one most beautifully regular white brush of them,
— :
on the surface. They remained and in the end the ice broke up in just
these pieces
of manslaughter
Jan. 10, ’70
— Noir
^Victor by Prince Pierre Bonaparte^
killed
to 2 yrs. imprisonment
The same month a negro first sat in Congress (for Mississippi),
Virginia was readmitted to the Union, and the Duke of Richmond
became Conservative leader in the House of Lords
In March Montalembert must have died [On the i5th]5
April 1
1
—Capture of the English ‘Lords’^ by the Greek Brigands.
Four of them (Herbert, Vyner, Lloyd, and the Count de Boyl) were
murdered on the 23
April 25’' —Maclise^ died
May 21 —Sir John Simeon’ died
In May three successes of the American yacht Sappho^^
June I Dr. Grant died"
Dickens must have died in June (on the 9th)
June 25—Qu. Isabella resigns favour of her son the Prince of
in
Asturias
July 15—War declared between France and But the Arch- Prussia.
bishop says the Definition of the Infallibility was on the i8th and the
declaration of war next day
July 22 — ^Hon. Francis Charteris" Lord Elcho’s son killed by his
own pistol
—
Aug. 16 Gravelotte
—
Aug. 18 ^Vionville
—
Aug. 19 Minister of Foreign Affairs (Viconti-Venosta?) said to
the house ‘The obligation of not attacking the frontiers of the Papal
states and of not allowing them to be attacked remains in force. And,
Gentlemen, if this obligation were not confirmed by treaty, it would
come under the obligations provided in the common law of nations
and in the political relations of states’
—
Aug. 20 Camp of Chalons abandoned
—
Aug. 30 French defeated at Carignan and Beaumont. Bazaine —
—
tries to get out of Metz. Burning of Bazeilles
Sept. 2 — Surrender of Sedan
Sept. 4 — Emperor deposed. Flight of Empress
Sept. 7 —^The foundered*
Captain
Sept. 9—Laon surrenders. The explosion
Sept. 18 —Government and foreign ambassadors established at
Tours
Sept. 1
9 — completely invested
Paris
Sept. 20 —Storming of Porta Pia andcapture of Rome. Herr —
Jacoby imprisoned for suggesting that French provinces should not be
annexed against the wishes of the people
Sept. 23 — Toul surrenders
Oct. 7 — —
Gambetta’s Balloon escape. Roman plebiscite
Oct. 1 1— Orleans taken
Oct. 16 — Garibaldi appointed to the Vosges
—
Oct. 24 In Whitaker’s Almanack, from which most of these notes
are, I find this put down for the day of the great Aurora I have it on
:
the 25th^
Oct. 26 —
Metz surrenders with 173,000 men
— —
Nov. 9, 10 ^Aurelles de Paladine’s victory Orleans retaken.
Here Whitaker’s Almanack ends. For further notes later
Mgr. Eyre and Mr. Healy of Isleworth died during the winter, Mr.
Maclauren also, Br. Bceuve on March 3 the feast of the Lance and
Nails, De Morgan^ died in March
but the air breathing it aside entangles it with itself. The films seems
to rise not quite simultaneously but to peel off as if you were tearing
cloth then giving an end forward like the corner of a handkerchief
;
and beginning to coil it makes a long wavy hose you may sometimes
look down, as a ribbon or a carpenter’s shaving may be made to do.
Higher running into frets and silvering in the sun with the endless
coiling, the soft bound of the general motion and yet the side lurches
sliding into some particular pitch it makes a baffling and charming
sight.— Clouds however solid they may look far off arc I think wholly
made of film in the sheet or in the tuft. The bright woolpacks that pelt
before a gale in a clear sky are in the tuft and you can see the wind
unravelling and rending them finer than any sponge till within one
easy reach overhead they are morselled to nothing and consumed it —
depends of course on their size. Possibly each tuft in forepitch or in
origin is quained and a crystal. Rarer and wilder packs have some-
times film in the sheet, which may be caught as it turns on the edge of
the cloud like an outlying eyebrow. The one
in which I saw this was in a north-east wind,
solid but not crisp, white like the white of
egg, and bloated-looking
What you look hard at seems to look hard at you, hence the true
and the false instress of nature. One day early in March when long
streamers were rising from over Kemble End one large flake loop-
shaped, not a streamer but belonging to the string, moving too slowly
to be seen, seemed to cap and fill the zenith with a white shire of
cloud. I looked long up at it till the tall height and the beauty of the
scaping —regularly curled knots springing if I remember from fine
changed beautiful changes, growing more into ribs and one stretch of
:
running into branching like coral. Unless you refresh the mind from
time to time you cannot always remember or believe how deep the
inscape in things is
the whole heaven but spanning the skyline with a slow entasis which
left a strip of cold porcelain blue. The long ribs or girders were as
rollers/ across the wind, not in it, but across them there lay fine grass-
ends, sided off down the perspective, as if locks of vapour blown free
from the main ribs down the wind. Next day and next snow. Then in
walking I saw the water-runs in the sand of unusual delicacy and the
broken blots of snow in the dead bents of the hedge-banks I could find
a square scaping in which helped the eye over another hitherto dis-
ordered field of things. (And if you look well at big pack-clouds over-
head you will soon find a strong large quaining and squaring in them
which makes each pack impressive and whole.) Pendle was beautiful
the face of snow on it and the tracks or gullies which streaked and parted
this well shaped out its roundness and boss and marked the slow tune
of its long shoulder. One time it lay above a near hill of green field
which, with the lands in it lined and plated by snow, was striped like
a zebra this Pendle repeated finer and dimmer
:
—
March 1 7 In the morning clouds chalky and milk-coloured, with
remarkable oyster-shell moulding. (From a rough pencil sketch)
events there is a new world of inscape. The male ashes are very boldly
jotted with the heads of the bloom which tuft the outer ends of the
206 JOURNAL (1871)
branches. The staff of each of these branches is closely knotted with
the places where buds are or have been, so that it is something like a
finger which has been tied up with string and keeps the marks. They
are in knops of a pair, one on each side, and the knops are set alter-
nately, at crosses with the knops above and the knops below, the bud
of course a short smoke-black pointed nail-head or beak pieced of
is
four lids or nippers. Below it, like the hollow below the eye or the
piece between the knuckle and the root of the nail, is a half-moon-
shaped sill as if once chipped from the wood and this gives the twig its
quaining in the outline. When the bud breaks at first it shews a heap
of fruity purplish anthers looking something like unripe elder-berrie$i
but these push open into richly-branched tree-pieces coloured bxxft
and brown, shaking out loads of pollen, and drawing the tuft as a \
—
whole into peaked quains mainly four, I think, two bigger and two
smaller
The bushes in the woods and hedgerows are spanned over and
twisted upon by the woody cords of the honeysuckle the cloves of leaf :
these bear are some purple, some grave green. But the young green of
the briars is gay and neat and smooth as if cut in ivory. One bay or —
hollow of Hodder Wood is curled all over with bright green garlic
The sy comores are quite the earliest trees out some have been fully :
out some days (April 15). The behaviour of the opening clusters is
very beautiful and when fully opened not the single leaves but the
whole tuft is strongly templed like the belly of a drum or bell
The half-opened wood-sorrel leaves, the centre or spring of the
leaflets rising foremost and the leaflets dropping back like ears leaving
straight-chipped clefts between them, look like some green lettering
and cut as sharp as dice
The white violets* are broader and smell the blue, scentless and ;
finer made, have a sharper whelking and a more winged recoil in the
leaves
Take a few primroses in a glass and the instress of brilliancy, sort —
of starriness : I —
have not the right word so simple a flower gives is
remarkable. It is, I think, due to the strong swell given by the deeper
yellow middle
‘The young lambs bound As to the tabour’s sound’.
They toss and toss : it is as if it were the earth that flung them, not
themselves. It is the pitch of graceful agility when weT;hink that. —April
16 —Sometimes they a little space on the hind legs and the fore-
rest
feet drop curling in on the breast, not so liquidly as we see it in the
limbs of foals though
Bright afternoon; clear distances; Pendle dappled with tufted
shadow west wind
;
interesting clouding, flat and lying in the warp
;
of the heaven but the pieces with rounded outline and dolphin-backs
JOURNAL (1871) ao7
shewing in places and all was at odds and at Z’s, one piece with
another. Later beautifully delicate crisping. Later rippling as in the
drawing^
April 21 —^We have had other such afternoons, one today—the sky
a beautiful grained blue, silky lingering clouds in flat-bottomed
loaves, others a little browner in ropes or in burly-shouldered ridges
swanny and lustrous, more in the Zenith stray packs of a sort of violet
paleness. White-rose cloud formed fast, not in the same density some —
caked and swimming in a wan whiteness, the rest soaked with the blue
and like the leaf of a flower held against the light and diapered out by
the worm or veining of deeper blue between rosette and rosette.
Later/ moulding, which brought rain in perspective it was vaulted
:
in very regular ribs with fretting between: but these are not ribs;
—
they are a ‘wracking’ install made of these two realities the frets,
which are scarves of rotten cloud bellying upwards and drooping at
their ends and shaded darkest at the brow or tropic where they
double to the eye, and the whiter field of sky shewing between the :
zenith sky earnest and frowning, lower more light and sweet. High up
again, breathing through woolly coats of cloud or on the quains and
branches of the flying pieces it was the true exchange of crimson,
nearer the earth/ against the sun/ it was turquoise, and in the opposite
south-western bay below the sun it was like clear oil but just as full of
colour, shaken over with slanted flashing ‘travellers’, all in flight,
stepping one behind the other, their edges tossed with bright ravelling,
as if white napkins were thrown up in the sun but not quite at the
same moment so that they were all in a scale down the air falling one
after the other to the ground
—
April 27 Went to see Sauley Abbey (Cistercian) there is little
:
to see
Mesmerised a duck with chalk lines drawn from her beak some-
times level and sometimes forwards on a black table. They explain
that the bird keeping the abiding offscape of the hand grasping her
neck fancies she is still held down and cannot lift her head as long as
she looks at the chalk line, which she associates with the power that
holds her. This duck lifted her head at once when I put it down on the
table without chalk. But this seems inadequate. It is most likely the
fascinating instress of the straight white stroke
April 28 —
I have never taken notice and I believe that I have
never seen such size and such a noble bulk of member in the clouds as
here and this day. The blue was like that blue of vase-glass, the clouds
—
because its knops arc like the squeeze outwards of the packed stuff
between the places where a network of many cords might bite
into it
Found some daffodils^ wild but fading. You see the squareness of
the scaping well when you have several in your hand. The bright
yellow corolla is seeded with very fine spangles (like carnations etc)
which give it a glister and lie on a ribbing which makes it like cloth
of gold
May 6 — First summer-feeling day — not to last long
The banks are ‘versed’ with primroses, partly scattered, partly in
plots and squats, and at a little distance shewing milkwhite or silver^
little spilt till-fulls of silver. I have seen them reflected in green standing
farmyard water
May 9 — ^A simple behaviour of the cloudscape I have not realised
before. Before a N.E. wind great bars or rafters of cloud all the morn-
ing and in a manner all the day marching across the sky in regular
rank and with equal spaces between. They seem prism-shaped, flat-
bottomed and banked up to a ridge their make is like light tufty snow
:
^
in coats
This day and May 1 1 the bluebells in the little wood between the
College and the highroad and in one of the Hurst Green doughs. In
the little wood/ opposite the light/ they stood in blackish spreads or
sheddings like the spots on a snake. The heads are then like thongs
and solemn in grain and grape-colour. But in the dough/ through the
light/ they came in falls of sky-colour washing the brows and slacks of
—
they are lodged and struggle/ with a -shock of wet heads the long ;
stalks rub and click and flatten to a fan on one another like your
fingers themselves would when you passed the palms hard across one
another, making a brittle rub and jostle like the noise of a hurdle
strained by leaning against then there is the faint honey smell and in
;
the mouth the sweet gum when you bite them. But this is easy, it is the
eye they baffle. They give one a fancy of panpipes and of some wind
—
instrument with stops a trombone perhaps. The overhung necks
for growing they are little more than a staff with a simple crook but
in water, where they stiffen, they take stronger turns, in the head like
sheephooks or, when more waved throughout, like the waves riding
through a whip that is being smacked what with these overhung —
necks and what with the crisped ruffled bells dropping mostly on one
side and the gloss these have at their footstalks they have an air of the
knights at chess. Then the knot or ‘knoop’ of buds some shut, some
just gaping, which makes the pencil of the whole spike, should be
noticed the inscape of the flower most finely carried out in the
:
siding of the axes, each striking a greater and greater slant, is finished
in these clustered buds, which for the most part are not straightened
but rise to the end like a tongue and this and their tapering and a little
flattening they have make them look like the heads of snakes
—
May 17 etc I have several times seen the peacock with train
spread lately. It has a very regular warp, like a shell, in which the
bird embays himself, the bulge being inwards below but the hollow
inwards above, cooping him in and only opening tow^ards the brim,
where the feathers are beginning to rive apart. The eyes, which lie
alternately when the train is shut, like scales or gadroons, fall into
irregular rows when it is opened, and then it thins and darkens against
the light, it and satin it has when in the pack but
loses the moistness
takes another/grave and expressive splendour, and the outermost eyes,
detached and singled, give with their corner fringes the suggestion of
that inscape of the flowing cusped trefoil which is often
effective in art.He shivers it when he first rears it and
then again at intervals and when this happens the rest
blurs and the eyes start forward. —
I have thought it looks
likea tray or green basket or fresh-cut willow hurdle set all over with
Paradise fruits cut through —
first through a beard of golden fibre and
then through wet flesh greener than greengages or purpler than
grapes ^
—or say that the knife had caught a tatter or flag of the skin
B 6028 P
aio JOURNAL (1871)
and laid it flat across the flesh —and then within all a sluggish
corner drop of black or purple oil
May 21 — —
Summer weather so I wrote but there was very little
of and we have hitherto (July 5) not had one hot day but much
it
made out the make of it, thus —cross-hatching in fact — see April 2ii
and hollow. Since that day and since this (May 24)
I have noticed this kind of cloud its brindled and hatched scaping
:
and Fr. Olivain with four other of our Fathers. It was at the same
time the burning of the Tuileries and the other public buildings was
carried out
Lancashire
—
‘of all the wind instruments big droom fots me best’.
— Old Wells directing someone how to set a wedge in a tree told him
that if he would put it so and so he would ‘fot it agate a riving’.
The omission of the is I think an extension of the way in which we say
‘Father’, ‘government’ etc they use it when there: is a relative in
order to define. —
^They say/r^ and aboon
Later
—^Talking to James Shaw of Dutton Lee, who told us among
other things that Iwn in Luke Lum means standing water and to sail
as in Sail Wheel is to circle round. This is no tautology, for wheel is
not whirlpool but only means, as I think, the double made in the
water by the return current where at a spread of the stream caused by
the bend or otherwise the set or stem of the river bears on one bank
and sets the slacker water on its outside spinning with its friction and
so working back upstream
—
Later The Horned Violet^ is a pretty thing, gracefully lashed.
Even in withering the flower ran through beautiful inscapes by the
screwing up of the petals into straight little barrels or tubes. It is not
that inscape does not govern the behaviour of things in slack and decay
as one can see even in the pining of the skin in the old and even in a
skeleton but that horror prepossesses the mind, but in this case there
was nothing in itself to shew even whether the flower were shutting
or opening
The ‘pinion’ of the blossom in the comfrey^ is remarkable for the
beauty of the coil and its regular lessening to itscentre. Perhaps
the duller-coloured sorts shew it best
;
of flash but I am not sure that sometimes there were not the two to-
gether from different points of the same cloud or starting from the same
point different ways —one a straight stroke, broad like a stroke with
chalk and liquid, as if the blade of an oar just stripped open a ribbort
scar in smooth water and it caught the light the other narrow and\
;
stunned with purplish shadow. I'he instress of its size came from com-
parison not with what was visible but with the remembrance of other
clouds like the Monte Rosa range from the Corner Grat its burliness
:
forced out everything else and loaded the eyesight. It was in two limbs
fairly level above and below but not equal in breadth as 2 to 3 or —
3 to 4 perhaps like —
two waggons
,
or loaded trucks. The left was
breaking, then the hubrows, which are gathered into hubs, then sometimes
another break and turning, then rkkles, the biggest of all the cocks,
which are run together into placks, the shapeless heaps from which the
hay is carted
—
Aug. 6 Unusually bright. From Jeffrey Hill on the Longridge fell
in the ridge opposite with Parlock Pike the folds and gullies with
shadow in them were as sharp as the pleats in a new napkin and we
made out in the sea, appearing as clearly outlined flakes of blue, the
Welsh and Man, and between these two the sea was
coast, Anglesea,
Henry Kerr^ was with me.
as bright as brass.
Next day there was heat and so it has been since, not bright. Till
then the summer had been most unusually wet and that widely, for
instance inGermany
The Battle of Dorking^ and the fear of the Revolution make me
sad now
In the holidays we spent a fortnight at the College. On Aug. 16 we
sailedfrom Liverpool for Indian on the Argyleshire coast of the Frith
of Clyde. The same day Mr. Hayden and Mr. Lentaigne left us for
Ireland. We landed at Greenock in the morning and went by a Clyde
steamer to Indian. Out at sea saw the mirage for the first time,
were on the ramparts of the Castle a great gale sprang up, I believe
one of the most violent there had been for years in Scotland, which
tossed us in crossing the Firth from Wemyss Bay to Inellan and the
rain, which I took for hail, cut one’s ears and somebody said was libs
pebble-stones
At night northern lights beautiful but colourless, near the horizoii
in permanent birch-bark downward streaks but shooting in streamers'
across the zenith and higher sky like breath misting and then being
cut off from very sensitive glass
—
Aug. 28 ^The last day at the villa and first really fine one. Up the
Clyde to Glasgow. We went to see Napier’s shipbuilding yard^ and
mismanaged things so as not to see the Cathedral till when it was shut
and almost dark. It is very complete and well preserved. I had not
time to study the tracery well from within nor at all from without. It
seems much like that at Salisbury. Two instances, pairs, in the tran-
septs however struck me as fine and effective I am not quite sure I
:
remember them correctly but they were three-lighted, with the lights
coupled across one another and so the heads carried to the
main arch, the intersections thus given and others filled with
trefoiled roundels foil not cusp at bottom
In the evening we sailed from the Broomielaw for Liverpool,
coming into port next day, where Mr. Silva left us. Saw a shoal of
porpoises. Had a talk with a Welsh stonemason, an honest simple
young fellow.
—
Aug. 30 In the evening we went into retreat under Fr. Leslie,^
who pleased me very much. It ended on Sept. 8, when Cyril came and
stayed at the College till Monday the i ith. We travelled together as
far asBlackburn he for Liverpool, I for Hampstead. I found there my
father and Milicent. Next day to see Grandmamma and Aunt Anne.
—
Grandmamma looks changed. She says my father told me in the
evening but I ought to have heard it from herselF— that she has heard
her grandfather say that he could remember an old man saying he
had seen the soldiers going about the hedges in his part of the country
in search of Charles I — which
after battle ?
Sept. 13 —^To Bursledon on the Hamble in Hampshire, where my
mother and the rest were staying. From the garden there is a beautiful
view over the river. It is an elm and oak country but not much
—
wooded. The woods have the rich packed look in the distance one
notices in southcountry landscape. Laurels grow strong —
glossy, smart,
and graceful, and bear their fruit
—
Sept. 14 By boat down the river to Hamble, near where it enters
Southampton Water, and a walk home. On this walk I came to a
cross road I had been at in the morning carrying it in another ‘run-
ning instress’. I was surprised to recognise it and the moment I did it
lost its present instress, breaking off from what had immediately gone
before, and fell into the morning’s. It is so true what Ruskin says
talking of the carriage in Turner’s Pass of Faido* that what he could
not forget was that ‘he had come by the road’. And what is this run-
ning instress, so independent of at least the immediate scape of the
thing, which unmistakeably distinguishes and individualises things?
Not imposed outwards from the mind as for instance by melancholy
or strong feeling: I easily distinguish that instress. I think it is this
same running instress by which we and refuse
identify or, better, lest
to identify with our various suggestions/ a thought which has just
slipped from the mind at an interruption
Sept. 15 —
Among other clever things the parrot here says when
wasps come near her ‘Get along’, ruffling her feathers with excitement.
When I pull out a handkerchief she makes a noise of blowing the nose
In the afternoon to Nctley Abbey,^ a spot which everything makes
beautiful — the ruins, the lie of the ground, the ivy, the ashtrees, and
that day the bright pieces of evening light. The ashes it would not be
easy to match but some are dead, others dying, and one in the chapter-
house fallen across, the roots to the ground but higher up the stem/
resting on the wall others have been felled. There is one notable dead
:
tree in the N.W. corner of the nave, the inscape markedly holding its
most simple and beautiful oneness up from the ground through a
graceful swerve below (I think) the spring of branches up to the tops
of the timber. The finest of all stands I think in the monks’ day-room.
In the building the most beautiful and noticeable things are the east
window the;
windows on the S. side of the nave,^ the middle
triplet
light trefoiled the other two lancets outside they are flush with the
:
wall but inside hooded under arches which spring lower than their sills
or at leastthan the top of the sill ; a pair of plain three-light lancets in
each clearstory of the S. transept, which dwell on the eye with a simple
direct instress of trinity a fine piece of blind tracery in the quasi-
;
the chapterhouse, not quite of equal breadth etc 3l plain sixfoil, clear,
;
not enclosed in any roundel, at least inside, riding two plain broad
lancets the cusps were sharp and both it and the lancets had no work
:
beyond the splay inwards but the jambs (?) of the head to the whole
window were moulded and stripes of red colour could be seen in the
splay of the lancets of one window radiating from the opening and so
following the splay. I notice a predominance of the series i, 2, 4, 8 in
parts, perhaps throughout — in the east window four lights gathered
intotwo greater heads (the middle and greater mullion still stands)
and an eight-foil in the circle riding them, four pillars in the jambs
each carrying a moulding of four ribs, thus 16 in all, the two middle
ribs carrying a band, fillet, or whatever it is called
two windows of two lights in each side of the choif,
that is, I suppose, two bays two bays in the trail|-
;
and long brindled jetties dripping with fiery bronze had the look of
being smeared by some blade which had a little flattened and richly
mulled what it was drawn across. This bronze changed of course to
crimson and the whole upper sky being now plotted with pale soaked
blue rosetting seized some of it foreward in wisps or plucks of smooth
beautiful carnation or of coral or camellia/ rose-colour
Sept. 1
7 —To Netley Hospital* to Mass. In the evening walk with
my mother and Grace through the stubble fields and wood. First
the sunset, the Plough tail. The stilts seems* on this side of the clouds
when there are clouds. This day there were none and they were bars
of dull blue. Now it seemed to me that as the sun sank lower beneath
the horizon they fell over to the right, the south, which would agree
with their being polar to the sun, which goes northward by night as
windows were nearly ready to fly a wasp coming into the nest stung
them in the throats so that they died and then was seen in the nest
feeding on them
—
Sept. 18 Back to Stony hurst by Reading. I met with much kind-
ness that day —
^at Bursledon, in the train, and here. Mr. Mazoyer had
jump down. I heard her mew a piteous long time till I could bear it no
longer ; but I make a note of it because of her gratitude after I had
taken her down, which made her follow me about and at each turn of
the stairs as I went down leading her to the kitchen run back a few
steps and try to get up to lick me through the banisters from the flight
above
Some events of interest of 1871 and the end of ’70 (see that date)
partlyfrom my memoranda and partly got out of Whitaker’s Almanack
by Cyril and Uncle John
Recapture of Orleans by the Germans Dec. 5, 1870
Death of Prim and landing of King Amadeo in Spain Dec. 30
Le Mans occupied by the Germans (after several days of fighting)
Jan. 12, 1871
Surrender of Paris Jan. 28
Signing of peace Feb. 26
Paris seized by the Commune March 18
of the Communal troops and death of Flourens April 4(?)
First defeat
Death of the Archbishop etc May 24
Suppression of the insurrection May 28
Exercise of royal prerogative to carry the Army Purchase bill
against the House of Lords Aug, 1 7
The Titchborne trial* began some time early in the summer, and
after lasting
103 days ended on March 6 of this year in a nonsuit. The
same day Arthur Orton the claimant was committed for perjury.
218 JOURNAL (1871-2)
Sei^eant Ballantine,’ Giffard^ Jeune^, and Sir George Honeyman^ were
retained on his side, the Attorney General (John Duke Coleridge)® and
Hawkins® for the defendant
Pius IX reached the 25th year of his pontificate (‘the years of Peter’)
in June. George Grote’ died the same year
Early in December was frost and some skating. Then much wind
and rain but very little cold till when I made the note, Feb. ii, and
later. It was as mild a winter as could be. Things budded early,
celandine for instance was springing at the end of January. At the
beginning of March the weather was balmy. On March 2 1 leaves Oti
the poplar, quick, and hornbeam had been out some time and knots
of leaf were open on the sycomore: cp. last year, April 15. On Marciy
21 was the first snow fall. There was then snow and frost for some daysy
the second winter. See March 26
—
Feb. 23 A lunar halo: I looked at it from the upstairs library
window. It was a grave grained sky, the strands rising a little from
left to right. The halo was not quite round, for in the first place it was
a little pulled and drawn below, by the refraction of the lower air
perhaps, but what is more it fell in on the nether left hand side to
rhyme the moon itself, which was not quite at full. I could not but
strongly feel in my fancy the odd instress of this, the moon leaning on
her side, as if fallen back, in the cheerful light floor within the ring,
after with magical rightness and success tracing round her the ring
the steady copy of her own outline. But this sober grey darkness and
pale light was happily broken through by the orange of the pealing of
Mitton bells
Another night from the gallery window I saw a brindled heaven, the
moon just marked by a blue spot pushing its way through the darker
cloud, underneath and on the skirts of the rack bold long flakes
whitened and swaled like feathers, below/ the garden with the heads
of the trees and shrubs furry grey: I read a broad careless inscape
flowing throughout
At the beginning of March they were felling some of the ashes in our
grove
March 5 —A from Challis saying he had left the Church
letter
March 13 —^Aftera time of trial and especially a morning in which
I did not know which way to turn as the account of De Ranch’s final
conversion® was being read at dinner the verse Qui confidant in Domino
sicut mons Sion which satisfied him and resolved him to enter his abbey
way place and I fancy was not very well off. He started off a walk of
some I o or 1 2 miles to a town to try and get a servant and on returning
was caught by a snowstorm. He was found dead only a few hundred
yards from his own house. Is it not sad ? He had only been married a
few months.’ But Addis says ‘Do you remember Fletcher a Scotch
Catholic ? He was a penitent of one of our FF. and used to spend a
great deal of time in our church. He married a young lady of good
family whom he had converted from the Scotch Kirk and went out
with her to the Red River. There he was the great support of the
Catholic chapel. One morning he said to his wife “I have made my
meditation this morning on the best way to spend the last day of my
life.” That same day he was frozen to death in the snow. He had
shattered by a fall from a horse, and he said quite simply “No, I think
it was a providential accident, for it took me away from Oxford.”
When he bid his confessor here goodbye he burst into tears and said
how much he felt leaving our church. His uncle told me all the
particulars of his death. He had another uncle a Jesuit Fr. of the
Irish province’
Addis also mentions the cold feeling between the two Oratories is
thawing
Stickles/ Devonshire for the foamy tongues of water below falls
—
March 23 They say here Mhee road for the high road and steel for
stile .
—
Saw a lad burning bundles of dry honeysuckle: the flame
(though it is no longer freshly in my mind) was brown and gold,
brighter and glossier than glass or silk or water and ran reeling up to
the right in one long handkerchief and curling like a cartwhip
—
March 26 Snow fallen upon the leaves had in the night coined or
morselled itself into pyramids like hail. Blade leaves of some bulbous
plant, perhaps a small iris, were like delicate little saws, so hagged
with frost. It is clear that things are spiked with the frost mainly on one
side but why this is and how far different things on the same side at the
same time I have not yet found
—
March 30, Holy Saturday ^warm, with thunder, odd tufts of thin-
textured very plump round clouds something like the eggs in an
opened ant-hill
April 9 —
Mr. Kennedy left us. He offered himself to Fr. de Smet'
for theAmerican mission
—
April 16 For a good many days now we have had pied skies or big
flying clouds and cold west winds. Mr. New^ says they pass over
icebergs which cool them
After this cold and then thunder
—
April 30 First very warm day
220 JOURNAL (1872)
May I —We have a cherry tree from head to foot every branch*
sleeved with white glossy blossom
Much rain early in May
May 13 —
day (and often afterwards) we have had one or two
^This
bats flying at midday and circling so near that I could see the ears and
the claws and the purplish web of the wings with the ribs and veins
through it
have seen it once with the light coming through leaves, and this got
less and less distinct on white paper which I moved towards the win-
dow, and once coming without a break from the brim of the fells^
It is the same seen the other way as the water ridi one sees in the sun’s
disc when low
—
July 19 ^The ovary of the blown foxglove surrounded by the green
calyx is perhaps that conventional flower in Pointed and other
floriated work which I could not before identify. It might also be St.
John’s-wort
* MS reads branched.
—
Stepped into a barn of ours, a great shadowy barn, where the hay
had been stacked on either side, and looking at the great rudely arched
—
timberframes ^principals (?) and tie-beams, which make them look
like bold big As with the cross-bar high up I thought how sadly—
beauty of inscape was unknown and buried away from simple people
and yet how near at hand it was if they had eyes to see it and it could
be called out everywhere again
This month here and over the country many great thunder-
all
we heard a little girl sing a Manx song,^ though indeed it was but
four lines, a rhyming couplet and the third line repeated, and she
recited it sounded just like English words done into nonsense
only. It
verses thus the third and fourth lines or burden seemed ‘The brow
:
speaker of Irish. The people are the most goodnatured I think I have
ever met
Aug. 6
—^The rocks are grey sandstone, in very regular slabs, cleav-
ing like slate, and decayed between the slabs or flakes so as to look like
wood rotted with water. I noticed from the cliff how the sea foots or
toes the shore and the inlets, now with a push and flow, now slacking,
returning to stress and pulling back^
—
Aug. 7 Cormorants, called here Black Divers, flew by screaming
As we were bathing at a cove near a big hawk flew down chasing a
little shrieking bird close beside us
We went mackerel fishing. Letting down a line baited with a piece
of mackerel skin — tin or any glimmering thing will do —we drew up
222 JOURNAL (1872)
nine. A few feet down they look blue-silver as they rise. We fell away
with the tide so as not to be able to get into the bay again and had to
put in under shore south of Douglas and row/ hard under the cliffs to
the Head. Looking up
saw a sheep hanging in one of the softly
I
fluted green channels runningdown between the rocks of the cliff.
The brow was crowned with that burning clear of silver light which
surrounds the sun, then the sun itself leapt out with long bright spits
of beams
Aug. 8 —
^Walked to Ramsey, and back by steamer. From the high-
road saw how the sea, dark blue with violet cloud-shadows, was
I
warped to the round of the world like a coat upon a ball and often
later I marked that perspective. I had many beautiful sights of it,
sometimes to the foot of the cliff, where it was of a strong smoulderinjj
—
green over the sunken rocks these rocks, which are coated with small
limpets, discolour the coast all along with a fringe of yellow at the
tide-mark and under water reflect light and make themselves felt where
hidden by the fall of the hill, packing the land in/ it was not seen how
far, and then you see best how it is drawn up to a brow at the skyline
and stoops away on either side, tumbling over towards the eye in the
broad smooth fall of a lakish apron of water, which seems bound over
or lashed to land below by a splay of dark and light braids they are :
the gusts of wind all along the perspective with which all the sea that
day was dressed.
And it is common for the sea looked down upon, where the sheety
spread is well seen but the depth and mass unfelt, to sway and follow
the wind like the tumbled canvas of a loose sail
The flowers in the island are plentiful and strongly coloured. On the
sides of the cliff above our house, Derby Castle, the brambles were
often doubled. The flower was bigger, purplish pink, and the five
petals changed for a multitude of small strap leaves as in daisies and
auriculas
The country is bare and you see the valleys and fell-sides plotted and
painted with the squares of the fields and their hedges far and wide.
But the trees are rich and thickly leaved where they grow. I remember
one little square house cushioned up in a thatched grove of green like
a man with an earache. These groves are stunted and shaped by the
Seabreeze but plighted thick together and cast a deep green shade.
Often the cage of boughs is bare and ragged but thick tufts at the top.
The ashes thrive and the combs are not wiry and straight but rich
and beautifully curled. The climate varies little and is said to have a
higher average of heat in winter than Rhodez or Milan. Fuchsias,
strawberry trees, and tamarisks do well
—
is foam, the green/ solid water. Then looked at to the right or left they
are scrolled over like mouldboards or feathers or jibsails seen by the
edge. It is pretty to see the hollow of the barrel disappearing as the
white combs on each side run along the wave gaining ground till
the two meet at a pitch and crush and overlap each other
About all the turns of the scaping from* the break and flooding of
wave to its run out again I have not yet satisfied myself. The shores are
swimming and the eyes have before them a region of milky surf but it
is hard for them to unpack the huddling and gnarls of the water and
law out the shapes and the sequence of the running I catch however
:
the looped or forked wisp made by every big pebble the backwater
runs over — if it were clear and smooth there w ould be a network from
their overlapping, such as can in fact be seen on smooth sand after
the tide is out —
then I saw it run browner, the foam dwindling and
;
twitched into long chains of suds, while the strength of the back-
draught shrugged the stones together and clocked them one against
another
Looking from the cliff I saw well that work of dimpled foamlaps
strings —
of short loops or halfmoons^ which I had studied at Fresh-
water years ago
It is pretty to see the dance and swagging of the light green tongues
or ripples of waves in a place locked between rocks
—
Aug. 12 ^To see Peel Castle. On the way we went into the church-
yard of Kirk Braddan, as beautiful as any I ever saw fine and beauti-
:
our driver home told italso as he had always heard it from a child, so
that it lives. We passed the Tynevald (from Thingvollr) mound too
from which the Manx laws are published now they only read the —
titles of the acts. It is an earthen mound of four rounds or stages one
within the other like Ecbatana, each about a yard high perhaps, buif
a way up of lower steps is cut on the side towards the church every :
but when it held up turned aside to Port Soderick, a little bay south
of Douglas, and spent the day there among the rocks and caverns.
We saw hawks and gulls and cormorants and a heron, I think, that
alighted on a rock with easy beating wings. In flight it was like
this
—
Aug. 16 ^Big waves. There is a stack of rocks beyond the bay con-
nected with the slope of the green banks by a neck of grass. Like an
outwork or breakwater to the stack is a long block consisting of a
table or platform of even height sloping forward to the sea and flanked
by two squarelike taller towers or shoulders, all shining when wet like
smooth coal and cut and planed like masonry. The sea was breaking
on all the stack and striking out all the ledges and edges at each breaker
like snow does a building. In the narrow channel between this out-
work and the main stack it was all a lather of foam, in which a spongy
and featherlight brown scud bred from the churning of the water
roped and changed, riding this and that, but never got clear of the
channel. The overflow of the last wave came in from either side
tilling up the channel and met halfway, each with its own moustache.
When the wave ran very high it would brim over on the sloping shelf
below me and move smoothly and steadily along it like the palm of a
hand along a table drawing off the dust. In the channel I saw (as
everywhere in surfy water) how the laps of foam mouthed upon one
another. In watching the sea one should be alive to the oneness which
all its motion and tumult receives from its perpetual balance and
—
water of a spring tide first, say, it is an install of green marble
knotted with ragged white, then fields of white lather, the comb of the
wave richly clustered and crisped in breaking, then it is broken small
and so unfolding till it runs in threads and thrums twitching down the
backdraught to the sea again.
—
Aug. 20 ^Back to Stonyhurst. In Liverpool I saw Cyril. From
Blackburn I walked and I never saw Lancashire or Ree Deep look
so beautiful and the grass so fresh a green. The inland breeze after
Douglas felt warm and velvety. Fr. Rector came over to wait on us at
supper, which touched me
Aug. 22—To see Grace Wells’ loom at Dutton Lee. She says wark
B flC28
226 JOURNAL (1872)
for warp and wefty I think, for woof (there is perhaps some difference of
meaning). There are what are called by-ends but I do not exactly
know what : I think they are certain surplus warp-threads, at all events
they come from the warp, are drawn together to a heap and taken
backwards over the near end of the loom where they hang in one ball
of ‘clue’, if I remember
We heard also at Dutton Lee the same story of the origin of the
mossy cankers on rose bushes as they have in Ireland : they call it
Virgin^s brier (they say breer). They told us that to carry a thorn in your
hand in a storm is a preservative against lightning or keeps you from
seeing the flash
Aug. 29 —To see Clitheroe Castle^ (which belonged once to tl\e
De Lacys)
'
Sept. 17—I wandered all over Pendle with Mr. Sutton. There are
some black scalped places on it that look made for a witches’ sabbath,
especially on the far side looking over the part of the country which the
bulk of the hill between hides from us here, where the hillside is very
sheer, and you might fancy them dancing on the black piece and
higher and higher at each round and then flinging off at last one after
the other each on her broomstick clear over the flat of country below.
And there is another odd thing by the same token here, namely that
in looking out forward over the edge while to right and left and be-
and bare and in size and shape just such as might be covered by the
tree scores off and keeps and shelters hoarfrost or dew and the sun-
light eats up to the edge of it this seemed chilled and blasted with just
of the cleft and had been washed by strong out,* I caught an inscape as
flowing and well marked almost as the frosting on glass and slabs ; but
I could not reproduce it afterwards with the pencil. I noticed damask-
ing also in dry parched pieces of root of grass which strew the place
and have perhaps fallen from the sheeps’ mouths in browsing. Also I
saw the same clustered-shaft make in softy miry peat (all bearing one
way) as I have remarked on in snow
Thewheelwright’s son, a nice intelligent lad, guided us across the
fields from Mitton to Clitheroe. He called felly/ and nave short like
have. Wind he pronounced with the i long. When he began to speak
quickly or descriptively he dropped or slurred the article.
We came down the hill to Little Mearley Hall, where they were
marking a sea of sheep and the farmer, a goodnatured man, showed us
the front of the house built in with pieces brought from Whalley or —
Sauley? Abbey, I forget which
—
Shortly after Fr. Fitzsimon went to the College and Fr. Maccann*
became minister
Sept. 20 —
Fr. Gapaldi went to St. Beuno’s. Fr. Thiemann a genial
Hanoverian came in his place.
—
Oct. 5 ^A goldencrested wren had got into my room at night and
circled round dazzled by the gaslight on the white cieling; when
caught even and put out it would come in again. Ruffling the crest
which is mounted over the crown and eyes like beetlebrows, I smoothed
and fingered the little orange and yellow feathers which are hidden
in it. Next morning I found many of these about the room and en-
closed them in a letter to Cyril on his wedding day
—
Oct. 8 Cyril was married to Harriet Bockett^ at Muswell Hill
—
Oct. 20 ^Addis was ordained priest
—
Oct. 27 Fr. Gallwey came up. Before night litanies he came to my
room as I lay on my bed making my examen, for I had some fever,
and sitting by the bedside took my hand within his and said some
affectionate and most encouraging words
That fever came from a chill I caught one Blandyke^ and the chill
from weakness brought about by my old complaint, which before and
much more after the fever was worse than usual. Indeed then I lost so
much blood that I hardly saw how I was to recover. Nevertheless it
stopped suddenly, almost at the worst. This was why I came up to
town at Christmas
—
Nov. 1 7 ^Dr. Herbert Vaughan^ after Dr. Turner’s death appointed
bishop of Salford came to visit us. An Academy was held in his
honour and addresses in prose and verse read. I wrote some Greek
iambics
Nov. 27 —Great fall of stars, identified with Biela’s comet. They
• Thus in MS.
:
through their flight. The kitchen boys came running with a great
todo to say something redhot had struck the meatsafe over the scullery
door with a great noise and falling into the yard gone into several
pieces. No authentic fragment was found but Br. Hostage^ saw marks
of burning on the safe and the slightest of dints as if made by a soft
body, so that if anything fell it was probably a body of gas, Fr. Perryz
thought. It did not appear easy to give any other explanation than a
meteoric one. Br. Starkey^ saw and heard also but was odd and close
'
about it
Grandmamma has kept her 87th birthday. Uncle Dick^ is dead \
—
Dec. 1 2 A Blandyke. Hard frost, bright sun, a sky of blue ‘wati^’.
On the fells with Mr. Lucas.® Parlick Pike and that ridge ruddy with
fern and evening light. Ground sheeted with taut tattered streaks of cri^
gritty snow. Green-white tufts of long bleached grass like heads of hair
or the crowns of heads of hair, each a whorl of slender curves, one tuft
—
taking up another however these I might have noticed any day. I
saw the inscape though freshly, as if my eye were still growing, though
with a companion the eye and the ear are for the most part shut and
instress cannot come. We started pheasants and a grouse with flicker-
ing wings. On the slope of the far side under the trees the fern looked
ginger-coloured over the snow. When there was no snow and dark
greens about, as I saw it just over the stile at the top of the Forty-Acre
the other day, it made bats and splinters of smooth caky road-rut-colour
—
Dec. 19 Under a dark sky walking by the river at Brockennook.
There all was sad-coloured and the colour caught the eye, red and blue
stones in the river beaches brought out by patches of white-blue snow,
that snow quite white and dead but yet it seems as if some blue or
is/
lilac screen masked it somewhere between it and the eye I have often ;
noticed it. The swells and hillocks of the river sands and the fields were
—
sketched and gilded out by frill upon frill of snow they must be seen
this is only to shew which way the
curve lies. Where the snow lies as in
a field the damasking of white light
these catching the sun perhaps or at all event more directly hitting the
eye and gilded with an arch brightness, like the sweat^ in the moist
hollow between the eyebrows and the eyelids on a hot day or in the
way the light of a taper Tommy was screening with his hand the other
JOURNAL (1872) 3ag
morning in the dark refectory struck out the same shells of the eyes
and the cleft of the nostrils and flat of the chin and tufts on the cheeks
in gay leaves of gold
—
Dec. 23 ^To Hampstead. There were pinings and remainders of
snow on the hills as far as Macclesfield as on Pendle and Whalley Nab.
Southwards floodwater was out. Here and in many parts of the country
there have been great rains and gales have been everywhere. Some-
where in Cambridgeshire there was flood as far as the eye could reach.
—
The weather is very mild. As far as Stafford I travelled with Mr.
Shapter’s' brother
Christmas Day —Cyril and Harriet and Aunt Kate with her chil-
dren came up to dinner
Dec. 30 —underwent an operation^ by Mr. Gay and Mr. Prance,
I
He did not go to the usual station but to the terminus of the Northern
railway, no doubt to throw them off the scent, for at some distance
from Paris he could by a junction get onto the line for Strasburg. Now
at this junction, I think it was, he got out and it is likely he meant to
have walked some way on and taken the train or a later train further
on upon the line but he turned the wrong way and walked towards
Paris. This mistake Wood and Gladstone,^ who went to the place to
ascertain, found was easy to make by daylight, much more in the
dark. His dead body was found in a pool or horse- or cattle-trough by
the roadside only a few feet deep. His hat was on the bank. They think
from this that he had stooped to drink, been seized with a fit, and
fallen in —or fallen in and been seized with a fit. But this is hard to
understand. The bank was steep on the side he fell in from and two
others but on the fourth there was a slope for the beast to go down by.
f he pool, as I have said, was quite shallow. On his body was found a
cross.His name they could find nowhere but in his boots and for some
dme they thought it was the maker’s. Wood and Gladstone convinced
themselves it was not suicide
330 JOURNAL (1873)
The weather while I was in bed, a fortnight, was very mild except
for gales and still is Jan. 18, 1873. "The elms are hung and beaded with
round buds and many trees have the Spring smoky claret colour
and in projection like relief maps. These the wind makes I think and
of course drifts, which are in fact snow waves. The sharp nape of a
drift is sometimes broken by slant flutes or channels. I think this must
be when the wind after shaping the drift first has changed and cast
waves in the body of the wave itself. All the world is full of inscape
and chance^ left free to act falls into an order as well as purpose:
looking out of my window I caught it in the random clods and broken
heaps of snow made by the cast of a broom. The same of the path
trenched by footsteps in ankledeep snow across the fields leading to
Hodder wood through which we went to see the river. The sun was
bright, the broken brambles and all boughs and banks limed and
cloyed with white, the brook down the dough pulling its way by drops
and by bubbles in turn under a shell of ice
It was lopped first: I heard the sound and looking out and seeing
to die and not to see the inscapes of the world destroyed any more
April 17 —^To Whitewell with Mr. Clarke.^ Saw a shoal of salmon
in the river and many hares on the open hills. Under a stone hedge
was a dying ram: there ran slowly from his nostril a thick flesh-
coloured ooze, scarlet in places, coiling and roping its way down, so
thick that it looked like fat
Later —on Jeffrey hill at the cairn. Magnetic weather, sunlight soft
dipped in
and bright, colours of fells and fields far off seeming as if
watery blue
clucked
The weather became cold. April 24 snowstorm. The birds
and scurried away under bushes
:
JOURNAL (1873) 23 *
jodding with their heads. The two young ones are all white and the pins
of the folded wings, quill pleated over quill, are like crisp and shapely
cuttleshells found on the shore. The others are dull thundercolour or
black-grape-colour except in the white pieings, the quills and tail, and
in the shot of the neck. I saw one up on the eaves of the roof as it :
moved its head a crush of satin green came and went, a wet or soft
flaming of the light
Sometimes I hear the cuckoo with wonderful clear and plump and
fluty notes it is when the hollow of a rising ground conceives them
:
and palms them up and throws them out, like blowing into a big
—
humming ewer for instance under Saddle Hill one beautiful day aitd
another time from Hodder wood when we walked on the other side 6f
the river
In the evening the triduum began
— Mr.
June 19 drove
Ratcliff off
—Feast of the Sacred Heart and renovation of vows
June 20
— was examined
June 23 I de universa philosophia
—Camps of yellow
June 24 blowing
flagflower the wind, which in
curled over the grey of the long
sashes leaves
June 25—At two minutes ten night a greenish white meteor
to at
fellwith a slow curve from right to left between this and Pendle over
Mitton. I judged so because it seemed to pass this side of the crest of
the hill but only a little way and then disappeared, so that perhaps I
might be mistaken
It was* a firework, for I saw just such another but not falling so far
another night at just the same time. But its seeming to pass the crest
of Pendle is curious. It may be because the eye taking up the well-
marked motion and forestalling it carrys the bright scape of the present
and past motion (which lasts J of a second, they say) on to a part of the
field where the motion itself has not or will not come
—
June 30 I went to teach the School of Rhetoric* at the College in
Mr. Sidney Smith’s^ absence, while he was with some of his boys who
were gone to Manchester to matriculate, and I taught six days
—
July 2 ^The college watchman said ‘Til put on my shoon and let
thee out’
^
About this time I had a kind letter from Mr.^Gay
July 10 — ^The Rector’s day. Fr. Gallwey appointed provincial
July 12 — ^Went to see Mr. Scriven, who is dying of consumption
July 17 — Provincial’s day. Mr. Vaughan^ took off Cornelius the
—
philosopher’s servant ay and a-bullyraggin’ teoo’, that
‘a-bullockin’,
is bullying, using abusive words also (as I heard afterwards) how the
;
Queen told the Shah when he wanted one of his courtier’s heads struck
—
off for bad horsemanship at Windsor that he had better not coon ahn,
that road
July 18 — with a high wind blowing the crests of the trees
^Bright,
before the sun and fetching in the blaze and dousing it again. In parti-
cular. there was one light raft of beech which the wind footed and
strained on, ruffling the leaves which came out in their triplets threaded
round with a bright brim like an edge of white ice, the sun sitting at
one end of the branch in a pash of soap-sud-coloured gummy bim-
beams rowing over the leaves but sometimes flaring out so as to let a
blue crust or platter from quite the quick of the orb sail in the eye
—
July 20 ^Water high at Hodder Roughs; where lit from within
looking like pale gold, elsewhere velvety brown like ginger syrop;
heavy locks or brushes like shaggy rope-ends rolling from a corner of
the falls and one huddling over another below the rock the bubble-
;
jestled skirt of foam jumping back against the fall, which cuts its way
clean and will not let it through, and there spitting up in long white
ragged shots and bushes like a mess of thongs of bramble, and I saw
by looking over nearer that those looping watersprigs that lace and
dance and jockey in the air are strung of single drops, the end one, like
a tassel or a heavier bead, the biggest they look like bubbles in a quill.
;
When the air caught at theof the fall a sour yellow light flushed
sill
underneath like smoke kindling all along the rock, with a sullen noise
which we thought was thunder till someone pointed out the cause, and
this happened, I noticed, when one of the bladders or blisters that
form and come bumping to the top in troubled water sailed over the
falls
July 22 —^Very hot, though the wind, which was south, dappled very
sweetly on one’s face and when I came out I seemed to put it on like a
gown as a man puts on the shadow he walks into and hoods or hats
himself with the shelter of a roof, a penthouse, or a copse of trees, I
mean it rippled and fluttered like light linen, one could feel the folds
—
and braids of it and indeed a floating flag is like wind visible and what
weeds are in a current it gives it thew and fires it and bloods it in.
;
very slender and nimble and as if playing very near but after supper
it was so bright and terrible some people said they had never seen its
like. People were killed, but in other parts of the country it was more
violent than with us. Flashes lacing two clouds above or the cloud and
the earth started upon the eyes in live veins of rincing or riddling
liquid white,inched and jagged as if it were the shivering of a bright
riband string which had once been kept bound round a blade and
danced back into its pleatings. Several strong thrills of light followed
the flash but a grey smother of darkness blotted the eyes if they
234 JOURNAL (1873)
had seen the fork, also dull furry thickened scapes of it were left in
them
July 24 — Blandyke. Mr. Colley* and I crossed the river at
Hacking boat, went up the fell opposite near the Nab, walked some
way, and coming down at Billington recrossed at the Troughs and so
home. But the view was dim. A farmer on the other side at the Troughs
talked of the driver of the mower (he had one) ‘a-peerkin’ on the seat*,
being p)erched on the seat, and said the hay was to be ‘shaked*. The
ferryman told us how in the hot days working in the hay he had
‘Supped beer till’ he ‘could sup no more’
—
July 28 Haymaking still going on
Arthur and Rebecca came but I did not see them till next day,
when I took them over the college \
—
July 30 Mr. Scriven died at halfpast ten in the morning. In thle
night he had a great struggle in which he started up in bed and caught
hold of the Rector with both hands. Afterwards he was calm. He
offered up his life for the Society. It was thought providential that he
died on the eve of St. Ignatius
I took Arthur and Rebecca to see Ree Deep and Lambing Clough
—
Aug. I To Derby Castle at Douglas as last year
—
Aug. 5 Up Snae Fell with Mr. Shapter. You can see from it the
three kingdoms. The day was bright pied skies. On the way back we
;
cloud warping/ in the perspective. I marked well how the sea fell over
from the other side of the bay, Fort Hillion^ and the lighthouse, to the
quite like the rounding of a waterfall
cliff’s foot,
—
Aug. 9 Mackerel fishing but not much s]X)rt. Besides I was in pain
and could not look at things much. When the fresh-caught fish flounced
in the bottom of the boat they made scapes of motion, quite as strings
do, nodes and all, silver bellies upwards something —
thus. Their key markings do not correspond on the two
sides of the backbone. They changed colour as they lay.
There was sun and wind. I saw the waves to seaward
frosted with light silver surf but did not find out much,
afterwards from the cliffs I saw the sea paved with wind
—
clothed and purpled all over with ribbons of wind
—
Aug. 10. Some yellow spoons came up with the tumblers after
dinner. Somebody said they were brass and I tasted them to find out
and it seemed so. Some time afterwards as I came in from a stroll with
Mr. Purbrick^ he told me Hiigel had said the scarlet or rose colour of
:;
and ashes and rocks maroon-red below water up the glen. When we
were back there we turned aside to follow the brook up under groves
of beech and Spanish chestnut. The rock is limestone, smooth and
pale white, not rough and gritty, and without moss, stained red where
the water runs and smoothly and vertically hewed by the force of the
brook into highwalled channels with deep pools. The water is so clear
in the still pools it is like shadowy air and in the falls the white is not
foamed and chalky, as at Stonyhurst, but like the white of ice or glass.
Round holes are scooped in the rocks smooth and true like turning
they look like the hollow of a vault or bowl. I saw and sketched* as well
as in the rain I could one of them that was in the making a blade of
:
water played on it and shaping to it spun off making a bold big white
bow coiling its edge over and splaying into ribs. But from the position
it is not easy to see how the water could in this way have scooped all of
them. I jumped into one of the pools above knee deep and it was
raining besides so to keep warm, when we reached the high road I
;
turned towards Douglas and let them overtake me. We got home in
heavy wet and Mr. Sidgreaves covered me under his plaid
—
Aug. 14 Walking along the cliffs towards Growdle, Sun and wind
sea dark blue, yet one can always see the dimness in the air shed upon
the offing and stealing the distant waves. Painted white cobbled foam
tumbling over the rocks and combed away off their sides again. The
water-ivybush^, that plucked and dapper cobweb of glassy grey down,
swung slack and jaunty on the in-shore water, plainer where there was
—
dark weed below and dimmer over bare rock or sand. On the cliffs
fields of bleached grass, the same colour as the sheep they feed, then a
enclosure of rocks the peaks of the water romped and wandered and
a light crown of tufty scum standing high on the surface kept slowly
turning round chips of it blew off and gadded about without weight
:
in the air. At eight we sailed for Liverpool in wind and rain. I think
it is the salt that makes rain at sea sting so much. There was a good-
looking young man on board that got drunk and sung T want to go
home to Mamma’. I did not look much at the sea the crests I saw:
ravelled up by the wind into the air in arching whips and straps of
glassy spray and higher broken into clouds of white and blown awa^.
Under the curl shone a bright juice of beautiful green. The foam eji^-
ploding and smouldering under water makes a chrysoprase greeii.
From Blackburn I walked infinite stiles and sloppy fields, for there
:
has been much rain. A few big shining drops hit us aslant as if they
were blown off from eaves or leaves. Bright sunset all the sky hung
;
with tall tossed clouds, in the west with strong printing glass edges,
westward lamping with tipsy bufflight, the colour of yellow roses.
Parlick ridge like a pale goldish skin without body. The plain about
Clitheroe was sponged out by a tall white storm of rain. The sun itself
and the spot of ‘session’ dappled with big laps and flowcrs-in-damask
of cloud. But we hurried too fast and it knocked me up. We went to
the College, the seminary being wanted for the secular priests’ retreat
almost no gas, for the retorts are being mended therefore candles in
;
bottles, things not ready, darkness and despair. In fact being unwell
I was quite downcast nature in all her parcels and faculties gaped and
:
that is/ three, perhaps four/ strikings of the keynote or nethermost red,
counting from the outermost red rim: this of course is quite inde-
pendent of a double rainbow, which this also happened to be
Sept. 18 —
^At the Kensington Museum.^ Bold masterly rudeness of
the blue twelvemonth service of plates or platters by Luca Della
—
Robbia Giovanni’s (1260) and Niccola (early in next century)
Pisano’s pulpits —
Bronze gilt doors for Cathedral of Florence by ?
The cartoons and a full sized chalk drawing from the Transfiguration
— —
Standard portfolios of Indian architecture also of Michael Angelo’s
paintings at the Vatican the might, with which I was more deeply
:
struck than ever before, though this was in the dark side courts and I
could not see well, seems to come not merely from the simplifying and
then amplifying or emphasising of parts but from a masterly realism
both these things there is the simplifying and
in the simplification, ;
of all the viol family is the Welsh erwth. The name looks against this.
They are characterised by the bridge and the use of the bow. The vdbl
has 5 Another day at the Kensington I made some notes. Tt\e
strings.
lute is round-bottomed and has frets —
^Fetis* says 10 and 1 strings,
^
1
says it differs from the lute in being flat and having metal instead of
catgut strings. The mandola is round-bottomed, with frets Fetis says :
after this I shall have had the use of reason. This first start is, I think,
a nervous collapse of the same sort as when one is very tired and hold-
ing oneself at stress not to sleep yet/ suddenly goes slack and seems to
fall and wakes, only on a greater scale and with a loss of muscular
control reaching more or less deep; this one to the chest and not
further, so that I could speak, whispering at first, then louder for the —
chest is the first and greatest centre of motion and action, the seat of
dvfjios. I had lost all muscular stress elsewhere but not sensitive, feeling
where each limb lay and thinking that I could recover myself if I
could move my finger, I said, and then the arm and so the whole body.
The feeling is terrible the body no longer swayed as a piece by the
;
nervous and muscular instress seems to fall in and hang like a dead
weight on the chest. I cried on the holy name and by degrees recovered
myself as I thought to do. It made me think that this was how the
souls in hell would be imprisoned in their bodies as in prisons and of
what St. Theresa says of the ‘little press in the wall’ where she felt
herself to be in her vision
Sept. 22 —
^The schools began
:
About this time it was announced that Mr. Ratcliff and Mr. Potter
had left the Society
Sept. 26 —^Weather has been bright but yesterday was brilliant.
