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Transcribed from the 1886 Cassell & Company edition by David Price,
email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
TRAVELS IN ENGLAND IN 1782
INTRODUCTION
Charles P. Moritz’s “Travels, chiefly on foot, through several
parts of England in 1782, described in Letters to a Friend,” were
translated from the German by a lady, and published in 1795. John
Pinkerton included them in the second volume of his Collection of Voyages
and Travels.
The writer of this account of England as it was about a hundred years
ago, and seven years before the French Revolution, was a young Prussian
clergyman, simply religious, calmly enthusiastic for the freer forms
of citizenship, which he found in England and contrasted with the military
system of Berlin. The touch of his times was upon him, with some
of the feeling that caused Frenchmen, after the first outbreak of the
Revolution, to hail Englishmen as “their forerunners in the glorious
race.” He had learnt English at home, and read Milton, whose
name was inscribed then in German literature on the banners of the free.
In 1782 Charles Moritz came to England with little in his purse and
“Paradise Lost” in his pocket, which he meant to read in
the Land of Milton. He came ready to admire, and enthusiasm adds
some colour to his earliest impressions; but when they were coloured
again by hard experience, the quiet living sympathy remained.
There is nothing small in the young Pastor Moritz, we feel a noble nature
in his true simplicity of character.
He stayed seven weeks with us, three of them in London. He travelled
on foot to Richmond, Windsor, Oxford, Birmingham, and Matlock, with
some experience of a stage coach on the way back; and when, in dread
of being hurled from his perch on the top as the coach flew down hill,
he tried a safer berth among the luggage in the basket, he had further
experience. It was like that of Hood’s old lady, in the
same place of inviting shelter, who, when she crept out, had only breath
enough left to murmur, “Oh, them boxes!”
Pastor Moritz’s experience of inns was such as he hardly could
pick up in these days of the free use of the feet. But in those
days everybody who was anybody rode. And even now, there might
be cold welcome to a shabby-looking pedestrian without a knapsack.
Pastor Moritz had his Milton in one pocket and his change of linen in
the other. From some inns he was turned away as a tramp, and in
others he found cold comfort. Yet he could be proud of a bit of
practical wisdom drawn by himself out of the “Vicar of Wakefield,”
that taught him to conciliate the innkeeper by drinking with him; and
the more the innkeeper drank of the ale ordered the better, because
Pastor Moritz did not like it, and it did not like him. He also
felt experienced in the ways of the world when, having taken example
from the manners of a bar-maid, if he drank in a full room he did not
omit to say, “Your healths, gentlemen all.”
Fielding’s Parson Adams, with his Æschylus in his pocket,
and Parson Moritz with his Milton, have points of likeness that bear
strong witness to Fielding’s power of entering into the spirit
of a true and gentle nature. After the first touches of enthusiastic
sentiment, that represent real freshness of enjoyment, there is no reaction
to excess in opposite extreme. The young foot traveller settles
down to simple truth, retains his faith in English character, and reports
ill-usage without a word of bitterness.
The great charm of this book is its unconscious expression of the writer’s
character. His simple truthfulness presents to us of 1886 as much
of the England of 1782 as he was able to see with eyes full of intelligence
and a heart full of kindness. He heard Burke speak on the death
of his friend and patron Lord Rockingham, with sudden rebuke to an indolent
and inattentive house. He heard young Pitt, and saw how he could
fix, boy as he looked, every man’s attention.
“Oh, wad some power the giftie gie us
To see oursels as others see us!
It wad frae many a blunder free us,
And foolish notion.”
And when the power is so friendly as that of the Pastor Moritz, we may,
if wise, know ourselves better than from a thousand satires, but if
foolish we may let all run into self-praise.
H. M.
CHAPTER I.
On the Thames, 31st May.
At length, my dearest Gedike, I find myself