Some of our trees make a great gate* opening over the park two —
poplars for posts ;
on the
of the cedars of more upright,
left is the tallest
less horizontal/ habit than the others, hive-shaped but set to one side
by the wind then, taller, the poplar beautifully touched with leaf
;
against the skyand below these a tree with a mesh of leaves leaning
away, beech and what not here the break and distant oaks on a height
;
in the park then the other poplar, more gaunt and part strung and
;
—
dead, and again other trees lower Spanish chestnut and Turkey oak.
Almost no colour the cedar laying level crow-feather strokes of boughs,
;
with fine wave and dedication in them, against the light. The sun just
above, a shaking white fire or waterball, striking and glan ting*. Blue of
the sky round and below changed to a pale burning flesh. One of the —
wychelms in the field between is just shaped in under a branch of a
near cedar, its boughs coming and going towards one another in
caressed curve and combing
This morning. Sept. 27, blue mist breathing with wind across the
garden after mass. Noticed how everything looked less and nearer, not
bigger and spacious in the fog. Tops of the trees hidden almost or where
seen grey, till the sun threw a moist red light through them. Two
beautiful sights printed upon the sun, a glowing silver piece, came out
:
the sharp visible leafage of invisible trees, on either side nothing what-
ever could be seen of them, and these leaves handful for handful,
changed as I walked the other was splays of shadow-spokes struck out
;
from any knot of leaves or boughs where the sun was/ like timbers
across the thick air
—
Oct. 1 7 ^Woodpigeons come in flock into our field and on our trees
they flock at this time of year
Adoe comes to our sunken fence to be fed: she eats acorns and
chestnutsand stands on the bank, a pretty triped, forefeet together
and hind set apart. The bucks grunt all night at this season and fight
often : it is their season
At the end of the month hard frosts. Wonderful downpour of leaf:
when the morning sun began to melt the frost they fell at one touch
and in a few minutes a whole tree was flung of them they lay masking ;
and papering the ground at the foot. Then the tree seems to be
looking down on its cast self as blue sky on snow after a long fall, its
losing, its doing
White poplar leaves at this season silver behind, olive black in front.
Birch leaves on a fading tree give three colours, green, white, and
yellow
* Thus in MS.
840 JOURNAL (1873-4)
—
Fine sunset Nov. 3 ^Balks of grey cloud searched with long crim-
—
sonings running along their hanging folds this from the lecture room
window. A few minutes later the brightness over one great dull rope
;
coiling overhead sidelong from the sunset, its dewlaps and bellyings
painted with a maddery campion-colour that seemed to stoop and
drop like sopped cake ; the further balk great gutterings and ropings,
gilded above, jotted with a more bleeding red beneath and then a
juicy tawny ‘clear’ below, which now is glowing orange and the full
moon is rising over the house
—
Nov. 12 Fine; elmleaves very crisp and chalky and yellow, a
scarlet brightness against the blue. Sparks of falling leaves streamtiing
down and never stopping from far off \
—
Dec. I Our first ‘menstruum’*
Some sharp frosts, frosting on trees and cobwebs like fairyland, is
Fr. MacCleod^ said. After that very mild
— —
Dec. 18 ^To Beaumont to see an Academy. Felling of trees going
on sadly Roehampton
at
—
Xmas Day ^To Hampstead for a week
During the time I went with Arthur to the winter exhibition of the
Water Colours. Walker’s^ Harbour of Refuge^ smaller watercolour
reproduction of the oilpainting in the Academy for ’72 that sold for
:
3(^1500, this for 3^1000. Execution rough, the daisies and may brought
out by scratching and even rudely, but perhaps this is more lasting
than Chinese white. The sunset sky and boughs of tree against it most
rude, yet true and effective enough —at a distance, thoughthis seemed
inconsistent, for the details of the facesneeded to be looked at close.
When I wrote these notes my memory was a little duller. The young
man mowing was a great stroke, a figure quite made up of dew and
grace and strong fire the sweep of the scythe and swing and sway of
:
the whole body even to the rising of the one foot on tiptoe while the
other was flung forward was as if such a thing had never been painted
before, so fresh and so very strong. In contrast the young girl with the
old woman on her arm with an enforced languor in her in face the ;
same type as Catherine Beamish in the Village on the Cliff, very pensive
and delicate and sweet; auburn hair; beautiful, rather full, hands,
crossed a pretty clever halo of a cap. The background of the long line
;
work a clod of rawness not wrought into perfect art, which in a French-
man would not be
There was^ also a pretty medieval ploughing-scene by Pinwell* and
some good things by Macbeth,^ also a masterly little thing, the Flute-
player, Roman of course, by Alma Tadema*^
—
Feb. 13 The Provincial’s day. Skating. But before this weather
very mild and the skating did not last
:
Br. Scanlan, who was a pupil of mine that six days I was at the
College at Stonyhurst, died lately at Brighton. He insisted on wearing
his gown to the last
At time the elections for the new parliament were going on
this
there was a great Conservative reaction. The Lord Chief Justice
(Cockburn) was summing up in the Titchborne case.* The Univers
was in a two-months’ suppression for publishing a pastoral by one of
the bishops containing political passages it was thought Bismarck
:
white, like cameo a fourfold head, two female faces, back to back like
a sh e-Janus, the long way of the stone, which was oval; above them
along the crown, their common crown, looking up like a mask put
—
back from the right-hand face, a man’s face these three delicately
featured below, across the neck, looking down, a snub Silenus’ face,
;
March 1 —
^Wood came to see me and Fr. Porter. Shortly after
Easterhe was married to a Miss Fulton of Bath
—
March 2 Entry of Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh into London.
—The same day Lionel set sail for Peking
Great famine in Bengal
Very windy at the equinox, more than usual
April 6 —
Sham fight® on the Common, 7000 men, chiefly volunteers,
^ent up in the morning to get an impression but it was too soon,
—
however got this caught that inscape in the horse that you see in the
R
242 JOURNAL (1874)
gate and saw the march past and an unsheathing of swords by some
cavalry, which is a stirring naked-steel lightning bit of business, I thVik
—
April 9 To Kensington museum^ with Br. Tournade the youhg
Frenchman bound for China. Looked at a Graeco-Roman statue of
Melpomene these Greek gowns are of linen which makes crisp pleat-
:
like folds; I marked especially how on the bosom the folds were
ivory relief, I don’t know how to call the work, but it was, I think, by
cutting out certain beds or fields and in them relieving the figures
(incised work?), which gives rather precision to the whole than simple
relief and then further heightening, on one side only, the edges of the
figures within the fields or dies or else the edges, cliffs/ of these dies
with yellow gleam or vice versa, also pale yellow-green, also yellow-^
transparent ;
cymophane/ beautiful stone and name
April 1 1 halfpast 1 1 at night (?) Rebecca of a daughter!
Uncle James^ is dying
April 20 —Young elmleaves lash and lip the sprays. This has been
a
with white daisies, yellower fresh green of leaves above which bathes
the skirts of the elms, and their tops are touched and worded with leaf
too. Looked at the big limb of that elm that hangs over into the Park
at the swinggate/ further out than where the leaves were open and
saw beautiful inscape, home-coiling wiry bushes of spray, touched
with bud to point them. Blue shadows fell all up the meadow at sunset
and then standing at the far Park corner my eye was struck by such a
sense of green in the tufts and pashes of grass, with purple shadow
thrown back on the dry black mould behind them, as I do not remem-
ber ever to have been exceeded in looking at green grass. I marked this
down on a slip of paper at the time, because the eye for colour, rather
the zest in the mind, seems to weaken with years, but now the paper
is mislaid
April 25, Saturday, eve of the Feast of St. Joseph’s Patronage*
Br. Alexander Byrne died of rapid consumption. He was a novice but
had been one of my pupils
The beginning of May very cold and so on to the 14th, I think
a mockery of bright sunshine day after day, no rain (Except that^ on
one day there was hail and then a little rain), wind always holding
from the north, dim blue skies, faint clouds, ashy frosts in the morn-
ings saw young ivyleaves along the sunkfence bitten and blackened.
:
There was something of a break, with rain, but still now it is cold
(May 21)
May 7 —To Kew Gardens with Br. Campbell the Highlander and
Br.Younan a young Syrian from Calcutta. Did not see much but the
—
mandarin duck. The Old Palace though is a pretty picture ruddled
red brick over a close-shaven green- white lawm. ;
chestnuts in bloom
and a beech in a fairy spray of green
I see how bloom look like big seeded stawberries
chestnuts in
May 1
7 —Bright. Took
Br. Tournade to Combe Wood^ to see and
gather bluebells, which we did, but fell in bluehanded with a game-
keeper, which is a humbling thing to do. Then we heard a nightingale
utter a few strains — strings of very liquid gurgles
On the way home, from about
4.30 to 5 p.m. but no doubt longer,
were two taper of vapour or cloud in shape like the tufts in
tufts
ermine, say, touched with red on the inside, bluish at the outer and
tapering end, stood on each side of the sun at the distance, I think, the
halo stands at and as if flying outward from the halo. The lefthand one
Was long- tailed and curved slightly upwards. They were not quite
diametrically opposite but a little above the horizontal diameter
and seemed to radiate towards the sun. I have seen the phenomenon
before
Piece of Irish from Br. Gartlan— ‘That bangs Bannagher and Ban'
nagher bangs the devil’
— — ; — ;;
I went one day to the Academy' and again June 12, when Fr.
Johnson* (Superior in the absence of Fr, Porter, who is gone to take
the waters at Carlsbad^ in Bohemia) kindly sent me to town with Br.
Bampton^ for change. These are the notes on the two days
Phillis on the new-mown hay (R. W. Macbeth®) —
^Very pretty but t|ie
Phillis a copy, a close gross copy in expression, gold red hair, circle of
cap, large shapely spread hands etc from the girl in Walker’s Harboiir
of Refuge
Briton Riviere’s^ Apollo (from Euripides) Like a roughened—
boldened Leighton, very fine. Leopards shewing the flow and slow
spraying of the streams of spots down from the backbone and making
this flow word-in and inscape the whole animal and even the group of
them; lion and lioness’s paws outlined and threaded round by a
touch of fur or what not, as one sees it in cats ^very true broad —
realism; herd of stags between firtrees all giving one inscape in the
moulding of their flanks and bodies and hollow shell of the horns
—
Queen of the Tournament P. H. Calderon’ Clear composition in the
pieces, the figures singly, not in the picture or piece in the old-
fashioned sense of piece ;
clever frank treatment of bright armour. His
name is Spanish : I think there is something Spanish about him
Millais® Scotch Firs: ‘
The silence that is in the lonely woods^ —No such
thing, instress absent, firtrunks ungrouped, four or so pairing but not
markedly, true bold realism but quite a casual install of woodland
with casual heathertufts, broom with black beanpods and so on, but
the master shewn in the slouch and toss-up of the firtree-head in near
background, in the tufts of fir-needles, and in everything. So too
—
Winter Fuel: '‘Bare ruined choirs^ etc almost no sorrow of autumn a ;
rawness (though I felt this less the second time), unvelvety papery
colouring, especially in and purple birchstems, crude rusty
raw silver
cartwheels, aimless mess or minglemangle of cut underwood in under-
your-nose foreground aimlessly posed truthful child on shaft of cart
;
him. Should be remarked how he makes his figures out into pieces
— scarlet turning of the coat collar, white waistcoat, red tie, face,
hair, scarf, breeches etc. So also in the Picture of Health the head,
curlson either side, green-blue butterfly of scarf, velvet coat, muff
—
Daydream a Millais-Gainsborough most striking crossbreed
colouring raw, blue handkerchief not any stuff in particular but
Reynolds’ emphatic drapery^ background (bushes and tank) either un-
finished or mere mud. Intense expression of face, expression of charac-
ter, not mood, true inscape — Icould hardly be exceeded.
think it
Features long, keeling, and Basque. The away of the cheek (it is a
fall
I face) masterly. Great art in the slighted details of the hat on the lap,
blue of the bracelet, lace of scarf; fingers resting on or against one
another very true and original (see on Holman Hunt’s Shadow of
Death much the same thing)
Alma Tadema Joseph overseer of PharaoKs granaries^ Joseph in sort —
of white linen toga, sceptre stained or painted like a lotus, black wig
merely antiquarian but excellent in that way
—
The Picture Gallery^ Less antiquarian lighting just a little studio-
;
slough, the arm of one resting on the other’s shoulder very faithful
drawing; little colour; happy use of openings, accidental installs,
people’s feet, hands etc seen through; use of square scaping
1 saw also a good engraving of his Vintage Festival, which impressed
the thought one would gather also from Rembrandt in some measure
and from many great painters less than Rembrandt/ of a master of
scaping rather than of inscape. For vigorous rhetorical but realistic
and unaffected scaping holds everything but no arch-inscape is
thought of
Leighton Moorish Garden: a dream of Granada^ —^Whimsical little
girl,blown together of Andalusian afternoon air, leading a white and
a coloured peacock (its train brown in the light exhibited) brown and
;
—
grouping little girl should have transomed the trailing sweep of the
peacocks’ trains, as indeed their necks did but not markedly enough
however beautiful chord of blue and green ^ browns and reds
Old Damascus: Jews^ Quarter seemed to me the gem of the exhibition.
Marble paved striped court of house, striped pillar, delicately capi-
talled brace of corbel-pillars springing from the channelled half-
architrave Arab capital, vault of arch as well as heads or lintels of
doors covered with inlaid roundels of all sorts of designs, the nearest
arch however not in roundels but in more highly wrought arabescjlie
patterns. The child with her arms held straight out to hold up h^r
frock to catch the lemons gave a horizontal line carried on by some-
thing in the waist of the woman with the staff to knock them down and
perhaps by other things don’t know whether he saw or meant this.
:
the whole picture were the inlaid blue-panelled door, which struck the
keynote, and the panelling in the shade of the arches within the
some of the roundels, mosaics in the vault of the arch
etc, stripes on pillars on wall, stripes on pavement, and the lemon-
woman’s coat or mantle. In the red scale were the same woman’s scarf
and drawers, the child’s skirt, which was rosier, the flowers in the pots,
some mosaic and the brown marble framing of the braced windows, in
which, as I have said there was a beautiful flush of dark. The frame of
this picture was margaretted with round arabesques in black but after
much looking I did not find much inscape in them, though richness
and grace
Clytaemnestra watching the beaconfires —
very smooth and waxen addled ;
curl and all that (as it was really there must say so) behind tall-up ;
‘shrugged’, as in Turner
W. L. Wylie^ —
Goodwin Sands ^Fiery truthful rainbow-end; green
slimy races of piers all clean, atmospheric, truthful, and scapish
;
—
Several Tissots^ Atmosphere green and yellow chestnut leaves
;
—
May 29 Fr. Rector went to Carlsbad to take the waters. Fr.
Joseph Johnson came in his place
—
May 30, 31 (Trinity Sunday) Bright, with wind dancing the coma,
lacy favours of the Turkey oaks
June 12 — Fr. Johnson sent me to town with Bampton, when I made
JOURNAL (1874)
some of the above notes on the Academy. After that we went to AH
Saints’ Margaret Street. I wanted to see if my old enthusiasm was a
mistake, I recognised certainly more than before Butterfield’s want of
rhetoric and telling, almost to dullness, and even of enthusiasm and
zest in his work —
thought the wall-mosaic rather tiresome for instance.
Still the rich nobility of the tracery in the open arches of the sanctuary
and the touching and passionate curves of the lilyings in the ironwork
under the baptistery arch marked his genius to me as before. But my
eye was fagged with looking at pictures
Then we went to Holman Hunt’s Shadow of Death} First impression
—
on entering great glare and lightsomeness (so that, strange to say, I
could not help knowing what a woman behind me meant by saying
that, well, it reminded her of those pictures they hang up in nation4
schools) ;
true sunset effect—that
the sunset light lodged as the
is/
The early part of the summer cold and very dry, so our haycrop
lightand poor. June 24. thunderstorm
June 25. Showery. To Kew Gardens with Dobson.^ On way home
got some fumitory and white bryony, which last kept a long time, the
leaves warping and coiling strongly in water. It is not dead yet,
July 16.
June 26. Triduum began, during which dark wet days the end of the
:
July 7. Over Wimbledon Camp, One man fired on his back with
one arm. The day was bright and windy it was very pretty to see the
:
flags folding and rolling on the wind ; the figures seemed to glide off at
one end and reappear at the other
July 9. To the Oratory. Addis was away but Fr. Law* was kind and
hospitable. I met Mr. David Lewis, ^ a great Scotist, and at the same
time old Mr. Brande Morris^ was making a retreat with us I got to :
know him, so that oddly I made the acquaintance of two and I sup-
pose the only two Scotists in England in one week
Heat has come on now. The air is full of the sweet acid of the limes.
The trees themselves are starrily tasselled with the blossom. I remark
that our cedars, which had a warp upward in the flats of leaf, in
getting their new green turn and take a soft and beautiful warp down-
wards whether it is the lushness or the weight of the young needles or
:
both I cannot tell. They are now very beautiful in shape and colour
July 12. I noticed the smell of the big cedar, not just in passing it
but always at a patch of sunlight on the walk a little way off. I found
the bark smelt in the sun and not in the shade and I fancied too this
held even of the smell it shed in the air
— —
July 13 Tht comet I have seen it at bedtime in the west, with
head to the ground, white, a soft well-shaped tail, not big I felt a :
certain awe and instress, a feeling of strangeness, flight (it hangs like
a shuttlecock at the height, before it falls), and of threatening
By the by Mr. Knowles was here lately to see Fr. Johnson. He has
now left the Society
July 14 —^To the House of Commons.** The debate was on the Schools
Endowment bill moved by Lord Sandon, who spoke well so did, not ;
preparing to speak and writing fast but we could not stay to hear him.
Lowe, who sat like an apple in the snow
next him, looked something
July 23 —^To Beaumont was the rector’s day. It was a lovely day
: it
uncut ryefields, the wheat looking white and all the ears making a
delicate and very true crisping along the top and with just enough air
stirring for them to come and go gently then there were fields reaping.
;
All this I would have looked at again in returning but during dinner
I talked too freely and unkindly and had to do penance going home.
One field I saw from the balcony of the house behind an elmtree,
^hich it threw up, like a square of pale goldleaf, as it might be,
catching the light
Our schools at Roehampton ended with two days of examination
before St. Ignatius’ feast the 31st. I was very tired and seemed deeply
cast down till I had some kind words from the Provincial. Altogether
250 JOURNAL (1874)
perhaps my heart has never been so burdened and cast down as this
year. The tax on my strength has been greater than I have felt before :
at least now at Teignmouth I feel myself weak and can do little. But
in all this our Lord goes His own way
On the 5th I went again to Beaumont for their speechday. This time
I went twice up to the beeches to see the view over Windsor and the
valley of the Thames which it commands. I returned in the evening
but next day went over again to go with their community to Teign-
mouth for the villa
Aug. 7 —This seems a dull place. The cliffs are of deep red sand-
stone ; the sand on the shore and stings you the vegetatiop
flies ; is
rich ;
the Teign is an estuary where it meets the sea and as far up
Newton Abbot. I evening along the road which skirts it As
walked this
far as Kingsteignton (I think) with Mr. Hayes. ^ Steep hills rising oh
the right, with beautiful elms running tall and slender, as I have
remarked before about Torquay, climbing up them; the hedges in
long sprays the soil red
;
—
Aug. 8 Walking in morning with Fr. Beiderlinden. Pretty farm-
yard at ^
—
thatch casting sharp shadow on white-
wash in the sun and a village rising beyond, all in a comb; sharp
showers, bright clouds sea striped with purple. In the evening I went
;
of the trees and their rich and handsome leafage charmed and held me.
It is a little nearer the sea in the same coomb the little girl spoke of
indeed. Then near Bishopsteignton from a hilltop I looked into a
lovely comb that gave me the instress of Weeping Winifred^^ which all
the west country seems to me to have soft maroon or rosy cocoa-dust-
:
blotted out the views. However I looked into this same and other
coombs. I saw how delicately beautiful the orchards look from far
above: the wrought-over boughs of the appletrees made an em-
broidery and whole head and wood a soft tufting and discolouring
which were melted by the distance and the rain. A steep sloping — *
field in which the sheaves were scattered and left in the rain, not made
—
which the red ends and chalk begins on the right Hope’s Nose and
;
Torbay just caught sight of beyond and above it. Near below me the
estuary and valley of the Teign Teignmouth at the corner between
;
river and sea, an irregular, not unpicturesque jaunt of white walls and
lavender slate gables the valley is backed and closed by Dartmoor,
;
with several tors in sight. The sea striped with splintered purple
cloud-shadows. I marked the bole, the burling and roundness of the
world. I sat down in the lap or fold of a steep slanting pasturefield the
grass of which was so smooth and parched and light that it pained
the eyes like a road and between the two cheeks of this field the sea was
caught in some such shape as this. Many
butterflies fluttering in the lanes, burnet-
moths loafing on heads of scabious hedges of ;
way Tunnel watch them. The wave breaks in this order the crest
to —
of the barrel ‘doubling’ (that, a boatman said, is the word in use) is
broken into a bush of foam, which, if you search it, is a lace and tangle
of jumping sprays then breaking down these grow to a sort of shaggy
;
quilt tumbling up the beach thirdly this unfolds into a sheet of clear
;
foam and running forward in leaves and laps the wave reaches its
greatest height upon the shore and at the same time its greatest clear-
ness and simplicity after that, raking on the shingle and so on, it is
;
forked and torn and, as it commonly has a pitch or lurch to one side
besides its backdraught, these rents widen they spread and mix and
:
the water clears and escapes to the sea transparent and keeping in the
end nothing of its white except in long dribble bubble-strings which
trace its set and flow. —
The shore here is not pebbly but sand and in
some places a fine red grit hardly to be called sand, when wet of a rich
maroon, fallen from the red cliffs, which are richly tapestried with
bramble, traveller’s-joy I think, and ivy and other things. The colour
of the breakers registered the nature of the earth they were over
mostly brown, then a wandering streak or stain of harsh clayey red.
The seawall is picturesque and handsome from below it is built of —
:
JOURNAL (1874)
white and red and blue blocks and with a brim or lip or cornice or
coping curved round to beetle over and throw back the spray without
letting it break on the walk above this shape and colour give it an :
—
Aug. 14 In the afternoon I went up the down above called Little
Haldon (it is Haldon, Shaldon, Hawldon, Shawldon, not Haldon etc).
At one gate on the way to the left —
a long barrow-like shapely hill ‘
between me and the Teign this dipped to a coomb and another hill
;
rose opposite; between them was the same coomb, I think, that 'J
beautiful sight.At the next opening above/ the barrow-hill was pressed
down, the hills beyond the Teign topped it, the flooded valley of the
Teign opened and Newton Abbot at the head. Then I got onto the moor
or down and looked over onto the opposite country and could see
—
without break all round Dartmoor; Berry Head in Torbay and, I
think, the head at the mouth of the Dart the Exe and the Dorset etc ; ;
coast and all the sea between. The distance, especially westward over
Dartmoor, was dim and dark, some rain had fallen and there were
fragments of a rainbow but a wedge of sunlight streamed down
through a break in the clouds upon the valley a hawk also was hang- :
ing on the hover. — I clearly saw then and also yesterday what I was
once doubtful of at Bursledon —beams rising from the horizon in the
east due opposite to the sunset:* this was some time before sunset,
room we used for chapel in which I saw that optical illusion I have
noticed in blue window-glass and in a stencilled wall in the church at
ing close it appeared the blue at all events was slightly higher than the
rest, being apparently of looser, tuftier make but not enough to ex-
think it is Bp. Marshall’s, date 1206. The flow of the main lines of
tracery enclosing the panels or medallions and the foliation filling the
spandrils and vacant field is original, flush, sweet, and tender, and
truly classical, as befits and marks a flush and hopeful age. ^Here are —
some dates and measurements from a guidebook
—
Towers 128 ft. high, 28 ft. square 1 1 12 ladychapel and chapter-
;
house 1223-1244 transept and part of choir 1281-1293 choir 132 ft.
; ;
Aug. 1
7 —^We went over to Ugbrooke at Lord Clifford’s invitation.
He took us over the park, to Chudleigh Rocks, which are a
cliff over a
deep and beautiful cleave quite closed with ashtrees into which we
looked down ; to the Danish Camp (it seems to be Roman but was
used in Alfred’s war with the Danes) —
the steep vallum is now grown
with trees, mainly sycomore ; later to a spot where Dryden wrote the
Hind and Panther and to a great oak, now in its decay and shrinking
in size by the fall of its branches from time to time, which serves as a
landmark for two parishes and goes by the name of Great Rawber
(or Rowber, I think, like how)^ probably a corruption of Magnum
—
Robur in Latin deeds. ‘Beeches rich in leaf, rather brown in colour,
one much spread —
Tall larches on slope of a hill near the lake and
’
^ill, also a wychelm, also a beech, both of these with ivory-white bark
pied with green moss there was an instress about this spot
: — ,
Beautiful
254 JOURNAL (1874)
glittering planes —
[Two great spreading laurels, one upheld by
props — A
little olivetree leaves like privet (it is akin to privet and ash,
:
Mr. Sircom* said) but stiffer, pricked at the end, sober green lined
with grey, the sprays free and graceful bark smooth and grey habit
; ;
of tree trim. The day was fine, the park is beautiful, especially from the
falls of ground —
great brows falling over to the lakes and clothed with
fern and clumps of trees and woods. In the house we were shewn a
—
wonderful piece of embroidery^ bedhangings, now taken down and
displayed on great folding screens they are of a Lady Cliiford’s work
:
—
execution delicate. I liked the family all the children spoke in a very
:
frank and simple way which shewed innocence as well as good breed-^
ing. As we drove home the stars came out thick I leant back to look :
at them and my heart opening more than usual praised our Lord to
and in whom all that beauty comes home
—
Aug. 18 ^Bright, the first such day here. ^We pulled over to —
Babbicombe, the sea being too calm for sailing. great seine wasA
floating and covered acres it is nothing but a belt or valence of net,
:
floated with corks above, leaded below, and having I forget what the
depth is, drawn into a semicircle with the ends resting at the shore, by
which it gathers the fish. If the ‘schoor'* (the boatman talked of
make a rush it breaks and for the same reason the fish cannot
‘schools’)
be dragged up on shore but must be taken out with dipnets. The fish
landed are mostly dead they kill one another with their weight and
:
crowding: only those at top are alive. He also told us there were
badgers living along the cliffs. At Marychurch we went to Mr. Brown-
low’s.^ (By the by I saw there Maderna’s^ beautiful statue of St.
Cecilia he was a contemporary of Bernini’s but the natural grace of
:
this figure is due to its having been made after the body of the saint as
it was found lying.) Then I went, with John Lynch,^ who had come to
was westered, a bush of sparkling beams and below/ the trees in the
;
hollow grey and throwing their shadows in spokes/ those straight below
the sun towards me, the others raying away on either side a beautiful —
.
JOURNAL (1874)
sight ; long shadows creeping in the slacks and hollows of the steep red
sandstone fields
I dined with Mr. Tozer^ a convert, brother to African Bishop Tozcr.
I met the Bp. of Plymouth^ (my sixth Vaughan) Miss Betts a convert,
;
a simple-minded young lady whom I liked she had tried her vocation
:
—
completed it had been truncated, one storey only. It is under restora-
tion by Godwin and so the choir boxed off as Exeter Cathedral. It is
mostly good and rich early Third-Pointed but the steeple and North
Porch are Middle-Pointed rich and terminal (split cusps etc), some
parts are First-Pointed and the whole shell of the church I believe is so.
This north porch is striking it is a hexagon, if I remember the win-
:
;
dows richly foiled but the cusps not split, though the effect is much
the same buttresses run up and end in a wedge upon their mullions,
:
with odd effect. Within, opening on the church, two beautiful First-
Pointed arcades with the heartfelt grace and flush in the foliation of
the capitals that belongs to that keeping. Odd windows in transepts
with a band of quaterfoils enclosing the rest (Third-Pointed). Third-
Pointed finely proportioned tomb behind altar, in two compartments
with canopy. The Geometrical windows at the west end of aisle and in
basement of tower are modern. Here and at the Cathedral tombs
with fine rich remarkably designed Middle-Pointed canopies. Of the
Cathedral we could not see much. Street is adding a nave to it:
designs cold, not pleasing
Aug. 21 —
^To see the suspension bridge. Odd to
see people walking below: they appear like this —
The rock the top of which is Clifton down is very fine.
We went on to Beaumont. As we approached Windsor
the London smoke met us rolling up the valley of the
Thames. Windsor stood out in the evening light I think there can
:
—
be no place like it the eye-greeting burl of the'"Round Tower all ;
the crownlike medley of lower towers warping round red and white;
views of the Castle, etc. Came out at the Wheatsheaf and by Engle-
field green, all grown with grey and red heath, so down Cooper’s Hill,
home
—
Aug. 24 ^To Roehampton
—
Aug. 25 ^To Westminster Abbey, where I went round the cloisters,
examined the diaper, took in the beautiful paired triforium-arcade
with cinqfoiled wheels riding the arches (there is a simplicity of instress
in the cinqfoil) etc. Then to the National Gallery, where I made notes.
As hurried from picture to picture at first these words came to my
mind
I
—
‘Studious to eat but not to taste’. I dined with our Fathers at
Westminster
—
Aug. 26 ^Heard definitively that I was to go to St. Beuno’s^ to
make my theology
—
Aug. 28 Rising half an hour earlier than usual I saw the full moon
of brassyish colour and beautifully dappled hanging a little above the
—
clump in the pasture opposite my window. ^To St. Beuno’s. Henry
Kerr and Mr. Bodoano met me at St. Asaph, Mr. Bacon put scarlet
geraniums in my room, and everyone was very kind and hospitable
The rector is Fr. James Jones, the minister Fr. Murphy^
—
Aug. 30 ^Walked with Mr. Bacon to Cwm churchyard
—
Aug. 31 ^Walking with Henry Kerr. We talked to the old lodge-
keeper at Bryn Bella she will be 89 next month. She had been servant
:
there to Mrs. Piozzi, Mrs. Thrale^ that was. Also she told us she was a
Tremeirchion Cow there are the C'wm Calves, the Caerwys Crows,
:
decided not to do so
—
Sept. 7 We heard of the Marquis of Ripon’s conversion. He had
been just before Grand Master of the Freemasons: it seems a great
stroke of grace
Sept. 8 —^With Morris up the FoeP
Fr.
Sept. 10 — Blandyke;
^A and bright.
fine With Mr. Bacon to
sound), Cefn Rocks, from which the view of the deep valley of the
Elwy, the meeting of two, which makes three, glens indeed, is most
beautiful. The woods, thick and silvered by sunlight and shade, by
the flat smooth banking of the tree-tops expressing the slope of the hill,
came down to the green bed of the valley. Below at a little timber
—
bridge I looked at some delicate flying shafted ashes there was one
especially of single sonnet-like inscape —
between which the sun sent
straight bright slenderish panes of silvery sunbeams down the slant
towards the eye and standing above an unkept field stagged with
patchy yellow heads of ragwort. In the evening I watched a fine
sunset from the tower the place is famous for them
:
At night the retreat began, given by Fr. Coleridge. There are some
remarks on it in my notes of meditation. The ordination of sub-
deacons took place on the i8th, by Bp. Thomas Brown* of Newport
and Menevia in place of Bp. James Brown^ of Shrewsbury, who is ill
next day, the 19th, that of deacons and also the minor orders were
given to me with six others. One of these was Br. Magri a Maltese,
who has an interesting history. It is said he was to be married, when
he broke off the match, gave his property over to his brother, and fled
to our noviceship. Perhaps this word fled does not truly represent what
—
happened. ^The retreat ended with the i8th. Fr. Brindle^ is minister
in Fr. Murphy’s place
difference made on purpose but not in the lettering of the word then ;
one could catch the difference between ghali and ali in quick conversa-
tion, or at a distance. A
better instance is gharghafy which sounds like
am with some hesitation or delay before the vowels. Their verse is
either by quantity or accent (with rhyme) but I found that this
the word we tried it was plain the accent followed the quantity/ above
two syllables, just as in the modern accentuation of Latin words
26 o JOURNAL (1874)
This day my late pupil Br. Richard O’Neill died at Stonyhurst of
(most likely typhus) fever brought with him from Roehampton. There
was, I now remember, a sad wistful look he had, a sort of mark of
early death stamped upon him I interpret after the event
:
Sept. 20 — —
Ordination of priests* ^sixteen, including many Germans
from Ditton. At the singing of the Veni Creator and giving of the Orders
I was by God’s mercy deeply touched
—
Sept. 24 ^Very bright and clear. I was with Mr. Rickaby^ on the
hill above the house. All the landscape had a beautiful liquid cast of
blue. Many-coloured smokes in the valley, grey from the Denbigh
lime-kiln, yellow and lurid from two kilns perhaps on the shoulders of
a hill, blue from a bonfire, and so on .
Afterwards a lovely sunset of rosy juices and creams and combs thi ;
—
grey washes at thinnings or openings of the mist. ^At that time it was
—
dull but cleared to a lovely day ^we have been having indeed a
—
second summer , but in the evening a fog came suddenly on and then
cleared again
Sept. 28 —^With Bodoano Caerwys wood, a beautiful place. The
to
day being then dark and threatening we walked some time under a grey
light more charming than sunshine falling through boughs and leaves
—
Oct. I ^This day the scholastic year began and Fr. Tosi read the
inaugural address, an interesting composition but a little amusing
shewing that the present persecution was ‘omnium taeterrima’
—
Oct. 2 ^There is a splendid thick-stemmed carnation-coloured lily
called valotta. I saw one in the greenhouse next to an agapanthus^ on
the same shelf: the chord of colour and even the bidding of shape
in the two heads struck me very much
—
now the stress and buoyancy and abundance of the water is before
my eyes
Qct. 12 —^The bp came, so we got a half holiday and I went with
Rickaby to Cwm. We came back by the woods on the Rhuallt and the
view was so like Ribblesdale from the fells that you might have
thought you were there. The sky was iron grey and the valley, full of
Welsh charm and graceful sadness, all in grave colours lay like a
painted napkin
Oct. 19 — I was there again with Purbrick, at the scaffolding which
is left as a mark of the survey at the highest point. We climbed on this
and looked round it was a fresh and delightful sight. The day was
:
rainy and a rolling wind ; parts of the landscape, as the Orms’ Heads,
were blotted out by rain. The clouds westwards were a pied piece
sail-coloured brown and milky blue; a dun yellow tent of rays
opened upon the skyline far off. Cobalt blue was poured on the hills
bounding the valley of the Clwyd and far in the south spread a bluish
damp, but all the nearer valley was showered wdth tapered diamond
flakes and brown and green
of fields in purple
Nov. with Wm. Splaine^ we saw a vast multitude of
8—Walking
starlings^ making an unspeakable jangle. They would settle in a row
of trees then, one tree after another, rising at a signal they looked like
;
winds you could see the nearer and farther bow of the rings by the
—
size and blackness many would be in one phase at once, all narrow
;
black flakes hurling round, then in another then they would fall upon
;
a field and so on. Splaine wanted a gun then ‘there it would rain
:
with Mr. Hughes up Moel y Parch, from the top of which we had a
noble view, but the wind was very sharp. Snowdon and all the range
reminded me of the Alps they looked like a stack of rugged white
:
flint, specked and streaked with black, in many places chiselled and
as if for vexation, caught and gnawed at the stone quay of the sluice
close under me
Susan Bond is married (to Mr. Pooley). Mrs. Beechey has been dead
about 3 weeks. Baillie is threatened with consumption and has been\
spitting blood he is ordered south and is going up the Nile
:
made the distance dim and the stack of Denbigh hill, as we came near,
dead mealy grey against the light the castle ruins, which crown the
:
hill, were punched out in arches and half arches by bright breaks and
before the gateway I had an instress which only the true old work
gives from the strong and noble inscape of the pointedarch. We went
to eat our lunch to a corner opening by a stone stile upon a wilderness
by which you get down to the town, under the outer wall, overgrown
with ivy, bramble, and some graceful herb with glossy lush green
sprays, something like celery
Feb. 7 — I asked Miss Jones in my Welsh lesson the Welsh for fairy,
for we were translating Cinderella. She told me cipendper (or perhaps
ciperndper, Anglice kippemapper) :* the word is nothing but kidnapper,
t She afterwards called the coats long (llaes, that is/ trailing ; perhaps uncon-
fincd by a girdle) and black. The caps or hats were round and black
LECTURE NOTES: RHETORIC
RHYTHM AND THE OTHER STRUCTURAL
PARTS OF RHETORIC-VERSE^
Mention of rhythm,^ ‘number’, as heard in periods, in prose,
leads to treatment of rhythm and its belongings, the various
shapes of speech called verse
Definition of verse — ^Verse is speech having a marked figure, Verse defined
(or verseless composition) begins, for they pass into one another
—as for instance if rhymed but unmetrical doggrel is verse
Beyond verse as thus defined there is a shape of speech possible Another vehicle
in which there is a marked figure and order not in the sounds but of composition
Hebrew poetry is said to be of this nature. This is figure of gram- Hebrew poetry
mar instead offigure of spoken sounds which in the narrower sense couched in this
weak —only they go together for the most part. In French they English
maiso n, chapell ami for mai son, chap elle, a mi because the tonic
accent is or often is maiscl\n, chapell^e, ami^. And so the French
/ / f
/
—
' . . . ,
tmguish weak syllables JVapole^on, amiti^e, if I am not mistaken.
So also probably in Greek
For the Greek name for accent is irpoacphia, that is the tune Greek accent
tonic accent then differs by high and low, sharp and flat. The
emphatic differs by strong and weak, which easily passes into
loud and soft. When we contract two or more syllables into one
we try to give as far as possible the new syllable the properties
which all the old had or when we make a word of one or fewer
syllables stand for a word of more syllables ;
it thus comes to have
the heights of two or three tonic accents and the stresses or
Circumflex strengths of two or three accents of stress. This is circumflex
<iccent
accent (not the same as circumflex vowelling, which is break,
though this latter will involve the former) and there will b^
two kinds of it, for stress and for pitch \
It
its
the ordinary way is short and as rhymed to bind long or sit, got, English
hat, met short, sight, goat, hate, meet long, is rather strength than
length of syllable. Undoubtedly there is a difference of length
and so also when you add consonants thinkst is longer than
thick, lastst than lass etc but not in the Greek way by ratios
of 1:2.
Accent of stress has been explained It is the bringing out
(3) — Accent of stress
parable I
+4 + + + = 4+4,
1 or perhaps 1+2 = + + 1, for i i
f If f If
,
—
| | |
' '
'
I ' I ' I
' etc, w-|w-|w-or^|-^|-v^| - especially a long
way from the beginning. In other words how are we to deter-
mine the rhythm and the feet? In quantitative verse (which al-
ready has time) by the beat, in accentual (which already has
beat/ in accent) by the time. We must then define rhythm, foot,
beat. Beat, Latin ictus, is metrical accent, the beat, that is the Beat
strong beat, as the accent is the strongest accent, is the strongest
beat of a foot, hfoot two or more syllables, running to as many
is Foot
as four or five, grouped about one strong beat. The smaller
Greek names of The Greeks have given names to the feet from two syllables
feet up to four and to one of five syllables. They are pyrrhicL
TTvppLxto£y ^ ^; spondee^ oTrovhclos ;
—
iamby lapPogy ^ - ; trochee\
—
TpoxdLosy x^p^^osy three syllables tribrachy rpi-
macer, -w- •
dvaTraiarrosy anapaest y ;
ScticrvAo?, dactyl, - v/ ^
ap(l>ippaxvsy amphibrach, ^ ;
poXooGo^, molossus, ; for four
syllables TrpoKeXcvaparLKog, proceleusmatic, ^ naLojv npw-
;
Tos, first paeon, - v/ u; 77. Scvrepog, second paeon, ^-^ ^yir. rplios,
third paeon, tt. rerapros, fourth paeon, Icovikos a
majore, long-to-short Ionic, — 1. a minore, short-to-long Ionic,
— ;
Stta/xjSo?, double iamb, v-^ ; Strpoxatos, Bix^p^ios,
double trochee, - ;(opta/ij9o?, choriamb, -^^- (= trochee -f
iamb) avrlaTraaros, antispast, ^ (= iamb + trochee);
—
;
w - fourth,
; ;
StcTTroi'Seto?, double spondee, . The
dochmius, hoxiiios, ^ with many variations is sometimes
counted a foot, but is rather a plrpov. Examples — brevis, longi,
Feet may be mixed but the beat must be commonly the same Mixing feet
or nearly.
The amphibrach repeated or mixed with other feet
is
considered unlawful because of its very unequal division
j .^ 3, to remedy which you must beat in the middle of the long
which is unpleasant. St. Austin’s pupil {de Musical) is
syllable,
faci|as |i
hone,sta’
The repetition of feet, the same or mixed, without regard to Rhythm and
how long, is rhythm. Metre is the grouping of a certain number of metre
feet. There is no metre in prose though there may be rhythm.
Feet give their names to the rhythms that are made out of Rhythms and
them. their characters
There is iambic, trochaic, dactylic, anapaestic, bacchic,
paeonic, ionic, choriambic, antispastic, dochmiac rhythm.
Aristotle says^ that all TroiTyat?, that is creative art, is pLlp. 7jGi,Sy
imitation, reproduction, representation and he says this of
verse, music, and dancing. The imitation or representation is of
B 6028 T
S74 LECTURE NOTES! RHETORIC
character, feeling and action Kal rjOrf Kal ndOrj tccu rrpd^^ts
And so in fact it is commonly felt and said that feet and rhvthrns
have their particular character. In general when the short or light
syllables go before the long or strong, as in the iamb, the ana-
paest, the ionic a minore^ the third and fourth paeon, the rhythm
is forward and expresses present action. When it is the other way,
as in the trochee, dactyl, the ionic a majore, the first and second
paeons, it expresses succession and suits narrative. In considering
the character of a rhythm we must be careful to see what it
really is, not the easiest or most obvious way of scanning it
(‘Now the hungry lion roars’^ is iambic though it begins with k
trochee and ‘’Twas when the seas were roaring’^ trochaic thougl^
it begins with an iamb). Also the even rhythms, anapaestic)
dactylic, spondaic, ionic are more monotonous than the uneven,
iambic, trochaic, ere tic. More in detail the iambic^ is near the
language of common talk, as Aristotle says of Greek and the same
holds for English, and as modem verse is essentially spoken, not
sung, it is the staple rhythm in the Teutonic and Romance
languages: the ancients use it for dialogue. The trochaic^ is
tripping, ut idem dicit: it runs. It suits brisk narrative (”Twas
when the seas were roaring’), especially when not doubled.
When doubled it becomes grave and monotonous (‘Ah dis-
tinctly Iremember’ and Hiawatha) The dactyl is like the trochee
.
there is the accent but you cannot use the quantity for this in
English without spoiling the rhythm. The spondee is solemn and
slow. The pyrrhich is very light there cannot be an accentual
:
more unfortunate’
— ‘The Assyrian came down’) the amphi-
—
:
brach has the most bound and canter leaps like waves. The
^it
second epic and narrative, the last lyric verse. We must remem-
ber that in modern verse part of the office of rhythm is thrown
on rhyme and other things
Rhythm of prose — Aristotle^ says {Rhet. Ill viii)
— ‘The shape Rhythm of
(or figure)of the diction must not be metrical nor yet unrhyth- P^^se
moreover it stands out and catches the ear, making the hearer on
the watch for resemblances, when the chime will come again. In
fact it is like a public manumission, when word
the boys take the
out of the crier’s asks/ Whom does the
mouth and when he
emancipated man
choose for his patron? shout Cleon, On the
other hand what is unrhythmical is unbounded. Now it should
be bounded, though not by metre, for the unbounded is un-
pleasant and unintelligible. Number puts a bound on every-
thing and the number (or count) of the figure of the wording is
rhythm: metres are sections of this. There should then be
rhythm in speaking but not metre (which would make it poetry),
but not exact rhythm. Partial rhythm will be what we want.’
—
He then names three rhythms the heroic (dactyls with alterna-
tive spondees), which has the ratio
I the
iambic and the trochaic,
;
one of those named which by itself does not make metre, so that
it
unnoticed the easiest.’ Only they should use not only
passes
the paeon, as they do, which suits beginnings, as AaXoyevesy
first ‘
^
AvKLav and ;^tKT€o/cdjLta ^EKarCy irai Jid? ’ (notice the
‘
ratio, which is hard to catch, and by its length, which makes the
longs and beats wide apart and so also hard to catch the particu-
lar rhythm of, though rhythmical. Instances of English accentual
—
paeons ‘is no more glorjy than a mumlmy is a man’ (fourth)—
r f
‘and such |
are ir|reparable’
(first). Cicero^ did not agree
losses
with Aristotle about paeons; no wonder, for Aristotle was\
speaking of Greek, in which accent went for next to nothing in
rhythm and was, if noticed, often on the last syllable, while in
Latin it is an element to be considered and is never on the last
so that Latin has essentially a dropping beat, which will not suit
with the final paeon. The Asiatic schooP of oratory liked to end
with the double trochee, which from the lightness or trip is free
of the single, and undoubtedly the dropping cadence satisfies the
f ft ^ ft ,
overboiled,
ft
|
t u
then the beef |
f
underdone’—
ft
|
at
/ n t //
times sadness, |
regret never’
Saturnian verse
Quod
f
re sua diffidens
|
Iff
aspere afflicta
and
Cornelius Lucius |
Scipio Barbatus
' ' ' ' ' '
. .
fTaurasia, Cisauna |
Samnio cepit,
or
/ f f f t
or this
/ t f t
f
j
In April Come he will,
/ / f
I
In May He sings all day,
/ / f /
,
In August Go he must
syllables are not counted but not even the number of beats in a
line, which is commonly two in each half-line but sometimes
three or four. It almost seems as if the rhythm were disappearing
and repetition of figure given only by the alliteration. The
Saturnian is stricter: three beats to a half-line are commonly
reckoned but I suspect that two are allowed in the ending in
long words. It must have been chanted, as the beats as often as
The same not disagree with the word-accents. This beat-rhythm allows of
developed development as
much as time-rhythm wherever the ear or mind
is true enough to take in the essential principle of it, that beali^
Shakespeare^-
/ / / /
GampbelP
f f f t
Busk
1
ye,
1
busk
1 1
|
ye, my winsome marrow
and
f tf f ft ' '
4 for 2 + =3)
1
A la porte de la salle
t t ! t
^
ft!
^
weaker than with us. Thus you may have trochees in the second
foot of a five-foot iambic or indeed in any place but the last ; in
English commonly only in the first, as
t t t t / ,
the third and fourth feet it would not break the rhythm. The
same rule holds for the iambic trimeter. In the pentameter the
break in the middle divides the line equally indeed but it leaves
a foot unfinished, so as to give the equation 2J+2I 5. (The =
hexameter and iambic trimeter have the equation =6
or 3jH-2| =
6). Yet even so it is too monotonous to be repeated
twice running. The English ten-syllable iambic (made use of in
Italian, German, and sometimes in French) may be divided
three ways so as to avoid monotony and yet have balance first
between the second and third feet, which gives 2+3 5, next =
between the third and fourth (3+2 = 5), lasdy breaking the
third foot (2J+2J = 5). This last is not monotonous like the
Of that
ft
pentameter, because the foot
forbidden ||
tree
is
/
reversed after the break
whose mortal
ft taste
—
though the number of syllables is the same : in fact the number
of beats is different. (Or say
/ / ' ' /
—
.
Without unspotted, ||
innocent within ).*
certamine campi
.
—
— — —
*
= + 3+4 (=
terris ||
nivis atque dirae*
=
9))
Wrapt
J t f
in eternal silence,
f
far
ft
from enemies-
but Byron always in the other. However the Alexandrine as they
use it and as it is found in heroic couplets is exceptional. For its
In the last the two accentings agree only on the syllable sig in
signa. The case of the Latin Sapphic is still more striking. The
word-accents are made to run
/ / / \/ // f/
Jam sdtis |
t^rris ||
nivis atque dirae
// /
/ / //
Grandinis [
misit H pater et rubente
or
r f .
Mercdri |
facunde ||
n^pos Atlantis
// t
Dives et lasciva
If
1|
ff
tenetque grata
If
—
If I
Nuntium curvaeque
If
||
I
l^rae parentem —
They give in fact the so-called English sapphic of the Needy
Knifegrinder and a passage ofKehama,^ In'English Milton made
experiments in accentual counterpoint, as
expressed
Under this head we may include emphasis of meaning
— — —
unity of the verse but the contrary ; they make it organic and
what is organic is one. All the parts of water are alike but the
parts of man’s and man’s individuality is marked but
body differ
one and one thing than the ellipse, yet the ratio of its circum-
ference to its diameter is undiscoverable, whereas there must be
one ellipse in which it is 3 i and any number of others in which
:
the beginning with the same sound, as may, must, man, mother
wiih m ;
that is/ with the same consonant or with any vowel, for
all vowels alliterate, probably on account of the catch in the
mouth (what people wrongly call the smooth breathing) or of
the rustle (which is nearer), which is the same in all. There-
fore the line
alliterates but not for the reason the writer thought, for in the
six alliterated syllables there are at least three vowels (reading
<ind and alliteration withoutnot one only the hard or dry
slur), —
short a
;
the long shut English a the Italian long e and the long ;
broad a
Any vowels then alliterate but with a soft or imperfect alli-
teration, but in consonants only the same and those perfectly.
LECTURE notes: RHETORIC
Perhaps there is a very soft alliteration between a consonant and
its belonging aspirate—;/> and /, b and v etc. But the belonging
(dh) in there, do not and offend the ear if represented as doing so,
in the word will alliterate with consonants but not so well as the
initial ones. When vowels alliterate in this way it is rather
assonance than alliteration. All initial syllables alliterate, but
faintly if unemphatic
marked
Assonance Between these two comes assonance. It is sameness of vowel in
not, as matter and answer, entangled and many. When used with or
poem’—
On that lone shore loud moans the sea^
differ : This may be as long and short, e.g. came and them, meet rhymes
and it, etc, and this is very lawful and sometimes even graceful
when we keep up the true correspondences but not when we
make day rhyme to Africa, as Browning^ does, or lay to Cophetua,
as Tennyson,^ which are no rhymes at all, or by to cruelly, which
was a rhyme ;
—
or it may be by taking neighbouring vowels in
one of the vowel scales, as love and of, for both are moulded or
labial and short and dry, or love and prove, for both are moulded
or labial, or bear and near, for both are shut and long and cir-
cumflexed but here English writers are not guided by the ear
:
but by the eye, for love and prove is far commoner than luck and
duke oreven luck and shook, which is a bad principle there is —
and should be more licence in double rhymes than in single and
when consonants follow than when the vowels are open ;
— (ii)
word rhymes with two or more and those not enclitic the one o|n
the other, as in minute and in it, but like chimney and slim knee iiji
the Duchess,^ for then they do not agree in quantity and distribu-,
tion of accent ;
(vi) when the rhyme ends in the middle of a word,
if for instance the word is partly in one line, partly in another
Rhyme to the The so-called rhyme to the eye is when the syllables are spelt
(ye and ear alike, as plough and though and cough and rough and enough, but this
water. Of the above words rough and enough are perfect rhymes,
plough and rough none at all. Rhyming to the eye in no way helps
the rhyme, rather the contrary, for there are two elements in the
beauty rhyme has to the mind, the likeness or sameness of sound
and the unlikeness or difference of meaning, and the last is
wingest, ever and never, brother and mother, but mother and other is a
rich rhyme.
Unlawful Unlawful rhymes—We may notice (i) mere eye-rhymes; (ii)
rhymes m and n, for though they are like enough roughly to satisfy the
among others they are also found in ballads and Scotch native
;
poetry this and the former case are rather substitutes for rhyme
:
is not that the vowels go for nothing but that they seem to be sided
rima from Pulci^ and a sonnet from a note in the works of Redi,^
the first of vowel-less rhyme (casa cosa, bretta brutta), the other of
full rhyme. In English he instances
help the memory, and then is useful art, not pLovGiKrj (Thirty
days hath September’ and ‘Propria quae maribus’ or Livy’s
Imendum carmen) and so is not poetry. Or it might be composed
without meaning (as nonsense verse and choruses ‘Hey nonny
—
nonny’ or ‘Willc wau wau wau’ etc) and then alone it would not
he poetry but might be part of a poem. But if it has a meaning
and is meant to be heard for its own sake it will be poetry if you
take poetry to be a kind of composition and not the virtue or
success or excellence of that kind, as eloquence is the virtue of
oratory and not oratory only and beauty the virtue of inscape
and not inscape only. In this way poetry may be high or low,
B 6628 U
— — 1
Kinds of Verse —
Verse wholly or Verse then is speech wholly or partially repeating the same
partially re- figure of sound. Partially as ‘Jam satis terris nivis atque dirae’—
peats the same - - - - u - o - - for the common measure
that is
/
Ly
I I
figure of sound
— this ex-
(= ^ -) is repeated throughout, wholly when you add ‘Gram-
plained dinis misit Pater et rubente’; or partially, taking the wh^le
stanza, for it repeats the same figure for three lines but gives lip
in the fourth, but wholly if you take two stanzas. More clearly
a partial repetition only, for this is verse though you did not add
another line, and this is a whole repetition ^ ^ u1 — | |
quain, margaretting
[There are three artistic tones candor, chasteness, ‘clear’,
home at Hampstead, but was a boarder for part of it. himself burnt GMH
parts of this 1862 Journal on i June 1866 (see p. 138) ;
no other parts have
been traced.
money, and he was shipped off to his uncle, Judge James Langton Clarke,
in Melbourne. In turn bank-clerk, bushman, editor of the Colonial Monthly,
mimes, as well as three novels. He fell badly into debt, and died after a
severe illness, aged only 35. GMH
noted his address in 1864, and Cyril
Hopkins kept up a correspondence with him. The Hopkins brothers recur
constantly in his stories and reminiscences. In the story Holiday Peak he
describes a might-have-been meeting with Gerard, become then a painter
p. 4) and married to ‘Constantia*, having three children; and in
(see Life,
his novel Chidiock Tichboume there arc two characters called Gerrard and
4 * I-
Here begins the small pocket note-book hereafter described
Growth,
C. I. It is inscribed on the end-paper ‘Gerard M. Hopkins,/ Sept. 24.
1863’. The opening
pages have been removed. The text begins on the
m NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
lower half of a cut page with this fragment ‘growth . . ,young\ The ‘horn’
on the verso of this half-page and runs on to the first full page,
4.note starts
which is numbered (by Hopkins himself) 15. The MS is mostly in pencil,
but a few parts have been written over in ink.
2. com. After this word in MS
is what appears to be a coronis (as given
4« 3. Servius: on Aeneid, vii. 684, Herna —vox Sabina qua saxum signifi-
cabatur; cf. Pauli excerpta ex libris Pompei Festi de significatione verborum (ed,
W. M. Lindsay, Teubner, 1913), 100. ‘Hernici dicti a saxis, quae Marsi
hema dicunt.’
K€ TL 9
ToifS €t
avTLKa drjXvv npoirav S* dnepevae Kap'qvcov
eOrjKey \
for horns, and dprjrrjp for priest’ (trs. Bywater) The form of the nominative .
depends on the accent given in this place epvvyas would give epvv^ ipvvya^:
;
the
6 . Related in the manner of Arnold and Liddell, ‘The Legend’ parodies
I .
Rome, 1855), one of John Murray’s ‘Student’s Series’ which read at GMH
Highgate; probably also Arnold’s Early History of Rome, of which the first
6. 3. chief magistracy, Robert Scott (181 1-87; see DjVB) had become Master
of Balliol in 1854 largely as a stop-gap to keep Jowett out; but was not the
cipher some writers on Jowett suggest. Joint editor, with Dean Liddell, of
the Greek-English Lexicon, Dean Ireland’s Professor of Exegesis 1861-70.
Dean of Rochester 1870, when Jowett succeeded him as Master. Some of
Hopkins’s undergraduate essays are initialled ‘R.S.’, for it was a Balliol
custom to write essays at intervals for the Master in addition to routine
work for the Tutors. For an appreciation of Scott as Master see P. A.
Wright-Henderson, Glasgow and Balliol from 1858 to 1865 and other Essays^
1926, the relevant essay reprinted from Blackwood'*s^ Mar. 1894; and for a
more critical picture. Sir Geoffrey Faber, Jowett^ I 957 j PP- 109-10, 206-7.
Mods and there are extant essays written for him (see appx. IV, p. 530). See
A Memoir of Sir William Anson, ed. H. H. Henson P. A. Wright-Henderson,
;
7 2. Gurney, Frederick (1841-98), was eldest son and one of the eight
-
is the one figure which fills my whole memory ofjny Oxford life. There is
him all his life and regretted that he did not see more of him.
NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES 297
g, 3.
'Purpurea . . . BritannV: Virgil, Georg, iii. 25.
9. 4. Reiss,
Frederick Augustus (1843-1945). Balliol 1863-6. See LL, iii.
75
and note.
9. 5.
Amcotts, Vincent Amcotts Cracroft- (1845-81), eldest son of Weston
Cracroft-Amcotts, of Hackthorn. Eton. Balliol 1863. 3rd Mods 1864;
3rd Law and History 1866. GMH
described him in a letter, 4 May 1863
{LL, 77) as ‘the Genteel Skeleton’ and said: ‘He plays the piano
iii.
brilliantly, and is the greatest dilettante in the college. He also writes very
good poetry. For the rest, as the French say, he is said to have delivered
her gown, though puritanically plain, made by one of the best modistes in
London’ this was a ‘suspicious sign of infirmity of faith in our modern
;
moralists’ {Proserpina, i. vi; Works, ed. Cook and Wedderburn, xxv. 282).
One Aunt Judy illustration ‘Nothing to Do’ was in RA 1859. Six prints of
these and one or two original sketches of Clara Lane’s are in Hopkins
family albums. It is not known what sketch GMH took to Oxford.
Another Lane daughter, Eliza or Emily, exhibited at the Female Artists’
but not at RA.
9 - Mrs. Chappie had been in 1862 some kind of responsible housekeeper
7-
or matron at Elgin House, Highgate School, when Hopkins was a border
there, and seems to have been kind to him when he was in trouble with the
Headmaster {LL, iii. 2).
*0- I This I do not believe. Hopkins’s doubts about Knight’s interpretation
.
of these lines from Twelfth Mght seem reasonable enough. His own sug-
gestion is preferable, and is similar to the view of Steevens which Knight
quotes with disapproval ‘Liver, brain, and heart, are admitted in poetry
:
Shakspere calls “her sweet perfections” * {The Pictorial Edition of the Works
of Shakespeare, ed. Charles Knight, 136).
7 vols, 1842: Comedies, ii.
298
10. NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
2. Castiliano volto: Charles Knight, above, gives this as Warburton’s
reading.
patience and cheeked him wildly, and he blazed into me with his ridingi
whip* (LL, iii. 2). See rest of letter, and Luxmoore to Arthur Hopkins
(LL, iii. 394-6).
11. I. TTCToAa TTvpLva. The phrase occurs in Plutarch, De Placitis Philoso-
phorum, 889 a, in the section Trepl ax^pLarog acrripwv lA \ ”Evloi Sc
ii.
16. IChalmers says. Chalmers’s note in his edition of The Plays of William
.
16. 2. ^How will this fadge?'. The reference is to Twelfth Nighty ii. ii. 34. (The
note from Chalmers is not quite accurately copied Chalmers : italicizes all
the words except the first to, and is.)
16. 3. To fond on. The expression comes from Twelfth Night, ii. ii. 35, and
Hopkins’s note is correct. Chalmers has no note here,
16. 4.R.R P.R. . J.R. these must be Riddell’s, Palmer’s, and Jowett’s
.
.
:
working with you, I am always working for you* (Bright’s Journal, Nov.
1863 and Mar. 1864). The house in Christ
lectures, given in Pusey’s
Church, were sometimes called they were always in the evening but
levees \
not constantly on the same day of the week.
16. 6. Adadan is almost certainly James Riissell Madan (1841-1905), son of
Revd G. Madan of Cam
and Redcliffe, Glos., Hon. Canon of Bristol,
Marlborough. Sch. Queen’s, Oxford i860. Member of the Hexameron
1867 (seep. 328). Anglican Deacon 1865. Principal (surely too young and
inexperienced) Warminster Mission House, for training ‘theological stu-
dents intending to be ordained and go abroad’ (Madan to Liddon 27 Feb.
1868; Liddon Papers). By Spring 1872 was in serious doubts about his
Anglican position and consulted Bright; was advised by Bishop Moberly
of Salisbury to leave Warminster. Studied history of 3rd to 8th General
Councils in Oxford, and was convinced that the promise ‘Tu es Petrus,
300 NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
&c* belonged to the Sedes Petri. Received into Roman Church (* “Ro-
mana’”, he said, ‘was an old epithet by schismatics &c of the Church’)
by the Bp of Clifton at Christmas 1872 (Letters to Liddon, 27 Apr. and
2 Mar. 1873), Signed himself to Liddon ‘Your affect, former disciple’.
Taught at Kensington R.C. School. Ordained priest. Missioner in New
Zealand 1886-96. Died at Mill Hill 12 Apr. 1905. At this date Hopkins
and Skrine would hardly have been dining with his elder brother Henry
George, Fellow of Queen’s 1861 (see p. 308).
16 7. Skrine, There were two Skrines in Oxford. This is probably not John
.
ham. Balliol 1863. 3rd Greats 1867. Gk Testament Prize 1869; Denyer
and Johnson Sch. 1870. Deacon 1868. Vice-Principal, St Edmund Hall
1871-89. City Lecturer, St Martin’s, Oxford 1872-95. Theological Lec-
turer at five different colleges between 1879 1896. Rector of Water-
stock 1896.
very ill then, & said that he was much depressed. That day or two seemed to
bring back all the old friendship, & give it, as it were, new life. When my
Husband came back he spoke of Father Gerard to others; & we had just
—
managed that he should be sent for back to England ^when we heard —
of his illness. We were hoping to have him in Oxford for some time this
— —
summer .... He was so lovable so singularly gifted &, in his saintliness,
so apartfrom, & different to, all others. Only that his beautifully gentle &
generous nature made him one with his friends; & led us to love & to
value him, —
feeling that our lives were better, & the world richer, because
of him. . One thought has much comfort in it. Although Fr. Gerard’s
. ,
— —
work in the world, so to speak, his literary work was always, for him,
mixed with a certain sense of failure & incompleteness, yet he had the life
he chose for himself. And, in his religious life, he was very happy. My
Husband remembers how he would speak of his enjoyment in the saying
his Office, & in the quiet completeness of his religion’ (14 June 1889:
Bodl. MSS).
The Paravicinis gave a font to St Aloysius’s Church, Oxford, in Hopkins’s
memory.
16.12. Willert, Paul Ferdinand ( 1 844-1 912). Eton. Balliol 1 862 Migrated to .
Corpus as Sch. 1863. ist Greats 1866. Fellow of Exeter 1867. Master at
Eton 1870-4. Tutor in History at Exeter 1877. Published Louis XI and
various historical articles ; a friend of Bridges and Strachan-Davidson (see
P- 3'9)> never a close friend of GMH.
16. 13. Bailward, Thomas Henry Methuen (1843-1913). Eton. Balliol 1862.
2nd Mods 1864; 3rd Law and History 1866. Succeeded father as Lord of
the Manor of Horsington, Som. 1868. Member Somerset CC and JP.
y
trations are competent, those for The Return of the Native, as was inevitable,
being the least satisfying, missing the superbly poetic quality of that great
novel.’ In an interview reported by J. A. Reid {Art Journal, July 1889), with
and reproductions, Hopkins himself said his early black-and-white
portrait
work was much influenced by du Maurier, who was a friend. He was also
a regular, though not really frequent contributor to Punch. Simultaneously
he worked in water-colours (specially influenced by Fred Walker, for
whom see pp. 387 and 427) and in oils. From about 1881 was member of
RWS, exhibiting annually; treasurer in later life. First oil picture, exhi-
His oil portraits of his mother and of his sister Milicent in her habit
as an All Saints’ Sister are not distinguished. ‘My admiration in oil-
then was; ‘So long as the artist sticks to truth, and learns from Nature to
be faithful and modest, he will always have his reward, though he may
never be the fashion.’ In 1878 GMH
wrote: ‘My brother’s pictures, as you
say, are careless and do not aim high, . . . But ... he has somehow in
painting his pictures, though nothing that the pictures express, a high and
quite religious aim’ {LL, i. 51). One long letter of GMH to AH, mainly
about one of his pictures, has survived {LL, iii. 186) for two ;
earlier letter-
headings of GMH
to him, sec plates 7 and 8. _
17. 2. Mamma: Kate Hopkins (3 Mar. 1821-30 Sept. 1920), eldest of the
eight children of John Simm Smith, FRGS, FSA (seep. 349) and Maria,
daughter of Edward Hodges, a successful underwriter during the Napo-
leonic War. Brought up in 17 Trinity Square, Tower Hill, where her
father practised as a doctor till his move to Blunt House, Croydon, some
years after her marriage. Her memoir. The Mirror (Fam. Papers), named
after the rococo drawing-room mirror, which remained, long afterwards,
her chief association with Trinity Square, gives a short but vivid picture
NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES 305
with a family in Hamburg and learnt some German, there is little known
evidence to support Fr Lahey’s rather formidable description of her: ‘She
was an unusually well-educated woman for that generation, and her early
acquaintance with German thought and literature, made her ever after-
wards a keen student of philosophy, history, and politics’ {Life, p. i ) For .
her marriage to Manley Hopkins (8 Aug. 1843) and some details of their
married life, see p. 331. LL, iii contains 70 letters to her from GMH, found
at her last home. The Garth, Haslemere, after LGH’s death in 1952; and
a photograph. A long series of Robert Bridges’s letters to her, 1889-1919
(Bodl. MSS), shows the great interest she took in the publication of her
son’s poems. She had always valued them; and The Starlight Night,
one of the two sonnets he sent her on 3 Mar. 1877 hi. 144), hung,
illuminated on parchment, in her house. She lived for two years after
RB’s edition of the Poems in 1918, to within six months of her hundredth
birthday.
of Qjaeen’s. On 8 Dec. 1863 Hopkins, Addis, and Bridges were among six
new members proposed and seconded: on 28 Jan. 1864 Addis and Bridges
B 6028 X
3o6 NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
were elected. The diary-note here and a letter to his mother on 23 Jan.
1864 {LL, iii. 88) both show that, as we should expect, was tempted GMH
to join: but he never did. Home ties were probably still too strong; later,
his own scruples and rules of asceticism may well have gone beyond those
of the Brotherhood.
The daily prayers used by members were based on Newman’s ‘Prayers
for Unity and Guidance into the Truth’, sketched for his and Pusey’s
proposed Union for Prayer in the Church of England, of 1840 (Liddon’s
Life of E, B. Pusey, ii. 134-5). This probably accounts for Bright’s having to
refer ‘to the supposed, —
but he [Bp Tozer] should know, the untrue, con-
nection with the oratory* (Bright’s Journal, 19 Feb. 1863). In Oct.
the Master, then the Revd J. E. Millard, followed by Liddon, read ad-
dresses to 29 Brethren on the Position of the Church of England wit^
Reference to the Church of Rome. The withdrawals of Addis, Challi^
—
Garrett, and Wood all converts to Rome that summer and autumn—^
were then announced.
The Brotherhood played an important part in the inner life of the
Catholic Revival, especially in Oxford. St Stephen’s House (from 1876),
then Pusey House (from 1884) were centres for its meetings. In the 80 ’s
its influence declined, probably, F. L. Cross suggests, because its rules ill
17. 4. Xanadu. ‘A Trip to Xanadu’, Cornhillf Feb. 1864, ix. 159, is in fact
an account of a visit to Futlehporc Seekree (so spelt), the deserted city of
Akbar 22 miles from Agra. Its descriptions of the architecture possibly
interested GMH, for it is otherwise affected and sententious. For his looking
at Fergusson’s photographs of Indian architecture, see p. 237 and n.
17. 5. Locke uses pudder and opiniatrety: pudder (pother) in The Conduct of the
Understanding (a posthumous work, first published in 1 706, not to be con-
fused with the Essay concerning Human Understanding)^ § 13, ‘contrary obser-
vations, that can be of no other use but to perplex and pudder him if he
compares them’ ;
opiniatrety (obstinacy) in the same, § 1 6, ‘This is a short
way to fancy and conceit, and (if firmly embraced) to opiniatrety’. Locke
uses both words elsewhere but : GMH was certainly reading this essay then
and quotes from Diary (p. 19). He read it, with Bacon’s
it later in the
Essays, in a small edn of the two published as one vol. by Chambers,
1862. Opiniatrety was spelt opiniatrity in the original and contemporary
edns; opinionatry in the Collected Works of 1843 ^ 254 Both it and *
17. 8. Ajax soliloquizes. This seems to be the synopsis of some projected work
on the theme of Sophocles’ Ajax,
i8« !• *. • . tried for the — who pitied me,^ This blank is quite clear in MS.
. :
MS seems to read
18. 2. are bare, ‘the gulfs are blue are bare’; but there is
end, than he that runs after every one he meets, though he gallop all day
full-speed’. He has just before spoken of ‘the mizmaze of variety of opinions
and authors’, through which one has to be led to truth and certainty,
19. 3. Miss Ingelow. Divided, the first poem in Poems, by Jean Ingelow, 1863,
begins
‘An empty sky, a world of heather.
Purple of foxgloves, yellow of broom . .
19. 4. Shelley: the title shows that GMH had read the version given in The
Pine Forest of the Cascine, near Pisa, published by Mrs Shelley in Posthumous
Poems (1824) and followed in the ist edn of Poetical Works, 1839 (iv. 178).
The passage there runs
‘There lay far glades and neighbouring lawn,
And through the dark-green crowd
The white sun twinkling like the dawn
Under a speckled cloud.*
In the 2nd edn of 1839 poem was divided into The Invitation and The
with considerable variations of text: these lines, with some
Recollection,
changes, come in the last stanza of The Recollection.
19. 5. Ite domum . . . Virgil, Eel. x. 77. Between ‘Go* and ‘home’, below, MS
seems clearly to read ‘one’; this must be a slip for ‘on’.
spent part of Aug. 1864 reading together in Wales {LL, iii. 21 1-13), They
seem to have lost touch on leaving Oxford, but sent remembrances GMH
to him via Baillie in Dec. 1872 from Stonyhurst {LL, iii. 239).
*9- 7 * Lasher: *. . 3. Chiefly local (on the Thames) the body of water that
:
Paul’s 1880. \
20# 3« Danish Soldiers Relieffund, for aid after attack by Prussia of Jan.
^
. . .
21. I. Speke says . . . The quotation is from the Introduction (p. xxx) to
Capt. John Hanning Spekc*s Journal of the Blackwood,
Discovery of the Nile,
1863, the account of his journey from Zanzibar to Lake N’yanza, and down
the Nile to Alexandria Aug. iSSo-Feb. 1863. Zanquebar (corrupted to
Zanzibar by the Indian traders) is the old Arab name for the East African
seaboard from the Red Sea southwards. Speke returns to the euphony of
the language in his second book. What Led to the Discovery of the Source of the
Nile, Blackwood, 1864, pp. 238-9. Among the examples he quotes is
Unyamuezi (‘country of the moon’), one of those given by here. GMH
21. 2. Speke — U-n-ya-muizi. There is a gap of a third of a page after this
word, as if he was going to put down more examples of ‘euphony*.
21. 3. Lionel Charles Hopkins (1854-1952), sixth child, fifth son, last sur-
and in face, like his brother GMH,
vivor of the family. In small slight build,
whom he much loved and admired. The Harrow examiners made a bad
mistake in rejecting him (see p. 150). Early in 1868 went as Commoner to
Winchester, a foundation-member of Revd W. A. Fearon*s new House at
22 Kingsgate Street (moved to Culver House 1869): Ridding had just
succeeded Mobcrly as Headmaster. On leaving, LCH was top of Senior
Division of Modern School, with a report of ‘thoughtful and thorough
work’ in French and German; among much praise of his work, conduct,
and manners, Fearon wrote; ‘He is modest and most faultily unambitious.*
In March 1874 he joined British Consular Service in China as Student
Interpreter (see p. 241). Moved regularly up the official ladder, serving at
one time or another in most of the Treaty Ports, with occasional leave in
England, till he became Consul-General in Tientsin 1901. Retired 1908
(ISO) on account of ill-health, and lived, unmarried, till death, in the
family house at Haslemerc, rarely leaving it even for London. He seems to
have been little interested in the art, philosophy, or even people of China;
but his interest in the language made him a scholar of world-wide reputa-
tion for interpreting the archaic scripts. His translation of The Six Scripts
by Tai T’ung (Amoy, 1881) has been reprinted with a Memoir by W.
Perceval Yetts (CUP, 1954). His most important work was the collection
and interpretation of incised oracle bones of c. 1300-1050 b.c. On these
and related subjects he contributed 43 articles to the Journal of the Royal
Asiatic Society between 191 1 and 1949. His collection of inscribed bone and
tortoiseshell was bequeathed to the Cambridge University Library. His
Guide to Kuan Hua (1889) is, writes Prof. Yetts, ‘an important contribution
to the study of colloquial Chinese*, and he was a pioneer, among Western
scholars, in ‘recognizing the importance of studying archaic Chinese
writing as a basis for mastering the language*.
His incidental writings and letters (quoted elsewhere in these notes) show
a dry detached humour and (especially in earlier years) a taste for puns and
310 NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
other play on words, which he shared with the family. Among the Fam.
Papers are several elaborate jokes of his, such as ‘Genealogical Tree of
the Bunter or Brentear Family’, with a short parody of family history. He
published some humorous verses, &c., in newspapers in China.
In religion he became unobtrusively agnostic, had no sympathy with the
Jesuits, and said he did not see why GMH
could not have become ‘an
ordinary Catholic* like other people. LCH visited GMH
as a novice, who
began, as he said, to ‘taste* Lionel’s mind and asked him a lot of religious
questions. He started by saying: ‘Do you say your prayers?’ ‘No.* ‘At least
that’s honest.* LCH could not understand why his parents had been so
distressed at GMH’s conversion, but said that the way they later becatne
reconciled even to his being a Jesuit Priest argued great tolerance, charity,
and, above all, great love for Gerard. \
The brothers regretted they did not meet or correspond more. One lon|
letter of GMH to LCH, about Greek histories, philological works, &c.,;
has survived (LL, iii. 191).
Cyril was the only one of the sons to join his father in the profession of
average adjuster, and was a partner in the firm Manley Hopkins, Son and
Cookes. He may have worked with his uncle, John Simm Smith the
actuary, in Liverpool about 1870-2 (see references to them together,
apparently near Stony hurst, pp. 217 and 226). He was Associate of the
Average Adjusters’ Association in 1873, and Member 1874. He retired
from partnership in the family firm i July 1888 (Memorandum of Agree-
ment in Fam. MSS Gp 1 G. 2). Retired from business 1918. Married
.
Harriet Isabella Bockett 8 Oct. 1872; died, without issue, 8 May 1932.
June 1864; the Meadow buildings at Christ Church by Deane (of Deane
and Woodward) were begun in 1862 and finished 1865; the Museum by
Woodward had been opened in 1858, but its decoration is not finished to
this day.
5 July 1909 : ‘I knew him in his undergraduate days far better than any one
else did. ... Of many letters some of them very long which Hopkins wrote to
me I have not, alas! kept even one’ {Life^ pp. 18-19; Campion Hall MSS).
Son of Revd T. Addis, Free Church Minister, Morningside, Edinburgh.
Educ. Merchiston Castle School; Glasgow University; Snell Exhibitioner,
Balliol 1861 (Tutor, Jowett). 1st Mods 1863 and Greats 1865. 1866.
Received into Catholic Church at St Mary of the Angels, Bayswater about
a fortnight before Hopkins, Oct. 1866. Confirmed there by Manning,
together with GMH
and Alexander Wood, 4 Nov. 1866. Joined London
Oratory 1868; ordained Priest 1872. Parish Priest at Sydenham (where
GMH at least once went to preach for him) 1878-88. Came to know
intimately F. von Hiigel, for whose friendship (and later concern) with
him see Michael de la Bedoy^re, The Life of Baron von Hiigel, 1951. Elected
Fellow in Mental and Moral Philosophy, Royal University of Ireland,
Apr. 1882; but resigned Oct. of same year. In 1888 he renounced the
Catholic Church and married Rachel Flood of Sydenham, by whom he
had one son and one daughter. His renunciation caused Hopkins very
great pain {LL, i. 298). Addis then became Asst Minister, Australian
Presbyterian Church, Melbourne 1888-92; Minister of High Pavement
Chapel, Nottingham 1893-8; Professor, Manchester College, Oxford
(Unitarian) 1899. Master of Addis Hall 1900-10. Returned to Church of
England 1901. Licence from Primate to officiate as Anglican Priest 1907.
Curate of St Martin and All Saints, Oxford 1909. Vicar of All Saints,
Ennismore Gardens 1910. During this remarkable career, besides pam-
phlets and articles, he published Documents of the Hexateuch, 2 vols, 1893-8;
Christianity and the Roman Empire, 1893, &c. It is ironical that he is now
best remembered by the Catholic Dictionary which he first published
together with Thomas Arnold Jnr (another wanderer) in 1883, and that
this was still being quoted as a reliable popular statement of Roman
—
(‘Nay, King, if thou art rightly called, Zeus all-ruling, may it
not —
escape thee . . Jebb’s transL). In putting the passage into capitals
Hopkins has inserted an d» before Zev, not in any of the texts.
26 Grandmamma, Mrs Martin Edward Hopkins was bom Ann Manley#
. 3.
—;
Her brother Henry became a JP. It is hard to see how she and Hopkins ever
met, unless he was in Devonshire on some business connected with the
Tiverton Canal. They were married in 1814 at Halberton on 3 Aug. Her
father was described as a Fundholder, but there is no reason for thinking
she was a substantial ‘heiress’, as has been implied in the Beaver (June 1947).
M. E. Hopkins was obviously rather unsettled and perhaps unprosperous
his business addresses were various: 1814, ‘Broker*, Lambeth; 1817-19, 2
Langbourn Chambers, Fenchurch Street; 1822-4, 2 Birchin Lane; 1825-8,
5 St Peter’s Alley, Cornhill; 1829, 48 Fenchurch Street; 1834-5, ‘Indigo
Merchant’, 4 Savage Gardens, Tower Hill. Of his children, Ann Eleanor
was born in Kennington, Manly at East Dulwich. He died intestate in
1836, and his widow had to administer an estate of only £,200. Manley
became the head of the family, and on his marriage in 1843, if not before, he
moved to The Grove, Stratford, providing a home there for his mother and
sister, and also, temporarily, for his brothers Marsland and Charles. The
family tradition, received from LCH, was that Grandmamma was left ‘not
well off’ and that Manley carried the burden; but it seems clear that
Grandmamma must have had some private means, for Marsland was sent
to Cambridge, and all the evidence points to prosperous middle-class life.
An American visitor in 1844 (MS journal of William Richards, Archives of
Hawaii) reported great comfort, and said of Grandmamma, just before
GMH’s birth ‘Mother feels as mother should’.
:
There are extant a number of photographs of her in old age, but neither
they nor anything else reveal much about her character. She was always
looking back to Devonshire, and GMH was surprised in 1865 to realize
she spoke with a marked Devonshire accent (LL, iii. 89). After her son
Marsland ’s marriage she moved, with her daughter Ann, to a small house
in Clifton Terrace, Maida Hill, to be near the Church of St Saviour,
Paddington (Franklin Diary, 18 July 1862), of which he became incumbent
in 1856; he died in 1862; and it seems clear that she moved to 36 Victoria
Road, St John’s Wood (later called Fairfax Road), at some time just
before 29 July 1865; she was still there when GMH went to the Jesuit
Novitiate in Sept. 1868. In her last illness he wrote to his mother (24 Apr.
1875) T hope in spite of her 90 years to hear better news of my grand-
:
mother in your next letter I have made and got made many prayers for
:
her good estate.* No letter of his about her death has been preserved.
Instead of a will she left the following note ‘I give and bequeath to my
:
beloved daughter, Ann Eleanor all that I possess. Money in the Funds,
Furniture, Wearing Apparel, Trinkets, Books (all but the British Poets,
which were promised to Manley many years ago) I leave this little docu-
.
27. I . He was a shepherd. This is the earliest draft of fragment (i) of Richard^
Poems, p. 1 33, there taken from its later couplet-form in C. II Oct.-Nov. 1864.
29. I. Caen Wood: often so called during the i8th century; Ken Wood in
W. Howitt’s The Northern Heights of London, 1869, and always since. The
house, built by Robert Adam, and its park of 50 acres, lie to the S. of
Hampstead Lane. Lord Mansfield, who then owned it, used to allow the
boys of Highgate School to bathe in one of the ponds in the park.
two alternative plans for the poem. An attempt to give a coherent text df
one plan has been made by transposing the second and third fragments.
30. I. Middle Ages: not used by Taylor absolutely, but in ‘the middle ages
of the Church’; the rest of GMH’s note merely gives the full reference.
account of the PRB is in Dante Gabriel Rossetti: his Family Letters with a
Memoir (1895).
.
The English Pre-Raphaelite Painters^ 1901, pp. 77-79). In RA that year (1864)
he had ‘Guinevere’ and ‘Elaine* (illustrating scenes from Idylls of the King).
His masterpiece, ‘A Wounded Cavalier* (RA, 1856), is in the Guildhall
Gallery.
32. 2. Fau^s Anatomic. Anatomic des formes exUrieures du corps humain d V usage
des peintres et des sculpteurs, par Julien Fau, Paris, 1845. An accompanying
illustrative atlas of 28 lithographic engravings was published in Paris the
next year; and an English edition of both, by Robert Knox, MD, in 2 vols,
London, 1849.
32. 3. Seddon: from the proximity in the Diary of the sketches mentioned
below, this most likely refers to Progress in Art and Architecture, With Prece-
dents for Ornament, by John P. Seddon, brother of Thomas Seddon the
landscape-painter. Seddon supports his appeal for a return to the Gothic
in architectureby quarto plates of capitals, bosses, and other ornaments
from Byzantine and Gothic cathedrals, drawn by himself.
32. 4. Peter von Cornelius (1783-1867) and Johann Friedrich Overbeck (1789-
1869) with Veit, von Schadow, and others, formed in Rome 1810-11 (in
the convent of San Isidore) a kind of Pre-Raphaelite brotherhood called
the ‘Nazarenes’, of which the object was to revive religious art. They all
later returned to Germany. Cornelius became Director of the Academy of
Dusseldorf 1819-24, then of Munich. His chief popularity was as an illus-
Old and New Testaments, Homer, Dante, Goethe. His best-
trator of the
known works are the frescoes in the Bartholdy palace in Rome and in the
Munich Glyptothek. He spent 10 years on The Last Judgment (St Ludwig,
Munich). Overbeck, who became a Catholic in 1813, was an exclusively
religious painter. He
painted The Vision of St Francis (Assisi commissioned :
33. I . Leys. GMH had difficulty with his name. Written here as Lluys, with
a caret after the L and I inserted, so that it looks like Huys, as given in
NB {ig37) But four more references to him in the newly discovered Journal
(one as Feys, the others correct) show that it is Baron Jean Auguste Henri
Leys (1815-69) he is writing of here. Historical genre painter and leader of
the Belgian mid-century medievalists. Decorator of Antwerp Town Hall.
Exhibited in RA
1868 (see p. 167). Walker Gallery, Liverpool, has one of
his pictures large collection at Antwerp and Brussels. See Richard Muthe,
;
34, I . Gerente designed windows at All Saints except those in the clerestory, which are
by O'Connor, Alfred Gerente (1821-68), one of the leading French stained-
glass painters of the period, worked in Canterbury and Ely as wellj as
designing the windows for All Saints*, Margaret Street, completed in 1859.
M. and A. O’Connor worked in London and exhibited together at tpc
1851 Exhibition, as well as separately at the RA: from the dates when tWy
exhibited, was probably M. O’Connor who did these designs for All
it
Saints*. G^rente’s subjects were the Root of Jesse in the great west window
(copied from the Jesse window of Wells Cathedral) and single figures of
saints in those of the aisles. O’Connor’s glass, high up in the clerestory,
consisted of arabesques only. The Ecclesiologist (June 1859) disliked the
clerestory, but with some reservations approved of G^rente’s colouring (in
the west window, mainly green and gold) The Art Journal ( 1 859) found .
when an end comes to their brittle life, may Heaven be the home of them
both.’ This seems to be the earliest recorded interest of Hopkins in the
Welsh language (see p. 440)
34* 3. F, W. Burton: (Sir) Frederic William Burton (1816-1900; see DNB),
water-colourist and, later, Director of the National Gallery (1874-94). He
attained considerable distinction for his portraits in water-colour and
drawings in Dublin 1826-51; then worked and studied in Germany, till
1858, before settling in London. Exhibited regularly as Member of Old
Water-Colour Society 1856-70, including chalk portrait of George Eliot
(now in National Portrait Gallery) and several genre drawings under
influence of Old German Masters. Gave up his art on accepting Director-
ship of National Gallery 1874. See also pp. 31 and 33.
34* 4. Niclas Geop. Text gives Kovhirov aKevaala (‘preparation of spiced
wine*), kovBltov in note. GMH
found kovSItos olvos in Liddell and Scott,
edns 1855 or 1861, and was rightly surprised, as this accent changed mean-
ing from ‘spiced wine’ to ‘wine cooled by being buried in the earth*. Edns
to 1849 had kovSltos, to which edn of 1889 reverted.
35, I . The lawless honey. Possibly a reference to i Sam. xiv. 24 ff. Cf. ‘the
of his reflection in a lake (see fig. 27), and on verso the curious fragment
of verse given, is cut out. Deposited at Campion Hall 1949.
;
35. 3. Miss Story's character, GMH wrote c, 14 Aug. 1864 to Baillie from
Maentwrog: ‘We have four Miss Storys staying in the house, girls from
Reading. This is a great advantage — but not to reading’ {LL^ iii. 213). He
was probably wrong in thinking at first they were all sisters; one was
surely Louisa May. Counting all versions and variants there are 70 extant
linesof these verses: the printed version of 32 lines is written continuously
in MS, though the order of the last 12 is possibly uncertain. The first
parts of the draft were written very shakily, as if still ‘in the van’, or at
least while travelling; ‘Miss Louisa May’ &c. is written at the top of a
later left-hand page in a quite firm and obviously feminine hand. It seems
she was asked to write her name and address ahead on a blank page of
the book, and that the verses were written round it. After some shaky
later lines of the drafts is written: ‘Train from Chalk Farm to Croydon.*
Many of the verses were thus drafted on the move; but the MS of the
printed version is firm and relatively fair.
35. 4. *Her prime . . . years'^ written, also shakily, among drafts of ‘Miss
Story’; probably a parody of CMFI’s own; the apostrophes and the
omission of the month tend to confirm this.
35. 5. Henry Nehon Coleridge: Introductions to the Study of the Greek Classic
Poets, Part i (1830). This was on Homer; no more published.
was A Short Treatise on the English Church (1845). Cresley became first
incumbent of the new church of All Saints’, Boyne Hill, Maidenhead,
designed by Sti ect (see p. 36 1 ) and had for his curate there Richard Temple
,
Hopkins sent Max Muller a copy of his Hawii (1862): they corresponded
about the chapter on language and later met in Oxford. For the influence
of Muller and other philologists on GMH, see Alan Ward’s note, p, 500.
3^' 3. The Christians ofSt. Thomas and their Liturgies, by George Bradley Howard
(Parker, 1864), about the ancient Christian Church of S. India, was among
the Hopkfns family books, with Manley Hopkins’s signature.
.
318
37. NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
I. Mrs. Hopley. Not known; but it would be well within the family
tradition of word-play for this to be a combination of Hopkins and Manley.
39, I . in her cheeks .... Possibly intended for another verse of lo (see p. 38).
40. I . It does amaze me ... . The first of these blank verse fragments. Gf.l to
40. 2. know not ... The following 14 lines, which seem clearly to
Welli I .
belong here, have been moved back from early in C. II (Sept. 1864). A
stage-direction [Comes to the bed] immediately before them has been omitted
as redundant.
43. I . Why what a boorish opening is that! The first note-book, C. I, ends here.
44. I. Polly Oliver . . .: the first three are popular 18th-century tunes;
Watkin's Ale an Elizabethan dancc-tunc used in virginal music; Die drei
is
Polly Oliver Admiral Benbow, and Watkin's Ale were published in Chappell’s
y
Popular Music of the Olden Time, 1855-9, to which refers in LL, iii. GMH
109.
44. 2. Aunt Fanny's: Frances Smith, one of GMH’s maternal aunts. Either
she or her sister Laura (sec p. 380) wrote the most vivid and individual
(but unsigned) childhood-memoir of those collected for their brother
Edward’s proposed ‘Book of Memories’ (Fam. Papers). always refers GMH
to her as Fanny, and to his other Aunt Frances (Mrs Edward Hopkins: see
p. 336) as Frances.
48. I . Her hue's . . Variant for the last two lines of the 2nd verse of lo-
See p. 38.
deposited at Campion Hall 1949. Not numbered, but context shows they
fit in here (see below).
49. 5. Hasel[e]y Ct, Tetsworth was the home of Lionel Muirhead (see p. 302).
50. I. ^St. Dorothea'. Substantially the same version as that later written out
for Bridges (see his note in Poems, p. 217) and copied out by Dolben (sec
p. 326).
father (Letters ofS.T.C., 1895; ^nima Poetae, 1895; Poetical Works of S,T.C.,
1912) and of Byron (Poetical Works of Lord Byron^ 7 vols, 1898-1903). Also
published his own Poemsy 1898. GMH sent him his poem 11 Mystica (Poems,
pp. 280-5) 5 Sept. 1862, which he began ‘dear poet’ and
letter
ended ‘mind you send me some poetry in your next .’ (LL, iii.
5-14). . .
Two further of the seven surviving letters to him published in LL, iii, show
that they were discussing religious problems with each other in
June 1864
and Jan. 1866. In Oct. 1867 Coleridge was anxious to visit Hopkins at
The Oratory and to hear Newman preach (LL, iii. 45) and in 1868 GMH ;
unlocked by their society, and they were often surprised by his recollection
of birthdays, and by Christmas books and cards.’ had now just GMH
met him for the first time when he was staying with Robinson Ellis at
Trinity, and was asked for a photograph. He saw a good deal of Oxenham
in Oxford in Dec. 1865. In Oct. 1866 he was disparaging Oxenham’s
‘minimising’ Romanism (LL, iii. 28). After getting his First in 1867 he
wrote ‘Oxenham writes
: me congratulatory etc notes harder to answer than
the Greats papers’ (LL, iii. 39). Oxenham published several books of verse,
works of theology, and contributions to periodicals, especially the Saturday
of London and its Suburbs (1874); The Pope and Italy and The Vatican and the
Quirinal (pamphlets in English and Italian, 1882) and another pamphlet ;
(in Italian only) on University education for Catholics (1883: see LL, iii.
299). Most of these facts are taken from Fr J. H. Crehan’s valuable article
51.
on GMH’s friendship with Wood, ‘More Light on Gerard Hopkins* ( The
Month, Oct. 1953). Hopkins met Wood early in 1864, and there are many
references tohim in LL, iii, as well as in his two diaries. After their conver-
sion, Wood, Addis, and GMH were confirmed together by Manning, on
St Charles’s day (4 Nov.), 1866, in St Mary of the Angels, Bayswater.
opening of Homer and the Homeridae. This essay was first published in
Blackwood's Magazine (Oct., Nov., Dec. 1841) and reprinted in vol. vi of
the Collected Writings (1857) ; in Masson’s edn vol. vi, 7 (1897). De Quincey
wrote ‘imbecility’.
5a. I. Keats. The quotation is from Notes on Gilfillan's Literary Portraits: John
Keats. This essay is also in vol. vi of the Collected Writings (1857).
B 0628 Y
322 NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
lodgings with papers. John Nichol, the son, was at Balliol 1855-9, a great
friend ofSwinburne and founder of the Old Mortality Club; Professor of
English Literature at Glasgow 1862-89,
the Gospels, besides The Life of Christ in Recent Research, 1907, and other
preliminary studies for a life of Christ (which was never written). GMH
admired him greatly as an undergraduate and ^hared Gurney’s opinion
that he was ‘the most charming man’ he knew {LL, iii. 77) Sanday was also .
in the National Review during 1864 were likely to have been written by
Samuel Sharpe, the Unitarian banker, Egyptologist, and Biblical scholar:
a review of Dr Smith’s History of the Bible (Jan.) and On the Relation of Ihe
Pauline Epistles to the Historical Books of the New Testament (Nov.). Neither
—
can be verified, as the records of the publishers (Chapman & HaU) for
this period perished in the last War.
There were two articles by Arnold: Joubert; or A French Coleridge (Jan.:
unsigned) and The Functions of Criticism at the Present Time (Nov. signed, but :
54. 7. Article on the Grotesque was in the National Review, see p. 60 and n. 9.
55. I. Urquhart, Edward William (1839-1916), was the eldest son of Adam
Urquhart, advocate and Sheriff of Wigtown. Educated Edinburgh Academy
and Trinity College, Glenalmond. Balliol 1857-61; 2nd Mods 1859; ^st
Law and History 1861. Deacon 1862. Priest 1863. For a time private
tutor for Hons School of Law and Modern History, Oxford. Curacies at
Bedminster, Bristol (1862-4), SS Philip and James, Oxford (1864-6),
Bovey Tracey (1866-73), where, Apr. 1872, he married Caroline Mary,
daughter of William Harris of Plumley (see p. 373). Vicar of King’s Sutton,
Northants. 1873--86. Chaplain of St Mary’s, Brondesbury 1887-9. Licensed
preacher, Diocese of Exeter 1890-1908. As a curate at SS Philip andjames,
he was one of GMH’s closest High Church friends at Oxford. Member of
both the Brotherhood of the Holy Trinity and the Hexameron; and figures
several times in William Bright’s Journal (‘Another hope for the cause fails.
Urquhart not elected to any one of the 4 Fellowships at All Souls’ entry for :
3 Nov. 1864), He was the only friend whom Hopkins, in Sept. 1866,
‘deliberately told’ of his conversion {LL, iii. 26) ; and GMH’s other pub-
lished letters to him at this period show Urquhart’s own perplexities about
remaining in Anglican orders or joining the Church of Rome. Cf. Bright’s
Journal, Oct. 1865: ‘Cundy heard that Urquhart, last term, having
. . .
E. “owr poor dry branch".' His published articles and pamphlets include The
Oxford University Election of 1^5; Remarks on the Position of the Catholic Party
under the Recent Judgment of the Committee of the Privy Council in Martin v.
Circulation) and The Doctrine of the Real Presence (Paper read at Salisbury,
;
55. 5. Geldart, Edmund Martin (1844-85 ; see DNB), was the son of Thomas
Geldart and Hannah Ransome, authoress of popular religious books for
children. He had a strict evangelical upbringing. Educated Merchant
Taylors* and Manchester Grammar Sch. (after his father’s move from
Reigate to superintend the Manchester City Mission 1856). Sch. Balliol
1863; 2nd Mods 1864; 2nd Greats 1867. Asst master (Modern Languages)
at Manchester Grammar Sch., but left owing to ill health. Taught in
Athens and learnt modern Greek, Married Charlotte Andler, a German.
Ordained in Church of England curacies in Manchester and Liverpool
:
then ‘Dolben’s came for which Glory to God* (Diary, 6 Nov: see
letter
sense of loss, it could suggest, taken as a whole, that Dolben was no longer
of such importance to him. But a single quatrain, written on the back pf his
translation of Horace’s Odi profanum volgus (see appx. IV, p. 534), may
possibly be a more intimate comment: \
The beginning, on the same sheet, of a letter to Laura Hodges (with whom
GMH had been staying in Jan. 18G8), almost certainly dates this fragment
not Dolbcn’s, it is difficult to suggest whose it could be. Over five years
later, Hopkins recorded in his Journal, between 30 Aug. and 8 Sept. 1873,
‘I received as I think a great mercy about Dolben’: a phrase he use.s
and he had been shown earlier poems also [Memoir, p. Ixxxvi). Among tlie
Dolben Family Papers (Northants. Record Society, Lamport Hall) is a
Dolben, Nos. 25, 46, and 49) and two other poems, probably also his, but
unpublished (
The Holy Name and The Paradox), they form a small collection
Paradise, by the same. Translated (with the additional chapters) from the
Italian, for the use of members of the English Church. [Edited by Dr
the 2nd edn of 1849. work of Scupoli had had an earlier Anglican
edition in 1656, and had been recommended by Bp Wilson, In mid-
NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES 327
56 . 5 . T actsfor the
r Times ; Essays and Reviews. I i is remarkable that even at this
date GMH had apparently not read either any of the Tracts or the famous
‘neologising’ volume published in i860; that he had not read the latter
ran only mean that he was hardly at all ‘tinged with the liberalism
prevalent among reading men’, as Addis said he was {Life^ P- 19; Farm St
MSS). After two years at Balliol it was a considerable abstinence not to
have read jowett’s essay ‘On the Interpretation of Scripture’.
56. 6. Sakooniala. The spelling had heard of was
suggests that the edition he
Sakoontala; or the Lost Ring, An
Indian Drama, Translated into English
Prose and Verse, from the Sanskrit of Kalidasa, by Monier Williams ....
Third Edition .... Hertford, 1856.
and was published anonymously the following year. It gave the quickly-
recognized authoress a popular reputation at once. ‘It was just after the
NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
publication of Elizabeth, and Mrs Kemble said to Thackeray that people
were beginning to say that Anny stood next to him as a writer, and he
replied with emotion: “Yes, it tears my guts out!”’ (Rhoda Broughton,
quoted in Letters of Anne Thackeray, ed. Hester Ritchie, London, 1924).
GMH was ‘Reading with delight’ her Cinderella a year later: see p. 140.
56. II. Wootlon Church: not the Wootton near Oxford, but Wootton,
Northants., in the diocese of Peterborough. The parish church was re-
57. I. Pure fasted faces . . the 1st draft of ‘Easter Communion*. The re-
vised draft {Poems, p. 35) was copied into the diary 26 June 1865 and there
dated ‘Lent, 1865*. See p. 63.
58. 2. March 12. A day of the great mercy of God. For suggested connexion of
Dolbcn with the religious crisis leading to this entry, see p. 325.
Essay Club among the abler undergraduates (some of them Jowett’s own
pupils) whom I happen to know. There are already two such clubs in
hope that we have got together a sufficient body of clever men to make our
Club intellectually respectable, and it will open next Term with an intro-
pp. 90-91). In spite of slight difficulties about dates and the extent of
Liddon’s initiative, this seems clearly to refer to the club which came to be
‘Saturday night’ : ‘The first general meeting of our Society took place this
name) which the Society agreed upon is embodied in the first rule. “The
object of the Essay Society shall be to promote discussions upon sub-
jects of interest so far as may be consistent with adherence to the doctrines
Mar. 1864 (see p. 19) refers to membership of the Hexameron in its early
.
W. Addis
bers: W. Av/dry (Balliol), S. R.
(Balliol), Brooke (G.G.G.),
H. W. Ghallis (Merton), W. A. Gomyn-Macfarlane (St. John’s), M.
Creighton (Merton), O. E. Gresswell (Trinity), J. Gent (Trinity), A.
Gurney (Exeter), H. de B. Rollings (G.G.G.), G. M. Hopkins (Balliol),
J. R.
Madan (Queen’s), W. Moore (New Goll.), H. G. Ogle (Magdalen),
W. G. F. Phillimore (Gh. Gh.), A. Plummer (Trinity), Rev. O. J. Rcichcl
(Queen’s), G. A. Simcox (Queen’s), W. H. Simcox (Queen’s), Rev. E. W.
Urquhart (Balliol), Rev. A. B. Webb (University), A. Wood (Trinity);
Honorary Secretary: S. R. Brooke (G.G.G.).’ At least a dozen of these men
were intimate friends or close acquaintances of Hopkins an interesting ;
name to find is that of Mandell Greighton, as his widow did not mention
the Hexameron in the early Oxford chapters of the Life and Letters interest- \
59* 2.I confessed on Saturday, Lady Day, March 25. GMH’s notes for confession,
omitted from the text, begin here. See Preface, p. xx.
59* 3* Butterfield has restored Ottery St Mary church. The beautiful Early English
collegiate church of St Mary was restored in 1849-50, principally through
the influence and liberality of Sir John Taylor Goleridge (STG’s nephew),
Justice of the Queen’s Bench, and his family and friends. His eldest son,
John Duke (1820-94), later Lord Ghief Justice and ist Baron Goleridge,
330 NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
was certainly rcponsible for the choice of his life-long friend, Butterfield
as architect; and he extolled Butterfield’s work (carried out against the
active opposition of the governors of the church) in a paper on the restora-
tion read to the Exeter Diocesan Architectural Society Sept, 1851 {Transac-
tionSi iv.189-217). The nave was enlarged by the removal of pews and
galleries and paved with encaustic tiles; the roof painted in polychrome
colours; and a new font of Devon and Cornish marble installed. Butter-
field’s pupil, Woodyer (see p. 374), had earlier restored the Lady Chapel;
59. 4. I was wrong about Merton. Butterfield carried out a major restoration
of the Chapel in 1849, enlarging the choir, erecting a new screen and
removing collars from the roof so as to show the whole height of the
E. window. He added most of the fittings and decorations noticed by
Hopkins, two years later. Of these, the font (of green and white marble)
remains; the screen and iron gates have been removed. Butterfield’s
encaustic tiles of red, black, and white squares set diagonally, with a
decorated yellow border, replaced the plain black and white squares of
Ackermann’s print (1814). The same print shows the monument to Sir
Henry Savile in its old position athwart the sedilia. The altar-piece is by
Tintoretto’s son. It is a little odd that GMH did not comment on the roof
of the choir, decorated with medallions and spandril pictures painted
(under Butterfield’s direction) 1850 by Revd J. Hungerford Pollen (1820-
1902), tractarian Fellow of Merton, who became a Roman Catholic in
1852 and was the architect of the University Church in Dublin. {Merton
College Register J Lj^; Dr Roger Highfield,
information kindly supplied by
Librarian of Merton; The Merton Chapel, also used
Ecclesiologist^ 1850).
then as a parish church for the parish of St John the Baptist, was plainly in
the sixties a common centre and place of worship for the High Church
group. Cf. Bright to Liddon, 14 Sept. 1867: ‘Hope is curate at Holywell,
and [?] trusts to have a good service there next term. Six Merton boys have
joined the choir. This will be something’ (Liddon Papers).
at 69 Cornhill his own firm of average adjusters, which grew into Manley
Hopkins, Son and Cookes, still practising at 91 Gracechurch Street in the
City. Was one of leading original members of the profession’s Association,
founded 1873. On 8 Aug. 1843, married Kate Smith (for whom sec p. 304),
eldest child of Dr John Simm Smith, at Ghigwell. They setded at The
Grove, Stratford, Essex, where Gerard and 3 of the 7 children who sur-
vived him were born. In 1852 they moved to Oak Hill, Hampstead (the
house is now No. 9, Oak Hill Park), then on edge of the country, where
they stayed for 34 years. In Feb. 1856 Manley, through the influence of his
brother Charles (see p. 400) became Consul-General for Hawaii in London,
,
and remained so for over 40 years. His work was chiefly commercial; but
he also played a large part in the establishment of an Anglican Bishop and
Mission in Honolulu. Both he and Mrs Hopkins were deeply religious
High Anglicans and religious practice was a strong force in their children’s
;
Smith, Elder, 1867; (5) The Port of Refuge, or advice and instructions to the
Master- Mariner in situations of doubt, difficulty, and danger, 1873; (6) The
Cardinal Numbers, Sampson Low, 1 887 [GMH contributed to this see LL, :
i.
294, and note by Abbott, pp. 321-2]. He and his brother Marsland
published an anonymous volume of poems together, Pietas Metrica; Or,
Nature Suggestive of God and Godliness. By the Brothers Theophilus and
Theophylact, Masters, 1849. The Preface ends: ‘Of the authorship of the
present volume suffice it to say, that one of the writers ministers in the
Temple; the other has admittance to the outer courts only.’ It is dedicated
to The Church ... By Two of Her Sons. Manley’s final volume, Spicilegium
Poeticum, A Gathering of verses by Manley Hopkins, was privately printed
in London: inscriptions on four copies have the date 1892. He also wrote
some short critical notices for The Times', and from 1856 to 1859 a series
of about 20 London news letters (over the pseudonym ‘Fleet Street’) for
the Polynesian, the Hawaiian Govt paper Charles Hopkins edited. Other
literary ventures were less successful: in 1855 Blackwood’s refused the
offer of an essay on Longfellow; and a few years later J. A. Froude rejected
a novel for serial publication by Fraser’s.
in the summer of 1886 the Hopkinses left Hampstead and settled in
Haslemere, Surrey first at Court’s Hill Lodge, then at The Garth, which
:
remained the family house till LCH’s death in 1952* Prof. Abbott has
published six of Gerard’s letters to his father and the draft of one letter
^ .
fostered GMH’s early drawing and his early music. GMH described her
to Baillie in 1864 as ‘deep in archaeology etc etc’ (LL, iii. 207) and this is ;
borne out by Lady Jane Franklin: ‘Miss Hopkins, a short plain woman
talked to Sophy rather learnedly of the Gentoo and Buddhist religioas
which Sophy was rather shy of entering upon ’(Diary, 18 July 1862). Ann
Hopkins lived separately with her mother in London 1856-75 (see p. 313),
and then apparently returned to the Manley Hopkinses. Died, unmarried,
at Haslemere 18 May 1887.
59 7, Aunt Katie,
.
Hannah Bcechcy, eldest daughter of Rear-
Katherine
Admiral F. W. Beechey, the well-known geographer {DNB) and grand-
daughter of Sir William Beechey, portrait-painter to Qjjeen Charlotte
{DNB), On 17 Apr. 1850 she was described by Lot Kamehameha as a ‘very
fine looking person’ (MS Journal, Bishop Museum, Honolulu), and in
LCH’s memory nearly 100 years later she was ‘a very charming person . .
60. 2. The Divine Master [by Felicia M. F. Skene], Masters, 1852. A book of
Devotions based on the Way of the Gross, it reached its 7th edn in 1867.
Felicia Skene also wrote a Memoir of her cousin, Alexander Forbes,
Bp of Brechin, for whom see below.
60. 3. Validity .... This could refer to either of two publications by William
Goode, D.D. :
[a) JVon-Episcopal Ordination : an Abridgment of an Article
Nov. 1851 setting forth the Opinions of the
in the Christian Observer for
Church of England from Archbishop Cranmer to Archbishop Howley,
London, 1856; or {b) A Vindication of the Doctrine of the Church of England on
the Validity of the Orders of the Scotch and Foreign Non-Episcopal Churches^ in
three pamphlets, &c. London, 1852. Goode (1801-68), Dean of Ripon
i860, was for some years editor of the Christian Observer and became the
recognized champion of the evangelical party in the Church of England,
He published numerous pamphlets attacking the Tractarians.
60. 4. The Teaching of the Types, Tracts for the Clergy and the Earnest
Minded. No. i The Distinctive Character of the Natural, the Spiritual,
.
and the Divine Life. No. 2. The Circumcised Israelite in the bondage of
Egypt a Type of the Baptized and Unrenewed Christian. By the Rev.
Robert Aitkcn, Oxford, 1854. Aitken (1800-73) was a fervent and popular
preacher who for a time left the Church of England to preach in Wesleyan
Chapels, and rejoined it in 1840 to become the first incumbent of Pendeen,
Cornwall.
60.5. Dr. Pusey . . . (i) Daniel the Prophet: ‘Nine lectures, delivered in the
Divinity School of the University of Oxford, with copious notes. By the
Rev. E. B. Pusey, D.D.,’ Oxford, 1864. Pusey, as Professor of Hebrew, gave
these lectures during 1862 and 1863 as his contribution to the defence of
the Old Testament against the recent criticism of Essays and Reviews. ‘I
selected thebook of Daniel because unbelieving critics considered their
attacks upon
it to be one of their greatest triumphs. The exposure of . . .
Preface, p. vi.
(ii) Evei lasting Punishment: ‘A sermon [on St. Matth. xxv. 46] preached
before the University ... on the twenty-first Sunday after Trinity, 1864,’
Oxford, 1864. Also published in University Sermons and Selected Occasional
Sermons.
(iii) The Thought of the Love of Jesus for tw, the Remedy for Sins of the Body:
‘A Sermon [on i Cor. vi. 15] preached to younger members of the Uni-
versity, at St. Mary’s Church, Oxford, on Friday evening, March i, [1861].
• •
Published by request,’ Oxford, 1862. Also published in Lent Sermons
.
3^nd Selected
Occasional Sermons. Descriptions taken from Falconer Madan’s
bibliography (appxs A and B to Liddon’s Life).
6 . The Bp. of Brechin's defence. Reply to the Pleadings in the Case of Henderson
.
60. 7. Shairp. Wordsworth: The Man and the Poet, unsigned article in HoHh
British Review, Aug. 1864; revised version in Studies in Poetry and Philosojdi)^,
by J. C. Shairp (later Principal of St Andrews University), Edinburg!^,
1868. GMH later copied out into one of his note-books Shairp’s passage ifi
defence of Wordsworth’s ‘ideal light’ bringing out ‘the real heart of nature*
{Studies in Poetry and Philosophy, pp. 70-71).
but wider in scope, in the April issue of the same year, Intercommunion with
the Eastern Church. Both were concerned to advance Christian union. The
October article mentions William Palmer (brother of Edwin, GMH’s
tutor: see p. 298) as one of the few English theologians who had written
(in 1853) on subjects relating to the ‘Orthodox’ or ‘Eastern-Catholic’
Communion.
60. 9. The Grotesque etc. Wordsworth, Tennyson and Browning’, or Pure, Ornate,
and Grotesque Art in English Poetry, by W. B. [Walter Bagehot], in the
Studies, 1879.
60. 10. Lavington church: St Mary Magdalen’s, West Lavington, a small and
picturesque hamlet a mile SE. of Midhurst. Built in 1849 and consecrated
prominent among the mourners. For GMH*s visit to the church in July
€o, II. Burges^ & Gambier Parrys Papers at the Bristol Congress. This was the
of
fourth of the annual perambulating Church Congresses, ‘the offspring
and
an age of facilitated locomotion’ (A. J. B, Beresford Hope, The Pla£e
NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES 335
60. 13. Milman, Henry Hart (1791-1868). For Dean Milman’s poetry as
‘Olympian’, see p. 38 and LL, iii. 220. Gf. p. 112.
60. 14. Bowles, William Lisle (1762-1850), chiefly remembered now for the
ecstatic praise his Fourteen Sonnets, written chiefly on Picturesque Spots during a
tour (1789) evoked from the young Coleridge, and for the controversy with
Byron and Campbell that followed his 10 vol. edn of Pope (1806). During
a long life as a country clergyman in Wiltshire he published a considerable
amount of verse his collected Poetical Works were edited, with a memoir,
:
By G. Gilfillan, 1855.
15* A, S. Mackworth Dolben. For main note on Dolben see p. 325. His
middle names, which he never used, were Augustus Stewart.
60. 16. Pritchard
(similarly mis-speltby Bridges in his Memoir of Dolben and
corrected in corrigenda to
edn of 1915): Revd Constantine Estlin Prichard
{182^69), 3rd son of James Cowles Prichard, MA, FRS, the distinguished
physician and ethnologist of Bristol and author of Researches into the Physical
History of Mankind,
Fellow of Balliol 1842-54. Rector of South Luffenham,
. , .
60.1 7. Where art thou friend- For suggestion that this sonnet was addressed to
Dolben, see pp. 325-6.
61. I. Where is it? . . This entry comes between the two halves of the sonnet
given above it. ;
61 • Shrubs of the Ancients. Lectures III and IV of four lectures given bdbre
2.
the University in the Easter Term, 1865, by Charles Daubeny, MD, F^S,
Professor of Botany and Rural Economy, Oxford. Published the same yfear
as Essay on the Trees and Shrubs of the Ancients. A comparison of the notes
which follow and the printed text show that GMH paid considerable
attention to these two lectures. C. G. B. Daubeny (1795-1867), succes-
sively Professor of Chemistry, Botany, and Rural Economy (he held all
three Chairs together from 1840 to 1855), was one of the first members of
the British Association and its President 1886. His principal work was A
Description of Active and Extinct Volcanoes^ first published in 1826. From 1834
he resided at the Oxford Botanic Garden.
61 • 3. oXdaia (Diosc.): Dioscorides, De Materia Medica, iii, cap. cliii (cd.
in relation to jealousy.
d2. 3. Walk Islip comes in the middle of the spiritual note for 18 May,
. . .
1870 from Lake Superior to Fort Garry (now Winnipeg). She was the
only woman to accompany the expedition, and the pictures are thought to
include portraits of herself and of her husband, heavily bearded, in a large
black hat and smoking a big pipe they are both calmly overdressed among
:
Edward Hopkins finally left the service of the Hudson’s Bay Co. in 1870
and his wife thereafter painted busily and exhibited a good deal in the
Royal Academy. She died in London 1920.
See ‘Voyageurs’ Artist’, an article, with many mistakes of family detail,
by Grace Lee Nute, in the Beaver (Journal of the HBC), June 1947, with
reproductions.
63. I. MicheWs poem is.: Dantis exsilium, the Latin Prize Poem for 1863, by
of the cause, in Balliol at any rate’ (Liddon Papers) Resigned his exhibi- .
tion 1867, from scruples that he had not worked hard enough. Cuddesdon
1868-9, under Edward King. Ordained 1869. Curate, Wantage 1869-72.
Succeeded his father as Rector of Shepton Beauchamp 1872-84. Returned
to Oxford 1884 as resident Librarian, Pusey House; Chaplain 1890-1909;
Work in Country Districts (1906). He was one of the leading priests of the
Catholic Revival in England, and is remembered especially for his genius
for friendship and his pastoral work among young men. ‘Coles’s humility
deceived many into taking him at his own valuation actually his spiritual
;
power influenced not Oxford only but penetrated the whole Anglican
Communion’ (S. L. Ollard in DNB). See V. S. S. Coles: Letters, Papers,
Addresses, Hymns and Verses, With a Memoir, edited by J. F. Briscoe, 1930.
His and Hopkins’s friendship died away after Hopkins’s conversion; but
B 0C28 Z
338 NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
they met again in Oxford in August 1879, when wrote to Bridges: GMH
‘By the by I have seen a Westcountryman V. S. S. Coles for the first — —
time since I went down. I am truly fond of him and wish . . except these .
71. I. the fact of Provost Fortescue {Oct. 16 and 18, 1865). This refers to Edward
Fortescue was President. The difficulty about this theory is that the
Holy Office’s rejection of the APUC’s appeal, which, as Fr Crehan says,
certainly turned Anglican feeling against Rome, was not issued till 8 Nov.
Nor, apart from being one of the Churchmen who signed the letter, does
Fortescue seem to have been publicly implicated in the controversy.
The first suggestion, that GMH
was referring to two specific sermons,
receives support from a note in William Bright’s fragmentary MS Journal
for 9 Dec. 1865 (Liddon Papers) ‘He [Frank Slater] thinks the catastrophe
:
71. 3. Nov, 6, On this day Glory to God comes in the middle of the spiritual
. . .
note for this day, bracketed and not crossed out. See Preface, p. xx.
71. 5. Leading topics of Dr, Pusey's recent work reviewed .... Oakeley’s review
was one of several articles and letters written by Roman Catholics, mostly
converts, in response to Pusey’s ‘Eirenicon’, The church of England a portion
of ChrisVs one holy Catholic Church, and a means of restoring visible unity, Oxford,
1865. A published letter from Newman led Pusey, still hopeful of corporate
re-union, to write Parts 2and 3 of ‘Eirenicon’ in reply, in 1869 and 1870,
Fred. Oakley: Frederick Oakeley (1802-80), Fellow of Balliol 1827-45,
tractarian, and incumbent of Margaret Chapel (the predecessor of All
Saints’, Margaret Street) 1839-45. Became a Roman Catholic 1845: priest
1848, and canon of the Westminster diocese from 1852 to his death. He
published many theologicaland liturgical works before and after his
conversion, as well as numerous articles.
6 . Katie: Kate Hopkins (7 Mar. 1856-1933), GMH’s second sister. He
described her to Baillie in
1877 as ‘a sort of humourist’ {LL, iii. 240), and
was clearly on very affectionate terms with her. Two of his letters to her
survive, the second
in an assumed Irish dialect {LL, iii. 114 and 164);
^^id he mentions her many times in letters to his mother. She had a marked
gift for drawing; and many of her delicate sketches of trees and flowers
340 NOTES TO EARLY DIARIES
have clear affinities with GMH’s. In 1917 and 1918, when her mother’s
health was failing, she dealt with many of the details concerning the pub-
lication of her brother’s poems about which Bridges consulted the Hopkins
family. She did not marry; and, on her mother’s death, lived on at The
Garth, Haslemere, with her brother Lionel and younger sister Grace.
(untraced) GMH
had made (LL, iii. 122); in 1875 she had composed a
sonata (LL,iii. 134). In 1880 she set accompaniments to GMH’s melodies for
RB’s two Spring Odes [LL, i. 103 and iii. 156) among Bodl. MSS is ‘Spiring :
ment GMH’s melody for Dixon’s ‘Sky that rollest ever’, of which two
to
draftsand a more finished version are in Bodl. MSS. Hymn-tunes by Grace
were sent to GMH
at Liverpool in 1 88 1 {LL, i, 264 and iii. 1 59) but are un- ,
traced. A carol ‘Sing! Baby, sing’. Words and Music by Grace Hopkins,
was published in Goodwilly x. 282 (Dec. 1903).
Grace Hopkins was engaged to Henry Weber, son of a doctor at Sens-
burg in E. Prussia, whom she met at Montreux, summer 1882; he died the
following year (LL, 84) she remained devoted to his memory, unmarried,
i . 1
;
in long friendship with his family. Like her sister Kate, she continued a
devout moderate High Anglican and owned a copy of R. F. Littledale’s
Plain Reasons against joining the Church of Rome, After their mother’s death the
sisters lived on with their brother Lionel at The Garth, Haslemere.
72. 2. January 23, 1866, The notes for confession end here.
72. 3. Wharton, Edward Ross (1844-96), 2nd son of Henry James Wharton,
of Rhyl, Flints. Charterhouse, Sch. Trinity, Oxford; ist Mods 1863;
Greats 1867; Ireland Sch. 1865, and prox, acc, both Hertford and
1st
73. I. i86g . . . when? Not far out, since Louis Ny)oleon gave himself up to
the Prussians in Sept. 1870, and came to England as an exile the following
year.
.
Temple, and the vivid pictures of Rameses’ actions in the Kadesh cam-
paign which cover one wall. He may have seen photographs and wood-cuts
of them in Egypt, Nubia and Ethiopia (1862), by Joseph Bonomi (whom he
met nearly ten years later with his nephew, Fr Goldie see p. 428) a note : :
on pp. 201-2 discusses the proportions of the colossi, and two illustrations
(after Rosellini’s) show the King (i) about to behead his enemies and
80. 1. Pater, Walter Horatio (1839-94) had been Fellow of Brasenose since
1864. For his early teaching sec T. Humphry Ward, ‘Brasenose, 1864-
1872’, Brasenose College Quater centenary Monographs, 1909, xiv. 2, 74-75:
T still possess notes of those early lectures their subject nominally the —
History of Philosophy — and some of my own undergraduate essays, with
Pater’s brief but invaluablecomments. The novelty of the lectures was that
they rarely mentioned any philosopher’s name. They presupposed, I fear,
much more knowledge than any of the class possessed one man who . . .
had easily gained his First in Moderations resigned Greats work on the
spot. Not that they were difficult, still less dry; but the easy way in which
the teacher moved amid his material was a little confusing to slow-moving
minds. His ideas, his view of life, were fresh and original, as all the
, . .
world recognised a few years later; and his criticism of style, though ad-
ministered with the lightest possible touch, was convincing and final.
Vulgarity of expression, over-emphasis, exaggeration, could not stand up
for a moment up at a word,
before his correcting pencil ; they shrivelled
and a word was he gave them. Perhaps he seemed to undervalue
all
learning as such, but no man demanded more clear and accurate thinking,
or a more exact expression of it in words.’ It is doubtful whether Hopkins,
as a Balliol man, would have attended the lectures; but the rest would
certainly apply also to him.
®3 * I* ioTi yap . . . ap^ijs {^wickedness . principle ') ; Arist. Eth. Nic, vi. v. 6.
»
POETIC DICTION
97, I . Dido's curse on Aeneas and his children, Aeneid, iv. 607-29.
98.1. 'Music when sweet voices die,' The text of the Oxford edn, p. 633, is:
103. I. the frontispiece to Miss Rossetti's Goblin Market, Through the folds and
falling of the girl’s dress the dots are not consistently *.*
;
sometimes
107. I. {or as some people , . verse). These words are bracketed in apparently
the same pencil as ‘read Hanbury throughout’. See Preface, p. xxiii.
eight lines of Shelley (not the first four only, as in the Dialogue’s imagined
case (see p. 98), the first line being correctly quoted ‘Music, when
soft
voices die’.
:
1. 2. The leaves, . . .
iii 2^9). For correspondence between Green and Henry Scott Holland on
CMH’s becoming a Jesuit, see Stephen Paget, Henry Scott Holland, 1921,
pp. 29 ff.
127.
PARMENIDES
(1930), p. 178. ‘Parmenides does not say a word about “Being” anywhere.
... We must not render to iov by “Being”, das Sein or I'itre. It is “What ^s”,
das Seiende, ce gui est. As (to) €ivai it does not occur, and hardly could occur
at this date.’ ‘Being’ was the accepted translation in Hopkins’s time.
127. 3. Tj fih [dSoj Stjijmos] . . . ‘Come now, I will tell thee —and do thbu
hearken to my saying and carry it away— the only two ways of search that
can be thought of.The first, namely, that It w, and that it is impossible for
it not to be, is the way of belief, for truth is its companion. The other,
namely, that It is not^ and that it must needs not be, —that, I tell thee, is a
path that none can learn of at all. For thou canst not know what is not—
that is impossible —nor utter it; for it is the same thing that can be thought
p. 107) thus;
128. 2. ouSe Ti ITT] /xdAAov . . . R. & P. here give rfj in the text. Cf. rij /xdAAov
cramped.
NOTES TO JOURNAL
133. I. New Inn Hall Street, For the Hall, see p. 25: in 1866 the street did
not continue northwards to George Street but turned at right-angles in its
course, along what is now St Michael’s Street. City and Bodleian records
have not revealed a key to the numbering. In 1834 No. 25 was next-door
to the grounds of the Union (C. A. E. Moberly, Duke Domum, p. 55) it ;
seems possible that No. 18 was on the site of the modern block which runs
round the right angle. In Oct. 1866 Hopkins lodged at No. 23 {LL, iii. 95),
which might possibly have been one of the surviving old houses in St
Michael’s Street between the Union grounds and the corner.
133. 2. '‘Bleak-faced Neolog)/, in cap and gown" is the fifth line of the sonnet ‘A
Dream’ in Sonnets by the Revd Charles Turner (1864), p. 87. Over twenty
of the last sonnets in this volume are more or less direct attacks on theo-
logical ‘Neology’ in one or other of its many forms. Writing to Baillie on
5 Jan. 1865 GMH asked: ‘Have you read Turner’s sonnets? They are the
things to read now.’ The volume was dedicated ‘To Alfred Tennyson ... by
his affectionate Brother Charles Turner’.
133. 3. Fra Dolcinoy the ‘arch-heretic of Novara’, was leader of the Order of
the Apostles, a dissenting Franciscan sect of the end of the 13th century.
Clement V launched a ermade vowing their utter extermination in June
1305. Addis or Hopkins may have read the terrible history of their two
years’ sufferings in the mountains above Vercelli, their final defeat and
the burning of Dolcino after frightful tortures, in the popular and anti-
Papal Historical Memoir of Frd Dolcino and His Times^ by L. Mariotti (A.
Gallcnga), Longmans, 1853. Mahomet gives a warning message to Dolcino
in the Inferno^ xxviii. 58-64.
Church meadows, close to the barges, there arc to be found in the after-
noon two or three persons of highly unprepossessing appearance, with
small cages and some sharp-looking terriers these cages contain rats, and
:
tration.
133* 6. cads. The Oxford Spectator (3 Mar. 1868), dealing with some current
University slang, has: "Cad.— term of reproach. It is of comparatively
recent origin, and was originally applied to Radicals by their political
opponents, being derived from the Greek xaSoj, a ballot-box.’
133* 7. Violante / In the pantry ... See Oxford Diet, of Nursery Rhymes, cd.
Iona and Peter Opie, 1951, p. 198. The version they print begins ‘Hani^ah
Bantry .’; and their note runs: ‘After much preluding Frederick sibgs
. .
this in Maria Edgeworth’s story The Mimic (1796). His version starred
“Violante, in the pantry”; JOH [Flalliwell, The Nursery Rhymevof
England, 1846] gives “Hannah Bantry”. . .
.’
:
133. 8. Maurice de Guirin^s Remains: the ist edn of his Journal, in two parts,
Paris, 1861, was entitled Reliquiae. GMH bought the Journal after reading
Arnold’s essay on him in Essays in Criticism: ‘admired it, but for some
reason or other never got far in it’ (LL, ii. 16).
*33* 9- motion in defence of the Fenians .... No records survive of the Balliol
Davidson supported a motion at the Union ‘that the mass of Fenians, even
though misguided, are patriotic men, and that the disgrace of the late
rebellion lies with England, not with Ireland’ (J. W. Mackail’s Memoir
of Strachan-Davidson, p. 21.). Although 20 years later GMH protested to
Baillie from Dublin that he was a Home Ruler {LL, iii. 274), it was from
despair of any other solution to the Irish problem; there is in fact plenty of
to the suspension of the Habeas Corpus Act in February; and at the end of
133. 10. SS. Philips sandJames* sM^ds built and consecrated in 1862 as a district
church in the parish of St Giles. It is some way out along the Woodstock
Road. Architect, G. E. Street (see p. 361). ‘At the time of its building . .
this church was a test for taste — it was admired extremely by the sensitive
and roundly condemned by the obtuse. Some may think that it remains a
the
test for taste today’ (H, S. Goodhart-Rendel, English Architecture since
Regency, 1953, p. 142, with illustration). The tower and spire were added
in 1864. First incumbent was the Revd James Black Gray; GMH’s friend,
‘well-
E. W. Urquhart (see p. 323), was his curate 1864-6, It soon became a
known temple of “gentlemen of the ritualistic persuasion” ’ (Goodhart-
them from much cheaper rooms in Oct. 1863, after two terms {LL, iii. 82).
The valuation was for the furniture, which the College owned: it was
valued between each tenancy, and the occupant paid 5% of the value for
its use yearly, in addition to the cost of any depreciation. This system ap-
pears to have lasted till the 1914—18 War, after which an inclusive room
rent was charged. In May 1863 Hopkins had told his mother that between
£35 and £40 was ‘ordinary* for ‘second rooms* {LL, iii. 78).
135* Bampton Lecture. Liddon had been invited to deliver the annual
1-
*
35 * Fr Lockhart, William (1820-92; see DNB), follower of Newman, and
the of the Tractarians to secede to Rome Aug. 1843. Entered the
first
Rosminian Order of Charity, and wrote on the life and ideas of Rosmini.
ft was he
who established St Ethcldreda’s, Ely Place, as the first medieval
t^hurch in London
to revert to the Roman allegiance ; and he died as its priest.
.
green shouldering grey, which is already abridged and soured and perhaps
will soon be put out altogether, the Whytham and Godstow landscape
(as I take it to be) of “Love’s Consolation” and “Waiting”* (GMH to
Dixon, 27 Feb. 1879: LL, ii. 20).
135, 5. Coventry Patmore in hand. Perhaps The Angel in the House (2 vols revised,
1863 and 1866; and see LL, iii. 298-9) but there is no real clue in GMlfl’s
:
still stand. ‘The Fyfield elm’ of The Scholar Gipsy (and ‘the Fyfield tree’ of
Thyrsis) was in fact known locally as ‘the Tubney Tree’; and is so called in
135- 7* Beddingfield church. This at first sight seems a balfiing entry; there is
for
the firm, which had become a limited company the year before, failed
over £5m. Behind the panic lay the wave of speculative company p^'
pvi
motion that followed the trade boom at the end of the American
s
War; the story of Overend, Gurney’s involvement is told in W. C. T.
The Times
History of the London Discount Market, London, 1 936, pp. 242-56.
NOTES TO JOURNAL 349
of 1 1 May, ‘Black Friday’, said that the shock of the failure would be felt
‘in the remotest
corners of the Kingdom*.
136. 3. Balliol often bumped now taken off. The Balliol boat began gth, was
bumped the first four nights, and ‘to avoid being bumped four more and
ending bottom of the river . . .was Taken Off!’ {Balliol Boat Club Journal,
1858/71). There is no other record of a boat thus going to the bottom of
Eights through default.
136. 5. The Agra and Mastermans Bank, after a month’s vicissitudes on the
Stock Exchange, suspended payments late on Wednesday 6 June. Its
failurewas the most serious of many that followed in the wake of the
Overend, Gurney panic (see above). Remarkable as the only one of the
London banks which closed to resuscitate itself. It reopened in the United
Kingdom Jan. 1867, and in India in March, as the Agra Bank. All creditors
were paid off, with 5% interest, by July i868. Grandpapa Smith therefore
would have recovered his deposits in full.
not seem to have disturbed his professional career: he became FRCS 1856
and was a member of the Council of the National Institute. For GMH’s
belief that
he had special tokens from heaven at his grandfather’s death,
i4'7-.8. LCH wrote to his sister Kate, 4 Dec. 1877: ‘To us all
see LL, iii.
136. 7. Waterhouse is to do the new buildings of the college .... Allred Water-
house (1830-1905), one of the most successful ‘Gothic’ architects of the
period, began practising in Manchester and earned a considerable reputa-
tion with the Manchester Assize Courts 1859, followed by the new Town
Hall, opened 1877. He came near to winning competition for the new
Law Courts, London 1866. Designed the Natural History Museum, S.
Kensington 1868, and soon had a large practice in London and the
Universities: larger in Cambridge (Gonville and Caius, Trinity Hall, Jetus,
Pembroke, the Union) than in Oxford (Balliol, the debating hall of ’,^he
Union) Bridges married his eldest daughter.
. \
He was asked to provide plans for rebuilding the 15th century S. ahd
E. ranges of the Front Quadrangle of Balliol in Apr. 1866: they were
formally accepted at a College Meeting on 1 1 and 2 Oct. (College Register).
1
Jowett took a keen interest in the scheme. To Thomas Woolner, the sculp-
tor and original member of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, he wrote ‘I :
think that we have made a good choice and am glad to hear that you
think so too. ... In choosing Mr. Waterhouse we hope to avoid eccentricity
and Unenglish styles and fancies. Simplicity and proportion such (not
colour) always seem to me the great merits of Architecture* (Bodl. MSS.
Engl, letters, e. 28, f. 112, undated). The new buildings, in Waterhouse’s
baronial Gothic, were ready for occupation by Oct. 1868 and have re-
mained substantially unaltered since. (For further details sec VCH Oxford-
shire, iii. 94.) Butterfield had rebuilt the CollegeChapel in 1856-7: Jowett
not surprisingly objected to its external colour scheme (now much con-
cealed by plaster) in banded red and white.
136. 8. Ernest Geldart is up on the business. See p. 339. Geldart was still a
pupil of Waterhouse.
136. 9. Mrs, and Miss Coles'. V. S. S. Coles’s mother and elder sister, Julia.
Mrs Coles was Eliza, daughter of Vincent Stuckey of Langport, Somerset,
banker and close connexion by marriage and business of the Bagehots.
To her enthusiasm for Keble’s Christian Tear Coles said he owed much of
His sister Julia lived on at Shepton Beauchamp
his early religious fervour.
after her parents’ death, and looked after him in his later years.
137.I Hall, Of the two then at Christ Church, GMH is more likely to have
.
St
137, Dr, Pusey preached. This was the University Sermon given in
2.
(appx ^
Mary’s in the afternoon. Not in Falconer Madan’s bibliography
to Liddon’s Life), nor marked as such in the MS
sermons at Pusey House.
:
Balliol 1864; Hertford Sch. 1866; Ireland 1867; Gaisford Greek Verse
Prize 1868; 2nd Greats and Fellow of Balliol 1869; later, Tutor in Philo-
sophy. Died of exposure on Mont Blanc 1892. Memorial Sermon by Jowett
in College Sermons (1895), p. 264. Nettlcship’s Philosophical Lectures and
Remains, ed. Bradley and Benson (1897), contains Memoir and portrait.
Was intimate undergraduate friend of Henry Scott Holland, with whom
he visited GMHin Jesuit Novitiate at Roehampton Dec. 1868 (Stephen
Paget, Henry Scott Holland, 1 92 1 , p. 29) In 1 884 sent a testimonial supporting
.
when we were undergraduates at Balliol. Since that time we met but little.
This was more my fault than his .’ (Bodl. MSS.).
. .
137. 4. Beautiful blackness . . . from behind. Cf. ‘Spelt from Sibyl’s Leaves’,
11. 9-10 {Poems, p, 105)
Only the beak-leaved boughs dragonish |
damask the tool-
smooth bleak light; black.
Ever so black on it.
now under Edward King (Principal 1863-73), see Owen Chadwick, The
Founding of Cuddesdon, OUP, 1954.
*37- 8. Awdry, William (1842-1910), 3rd son of Sir John Wither Awdry,
Chief Justice of Bombay and later one of the University Commissioners.
^A/inchesier. Balliol. ist Mods 1862; ist Greats 1865; Ellerton Theological
Prize. President of
Union. Rowed in Oxford VII 1 1863 and 1864. Ordained,
lellow of Queen’s 1866. Second Master, Winchester 1868-73; Headmaster,
Hurstpierpoint 1873-9. Canon and Principal of Theological College,
Chichester 1879-86; Vicar of Amport, Hants. 1886-96; Suffragan Bp of
^Southampton 1895; Bp of South Tokyo 1898. He married Emily, daugh-
ter of
George Mobcrly, Headmaster of Winchester and Bp of Salisbury,
or many
details of his family and youth, see C. A. E. Moberly, Duke
kmum. George Moberly, His Family and Friends, 1. 191
352 NOTES TO JOURNAL
138 . I. the St, Giles^ gate. The forcing open is recorded in the College
Register, but there is no record of the culprits being found.
138 . 6. Simeon, Philip Barrington, b. 12 Dec. 1845, eldest son of Capt. Charles
Barrington Simeon of Hursley, nr Winchester; nephew of the Roman
Catholic Sir John Simeon, of the Isle of Wight, friend of Tennyson, W. G.
Ward, &c. The Hursley branch remained Anglican, and were well known
to Manley Hopkins, who had many dealings with them and with Keble
about the Honolulu Bishopric in 1861-2 and about the visit of Queen
Emma of the Sandwich Islands in 1865; there are extant photographs of
the Simeon house prepared for Queen Emma’s reception, with a Hawaiian
greeting above the door and the children outside. Philip was a Winches-
ter commoner 1857. Christ Church 1864; BA 1868. Deacon 1870;
Priest 1871. Curate, N. Moreton 1870-2; Diocesan Missioner, Lichfield
1873-7; St Augustine’s, Kilburn 1878-84 (see Bumpus, London Churches
Rural
ii. 343-7). Diocesan Missioner, Grahamstown, S. Africa 1884;
Dean, Fort Beaufort 1886. Returned to England; Rector of Lathbury
celibate
1904-9, and of Longparish, Hants 1909; though thought to be a
married a Miss Woodcock, known to her nieces as Aunt Grouse. His
brother, Algernon Barrington, was Warden of St Edward’s School, Oxford
1870-92; Rector of Bigbury 1893, and of Yattendon 1904. Of his
sisters,
*38. 12. The Bp. of Brechin (Alexander Penrose Forbes: see pp. 333-4)
bad himself been curate at St Thomas’s, Oxford (where V. S. S, Coles
first remembered to have seen a chasuble worn) in 1845. In 1865-6 he was
and four daughters, lived in Broad Street, Oxford, next to Kettel Hiall
(Tuckwell, Reminiscences, p. 135). This Miss Lloyd continued to live in
Oxford, at 96 Holywell, unmarried, and saw her at a concert GMH
Feb. 1879 ‘in a black bonnet and yellow ribbons’ (LL, iii. 153). She was\a
friend of Liddon and Bright, and gave Liddon some secretarial help with
his biography of Pusey, whose patron her father had been. She was a keen
sketcher (Liddon MSS).
139 . 3. Pilkie and Pulkie may possibly have been nicknames for GMH’s two
sisters, Kate and Grace (see pp. 339-40) ; but no evidence in Fam. Papers.
139 .4. the Agra broke: see p. 349. The full effects were felt on Thursday
the 8th. See too entry of 13 June.
139, 8. Grandmamma Smith was born 7 Aug. 1 794, Maria Hodges, one of the
eleven children of Edward Hodges, underwriter at Lloyds, a Bristol man
who moved to London and made a fortune in the Napoleonic war; her
mother was a plump Devonshire woman. Maria was possibly her
little
139* 9 - area of the theatre: the floor of the Sheldonian. See p. 354.
140. I. Miss RossettVs Princess Progress out: The Prince'" s Progress and other
Poems by Christina Rossetti, with two designs by D. G. Rossetti, Macmillan,
1866.
the Author of The Story of Elizabeth, Smith, Elder, 1868. The fairy god-
nn)ther has become the heroine’s rich old aunt. Lady Jane Peppercorn, and
tlicBall is given in Guildhall. T had written several novels and a tragedy
by the age of 15, but then my father forbade me to waste my time any more
scribbling, and desired me to read other people’s books. I never wrote any
more except one short fairy tale’ (until i860): Lady Ritchie (Anne
Thackeray) to George Smith 1 900 ( Thackeray's Daughter, V. Hammersley
and H. T. Fuller, Dublin, 1951, p. 87).
140. 3. George Arthur Williams, b. 1845, 2nd son of Revd Isaac Williams of
Bixley, Glos. Exeter College Jan. 1863. BA 1866. Curacies 1867-74.
Curate, then Vicar, Weston Beggard, Herefordshire 1874-80.
14®* 4* Benson's Manual of Intercessory Prayer, pt. i, 1863 (pt. ii, 1871).
Richard Meux Benson (1824-1915; see DNB), Vicar of Cowley, founded
the Mission Priests of St John the Evangelist, the ‘Cowley Fathers’, 27 Dec.
1866. His Intercessory Prayer was widely used by Anglo-Catholics.
5. Bp, Wilson's Sacra Privata, and his book on the H,C. (i) The Sacra Pri-
vata, or, and prayers, of Bp Wilson (Thomas Wilson,
private meditations
1663-1755, Bp of Sodor and Man 1697); published posthumously 1781,
and reached its nth edn in 1864.
(2) A Short and plain instruction for the better understanding of the lord's
Supper . .
1773, over fifty edns by 1866. The Bp was a household
'vord of piety for a century after his death. Arnold lamented the neglect
of his union of
ardpur and good sense in the Preface to Culture and Anarchy
,
the Lady Chapel 84-6) , with angle-turrets. The carving in the orders
( 1 1
of the exterior arch of the N. door {c, 1185-90) is mainly what refers GMH
to; in one order is a series of medallions showing in relief scenes from the
scriptural life of the Virgin, the Adoration of the Magi, &c. (Detail well
illustrated in A. W. Clapham, English Romanesque Architecture^ I934> pl*
25.) O.T. scenes were begun on the S. door, but not finished. A Gibqrnc
photograph, possibly of the 6o’s, shows the interior of the chapel with
much of its detail richly obscured by ivy and other foliage (Fam. Papers).
140. 7. Avilion, Tennyson, in writing of the island-valley in ‘Morte d’ Arthur’,
Where falls not hail, or rain, or any snow,
Nor ever wind blows loudly; but it lies
Dcep-meadowed, happy, fair with orchard-lawns,
remembered Homer’s description of the Elysian plain [Od. iv. 566). Hopkins
in the first stanza of ‘Heaven-Haven’ {Poems^ p. 40) probably remembered
both.
140. 9. St, RaphaeVs: the chapel to the Sailors* College, Bedminster, a group
of almshouses near the Bristol Docks, founded 1859. Its High Church
allegiance was clear from the start: Archdeacon Denison officiated and
preached at the opening; and its chaplain, A. H. Ward, introduced vest-
ments, altar-lights, and incense. In 1877 these and his ‘ritualistic practices’
during Holy Communion were complained of to his Bp, C. J. Ellicott,
and his licence was withdrawn in Mar. 1878 {St RaphaeVs, Bristol, The
Church closed by a Bishop. Statement and Correspondence. London, 1878). After
being closed for 15 years, it reopened as a parish church in 1893 with A. H.
Ward as the first vicar; but was bombed during the last War and has since
been demolished. For GMH’s second visit, see p. 256.
140. 10. The rector of St. Ethelburga'^Sy Bishopsgate: ], M. Rodwell, the orienta-
listand translator of the Koran; on becoming Rector in 1862, he intro-
duced vestments, incense, and Gregorian music and made St Ethelburga s
the most ‘advanced* church in the City of London. It became a centre of
troubles over ritualism about the same time as St Raphael’s, but after
Rodwell’s retirement from residence.
140. 12. Tintern Butterfield. The close likeness of the nave arcade of St
. . .
Keble (1868-70).
141. I. Prichard: this seems to refer to someone with whom Addis had had a
breach of friendship rather than to someone who had died. The only
Prichard whom Hopkins and Addis might have both known cer- (GMH
tainly knew of him) was the Revd G. E. Prichard, Fellow of Balliol till
1854, Dolben’s tutor of the year before, now ill with pneumonia (see
p. 335). But his possible friendship with Addis and associations with
Herefordshire remain a mystery. The whole passage, followed by the entry
fortwo days later, reveals that concern for friendship and association of
landscape with the past, typical of many of GMH’s Oxford friends and
explored particularly in Thyrsis, The Scholar Gipsy, and In Memoriam.
141.5. Simm was Simm Smith, son of Henry Smith, a first cousin once
removed of GMH, on his mother’s side, not to be confused with John
Simm Smith, ‘Uncle John’ (see p. 379).
141. 6. Gloucester cathedral . . . ‘Old Mr Davies of Abbenhall
sadly done, Cf.
... a simple cheery old of faith and goodness,
man, full . talking of . .
Gloucester and the cathedral service . said it had a cold propriety, and
. .
utterly lacked “poetry and affection, which are the gems of such worship’”
(William Bright’s Journal, Tuesday 16 June [?]i868).
142. I. Etzkoltzias .... These ‘unhappy flowers’ are spelt Eschscholtzias,
after the German botanist J. F. von Eschscholtz Jthe best-known species,
:
meritorious little work, but spoiled by the crude green and hard drawing of
its leafage. In his other work, “Tuning up”, the figures are not injured by
what surrounds them. A family in the last century are going to have a little
music etc.’ Johnson also exhibited ‘Girl reading a Play-bill’ and ‘Card-
. . .
142. 6. Boyce, George Price ( 1 826-97) was trained as an architect, but a meet-
ing with David Cox in 1 849 turned him to landscape painting. Extracts from
his Diaries1851-75 are in Old Water-Colour Society's Club Annual Volume, xix,
^94ij with eight reproductions of his work, other interesting illustra-
tions, and reprinted Memoir by Arthur E. Street; they contain valuable
material about the Rossettis and others. There are examples of his work in
(3), National Gallery of Scotland (3), Birmingham City
the Ashmolean
Gallery (i). His pictures in this exhibition were No. 57 ‘Whitby Abbey at
Sunset’ 1
34 ‘Pangbourne, Berks.’ ; 1 40 Wotton House, Surrey* ; 167 ‘Nora’
; ‘
269 ‘On the Thames, between Streatley and Pangbourne’ 292 ‘An Out-of- ;
142 .9. Hughes, Arthur (1832-1915; see DNB), the well-known follower of
the Pre-Raphaelites. His earlier painting such as ‘April Love’ (Tate), ‘The
Long Engagement’ (Birmingham), and ‘Home from Sea’ (Ashmolean)
has in recent years won wide
appreciation for its ‘constant intensity of
delicate and poetic sentiment’ (R. Ironside and J. Gere, Pre-Raphaelite
Painters, Phaidon, 1948). In middle life his best work was in black-and-
white illustration, specially notable being his 25 drawings for Enoch Arden
(1866) and 125 for Christina Rossetti’s book of children’s poems. Sing
Song (1872). Hopkins here seems to have made some mistake, for this
illustration to her poem does not appear in the body or index of the RA
Catalogue 1866. Hughes did exhibit in RA 1866 ‘Good Night Day’s —
turn is over, now arrives the night’s Browning^', ‘Mrs Thomas Woolncr’;
and ‘The Guarded Bower’.
See also p. 247 and n. for ‘The Convent Boat’.
142 . 10. John Samuel (1829-77; see DjVR), son of a clergyman who
was a talented water-colour painter. Had no professional training; learnt by
studying Crome and Constable. Exhibited oil landscapes at RA and BI
from 1849. Much influenced by Pre-Raphaelites; ‘his later works are
characterised by great elaboration of detail, an original and striking scheme
of colour, and strong poetic feeling’, says F. M. O’Donoghue in DNB, and
puts among his best works of this class ‘Midsummer moonlight Dew —
Rising’, which is the picture Hopkins refers to. Ravon also had ‘A Voice of
joy and gladness’ in this exhibition. See also p. 247 for RA 1874.
142 .11. John (1831-1 902 see DNB) His earlier work has lately been
Brett, ; .
of Diana*. Suggested by Theocritus, Idylls, ii. Said to have left the country,
but sketches and squared tracings for the design are in the Leighton House
Collection {Life, ii. 10, where letter from Caroline Norton about the picture
also given).
143. I. Milicent Hopkins (1849-1946) was GMH*s eldest sister, the only
member of the family besides himself who entered into a regular religious
life. In Oct. 1863, when she was going to send him a kettle-holder for his
Balliol rooms, he wrote home apologizing for forgetting her birthday on the
17th; it seems likely that this was the occasion of the verses ‘A Complaint*
{Poems, p. 145), which appear to have been written by GMH
speaking
in the person of Milicent. In youth she, like her sister Grace, was very
interested in music. There is extant with her name, and the date 23 Feb.
1866, a copy of Friedrich Richter, Treatise on Harmony, transl. and adapted
by Franklin Taylor. GMH*s letter of 7 Feb. 1869 {LL, iii. 106) shows that
she was already then an ‘out-sister* of what was called the All Saints*
Home. This was the Sisterhood founded in 1851 by William Upton
Richards, Vicar of All Saints*, Margaret Street till his death in 1873
(DNB), She then lived at home, and was occupied in nursing, &c. Writing
to her on 27 Mar. 1876, LGH spoke of ‘my dear friend Sister the Hon.
Aristocralina d*All Souls’. On 6 Jan. 1877 (the year of his Priesthood)
GMH wrote to Baillie of her as ‘given to Puseyism*, with various comments
that did more credit to his logic than to his charity {LL, iii. 240). It is clear
that Milicent and the Hopkins family were in touch through All Saints*
with Maria Francesca Rossetti (GMH
to his mother, 5 Mar. 1872;
LL, iii. 1 18), who was fully professed in the Sisterhood in 1873, three
years before her death. The full profession of Milicent Hopkins is recorded
in the Family Bible: ‘Took the Sister*s Habit, loth August 1878.’ Other
family friends in the Sisterhood were two of the daughters of Gapt. Charles
Barrington Simeon (see p. 352). There is a portrait of her as a Nun by her
brother Arthur (see p. 303) and photographs of her just before her profession.
Mrs Street was Mariquita, daughter of Robert Proctor (who had pub-
lished in 1825 ^ Narrative of a Journey across the Cordillera of the Andes), and
niece of John Payne Collier.
house
beautiful as well as the proportions of the doors &;c. It was clearly a
designed by an architect There was a trace of Gothic feeling in a few
. . .
too
of the fireplaces &c and in the upper corridor where the spaces were
narrow for round arches pointed ones were used. The stone staircase wi
.
1 44* 3. French and Belgian exhibition: the thirteenth of the series of such ekhi-
bitions organized in London by Mr Gambart, :
of his pictures in the Nat. Gallery of Scotland and a number in the Tate.
Richard Muther, The History of Modern Painting, 1907, ii. 350, particularly
praises his river-scenes.
what plant —or what part of a plant— ^he had before him. A botanist can-
not help wishing that he had had more botanical knowledge as a background
to his genius for minute analysis of shapes and patterns the combination—
would undoubtedly have resulted in taxonomic work of a very high order.
The entry on oaks here, and the further study of oak leaves on p. 146, are
good examples of this minute observation.
145* 2-
Lavington. The reasons for GMH*s visit may have been more
personal and complicated than the interest in Butterfield already noted in
at thetime Purcell’s Life of Mannings ii. 7 1 ) St Mary’s can have had only a
: .
handful of parishioners when it was built, but the site that Laprimaudaye
chose is conspicuously beautiful the church stands among pines and birch
:
145. 4. Walked through Lord EgramonVs park: Petworth House, whose vast
park begins about 4 miles E. of the ruins of Cowdray. The 3rd Earl of
Egremont (1751-1837), who lived at Petworth for most of his 86 years and
became famous as the patron of Turner and other painters, had left it in
1837 to his natural son, George Wyndham, later created Lord Leconfield.
The Egremont earldom became extinct in 1845.
145. 5. Mr, Ing at Whiting^s farm: the farmer’s name was Henry Ings; and
the farm, part of the Nuthurst estate then belonging to the Nelthorpe
by itself well off the lane from Horsham to Nuthurst. ‘The farm
family, lies
is ugly as can be but the country very pretty’,
as wrote to Bridges GMH
on 24 July (LL, i. 2).
* 45 - 8. Denne Park: a mile S. of Horsham, on Denne Hill.
*46.I. One of the day's papers quotes the Moniteur . . . the Daily Telegraph, :
147 . Aug, 31, i86y, the opening entry in the 2nd of the surviving Journal
4.
note-books, was obviously the date on which began to write up this GMH
part of his Journal. July 10, 1867’, the day he left for France, comes im-
mediately underneath it.
147 . 5. July 10, i86y. This journey to Paris was with Basil Poutiatine (or
only member of the Orthodox Church whom had known personally, GMH
at a time when approximations between the Anglican and Orthodox
churches were looked on as hopeful for ‘Re-Union^. For the circumstances
of his early death see p. 229.
147 . 6. Hdtel de Saxe: did not survive under this name after the 1914-18
War,
147 . The Universal Exhibition had been opened by Napoleon
7 . Exposition,
III Apr. in the Champ de Mars, the main approach being from the
on I
end of the Pont de Jena. The main building, single-storied, of brick, iron,
and glass, was thought to be effectively utilitarian, logical, and convenient,
but lacking the imaginative quality of the Crystal Palace. It formed a
NOTES TO JOURNAL 367
148. 2. St. Eustache: the great Renaissance church, facing the Halles
Centrales, had been entirely restored after a fire in 1844.
148. 4. Leys: see p. 33 and n. He was awarded the Gold Medal in Paris
this year.
Nicene Fathers.
William Bright wrote to Liddon of him, after this visit to
France ‘He :
a dear fellow with a great deal of thought as well as a
is really
very warm heart
and a very devout soul ... he said to me the other day
368 NOTES TO JOURNAL
that he thought Protestantism, that unsacramental religion, led natu-
is,
rally to Unitarianism or unbelief. ... I don’t think his stay in France has
prepossessed him in favour of Roman services, but quite otherwise:
although he expressed to me his regret that we had not the ‘Tabernacle’
in our churches. ... It wd. be worth while for you, perhaps, to have a walk
with him some day’ (from Lympstone, 23 Sept. 1867).
148. 9. ^blue bow': ‘with each end of thy blue bow* {Temp,, iv. i. 80).
death. Newman’s letters to Coles and Sewell after Dolben’s death are
referred to in main note.
149. 2. See June 28: the only reference to the missing Journal note-book that
presumably covered the period 25 July 1866 to 9 July 1867. See Preface,
p. xxiv.
Meissonier, Jean Louis Ernest (1815-91), now at height of his fame for
both his miniature rococo genre pictures and military paintings he received :
15®' 1 • Bishop’s wood, belonging to the Sec of London, was still standing then
on the SW. side of Highgate.
B Cq28 B b
370 NOTES TO JOURNAL
Thwaytes incapable of testamentary disposition, owing to the diseased state
of her mind. The evidence of servants and tradespeople, as well as of her
relatives, made it clear that she had been a victim of the wildest religious
—
hallucinations, believing among other delusions —
that she and Dr Smith
were members of the Holy Trinity, that Dr Smith knew all her thoughts,
and that she had a special part to play in the Last Judgment, for which
event she had prepared the drawing-room of her London house. Dr Smith
had first attended her during a nervous fever in 1832; since then he had
been her regular medical adviser and, later, had assisted her in controlling
her property. Under her first will (drafted immediately on her husband’s
death) he would have been left about £500,000. In fact he received from
here for over 30 years an annuity of £2,000, as well as about £50,000 in
gifts; while his brother, Samuel Smith, was employed to manage her
household at £400 p.a. The case {Smith v. Tebbitt) is reported in full
in the Law Reports [/ Probate and Divorce {1865-g)^ p. 398], together with an
earlier case (same Report, p. 354) establishing Mrs Tebbitt ^s title as next-
of-kin. It naturally attracted much attention in the Press: The Times of
7 Aug. 1867 gave a long summary of the judgement; and the Saturday
Review (10 Aug. 1867), p. 184, published an article agreeing with the
Court*s decision and marked by obvious hostility towards the Smiths. The
case and its publicity must have been agonizing to the Hopkins family.
A surviving letter from Kate Hopkins before her marriage gives a picture
of Mrs Thwaytes’s generosity to the Smith household, with no hint of
abnormality; she had just given them two musical parties, and Kate had
been staying for a month with her at Herne Bay. Richard Lane (see p. 420)
exhibited two lithographs of her, RA 1843 and 1852.
150 . 4. the Palace at Aluswell Hill: the Alexandra Palace. The project for
151 • I. National Portraits, This was the second of three special loan exhibi-
tions organized, on the suggestion of the Earl of Derby, by the Committee
of Council on Education. Preliminary notice and appeal for exhibits in,
for example, Saturday Review^ 21 Oct. 1865, p. 534. They were held 1866-8
in the brick building on the W. side of Exhibition Road, which had been
the refreshment rooms for the International Exhibition 1862. The 1867
Exhibition was of 866 18th-century portraits, including 154 attributed to
Reynolds and 78 to Kneller. Many were thought ‘by no means qualified to
excite any great degree of interest’ {Art Journal^ Photo-
1867, p. 153).
graphs by Messrs Cundall of most pictures in the Exhibitions, together
NOTES TO JOURNAL 371
51.
with the official catalogues, form a standard work of reference on national
portraits.For 1868 Exhibition see p. 395.
151. 3.
:
‘spirals, coils’. GMH may have had in mind cAt/cc? errepoTr?}?
(Aesch. Prom. 1083), ‘flashes of forked lightning’.
151. 4. Museum. This visit seems to have been confined to the W. Cloisters
under the Schools of Art, where the metal-work and musical instruments
(see p. 237 and n.) were then housed. Loans to the museum were then
common (usually for 6 months), and the authorities took photographs of
loaned objects for instruction in the Schools of Art {Guide to the South
Kensington Museum, 1868, pp. 4, 31, 32). Celadon is a pale willow-green.
15a. 4. The chapel of the poor Clares: at the junction of Cornwall (now West-
bourne Park) Road and Ladbroke Grove, Notting Hill. They were the
second house of Poor Clares-Colettines (the reformed order) to be set up in
England, being invited by Manning from Bruges in Sept. 1857, as part of
Wiseman’s plan for the settlement of NW. London. As a contemplative
order Manning wanted them
to pray for tlxe work of his Oblates of St
Charles, whom
he had founded in July at St Mary of the Angels, Bays-
water, near by. (Information kindly supplied by the Convent of Poor
Glarcs-Colettines, Notting Hill.)
the sea, and I had lodgings in the town, going to him every morning with an
essay, or to hear him discourse on the Republic and the thousand subjects
suggested by it* (T. H. Ward, Brasenose Quatercentenary Monographs, xiv.
P. 75).
*
53 * 2. fJLop<f}r) fiia: ‘one form.’
* 53 *
3 *
(b. 1798), who superintended and helped to
Miss Warren: Charlotte
support the local parish school; her sister was Susannah (b. 1814), with
whom GMH went sketching to Bullaton Rocks, author of various works for
the SPCK, They lived at 2 miles N. of Bovey
Hazelwood House, Hennock,
Tracey, and were two of the 13 children of the Revd Dawson Warren
(1770-1838), Vicar of Edmonton, Middlesex, author of The Parish Priest,
a translation
of a Latin poem by John Burton. The Warrens knew the
Giberne family {LL, and in The Journal of a British Chaplain in
iii. 102);
s y
153. 4. her nephew probably the Revd Frederic Warren ( 1 842-1930) , Fellow
:
154. 6. Lord Clifford: Charles Hugh, 8th Baron (1819—80), eldest son of
Hugh Charles, 7th Baron, and by his mother a grandson of Cardinal
Weld, who had been married before taking orders. Educ. Stonyhurst.
Married Agnes, daughter of Ld Petre, 1845. Succeeded his father in 185B.
Brother of Fr Walter Clifford, SJ (see p. 438). His other brothers were
William, who became Bp of Clifton, and Henry Hugh, one of the earliest
winners of the VC. His eldest son played the chief part in re-establishing
Buckfast Abbey, and two of his daughters became nuns. For further
family details see Henry Cliffordy VCy his letters and sketches from the Crimea,
For
edited, with a Biographical Note, by Cuthbert Fitzherbert, 1956.
GMH’s second visit to Ugbrooke in 1874, see pp. 253-4.
154. 7. Gappath: a hamlet and farm on the Ugbrooke estate, just
W. of the
late summer and autumn. The nibs are presumably the ‘keels*.
:
the roof, killing four and injuring over 60; from Hopkins’s account it seems
damage was not completely made good until the church was restored in
1874. The fine embattled Western tower, 120 feet high, is similar to some of
earlier West Somerset ones added during Elizabeth’s reign (tradition says
:
155. 4. Becky Falls are in the wooded valley of Bovey Tracey. Cf. NW.
Coleridge: . .we were at the interesting Bovy Waterfall, through that
wild Dell of Ashes that leads to Ashburton, most like the approach to
Mattcrdalc from Keswick/’ (Note-book entry for 19 Oct. 1803, describing
his tour with Southey of Sept. 1 799 The Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coler-
:
155. 5.To the flower-show and industrial Exhibition^ the annual show of the :
Bovey Tracey Horticultural Society. ‘The most novel feature of the exhi-
bition was the Industrial and Art Loan Department. . . , The Bovey
Tracey Pottery Company exhibited some artistic illustrations of the art of
pottery, from raw material to finished wares. Mr J. S. Bearne, of Newton,
exhibited several specimens of glass, china, and other manufactures, in-
cluding some Parian statuary, Bohemian glass, Worcester china, and lava-
ware . .’ (the Western Times 6 Sept. 1867). The dish of Palissy ware may
.
have been one of the numerous copies of Bernard Palissy’s work (charac-
teristically decorated with fish, shells, plants, &c.) produced in the mid
*56* To the Harrises at Plumley: the house lies off the road to Moreton
Hampstead, about a mile outside Bovey Tracey. The family consisted of
William Harris and his wife Jane; their eldest son, William Augustus (at
Balliol: see LL, iii. 39 and n.); another son, Henry, who became Com-
mander, RN ; and at least two daughters, one of whom, Caroline, married
Urquhart in 1872 (see p. 323).
* 5 ®* 2. Pixies*
probably the cave near Ottcry St Mary loved by
Parlour',
Coleridge as a boy and the subject of a note affixed to Songs of the Pixies
in his first
volume of poems
‘At a small distance from a village half-way up a wocH-cover’d hill,
. . .
is an
excavation cfalled the Pixies’ Parlour. The roots of old trees form its
374 NOTES TO JOURNAL
ceiling, and on its sides are innumerable cyphers, among which the author
discovered his own cypher and those of his brothers, cut by the hand of
their childhood. ... To this place the Author conducted a party of young
ladies, during the Summer months of the year 1793 .* {Poems on Various . .
Occasions, ^79®).
3 the old church the late 1 5th-century parish church of Bovey Tracey,
:
156. 4* The Monros and Miss Bowies at Ingsdon, The house lies below Ingsdon
Hill, 3 to 4 miles S. of Bovey Tracey. Their host, Charles Hale Monro,
JP, died the following month, and 2 years later his son pulled down the
old manor-house and built the present stone mansion. The woodwork in
the porch, chair and fig-tree have long since vanished and the house is now ;
a Roman Catholic convent. The Miss Bowies were relations of Mrs Monro.
highly original and picturesque work’, and describes his schools at Bislcy
and ^pley, Surrey, both built ‘to follow Ecclesiological prescriptions’, as
‘two of the most delightful that were built’ (p. 113). Francis Bumpus,
London Churches, ii. 294, picks out for special praise his ‘exquisite chapel
attached to All Saints’ Convalescent Home, Eastbourne, as ‘. withal very . .
NOTES TO JOURNAL 375
rated Gothic in his own fashion without allowing it to lose its own indi-
viduality*.
156. 7. Revd. Jacob Duchi\ his story is told in William Henderson’s Folklore
(see p. 372), p. 289. He was a chaplain in America during the
of War
Independence, who dreamt, while crossing the Atlantic to rejoin his family,
that he found his wife lamenting the death of their son. He recorded it and
had it attested; and on arriving in Philadelphia, found that his son had
died at the very time of the dream. Henderson heard the story from Dawson
Warren, whose grand-daughter he had married.
156. 8. Bright^ William (1824-1901 ; see DNB) later became well known as
Regius Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Canon of Christ Church
from 1868, Educ. Rugby under Arnold. Sch. University College, Oxford.
1st Classics 1846. Fellow 1849. Apart from a short time at Glenalmond,
his whole life was spent in Oxford, and he died unmarried there. Several
of his works became standard Anglican textbooks of church history, and
he wrote many hymns, and books of devotion. Was one of Liddon’s
verses,
closest friends and work in Oxford in the Go’s; an active
allies in all his
senior member of both the Brotherhood of the Holy Trinity (sec p. 305)
and the Hexameron Essay Society (see p. 308) had many close friends ;
436). At the time of this meeting Bright was making a round of visits to
Oxford friends in Devon; he wrote on 14 Sept. 1867 T have been spending :
a week with Fred. Gurney and his wife at Torquay. The place is exquisite, I
think; and being with them is like breathing the sweetest air in the world.’
He does not mention meeting GMH; he went on to stay with Urquhart at
Bovey Tracey on 17 Sept., after GMH
had left, and thence on the 20th to
stay with Charles Browne of Balliol (see p. 367) and his father at Court-
lands, Lympstone; the illness of both Coles and his father prevented his
going to Shepton Beauchamp (Liddon Papers) When Pusey first greeted .
Bright as Canon of Christ Church he said ‘I have been here forty years,
:
and have never had anyone likeminded until now.’ And Bright added in
his Jounrnal: ‘What a pathos in this —
and for me how great an honour!’
IS®* 9- Butterfield^s new church: All Saints’, Babbacombe, 2 miles N. of Tor-
quay. Begun Dec. 1865, and sufficiently complete to be consecrated by
Samuel Wilberforce on All Saints’ Day 1867, although the tower and
chancel were not added until 1873-4. Large and imposing from the out-
side, it has Butterfield’s typical and profuse decorations within: bands of
Urquhart: ‘In any case you wd. be thankful, I am sure, if you knew so
charming and good a man as Mr. Kenelm Vaughan. . . You wd. there see
an extraordinary devotion to the B. Sacrament’ (LL, iii. 49). He may well
have had an important influence on Hopkins’s decision about his vocation.
157.2. Mr Spenser'. Fr Thomas Spencer had celebrated the first Mass in the
and took possession in 1861. Their church was consecrated two years later.
The order had been at Burnham Abbey, Bucks., until the Reformation:
it then moved to Louvain and returned to England 1794, after the French
Revolution.
157, 4. Canon Agar: William Seth Agar (1815-72), b. near York; educated
Prior Park, and ordained there 1842. Mission-priest at Lyme, Dorset
1845, but suffered from ill health, and acted as Chaplain to the Abbotsleigh
Convent from 1852 to his death. Canon of Plymouth 1856. He greatly
admired the Italian theologian and philosopher, Rosmini (i 797-1855), and
well
translated his Catholic Catechism .for the use of the Uninstructedy 1849, as
. .
(Joseph Gillow).
157. 5. But this he told me about himself The story of Kenelm Vaughan’s cure
The date is there given as 3 Nov. 1865, but the claim that water
in Blessing.
fellon him, recorded by GMH, is not mentioned. His anxiety would have
been lest more than the amount of water allowed had fallen into the wine.
Stories about Kenelm Vaughan’s unworldliness and exuberant habits of
prayer are still told at St Augustine’s, where he was a regular visitor.
ham (founded by Newman 1859), for two terms, and left at Easter 1868.
For a description of his life there, see letter to Urquhart of 30 Sept. 1867
{LL, hi. 43-44). The fifth was the top form and had only five boys; Bellasis
and Sparrow (see notes below) were the private pupils he told Urquhart
about.
>^58. 7.Sparrow^ William John, b. 1850, son of John Sparrow, JP, of Black-
burn. At the Oratory School 1863-74. BA and LLD London. Barrister
Lincoln’s Inn 1878. Practised in Liverpool. Later took great interest in
education: a member for 14 years of Liverpool School Board; Vice-
President, Liverpool Voluntary Schools’ Assen.
*58. 8. BellasisRichard Garnett, b. 1849, eldest son of Edward Bellasis,
Serjeant-at-Law, the intimate friend to whom Newman dedicated the
Grammar of Assent. First boy to arrive at the Oratory School, when Newman
founded it in 1859. BA London. Barrister. Ordained as a Priest of the
•
158. 10, Stokes, John Scott, son of Charles and nephew of Scott Nasmyth
Stokes (Chief Inspector of Schools 1871), both of whom were at Trinity,
Cambridge and converts to Rome. John was educ. Oratory School, taught
and later made a career in the Post Office. For weekly
there temporarily,
‘journal’ he edited during Lent term 1868, containing GMH’s The Elope-
ment {Poems, p. 288), and a parody by Bellasis and Sparrow (above), see
Thomas Redington of Dublin. Christ Church 1864. 2nd Mods 1866; 1st
Greats 1868. BA 1869. High Sheriff, Kilcornan, co. Galway 1873. Became
a Senator of Royal University of Ireland.
159. 2. the class list. Apart from Bridges, only Garrett (see p. 352) was a close
friend. The only others mentioned elsewhere in the Diaries or Journals
are Case (see p. 345), Fyffe (see p. 325), Wharton (see p. 340), and Stocks
(see p. 351). Of the remainder, two were members of the Hexameron at
the same time as GMH: John Gent (1844-1927; J’ellow of Trinity 1869-
86; barrister; County Court Judge 1906-19) and W. G. F. Phillimore
(1845-1929; Fellow of All Souls 1867-71 ;
barrister; Judge, Q,.B. Division
i. 20)
have always imagined you wd. get: mind it is a good one’ {LL,
Although there are only two references to him in Hopkins’s undergraduate
Diaries (both among the spiritual notes in G. II), they are quite revealing’
—
‘Nothing read, not very culpable perhaps, but chiefly through going to
Bridges in the evening* (30 Apr. 1865); and ‘Foolish gossipy way with
Bridges* (10 Dec. 1865).
159 .4. O' Hanlon's suicide. Hugh Francis 0*Hanlon (1842-67), son of Hugh
O’Hanlon. Tonbridge 1856-61; Sch. BNC; ist Mods and Greats; BA
1865. Fellow of Lincoln and student of the Inner Temple. Published, 1866,
a pamphlet, A Criticism of jf, S. Mill's Pure Idealism. He shot himself in his
lodgings, 8 Nov. 1867.
the devotion of ‘Forty Hours* (in honour of the forty hours Our Lord spent
in the tomb) was approved by Pius IV in 1560. In 1592 Clement VIII
provided for the public and perpetual adoration of the Blessed Sacrament
on the altars of different churches in Rome. The forty hours in one church
succeeded those in another.
There are two relevant entries in Newman*s short MS diary for Dec.
1867. The first Sunday, ‘Exposition today and two fol-
reads: Dec. ist,
lowing days for the Pope’s troubles’. The second, on Saturday 14th, has:
‘Quarant’ Ore begun*. It is clear that there were two Expositions, a special
one, presumably at the wish of the Bp, and the ‘Forty Hours’ which was
held annually in the Oratory churches during these years. Shortly after
this year (1867), Bp Ullathorne stopped the ‘Forty Hours* devotion in his
diocese, presumably because the churches could not carry it out properly.
topically novel. A
summarizing article on the enterprise to this date
(organized by S. Arthur Chappell) was in the Saturday Review^ 28 Mar.
1868.
His club in 1889 was the United University, which in 1868 was in Pall
Mall East.
159. 10. Wigan^s theatre to see Dearer than Life, ‘the new queen’s theatre
—
ROYAL, Longacre. Lessee & Manager, Mr. Alfred Wigan the per- . . .
159. 1 1 . Bridges and Muirhead sailed to Egypt and Syria {LL, i. 20-2 1 and
Abbott’s note).
dated 1865, showing the Norman S. door, the Norman W. door, &c.
Almost identical views of the ruins in the same overgrown condition can be
seen in Abbeys by M. R. James (GWR, 1925). The Arroasian Canons,
named from Arouaise near Bapaume, were later absorbed into the order
of the Augustinian Canons.
161. I. instrument concert. No clue in Newman’s MS diary; but cf.
To an
‘Today have been hearing a quartet on violins and violincello by the
I
music master, one of my p.p.s, one of my fifth form boys, and Dr. Newman’
(30 Sept. 1867: Z.L, hi. 44).
162. I. Selly Oak. Sisters of Charity of St Paul the Apostle, first invited to
162. 2. Some evening . . .milk inserted from left-hand page of MS. Below, the
sketch illustrating it ;
and above, sketch of the new moon and Venus.
162. 3. Chervil, From the time of year this must be the wild species (more
usually, cow parsley or keck), Anthriscus sylvestris, the ‘fretty chervil* of the
sonnet Thou art indeed just, Lord. See Geoffrey Grigson, GMH (British
Council Bibliog. Series), 1955, p. 24.
163, 2. The retreat. Probably that for old boys of the school normal in Roman
Catholic schools during Holy Week.
Henry James (1822-93; see DNB), second son of Sir John
163. 3. Coleridge,
Taylor Coleridge; younger brother of J. D. Coleridge (see p. 416). Eton
and Trinity, Oxford; ist Classics 1844; Fellow of Oriel 1845. Anglican
Deacon 1&49, curate of chapel-of-ease, Alphington, nr Exeter. For con-
scientious reasons would not take Priest’s orders, resigned curacy 22 Feb.
1852, and was received into Roman Church the same year. His father,
encouraged by Keble, wished to retire from the Bench, take Orders, and
serve the Alphington cure to testify his loyalty to the Church of England,
8ut was dissuaded.
HJC studied theology in Rome. Priest 1855. Jesuit
Novice 1857. After probation taught at St Beuno’s. After a family reunion
in 1863, his brother wrote: ‘The more I see and hear of the Jesuits, the
more I am struck with their general superiority and freedom from non-
sense. I always did rejoice that if my brother must be a R.G., and must
be in an order, he chose the Jesuit order rather than any more modem
382 NOTES TO JOURNAL
one . . • - '(E* Coleridge, Life &
Correspondence of John Duke, Lord Cole-
ridge, i. In 1865
95, 195-6, ii. 1 21). me
became first Jesuit editor of The
Month, bought by the Society from its founder Miss F. M. Taylor (see
note on Fr Weld, p. 384), and held office till 1881. His friendship with
Newman involved much correspondence (see Ward, Life of Newman) and
visits to Birmingham Oratory: The Month first published The Dream of
Gerontius in Apr. and May 1865, The following account of Coleridge’s
rejection for The Month of GMH’s Wreck of the Deutschland was sent to
Humphry House by Mgr J. M. T. Barton in a letter dated 23 June 1944:
‘The facts, as told to me by my old and dear friend the late Fr. Sydney
Fenn Smith, S.J. [1842-1922], were these. The editor at that time was Fr.
Henry Coleridge, a convert clergyman and a scholar of the old-fashiclyied
classical type. He read the poem and could not understand it, and he did
not relish publishing any poem that he himself could not master. He then
handed the poem to Sydney Smith who did his best to master the author’s
elaborate system of diacritical signs. But it was not of any service to him.
He told me that the short line (Stanza 30, 1. 4) “Thou hadst glory of this
nun?” was one that he read and read again, without ever being sure that
he was reading it with the exact rhythm desired by G.M.H. In the end, as
he said to me, “the only result was to give me a very bad headache, and to
lead me to hand the poem back to Fr. Coleridge with the remark that it
was indeed unreadable”. This conversation may well have been in
. . .
1846 and lasted till 1872. The original object was ‘that the Gentlemen
and Ladies of Hampstead may assemble for the promotion of intellectual
amusements, and to render the Fine Arts, and a knowledge of Scientific
researches, more general sources of interest, conversation and pleasure in
daily life’. In the early days there was rather more emphasis on the Science
than later, when the main activity was to hold loan exhibitions of pictures
by ‘living artists of the first rank’. Ruskin, Samuel Rogers (whose nephew
H. Sharpe was a Hampstead resident), and Clarkson Stanfield Were among
the early supporters. There were usually four meetings each winter, at
about monthly intervals, held in the Assembly Rooms (now known as
Romney’s House) at or about 8 in the evenings. Refreshments were sup-
plied from the Holly Bush Inn next door, which was owned by the Trustees
of the Assembly Rooms. On the evening following the meeting of the mem-
bers (who paid a subscription of from i to 3 gns. a year), the exhibitions
were open to the public by tickets obtainable from members, when guides
and informal lecturers were present. The Society thus became an agency
of Adult Education. See The Hampstead Annual, 1900, pp. 139-445
Barratt,
Potter, Random Recollections of Hampstead, 1907, pp. 56-57; T. J.
NOTES TO JOURNAL 383
Annals of Hampstead, 1912, ii. 17; Edith Sichel, Life and Letters of Alfred
Ainger, p. 8. The Books and Minutes of the Society have not been traced.
164. 2. Pinwell, George John (1842-75; see DNB), began career with
black-and-white illustration for the Brothers Dalziel; would have GMH
been familiar with his work in Once a Week, First exhibited in water-colour
1865. In Water-Colour Society Exhibition 1869 were two pictures from
Browning’s ‘Pied Piper’, ‘Children’ and ‘Rats’, praised in J. L. Roget,
History of the Old Water-Colour Society, p. 397. It was almost certainly one of
these which GMH
saw, (The Tate has a study of Pin well’s for ‘The Pied
Piper of Hamelin: The Children’, exhibited WS
1871.) Pinwell died of
consumption at Warwick House, Adelaide Road, Haverstock Hill, and his
connexion with the Hampstead Society may have been a local one.
164. 3. Dalziel,Edward (1817-1905; see DNB) was mainly involved all his
life work of the famous wood-engraving firm, publishers also of
in the
illustrated books; but in leisure painted in both oil and water-colour;
exhibited occasionally at RA. See E. and G. Dalziel, The Brothers Dalziel
(1901); Gleeson White, English Illustration: The Sixties (1897).
164* 4. Ap, I’j, 1868 is the opening entry in the 3rd of the Journal note-
books.
164. 5. To the French and Flemish, The Exhibition of French and Flemish
Pictures (15th season), 120 Pall Mall, under H. Wallis.
164. 6. Bischoffis almost certainly Ghristoffel Bisschop (1828-1904),Dutch
landscapist and whose pictures in the Exhibition of British
genre painter,
and Foreign Artists (same Gallery) the following December the Art
Journal picked out for special notice. He ‘gains fine and rare qualities of
colour’, its reviewer wrote, and found analogies with ‘the colour of
Rembrandt and his school’. Only one picture, ‘Charity’, is mentioned by
name. Bisschop painted chiefly in The Hague and Friesland and married
an English pupil, Kate Swift. For discussions of his work see Art Journal,
1892, pp. 21 1-14, and Muther, iv. 94 (illustration at i. 89).
164. 7.To Roehampton into retreat. For the house of the Jesuit Novitiate at
Roehampton, see p. 401. This would have been a private retreat arranged
by GMH in order to help him to determine his vocation; no such retreat
would have been required of him before acceptance as a Jesuit Novice.
During it some of his most important decisions were taken.
*64* 8- This day, I think, I resolved', almost certainly the resolution to destroy
bis poems, if he became a priest. Sec appx V.
*65. I still doubtful between St, Benedict and St, Ignatius,
. GMH
had spent Holy
Week and Easter the previous year with the Benedictines at Belmont
Abbey, near Hereford, and had found it ‘a delightful place in every way’
{LL, iii. jje had first visited the Abbey with Addis, 20 June 1866 (see
P* 141). For Newman’s letter when he decided to become a Jesuit, see LL,
bi. 408.
165. 4. F. Weld. Alfred Weld (1823-90) was at this time Provincial of the
English Province of the Society of Jesus. Hopkins’s interview was to apply
for admission as a Novice; Weld’s acceptance was received on 30 May
(see p. 166). The interviewing of candidates by four experienced Fathers
(see appx VI) is more a formal matter to satisfy the requirements of Canon
Law, and to see whether there are from the Society’s point of vievy any
obvious obstacles to acceptance, than an exploration of mind and pensona-
lity. On these the decision rests with the Provincial, guided by what
advice he may seek. In Hopkins’s case Fr Weld might well have consulted
Fr Henry Coleridge, for instance, who knew him already (see p. 381). ^he
interview was probably in Hill Street, Berkeley Square, which was then the
address of the Jesuit House serving Farm Street Church.
Fr Weld, son of George Weld of Leagram, Lancs., belonged to a branch
of the well-known old Catholic family; three of his sisters were Nuns.
Educ. Stonyhurst. Novice 1842. BA London 1844. Professor of Science,
Director of the Observatory, and Prefect of Philosophers at Stonyhurst.
Priest 1854. As Superior of St Mary’s Hall, 1857, obtained recognition of
Stonyhurst as a Meteorological Station. Fellow, Royal Astronomical
Society. Becoming Novice Master in 1 860, he played an important part in
the development of the buildings and grounds at Roehampton, and put his
Novices hard to work in the grounds. Provincial 1864-70, after much
hesitation because of his youth. The General said to liim ‘Nemo despiciat :
juventutem tuam.’ Initiated, and contributed much to, Letters and Notices,
the private periodical of the Province (see Preface, p. xxiv) ; and his Obituary
Notice appears in the same volume of it as tliat of the poet he accepted.
‘At his instance, or with his sanction’, the periodical The Month was
bought by the Society (see p. 382). He had the idea of forming a house or
community of writers, and thus gave Fr Coleridge his chance. He was later
Rector of St Beuno’s, where he enlarged the buildings, and then, 1873-83,
Assistant to the General of the Society in Rome for the English group ol
Provinces. In 1883 he went as Superior General to the Zambesi Mission,
which he had done much to found and foster. He was described as of an
‘ardent, gay, guileless dispK)sition’.
165. 5. Croydon: the cutting up .. Part of the Blunt House property, the home
of GMH’s Smith grandparents, was sold as budding-plots that year (see
p. 362).
165. 6. Cardinal d* Andrea, long been in ill health, died suddenly i"
who had
Rome during the night of 1 5 May. His liberal views and his quarrel with
at
the Pope and the Cuna were well known. The Times correspondent
going
Florence certainly made no attempt to disguise the ugly rumours
about: it ‘will have caused a great sensation and given rise to many
con-
a
jectures and suspicions’, he wrote. ‘. . . All I can positively tell you is t
‘We need hardly say that we attach no importance to the current on dit
newspapers that the Caurdinal was poisoned by the Jesuits’;
of the Italian
but attacked his being kept in Rome against his doctors* advice as an
extreme example of papal autocracy.
165. 7. Mollia et ventosa flagella^ not traced as a quotation from any Latin
author; possibly Hopkins’s own phrase deriving from Virgil, G. ii. 299, and
on the
Servius’s gloss *
passage: Flagella dicuntur summae arborum partes,
ab eo quod crebros ventorum sustinent flatus.’ For GMH’s admiration of
Servius, see LL, iii. 204.
166. I. The Hodges came up: almost certainly Edward and Laura Hodges, of
Edgmond, Shropshire: see p. 380.
166. 2. Henry Leslie's Concert ‘mr henry Leslie’s choir. May 27th.
. . .
.*
—
THISEVENING, St. James’s-hall, 8 o’clock. Soloists Miss Edith Wynne, —
Mme. Patey-Whytock, Mr. Sims Reeves, Signor Gustave Garcia, and
Mr. Charles Hall(§ Mr. sims reeves will sing Beethoven’s “Adelaida”
. . .
May 1868). John Sims Reeves (1818-1900) was the leading English tenor.
Halle, whose orchestra had been established in Manchester since 1858,
continued to give his Pianoforte Recitals in London and to play frequently
at the ‘Monday Populars’ (see p. 379).
i66. 3. Solomon, Simeon (1840-1905; see DNB), the painter, then at the
height of his brief period of fame. Friend and disciple of D. G. Rossetti and
Burne-Jones, he had already exhibited nine pictures at RA, mostly Scrip-
tural and strongly Pre-Raphaelite. After a visit to Italy, had turned to
pagan subjects, and later was one of those attacked in Robert Buchanan’s
article, ‘The Fleshly School of Poetry’, in the Contemporary Review, 1871.
Became friend of both Swinburne (with whom seems to have met GMH
him) and Pater, whose portrait he painted and his work became particu- ;
^orc happiness than most p>cople are blest with Mrs. Gurney was a sweet :
person and except that no children were bom everything seemed to go well
until now’
{LL, iii. 50).
B 082 S
cc
.
167. I. Papa has succeeded in winding up Mrs. Thwaites' affairs . . . : see p. 369.
Manley Hopkins was not personally involved in Mrs Thwaytes’s will his :
aid was presumably invoked by his father-in-law. Mr. Hewitt had acted for
Mrs Tebbitt’s two children in the Probate case.
167. 2. Mason, George Hcming, ARA (1818-72; see DNB). Travelled to
2 as Life). GMH
knew and admired Millais early; was familiar with his
black-and-white work in Once a Week {vom 1859; by early 1862 was forming
an imitation of Millais’s monogram (see plates i and 2). 1
*^
his initials into
Harriet
Once a Week (viii. 2 lO-i 1,14 Feb. 1863) an illustration by Millais to
Martineau’s ‘The Hampdcns’ faced Winter with the Gulf Stream, In RA
NOTES TO JOURNAL 387
GMH saw ‘The Eve of St Agnes’, ‘The Wolf’s Den’, and ‘My first Sermon’,
and called Millais ‘the greatest English painter, one of the greatest of the
world’ {LLy hi. 201). Of these pictures in RA 1868 (i) ‘Sisters’ was a
portrait of Millais’s daughters, Life^ ii. 19; (ii) ‘Stella’ is in Manchester
City Gallery, reproduced Handbook^ ed. Phythian, 1910; (hi) ‘Rosalind
and Celia’, illustrating AYLI, ii. iv. i-io, is described and reproduced
they stand’, yet showed only two Greenwich Pensioners viewing Nelson’s
tomb by lamplight: reproduced. Life, i. 413; (v) ‘Souvenir of Velasquez’,
as a Diploma work, is in RA
permanent collection. For discussion of Millais
pictures in RA
1874, see pp. 244-5 and n. In 1881 GMH
expressed great
admiration of ‘The Order of Release’ and ‘The Proscribed Royalist’,
disapproval of ‘The Black Brunswicker’ (LL, i. 132). For Arthur Hopkins
on Millais, see p. 304.
167. 4. Leighton (formain note seep. 361) had five pictures in this exhibition;
No. 227 ‘Jonathan’s token to David’; 234 ‘Mrs. Frederick P. Cockerell’;
328 ‘Ariadne* (full title: ‘Ariadne abandoned by Theseus. Ariadne watches
for his return; Artemis releases her by death’) 449 ‘Acme and Septimius’
;
*67* 6. Hemy, Charles Napier, ARA (184 i-i 9 1 7) was chiefly a marine painter,
A Tynesider by birth, he emigrated with his parents to Australia at 9 years
old and later worked his passage back to England; afterwards ‘oscillated
between the Roman Catholic priesthood, art, and the sea, passing more
than once from painting to monastery and back again’
(J. E, Phythian,
handbook to Permanent Collection of Manchester City Art Gallery, 1910). Pupil of
NOTES TO JOURNAL
Leys at Antwerp and painted religious subjects; then sea-pictures; and,
under Whistler’s influence, riverside studies in 70’s and Bo’s. Works in
Tate (Ghantrey) and City Galleries of Manchester and Leeds.
i67, 7. Poynter, 836-1 9 1 9 see DNB) was a pupil of Leigh-
Sir Edward John (1 ;
167 , 8 Moore^ Albert Joseph (1841-93 ; see DNB) one of the 1 3 sons of William
.
,
‘Proud Maisie’ illustrating Scott’s poem ‘The Pride of Youth’, the girl’s
hair in minute and vigorous detail, one lock being bitten. This was a
favourite theme with Sandys and appears in his illustration to Christina
Sec Glecson White and Forrest Reid. The best collection of
Rossetti’s Tf’.
Sandys drawings is in the Birmingham City Gallery. Works also in Walker
Collection, Liverpool.
167* 10. Watts, George Frederic (1817-1904; see DNB, R. W. Alston, Mind
and Work of G. W, Watts, and R. Chapman, Ttie Laurel and the Thorn,
1945). (i) Clytie. Marble original in Guildhall Art Gallery; No. 157 in
Watts Exhibition, Tate Gallery, 1954-5, of which Catalogue summarizes
the literature. The Clytie legend (Ovid, Met, iv. 190-270) is that from
jealousy she revealed the consummated love of Apollo (as Sun God) for
Lcucothoe, and was punished. She sat nine days in starvation, yearningly
turning her head to the sun in his course, and was then slowly changed into
the heliotrope plant. The bust aims to show the human agonies of unre-
quited love and longing for light denied, combined with the legendary
pain of physical transformation from woman to flower. A young woman
throws her head dramatically back, straining to look over her right shoulder
(pose possibly from Ellen Terry) upper arms and shoulders have quite
;
the brothers meet, filling all the foreground at a lower level behind are a
;
mother and child and other figures; the background is a wide vista of plain
closed by distant hills. Reproduced in R. W. Alston, Mind and Work of
G, F. Watts and Commemorative Catalogue, Exhibition of British Art, Royal
Academy, ig34, p. cxxvii.
(iii)The Wife of Pygmalion: in the collection of Lord Faringdon; No. 45
in the Tate Watts Exhibition 1954-5. Galatea is shown at bust length just
in the transition from marble to flesh. Swinburne in adulation called it a
by both Rossetti
and Swinburne; but ‘Sir Thomas More showing some of
Holbein’s pictures to Henry the Eighth’ Swinburne called ‘an instance of
: ,
167. 1 2. Madame Leupold*s concert Mme Leupold was a teacher of music living
in Westbourne Avenue. Her concert was not advertised in The Times: it
was possibly given in her home. The finger-glasses were Musical Glasses,
played by stroking the rims, tuned according to the amount of water each
contained. In England they outlived Benjamin Franklin’s invention of the
Armonica (or Glass Harmonica) in Dec. 1761, in which the glasses were
strung on a revolving iron spindle, and remained popular in the siiftjipler
form. For many interesting details of their history and use, sec A. Hyatt
King, The Musical Glasses and Glass Harmonica^ Proc. Royal Musical A^cn,
1945-6, p. 97. Their tone was famous in the i8th century: ‘No instruttient
that I know has so celestial a tone’, wrote Gray to James Brown, Mar. 1 761
T thought it was a Cherubim in a box’ (quoted by Hyatt King, p. 106).
Mattauphdne is not given in Scholes or Grove or by Hyatt King. It may
have been a trade-name for the particular species on which Mile Vogt
performed. Such names were extremely varied. Scholes, A Mirror of Music,
1947, quotes ‘Crystalphonicon’; Hyatt King finds ‘Golophone’ (1888);
GMH would have been particularly entertained by an advertisement
calling one (c. 1900) a ‘Hydrodaktulopsychicharmonica’ (quoted in Scholes,
The Oxford Companion to Music). His sketch of Mile Vogt playing is inserted
from left-hand page of MS.
168. I . Letter from Bridges .... home inserted from left-hand page, where it
is dated ‘24’. RB had just returned from his journey abroad with Lionel
Muirhead (see p. 159).
Capel June 1868 (cf. LL, i. 54). Published The Little Sacrament Book
(Rivington, ? 1865), with verses of his own; Amadeus and other Poems (Smith,
Elder, 1873); and other verses, articles, and pamphlets. ‘Amadeus’ is an
elegy for Dolben, which Bridges asked leave to reprint as a Preface to
Dolben’s Poems. Lord Braye, perhaps realizing that Edgell had plagiarized
Milton, Wordsworth, and Shelley, perhaps wishing, as he said, he ‘had set
the elegy in a more Catholic key’, refused. Other 1873 verses also centre on
Dolben’s death. Edgcll’s mother {nSe Hon. Henrietta Otway-Cave), who
followed him into the Catholic Church, became Baroness Braye 1879; he
succeeded as 5th Baron the same year; changed name to Verney-Cavc by
licence 1880; inherited Stanford Hall 1881 ;JP and DL Leics.; Lt. Col. and
Hon. Col. 3rd Bn (Militia) Leics. Regt; S. African medal and clasp;
Knight of Malta. His Fewness of my Days: a Life in two Centuries (1927),
though rambling and monotonously moaning against the Reformation,
contains interesting matter used in this note and elsewhere in the volume.
Of Edgell’s two brilliant soldier elder brothers, one died 1866, one was
killed in battle of Ulundi 1879. For GMH’s meeting with him in 1880, see
LL, i. 104.
*69* 2. That evening town inserted from left-hand page of MS., where it
. . .
is dated
‘July 6’. Above, three very slight sketches of mountain-views (not
given) are on leaves of thick, smooth paper —
obviously torn from a note-
—
book stuck on to the page. This must surely be the same as (or a continua-
book’ referred to on pp. 150 and 166. The three leaves
tion of) the ‘little
here show
dimensions to have been 4x2-5 in. (or slightly narrower
its
than the four sketch-books catalogued in appx IV). On the back of the
sketches are pencilled financial jottings, and notes clearly written up into
this part of the Journal.
392
170.
NOTES TO JOURNAL
I . Museum. The Gallery of the Basle Museum has one room devoted
the
to Holbein’s pictures, and another to Holbein and Diirer drawings, Hol-
bein’s predclla, ‘Christ in the Tomb’ (oil and tempera on wood, 1521) is
now catalogued as No. 15, reproduced in Paul Ganz, The Paintings of Hans
Holbein^ Phaidon, 1950, pi. 51. There is nobility in the head and face; but
the rigid, outstretched body gives a horrifyingly final impression of death.
170.
Before it Dostoevsky once exclaimed, ‘This picture could rob many a man
of his faith’ (quoted by Ganz, p. 218).
170. 5. the Rigi (5,905 feet). Besides tourists, pilgrims in great numbers have
ascended the mountain since 1 700, when a miraculous image of the Virgin
was placed in the Chapel of Our Lady of the Snow, built for the Rigi
cowherds. The ascent was already a major tourist attraction by the time
of GMH’s visit the Rigi-Kulm Hotel, just below the summit, was built in
:
1 71. 4. Infact .... gadroons inserted from left-hand page. The phrase
trans-
lates the sketch into exact technical terms flattened and elongated curves
:
173. 2. the Giessbach Falls, seven cascades leaping through a forest of fir,
were already one of the most popular sights in the Bernese Oberland.
They were illuminated by Bengal lights every evening through the
summer. Gf. Ruskin’s admiration of this to his mother 7 June 1866:
\ the red light shines right through, turning the whole waterfall into a
.
174. I. the Silberhorn (12,156 feet), one of the peaks of the Jungfrau.
The other was probably one of the species of Potentilla allied to P. reptans,
175. I. the Faulhorn (8,802 feet), rising between the Lake of Brienz and the
valley of Grindelwald.
176. 2. the Finster Aarhorn (1 4,026 feet) , the highest of the Bernese mountains.
*77- 2. July ig, 1868 is the opening entry in the ist of the two Journal note-
books published in NB (1937), pp. 105-2 17. The page is headed ‘Journal*.
179* 2. like Solomon's seal. This was probably Veratrum alburn^ but possibly
a species of Ornithogalum (Star of Bethlehem).
180. I. the Riffel: the ridge of the Riffelberg, 8,000 feet; they would have
dined and stayed at the Riffel Inn on the top, the usual starting-point for
the expedition they made during the next three days.
180, 2. the Gomergrat (10,289 feet) : a rocky ridge rising from the table-land
of the Riffelberg.
t8i. I. Cima di Jazi (12,526 feet); five hours from the Riffel; regarded as
one of the easiest of the Alps to climb.
182. 2. rvxJI rexvTjv arepyovar): ‘[by] chance that loves art’ (based on a
quotation from Agathon).
says
185.2. Saw Garrett, Entered under 16 Aug., but note on left-hand page
‘No, the next day’.
:
185. 4. fald near Chester . . . gold armour. The armour is the Gold Peytrel
(breast-plate for a horse), of the later Bronze period, now in the British
Museum, for which it was bought in 1835. Archaeologidy xxvi (1836), 422 ff.
contains ‘A letter from John Gage Esq. F.R.S.’, from which the following
account is taken:
Extract from a letter dated 29 Jan. 1835 from
(i) Mr John Langford to
John Fenton Esq. of Glynamel, Fishguard:
‘The gold breast-plate, now in my possession, was raised on the 1 1 th
of October, 1833, from a description of rough vault in a field in my farm
(about a quarter of a mile from the town [Mold]) called Bryn-yr-Ellylon.
The stones had partially fallen in, among which were found the bones of
a man, and the breast-plate which was partly bent together from the
weight of the stones which had fallen on it. The discovery happened by
removing what appeared to be a mass of litter, in order to level the mound
with the rest of the field. About three or four hundred loads of pebble
and other stones were found upon the place where the body had ap-
parently been laid.’
(ii) Extract from a letter from the Revd Charles Butler Clough, Vicar of
Court, where it still is. ‘To waist; nearly profile to r. showing both hands-
;
dark mantle; vine leaves in background. Panel i8x 13 in.’ (hi) No. 6a6
‘Hen. Howard, E. of Surrey and a Lady supposed to be the Fair Geraldine’,
lent by Lord Taunton. ‘Half-length figure, in a landscape; Surrey holds
a heart’s-ease, Lady G. a heart; in the sky is a Cupid with bow and arrow.
Panel 6^ X 4^ in.’ That GMH
wrote of a red pear seems to show that he
went round without a catalogue, (iv) No. 152 John Keats* by Wi^liam
Hilton, RA, lent by the National Portrait Gallery. ‘To waist; leaning on 1.
hand; open book before him. Canvas 30 X 25 in.’ (v) No. 153 ‘Percy B^she
Shelley’ by Miss Curran, lent by Sir Percy Shelley, Bt. ‘To waist, sea^d;
nearly full face; open white collar, blue coat; pen in r. hand. CanVas
24X 20 in.’
i86. 2. St AlbarCs. Main sources: VCH Hertfordshire^ ii and iv; HMC
Hertfordshire; A Guide to Saint Albans Cathedral (HMC, SO,
1952); Bell’s
Series. Benedictine abbey, then a vast, muddled Parish church, too poor
to maintain its fabric, being doctored by Sir Gilbert Scott. Lady-chapel
was in use as Grammar
School, with open public passage between it and
presbytery. Ten
years later Protestant lawyer-architect-benefactor Lord
Grimthorpe averted collapse ; but his own appalling major works (W. front
and N. and S. ends of great transept) have much altered the building GMH
saw. Grimthorpe did wisely replace steep-pitched roofs. One Hopkins
family photograph shows nave and S. aisle roofs completed, with other
Grimthorpe works not yet begun others show what GMH saw, as also docs
;
buttress-work.
^
(shown as GMH
saw it in Bell’s Series, p. 20) was a slype S. of S. transept,
destroyed and replaced by Grimthorpe; the wall-tracery is heavily restored
and partly set quite out of place high on wall of S. transept. Saxon work
was re-used by Norman builders in transept triforia; the Saxon shafts may
actually have been turned on a lathe.
It is quite remarkable to have observed the minute twirled, sometimes
shell-like, nozzles at the base of the corbels in the Gothic part of the nave;
they go different ways and also differ from each other in design.
187.I. Rover the family dog, was a black retriever, b. 1864, d, 1 1 May 1875.
There are extant dated photographs.
187, 3. To see Amt Kate is entered under 28 Aug., with note on left-hand
page to say it should be under the next day.
till death, leaving it one of the most vigorous and efficient parishes in
London. The schools there are a memorial to him. He was a very close
friend of Hopkins’s Aunt Kate (see
p. 332), but it is not known how and
when their friendship began.
Work therefore
went in stages over 6 years from the laying of the foundation
39B notes to journal
stone on 22 July 1867. On this visit Hopkins would have seen finished
the apse, which fills the angle between two streets, and only the body of the
nave without its tall clerestory and S. aisle. Internally he saw something of
the effect of raising the short, vaulted choir and sanctuary sharply and
steeply above the floor of the nave; he saw too the fine N. arcade (with
plain octagonal main columns and subdivided arches) which divided off the
strange narrow quasi-aisle forced on Street by the Building Act. The nave
was being temporarily roofed, to be opened for services on 21 Oct. 1868.
Thus GMH
missed the sense of the church as a whole, with the octa^nal
spired tower set in the SE. angle beside the apse. Street wrote to West:
‘Happy is the architect who is allowed to build in this way. ... If Clergy
would do as you do, begin on a large scheme, and build bit by bit, we shduld
have more fine churches, and architects would not complain that nothling
grand or noble is possible.* See Bumpus, London Churches, ii. 319-24 and
Garter’s Memoir of West, as above.
187* 7. Ely, Main sources: James Bentham, History ,,, of the Cathedral
Church of Ely (1771 ; 2nd edn 1812) ; Handbook to the Cathedral Church of El}\
esp. 1867 edn and 20th edn (1898, cd. C. W. Stubbs) ; Victoria County
History of Cambridge and the Isle of Ely, vol. iv, ed. R. B. Pugh (1953) with
architectural description of Ely Cathedral by T. D. Atkinson. The VCH
reproduces Plates XLI and XLI V from Bentham, which most clearly show
the details which interested Hopkins in octagon and choir. See also Ely, a
pamphlet of modern photographs by Henry C. Stacy (SPGK, undated).
There are extant photographs of the cathedral by his uncle, George
Giberne, which Hopkins may have seen in about Jan. 1864.
great Norman tower, Francis Bumpus called it ‘our greatest and loftiest
Early English tower’, but ‘Norman’ is still used by the official Short History
of Ely Cathedral (1954). The tower below the 15th-century octagon and
turrets was finished about 1200; its three upper ranges have lancets with
pointed heads, and are decorated with pointed arches, trefoil arches, and
cusped circles.
transitional. The nave is all late Norman; to call it heavy and barba-
corbels of the choir vault are long inverted cones, some carved with foliage
in very high relief, some with flat bands.
Alan of Walsingham, The famous sacrist under Bp Hotham and Pnor
the
Crauden, who supervised the building of both the Lady Chapel and
great central octagon and lantern, is not personally now, so much as for-
merly, credited with the varied genius which they display (sec VCH)*
NOTES TO JOURNAL 399
between the tall E. arch of the octagon crossing and the lower W. arch of
the choir vault. It is vertically high above Sir Gilbert Scott’s choir-screen
(1852) and appears, though badly drawn, in Bentham’s Plates XLI and
XLIV, and also, clearly, in one of the Hopkins family photographs.
canopies over bracketsare roughly shown in Hopkins’s sketch. The year
after his visitthe brackets were, and still are, occupied by seated figures
of the Apostles, ‘each holding a symbolical instrument’, by Redfern. See
Ely Gossip by Rt Revd Harvey Goodwin (1892), p. 62. They are well
shown in the SPGK pamphlet.
pierced hoods, difficult to seefrom the ground, and to visualize from verbal
description. Handbook (1898) says: ‘Towards the top each window is faced
internally with a trellis or lattice work of stone.* Bentham’s Plate XLI, and
Stacy’s SPGK photograph taken looking up into the lantern, both give
something of the effect.
The deling of the nave. Painting begun by H. Styleman L’Estrange (1815-
62), influenced by original contemporary ceiling in romanesque church of
St Michael, Hildesheim {Ely Gossip, p. 35). After doing the six W. bays
L’Estrange left, to design cartoons for St Alban’s, Holborn, and died.
Thomas Gambier Parry (see p. 335) completed his friend’s Ely work, with
the ‘spirit-fresco’ process used also by Ford Madox Brown in Manchester
Town Hall. The frescoes show, in twelve subjects, the sacred history of
man from the creation to the Son in Glory. The pleasing quietness has
increased with time.
the window with the queen in her coronation robes in the SW. angle of the
a thorough repair, the rafters and cornices have been repainted and gilded
in their original style’ {Handbook, 1867).
The Lady~chapel was used as the parish church of Holy Trinity till 1938,
when it was taken over by the Dean and Chapter and restored by the help
of the Pilgrim
Trust. The ‘arcade’ is in fact a series of 74 stone stalls
(corresponding to the 70 wooden stalls in the monks’ choir of the main
church), grouped in pairs, running round all the walls under the windows
ol the
chapel, each stall having its own arch and each pair its own canopy
projecting forwards at the centre and decorated with the most beautifully
400 NOTES TO JOURNAL
rich and delicate carving. The sculptured figures in the spandrils between
the arches of each pair of stalls illustrated the scriptural and legendary
history of the Virgin and were all decapitated and otherwise mutilated
‘after the Reformation*. The whole series is illustrated and described by
M. R. James in The Sculptures in the Lady Chapel at Ely ( 1 895) It is said that
.
when Pugin saw the chapel he burst into tears. To try to feel the effect of
this wonderful work as a whole is a valuable help towards understanding
Hopkins*s use of the word ‘instress*.
Prior Crauden's chapel, S. of the main monastic buildings and attached to
the Prior*s Hall, now forms, together with the undercroft on whidfi it is
built, a double chapel for the King’s School. The E. window, which QMH
describes, has five equal lights, with tracery so designed as to form an ihner
arch above the central three, the ‘outer border* of tracery being of the
width of one light on either side. A photograph in the SPCK pampklet
excellently shows the effect from outside. The chapel also has two small
windows richly decorated on the inside with canopies similar to those of
the Lady Chapel stalls.
The galilee is lancet- work of the early 13 th century. There are two fine
Giberne photographs of its exterior, from one of which GMH probably
made, in about Jan. 1864, the drawing in Note-Book G. I marked: ‘West
door, Ely Cathedral. Very incorrect’ (see p. 14). He apparently here
refers to the outer doorway, which is subdivided by a central column, to
form two cusped and elaborately moulded arches, with bold tracery above.
The two mouldings are possibly the two highest inner mouldings of these
two arches, whicli are carved with foliage, and run down to form a ‘v*.
i88»I. Uncle Charles: Charles Gordon Hopkins (1822-B6), second of
Manley Hopkins’s three younger brothers. After working some years in a
London lawyer’s office, went out to Honolulu in 1844, on recommenda-
George Simpson (see p. 303, n. 18), to join staff of the Hawaiian
tion of Sir
Government. From 1845 to 1867 held bewildering series of appointments
under three successive King Kamehamehas, and played considerable part
in the national life. At different times Clerk of the Supreme Court, Director
of the Government Press, Private Secretary to the King, acting Minister
For some time
for Foreign Affairs, and, finally, Minister of the Interior.
he edited and contributed largely to the Polynesian, the Government’s
official paper. He became a naturalized Hawaiian subject in 1845, learnt
Hawaiian, and bought a large cattle ranch. He was on intimate terms with
Kamehameha III, who called him ‘Hopekini’, and with Kamehameha IV,
who first appointed Manley Hopkins to the po^ of Hawaiian Consul in
London. In 1865-6 he accompanied the Dowager Queen Emma on her
tour of Europe. Referred to in Hallam Tennyson’s Memoir of his father,
ii. 27: ‘Sept, 28th. Farringford. Queen Emma of the Sandwich
Islands
and walked down Finchley Road about J mile to see his grandmother
and Aunt Anne living in what was then called Victoria Road; but the
name was changed some time before 1873 to Fairfax Road {Hampstead
and Highgate Directory 1873, compared with map of Hampstead Parish
dated 1864, both in the Hampstead Central Library). Fairfax Road, still
so called, runs across the angle between Finchley Road and Belsize Road,
just W. of the present Swiss Cottage Bakerloo station. GMH’s train would
have taken him via Willesden Junction to Richmond, whence he could
have reached Roehampton walking or by cab.
189. 2. Roehampton was then a village SW. of London and even now retains
some detachment. The Novitiate of the English Province, which had been
at Hodder, nr Stonyhurst, in Roger Tichborne’s time (see p. 414),
moved thence to Beaumont Lodge, Old Windsor (curiously called by RB
in his Dolben Alemoir ‘a Lodge of Jesuits at Old Windsor’, p. xxviii), and
then again in 1861 to Roehampton Park, a mansion built by the 2nd Earl
of Bessborough. It was renamed Manresa House after the place where St
Ignatius Loyola, in austere retirement, wrote the From
Spiritual Exercises.
the entrance-gate NE. of the house (now by the terminus of the No. 30
bus route) in Roehampton Lane, the approach ran first due S. up a slight
hill through an avenue of elms, and then turned at right angles, through
yews (seep. 192) and clipped laurels, to the entrance-front. The architec-
tural front, on the opposite side to the entrance, is airy and grand, with a
line pillared portico (see under 17 Nov. 1869, p. 193), overlooking to W.
the ‘heights and groves’ of Richmond Park. The large grounds of Manresa
have many of the fine trees which
still GMH —
loved cedars in many places
and turkey-oaks by the chapel ; most of his elms and poplars have gone,
and the chestnuts have changed. The main part of the grounds has now been
requisitioned by the LCG for development, but it is hoped that many of the
trees will be kept. The huge walled garden (E. of the angle in the main
drive), where Bridges took a peach, GMH
refused to eat one, and Bridges
>vished to buy more ( Testament of Beauty^ iv. 433-58 LL, i. 145, 152), is the
;
site of a number of
blocks of flats. Manresa was badly bombed several times
in the
939-45 War, and the Novitiate was moved first to St Beuno’s and
1
then to Harlaxton, Lines., where it now is: the Juniorate is now at Roe-
hampton. Some other details of house and grounds are annotated separately.
A map of the house and grounds was given in Letters and Notices, 1861.
3 The Long Retreat. The thirty days* retreat in which the novices
- first
work through the Spiritual Exercises of St Ignatius. See appx VI.
« 0028 Dd
402 NOTES TO JOURNAL
igo. I T/ie Park grass. Here and elsewhere ‘the Park* is Richmond
.
Park
which lies open to the grounds of Manresa House, from which it is divided
only by a sunk fence or ha-ha (see p. 243). There are still deer in the Park
as there were in GMH’s time.
190. 4. April 30. On the left-hand page opposite this entry is written
‘Australian flora’ [‘vegetation’ erased] and against the lower entries the
;
ness and lived with his father in S. Devon. In Rome before the shrine of
St Agnes he said, ‘If I pray to that little saint I shall have to be a priest’.
He entered the novitiate 1868. Ordained 1879 and remained some time
at St Beuno’s as Subminister. Then worked
22 years in W. Demerara, and
later at Corpus Christi Church, Boscombe.
*
9 ** 7Gartlan, Ignatius (1848—1927), educ. Mt St Mary’s, Chesterfield,
-
191. 10. ... suddenly and without a . The page ends here in MS and
. . .
Hopkins has added ‘see other end of book. I turn round in order to get the
smooth side of the page.’ And at the other end, where continues MS
unbroken, he says ‘Continued from the other end of the book in order
: lo
191* II. Fr, Gallway, Peter (1820-1906), b. Killarney, son of agent to Earl
of Kcnmare. Entered novitiate SJ at Hodder 1836. Ordained priest at
St Beuno’s 1852. Minister and Prefect of Studies, Stonyhurst 1855. From
1857 Superior of the Jesuit House (then at 16 Hill Street) in London.
Master of Novices at Roehampton now, 8 July 1869 (see NB [1937J, p. 41^
for a note on his instructions). As Provincial, 1873-6, he treated Hopkins
with great kindness. In 1876 he became Superior at St Beuno’s. The last 30
years of his life were spent at Farm Street. His habit was a plain and active
piety; he was unfanciful, and suspicious of eccentricity. But it is clear from
every account of him, from his success as a mission priest and director, that
he had an immense capacity for personal affection of the kind which was
of the greatest emotional value to Hopkins. See Memoirs of Father P. Gallway
S.J., by Fr M. Gavin SJ, 1913; Father Gallway, by Percy Fitzgerald, 1906.
191. 12. Gillet, Anselm (1848-84), returned to the noviceship ten months
later. He was a linguist and knew a great deal ^out the lives of the Saints.
He was ordained priest in 1881 and went in the following year to the
wot
reached by turning sharp right at the entrance gate. The skilled
NOTES TO JOURNAL 405
was done by lay brothers (see p. 237 for Br Duffy ploughing) or lay
employees the clerical novices did unskilled jobs about the farm and
:
192. 5. nymphaa scutifolia is the blue waterlily of S. and E. Africa now called
N. capensis; its leaves are nearly circular and float on the water; four of them
must have accidentally formed a pattern suggesting a Maltese Cross.
192. 6 . Egyptian sacred bean refers to Nelumho nucifera, the ‘East Indian Lotus’,
a native of SE. Asia and Australia, the sacred Lotus of the East. GMH
probably took the name from the Kew label, but it is now generally agreed
that Nelumbo only reached Egypt with the Persians, and that the true
sacred waterlily of ancient Egypt was Nymphaa lotus and possibly also N.
aetulea. For a full discussion see H. S. Conard, The Waterlilies, Carnegie
193. I . opposite bays of the sky. The same architectural metaphor is used in
Deutschland, st. 12, 1. 7:
‘Yet did the dark side of the bay of thy blessing
Not vault them. . . .?’
194. I. A Secretis: the local slang name at Manresa House for the novice
whose household task it was to clean out the water-closets (taken from a
low-Latin term based on the imperial forms ‘a libellis*, ‘ab epistulis’, &€.,
and meaning ‘Officer in charge of*).
195. I. Fr. Rawes" church', the Church of St Francis, Pottery Lane, just off
Portland Road, Notting Hill and about | mile NW. of the Convent of Poor
Clares, where GMHhad made his resolution of 23 Aug. 1867 (see p. 152).
Built by generosity of H. A. Rawes and consecrated 2 Feb. i860. Heija-y
Augustus Rawes (1825-85), educated Houghton-le-Spring GS (where his
father was headmaster) and Trinity, Cambridge, was ordained in Anglia^n
Church 1851. Warden, House of Charity, Soho 1854. Joined the Roma^n
Church 1856. One of the original Oblate Fathers of St Charles, Manning’s
foundation at St Mary of the Angels, Bayswater 1857. Priest same year;
put in charge of Notting Hill district, where he built his Church of St
Francis. Prefect of Studies, St Charles’s College 1870. From 1879 to his
death Superior, Oblate Prathers, Bayswater. Founder, Society of Servants
of the Holy Ghost; author of many devotional books; made DD by the
Pope 1875.
temptation** went a few steps to the left down a hill, and concealed
NOTES TO JOURNAL 407
himself beneath a rock, in a grotto about six feet deep, while the Apostles
remained in a species of hollow above. The earth sank gradually the
further you entered this grotto, and the plants which were hanging from
the rock screened its interior like a curtain, from persons outside.
‘When Jesus left his disciples I saw a number of frightful figures sur-
rounding him in an ever narrowing circle.
‘His sorrow and anguish of soul continued to increase, and he was
trembling all over when he entered the grotto to pray, like a wayworn
traveller hurriedly seeking shelter from a sudden storm, but the awful
visions pursued him even there, and became more and more clear and
distinct. Alas this small cavern appeared to contain the awful picture of
!
all the sins which had been or were to be committed from the fall of Adam
to the end of the world, and of the punishment which they deserved. It
was here, on Mount Olivet, that Adam and Eve took refuge when driven
out of Paradise to wander homeless on earth, and they had wept and
bewailed themselves in this very grotto.’
Lettersand Notices shows a St Joseph’s Chapel to the SE. of the house well
inside the Alton Road entrance. This seems to have been abandoned in
favour of a church near the Roehampton Lane entrance. wrote to GMH
his mother i Mar. 1870: ‘We have got a little iion church in our grounds
now, on the right hand as you come in. It is not yet opened’ (LL, iii. no).
The existing St Joseph’s church, served by the Jesuit Fathers for local
Catholic people, is on the left of the Roehampton Lane gate, an unpre-
tentious brick-and-stone building designed by Br Michael Fern and begun
in 1878 {The Jesuit Directory, 1921).
196. 3. In the first week . . . often heard. Crossed out in ink, possibly by Hopkins.
Novices, Roehamp-
Prefect of Studies at Beaumont. Rector and Master of
from 1913
ton 1894-1908. Rector of the College at Wimbledon 1908-13;
He was one of the most saintly priests of
to death he lived at Farm Street.
was not a great preacher; was personally reserv^, even im-
his time; he
ordinary life: but his
gainly; was sometimes astonishingly ignorant of
4o8 notes to journal
prayerfulness and knowledge of God were seen at once by the many people
who went him or were his penitents. Even in
to his retreats or consulted
old age he often spent a great part of the night in the chapel. There are
three pamphlets of his instructions published by the GTS, Words of En-
couragement^ and a short memoir with portrait, Father Daniel Considine^ by
Fr Devas SJ (GTS.).
199.
2. . . .first week of April. In MS a full-stop after ‘April’ is crossed out; and
from this point on it is Hopkins’s normal rule to put no stop at the end of a
199.
paragraph.
Meadows, Longmans, 1955, pt. 2. Since 1926, the Jesuits have done their
philosophy at Heythrop Gollege, Ghipping Norton.
said the old brother, “crouching down that gate to stare at some wet sand.
A fair natural ’e seemed to us, that Mr. ’opkins”.’
1
NOTES TO JOURNAL
die well-known soprano prima-donna;
Grisi, Giulia,
^
ao3. I.
b. i8n d
25 Nov. 1869 m
Berlin. Had popular successes in many
parte, but especi’ally
in that of Norma. Made many appearances at Covent Garden
^
No evidence to show whether Hopkins had ever heard her sing.
202. 3. Prince Pierre Bonaparte, cousin of Napoleon III, retired into private
life under Second Empire, was bitterly attacked in the Marseillaise as a
renegade republican. He wrote the Editor, Henri Rochefort, a letter as
good as a challenge. Paschal Grousset, author of the articles, took responsi-
bility, and sent Victor Noir and Ulric Fonvielle to wait on Bonaparte as
his seconds; both went armed. In a quarrel and scuffle, of which the
parties gave conflicting accounts, Noir was shot. Bonaparte was later
acquitted of homicide but ordered to pay 25,000 francs (r. £1,000) in-
demnity to Noir’s parents.
202 •4. Lucas, Vrain-Denis (b, 1818), son of a peasant at Chateaudun,
convicted of an astonishing scries of forgeries of literary autographs, for
which he had been paid nearly £6,000. He began with forging a long
correspondence between Pascal and Newton, the effect of which would
have been, if it had been genuine, to exalt the one and discredit the other
in the history of astronomy. These he sold to M. Chasles, mathematician
and astronomer, who persuaded many members of the Academie des
They were quickly attacked in pamphlets,
Sciences of their authenticity.
but new letters were at once produced to get over the difficulties. In the
end it appeared that Lucas had also forged letters of Galileo, Thales,
Alexander the Great, Lazarus, St Mary Magdalene, various apostles and
emperors, Plato, Pliny, Pompey, Seneca, Cleopatra, Shakespeare, Rabe-
lais, Louis XIV, and others. See J. A. Farrer, Literary Forgeries (1907).
410 NOTES TO JOURNAL
202* 5. On the 15th inserted from left-hand page of MS.
202. 6. Capture . . . On the
of the English *Lords\ i ith a party consisting of
202. 10. Sappho. Cf. LL, iii. 116-17, and Abbott’s note on p. 117.
202. II. Grant, Thomas (1816-70; see DNB), first Roman Catholic Bp of
Southwark; had been active in the negotiations leading to the establish-
ment of the English hierarchy. Much loved and trusTed by people of many
kinds and classes. See esp. Edward Bellasis, Memorials of Mr Serjeant
Bellasis,pp. 149-52; Life by ‘Grace Ramsay’. Though suffering from
cancer of the stomach, Dr Grant attended the Vatican Council and died in
Rome.
202. 1 2. Hon. Francis Charteris, b. 1844, eldest son ofViscount Elcho later loth
Earl of Wemyss, had been an Etonian contemporary, a year junior, of
GMH at Balliol. He was found shot after breakfast in his room in his
NOTES TO JOURNAL 411
father’s house. Verdict ‘That the death of the deceased was the result of
:
203- I. H.M.S. Captain (4,272 tons; 900 h.p.; double screw; also carried
canvas) was one of the early ironclad ‘turret-ships’, built to the design of
Capt. Cowper Coles her turrets carried six guns. She foundered in squally
:
weather off Cape Finisterre while with her squadron. Most of her crew of
500 were drowned. Among the drowned was Reginald Herbert, son of
Lady Herbert of Lea, who had become a Roman Catholic in 1865 (see
p. 419, n. 227. 4), though the children
had to be brought up as Protestants.
For GMH this would have given an extra poignancy to the wreck.
203. 2. Aurora, Date given as 24th in Annual Register.
6.
203. 3. De Morgan, Augustus (1806 —
18 Mar. 1871 see DNB), Professor of ;
The ‘white violets’ were white forms of Viola odorata. The blue scentless
ones were one of the kinds of ‘dog violet’, probably V. riviniana, or possibly
V.reichenbachiana. The distinction GMH
makes between the leaves is
rather obscure to a botanist.
207. I. Later rippling as in the drawing: may refer to the drawing on p. 205.
rated hima saintly man, and especially in his great humility, and
as
cheerful submission to the Will of God under much depreciation and many
disappointments. May he pray for me.*
2o8.2. Found some daffodils .... A piece of the page is here cut out, which
probably had an unsatisfactory drawing on it.
211.
2o8. 3. or silver of silver inserted here by Hopkins’s mark from left-hand
page.
211 . 2. comfrey. ‘Pinion* probably refers to the distal portion of the inflo-
rescence (cf. pinion =
distal portion of a bird’s wing). In comfrey and
other members
of the family Boraginaceae^ the young inflorescence is coil^
into a spiral before opening.
212. 2. The two rocks Aug, 28 inserted from left-hand page: the following
. . .
214 . I. Chapel Royal: properly the abbey church. It is not clear which are
the ‘two low arches’ to which GMH refers. The choir-screen arch of
Glasgow Cathedral with which he compares them is a very flat ‘Tudor’
arch it has no ‘downward lleurdelys’, but is decorated on top with a run
:
4H NOTES TO JOURNAL
to Turner. The dream insisted particularly on the great fact of its having
come by The torrent was wild, the storms were wonderful, but
the road.
the most wonderful thing of all was how we ourselves, the dream and I,
ever got here. By our feet we could not by an ivory gate we could not —
in no other wise could we have come than by the coach road.’
The drawing has a very small coach and horses in the middle-distance.
215.
The plate of it in Modern Painters was engraved by Ruskin, who put over
against it a drawing of the pass marked ‘Simple Topography’.
2. Netley Abbey. 2J miles W. of Bursledon, on Southampton Water.
Cistercian, founded 1239: church finished early 14th century. There ajre
many famous descriptions of its beauty, e.g. letters of Horace Walpole Ito
Bentley (Sept. 755) and of Thomas Gray to James Brown (Sept, i yGii)
1
and to Norton Nicholls (19 Nov. 1764). Two photographs dating fro^
this visit are in the Hopkins family album. ‘Our Wander-Book’, vol. i. (i)
shows dead tree in NW. corner of nave; inside position of triplet windows
on ‘hooded under arches’ and one set of three-light lancets
S. side of nave, ;
have deep sloping sills, because the wall was thickened, the cloister making
outside buttresses impossible. The two quasi- triforium arches at S. end of
S. transept clearly were divided into three lights each, with a quaterfoiled
roundel at head of the middle light: they appear, together with others of
Hopkins’s points, in a drawing on p. 324 of Highways and Byways in Hamp-
shire by D. H. M. Read ( 1 908) A small photograph of same date in another
.
Hopkins family album shows the E. window, its sill covered with ivy and
with ivy twining up its one surviving mullion.
215. 3. S. side of the nave. Here a piece of the page is cut out, evidently with
217.
a discarded drawing.
216. I. Victoria Military Hospital, Netley, founded after the Crimean War,
‘loads the shore with its costly ugliness’.
216. 2. V-shaped appearance in the sky. Cf. GMH’s letters to Nature, issues of
16 Nov. 1882 and 15 Nov. 1883, reprinted in LL, ii, appx ii.
lical side. Judge 1891. ist Baron St Helier 1905. See Lady St Helier,
Memories of Fifty Tears, 1 909.
2i8« 4. Hon\e\yman, Sir George Essex (1819-75; see DNB), appeared in fact
with Coleridge and Hawkins for the defendants, not as GMH says. Started
legal life in a solicitor’s office; then special pleader; called to bar 1849.
—
p. 193). For Fr Henry James Coleridge SJ, see p. 163 and n. his moving :
letter to his brother after this incident speaks of ‘the tender love that is
between us’ (E. H. Coleridge, Life and Correspondence of John Duke, Lord
Coleridge, ii. 187, where is a defence of the long cross-examination). John
Duke Coleridge was Chief Justice of Common Pleas 1873 and of Queen’s
Bench 1880; became ist Baron Coleridge 1874.
2i8. 6. Hawkins, Henry (1817-1907; see DNB); began legal work in office
of his father, a Hitchin solicitor; special pleader; called to bar 1843.
Appeared with Bovill in the Roupell forgery case 1862 (see p. 318); and
for defendants in various unsuccessful prosecutions after the Overend and
Gurney According to Herbert Stephen’s DNB article,
failure (see p. 348),
Hawkins, when retained in Tichborne ejectment action,
for defence
expected to cross-examine plaintiff and was much disappointed when
Coleridge became Attorney-General and, as such, leader of defence;
Hawkins only cross-examined some lesser witnesses, though ably. However,
he led for the Crown in the perjury trial (sec p. 427). Later he was a suc-
cessful criminal judge, unfairly nicknamed ‘Hanging Hawkins’, but a
failure through indecisiveness in civil cases. Became ist Baron Brampton
1899, and a Roman Catholic shortly before death.
220. I. Dielytras, an earlier Latin name for the flower commonly called
Bleeding Heart the present scientific name is Dicentra spectabilis.
;
220* 2. fells No full-stop in MS. The word comes at the end of a page, but
not of a paragraph.
221. I. Baddely Library, The name is mis-spelt. Edward Badeley (d. 1868),
B 6628 Ee
4i8 notes to journal
2. pp. 236 and 249; Duns Scotus^s Oxford {Poems, p. 84);
Scotus, Gf.
GMH’s sermon of 5 Dec. 1879 on the Immaculate Conception {Sermons,
pp. 43-46), &c. For discussion of his Scotism, see especially two articles,
‘The Image and the Word’, by Revd Christopher Devlin, SJ ( The Month,
Feb. and March 1950) the ensuing correspondence with W. H. Gardner;
;
224. I. Kirk Trinnian, The ruin is on the Douglas-Peel road. The buggane
refused to allow a roof to be built on the church, and Timothy the tailor
made a bet he would finish a pair of breeches before the buggane cast
down the next roof. The roof fell with a crash as he was putting in the last
stitch, and Timothy had to fly to hallowed ground. See (c.g.) Jenkinson's
Smaller Practical Guide to the Isle of Man, 2nd edn 1878, pp. 49-50.
226. I. Clitheroe Castle, The small, square, very strongly built Norman keep
survives, with fragments of the curtain wall.
226. 3. Mr. Cyprian Splaine. Elder brother of William Splaine (see p. 442).
Educ. Stonyhurst, and taught there in the College 1869-74 and 1880-7.
Was one of the Jesuits who had seen some of Hopkins’s poetry in MS; but
he does not seem to have appreciated it {LL, i. 196). He was fond of long
walks, a very fluent and clear writer of Latin prose, and an excellent
schoolmaster.
226. 4. A sentence has here been deleted at the request of the Hopkins
family.
227. Vaughan, Flerbert Alfred (1832-1903; see DNB), eldest son of Col.
4,
John Francis Vaughan of Courlfield; founder of St. Joseph’s Missionary
College, Mill Hill 1866; later Cardinal Archbp of Westminster.
Con-
secrated second Bp of Salford at St Johns Cathedral 26 Oct. 1872.
His predecessor William Turner (1800—72) had become first Bp, on
creation of the hierarchy, 25 July 1851. GMH
described this reception of
a Baillie (LL, iii. 238), in which he said:
the Bp more fully in letter to
was bidden to write Greek and shed twentyfour iambics with much
ado
‘I
an invaluable book for the details and sentiment of one side of Roman
SJ,
Catholic life there is no letter describing this Academy.
1867-1903;
engineer. Novice
228. I, Joseph (1833-77), b. Chester; a railway
Socius to Director of Stonyhurst
SJ as a lay brother 1857. 1867 appointed
Observatory. Held this office also under Fr Perry, whom he accompanied
228 . 4. Uncle Dick, Richard James Lane (1800-72 see DNB), line-engraver ;
228 . 6. like the sweat ... or in the way etc. Added as a footnote in MS.
229 . I. Shapter, William, SJ (1847-1929), b. Exeter of non-Catholic
parents. Educated Westminster. Received into Catholic Church at Ex-
mouth, aged 18. This led to trouble at home; he left England and lived in
New Zealand and then India. In 1867 entered the Toulouse Province
SJ in India and spent noviceship at Negapatam. Was sent for his Philo-
sophy to St Mary’s Hall, Stonyhurst 1872. Did some of his Theology in
France but was ordained priest at St Benno’s 1878. Worked on missions at
Preston, St Helens, &c. Prefect of Philosophers at Stonyhurst 1885-gi.
1895-1905 worked in Irdia. Spent the last part of his life on English
Missions.
229 * 2. I underwent an operation .... This operation was for piles. Miss Grace
Hopkins wrote for the first edition: ‘I remember that when I was . . .
allowed to see Gerard, he said, jokingly, that as he lay awake the night
after the operation, he kept thinking of the lines
Mr Prance was the family doctor in Hampstead, Mr Gay the surgeon, who
also practised there. Hopkins mentions the operation to Bridges, 22 June
NOTES TO JOURNAL 43,
had a certain natural grace of carriage that was pleasing and attractive
but he was quite unconscious of the fact and too manly to wish to be taken
notice of, and would have hated being noticed. He had a strong manly
will of his own. He was quite simple and did not show off his learning. He
was naturally somewhat eccentric in his views and ways: but these ways
were pleasing and many of them original. He spoke out pretty straight
what he thought; once he said to me “I admire you and I despise you”.
I quite understood why. It gave no offence. He had a keen eye for . . .
peculiarities in nature, and hunted for the right word to express them, and
invented one if he could not find one. He made for himself a peculiar sort of
handwriting, in later years he gave it up.’ (This possibly refers to the sys-
tem of abbreviations used in note-books C. I and II.) ‘He was not always
judicious in his sermons once he compared the Church to a milk cow and
;
the tits to the seven sacraments. But great genius must be excused eccen-
tricities.’
230. I. The Old Aiasters exhibition', ‘The Works of the Old Masters and of
Deceased British Artists’, a scries of loan exhibitions organized from 1870
by the RA in place of those previously managed by the British Institution.
The first one, containing 234 pictures from over 80 collections, received a
long and enthusiastic notice in the Art Journal (Feb. 1870).
230. 3. triduum. Three days’ prayer and recollection in preparation for the
spiritual renewal of vows, which Jesuits make every six months between
their 1st and final vows.
236. I. Ditton HalL During Bismarck’s ‘Kulturkampf’ the Jesuits were ex-
pelled from Germany Lady Stapleton made over for their use two country-
;
houses near Widnes, Ditton Hall being occupied by the Theologians and
Portico by the Tertians. For descriptions of these houses, and painful
accounts of residence in them, see Count Paul von Hoensbroech, Fourteen
Tears a Jesuit (Eng. transl. 191 1), ii. 216-22, 41 1-15. \
wrote: ‘Manresa is very quiet, but my life is a most busy one. I am kept
occupied from morning till night. You will find the scenery beautiful
. . .
(Richmond Park is spread out before us), the grounds charming, and our
chapel a perfect gem.* And on 25 Sept. ‘My new office somewhat confuses :
Porter’s was ‘I consider the education of one novice a better work than
:
the education of sixty poor children: because the education of one novice
may prove the salvation of a thousand poor children.’
236. 3. jokes of various kinds on the 21st. The ‘Beadle’s Log’ of 1873 supplies a
further detail of considerable interest
August 21. Thursday. As usual except that the Seminarians gave an
entertainment after supper .... It consisted of music, comic and half-
comic pieces etc. It was mainly got up by Mr. G. Hopkins, and was a
decided success.
An earlier entry in the same shows GMH once more apparently in the role
of humorist
April I, Mr. G. Hopkins read a paper at Eng. Academy entitled
Thoughts on Mobs, Fr. Rector and Mr. Smith present.
—
1873 i.e. a month later than these of Hopkins: ‘I have just received
marching orders to go to St. Beuno’s immediately as Professor.
Obedient Yamen
Answered “Amen”
And did
As he was bid.
So Southey says in the Rejected Addresses, and I will be like Yamen’ {Life and
Letters of Father John Morris, S,J,, pp. 176-7).
NOTES TO JOURNAL 425
236 . 5. meditation papers. The exact form and extent of these is not known.
There are extant two short sets of notes made in retreat, 1883 (Beaumont)
and 1888 (Tullabeg), published by Fr Devlin in Mote-Books, ii. 253 and
261. These are evidently some, if not all, of the papers referred to by RB
in a letter to Miss Kate Hopkins, 14 Oct. 1918, as ‘private papers which
ought never to have been sent. . . . One in particular which records his
meditations in retreat’, which RB was sending to the family; the originals
and RB’s letter are now among the Bodl. MSS. There was also formerly in
possession of the family an autograph Note-Book marked *Please do not
open this\ This was deliberately burnt by Miss Grace and Miss Kate
Hopkins (Gardner, ii. viii) it has been assumed by Dr Gardner, by the
;
editor, and by others to have been a spiritual diary; but this is only an
assumption: and parts of the Journal here printed are marked ‘Please not
to read’ (see appx IV, entry A I). The word ‘papers’ here seems to imply
separate sheets, not book. See Preface, p. xiv.
236 . 6 mercy
. about Dolhen. From the remarkable letter to his mother of
9 Oct. 1877, on the death of his grandfather Smith, it seems probable that
Hopkins thought he had received from heaven some sign of Dolben’s
salvation; for he then wrote: ‘Do not make light of this, for it is perhaps
the seventh time that I think I have had some token from heaven in
connection with the death of people in whom I am interested’ {LL, iii. 148).
For Dolben’s state of mind at death, see p. 325.
237. I. Laval. There was a Jesuit house at Laval, Mayenne, till 1901.
Students from many countries did part of their course there.
have been used for the interior decoration of the writing-cabinet of Cosmo
de’ Medici’: recent opinion suggests for the ceiling of a small barrel-
vaulted study of Piero de’ Medici in the Palazzo Medici in Florence, (ii)
page in MS.
239. I a great gate. It is no longer possible to trace this grouping of trees; all
.
poplars in this area have gone; but by the sunk fence are still two cedars
‘set to one side by the wind’.
240 . 7. Alma Tadema. For main note see p. 368. ‘The Flute Player’ was his
only picture in this exhibition, and its history has not been traced.
241 . I. Titchborne case. The trial of Arthur Orton (1834-98; see DjVB), son
of a Wapping butcher, for perjury in his action as Tichborne Claimant
(sec p. 414) began in Court of Queen’s Bench 23 Apr. 1873 before Lord
described the Stonyhurst plays in which ‘women’s parts are not given and
Lady Macbeth becomes an Uncle Donald’. Dr Kenealy’s treatment of this
Stonyhurst custom in the trial led to the following comments by the Chief
Justice on 29 Jan. 1874: ‘Vice is the foul accusation which has been hurled
428 NOTES TO JOURNAL
against the authorities of Stonyhurst. I am no friend of the Jesuit Order.
I believe that their principlesand their purposes are inconsistent with the
freedom, moral, intellectual, and religious, of the human mind. But to say
—
that this Order which, whatever may be its merits or demerits, has done
so much for the furtherance of education, and for which literary men ought
to feel grateful to it —
to say that this Order would use the opportunity of
demoralising the youth committed to its charge, and that it would do so
for the purpose of those abominations to which the learned counsel
referred, is in my mind one of the most hateful, most unfounded, most
abominable, and most fearful accusations that ever were brought before
against a body of men. Moreover there is not the slightest shadow of a
foundation for it. All that the learned counsel can point to is a foolish habit
they had of mutilating the plays which were acted in the College. They
omitted some scenes, and by some hocus-pocus converted the relations
between men and women into relations of a different kind. Because tperc
may have been left in some of these plays a passage which the Fathci^ in
their fastidiousness or sickly sentimentality thought a little too strong for
the ears of some delicate young lady, because something of that sort
dropped from the lips of the Rev. Father Fitz-Simon, the learned counsel
asks you to believe that these dramas were converted into something of a
totally different character and of a nature too terrible to contemplate. I
never heard of such an accusation before, and I trust to God I shall never
hear such another’ {The Tichborne Trial: The Summing-up by the Lord Chief
Justice of England, Ward, Lock, and Tyler, 1874, p. 16).
241 . 2. Bonomi, Joseph (1796-1878; see DNB), the second son of Joseph
Bonomi (1739-1808; seeDNB) an Italian architect who came to England
at the invitation of the Adam brothers. The son, a sculptor and draughts-
man, was chiefly distinguished by his drawings of Egyptian hieroglyphics
and antiquities, which illustrated the works of the leading Egyptologists of
the time. In 1861 he became Curator of the House of Sir John Soane,
Lincoln’s Inn Fields, largely because of his earlier work on the Seti
Sarcophagus there there is an interesting portrait of him at the Museum.
;
‘The Camels’, Wimbledon Park, was the name of his home, at which he
died. The elder Bonomi had been the architect of the first Roman Catholic
Chapel in Spanish Place built 1793-6 (see note on Fr Goldie, p. 402).
3. the gems were bought by Soane about 1834 from the ist Duke of
241 .
Buckingham and Chandos; more gems have proved ‘to be post-antique
than either Soane or the Duke probably reahsed’ (Cornelius Vermeule,
Catalogue of the Classical Antiquities in Sir John Soane's Museum, Unpublished
Typescript, 1953). Hopkins seems to have confused, in notes or memory,
two separate gems, (i) is mounted on a gold ring, a cameo of German
agate with an oval ground, 24X 19 mm. This is a four-faced figure; a
young head in profile looks right; another head in profile and upside-down
(said by Prof. Vermeule to represent Jupiter Ammon) looks left; across the
top lies a bearded profile looking upwards; at the bottom a ram’s head
looks down, and the ram’s horn, in higher relief than the rest of the work,
forms the centrepiece (Vermeule, Catalogue, No. 820, p. 712). (2) is of
NOTES TO JOURNAL 4129
the Silenus’ beard and the right-hand neck, looks up north-eastwards. This
cameo has no ram’s horn (Vermeule, Catalogue, No. 821, p. 713). Prof.
Vermeule does not think any of the faces are female; he calls attention to
two similar gems in the British Museum Post-Classical Collection (BM
Catalogue, Nos 212, 214, pi. x), and ascribes the whole group to the
1 8th century.
241. 4. National Gallery, (i) No. 790 ‘The Entombment’; purchased 1868
from Robert Macpherson; unfinished. ‘Hammer-realism’ probably refers
to the angles of limbs, feet, &c., and the dead heaviness of flesh in the body
of Christ. ‘Imperfection and archaism’ may be a partial recognition that it
is a very early work {c. 1495), derived from a print by Mantegna. First
241. 5. Sham fight. 12,000 men of the Volunteer Rifle Corps held field
242* 2. Kensington museum, (i) The plaster cast of the Louvre Melpomene was
(ii) The Japanese platter was probably work
broken up many years ago. of
the Komai family from Kioto, very likely obtained from the Paris Exhibi-
is not remembered now in the
tion of 1867; the particular piece Depart-
ment of Metalwork, (iii) The ivory relief was work of the kind called sunk
relief’; it seems that most, if not all, of the Japanese ivory in the
museum
. .
242. 3. I made the following notes . . . beautiful stone and name. This is on the
left-hand page of MS, but clearly belongs to this visit to the museum^
near Wimbledon, called Combe Wood, which was so thickly set with
primroses, that it seemed as if they had been put whole into the ground for
a surprise. Their beautiful pale yellow was interspersed with the blue-
. . .
244* the Academy. The only one of GMH’s painter relations who exhibited
I .
this year was his aunt Frances Hopkins (see p. 336), whose ‘Canadian
Voyageurs on Lake Superior starting at Sunrise’ was No. 100. The popular
subject-piece of the year was ‘Calling the Roll after an Engagement,
Crimea* (or ‘The Roll Call’) by Elizabeth Thompson (later Lady Butler),
which was ‘surrounded by a struggling multitude’ {A Victorian Diarist, ed.
E. C. F. Collier, p. 13) and had to have the coveted railing put round it.
Watts’s portrait of J. S. Mill was exhibited this year.
244* 2. Fr. Johnson, There were three Fathers Johnson at this time in the
Society. This is probably Fr Joseph Johnson Snr (1810-93); he had be-
come Socius to the Provincial in 1873, after many active years himself as
Provincial and as Rector of Stonyhurst. Fr William Johnson (1812-92) was
his brother. Fr Joseph Johnson Jnr (1826-91) was not a prominent Jesuit.
NOTES TO JOURNAL 43I
easy stroll; towards 5 I go to my hotel, say more Office, read, etc., till
7,
when I sup; the supper consists of bread and wine’ (Letters of ,, Fr, ,
Porter, p. 13).
244 . 5. Macbeth. For main note see p. 427. The title of this picture. No. 213
in the exhibition, should be ‘Phillis on the new-made hay’; original or
reproduction un traced.
244 . 8. Millais (formain note see p, 386) (i) ‘Scotch Firs’ formerly belonged
:
245 ‘The Picture Gallery* and ‘The Vintage Festival* are both discuffied at
3.
some length in G. A. Simeox’s article on Alma-Tadema (see p. 1368),
pp. 109-12. Of the former he says, ‘the modernism is very unobtrusive;
it is subdued by the quiet, matter-of-fact archaism of all the dctails’.\The
247 . 1 . Raven (see p. 360) exhibited only the one picture this year.
—
o’clock Tea” a bevy of Japanese maidens, seated on the floor, drinking
tea. In this picture I utilized the pretty dresses I had bought at the Japanese
warehouse when I was in Paris. ... I made my girl friends pose for me.’
Agnews bought it for £400. Also by her in RA 1874 ‘La Japonaise’, a
self-portrait in Japanese dress. She noticed specially in the exhibition the
Japanesey work of W. G. Wills competing with her own {Twenty Tears of
my Life, i 86y-~i 8Sy, 1925, p. 68;. Even more remarkable must have been
No. 1001, ‘A Japanese Cleopatra’ by A. Thompson. Her house and studio
in Beaufort Street, Chelsea, were taken over for a religious community
under Fr Kenelm Vaughan (see p. 375). For further details of her and
Jopling, see Life of Millais, i. 427-45, where is reproduced Millais’s portrait
of her, which is now in the Tate, presented by her son Lindsay Millais
Jopling. GMH
does not seem to have realized how much the taste for
Japanese things derived from the 1867 Paris Exhibition, which he visited
without commenting on them (see p. 147 and n.; Muther, iii. 100-4).
247. 8. Wortley, Arc hibald John Stuart (1849-1905), grandson of isi Lord
WharnclilTe, was a pupil of Millais. Founder and ist President of Society
of Portrait Painters 1889. Exhibited many portraits (including the Ivince
of Wales) and sporting pictures, chiefly at RA
and Grosvenor Gallery.
Illustrated the Badminton Library Shooting^ a book on The Grouse, &c.^^
247. 10. Bource, Henry (1826-99). Hopkins’s query after the name probably
shows his previous ignorance of it and doubt whether he had got it right.
Bource was b. Antwerp, and only exhibited about six pictures in England,
all between 1870 and 1877. The full title of this RA exhibit was ‘Ruined!
the day after the tempest’, and the Catalogue gave Bource’s address as
Antwerp and 396 Old Bond Street, There are examples of his work at The
Hague, Brussels, &c.
247. II, Moore, see DjVB), brother of Albert Moore (sec
Henry (1831-95;
p. 388). At a landscape-painter under Pre-Raphaelite influence.
first
Began sea-painting 1858, and by 1870 was doing little else. Called by
Muther (iii. 193-4) ‘the undisputed monarch of this province of art’. In
RA 1868 GMH would have seen ‘Ebb tide: squall coming on’. The full
title of this 1874 picture was ‘Rough weather in the open, Mediterranean’;
Moore sea-piece in the exhibition. There are examples of his work in the
Tate (Chantrey); Walker Gallery, Liverpool; and the Manchester and
Birmingham City Collections. See P. G. Hamerton, ‘A Modern Marine
Painter’, Portfolio, 1890.
247. 12. Hughes, Arthur. For main note see p. 360. ‘The Convent Boat’
was just mentioned by the Saturday Review (16 May 1874) for its ‘sweet,
though rather sickly, sentiment’.
248 .3. House of Lords. The Debates were (i) Leases and Sales of Settled
Estates Bill, (2) Cruelty to Animals Law Amendment Bill. Lord Chelms-
ford spoke on the first, and the Lord Chancellor on both.
249 . 3. Brande Morris, John (1812-80), one of the major eccentrics of the
Oxford Movement and Catholic Revival. Balliol; 2nd Greats 1834. Fellow
of Exeter 1837. passed his whole day up the tower of Exeter College
reading the Fathers, and cutting jokes upon our stepmother, the Church of
England* (M. Pattison, Memoirs, pp. 184-5). Hence nicknamed Simeon
Stylites. He also had ‘a noisy and odious turning machine’ in the tower, and
was considered too farouche and unpresentable for Lockhart’s wine parties
just below. Learned patristic scholar and orientalist. Published The
Homilies of St John Chrysostom on the Epistle of St Paul to the Romans (Library of
the Fathers, 1841); Nature a Parable: a Poem (1842); won £200 prize
436 NOTES TO JOURNAL
offered by the Bp of Calcutta for An Essay towards the Conversion of
Learned and Philosophical Hindus (1843; ‘The work*, says Gillow, ‘had no
circulation in India.*) Became Roman Catholic 16 Jan. 1846; Priest 1848.
Chaplain to E. R. P. Bastard, Yealmpton, Devon 1853-5; Canon of
Plymouth 1853; Chaplain to his former pupil Sir John Acton, Aldenham
Hall 1855-60; at Shortwood, Somerset 1860-8. Chaplain to Coventry
Patmore, Heron’s Ghyll 1868-70. In 1870 he settled as Chaplain to the
Soeurs de la Misericorde de Seez, a nursing Order with only one house then
in England, founded in i860 at Hammersmith. Morris’s later works included
Taleetha Koomee; or, the Gospel Prophecy of our Ladfs Assumption, A Draina in
four acts (1858), in verse; Eternal Punishment (1874); Eucharist on Calvary:
—
An Essay .... The Introduction (1878) this was intended to be a ‘history of
the Sacred Host with which our Blessed Lord communicated Himse^ at
His First Mass’, but Morris was dissuaded from continuing it (Gillow).
252 . I. Sky in the E. at sunset. Cf. pp. 210, 216, and letters to Nature (LL,
ii, appx ii).
253 -I. Exeter Cathedral was under restoration by Sir Gilbert Scott 1870-7.
accretions of colour-wash, &c., were cleaned off and the carving picked
NOTES TO JOURNAL 437
out. The of the choir were newly made from Scott’s designs incor-
stalls
porating the 13th-century misericordes (see Devon and Cornwall Notes &
Queries, xi, ii, 1920). The Bishop’s Throne (c. 1317) was a
magnificent
piece of carving with spire 60 feet high. It had suffered badly from John
Kendall {c, 1820), but Scott restored it to something
ap- like its original
pearance. The date Hopkins gives was a conjecture not based on the
Fabric Rolls.
Bp Marshall’s (d. 1206) tomb was probably moved to its present site
in the 14th century. ‘The effigy of Purbeck marble is ... in full relief and
of a character consonant with the art of his time; but the slab is of coffin-lid
shape. The tomb-chest seems neither to fit the place which it occupies (the
carving of the west end being partly hidden), nor the slab above it. The
character of the carving also appears to belong to a period several decades
later’ (Bishop, op. cit., p. 123).
253 . 2. Hind and Panther, Dryden was very possibly at Ugbrooke in summer
or autumn 1686 and may have begun the poem there (G. E. Ward, Review
of English Studies, 1937, xiii. 300-1); but he often went to Rush ton Hall,
Northants., in late summer and may have also written parts of it there,
where an urn was later set up in ‘Dryden’s Walk’ inscribed ‘In memory of :
John Dryden who frequented these shades, and is here said to have com-
posed his poem of “The Hind and the Panther”.’ Also, parts were almost
certainly written in London (J. M. Osborn, John Dryden: some biographical
facts and problems, Columbia UP, 1940, pp. 203-4).
254. 7. Lynch, ]oh.n (1848-1925), was one of the boys at the first opening of
Beaumont as a school, when the Novitiate moved to Roehampton in 1861.
He became a novice 10 years later. His chief work was done as a master at
Beaumont, and on the Bournemouth mission.
256. Toz6 r,}ohn Hellyer (1828-96), had become a Catholic in the early
I.
257 . I. St Beuno^s. The Jesuit Theologians (Divines) had been moved from
Stonyhurst to St Beuno’s in 1849. (For St Beuno see LL, i. 40). For GMH’s
description of the house and garden to his father, written the day after his
arrival, see LL, iii. 124-5. The site was chosen by Fr Lythgoc, and the first
building designed by Hansom, the inventor of the cab. Map of St Asaph
district, p. 548.
257 .3. Mrs, Thrale (1741-1821) had inherited Bachycraig, Flintshire, from
her father John Salusbury. In 1795 she left Streatham and went to live on
the Welsh estate with Piozzi, whom she had married in 1 784. It was he
who built Brynbella, and he died there in 1809. Mrs Piozzi gave the Welsh
property to John Piozzi, her adopted son.
257 , Mrs, Hemans was a member of the Browne family, who had a house
4.
at St called Bronwylfa. The tablet in the cathedral is inscribed:
Asaph
‘This tablet is placed here, by her brothers, in memory of Felicia Hemans,
whose character is best pourtrayed in her writings. She died in Dublin,
16th May, 1835, aged 40.*
257. 6. The church at Trefnant was built from designs by Sir Gilbert Scott.
6Jan. 1877 (LLjiii. 241) mightsuggest. Gardner also thinks Hopkins’s author-
ship of the Welsh version of 0 Deus, ego amo te (Poems, p. 189) sufficiently
probable to include it. For a full discussion of both, see Poems, pp. 266-70.
GMH refers to the Cywydd in a letter to his father of 7 Aug. 1876: ‘For the
Welsh they had to come to me, for, sad to say, no one else in the house
knows anything about it’ (LL, iii. 140). Of the effect of Welsh poetry on his
own he wrote to both Bridges (LL, i. 38) and Dixon (LI., ii. 15). Its influence
on his work is discussed by LI. Wyn Griffith in J\''ew Verse, Apr. 935, and by 1
Gweneth Lilly in Modem Language Review, July 1943, pp. 192-205. Fbur
letters to Hopkins from Dr (later Sir) John Rhys, ist Professor of Celtic
258. 2. St. Ignatius^ rules of election. For the rules governing the election of a
state of life, and commentary on them, see The Spiritual Exerciser of St.
Ignatius Loyola ., by Joseph Rickaby, SJ, 1915, pp. 1 13, 119-20, 156-60.
. .
258. 4. Ffynnon~Fair is the usual form of the name, but m and / are fre-
the parishes and schools of the diocese. It was for the silver jubilee of his
episcopate in 1 876 that Hopkins wrote The Silver Jubilee(sce p. 403, n. 1 9 1 .5) •
The Bp’s health broke down in 1879 and he retired to St Mary’s Grange,
near Shrewsbury.
NOTES TO JOURNAL 441
Catholic Chaplain; but he was not, and was moved to Farm Street. He
luckily went back to Oxford in 1899, and when Fr Richard Clarke (see
p. 421) died suddenly in the vacation, it was Rickaby who persuaded the
Vice-Chancellor to allow the Jesuit hall to continue; and he remained
there for the greater part of his life. His three great masters in teaching and
preaching were Aristotle, St Paul, and St John Chrysostom. His chief
published works are Of God and His Creatures (Notes and transl. of Aquinas
Contra Gentiles, 1905); Free Will and Four English Philosophers, 1906; Moral
Philosophy (Stonyhurst Series 1888). He edited Aquinas Ethicus and The
Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius Loyola, and published notes of his retreats in
Waters that go Softly, but in the published form they have lost a great deal
of their vigour, and lost too the pictorial images which Rickaby’s mind
held by and delighted in.
261. 3. St. Winifred. For her story, seeLL, i. 40. Hopkins’s short poem On
St. Winifred (Poems, p. 159) is undated. RB’s note says GMH began his
tragedy on St Winifred (fragments m Poems, 96 and 159) Oct. 1879; there
are further drafts in the ‘Dublin Note-Book’ of 1884-5 (see appx IV,
entry G. I.fl) It is clear that he had a very special devotion to the Saint and
.
her well.
261. 5. starlings. Cf. Coleridge: ‘Soon after this I saw Starlings in Vast
borne along like smoke, mist
Flights, — like a body unindued with voluniary
—
Power/ now it shaped itself into a circular area, inclined now tl[iey —
—
formed a Square— now a Globe now from complete Orb into an Ellipse-
then oblongated into a Balloon with the Gar suspended, now a concave
Semicircle; still expanding, or contracting, thinning or condensing, now
glimmering and shivering, now thickening, deepening, blackening!’
(Transcription in 1803 of note-book entry for 27 Nov. 1799: The Notebooks
of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, ed. Kathleen Coburn, 1957, i, 1589).
finished reading the 20th reply to my pamphlet. They cover 1000 pages
Manning, I think has been as civil as he could ... in his 200 pages has not,
I venture to say, made a single point against me’ (Morlcy, Life of Gladstone,
bk. vii, chap. ii). The answers GMH mentions were: (i) Expostulation in
Extremis by the Right Hon. Lord Robert Montagu, having on its title-
‘
page: “Although I hit you first, yet it is no matter; I will have an action
of battery against you if there is any law in Illyria”.— Mr. Gladstone in the
part of Sir Andrew Aguechcek.’ (ii) Pope Hennessy’s answer still untraced,
(iii) The Dbllingerites, Mr. Gladstone and Apostates from the Faith, 1874, or else
Mr. Gladstone's Expostulation Unravelled by Bishop Ullathorne, 1875. Ulla-
thorne was the senior English Bp at the Vatican Council, (iv) A Reply
to the Right Hon. W. E. by the Right Revd
Gladstone's ^Political Expostulation'
262. 2. Wagner, Fr Albert, SJ, joined the New Orleans Mission 1880, when
it belonged to the Lyons Province, and died there 1924.
267 . I. The title originally read ‘Rhythm and the other structural parts of
oratory and poetry —verse— *. The correction seems to have been made
immediately: the writing is thick and blackish; what follows thin and
brown.
i
I I 1
'
272 . I. apcrtg and Siaig. Cf. W. R. Hardie, Res Metrica (1920), p. 262 : ‘The
Greeks meant by arsis the lifting of the foot in the march or dance, and by
thesis the downward movement. In an anapaest the two short syllables
accompany the former movement, the long syllable the latter
thesis
Hence for the Greeks the long syllable in a dactyl, anapaest, iambus, &c.,
is the thesis, the rest of the foot the arsis.
‘A different use of the terms grew up in Roman imperial times, and after
that yet another usage, which has been the prevalent one with modern
metricians —the voice and not the foot came to be thought of, and hence
arsis and thesis exchanged meanings. The long syllable in the anapaest came
to be called the arsis. “Rise” and “fall” in English, and “Hebung” and
“Senking” in German, have been adopted as terms answering to this use of
273 . I. St. Austin. De Musical bk ii, chap, xiii, § 25; Migne, Patrologia Latina,
vol. xxxii, cols 1 1 13-14.
*Magister: Sed cur non etiam ille amphibrachus, quern ab ista numero-
sitate penitus ejiciebamus, hac condicione misceatur spondeo, dactylo, et
ciat? Potest enim simili ratione media quoque pedis ejus syllaba, quae
longa est, plausu dividi; ut cum singula tempera singulis lateribus dederit,
non jam unum ct tria, sed bina tempora levatio positioque sibi vindi-
^Discipulus: Nihil sane habeo quod dicam, nisi hunc etiam esse ad-
mittendum.
*Magister: Aliquid ergo plaudamus quaternorum temporum pedibus
ordinatum atque contextum, quibus istc commixtus sit, ct eodem modo
sensu exploremus utrum nihil imparile offendat. Et ideo attende in hunc
numerum propter judicandi facilitatem cum plausu tertio repetitum.
Sumas optima, facias honesta. Sumas optima, facias honesta. Sumas optima,
facias honesta.
‘structural parts of rhetoric — verse’ 445
*Discipulus: Jamjam, obsecro, parce auribus meis: nam etiam plausu
non admolo, ipse per se horum pedum cursus in illo amphibracho
vehementissime claudicat.’
Of goodly thousands. But, for all this {Macb. iv. iii. 44).
A third thinks, without expense at all (/ Hen. VI. i. i. 76).
273.
Pull off my boots; harder, harder, so (Lear, iv. vi. 178).
That she did give me, whose posy was (M. of V. v. i. 148).
Would then be nothing: truths would be tales (A. and C. 11. ii. 137).
3. St. Austin. De Musica, bk iii, chap, viii, §17; Migne, loc. cit., col. 1125.
Recte censes. Sed die mihi etiam quantum spatium putas esse?
‘Af.
D. Metiri hoc omnino difficile est. A/. Verum dicis: sed nonne tibi videtur
brevis ilia syllaba id metiri, quam cum addidimus, neque longae ultimae
ultra solitam productionem, neque ullum silentium in ejus metri repeti-
tione sensus desideravit? D, Omnino assentior: nam et te illud superius
pronuntiante atque repetente, hoc posterius ego apud me ipse repetebam
pariter tecum: ita sensi idem spatium temporis ambobus occurrere, cum
silentio tuo brevis mea ultima conveniret. Af. Teneas igitur oportet haec
silentiorum spatia certa in melris esse. Quare cum in veneris aliquid
decsse pedi legitimo, considerare te oportebit, utrum dimenso atque
annumerato silentio compensetur. D, Teneo jam istud, persequere
caetera.’
274# 2. *'Twas when the seas were roaring'. John Cay: ballad from The What
d'ye call ii, 1. i. Known in the Hopkins family from George Bickham,Jnr:
The Musical Entertainer. Cf. LL, i. 120.
the iambic is near the language of common talk. Arist. Poetics, 1449^^4*
274. 3.
/LtoAiorayap XeKTiKov twv pLerpwv to ta/xjSetov earev arif-Leiov Se tovtov,
Cf.
TrAefara yap laji^^la XiyopL€V iv Tjj SiaXeKTw Tjj irpos aXXrjXovs.
The iambic is also called irpaKTiKov 1460“! cf. Horace,
Rhetoric, 1408^33. ;
them
and godlike Achilles were parted in strife. Who then of the gods so set
ecause
at strife that they quarrelled? The son of Leto and Zeus (i. 6-9)
. . .
1)-*
Atreides had dishonoured Chiy^ses the priest (i. 1
in Shakespeare’s
275. I. (iamb + trochee) can be said to occur
antispasts
inverted the 00 e ore
blank verse, when a foot other than the first is ,
::
—though
|
Bokcl) Kal dfia kol i^Larr^aiv' Trpooe^^eu' yap Troiel to) opLolco, ttotc
ttoAu/ "ijfei. warrep ovv tcjv KTjpvKcov TTpoXapL^dvovai rd Traihia to ‘ViVa
alp€LTaL iTTirpoTTOv 6 dTr€X€vd€povp,€VOs ; KXi(i)va^\ to Se dpMiiov
aTTCpavTOV, Set Se TrenepdvSat. fiev, piTj fi€Tp(v Se. oT^Se? yap Kal dyicoarov
TO diTCLpov. TrepatVeTat Se dpidfiw ndvra' 6 Se tou o-x7//xaTO? tt]? Aefeo>?
dpidpos pvdpLos iaTLV, ov Kal to, /leVpa TjUT^TCt. Std pvdpLov Bel tov
Xoyov, pL€Tpov Sc pL'q. TroiTjpLa yap eWai. pv8p,6v Se pi) aKpi^ws' tovto Se
eerrat, idv fte'^pt tov \
275. 3. The iamb ... is actually what people talk in .. . Rhet. 1408^^33:
d Se LapLpos avrq €(Ttlv 'q Xi^ig rj tcov noXXoiv' Std /xdAtoTa ndi'TOJU tlov
pL€Tp(Dv ta/tjScta (f>d€yyovTaL Xdyovres. Cf. p. 274 and n. 3, giving Poet.
*>
I
449 24 .
276. I. Cicero . . . Orator, 64: ‘Quare etiam pacana qui dixit aptiorem, in
quo esset longa postrema, vidit parum: quoniam nihil ad rem est poslrema
quam longa sit. lam paean, quod plures habeat syllabas quam tres,
276.2. The Asiatic school. Cf. Cicero, Orator, 63 ‘Insistit autem ambitus :
modis pluribus, e quibus unum est secuta Asia maxime, qui dichoreus
vocatur, quum duo extremi chorei sunt, id est c singulis longis et brevibus,’
new pattern. Alliterative verse lasted for some time after the importation of
rhyming verse. The “Canterbury Tales” arc in the new metre, the “Vision
of Piers Plowman” in the old. Some poets wrote a mixture of the two,
cither adding an alliterative element to the new or a rhyming element to
the old.’
accepted it without question, and what it implied— i.e. the rejection of the
STRUCTURAL PARTS OF RHETORIC — VERSE' 447
quantitative theory altogether. This leads to difficulties as great as the
acceptance of it. That Hopkins felt uneasy in accepting Ritschl’s scansion
is shown in his final sentence on the metre: Tt must have been chanted,
as
the beats as often as not disagree with the word-accents.’
It is important to notice that he was aware enough to supply any hypo-
thesis at all to explain what was the generally accepted view of scholars at
the time.
The first quotation
a votive inscription called the Titulus Soranus,
is
M • P • VERTVLEIEIS G F • • •
OyOD RE SVA • • •
DiFEIDENS ASPER^ •
HERGOLEI MAXSUME • •
MERETO SEMOL TE •
GONDEMNES
‘Marcus and Publius Vertuleius, sons of Gaius — in that their father,
fearful and in despair at the grievous ruin of his fortunes, here made a
solemn vow — his children, in performance of this vow, willingly offer to
Hercules, who is most worthy, a tithe in sacrifice; and therewith beg that
thou wilt often grant their prayers.’
The second inscription is from the Sarcophagus of the Scipios moved
from outside the Porta Gapena to the Vatican Museum (C./.L. 30).
Edited by Ritschl with facsimile P.L.M.E, col. 32 and tab. xxxvii.
277. I . Fato Metelli fiunt Romae consules. ‘It is by fate that the Metelli become
consuls of Rome.’ This line is attributed by pseudo- Asconius (on Cicero: in
1
English versification from two quarters from Piers Ploughman and the —
older native poetry on the one hand, where it is marked by a sort of Greek
colon or by a stroke, and from France on the other and i. 156, l 8 Oct. . .
278. I. Shakespeare:
(i) Macbeth, iv. i. 6. cold Ff.; the cold Rowe (ed. 2); coldest Steevens
(1793) ;
a cold Staunton.
(ii) Ibid. IV. i. 9. Ff. read ^Boil thou first . .
.’.
(iii) As Tou Like It, iii. ii. 133. The common emendation is ‘Why
should this a desert be?*
(iv) Lovers Labour^ s Lost, iv. iii. 117. Jove (Rowe). The
‘. . . . . .’
279. I. arrowy her, Richard Garnett, The Nix, i. 2. Cf. Campbell, Hohen-
linden, i. 4, &c., ‘Of Iser, rolling rapidly’.
Fontaine frequently used. The strict rule of this verse is that the strong
place must be filled with a heavy syllable and the weak places by a heavy
or light, just as in the Alexandrine, but a heavy syllable in the weak place
must not be stronger than the strong syllable preceding of the same foot.
La Fontaine, however, took great liberties in his verse. Hopkins has
deliberately chosen an extreme example in which the rhetorical verse
stress frequently falls on syllables of which the speech stress is light. In the
firststanza of the fable, for instance, the two types of stress more generally
coincide. The strict rule depends on the formal assumption of the possi-
bility of a calculus in the strength of syllables. Hopkins’s statement that the
STRUCTURAL PARTS OF RHETORIC — VERSE* 449
rhythm of French verse iambic in lines of even syllables, trochaic of odd*
‘is
279. 7. the so-called political verse. ttoXltlkos, meaning ‘fitted to common life’
or ‘popular’, is contrasted with ttoltjtlkos by Phrynichus the Grammarian
280.
(chap. 53). In Byzantine and modern Greek ‘political’ verse is scanned by
accent and not quantity, a strong stress falling on the penultimate syllable.
282. 3. ^
Wrapt in eternal silence . . Spenser, i. 41. 9.
282.
281. 4. ^Propertius . . . enclitic gue etc\ Cf. LL, ii. 25.
3. *
Dives et lasciva . . .’. Horace, Odes, iv. ii. 23.
At this point in the MS a new section was begun on a fresh page, but
abandoned,
284. I . Marsh, George Perkins. See note on p. 450.
plays from the Spanish. In the second volume of these translations (1861),
containing Love the Greatest Enchantment, The Sorceries of Sin, and The
Devotions of the Cross, he writes ‘The peculiar feature, then, of this transla- :
tion is its rigid adherence to the metres of the original, and particularly to
that especial Spanish one, the asonante vowel rhyme, of which but a few
B qp 28 Gg
:
was born in Dublin: his family emigrated to America 1797. Wilde was a
.
lived in Europe, chiefly in Florence, where he was responsible for the dis-
covery of the Giotto portrait of Dante on the wall of the Bargello chapel.
.
He published a biographical work on Tasso, with many verse translations,
in 1842, and left one volume of a life of Dante in MS. The ‘nameless jpoem*
is the lyric beginning: \
.
My life is like the summer rose
That opens to the morning sky . . .
It was intended, under the name ‘The Lament of the Captive’, to be in-
cluded in an epic which was never finished. It was printed in 1815 without
Wilde’s permission, won immense popularity, and was even believed to be
a translation from Alcaeus. For the full history of it see Our Familiar Songs,
by Helen Kendrick Johnson (New York, 1881).
285 I. Rejected Addresses. Punches Apotheosis, by G. C. the Younger, 11. 1-2.
285 2. Browning. Home Thoughts from the Sea, 1. 7. Wordsworth rhymes ‘day’
and ‘Africa* in the sonnet ‘England! the time is come’, 1803.
286 2. Browning. The Flight of the Duchess, st. xi, 11. 63-64.
286 . 3. Keats. To 11. 37—38.
287 I. Hilmir hjdlma skurir, &c. This example is given by George Perkins
.
Marsh, Lectures on the English Language ., ist series, 4th edn, 1863, p. 556,
. .
‘The following sonnet in the Pisan dialect, from a note to the works of
Redi, abounds in full line-rhyme:
287. 5. Burns, These exact words are found in no poem of Burns. But in the
song ‘Twas even— the dewy fields were green’ comes the line ‘Her look was
.’
like the ‘Her looks were like a
morning’s eye’; and in ‘Blythe was she . .
May.’ This and the previous quotation are given in the same
flow’r in
words by Marsh, op. cit., p. 560, without exact references.
288. I . Die nobis, Maria, from the Easter Sequence Victimae Paschali often
ascribed to Wipo (Wippo,
Wigbert), a Burgundian priest, fl. c, 1000-48.
‘This sequence an excellent example of the transition from the rhythmical
is
Sudarium et vestes.
Surrexit Christus, spes mea,
Praecedet suos in Galilea.*
In the later ‘liturgical dramas’, c.g. Sepulchrum and Peregrini, the answer is
often divided between the three Marys, See Sir E. K. Chambers, The
Mediaeval Stage, ii. 315, for a Sarum version, and A. Gast6, Les Drames
liturgigues de la Cathidrak de Rouen (1893), p. 65.
: :
APPENDIXES
APPENDIX I
Hopkins’s Drawings
The drawings here reproduced fall into two distinct groups: the small, often
minute pencil sketches with which Hopkins illustrated his two early Diaries,
much more numerous in the first (1863-4) than in the second (1864-6);
and the more ambitious ones from his sketch-books and a few letters,
which cover mainly the period from his schooldays to 1868, but include one
drawing of 1888 (No. 32) and another (No. 33) done six weeks before his
death. The interest of the first group of sketches is primarily in their context
a reference to the position of each in the text is therefore given. Those in the
second group have been chosen by Mr John Piper for their merit as draw-
ings, and represent the best of Hopkins’s work in this field. They include
the 16 sketches published in the ist edn. The reproductions are of the same
size as the originals except for Nos. 3 and 24 which have been reduced from
c. 6 in. in diameter. Nos.
3 to 8 are in ink: most of the others in pencil.
They are arranged, so far as their dates are known, chronologically and
have been taken from the following sources
I, Sketch-books
A. Green: ‘Sketches’ in italic impressed in gold. 4^X5! in. Inscribed:
‘Gerard M. Hopkins. March nth 1862. Esse quam videri.’ Mostly
pencil. Sketches range in date from 12 Mar. 1862 to 8 Aug. 1863.
Includes Nos. i, g, and 1 1 to 16.
D. Identical with C. Dated 24 Aug. 1868 (i.e. the day Hopkins went to
St.Alban’s; see p. 186). Pencil. The last sketch in the book is dated
22 April 1889. In the possession of the Society of Jesus, at Campion
Hall, Oxford (see p. 531). Includes Nos. 29 to 33.
—
454 APPENDIX I
in poetry and painting about the latter. ... I have great things to tell.*
. . .
After he had decided to be a priest four years later, he wrote, also to Baillie
(12 Feb. 1868) ‘You know I once wanted to be a painter. But even if I could
:
I wd. not I think, now, for the fact is that the higher and more attractive
parts of the art put a strain upon the passions which I shd. think it unsafe
to encounter.*
He thought about painting only in poetic terms his intense apprehension
:
of the visual world of observed form and colour can easily mislead one into
thinking that the painter in him could have got the upper hand. But the
brilliance and freshness of the words he used, if transmuted into paint or
drawn lines (for instance, in the descriptions of skies) might have looked
nothing more than an intelligent interpretation of the habits of the age. His
drawing reaches what he would have called a Parnassian level in poetry.
‘Now it is the mark of Parnassian that one could conceive oneself writing
it if one were the poet.* (To Baillie, 10 Sept. 1864.)
HOPKINS’S DRAWINGS 455
their best a special English merit; he was one who by nature centred and
converged on the local and the special as giving the best evidence of the
whole and of God. He thought with Blake that ‘to generalize is to be an
idiot’, and, as it affected his drawings, he was here at one with Bewick and
Palmer.
His own writing remains the best comment on the drawings here repro-
duced. A quotation from a letter helps to show his own approach to drawing,
and its value to him.
‘Iam sketcliing (in pencil chiefly) a good deal. I venture to hope you
willapprove of some of the sketches in a Ruskinese point of view; if you
do not, who will, my sole congenial thinker on art? There are the most
here I do
deliciously graceful Giottesque ashes (should one say ashs?)
not mean Giottesque though, Peruginesque, Fra- Angelical ( !) in Raphael s ,
particular periods of
earlier manner. I think I have told you that I have
I am
admiration for particular things in Nature; for a certain time
astonished at the beauty of a tree, shape, effect etc., then
when the passion,
so to speak, has subsided, it is consigned to my treasury of explored beauty,
and acknowledged with admiration and interest ever after, while some-
thing new takes its place in my enthusiasm. The present fury is the ash,
IKtS -
L
\
'
/ 0 i\ ij
*'^vUl;^‘
’
^
-
f ^
,
y /» ^ ( r a J
r./ '
i u..
h<. : . i- - . I..
UL|}^,'64
Fig. 2/ ( see p. ‘jo)
Alihcrnt
tn
Utter
Hiodnv^:
(>. ^Fashionable Varialion of the Sinkiriff lii^ure in the Lancers: now called the
’
'\Seitino of the Evening Star'
/€(jaB, ARttBUH.,
5 (nen- (LctM;. ,
t,.sk..«t , ".,,
ii>. ]V\im. \Sludy f)(mt the difj above, Fteshwalrr (iale^ July 2J
yj. (',Uni(h. \')uh m nuil ^Jnly ! /<%]
\Sun (iotncr. ('Jijjs near the Needles Paint. July J
12
[iSGj)
'/i M' A ,
hs
^
A <
.
,
'
M -t
‘V
.'
k;. \Sl. Bdillwldww. ;l«(’. :y. Vjj. Ikiw. Aslilnuldii ml Ainvlon Ahlxil
/<%•;’
amUmke on a bank. 'Sepl.
20. Trees
21. Man in a piinl
Apiil 'I. Day (if till' Dual ia(C. On Ihc Clu'iarU'
21. 'Balaglas, Isle of Man, Auif. 12 , 'yj*
APPENDIX II
By JOHN STEVENS
I. INTRODUCTION'
‘Every impulse and spring of art seems to have died in mc^ wrote GMH
in 88 1 to RB, ‘except for music, and that I pursue under almost an impossi-
1
bility of getting on. Nevertheless I still put down my pieces for the airs seem
worth it they seem to me to have something in them which other modern
;
music has not got. I have now also one little piece harmonized.’^ This short
quotation suggests several of the questions which are worth asking about
GMH as a musician. Why should music have been the only art to spring
freshly in him in his last years? Why did he find progress in it so difficult?
Did he get profit from his studies in harmony and counterpoint? What sort
tiveness of his airs is a matter of mode and scale, or of rhythm and metre?
to close coinment on
therefore, to confine these introductory paragraphs
frequent reference to
three or four airs, the kind of comment that requires
^
There are three published accounts of GMH
as a musician: J’
227 sets out
house, ‘GMH and Music’, Music and Utters
^
chiefly the
trends of GMH’s ‘new’ thought, using
exercises in counterpoint; C. C. Abbott prints, an app m
pTyjjTJg
views of Dr H. G. Steward and Dr J. Dykes Bovver on
some '^ s songs.
songs-GMH
Dr W. H. Gardner, in an appendix to his GMH,
the opinion earlier
attempts a wider view, accepting uncritically, however,
authorities.
B 6028 Hh
:
458 APPENDIX II
the music itself, in the hope that answers will emerge to at least a few of the
—
questions framed above the questions about the relationship of his airs to
poetry. I ask the reader to grant for the time being what cannot be argued
—
here that the prime interest of GMH’s songs, for the musician as well as
for the reader of his poetry, is melodic^ that his gift was —
whatever it might
have become —a This method of proceeding has some bio-
gift for melody.
graphical justification. Each setting of GMH’s of which we have knowledge
began as a tune — and it was often a long time before anything was added to
it. The tune, therefore, even in a complicated setting such as The Battle of
the Baltic (Song lo), bears a direct relationship to the poem and jean fairly
be considered in isolation from the harmony. i
In the simplest airs the metre of the music reinforces the metm (as dis-
tinct from the rhythm) of the poem. Thus in T love my lady’s eyes’uSong 8)
the verse-stresses fall regularly on the first and third quavers of tl;ie \ bar.
The ‘missing’ fourth stress of each line is supplied by extending the third
stress over a whole bar. This accords with GMH’s remarks about ‘symmetry
and quadrature’; it is also what anyone setting these w'ords in a conventional
19th-century style would normally do. The slight oddness at the end, where
the music gives the stress; ‘And her eyes dainty-warm’, with the previous
lingering over ‘form’ with two pauses, is a welcome break in regularity.
—
The break is suggested but not dictated by the words by the need for addi-
tional stress on ‘dainty-warm’.
‘Again with pleasant green’ (Song i) is a setting of another of RB’s poems
in this likeable, light metre.The tune brings out the metre, exactly as in the
song just described, until line 5, ‘And back on budding boughs’. The line
has potentially a nervous, physical energy not quite in keeping with the rest of
the stanza. GMH
responded to this in three ways: (i) by doubling the time-
—
interval between stressed syllables it is now' a space of two crotchets instead
of two quavers; (ii) by repeating the phrase, in the same rhythms; and
(iii) by making the repetition the melodic climax of the song (bars 12-13).
This certainly is more than a ‘notation’, metrical and rhythmic, for the
poetry: GMH here interprets and, so to say, glosses the rhythm of the poetry
in musical terms. These terms are satisfactory, sufficient to themselves. It
might be better, in fact, to use the metaphor of translation. GMH ‘trans-
lates’ the poetic rhythm into melody (rhythm and pitch). But (and this is
the interesting thing) at the back of the musical ‘translation’ one can sense
and appreciate his original poetic interpretation. It is no very bold conjec-
ture that the muscular alliteration, ‘Back on budding boughs’, struck his
car more forcibly than anything else in the verse.
The first verse establishes the melody, the musical design or ‘inscape’ as
GMH would have called it. This musical design remains unchanged, in
essentials, throughout the six verses of this strophic song. Sometimes the
distinctive phrase coined for ‘Back on budding boughs’ is appropriate (c.g.
verse 3), sometimes less so. In other details GMH
shows by slight musical
variations his delicate and inventive response to the changing pattern of the
poem. These variations are now rhythmic, now melodic, now of ‘expression’.
Rhythm is the chief factor when for the words ‘evil lot' (bars 79-80) the dot-
ted crotchet is replaced by a triplet of semiquavers and two quaver rests
— —; .
the delightful little sprig of melody which forms the ‘opening and conclud-
ing symphony’ grew out of the emphases in bars 20-2 1 and 99.
One last comment, however, must be made. To read GMH’s criticisms
of his sister Grace’s accompaniment to this air ‘the accompaniment should
—
have a shower of semiquavers or demi-semis, with great chords at certain
places’ —
is to realize afresh the intensity of his sensuous experience, imagined
or actual. This intensity is even more marked in his ambitious and achieved
airs, but it is present even in the meticulous detail of the ‘sprightly but
*
Each note in characteristics: duration, pitch, and quality
music has three
(By ‘quality’ I mean degree of force and tone-colour or timbre.) 1 he combination
ol notes in succession, which makes a melody, has, correspondingly, rhythm,
melodic shape, and ‘expression*.
* The
poem as set by GMH
has the following variants: line 13 our-your,
me 17
i-
which omitted.
: G
460 APPENDIX II
I have marked accents to show the underlying metre. The rhythm of the
words closely follows this metre, though there are one or two places where
the rhythm only confirms the metrical stress very lightly (e.g. line 16: ‘For’)
and one where the speech reverses a foot and ‘counterpoints* it, as GMH
would say, against the metre (line 20 ‘Opened a new book*). :
The poem not throughout in ‘sprung rhythm’, of course, but there are
is
several lines where the reader has to remember that ‘one stress makes one
foot’ —
i.e. in lines 3, 4, 12, 17 (in GMH’s version), and 19. ‘Dust to dust,
clay to clay* is exactly analogous to ‘There to meet with Macbeth’ and ‘as :
takes ^-bar only, but with an extra J-bar making up the four, the ‘quadra-
ture*, the mind expects ; line 3 follows the pattern of line i line 4 follows ;
line 2. After this the rhythms become more subtle. One of the things in con-
temporary music which GMH
rebelled against was the ‘principle of sym-
metry and quadrature’.^ This had, he thought, ‘been carried in music to
stifling length and in verse not far enough and both need reforming at least ;
there is room, I mean for a freer musical tune and a stricter verse-prosody ’.^
It is curious that he never thought of using the modern device of bars of
irregular length. But at least he did his utmost to vary the balance of phrase
with phrase, by varying the number of bars in each. His ‘freer musical time’
is achieved by the trick already described of varying in his music the interval
of time between the stressed syllables (in verse these come roughly at regular
intervals) The last two lines of verse i provide a good example
.
I 2 34 1234 123 4 2 34
I
Bring your cypress |
wreaths — to |
day —TonK)r|iow scalier loses |
This is a more complex and subtle effect than any so far described. Bars 1 5-1
are conventional enough ; but in bar 1 7 the strong verse stress on ‘-mor-’ is
introduced on the weak last beat of the bar, to be followed in the next bar by a
weak syllable on the strong first beat. The deliberateness of the whole pro-
ceeding is emphasized by the melodic jump, the reiterated semitone and
the marks of expression. The effect is of an almost muscular contortion,
analogous to seemingly perverse metrical marks in the poems : e.g.
The contortion in both cases gives body and w^hat GMH describes elsewhere
as ‘markedness’, ‘rhythm’s self*.*
There are many other instances in ‘Past like morning beam’ of GMH’s
meticulous translation of his reading of the poem into musical terms, some-
times unexpected. In bar 44 the holding back of the first syllable of ‘blos-
som’ and shortening it gives it an emphasis, a small exploding emphasis.
* See LLy i. 45. r . .
^ LL, i. 1 19: ‘The principle, whether necessary or not, which is at the bottom 01
both musical and metrical time is that everything shd. go by twos and, where > ou
* LL, i. 120.
want to be very strict and effective, even by fours.*
^ Harry Ploughman {Poems, p. 108) sec Gardner’s note, p. 249, and facsimile
:
m
* LL, i. 4 C-
IL, i. 262.
;
exhibits all the characteristic procedures already described and adds some
more. It is hard to believe that the elaborate melodic structure is built on a
poetic foundation as slender as this :
462 APPENDIX II
The air takes its being from that intensification of the poem’s own rhyth-
mic and dramatic which we must believe was either GMH’s immediate
life
bar of g carries two poetical stresses. The rest of the melody is more curiously
worked. In bar 2 we meet a new device cross-rhythm, marked by heavy —
accents. The effect of the three groups of two cutting across the two groups
of three quavers is to displace the metrical stress on ‘On’. A similar displace-
ment is achieved by a quaver rest in bar 5. It also enables the composer to
‘imitate’ falling rain. Just as GMH
believed that poetic rhyth^ should
imitate the sense
fying’ the tune afresh in each verse he is careful to grade and shape tlie rises
and falls of the melody. (The only criticism that might be made is of the
repetition in verse 3 of the climax on A flat, 35 and 38.) There are particular
dramatic and rhetorical eflects: 31 tremblings grace-note; 32 ceased rest; — —
—
33 bowed melodic curve; 35 me released— sudden ‘vivace and explosive,
but light, high Ab; 38-39 Flashed like agony chromaticism, quarter-tone, —
‘agitato*, violent cutting-off of ‘agony’ on 2 semiquavers; &c. All these
particular effects arc patterned into the melody. So far from dissipating its
musical life they intensify it. His airs are never merely ‘literary’. ‘Music is com-
position which wholly or partially repeats the same figure of pitched sound
(it is the aftering of pitched sound). This was a truth he had pondered on.
When RB asked him why in his poems he employed ‘sprung rhythm’ at
all, GMH replied
Because it is the nearest to the rhythm of prose, that is the native and natural
rhythm of speech combining, as it seems to me, opposite and, one would have
. . .
it seems to me that the poetical language of the age should be the current language
heightened, to any degree heightened and unlike itself, but not ( I mean normally:
passing freaks and graces are another thing) an obsolete one."*
Sprung rhythm is, to twist his phrase, ‘the current rhythm heightened*.
'
of the Eurydice,
Ij}ss 1 . 41 (Poems, p. 78) : see Z/., i. 52.
* See p. 290. ^ LL, i. 46. ^ LL, i. 89.
GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS AS MUSICIAN 463
I findsame paradox in his music: a determination to use the
the
‘native
and natural* combined with the highest degree of ‘heightening’, ‘marked-
ness’. First, there is his interest in the fundamental truths of the ear: he is
fascinated by modes, heptachords, and quarter-tones, and by the twos and
fours ‘at the bottom of both musical and metrical time’. But he is also clearly
determined in his songs, particularly the more ambitious ones, to achieve
singularity, heightening, distinctiveness of musical effect. As a final example
we may take the off-beat accents in bars 1 5-1 7 of ‘Sky that rollest ever’ (Song
14) and the repeated and slurred (not tied) notes in the phrase ‘All thy
wild waves leaping’ (bars 30-31). Here there is a great intensification of
off-beat, off-stress life. The phrase seems crammed to bursting and yet holds
its frame intact.
In June 1880 GMH wrote:
I wish I could pursue music; for I liavc invented a new style, something standing
This remark, obscure as it is, has never been (perhaps never can be) satis-
factorily explained. But I do not doubt that the answer is to be found, not
by speculating about his harmonic theories, but by considering the paradox
just described. His design was, quite simply, to extend the melodic resources
(this included also the rhythmic) of music by a return to fundamentals- -to
the infinite subtlety and expressiveness of human speech and to the ‘world
of mathematics’ in music. This was in 1880. Within a year or so he had
written all his most interesting airs. We may well ask whether the musical
‘experts’, who dammed up this stream of clear-flowing melody and diverted
it into a standing pool of ‘species' counterpoint and correct fugal ‘answers’,
ever realized what an opportunity had been misst^d. They succeeded cer-
tainly in suppressing GMH’s instinctive perception of melody as a valid
(for him, the valid) medium of musical creation and as a fundamental key
to a world of music older, wider, and more universal than that around him.
2. SOURCES
Bodl.
(i) MS
Mus. c. 97. This is a collection of papers recently acquired.
It contains, besides Songs i, 4, 5, 10, 13, 14, 21, 22 of the list below, a copy
by GMH
of Hood’s ‘Oft in the Stilly Night’ to the traditional melody, and
another of A Christmas Carol by John Spencer to words by William Robert
Spencer. Someone else has copied out a roughly harmonized setting of John
Byrom’s hymn, ‘My spirit longs for thee’ it is not one of the usual setting
;
and I have not been able to trace it. This MS also contains photographic
copies of the counterpoint exercises, (iv) below.
(ii) GMH’s letters to RB, in the possession of Lord Bridges. With or in
these letters are Songs 8, 21 a quotation from Song 2, and
(2 versions),
Songs 26a, 26c.
(iii) Campion Hall Papers— Music N. 2? In these papers are more ver-
sions of Song 22, the only copies of Song 12, and the melodies without words,
Songs 23-24.
(iv) Campion Hall Papers —
Music N.3 contains ‘Exercises in Counter- :
3. LIST OF SONGS
The
following table sets out alphabetically the various settings which
GMH mentions in his letters to RB, RWD, and others. The music of
about half of them has been lost. In some cases it may never |have been
finished. \
SettirH^s extant by
23.
— ments
melody without
24.
— words
melody with-
out words
25. Setting of Barnes Barnes none
poems
26. Setting of Greek:
(a) Sappho’s Ode to Sappho melody
Aphrodite
{b) epws dviKare pid-gav Sophocles none
(c) Ava^oppiyye^ u/xvoi Pindar melody
27. Settings of Latin none
Note: Fr D. A. BischofT, S.J. catalogues (as 4A) ‘an unpublished musical composi-
tion “A1 Fresco Polka’” in The Mamiscripts of Gerard Manley Hopkins [Thought
(Fordham University Qiiarterly), Dec. 1951, Vol. XXVI]: but all efforts to
trace this have failed.
0.
Editorial Note
Small slips and eccentricities in musical grammar have been corrected without
comment. Additions by the editor are enclosed in square brackets; other emenda-
tions are indicated by footnotes (for example, in Song i ‘42, F, rest, D MS
, :
means that in bar 42 the symbols referred to appear in GMH’s MS as shown after
the colon and not as shown in the printed musical text) Marks of expression have
.
been given their normal modern abbreviations (c.g. rail, for rallentando) or stan-
dardizations (e.g. a teinpo for al tempo). In putting the words to the songs the division
into syllables has been standardized. GMH’s punctuation and spelling, however,
have been exactly reproduced. No attempt has been made to find a ‘best’ text of
the poems used. All GMH’s phrase-markings have been retained in the transcrip-
tion; but his slurs have generally been omitted, since the proper fitting of syllables
to notes is already conveyed either by the grouping of quavers or by the exact
spacing of the syllables. References are to: Poetical Works of Robert Bridges,
U.P., 1953; Poems of Gerard Manley Hopkins (ed. Bridges and Gardner) O.U.P.,
3rd edn 1948; Selected Poems of Richard Watson Dixon, Smith, Elder & Co., 1909;
Poems by Coventry Patmore, George Bell &
Son, 5th edn 1894 (2 vols) ; Poems of
Gray &
Collins, O.U.P., 3rd edn 1937; Oxford Book of English Verse, 1915.
4. THE SONGS
1. Spring Odes: I. Invitation to the Country.
Words: RB {Works, pp. 252-4).
Music: Bodl. MS, ff. i-iy (melody; autograph) ; f. 2 (one verse with piano
accompt, second verse underlaid ; not autograph)
Reproduced in facsimile Gardner, : ii. 381.
^ ^ of RB s
J^ote: GMH’s long strophic setting is of stanzas i, 3, 4, 5» 7 ?
-i£_
EiTz:
A - gain with plca-sant green Has spring re-newed the wood And
where the bare trunks stood Are lea - fy ar-bours seen And
65
75
Slower.
Slower.
'
- - _
-q /Tv
WiB ^
bzM
HA
7
—
-J*
Li^
105
r.:-,
-
— —zi L T • t~
11 -
ZiZr>_l 1
—
no
*^5
120 Soft.
l/}udeT.
Slower • 130
^ r — t^ri
|Sz1::^ 1
^mZT ]
J EBP m
crowds or stand a - part. 6, Then leave your joy-less ways, My
Guckoo» cuckoo!
but
3 . Ruffling Wind.
Words: RWD {Poems^ pp. 147 ff.).
Music: none.
Note: GMH was ‘delivered of an air’ to this poem at Inversnaid in Sept. 1881
(LI, ii. At the end of October it was still unfinished and ‘only written
65) .
in sol-fa score’ —
this suggests an attempt at harmonization (LI, ii. 84).
Nearly five years later he described his slow and elaborate work as a set-
ting ‘for solos, chorus and strings’ (LL, ii. 135). ‘I endeavour*, he con-
tinues, ‘to make the under parts each a flowing and independent melody
and they cannot be independently invented, they must be felt for along
a few certain necessary lines enforced by the harmony. It is astonishing
to see them come; but in reality they are in nature bound up (besides
many others) with the tune of the principal part and there is, I am per-
suaded, a world of profound mathematics in this matter of music indeed :
The words have been fitted to the music by the editor in the manuscript :
only the title is given. The task is quite a straightforward one since the
slurs were marked in preparation for words by the original copyist.
The
accompaniment continues throughout in the MS.
Not previously reproduced.
472 APPENDIX II
Note: GMH nowhere refers to this song in his letters. It has been described
as ‘a poor tune, badly harmonised’ (LL, ii, i^o{e)). The latter is certain.
Considered simply as a melody it is not very interesting: it has GMH’s
characteristic lack of modulation (he would not necessarily have seen this
as a defect). But as a setting of a particular text it shows, especially in
St. 2 (e.g. bars 34-38) melodic inventiveness closely linked, as usual, to
the imagery (‘Graves, yawn . .’) and rhythm (‘uttered’) of the poem.
.
Solo.
died with shame, that died with shame, Lives in death with
* The accompaniment is without special interest and is not here given in full.
10 B: MS quaver.
" :
Tutti.
20
_--r—
Those that slew thy vir - gin knight, For the which with
w
I'
— ~
~rm-
~t"
•
— ^*1-'
hea - vi - ly, hea - vi - ly. Graves, yawn, and yield your dead.
itFtr; £ :
ut -
be ut - ter, ut - ter - ed,
Solo.
> „ !?-_
— I*
38 B: MS ? A.
474 APPENDIX II
attractive of his modal tunes and, as Dr Dykes Bower has pointed out,
defies ‘all attempts to harmonize it* {LL, ii. iyo{d)). The setting is a good
example of a technique which GMH
often practised the air becomes : .
10
6, Ode to Evening.
beauty of that poem I groped in my soul’s very viscera for the tune and
thrummed the sweetest and most secret catgut of the mind. What came
out was very strange and wild and (I thought) very good. Here I began
to harmonise it, and the effect of harmony well in keeping upon that
strange mode (which, though it is, as far as notes go, the same as the
descending minor, has a character of which the word minor gives you
little notion) was so delightful that it seems to me (and I think you would
find the same) as near a new world of musical enjoyment as in this old
world we could hope to be. To the novelty of effect the rhythm and a
continued suspense natural to the mode and easy to carry further contri-
bute too. It is meant for a solo and a double choir singing in unison, the
organ or a string band bearing all the harmony. It is in three movements,
something like a glee, the third returning to the first’ (XL, i. 199 ff.). In
Jan. 1885 he describes the setting, humorously, as ‘more like volcanic
sunsets or sunrises in the musical hemisphere than anything ye can con-
cave’ (LL, i. 202). Then, again, in March: Tt seems to me like a new art,
the effect is so unlike anything I ever heard. The air is plain chant where
plain chant most departs from modern music on the other hand the har- ;
something you have not seen and I see. That at least is my mind and if
the whole world agreed to condemn it or see nothing in it I should only
tell them to take a generation and come to me again’ (LL, i. 214). There
is no composition by GMH that one would more like to see.
A.
*
That is, in the Aeolian mode or ‘descending melodic minor scale of
^
476 APPENDIX II
two verses and thought there must be an oversight in the phrase ‘Pro-
claim the spirit’s desire*. GMH
cannot check this because Grace has not
returned the rough copy; but he gives a verbal equivalent for the musical
—
rhythm ‘Betrdying the heart’s desire, betraying the heart’s desire,
desire O’ —
and, as a footnote, the rhythm in monotone:
re, de - sire;
,
then
A year later he was finishing the air (LL, i. 1 36) which he said in an earlier
letter was to be rather different for the third verse. He lammts that he
can only manage two-part counterpoint; ‘If I could only gen good har-
monies to I have loved flowers it would be very sweet, I think.’ A\year later
again (Oct. 1882) GMH
sends the completed air to RB with th^warning:
‘Playing it is of little use, unless it were on the violin the snapping of a ;
8 . Song.
sion of the poem the words were considerably changed: the offending
‘dainty-warm’ (‘too like the Miller's Daughter': LL, i. 1 18) was removed.
GMH sent RB the music to this poem in Jan. 1881 (LL, i. 1 15, 1 18) with
the comment that ‘it is rather trifling but not more so perhaps than the
poem’. A
rough draft of the letter adds that ‘by rights it should have a
quarter-tone in it’ (LL, i. 1 15). In April the same year, when was GMH
‘gropingly’ making his way into harmony, he thought the air scarcely
worth harmonizing (LL, i. 125).
Despite its brevity this air show's GMH’s meticulous care for every
detail of phrasing, every nuance of expression. The use of grace-notes and
of pauses in the middle of phrases is characteristic.
Allegro marcaio.
for double chorus (in unison) and piano of the first two verses of Gamp-
belfs poem, which he much admired {LL, ii. 23). began late in GMH
1884 to harmonize his tune ‘made long ago’ and asked RB to get the
opinion of his expert friend (name deleted) on the opening verses, all that
now survive. The composition was intended for orchestra ‘if I cd. —
orchestrate’ ;
GMH
feared that the most striking feature of the song, the
long ground-bass in verse 2 (first stated, bars 13-14, and misnamed ‘basso
continue’), could not be properly brought out except by instruments.
This ‘chime of fourteen notes’ u as to illustrate ‘It was ten of April morn
by the chime’. There was to be ‘a great body of voices’ and ‘the ground
bass shd. be done by bells or something of the sort’. (All the above
comments from LL, i. 201 ff., 207; 1885.) The expert evidently complained
of lack of modulation and timidity in harmony found it so plain, far
:
‘
—
too plain’ (LL, i. 213). GMH
was obliged to explain that he admired and
could produce modulations, ‘but in the two first verses ... I wanted to
see what could be done (and for how long I could go on) without them'
(LL, i. 219). If the expert had seen succeeding verses, ‘the timidity in
harmony would not have struck him’ (LL, i. 240). See also LL, i. 213-14,
where GMH
speaks of modulation ‘as a corruption, the undoing of the
diatonic style*.
The interest of this song, as of the simple airs, is in melody. The ground-
bass is, surely, conceived as a contrapuntal melody capable of subtle
rhythmic rather than of harmonic development. GMH does not begin to
calls for special com-
explore its harmonic richness. One rhythmic point
ment: GMH insists (LL, i. 208) that ‘the triplets shd.
be taken as made
with notes of the same length as the couplets, that is the quaver is the
is indeed
in both and no shorter in the triplet than in the couplet*. This
to use musical grammar in a private way; if his instructions
are taken
3 3^.
I. GMH ‘slurs* all triplets in the piano and in the voice part throughout.
GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS AS MUSICIAN 481
482 APPENDIX II
Both.
hurry with it, but keep the counterpoint correct* (LL, i. 270). It was prob-
ably never finished,
65--
J ^J . ^ m L.m -tfd- - _ • J
Da Capo,
—
i
- --
J—J 1
1
!
m J
^
-------
1
1 ! r
mem her.
13 . Fallen Rain.
Words'. RWD {Poems, p. 148).
Source'. Bodl. MS, fF. 3-31; (melody; autograph).
Reproduced in facsimile: LL, ii. 169; Gardner, ii. 389.
Note : GMH did not think
would be possible to find, ‘for a work of pure
it
Si - lent fell the rain — On the earth -ly ground; Then a -rose a
;
forte agitato.
rail, di molto. pp
Then the cru - el smile Flashed like a-go-ny And I fall and
a tempo, mf
—k— la-T”'
'
=]J
p,
zri?!!|
— ^
__ ^
m -I
" — I
-
~ — *^T~p
— \
^ ^
39 2nd symbol: GMH adds footnote, ‘This note is a quarter-tone below F. For
the piano play as below:’
14 . Wayward Water
Words: RWD {Poems, p. 143).
Source: Bodl. ff. 4-4^ (arranged as canon for two voices; autograph);
MS,
ff* 5-5V (melody and words; autograph, but the space left for piano
accompaniment has some pencilled notes presumably by Grace Hopkins)
ff. 6-62; (with piano accompt by Grace Hopkins, st. i and 2 only; not
Grace’s part.
perhaps true that ‘the tune is of no particular interest’ that is, to
It is —
the musician (ZZ, ii. 169). But it has an interest for the student of poetry,
because the melody with its rubatos (bars 18-20), displaced accents
(15-16, 30), ‘over-reaving’ (31-33) is in itself a commentary up6nthe way
GMH felt the rhythms of poetry. I
it sounds?*; (ii) ‘This is what they call a false relation, is it not?*-4it is not.
Sky that roll - cst ev-er. It is gi-ven thee To roll a-bove the
lake or sea. But thou lovest error More than con-stan - cy,
piii mosso.
in-to the sea, His wild hur - ry shunning All thy love and thee,
Not a mo-men t stay- ing To re-turn thy smiles, Sees thee still dis-
GERARD MANLEY HOPKINS AS MUSICIAN 489
forte agitato.
r=fc
1
play -ing All thy sun -ny wiles; Till thou fall - est weeping; Then more
fu-rious-ly, fu-rious-ly All thy wild waves Icap-ing Rush in-to the sea.
Thou that hadst thy mirror In theycarn-ing sea Why wouldst thou love
40
15 . Hurrahing in Harvest,
sonnet “Summer ends now”’ (LL, i. 103). The original attempt seems not
to have succeeded the ;
air is not mentioned again.
16 . The Crocus,
difficult* {LL, i. 199) it was his ‘first attempt in harmony* and he sent it
:
in 1884 through a cousin to Sir Frederick Gore Ouseley but it was never ;
490 APPENDIX II
Stewart saw the first verse (of three) and ‘gave it a very good mark (and
he does not flatter)’; the work was laborious, ‘but I now can do canon
easily and hope to have the other verses ready soon. Success in canon
beats the other successes of art it comes like a miracle, even to the inven-
:
tor .(LZ,, i. 277). This success, on which Sir Robert had set the seal of
.
time. May 1888, to Patmore telling him with enthusiasm of the new and
daring attempt (LL, iii. 393) ‘when all is done it ought to be sung by an
:
the canon is exact, at the octave, 4 bars off, between treble and t^or, and
runs in the first verse to 44 bars, I think* (LL, i. 290).* \
19 . The Swan.
Words: untraccd.
Music: none.
Note: the sole reference to a song with this title is in a letter dated Aug. 1884
from Patmore to GMH
(LL, iii. 357) ‘Pray let me have the music to the
:
* Gardner, Study ii. 391, takes LL, i. 304 (Apr. 1889) as stijl referring to work
on The Crocus. But the references in the future tense to canon and to Sir Robert
Stewart make this perhaps unlikely. I take LL, i. 304 with LL, i. 301 to refer to a
new unnamed song mentioned rather diffidently, LL, i. 298 (Feb. 1889).
1
Note: GMH to RB, Sept. 1880: ‘I have now an air for “Thou didst delight
my eyes’*, which some day you shall see. Your poetry is highly songful and
into tunes’ (LL, i. 105). In April the following year he was trying to
flies
harmonize it for RB, but by 27 Apr. he had given it up: ‘I hope you will
be able to judge of “Thou didst delight mine eyes” without accompani-
ment, for I do not see my way to one. The air is very marked and curious:
Dr Stainer would say it is “of a tonality” differing from the ordinary, but
what exactly is up with it I do not at present know’ (LL, i. 125).
shall breathe true feeling without spoon or brag’ (ZZ, i. 283). Rockstro,
who is still remembered for his interest in old music, was staying with
RB at this time and must have made an accompaniment to the air imme-
diately. GMH
was ‘honoured’ by this (ZZ, i. 289) but in the same letter ;
homes —
and fields that fol - ded and fed me? Be
492
APPENDIX II
lO
Chorus.
22 . JV/io IS Sylvia?
\
Words: Shakespeare, Two Gentlemen^ iv. ii. 40.
Source: Bodl. MS, f. 14 (Tune A; pencil); f. 15 (rough harmonisation of
same) ; f. 16 (Tune B; pencil; with three verses underlaid).
Campion Hall MS, f. i (Tune A, piano version); f. (Tune A in
bass, piano version, no words) ; ff. 2-2v (Tune B with attempt at canon?;
pencil) f. 2 v upside down (Tune A, piano version; sketch for f. 1 ?) f. 3
; ;
top (Tune A
in bass; pencil), bottom (Tune B in bass, descant above);
Y. 3^ top (Tune A, piano version; pencil), bottom (Tune A, piand version;
pen; with words). All these workings are autograph. The most finished
and worthwhile of the Campion Hall MS
versions are on ff. i and 31;
(bottom). The song is given here from Bodl. MS, f. 14 (A) and from
the same, f. 16 (B),
JVote: GMHwrites of this song in 1886 that the ‘tune is very old, almost
boyish; the setting done lately’ {LL, i. 240; ii, 135). It was twice to have
been performed at school-concerts in Dublin on 30 June he tells
: RWD
that the performance ‘tomorrow’ {LL, ii. 135) and that the song has
is
been set for duet and chorus, although made for a string orchestra; on
5 Oct. a ‘corrected and simplified* version is awaiting performance {LL^
iii. 1 76) but three weeks later he describes a miscarriage, ‘the bass fighting
by Sir Robert Stewart (though in the end he said almost everything was wrong. .)•’ .
-
(A)
cm
Who is SLl-via? what is she That all our swains com- mend her?
Ho - ly, fair, and wise is she: The heavens such grace did lend- her—
lO
y „ L j L_ — H
(B)
- mend her? Ho - ly, fair and wise is she : The heavens such grace did
kind-ness. Love doth to- her eyes re -pair to help him of his
- cell-ing; She cxcellsjshc excells each mortal thing up-on the dull earth
blind -ness And being helped in - ha - bits. And being helped in-
dwell - ing: To- her- let- us- gar - lands, To- her- let- us?
rail.
23*
tEE3 -.
—
rqij-
25
33
24.
rail.
13 G, F MS. two
: crotchets.
of the third to fix the modality (not the tonality as they confusedly write),
the omission of it may be necessary to unsettle that or to allow, as at bar 1 2,
of another one: there the middle part softly asserts the natural minor by
the, to my ear, delicious rise of a tone* (LL, i. 23^40). In a postscript
GMH more than hints that ‘opinions’ should wait on ‘performance*. RB,
it seems, sent this song with Who is Sylvia? [Song 22] to Wooldridge; GMH
496 APPENDIX II
agreed that no harm is done, ‘but it is not worth his while’. He describes
the song then as ‘experimental but . . . slight’ (LL, i. 246). A letter to his
mother, written the same day (6 Oct. 1886) as the first mention of Barnes’s
poems, mentions tunes to two poems, ‘very suitable to the words and as if
drawn out of them’. GMH
goes on to describe the performance in similar
terms to those already quoted.
26 . Settings of Greek.
(a) Sappho’s Ode to Aphrodite
Music: letter to RB, 28 Oct. 1886 (LL, i. 239).
Reproduced Abbott in LL, i. 239,
in transcription:
Note GMH’s comment is ‘more curious than beautiful, but v^ry flowing
: :
1 = » » .«r-
3^-
Music: none.
Note: GMH sent his ‘plain chant notes’ to these lines to RB, October 1886,
with a letter discussing the nature of Dorian rhythm, ‘the most used of the
lyric rhythms’, and his own ‘fundamental’ discovery about it —that ‘the
Dorian bar is originally a march-step in three-time executed in four steps to the
bar* {LL, i. 233). His music, he points out, ‘greatly brings out the nature
of the rhythm. . . . Ahem, study it. You will find that it is (but not de-
chord scale is founded deeply in nature; ... I can also let you see some
other settings of Greek to music as curiosities and some of them (as indeed
the enclosed piece seems to me) as good in themselves’ {LL, i. 234-5).
;
Xote: GMH writes ‘I have sometimes set music to a little Greek verse
: to a —
bit of a chorus in the Prometheus Bound and to the words dva^L<j} 6 pij,iyy€s
vfivoi in Pindar. . The above strain is not in Church plainsong, which, as
. .
—
(c)
f
p-i — — n-^-r 1
Mm ' ^
APPENDIX III
Philological Notes
By ALAN WARD
INTRODUCTION
The following notes are offered as a commentary on those entries in the two
early Diaries which might broadly be termed ‘philological’, and on which
the reader might feel the need of some specialized comment or information.
Most of these entries are concerned with the relationship between words
and it seemed important, first, to attempt to establish the kind of re-
lationship involved (where this is not obvious), and secondly, in those
caseswhere Hopkins may have supposed etymological relationship, to say
whether or not this was accepted at the time, and whether it can be accepted
today. Where etymologies or other linguistic problems are still in doubt,
it seemed relevant to discuss them in detail only when such discussion
would throw light on the note-book entries themselves.
As a poet and a scholar, Hopkins was naturally interested in the exact uses
of words and the delicate sense-differences between words of similar mean-
ing. As a more than usually accurate and comprehensive observer, he was
also closely interested in their form and sound. It is not surprising, there-
fore, that he was interested in etymology, at least in so far as this established
there; and mysearch for possible sources has not revealed any that are
certain other than those specifically mentioned by him. Hopkins makes
several references to Liddell and Scott’s Greek-English Lexicon, and the etymo-
logical notes there were almost certainly the source for some other entries
and parts of entries. For the meanings of English words Hopkins must have
consulted some English authority, and there is slight evidence that he had at
one point used either Ogilvie’s Imperial Dictionary, or Todd’s revision of
Johnson (see p. 526). There is some evidence (at p. 518) to suggest also the
possible influence of Max Muller’s Lectures on the Science of Language ( ist series,
1861) : and Hopkins listed ‘Max Miiller’ as to be read in a mejmorandum
of Aug. or Sept. 1864 (p. 36). For other books that Hopkins may have
used, see the relevant notes below. \
PHILOLOGICAL NOTES 50 ^
(1855 and 1861 respectively) of Liddell and Scott differ, when the date of
the edition is added. (There was much revision of etymologies in the fifth
edition as a result of the publication of Curtius’s Grundzuge der griechischen
Etymologie.) The
abbreviations are for the most part the familiar ones: the
least so maybe EDD (for the English Dialect Dictionary^ ed. by Joseph
Wright), IE (Indo-European) OF (Old French), OI (Old Irish), MDu
(Middle Dutch), and W
(Welsh).
One important matter remains to be mentioned. Many of the word-lists
and other similar entries throw interesting and sometimes valuable light on
Hopkins’s poetry. For example, a number of key-words in the Diary entries
appear also in the poems and the words there associated with them clarify
;
and particularize their poetic use. In the following lines from Summa :
itseems likely that Hopkins is using tires in a way that can be fully under-
stood only by reading his note on drill, &c., on p. 10. From that entry, in
which tire is said to be ‘connected with tero\ it seems clear that in the poem
he was thinking, partly at least, of tires as meaning ‘wears down*, ‘grinds
down’. Sometimes there is unmistakable use of an idea recorded in the
Diaries. On p. 7, L. grando is referred to grind and said to mean ‘splinters,
fragments, little pieces detached in grinding, hence applied to hail’. This note
at least partly explains the use o{ grind in TJu Loss of the Eurydice, stanza 7
Similarly, the connexion of the words meadow, mead, meat, and maid with the
senses ‘strengthening’, ‘nourishing’ (on p. 4), is reflected in many of
Hopkins’s lines on the Virgin Mary: in 'Flu May Magnificat {Poems, 81), for
example, and The Blessed Virgin compared to the Air we Breathe, in which he
writes of the air as
NOTES
4 I
. Hence mead .virga. Mead and meadow derive from a root meaning
. .
‘mow’, as seems to have been quite well known at the time, though not,
apparently, to Ogilvie. Mead (the drink) is not connected, and appears to
have come from a root meaning ‘honey’. Meat is unrelated to the other
words and is to be referred to a root meaning ‘wet’, ‘damp’, &c. Thus mead
and meat do not appear to have any close connexion with the meanings
‘strengthening’, ‘nourishing’, and no suggestion of such a connexion seems
traceable in Hopkins’s possible sources, unless in Ogilvie’s note jUnder meat
that ‘In W. mathu signifies to feed, to nourish . . I
Hopkins offers a parallel between the connexion of maid with mea^ and that
of virgo with virga in both cases the words are similar in form aqd have a
:
meadow in the case of mead, as a green shoot in the case of virga), Andrews
assumes virga to be connected with virgo, but this is improbable White and
:
Riddle give the etymology of virga as doubtful, but agree with Andrews in
referring virgo to vireo, ‘to be green or verdant’. Maid is not related to mead
or meadow. But it is doubtful if Hopkins was thinking here of etymological
connexion at all. Even if he were, the poetry of his parallel, which is in any
case the important matter here, would not in any way be injured.
Crown (of the head) was originally the same word as a king’s crown it is :
not related to icepa? or fcdpa, which derive from a root meaning ‘head*,
‘horn*, from which horn itself derives, and are thus unrelated to kemely &c.,
Kopwvlsy &c. Liddell and Scott (1855) remark under /cepa?:
‘The Lat. cornu, our horn: also found in Hebr. keren: akin to Kapa .*
. . .
deriving from a root meaning ‘to swell’, and great from one meaning ‘to rub
(away)’, &c. Great is related to groot, which may possibly be the obsolete
spelling of groat{s) or of groat (the coin), but is more probably the Dutch groot
from which the English groat is derived. The connexion of Du. groot with
English groat seems to have been quite well known: Ogilvie, for instance,
writes under groati ‘D. groot, that is, great, a great piece or coin*, and this
connexion of groat with great was also common. Andrews and White and
Riddle both give grandis as perhaps akin to cresco, and with cresco connect
crinis’, and Ogilvie considers grow to be ‘probably the same word as L.
Curvus is related to Kopwvisi &c., and so is not ‘from the root horn\
other words in this passage. This relationship appears to have been quite
well known at the time. Ts said to* indicates some kind of source, and a
probable one is Ogilvie, who has under Cornell ‘Lat. comus^ from comu^ a
horn, or its root, from the hardness of the wood.* {Cornel is missing from
Richardson and Wedgwood, Todd and Thomson are less close to Hopkins,
and Andrews and White and Riddle give no etymology for comus.) The
corns on the feet are ultimately from L. cornu, and Hopkins’s surmise as to
the meaning is correct. This etymology was well known as also the view :
that corns are ‘so called because hard, like horn* (Richardson)
Hopkins is quite right about comer, and the word is connectfed, as com-
monly supposed at the time, with L. cornu, 1
root of similar meaning; its root was probably onomatopoeic, l^have not
seen Hopkins’s suggestion elsewhere. ^
Hopkins was probably misled by its similarity in form with herna, horn,
and €pvv^. The root from which kpvos derives meant something like ‘to set
in motion’, and the word is thus unrelated to any of the others in this passage.
For Hopkins’s reference to Oppian, see p. 294. It may be worth adding
that this reference is given in Liddell and Scott (1861) under cpvos, where
Hopkins may have found it.
Also in Liddell and Scott, under epvv^, is the reference to Aristotle’s
Poetics ( 1457 ^ 33 ), the only place where the word is known to occur. For the
full quotation, see p. 294.
(and not the reverse, as suggested by Todd (quoting Johnson)). The words
are of obscure origin, though probably not related to grind. Lingere, lick, and
Xeixciv are related to each other, as was well known at the time. But touch,
despite Ogilvie and Thomson, is not related to tangere.
5. 3. granum ... a fair chance, Granum and grain are not related to the other
words in this list for their etymology see above. Related to each other arc,
:
however, grind, grit, and groat ‘grain*, whose root seem to have had the
PHILOLOGICAL NOTES 505
same meaning as the root of granum and grainy namely ‘to rub’ (though not
‘particularly together^), Hopkins’s explanation of the meaning of grit and
groats is thus essentially correct. Y ox gride and girdsco above. Grate probably
comes from a root meaning ‘to scratch* and is not related to the other words.
Hopkins refers to two different words greet, the first meaning ‘to salute’
and the second, apparently, the obsolete noun greet, ‘grief*, which does not
seem to appear in contemporary dictionaries, and which derives from
greet, ‘to weep’. These words are distantly related, though probably not to
the other words. Their origin is obscure, but they are possibly to be referred
to a root meaning ‘to call*. Although Hopkins is thus mistaken about greet,
his connexion of ‘grief’ with ‘rub’, from the comparison with tribulation
(since L. tribulare meant ‘press* as well as ‘oppress’), shows how alert an eye he
had for this kind of parallel. There are further examples of the same gift
later in the note-books.
Kpov€LV and Kporctv derive from different roots meaning ‘to strike’, and
crush and onomatopoeic origin: none of these four words is
crash are of
related to the others or to the other words in the list.
Crumb and crumble, related to each other, may possibly be related to (as
was widely known) granum and grain, but are more probably to be referred
to a root meaning ‘to turn’ and would thus be unrelated to any of the other
words listed here. Hopkins has obviously included the words at this point
as an afterthought suggested by ^groats or crumbs*. Similarly the inclusion
oi grief seems to have been prompted by 'Greet, grief. .*. Grief derives from
.
a root meaning ‘heavy’, ‘difficult*, and is not related to any of these words.
Gruff is of obscure origin it appears to have been borrowed from Dutch in
:
lated to grit at the time, and the connexion of crash'wiih crush was assumed by
Richardson and others. It was well known that fragmentum and frangere, bit
and bite were related. But all this still leaves many of Hopkins’s suggestions
unparalleled, and it is more than likely that much of this passage is original.
5. 4. Crack, Hopkins is almost certainly right about crack, creak, &c., and
we clearly have his own conjecture here.
5. 5. Crook, Crook, crank, and cranky are related and stem from a root
meaning ‘to twist’, ‘turn’. Crick is of doubtful etymology, but is probably of
onomatopoeic origin. Kranke is difficult: it does not seem to be an English
word, even an obsolete one. Probably (unless meant for German krank
‘ill’) it is German kranke ‘(an) invalid’, and if so, is related to crook, &c.
that crankis from the root of crook. Thomson considers crick (in the neck) to
be a diminutive of crook.
7. I Grando. Hopkins seems to suggest that L. grandoy ‘hail’,
. is connected
etymologically with grinds but the words are unrelated.
7. 3. Foot. Of these words foot, pes, ttovs, and pada (Sanskrit, meaning
‘a step*) are etymologically connected. Pad, ‘go on foot*, is probably not
related to this group, but is related to path. Pat is probably ofj onomato-
poeic origin. 1
Hopkins may here have been following Liddell and Scott (1855) under :
rrovs we find ‘The Sanscr. Root is pad, ire hence Sanscr. p^, Lat. pes
: :
ped-is, our pad, foot. Germ. Fuss, etc. akin also to ttcSov, == Sapscr. pada
:
. ..’ This note was revised in 1861 and the reference to pada dropped.
.
Pat is probably Hopkins’s own addition; I have not found it linked with
foot, &c., in any contemporary source.
appears that the verb clam and clammy are not directly etymologi-
It thus
cally connected. Yet Hopkins is again close, to the truth: clammy is derived
from an IE root meaning ‘agglutinate’, and clam {clem) from a different
extension of the same root meaning, probably, ‘to enclose*. The words are
.’
thus indirectly connected. And Hopkins’s notion of ‘closing the throat . .
may well be right, since the development of clem, clam, from the sense
‘enclose, fetter’ to the sense ‘starve’ certainly suggests that the notion of
closing, either of the throat or the mouth, is behind the latter meaning.
As for claudere &c., although claudere, close, and /cActy (related to each
other) are not related to the other words, clasp and cleave (‘adhere’) are
indeed ‘distantly akin’ to cling, clam, and clammy, deriving as they do from
^ ! ;
two different extensions of the same IE root. Thus Hopkins’s idea of this
root ‘having attached terminations and inHexions to itself’ is essentially
correct. The sense of the tap-root was probably ‘conglobate, rounded’
Hopkins is not far wrong in suggesting that the ‘original idea’ was that of
‘closing, or fastening together*.
and Scott (1861), for example, give claudo as related to icAcis; and
Liddell
that was also related was known at the time. (See Ogilvie under close
close
8. 2. XiyLos with slime. At/xo? does not seem to have been ‘originally
. . .
xXiii6s> Hopkins presumably consulted Liddell and Scott here, who say
of ‘The oldest form is said to have been Aet/xd?.*
Limus, ‘mud’, is connected with slime and lime, but not with clammy. It
is interesting that under the noun lime Ogilvie has ‘Sax. lim. lime L. . . . ;
limus . probably Gr. Xrjiirj, yXrjiJLrj, and allied to clammy. On this word
. .
Slum is first recorded in the early 19th century and is of unknown origin.
It appears to have been originally a cant word, and some connexion with
slime, although unlikely, is not impossible. I have not found slum in any
contemporary dictionary or etymological work.
8. 3. claudo . . . tie. Hopkins is mistaken in stating that claudo, kXcIs, ‘etc.’,
are connected with ligo; nor is ligo related to limes, limen, and limus^
‘apron’, though these last three are related to each other.
Andrews and White and Riddle connect limes and limen: White and
Riddle alone derive limen from ligo and give limus as probably related (in
the sense of 'girdle', &c.).
9. I. slip. Slip and slipper are closely related, as was commonly supposed
at the time. To these, slide is distantly related and so, possibly, is slant. Slop
and the etymologically obscure slope are probably related to each other
but probably not to slip, &c. Slahby, ‘muddy’, is probably not connected
with any of these words.
That slabby is related to slip is assumed, for example, by Richardson,
who also mentions Horne Tooke’s view that slop and slope were originally
forms of the past participle of slip. I have not found any contemporary
work linking slide or slant with slip.
him\ Baillie’s information, though plausible, was incorrect:
9. 2. 'nuts to
him’ is not from German nutz but from English nut, and the
nuts in ‘nuts to
usage appears in English in the early 17th century.
was the accepted one when Hopkins was writing (see, for example, Ogilvie).
I have not discovered who suggested that *earwig should be eaxwing* the
first element of the word means, as Hopkins concludes, ‘ear*, and the
9. 4. wigging . .
.
(shaky). Although a wigging might well have involved a
shaking, the word originally meant simply a ‘scolding’ and appears to
derive from the noun wig (of hair). If so, it is not connected with wag, &c.
‘There is, however, a dialect verb wig meaning ‘to shake*, connected with
wiggleand the -wig of earwig, and probably connected, as Hopkiils surmises,
with weak. It is possible that wag and waggle are related to these words also.
In any case, some influence of wag, waggle on wig, wiggle (or vice vtrsa), with
regard to sense or form or both, is quite likely. \
etymological work. \
10. I . tall. The reference is to The Pictorial Edition of the Works of Sliitkespeare,
ed. Charles Knight, 1842: Comedies, II, p. 138. The American sense of tall
that Hopkins refers to here is probably one of the following: ‘great; fine;
splendid; extravagant’, which are the only adjectival uses quoted in
Bartlett’s Dictionary of Americanisms (2nd edn, 1859). Bartlett calls this a
‘flash word’; and though Hopkins does not suggest that his unspecified
American use was a slang one, there seems to be no contemporary American
dictionary which records an un-English sense of tall, and the only originally
American uses of the word noted by the OED (‘exaggerated’, ‘large in
amount’, and ‘excellent’) are all staled to be either of colloquial or slang use.
These closely related meanings appear to be essentially the same as those
given by Bartlett; and the meaning Hopkins was referring to was probably
‘excellent’, since neither of the others seems close enough to the Shake-
spearian use he mentions.
10. 2. *Gusi* goust). This derivation of gust is correct and was well
‘mistaken* reading of Latin legal documents the reading must at first have:
been correct, with the original meaning ofpraemissa becoming rapidly lost.
That premises derives ultimately from L. praemissa was well known, and
with Dr Dyne’s more detailed explanation cf. Richardson:
‘The premises are propositioncs praemissae; the propositions which
—
10. 5. DrilL Thrill certainly meant originally ‘to pierce* and the -/nV of
nostril and the second element of n£se~thirl have the same root as thrill.
Drill also originally meant ‘to pierce’, and may be related to thrill, &c.
Trill (‘to quaver*), however, is not related to any of these words and did
not originally mean ‘pierce*. It is a little surprising to find trill in this
group: either Hopkins was referring to the obsolete variant of thrill, or,
more likely, he was misled by a contemporary error (as in Richardson) of
thinking this trill and trill, ‘to quaver*, to be the same word. But it is not
impossible that he was thinking of the piercing quality of many trills,
which are usually (in practice) high-pitched. Both Richardson and
Ogilvie (among others) consider thrill, drill, and trill to be related.
Hopkins is wrong in thinking tire to be connected with tero. He may have
been following Ogilvie, who makes this connexion.
not related to either fleck or flake', and fleck, if related to flake, is related
much more distantly (as far as we know) than sing is to sang. Hopkins
has here observed an important and still little recognized feature of the
language. The development of this kind of relationship, of ‘tones* in
the language, may be seen in many other words, particularly those of
onomatopoeic origin. For instance, we can contrast with flick not only
fleck and flake, but also the old verb flack, whose sense 3 in the OED is ‘to
flap, flick .... (Connoting a clumsier instrument and a ‘flatter* blow than
flick.)' We also have flitter, flutter (mentioned by Hopkins below, same
page), where flutter might well be considered the ‘tone ahove' flitter.
On p. 90 of his Essay Farrar wrote: ‘There are even broad general laws
by which the various degrees of intensity in sound are expressed by the
modification of vowels. Thus, high notes are represented by i, low broad
sounds by a, and the change of a or o to i has the effect of diminution, as
we see by comparing the words clap, clip, clank, clink, pock, peck, cat,
kitten, foal, filly, tramp, trip, nob, nipple, &c.’ Farrar is largely following
Wedgwood (vol. i, pp. ix-x) here: both these and Wedgwood’s remarks
provide interesting parallels with Hopkins’s passage.
It is not clear whether, in these remarks ahoul fillip and flip, Hopkins is
thinking specifically of etymological connexion or simply connexion in
meaning. Probably he is considering the latter as the clue to the former in
510 APPENDIX III
these words or with flee, but is connected with fleet and indirectly with fly.
Thus if Hopkins means that the group ^Flit, .flitter, etc.* are ‘variations*
. .
of the stem offly, flee, he is not altogether correct, though not faij wrong. Flee
is unconnected with any of these words, though fly is certainly connected
words to be found outside English that seem possibly connected are the
Modern Icelandic flaustra (vb.) and flaustr (noun), which have much the
same senses as the English fluster. But the English verb was already in use
in the early 15th century. Fluster and flutter have had and still have
closely similar meanings. There is a dialectal sense of fluster, ‘to flourish or
flutter in showy colours* [EDD), and we talk of flustered people as being
in a flutter or (in slang) in a flap. There is also a sense oi flutter described
by the OED as ‘To throw (a person) into confusion, agitation, or tremulous
excitement*, though this not recorded till the 1 7th century. On grounds
is
evidence, other than from Icelandic, of j-extensions to the root pleu- (to
which flutter belongs), oblige us to considci: Hopkins’s suggestion as only an
interesting possibility.
of uncertain derivation. One of Hopkins’s suggestions may
Flatter is also
well be, quite correct, at least very nearly so. The
if not suggests thatOED
flatter may be derived from a verb flatter meaning ‘flutter*, and of onomato-
poeic origin. This is probably correct, since the verbs flacker and flicker,
which also meant at one time ‘flutter’, both developed the sense ‘flatter’
or something very similar. And if the OED is correct, Hopkins’s ‘flutter
up* as the suggested sense-link between ‘flutter* and ‘flatter* is very likely.
Flatter is probably in English an onomatopoeic variation oiflutter, which
is
: :
II, 5, Fledge, Hopkins is right about the meaning o^fledge and its connexion
with fly, though fledge is not, of course, connected with fled (see note
above, p. 510).
The connexion offledge with fly was well known at the time.
la. With fillip, flip cf. flap,flob. It is not clear whether Hopkins is thinking
I.
contrast) here.
of an etymological or simply a sense connexion (and perhaps
Probably he was chiefly noting the connexion in meaning, but considering
also the possibility of etymological connexion. The words
are, in fact,
in i860,
probably related. Flob, ‘move heavily or clumsily’, is first recorded
an onomatopoeic variant of
and the OED is no doubt right in considering it
a
change of consonant indicating softer movement and
the verb flop, the
onomatopoeic variant of
heavier sound. Now the OED considersflop to be an
does not
flap, same may well be true of flip also, though the O-ED
and the
lighter bl^
suggest this. of vowel in this case would indicate a
The change
and a higher-pitched sound compare sense 2
:
offlap in the OED ‘To strike
strike smartly and
with something flexible and broad’ with sense 6 offlip ‘To
in fact compare the
lightly (with a whip, or the like); to flick.’ We can
5*2 APPENDIX III
connexion between flip and Jiap with that between flick and flack The diffi-
culty is that flip appears later in English than flllipy which suggests the
possibility that flip is merely a later form offillip.
Richardson assumed flip and fillip to be originally the same word.
he may also have considered flabby a ‘variation’ offlagy and flap, flop ‘varia-
tions* of flog. If this was his meaning, he is probably wrong over flag and
flabby, but quite possibly right over the others: it is often difficulMo interpret
the phonology of words of probably imitative origin. But Hopkins also, no
doubt, intended us to notice a phonological similarity betweenUhe word-
groups other than the initial fi- common to all the words. This is that, in
the three groups of words he compares, the keywords have a bapk plosive
consonant (g or where
their partners have a front plosive consonant
k),
(A or />). Hopkins considered the latter to indicate less
It is possible that
vigorous movement or condition by virtue of their different consonant, in
the same way as flick, fleck, and flake were distinguished by the change of
vowel.
As for the sense connexions, these are clear in the case of flick and flip,
and flag (presumably the verb) and flabby, but seem less clear with regard
to flog and flap, flop. It is worth noting, however, that was in use in the
igth century meaning ‘to strike’ (particularly in the sense of swatting
flies), and flop could then mean ‘to throw suddenly*.
The close connexion between flap and flop was well known at the time,
and Thomson implies a connexion between flag and flabby.
12 .3. hemshaw . shelter, shield. I have not been able to discover where
. .
Hopkins heard or read that hemshaw could mean ‘sham heron’. It appears
that the word has never had this meaning, and indeed the concept of a
‘sham heron’ is a curious one. It appears also that hemshaw has never been
used to mean ‘heronry’, although this sense has appeared in dictionaries
since Gotgrave (161 1), who, like Hopkins, thought the meant ‘wood*.
The word actually derives, in its various forms, from OF heronceau, which
meant ‘litde or young heron’, and this, together with the more usual
English sense ‘heron’, has been the meaning in English.
It is difficult to see what words Hopkins had in mind when remarking
that *shaw is sometimes added to words in sense of sham*. Only a very few
words in the language end in -show, and of these kickshaw alone seems even
remotely relevant. (It seems scarcely possible that Hopkins was thinking of
place or personal names.)
As for compound words with shaw~ as the first element, these appear to
have been even more rare, and again only one seems relevant. This is
sham-fowl, meaning ‘an imitation bird for shooting at’, or ‘scarecrow’, and
certainly looks like the sort of word Hopkins had in mind. The OED,
however, describes this word as obsoleteand rare, and does not record
it later than the 17th century. But the word appears in some contem-
PHILOLOGICAL NOTES 5*3
porary dictionaries, including Ogilvie, and it may have been in one of
these that Hopkins had seen The
shaw- in shaw-fowl is of doubtful
it.
origin and is probably not related to the word shaw meaning ‘grove*. Nor
is shaw itself likely to be related to the etymologically obscure sham,
as
Hopkins suggests; it did not, in Old English, mean ‘shade of trees’, but
only ‘wood’ or ‘grove’, and it is unrelated to shadow, &c.
Shadow, shade, and shed are interrelated on the one hand, and shelter is
possibly related to shield on the other. So much was commonly accepted
at the time.
It is interesting that Hopkins’s most notable mistakes here can be found
inThomson, from whom we gather that related to sky are ‘Shaw, Shade,
Sham, Shed,. . . Shelter, Shield . . and under shadow we find ‘from
shade’.
with shoal, though not with school ‘place of instruction’. Shell, the name of a
form in a school, is a special sense of the word shell (as in shell-fish &c.), and
is indeed probably related to shoal, though not in the way that Hopkins
similar, but was so called from the shape of the apsidal end of the school-
room at Westminster School. For these words see further p. 25, and
p. 521 below.
were related to each other. Skim and scum were commonly assumed to be
related at the time, and probably are. L. squama, ‘scale’, is of obscure
origin, but is probably not related to scale. Scale is unrelated to skim or scum.
As for keel, the only word that bears a sense suitable for this list is the
verb keel in the transitive sense of ‘skim’ but that this is Hopkins’s word
;
where keel is probably the verb ‘to skim’ (see his note on this word on
p. 31). Skeel is difficult. It seems at first sight that skeel is perhaps the
19th-century spelling-variant of the noun scale meaning ‘fish-scale’ (&c.),
but it is unlikely that Hopkins, in writing *keel, i.e. skeel’, could have been
referring to a verb in the one case and a noun in the other. There is a
dialectal verb skeel with a sense ‘to shell’ (peas, beans, &c.) ; and though
the EDD describes this sense as obsolete, it is recorded in Halliwell’s
Words (first published in 1847), where it is
Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial
possible that Hopkins had seen it. Hopkins was certainly capable of seeing
a sense connexion between ‘to skim’ and ‘to shell’. However, it is not easy to
see why, in this case, he did not simply add skeel to his list in the ordinary
way: words as divergent in sense are after all not uncommon in the other
lists. The most likely explanation of skeel is that Hopkins is assuming it to
have been an earlier form of keel, in the same way as he later assumes mlik
to have been an earlier form of milk. See p. 13, where in ^milk, i.e. mlik\ the
‘i.e.* must be interpreted in this way. And though keel, ‘to skim*, is not
related to any of the other words, it was well known that some A:-words are
B 6028 Mm
.
related to words with initial sk-: cf. Hopkins’s inclusion of koIXos and skull
in the same list in the next entry.
12 .6. Hollow Hell. Of the words in this list, hollowy hole, and hold (if this
. . .
means, as probably, ‘hold of a ship’) are related hell and hull are probably :
12. 7. caelum . . kolv^. Hopkins is mistaken here. Caelum and coma do not
derive from, nor are they related to, kolXov and kolv/j respectively. Liddell
and Scott give caelum as related to kolXos: but see note on p. 52 1 below.
12. 8. Skip, escape. These words are not connected etymologically. Cf.
Todd, however, who quotes Johnson’s note (under skip) ‘I know not :
12. 9. Hale . . . haul. These words arc closely related, as was well known
at the time.
Hold (presumably the verb) and hilt are not related. Halt (‘lame’) is not
related to hold, but is to hilt. For the view that the three words are connected,
to acknowledge hardly any kinship, if indeed any, with one another, and
yet with no great difficulty show that they had a common parentage and
descent. For instance, here are “shire”, “shore”, “share”, “shears”;
“shred”, “sherd”; they all are derived from one Anglo-Saxon word,
which signifies to separate or divide, and still exists with us in the shape
of “to sheer”, which made once the three perfects, “shore”, “share”,
“shered”. “Shire” is a district in England, as it is separated from the rest;
note here not only similarities between some of these explanations and
those Hopkins gives, but also a general similarity in style between this
•sherdy and short* The origin of shore is obscure, but the word may possibly
be related to this group. Unrelated to this group, and not related to each
other, are shire and shower.
As words not mentioned by Trench, Hopkins’s suggestions with
for the
regard to shower and short are similar to Horne Tooke’s quoted by Richard-
son and Todd.
form of TTpevjbLcoVy ‘lung’, the ttA- having been altered to ttv- because of a
supposed connexion with the unrelated TTvedfiay ‘breath’, and Trvdwy
‘breathe’, ttvcu/xu is not connected with TrXeLv. (For nXelvyflarey bloWy see
earlier.) Pluma is possibly connected with flyy but may stem from a differ-
ent root.
not. The
English word flare is obscure etymologically, but is not likely to be
related to (fiXio) or flos,
Liddell and Scott give ^Acw and flos as ‘nearly akin’ Ogilvie considers ;
13. 3. FaXa. mlik. FdXa &c., and L. lac are related, but English milk is
, , .
word as Lat. lac; see also the form y-Ady-o?: akin also to d-fiiXy-o), muh —
gere, milk'. Gf. also Donaldson, who gives d-fJbdXyo) as equivalent to
d-/xAdy-a> {The New CratyluSy 2nd edn (1850), p. 364).
the most likely, theory of how they came to be differentiated in use. The
view accepted here by Hopkins was the usual one at the time: see for
instance R. G. Latham’s A Hand-book of the English Language^ 4th edn
(i860), p. 431.
The now dialectal use of nor to mean ‘than* in such cases as ‘better nor
that’ of obscure origin, but it is unlikely that Hopkins’s derivation is
is
correct. For one thing, not only does a word na meaning ‘than’ make its
appearance a little earlier than nor and nar in this sense, but one of the
earliest instances of this use of na is one where na is immediately followed
by a word beginning with a vowel. Now, although written documents may
be an unreliable guide in this matter, this is not the situation we should
expect if -r forms of the word were the original ones. It loola, in fact, as
if na was the earlier form, and this was altered later to nor And nary be-
cause of the probable identity in pronunciation of na and n^ when un-
emphatic before words beginning with a consonant. Na may th^n in origin
be the word na ‘not’, or possibly a word deriving from the reduced *« from
than itself (though this ’n is also recorded slightly later than this use of na)
15. I .Dhu .flow, go. Hopkins is essentially right about dhu, though the
. .
forms vary, of course, in the different Celtic languages. Dun was an old
name for the Lincolnshire Old Don river, whose course lies partly along the
Lines .“Yorks, border. This Don is not connected with dhu. The dou- of
Douglas was certainly the same word originally as dhu, and so was Dove; but
the word meant ‘black* (as Hopkins says) and not ‘blue’.
Donuil Dhu: cf. Sir Walter Scott’s poem. Pibroch of Donuil Dhu.
Hopkins’s guess that -glas might mean ‘blue* is possibly correct. Welsh
glas, for instance, means ‘blue’, and some scholars believe that this word
forms the second element of Dou-glas, the whole name thus meaning ‘dark
blue’. If this view is correct, then -glas is certainly connected with L.
glastum. (Hopkins’s perception of the possible relationship is in any case
acute.) His suggestion that L. glastum was taken from the native word for
woad is almost certainly correct, except that by ‘native’ Hopkins probably
meant ‘British’, whereas the word appears to have been adopted from
Gaulish. The elder Pliny says that the plant in question was called glastum
by the Gauls.
But an alternative theory about the -glas in Douglas holds that it means
‘stream’ and is cognate with OI glaiss, ‘river’. This would seem to offer
a better explanation of the river-name. In any case OI glaiss is probably
related to Welsh glas, ‘blue’, and thus probably to glastum.
The etymology of the river-name Humber is very obscure, but the word is
probably British in origin. For an indication of the complexity of the prob-
lem, see Ekwall’s English River-Names, pp. 203-5.
In connexion with Hopkins’s assumption, it may be worth noting Isaac
Taylor’s Words and Places (1864) on p. 258 Taylor mentions that Humber
:
‘has been thought’ to contain a corruption of the root aber, which he says is
‘Cymric’ in contrast to Erse and Gaelic inver.
Wharfe and rough are not ‘identical’, nor even related. Wharfe probably
derives from a British river-name meaning ‘winding river’, whereas rough
comes from OE ruh. 1 have not found any evidence of a spelling hrough for
y .
(With regard to this list of rivers in the Cornhill, it may be worth noting
that there does not seem to be a river Eden or a Douglas in Yorkshire:
there is an Eden which flows through Cumberland and Westmorland, and
an Eden Burn in Co. Durham the Douglas is a Lancashire river)
;
with rave either, though the origin of rave is also uncertain. It is not likely,
however, that rave and revel are related (although assumed to be so by
Ogilvie).
The elements of the names Gwendolen and Guinevere certainly meant
first
second element of the word, and Hopkins ought therefore to have written
Guen here, not Guend.
As for Wenty there is a river of this name in Yorkshire (probably not
etymologically related to Guin-y &c.), but possibly Hopkins was referring
to the -went of Derwent. The relevance of the sentence beginning ^Went
Guend . .’is difficult to see unless the first word in it refers to one of the
.
rivers in the Cornhill list, and as this list gives Derwent as meaning ‘fair water’,
Hopkins would probably assume the -went to mean ‘fair’. As it happens,
Derwent does not appear to have meant ‘fair water’, but probably ‘oak river’,
the Derw- deriving from a British word meaning ‘oak’ and the -ent from a
British suffix.
Arar here is presumably the name used by the Romans for what is now the
river Saone; Ri the Sanskrit verb ri meaning ‘let go, release* &c. but the :
word Arar is probably not related to it and appears to have meant not ‘flow-
flow,* but ‘the slow’ or ‘the placid’, and to have been a Celtic word (or an
adaptation of one) containing the same root as the Welsh araf ‘slow,
placid’. (It is perhaps worth recalling that Caesar described the Arar as
flowing into the Rh6ne ‘incredibili lenitate’.) Understandably, Hopkins
assumed that the second -ar in Arar was a repetition of the stem, whereas it
5i8 APPENDIX III
kins was misremembering Max Muller: his etymology of Arar could cer-
tainly have been based on Max Miillcr’s note.
statements, and no other evidence that duffer (of doubtful etymology) has
ever been used to mean ‘ass’, the animal.
There have been several explanations offered for the derivation of lazy.
If Skeat was right in suggesting a connexion with Middle Low .German
then lazy is probably ultimately related to L. lassus; but the
lasichy earliest
forms of lazy (with -ay-) tend to argue against this derivation.
On the same page of the Cornhill as the list of rivers, it is stated that in
Yorkshire ‘clarty is sticky’. The etymology of clarty is unknown, but a
connexion with clay is by no means impossible and if there : is a connexion,
the sense-link would probably be as Hopkins suggests.
15. 3. Hawk. Hopkins is mistaken here. The verb hawk, ‘sell about the
streets’,seems to have been a back-formation from the noun hawker, which
the OED considers as apparently a borrowing of Middle Low German hoker,
‘a hawker’. The verb hawk, ‘make a noise in the throat’, appears to be of
onomatopoeic origin and unconnected with the previous verb. As for
Kingsley’s use of hawk, the OED has no record of such a meaning as
Hopkins gives, but the sense in question is probably ‘to hunt on the wing’,
used of birds and insects. A quotation from the OED illustrating this use and
dated 1879 tells of ‘A dragon fly, hawking to and fro on the sunny side of the
hedge’. It would be easy to take hawking here to mean ‘moving up and
down in one place’. Possibly the instance in Kingsley was similar.
howk. There seems to be no clear evidence of a sense ‘to harry’ for the
verb howk, but if we had the relevant reference in Kingsley we might well
find that ‘harry’ was only a contextual meaning of a common sense of
howk. Apparently a dialectal word in the 19th century, howk most com-
monly meant ‘dig up, excavate’ (both literally and metaphorically). The
EDD records a sense ‘punish’ for howk, though only from Cumberland:
perhaps some such sense was current farther south in Kingsley’s day. If
y y
i6. I gaily. Hopkins is right here gaUy and gallow are different forms of the
.
:
same word. The EDD records gaily or gallow from a wide area, including
the Isle of Wight. Gallow occurs in King Lear^ iii. ii. 44, and this seems to be
its first recorded appearance in English, though it is connected with, if not
actually derived from, OE agaslwan^ ‘astonish, frighten’.
16. 2. Spmre muck. Related etymologically in this list are spuere, spit, and
. . .
spittle^and probably related to these are spot and sputter. English spume was
borrowed and adapted from L. spuma^ which appears to be unconnected with
spuere &c. The verb spoom meant ‘to run before the wind or sea, to scud’, and
is probably in origin an alteration of a verb spoon of the same meaning and
25. I. Wade mingle etc. That wade^ waddle^ vadere, and fadum are
. . .
etymologically related was known at the time. Ogilvie observes chat waddle
‘seems to be a diminutive formed on the root of wade^ L. vado, to go . .
wade waddle
: Hopkins is right in assuming each pair of words here
. . . to
be connected in essentially the same way. The ~le represents an addition to
the verb-stem (or variation of the stem), which originally gave it a fre-
quentative or diminutive meaning. Thomson gives straddle and swaddle as
diminutives of stride and swathe respectively, and the etymological connexion
between these pairs was well known. Ming^ ‘to mix’, was current in literary
English till the 1 7th century, and still survived in dialect.
25, 2. Renew. The etymologies of renew are probably Hopkins’s own con-
jectures, but he could have got them from Ogilvie, who gives the deriva-
tion as ‘L. renovo\ re and novo^ or re and new.'
Renew cannot strictly but Hopkins was no doubt using
be ‘from’ renovare^
‘from’ in amore general sense. The OED suggests that renew was formed
from re- and the adjective new under the influence of L. renovare. But it
seems more likely that, as Hopkins supposed, the verb new was the basis for
renew, which was thus probably coined from the verb new under the in-
fluence of re-novare.
25. 3. Scoff. Liddell and Scott, under aKwirroj, have ‘Cf. our scoff'. The two
words may be related, though the etymology of scoff is uncertain.
25. 4. Gulf ...(... and beans). Though the derivation of golf is very
obscure, Hopkins’s suggestion is most unlikely to be correct. He is, however,
nearly right about gulf which comes from a root meaning, probably, ‘to
vault, arch.’ Gulp is of onomatopoeic origin and looks rather out of place
here, especially as Hopkins is usually quick to detect onomatopoeia in
words. Gula, also, is from a root probably echoic in origin, but there is no
clear evidence of a connexion with gulp. None of these words is connected
with any of those following, all of which (except for caelare and the shell which
is not the name of a form) Hopkins has already mentioned in this note-book.
curious,even though it has already been linked with hold. No doubt the
two words were closely connected in Hopkins’s mind. Neither is connected
with any other word in this group.
Caelare appears here partly, no doubt, because of its apparent (not real)
identity of stem with that of caelutn^ and partly because Hopkins saw a
sense connexion between it and hollow &c. But although caelare meant ‘to
make grooves in’, it did not mean ‘to make hollow’. Hopkins is not likely
to have been mistaken about the recorded meanings of caelare the mere \
fact that he puts ‘to make hollow’ first suggests that he was thinking of it
as an original, if unrecorded meaning.
As for caelum (clearly ‘heaven* here as earlier), the ‘same’ presumably
means ‘same as caelare\ i.e. ‘belongs to the same root as caelare\ On p. 12
Hopkins had thought caelum to be ‘from’ kolXov: here he is aware that this
view is incorrect. It
is possible that after writing his earlier note he con-
sulted the most recent edition of Liddell and Scott. Under /cotAoy in the
1855 cdn we find ‘Germ, hohl, our hollow whence Lat. coelum, though oft.
\
written caelum .* ‘whence’ might be taken here to imply that coelum was
. . :
borrowed directly from the Greek word. In the 1861 edn, however, this
note has been removed instead, under Kviw^ we find simply a list of re-
:
25. 5. skill. . . keely etc. For shell (in as chool), school, shoal, and scale see
earlier (p. 12), and the notes on those entries.
The skill Hopkins refers to here seems to be the verb skill: he is quite
right about its original meaning. Richardson mentions the verb as well as
the noun and gives as its meaning ‘To distinguish, to discriminate’, &c.
similarly Thomson and also Ogilvie, who marks the verb as obsolete. Shell is
related to but again Hopkins had the wrong reason for thinking so.
skill,
(See the earlier note on this sense of shell.) It is worth noting that Hopkins
has changed his mind about the original meaning of this word and of school
and shoal. Before, he had assumed that they originally meant ‘assemblage’
here all three words are still assumed to be connected, but this time derived
from a root meaning ‘divide, discriminate’. In view of ‘they say’, it is
reasonable to suppose that, at some time after writing his earlier note,
Hopkins had either looked up the etymologies of school and shoal (and pos-
sibly shell), or otherwise come across some new information about them. It
may also be significant that scale, which on p. 12 was not connected with
shoal, &c., is so connected (and correctly) here. All these new etymologies
are in fact correct except for school (of boys), where Hopkins is well aware of
the usual (and correct) derivation from schola, but continues, apparently,
to reject it. But the entry here must be considered not only in relation
to the entry on p. 12, but also to that on p. 31 below: see the note
there.
Shilling is related to skill, &c., and this is implicit in Richardson and
Thomson. That keel here is probably the verb keel meaning ‘to skim’ is
suggested by Hopkins’s reference to this sense of the word on p. 31.
(See the note on keel on p. 522 below). Aeel, ‘to skim’, is not related to
skill, &c.
.
25. 6. of course, *Of course’ might suggest common knowledge, but I have
not been able to discover any support for this view, which is incorrect.
More likely, Hopkins may have meant that the connexion of skill with
scindere was obvious —
to himself, of course, not necessarily to us. In any
case, the sense connexion is clear enough. is certainly related to
scindere, and the relationship was well known at the time Liddell and Scott, :
31. I. Skill etc. Gf. above, p. 25. Hopkins is not likely to have made this
third reference to the same group of words merely to add further words to
it, sincemuch of the note is a repetition of the previous one, ajnd there are
slight but interesting changes. In the first place, Hopkins had tentatively
noted there, ^skill, originally I believe to divide, discriminate’: here he is
more definite, remarking of skill, &c., ‘Primary meaning, to divide, cut
apart’. Secondly, if ‘as applied to fishes’ refers to school as well as Vo shoal (as
seems likely), Hopkins has at last (and correctly) dropped school (of boys)
from his list. Thirdly, he has omitted the qualifying ‘they say’ before the
etymologies of school, shoal, &c. and, lastly, scale has been left out of the list.
;
The reason for these changes is not altogether clear, though it looks
likely, with regard to skill at least, that Plopkins had consulted some
authority. (In the case of school (of boys) he may simply have come to the
conclusion, on further reflection, that the usual view was after all correct.
It is possible too, though less likely, that he omitted ‘they say’, uninfluenced
by any new authority.) The omission of scale is very difficult to explain if
deliberate, but it probably has no significance.
It is possible, then, that the differences between this passage and the
previous one (p. 25), and between that and the passage on p. 12, are due at
some authority whom Hopkins had consulted or come across.
least in part to
But not easy to see who this could have been. A possible source is
it is
Richardson, who favoured the view that skill, shilling, shoal, and scale
were interconnected and bore originally the sense of ‘divide’ or ‘division’.
Most of the new information on p. 25 could have been derived directly
or indirectly from him, and so could the changes here (except for the
dropping of scale). However, Hopkins’s etymologies shell, keel (of a ship),
and skull do not agree with his; and as the noun keel seems to make its first
appearance here, there must remain some doubt as to whether Hopkins
was in fact using Richardson at this point.
To
the verb skill Hopkins correctly adds the noun. ship’s keel, though A
ingeniously linked here to skill, is not connected with it or with keel, ‘to
skim’. (The fact that the verb keel is placed before the noun here suggests
that the noun is the new-comer.) Skull, ‘scull’, is another new-comer to the
group. Its etymology is obscure, but it is not likely to be related to skill
or to have anything to do with skimming. For shell, shilling, school, and
shoal see above.
its etymology is not altogether clear, is probably related to shell and so also
to skill,
36, 2. ^evycLv ,fugio. Hopkins must have taken this list from the 1861
, ,
edn of Liddell and Scott, since the note in 1855 (under OEY'FQ) is
different and docs not, for example, refer to bugti, bega, or biuga. The cog-
nate words and their meanings have been carefully noted by Hopkins, and
in the same order, except that he has left fugio (which appears before
biuga in Liddell and Scott) to the end of the list.
in aor. <f)vy€LV, <f>vyri, (f>viL 9 , Lat. fuga, fugio: perh. akin to Sanscr. bhuj
inflectere, our budge The only difficulty is a doubt as to whether
. . .
Hopkins would have said ‘They might have added our budge .’, when he . .
edn of Liddell and Scott (where there is no reference to budge) over those
of previous edns. Perhaps he had forgotten where he had seen the sug-
gestion. Alternatively, he may have got the idea from White and Riddle,
who under fugio include budge and ‘Sanscr. bhug’ as related words. But it
is by no means impossible that the idea was Hopkins’s own.
is an adaptation
we overlook the fact that goblin
likely to be correct even if
of the Fr. gobelin (as was well known at the time). The origin of the French
word is doubtful, but a Fr. boguelin* (for which there is no evidence) would
be unlikely to be connected with fugio, &c.
varies. Hopkins is thinking of the group
quantity
as a whole.
44* I. . , ,
liqueo is in factfound only with a short first syllable, while the first syllable
line from
of liquidus, though usually short, is sometimes long, as in the
Again, the syllabic of liquitur is apparently always long.
Lucretius. first
Because of its form, rarity, and late appearance in L., limpidus presents a
considerable etymological problem. There are serious difficulties in assum-
ing any connexion with liquidus, though such a connexion is not impossible.
Hopkins may have derived the idea from Andrews, who states that limpidus
is ‘another form for liquidus’.
44. 3. Now linquo Xetnoj. Both Andrews and White and Riddle imply that
. . .
linquo from AetTrai, and not merely cognate with it. The words are certainly
is
quite closely related, though they do not represent an exact parallel, since
-H- has been introduced into the stem of linquo but not, apparently, into
that of XcIttcj. (There is no evidence in support of a form XelaTTw.)
It is difficult to know if there is any significance in the difference between
‘certainly same’ and simply ‘same’. This might indicate a slight doubt in
the latter case, but more probably Hopkins means simply to emphasize
the certainty of the other statement. \
hunk and hump is not quite so good, but, despite their sense-difference, these
words also (both of obscure origin) may well be related.
46. 1. Sk and sc ... a disc. Hopkins is largely right here bushy and bosky arc :
closely related (as could be gathered from Ogilvie). The history of rush (the
plant) is not altogether clear, but a connexion with Med. L. ruscus, ‘butcher’s
broom’, is not likely. Dish, however, is ultimately derived, through L. discus,
from hlcTKos. Richardson quotes this etymology of dish, and Ogilvie has,
under rush, ‘. probably L. ruscus .
.’.
. . .
and Scott (1861) connect star and stella with darqp, but not crrtAjScu. The
meaning of the word, ‘glitter, twinkle’, suggests that this was the sense-link
between steel and star, &c.
47. 2. Stella perhaps for seems to be Hopkins’s own invention.
sterila. Sterila
47. 3. if not . . . Stella and steel. In this alternative etymology, ‘not that I
,;
would insist on the V nxust refer to the in stela. The rest of the sentence is
not easy to follow; probably the words from ‘not that* to the end are an
afterthought, in which Hopkins realized that it is not necessary to assume
an original in stela in order to link the word with steel (and orTiAj3 €tv)
since theI in these words could originally have been an r also. Hopkins may
be right in assuming that the stem of Stella originally contained an -r-, but
he is wrong in suggesting the same thing for and steel.
aGrrip cf. the etymological note on this word in Liddell and Scott (1855)
‘The a is euphon., as in darpov, astrunty compared with our star In 1861 . . .
d-y and the root is \ This latter agrees with the modern
given as ‘
ASTP^
view, which is not in fact ‘euphonic’ but derives from an
that the d- is
related to any of the previous words. The link seems to be partly one of
sense (with twit), and partly a slight formal similarity with twig, &c. As for
earwig, we have already seen that Hopkins thought the -wig related to
wigging: hence no doubt its reappearance here. Wicker is related to
ea.T-wig: a remarkable guess, unless suggested by Ogilvie, who considers
wicker and twig to be ‘probably formed on the simple word wig, from the
root of L. vigeoy to grow*. Hopkins’s -wig, however, was connected in mean-
ing with ‘shake*, not ‘grow’, and the sense connexion he assumed with
wicker was probably ‘shake’, ‘bend*.
Twig, ‘small branch’, appears here no doubt because of its sense con-
nexion with wicker and its formal identity with twig, ‘pinch* though in view ;
and ‘twig’ respectively for the noun twist. Perhaps this is the sense con-
nexion Hopkins saw with twig. If not, the connexion is probably with
wicker, since wicker-work ‘is formed by twining or turning one (twig) over
another’ (Richardson).
The connexion of twine with twist on the one hand, and with twy, two, &c.,
on the other, needs no explanation; and that these words are etymologically
related was well known. Twy must either be the obsolete variant of two
or twice, or the variant of the prefix twi- ; probably the latter, as still current
twy-blade, for example, appears as an alternative spelling for the [^lant tway~
blade in Ogilvic.
|
use of both eyes; but such a connexion seems still too slender a one to
be at all likely. Now it is probable that Hopkins, coming across the
comparatively rare word twire, would turn to a dictionary to look the
word up. Contemporary dictionaries differed as to its meaning and etymo-
logy, but in Todd (and apparently only there), there appears, along with
three other senses of the verb, a fourth sense, ‘To make flexures or wind-
ings’, with an illustrative quotation from Drayton’s Polyolbion. Also, in
Ogilvie (and apparently only there), there appears a noun twire meaning
‘A twisted thread or filament’, marked (like the verb) obsolete. (And this
noun does not appear in the contemporary edns of Ogilvie’s source,
Webster.) Either of these senses, but particularly, of course, the latter,
would satisfactorily explain the inclusion of twire in this list. And if
Hopkins had one or other (or both) of these meanings in mind, he is likely
to have first come across them in Todd and/or Ogilvie rather than in the
course of his own reading. For, although the OED records twire as a verb
(meaning, perhaps, ‘twirl’) and as a noun (meaning, perhaps, ‘twisted
thread’), both uses are marked as having been found once only, in Burton’s
Anatomy of Melancholy and Locke’s Observations on Silk respectively. At least
we may conclude that the appearance of twire in Hopkins’s list shows either
that he had consulted Todd or Ogilvie or both, or that he had read the
Burton and/or Locke passage. The etymology of twire, ‘peep’, &c., and of
twire, ‘twist’, &c., is not clear. The latter is very probably connected with
twine, two, &c. it is unlikely to have been misprinted for twirl (thus the
:
OED), since this appears no less than seven times in the Locke Observations.
It should be added that Todd almost certainly misunderstood Drayton’s
use of the word in ‘the sun looks through the twyring glades’: the
. . .
glades are probably not ‘winding’, but are, as it were, peeping at the sun.
PHILOLOGICAL NOTES 527
sense and by assonance with roixos it is related to the Wick of Hackney Wick
•
and to the •‘Wich and -wig of Harwich 2ir\d Schleswig. Liddell and Scott mention
that oiKos ‘is the Lat. vicus^ our old word wick^ wichy as in Painsu^zVA:, Norwich'.
Weak reappears here no doubt, because the -wig of Schleswig suggested the
unrelated {-)wig- of tdir-wig and wigging, with which Hopkins had already
(p. g) supposed weak to be connected. Wicked is probably related to weaky
and appears to be another of Hopkins’s correct conjectures, though
this
APPENDIX IV
.
NOTE-BOOKS
A. Journal
1 Cover of black paper; top right-hand corner cut away to show
PRIVATE J. B 9X7-5 in. Dated 2 May 1866. On verso of front
cover; ‘Please not to read.’ Consecutive entries to 24 July 1866.
II. Identical with I, but no heading in corner. Dated 31 Aug. 1867.
Entries from 10 July 1867 Apr. 1868.
III. Identical and immediate continuation of it. Dated 27 Jan.
with II,
1866: but entries from 17 Apr. 1868 to 18 July 1868.^
IV. Cover of marbled paper very worn: black back-binding broken:
letters ‘Ho’ on outside cover. Inside: ‘Esse quam vidcri.* 5*2 X 8-5
in. Continuation of III. 19 July 1868 to 10 Aug. 1872.
—
V. ‘next book green with red edges’ (see note, p. 418). Good repair.
7x4-4 in. Continuation of IV: 10 Aug. 1872 to 7 Feb. 1875.
B. School Note-Books
I. Brown, impressed. 7-3 x 4-6 in. Inscribed inside: ‘Gerard M.
Hopkins from himself. Esse quam videri.’ Trigonometry and
Mechanics. Undated.
II. Cover of thick boards under marbled paper: corners and back of
green leather. Dated 23 May 1862; ‘Esse quam videri’ beneath. A
very long book completely filled. It begins with notes on the Pro-
mitheus Desmotis, then comes an extremely detailed discussion of
Thucydides, ii. 87 ff., with several beautifully drawn plans of the
Aeschylus and the earlier books of the Odyssey and from Jowett on
Sophocles and Greek Choric metres. At the end are some general
notes on Greek history, and some notes taken at ill-attended lectures
on Plato’s Republic. All this belongs to the time when was reading H
Honour Mods: there are time-tables of them in C. I, Michaelmas
Term 1863.
The translation from Aeschylus, P.F. {PoemSj 177), is from this
book.
C. Early Diaries
I. Green cloth cover ; ‘Notes’ impressed in gold : rubber bandand pencil
slot 4*9 X 2*9 in. Bad repair. Dated 24 Sept. 1863. Incomplete page
loose in end pocket; others torn out. Pencil; smudgings.
530 APPENDIX IV
11 Identical with I, and immediate continuation of it. Dated
9 Sept.
1864: ends Jan. 1866.
Half-page from G. I (see p. 34 and n.) and two pages from C. II
(see pp. 49-50 and n. 49. 2) loose with Diaries. See Preface, p. xvii.
Phenomenalism) ;
and ending: ‘Our whole body is a sense to, or if
Vj. Sketch-Book
For description and reference to the sketches from it leproduced lierc,
see appx 1, p. 453.
F. Sermon Book
Black cloth cover. Inscribed ‘Fr. Humphrey gave me this book when he
left Oxford June, 1879.’ Twenty-seven sermons or parts of sermons,
PAPERS
H. Poems, &c.
I . Papers in the handwriting of Fr Francis E. Bacon, SJ.
(a) Version of ‘Elected silence sing to me’ titled The Kind Betrothal ;
532 APPENDIX IV
have a copy; preserved many years before 1 knew G.M.H. F.E.B.’
There follow variations initialed GMH, though in handwriting
of FEB. One double sheet ruled foolscap written on inner sides
only,
(e) Penmaen Pool. Barmouth, Merionethshire, Aug. 1876. Small
variations from Bridges’s text, Poems 67. Some of these marked in
pencil in another hand.
2. Hopkins autograph MSS.
(a) Nondum. This version printed Poems, 43.
3. Hopkins autograph. \
M. Classics
Dublin period.
7. {a) Syllabus for ‘Royal University First Examination in Arts — Pass’.
N. Music
I. Notes on ‘Fourth Species of Counterpoint’. Annotations by R. P*
O. Letter
Hopkins to Harry Bellamy, 21 Jan. 1889, from University College,
Dublin. Published in LL, iii. 66.
P. Miscellaneous
These papers are grouped as found.
1. Found enclosed in note-book D. VII.
() School or early Oxford autograph extracts Ecclesiastical Policy the
Best Policy: South.
{b) Rough pencil MS of Remembrance and Expectation 14 June 1868,
probably in hand of Manley Hopkins.
(c) Extracts from de Musset, Malherbe, &c., in unknown hand.
{d) A loose page of D. VII extract Studies in Poetry and Philosophy:
Wordsworth, J. C. Shairp, beginning ‘Each scene in nature has in
it a power of awakening .’
. .
(e) Extracts from Coleridge BX. i and vi, on dreams caused by Bow-
yer, and the delirious girl talking Latin and Greek.
(/) A slip of French idioms.
(^) H autograph and another hand: slip with dialect proverbs
(? Lancs.).
(h) Slip in another hand ‘And rushing flights up golden stairs’.
534 APPENDIX IV
(b) Elegiacs: Tristi memini: printed Poems 180. One page written
tu,
{d) Translation of Horace’s Persicos odi, printed Poems, 182. Four pages
of notepaper, bottom right-hand corner of one sheet cut out: on
recto of this, part of the draft of an undated letter: ‘. . most of .
better myself. ... I knew for cer[tainj was not to be. ..* [For
. . . .
—
Aunt Laura, No accident happened. Almost nobody had come
back; indeed the school is far from being complete now.’ [Clearly
written at the Oratory, Edgbaston, to Laura Hodges, between
Sept. 1867 and Easter 1868.]
On another sheet the following note or, possibly, draft of part
of a letter ‘. : must last in some form as long as the world, I think,
. .
but that, I suppose, people say of him what they do not say of their
greatest enemies otherwise that he is a quack.’—
(/) Translation, with variants, of the hymn Jesu Dulcis Memoria,
printed Poems, 185. Pencil and ink.
{g) Translation of the first four lines of the hymn Ecquis binas:
O
for a pair like turtles wear.
CATALOGUE OF MSS AT CAMPION HALL, OXFORD 535
5. Verses The Lady of Lynriy initialed MC [Marcus Clarke: see p. 293 and
LL, iii. 14] with note ‘If you show it to anyone you must copy it
out again’.
between 1878 and 1885: in his Latin quotations he uses the literal, not
the Vulgate text they are printed in parallel columns with Fr Roothaan’s
:
notes beneath. A number of the interleaved pages are torn out, of which
six survive. [Hopkins’s notes are published in full in The Sermons and
Devotional Writings of GMH.^
:
appendix V
Hopkins's Resolutions and '‘Slaughter of the innocents'
The three dates, 23 Aug, 1867, 2 and 1 1 May 1868, are very carefully cross-
referenced in the Journal^ as marking three stages in one extended resolution.
In the first stage, in the chapel of the Poor Clares at Netting Hill, on 23 Aug.
1867, the resolution made, but in a cautiously conditional form ‘if
is first
—
it is better*. When being entered in the Journal twelve days later it
this is
and 7 {Poems and Prose of GMHy Penguin Poets, p. 1 12, n. 2). By thus
May
regrouping the dates he goes counter to Hopkins’s minutely careful and
explicit arrangements. For the cross-referencing in the MS is clearly meant
major decision recorded under 5 May and confirmed under the
to exclude the
—
7th the resolution ‘to be a priest and religious’. These two entries are not
cross-referenced either to each other, or to anything else and the second of :
them is followed by the words: ‘but still doubtful between St. Benedict and
St. Ignatius’.
no evidence that he ever seriously considered any other order, unless it were
the Oratorians, with whom he had lived, worked, and made his Easter
—
Retreat in 1868. And the evidence here such as it is seems to be nega- —
tive. The key words of the scrap of the only directly relevant letter that has
survived (see p. 534) are tantalizingly missing; but the one relevant sentence
that is complete tells against staying with the Oratorians ‘I do not expect to :
538 APPENDIX V
saw you had not, from the moment you came to us’, he
for us. This I clearly
wrote to him on 14 May 1868 {LL, iii. 408).
(c) Some other important matter needing decision, running from an early
date, but now concurrently intertwined with the other two, yet clearly
distinguished from them.
The entry ‘Slaughter of the innocents’, of 1 1 May, refers not to the deci-
sion or resolution about this matter, but to some consequence upon the
which had been made nine days earlier. Any kind of oblique allu-
decision
Holy Innocents’ day seems out of keeping with Hopkins’s habit of
sion to
mind and the absence of a capital ‘I’ is out of keeping with his scrupulously
;
1 saw they wd. interfere with my state and vocation* (LL, i. 24). As there
is in the Journal no hint of such an act in the six days which had passed
to Baillie: T am expecting to take orders and soon* {LL, iii. 231). This refers
only to Minor Orders, as is clear at the end of the paragraph; and the letter
mentions the possible grief of his mother if he were a priest. Nor should the
* For a discussion of what was probably destroyed, see Preface, p. xix.
Hopkins’s resolutions and ‘slaughter of the innocents’ 539
—
phrase he uses ‘whether a few months may not be shut up in a
in I cloister’
—be taken too when written to
seriously, In the same
Baillie. letter he
seems certain already that entry to the priesthood must mean virtually
the end of his poetry: ‘I want to write still and as a priest I very likely
can do that too, not so freely as I shd. have liked, e.g. nothing or little
in the verse way, but no doubt what wd. best serve the cause of my re-
ligion.’ But that was his own view of his duties as a priest, as he much
later made clear to Bridges, when he told him that his poems were
virtually unknown to the Jesuits: ‘It always seems to me that poetry is un-
professional, but that is what I have said to myself, not others to me’ (24 Aug.
1884: LL, i. 197). Possibly tht'reis a connexion between all these statements
and a much earlier scruple: that stern, private resolution Hopkins entered
in his Diary on 6 Nov. 1865, two years before he considered his vocation
for the priesthood, and almost a year before his conversion ‘On this day
:
by God’s Grace I resolved to give up all beauty until I had His leave for
*
it
APPENDIX VI
From the Catholic Encyclopedia, vol. xiv, pp. 83 fF., article ‘Society of Jesus’ by H.
J.
Pollen, SJ. (By permission of the Robert Appleton Companv, New York.)
(1) Novices (whether received as lay brothers for the domestic and tem-
poral services of the order, or as aspirants to the priesthood), who are trained
in the spirit and discipline of the order, prior to making the religious vows.
(2) At the end of two years the novices make simple but perpetual vows,
and, if aspirants to the priesthood, become formed scholastics; they remain in
this grade as a rule from two to fifteen years, in which time they will have
completed all their studies, pass (generally) a certain period in teaching,
receive the pricsthocxl, and go through a third year of novitiate or probation
(the tertianship) According to the degree of discipline
. and virtue, and to the
talents they display (the latter arc normally tested by the examination for
the Degree of Doctor of Theology), they may now become formed coadju-
tors or professed members of the order.
(3) Formed coadjutors, whether formed lay brothers or priests, make vows,
which, though not solemn, are perpetual on their part; while the Society,
on its side, binds itself to them, unless they should commit some grave
offence.
(4) The professed are all priests, who make, besides the three usual solemn
missions. . . . The professed of the four vows constitute the kernel of the
this. The chief offices can be held by the professed alone; and though they
may be dismissed, yet they must be received back, if willing to comply with
the conditions that may be prescribed. ... All live in community alike as
regards food, apparel, lodging, recreation, and all are alike bound by the
rules of the Society
age, health, position, occupation of his parents, their religion and good
character, their dependence on his services; about his own health, obliga-
which may have led him to seek admission. The results of their questioning
and of their own observation they report severally to the provincial, who
weighs their opinions carefully before deciding for or against the appli-
cant. . . . Candidates may enter at any time, but usually there is a fixed day
each year for their admission, towards the close of the summer holidays, in
542 APPENDIX VI
order that all may begin their training, or probation, together. They spend
the first ten days considering the manner of life they are to adopt and its
difficulties, the rules of the order, the obedience required of its members.
They then make a brief retreat meditating on what they have learned about
the Society and examining closely their own motives and hopes of persever-
ance in the new mode of life. If all be satisfactory to them and the superior
or director who has charge of them, they are admitted as novices, wear the
clerical costume (as there is no special Jesuit habit), and begin in earnest
the of members of the Society. They rise early, make a brief visit to the
life
usual vows of religion, the simple vow of chastity in the Society having the force
of a diriment impediment to matrimony. During the no viceship but a brief
time daily is devoted to reviewing previous studies. The noviceship over, the
scholastic members, i.e. those who
are to become priests in the Society,
and mathematics lasting two years, usually
follow a special course in classics
in the same house with the novices. Then, in another house and neighbour-
THE ORGANIZATION OF THE SOCIETY OF JESUS 543
hood, three years arc given to the study of philosophy, about five years to
teaching in one or other of the public colleges of the Society, four years to
the study of theology, priestly orders being conferred after the third, and,
finally, one year more to another probation or noviceship, intended to help
the young priest to renew his spirit of piety and to learn how to utilize to the
best of his ability all the learning and experience he has acquired. In
exceptional cases, as in that of a priest who has finished his studies before
entering the order, allowance is made, and the training period need not last
BOVEY
00
DISTRICT
STONYHURST
INDEX I
....
......
A pure gold lily, but by the pure gold lily
66
48
A silver scarce-calbsilver gloss
... a standing
A star most
fell ........
preeminent
spiritual, principal, ....
52
54
50
Above
All as the
/ The vast of heaven stung with brilliant
moth call’d Underwing
Altho’ God’s word has said
alighted ....stars .
. 43
51
32
Although she be more white 50
Altho’ unchallenged, where she
— and on their brittle green quils
sits
..... 29
22
. . . and then
As Devonshire letters,
As it fell upon a day
as thick as fast
earlier in the year .... 55
63
60
37
.. bringing heads of daffodillies
.
49
But if this overlast the day 49
But what indeed is ask’d of me? 62
I have desired to go 33
I hear a noise of waters drawn away 54
... in her cheeks that dwell
In more precision now of light and dark .... 39
55
550 INDEX OF FIRST LINES
rage
In the staring darkness 72
It docs amaze me, when the clicking hour . . . 40
Late I fell in the ccstacy 35
Like shuttles fleet the clouds, and zdler .
• 36
Mothers are doubtless happier for their babes • 67
Night’s lantern
— now the rain ......
....
*
•
44
39
O Death, Death,
— O Guinevere
O what a silence
He
......
is
is this
come
wilderness ! . . . .
58
45
66
Or else their cooings came from bays of trees 34
Or
Or
ever the early stirrings of skylark
try with eyesight to divide .... • 50
65
Proved Etherege, prudish, selfish, hypocrite, heartless V 50
Pure fasted faces draw unto this feast .
•
57
.
•
.
67
39
64
•
52
V
38
The sparky air . 20
•
72
58
39
The villain shepherds and misguided flock
The wind, that passes by so fleet
There is an island, wester’d in the
....main
.
•
18
39
9
They are not dead who die, they are but lost who live 141
They came / Next to meadows abundant, pierced with flowers • 43
Think of an opening page illuminM
To rise you bid me with the lark .... . •
•
35
37
We live to see . . 48
What was it we should strike the road again? . 68
When cuckoo calls and I may hear • 59
When eyes that cast about in heights of heaven . 58
Who loves me here and has my love . 68
Whose braggart ’scutcheon, whose complaisant crest 18
INDEX II
Titles of publishedworks and of pictures are entered under the name of the author
or painter,and in longer entries are arranged alphabetically. Works published
anonymously or of which the author is unknown are entered under title.
References to buildings and streets arc entered under the name of town or village
except where a cross-reference indicates a separate heading.
The page number is printed in italics when the passage to which the index
refers is annotated.
chapel 140 (‘our chapel’); class list Bockett, Harriet Hopkins, Mt*s Cyril
159 Bockett, Rebecca: see Hopkins, Mrs
Bampton, Fr Joseph, SJ 244 247 Arthur
Banning, Henry Thomas 1 59 Bodfari 258
Baring-Gould, Revd Sabine 134 Bodlewyddan Church 262
Barraud, Clement William 261 Bodoano, Mr 257, 260
Bartolommeo, Fra 55 Beruv^, Br: death 203
Basel 169; church 169; museum lyo Bois de Boulogne 148
Bassus, Cassianus: Geoponica quol. 34 Bonaparte, Prince Pierre 202
Battenalp 176 Bond, Edward (sometimes ‘E.B.’) 76,
Bayeux 148 33> ^3^; with Hin Switzerland 168,
Bazaine, Francois, Marshal 203 i73. 174* 177 (2)> 181, 182; on
Beaumont, James 50 dreams 194 (2); visits H at Roe-
Beaumont Lodge: H’s visits 236, 240, hamplon 229
249, 250, 256 Bond, John 133
Becky Falls 155 Bond, Susan 262
Beddingfield (? Bessels Leigh): churcli Bonds, the 139, 159
J35 Bonheur, Auguste 143
Becchey, Mrs: death 262 Bonnat, L6on: ‘St Vincent dc Paul’ 143
Beechey, Mary 18, 159 Bonomi, Joseph 241
Beethoven, Ludwig van Pathetic Sonata : Bottor Rocks 156
166 Bource, Henry; ‘Ruined! the day after
Beiderlinden, Fr 250 the tempest’ 247
BcJlasis,Richard Garnett 138 Bovey Tracey: H’s visit /jj, 154-7;
Belmont: Benedictine monastery T4T Becky Falls 133; flower-show and
BcltrafEo, Giovanni Antonio: ‘Ma- industrial exhibition 133; House of
donna’ 168 Mercy 138; old church 138: potteries
Benedict, St 163 /J7; also 166; map 545
Bengal: famine 241 Bowditch 25
Benson, Richard Meux: Manual of Bowies, the Miss 138
Intercessory Prayer^ 140 Bowles, William Lisle 80
Bentley, Richard : 6n (‘the great Bent- Boyce, George Price 142
leius’) Boyl, Count de 202
Berne (‘Bern’) 173 Braddan Church 223
Bernini, Giovanni Lorenzo 254 Brady, Fanny 16
Berry Head 252 Brasenose College 47, 60
Bethesda, five porches of 258. Brechin, Rt Revd Alexander Penrose
Betts, Miss 256 Forbes, Bp of 6b, 138
Bibaculus, M. Furius 5/ Breil 182
Bicester 62 Breithom, mt. 180, j8i (3)
Bickersteth, Revd Edward Henry X44 Brent, river 144, 151 (‘river at Hendon’)
\ ;
Douglas, Isle of Man 221 (2), 222, 225 Exeter College 19, 47
(2), 234, 235 Eyre, Rt Revd Mgr death 203 :
Dover, 168
Doyle, John Andrew 159 Fanny, Aunt: see Smith, Frances
Dranse, river 183 Fau, Julien: Anatomie des formes 32
Drayton, Michael: Polyolbion 281 Faulhorn, mt. 775, 1 76
Drew, Sarah 24 Fenians, the 133
Dryden, John 112; The Hind and the Festus, Sextus Pornpeius 47
Panther written at Ugbrookc 253 — Fetis, Francois Joseph 238
quot. 280 (‘Without unspotted . . Ffynnon-y-capel (Ffynnon Fair) 238
use of synizesis 283 Fifeshire 71
Duche, Revd Jacob 136 Fincham, Dr 230
Duffy, Br 237 Finchampstead 49
Dugmore, Horace 135, 150 (2), 188 Finchley 3; wood 144, 151
Dugmorcs, the 66^ 150, 168 Finstcr Aarhorn, mt. iy6
Dumbarton Castle 212 Fitzgerald, Br 197, 198
Duns Scotus, Johannes 221 (2) ;
Scotism Fitzsimon, Fr Christopher, SJ 7p7, 227
236, 249 Fletcher, Miles Angus 136; cleath 218-
Durer, Albrecht 9, 170 19
Diisseldorf: school of painting 31, 33 Florence Baptistry gates (reproduction)
:
Gillett, Mr 23J
quot. 278
Giotto di Bonoone 168 Hamman, Edouard 149
Gladstone, John MacAdam 22g (2) Hampshire H’s visit 214-15
:
Gladstone, William Ewart 249; The Hampstead 20, 2i, 47, 66, 141, 144 *
(i868)
Health'. ill in Switzerland poems since published: 26, 28, 31-2-
181; (1872) fever from a chill 227; 3-4-5. 37. 38, 44 . 46-7-B--9. 5 1-2 ^
‘my old complaint’ 227; operation Sketching: at Elsficld 23 ^at Fyfield
229; (1873) ‘in pain and could not 135; at Finchley 151; in Devonshire
look at things much’ 234; ‘hurried too 155; at Croydon 165; in Svyitzerlancl
fast and it knocked me up’ 236; un- 177; notes for sketches 77, 43, 47,
well and downcast 236; (1874) ‘got 65 also 207, 235
;
chilblains again’ 244; tired and cast Hopkins, Gertrude Frederica, H’s
down 249-50. cousin 20, 53, 166
Personal and (1885) ‘day of
spiritual'. Hopkins, Grace, H’s sister 72, 13a
the great Mercy
of God’ 58 con- 216
(? ‘Pulkic’),
fession 59; ‘little book of sins* 60; ‘if Hopkins, Kate see Hopkins, Mrs T. M.
:
ever I should leave the English Hopkins, Kate, H’s sister 71 (‘Katie’),
Church’ 71; ‘resolved to give up all I3(j(^ ‘Pilkic’)
beauty until I had His leave for it’ 71 Hopkins, Lionel Charles, H’s brother
Dolben’s letter ‘for which Glory to 21. 150, 151, 152; to Peking 241
God’ 71; confesses to Dr, Pusey 71; Hopkins, Manley, H’s father (‘Papa’
(1866) resolutions for Lent 72; ‘sad except 214 ‘my father’) 34, 59, 61 on ;
OY
places
559
Hughes, Mr 262 W Jumeaux, mts 180, 181
Hughes, Arthur 142; ‘The Convent Jungfrau, mt.
174 (2)
Boat’ 247 Juvenal: 5fl/.quot.
49
Hume, David 119
Hunnybun, Mr: see Honey bun Kalidasa Sakoontala 36
;
Jones, Fr James, SJ 167, 226 257, 258 Langland, William Piers Plowman quot. :
Newman, Most Revd Dr John Henry, ton road 137; beating parish bounds
Cardinal 60; ‘Lead, kindly light* T36; Clarendon hotel 136; Heading-
71; his style to the Oratory
76; ton Hill road 17; New Inn Hall 23,
from Rednal 1^8 (‘Father*) ; birthday 133 (street); Randolph hotel 136;
161; preaches at the Oratory 164 Seven Bridge road 134; Witney road
(‘Father*) ; A Letter , . , on the Occasion 22, 24, 133; map 544
of MrGladstone's recent Expostulation Churches: St Mary’s 14; St
262 Michael’s 136; St Philip’s i33i St
Newman, William Lambert jj, 78 n Thomas’ 138
Newnham 25 Oxford University: B.H.T. 77; Bodleian
Newport, Bp of: see Brown T. J. Library 21; breakfast parties 76, 55;
Newton Abbot 156 250, 252
(2), 157, Commemoration 759; degree, class
Nicholl (‘Nicol’), Prof, J. P.jj list 759; , —
takes 166; Greats H
Niclas, N., ed. Geoponica 34 books 49; Hexameron 79 (‘new
Nicols (‘Nichols’), Revd David C. 165 names’), 58, 133; lecture lists 16, 22,
Noir, Victor: death 202 53» 54; lodgings, H’s 133; Newdigate
Norris’s market gardens 197 prize 20; places to show (‘New
North Barrule 235 College . ,’) 21 \ poetry 23; poets 60;
.
Piozzi, Mrs (Mrs Thralc) 257 Quivil, Peter de. Bp of Exeter 253
Pisano, Giovanni di Niccolo 237
Pisano, Niccola 237 Ramsey 222
Pius IX (‘the Pope’) 159, 165, 218 Rance, A. J. Bouthillier de 218
Plato: Republic 49, 53; Stallbaum’s 54; Raphael Santi 9; Cartoons 237; The
in relation to the Greek world 1 1 5- Transfiguration (copy) 237
17; also II, 107, 119, 127 (2) Ratcliff, Mr 224, 232, 239
Pliny the Elder 48, 62 Raven, John Samuel: ‘Midsummer
Plow, Revd AntonyJohn murder of 163 :
Moonlight’ 142; ‘Let the hills be
Plow, Mrs Antony John (Harriet joyful together’ 247
Bridges) death 190
:
Rawes, Fr Henry Augustus 795
Plumley 154, 756 Raynal, Dom Paul Wilfrid (‘a French-
Plummer, Alfred 79, 47, 55, 163 man’) 747
Plutarch 1 1 , 49 Reading 2 1
Plymouth, Bp of: see Vaughan, W. Redi, Francesco 287
Poe, Edgar Allan: The Raven quot. 274 Redington, Christopher Thomas 759
(‘Ah distinctly ,*) . .
Rednal 158 (3)
564 INDEX OF PERSONS AND PLACES
Ree Deep 225, 234 Runnymede 256
Reeves, J. Sims 166 Ruskin, John 13; Modern Painters 56; on
Regent’s Park 185 Turner 215
Reichenbach, river 176; falls 777 Russell, Herbert David 138', death 138
Reid, R. 54 Ruthin 258
Reiss, Frederick Augustus g Rymer, Frederick: death 262
Rejected Addresses: see Smith, J. and H.
Rembrandt 245 Saddle Hill 232
Rethel, Alfred 32 Sadowa, battle 145
Reuss, river 170 St Alban’s Cathedral 188-7
Reynolds, Sir Joshua 108, 245 St Alban’s Hall (‘Alban Hall’) 7
Rhine, river 169 St Asaph 257 (2) Cathedral 257, 260
;
35» 56; Henry VI 35, 56; Henry VIII Smith, John Simm, H’s uncle (‘Uncle
35, 56; King Lear quot. 16 (‘gallow’); John’) 159, 217, 226
Love's Labour's Lost quot. 278 (‘Thou Smith, Dr John Simm, H’s grandfather
for whom .’); Macbeth quot. 2y8 (‘Grandpapa’) 136, 139, 151
—
. .
Shrubs of the Ancients: see Daubeny 49; —quot. 281 (‘Wrapt in . .*) .
H3 Tosi, Fr 260 \
at Richmond 153, 189; drowning 55, 59 (2). «35 (a), «37. »4o; »
167; valley 250, 256 Devon 153-6
Theocritus 61
Thdodule, pass and glacier 182 Valtoumanches 182 (2)
Theophrastus J2g, 130 Vatican Council 202 Michael Angelo’s
:
;
Peasants* 257; ‘Clyde* 767; ‘Esau and from 755, 160; his marriage 241 j also
Jacob* 767; ‘Two Sisters* 237 ‘Wife 166, 229 (3)
of Pygmalion, The* 167 Wood Eaton 135
Weber, Otto: ‘A country lane* 143 Woodycr, Henry 136
Weggis (‘Waggis’) 171 Woollcombe (‘Woolcombe*, ‘Woolks’),
Weisshorn, mt. 180, 18 Edward Cooper 16
^
Ii6n (‘the heavy and . . .’) To the Yorkshire: rivers in 14; dialect (|9
Cuckoo (‘O blithe New-comer . .’) . Younan, Br 243
quot. and examined 95-96, 102, iii
Wortley, Archibald Stuart: ‘In Wharn- Zanzibar (‘Zanquebar’) 21
Ghace* 2^7
cliffe Zeno 127
Wyatt-Edgell, Alfred Thomas (later Zermatt 179, 180 (2); valley i8o\(2)
Lord Braye) 168 185 Zug, lake 1 70 \
1 7
INDEX III
References are for the most part grouped alphabetically under a general heading,
c.g. Art,Clouds, Words.
A page number is printed in italics when the passage to which the index refers
has been annotated.
pigeon 239; wren 227 165; barrow 65, 66; brassy 181, 212;
brindled and hatched 210, 216, 218;
Blandyke 227, 228, 234, 258, 2G2
bulk, bulky 134, 181, 207; candle-
Bones: sleeved in flesh 72
Book of Common Prayer, The 1
wax 201; cellular 210; chain of, in
1
chains 142, 149, 208; chalking,
Bridges: floating (at Southampton)
chalky 72, 150, 151, 205; coil, coiled,
216; suspension (at Bristol) 256;
coiling 138, 193, 212; combs 143,
Teign, over the 251
260; comet-shaped 143, 161 ; crisped,
Brotherhood of the Holy Trinity
crisping, crispy 142, 154, 187; crops
(‘B.H.T.’) 17
or slices 190; curdled, curds and
‘burl’, ‘burling’ 130, 251, 256
whey, 66, 137, 141, 142, 146, 168,
210; curl, curled 145, 156; damask,
‘cads’ 133 damasking 27, 207; dapple of,
Camps (ancient) Caesar’s 195; Danish
:
dappled 146, 150, 236; dirty,
J54» 253; ‘forths’ 198 scudlike 138, 139, 141; dropping
Candles: form of apparition 198; 1 83 ; eggs on an ant-hill 219; eyebrow
smoke 204; wax gulturings 173; also 181, 184, 204; feather 150, 153, 218;
236 featherbed 170; flake, flaked, flaky
‘canting* 262 142, 181, 193, 264, 218, 260; flat-
Castles: see Index II Clitheroe, Den- bottomed 207, 208; fleece 142, 192
bigh, Derby, Dumbarton, Edinburgh, (see below wool); flix 153, 156, 164,
Peel. 166, 192; ‘flock’, ‘flock of sheep’ 150,
Casuistry 8i 170; flosses 224; flue 171, 181; foiled
; ;
163; mackerel, mackerel ling 138, Costume, dress: Irish 187; Swiss 172-3;
*39» marching, moving in Tissot’s pictures, in 247
rank 207, 208; marestail 142, 161, Criticism: scientific basis 75-76; taste,
260; mealy, meal-white 67, 72, 208; in matters of 86-87
meridian 143, 168; meshy 192; Cross: Danish 224; engraved 221;
mooded, moody 163, 166; mottle, ‘stations’ 771
mottling 143, 153, 154 (2), 168; Crowd: composition 139
moulded, moulding 134, 137, 141, Crystals:mud 201 ; paste 189
148, 155, 205, 207, 208, 210,
154, Cures: miraculous 157, 261
ovcrlacing 135; oyster-shell 139, Cynicism 123
148, 205; pack 204, 205; parallel 66,
69, 139; pearled, pearling, pearly Danish soldiers’ and sailors’ relief fund
142, 196, 249; pellet, pcllettcd 138, 20
142, 165, 176, 216; pied 135, 205, Death: associations of the dead 141;
219, 234, 261; pillow 201; plotted casualties at Sadowa 145; mark of
212, 216; rack 142, 150-1, 164, 210, early 260; murder of the English
216, 260; rib, ribbed, ribbing 27, ‘Lords’ 202; murder of the hostages
143, 164, 170, 204, 205, 207, 216; 210-11
river 260; rocky 212; rope, roped, Decoration, design: earthenware 155-
roping, ropy 138, 158, 212, 240, 258; 6; embroidery 254; which seems im-
rosette, rosetting 207, 216; rotten, perishable 120
rotten-woven 184, 207; ruddled 142, See also Architecture
192; scaly, fish-scale 147, 151 ; scarf- Drama: chromatic 76; Greek 96, 114;
ends, scarves 148, 165, 185, 210; pathos 195; tragic irony 96; unity 97
seam 166, 201; set or current 165; Dream, dreaming: consciousness of
shire, shire-long 204, 249 ; spines 193-4; nightmare 238
138, 139, H3; stack, stacked 135, Dress: see Costume
185, 201, 212; streamer 138,
204, 224, 231; suffused with light Earthquake 205
145; tails 138, 145; tender after rain Education 80
190; thread, thready 151, 184; Electricity in wool 196
‘traveller’s’, travelling 185, 207; Emotion: cause 195; instress imposed
tretted moss 142, 156; tuft, tufted, by 215; tears 218
tufty 134, 138, 145, 156, 196, 201, ‘entasis’ 199, 205
189, 212, 233; IXlk€s /j/; preserva- atic and diatonic scale 104, 106;
tive against 226; shock from 221 church 84; concerts {q.v.); Fanny’s
Literature fortunate losses 49
:
(Aunt) music book 44; finger-glasses
Lock, lock-gates 8. See also Water i6y; Hebrew poetry, musical origin
Logic: induction and example ^9; in of 267; Kensington Museum, instru-
morals 81; also 10, 104 ments in /j/, 2J7-8 ; Millicent’s piano
Lovers: chatterings 37; killed by light- playing 143, 149; ^my music seemed
ning 24 to come to an end’ 258; new Realism
1 20 not symmetrical 88 Parnassian
; ;
Moon, moonlight: blue iris, blue spot Ordination 137, 259, 260
1 61, 218; eclipse 157-8, 220; lake, on ‘outscape’ 184
184; lunar halo 163, 218; lunar
rainbow 220; river, on 14 1, 169, 189; Painting: Bavarian 148; Belgian (Flem-
roofs, on 1G9; Venus, opposite 161; ish) 33, I 44 » 148, I 49 > 164; com-
also 23, 58, 237, 257 position 94, 120 (unity), 248 (in-
Morality: amusement, may end in scape) ; decline 79; Dusseldorf 31, 33;
122-3; heauty, analogy with 80-81; English 142-3, 149, 167, 240, 244-7,
consistency the highest excellence 83 248; French 31, 33, 144, 149, 164;
duty to oneself 1 24 ; historical theory German 170; inscape (q.v,); Italian
80; logical, whether 81; objective 168, 172, 173, 237, 241; Japanese
and subjective, political and personal (imitation) 247; missal 77; Parnas-
80-81, 122-4; political virtues not sian 38; pattern (lines and dots) 103;
the whole 123; utilitarian theory poetry in no; ,
—
more chromatic
80-85, 122, 123 than iii; portraits 55, 142, 186;
Mortification 59 Preraphaelite 30, 31, 79, 164;
Mountains, hills: air of persons 171; realism 77-79; ,
—
new realist school
Alps, Index II; Black Forest 169;
see 142 ; examples 237, 241, 244, 247,
cloud shadows on Wye 140; Dart- 248; scaping {q,v.)
moor, see Index II; horn 4; inscape Exhibitions and galleries visited:
180; Oxford, near 17, I33"4i Rhine Agnew’s, Hunt’s Shadow of Death at
\ ; ,
;
Parks: set Index II Gowdray, Denne, also 24, 147, 150, 151, 106, 173,
Richmond, Ugbrooke 186; harebells 172 (2); hemlock 136;
Pathos 195, 290 hemp 179; herb, some graceml 263;
Periodicals and magazines: Academy, hibiscus 61, 192; honeysuckle 166,
The 262; Christian Remembrancer, The 189, 206, 219; hops 168; hyicinths
60 Church Times, The 37; Cornhill
\ 54» 55; iris, flag-flower 136, 146, 141,
Magazine 14, 1 7 (‘A Trip to Xanadu’) 211, 219, 220, 232; ivy 243,^ 251;
Englishman's Magazine, The 34 Essays;
lilies 140; lucerne 772; maize, 179;
and Reviews 36', Moniteur 146; National marjoram 62; nymphoea scutifolid 132;
Review, The 34, 6b; North British Re- oats 144; oleander 169; orchis 24,
view, The 6b; Pall Mall Gazette 73; 134; oxeyes 138; pansies 39; parsley
Spectator, The 63; Times, The 56, 165; 147; pinks, Alpine 179; plantain
Union Review, The 70; Univers 241 172; potentilla 175; primroses, de-
Philistine 107 scriptive phrases 54, 55 (2);
— —
Philosophy: cynic 123; empirical 122; instress of 206; also 24, 57, 135,
idea of development 1 1 9-20 ; ortho- 190, 208; ragwort 259; rampion
doxy 1 19; Plato, of 1 1 5-1 7; realism (‘spiked flower’) 772; rapefield 231;
120, 127; stoic 123. roses 25, 143 (2), 167, 236; rue 61,
See also Metaphysics, Platonism, 147, 242; ryefields 249; St John’s
Utilitarianism wort 143, 220; scabious 251 ; snakes’-
Physiology ii8 head (fritillary) 24, 133, 779 (‘tulip-
Plants, flowers: Alpine 172, 174-3, 179; like flower’); Solomon’s seal 136,
frost (q.v.); hedges, green daylight 779; sorrel 138; traghneans 198;
161; inscape in behaviour 21 1; Isle traveller’s joy 147, 251; tulip 136;
of Man, on 222 ; leaf of flower held valotta 260; vetch 135; Victoria regia
against the light 207 ; meadows 132; violets, Alpine 174; — colour
peaked 47; snow {q.v.) and smell 206; — ,
,
horned 2ri; —
Particular: agapanthus 260; agri- also 39, 1 34 ; virgin’s brier 226 ; water
mony 257; alchemilla (‘bigger-leaved lily 192; wheat, green 20; —
, red
one’) 774; Alpine rose 175, 178; 147; — also 144, 249; wood-sorrel
auriculas 222; autumn crocus 39; 162, 206
barley 144, 235; bindweeds 147; Platonism never could be a system 1 1 7
:
gathering 243; —
also 54, ‘Ploughtail’ 2x6
134 (2), 135, 161; brambles, briars Poetry: afternoon of 119; artificial 38;
150, 206, 222, 251; bryony 6i, Castalian 38; conditions and restric-
797, 248; buttercups, in Magdalen tions in relation to beauty 79, 100-2;
meadow 137; —mass floating 139; deflnitions 84, 106, 107, 108, 289;
— ,
also 138, 174, 231; cabbages 143; doggerel 107, 267, 290; Elizabethan
campion 135; carnations 143; cclan- 10; emphasis 98, 106; Greek antho-
^ne 218; chamomile (‘ox-eye-like’) logies 79; inscape of speech 289,
J44; chervil 162, 174; clematis 61, inspiration, of 38; language (diction)
193; comfrey 21 1\ corn, under rain 38, 76, 84-85 ; lyrical, central idea in
*83; ,
—young 57; —
also 166, 167; 1 12; no royal road to 23; notes for
cornflowers 179; cowslips 23, 24, 46, 57; nursery rhyme 133 (‘Vio-
134; crocus 57; crosswort 257; lante ...’); Olympian 38; painting
daffodils 190, 208; daisies 134, 222, {q.v.); par^lelisms 19; Parnassian
‘splay’ 199, 216, 222, 239 in 85; pitch of 119; unity, effort at
‘stalled’, ‘stalling’ 194, 196, 21 83-
‘stands’ 136 ‘throes’ 203
beauty comes
Stars, planets: ‘all that Thunder, thunderstorms 141, 151 (2),
home’ 254; Andromeda 228; Antares >55» 183 (2), 189 (2), 212, 221, 230,
181; Bear 200; Gapella 170; Cassi- 233-4, 244. See also Lightning
opeia 170; eclipse, during 158; falling Tichbourne (‘Titchborne’) trial je/y-iB,
200, 227-8; Jupiter 153; morning 241 (2)
147; opposite bays of the sky, in 193; Tradition 185
Perseus 170, 228; Plough 170; Trees, shrubs: art, in 77; Australia 190;
similes 17, 37, 46-47; Taurus 181; branch-heads 50; budded 190, 230;
‘twiring’ 181; Venus 161 (2), 162 copses 134, 153, 154; distance, at a
(2). 217 137, 144, 145, 150; droop, drooping
Stoicism 123 144 (2)7 150; E. counties, in 187;
‘stress’:‘Being’ in Parmenides, in rela- felling 189, 218, 230, 240; France, in
tion to 127 (2), 129; heat, of 203; 147, 148; frost on 193, 239, 240;
sleep, in relation to 238 (2) ; sorrow, gate made by 23^; grey light under
o£ 195; water at Holywell, of 261; 260; house cushioned by 222;
waves returning 221 inscape {q.v.) instress {g.v.) Isle of
; ;
Sun, sunlight: ace 154, 196; beams on Man, in 222; Latin and Greek names
horizon opposite sunset 210, si6, 61-62; leaves falling 239, 240; —
232; behind cloud 48, 141, 200; bim- new 136; —
, scaping 192; ,
—
warp
bcams 233; ‘bursts’ 162; clouds 210; lobes 65, 72; mist, in (against
against and below 207 colour, effect ;
sun) 239; moonlight 23; orchards
i ,,;
;, ,
,,
—
also 94, 140, 145,
148, 192, 196, 210; laurel 62; lotus
196; sold ‘top and lop’ 191 ‘sprayed ; 61; mastich 61; mulberry 137, 192;
all one way’ 182; spraying 171; oak, curve (parabolic) 23, 89-90,
Spring colour 230; sunset 255; 153; — Great Rawber 253; law —
Switzerland, in 170, 171; theory of
,
—
organization
65; viol-headed, &c. 65, 151 (‘elms’) I44~~y^ — > roots 67;
,
Spanish, —
waterfall, at neck of 182; wind in
39, wrecked in gale ig2', ,
,
Turkey 196,—
144, 192, 233 239»247; —
also 134, 140,141, 142, 146
acacia 61; alder 235;
Particular',
(3), M7» M8, 150, 15^ 152 (2), 154,
apple 24, 134 (2), 1 51, 250; ash, 156, 165, 168, 214; olive 254; osier
boughs 23, 140; —
clusters 67, 177, 134* 189; palms 58; pine-buds 144;
182; —,
,
Dennc Park, in 146; — plane 137, 144, 154, 1 71, 254; poplar,
felled 215, 218, 230; —
inscape of forming a gate post 239', Lom- —
spraying 200, 205 -6, 254, 259;
,
also 72, 134 (2), 154, 155, 210, sloe 61; strawberry 154, 222; syco-
222, 223, 235, 253; aspen 139, 141, rnore, leaves, clusters 145, 206, 210,
147; azalea 62; beech, copper 136; 218; — Switzerland, in 175, 176
— determining planes 143, 144;
, — ,
(‘inscaped’), 182; —
also 137, 139,
leaves 135, 136, 165 (‘floral sit’), 239, 142, 155, 253; syringa 167; tamarisk
253; — M3; —
sun and 179 222; vine 61, 169, 179, 184;
wind in 233; —
also 72, 145, 171,
j
—
smell 249; —
warp 1385 139, 190 (see above osiers) ; wych-
249; — ,
—
leaves (fans) See also Woods
89-95 passim, loi, 133, 145, 162, ‘tretted’ 142, 156, 177
164, 165, 190; shadow 137; — ‘tuipid’ 8
Spanish 141, 145, i68, 179, 182, 189,
224, 235, 239; —
also 135 (2), 152,
Utilitarianism 80-85, 122, 123
169, 189, 201 ; cornel 4; coronillabi
cytisus 61; elder 61; elm, blackness
757; — branches, boughs 57, 137; ‘versed’ 208
— ,
,
—
Roehampton, in 84, 102, 108, 283, 284, 287, 288;
189 (2) I—, sky, against 150, 152; ballad 287; beat, see below rhythm;
trunks 136; —
also 23, 24, 62, 134 (2), caesura 273, 280-1, 283; Celtic 288;
135 (3 )> 142, M8, m8, 192, 198, 2M, Chinese 288; choruses 289; counter-
230* 249; fig 156; fir, Scotch 157; point 278, 279, 280, 281, 282; defini-
— Switzerland, in 170, 171, 172; tions 267, 289; English, accentual
— —
— ,
also 17, 22, 135 (2), M4» 198; 276, 277; alexandrine 281;
genista 61 ;gum
190; hawthorn (may) hexameter 274;
,
— alliteration 284;
55, 61, 136, 137, 161, 162, 218 — imperfect rhymes 285-6;
,
—
(‘quick’); hazel, catkins 161, 189,
,
M7i ^53; holly 155; hornbeam 218; rhythm; figure of sound 267, 290;
ilex 156; larch 22, 180, 183, 253; French alexandrine 281 ; ,
counted —
) ,
; ;
,
bossy 67; crest of a ripple 171; 160; sk and sc 46; slang 10, 15, 16;
crispings 144; drops 23, 175, 233; Slavonic 36; Teutonic 12, 274; Welsh
fall in shreds 12; fountains 169; 34, 258, 263; Yorkshire 49
glacier, in a 181; Holywell, at 261; Select list of words: bore 10; braids
knitted brook 65; lake 170; lock (or 190; bug-bear 36; bushy 46; ‘cads’ 133;
lasher), through a 5, 79; pail, in a chouse 16; clamy clammy, cling, clarty,
1 78 ; plant or rootwork of brooks 1 82 clay 8, 15; clamp 155; concelebrate 163;
reflection of willow 139; ribs 67; corn 4; cover 50; crack 5; crank 5;
rock, over 172, 178; rock-pools 224, crook, crick 5; crown 4; dank, damp 44;
235; rushing 176, 177; St Winefred’s dhu 1 57 dish 46 ; drill, trill i o ; drip 191;
Well 258, 261; sunken stone, over dujfer 15; earwig 9, ^7\fadge 16; ‘fash*
67; tinkling 145; water-runs 157, 5; fick 49; 1 2 ; 1 1 ; flaw, flare
201, 205; waterspout 230; weed-beds fledge 11; flick ii, 12; flow ii;
182; ‘wheel* 21 1 ; wimpling 175; flower 1 3 ; fluster, flutter 1 1 ; fly, flee 1 1
wine mixed with 224 folds 1 91; fond on 16; foot 7; gaily,
See also River, Sea, Waterfall gallow 16; grin 4; grind 5, 7, 10 ; greet,
Waterfall, cascade 1 70, 1 72, 1 73, 1 76-7, grief 5; grindlestone 191; goblin 36;
178, 180, 182, 233, 235 growth 4; grunt 7; gulf, golf 25; gust
Waterwheel 223 10; hail 7; hale, haul 12; hawk 15;
Waves; see Sea heal, hale 1 2 ; hernshaw 1 2 ; hold, hilt 1 2
;
hump, hunk 44; keel 12, 31 ; lather 1 1 22; whisket 190; wick, wig 47; wick
lazy 15; lead igi; lum 21 1; maid, 49; mging 9, 47
mead 4; milk 13; ‘mizmaze’ xg; mucus Select words used by H arc indexed
16; naus 13; nuts to him* g;
. . separately: see accidented, Bidding,
neatherd 13; nesh 160; ‘nibs* 154, 155; burl, cads, canting, entasis, flix,
non 3 ; opiniatrety 1 7 ; peak 47 ; pregnant flush, foredraw, forepitch, frank,
16; premim 10; pudder 17; put ig; gadroon, globeish, idiom, inlaw,
reech, reek204; renew 25; row 50; sail inscape, inset, install, instress, jod-
211; scoff 25; school 12, 25, 32, 254; jodding, jut-jotted, margaretted, off-
‘scout* 6 & n.; shadow 12; shaw 12; scape, outscape, Ploughtail, quain,
shear, shower 12; shell 25, 31, 32; scape, scopeless, screw-set, scuppled,
‘shrimpled up’ 167; skill 25, 31; scurl, sided, splay, stalled, stands,
skim 12; skip 12; skull 12, 25, 31, 32; stress, swaled, throes, tretted, turpid,
slip spit 16; steel, star 47; stickles versed
219; suant 251; tall 10; than, then 13; World: bole, burl and roundness 251;
tire 10; twig 47; twirc, twiring 47, sea warped to the round 222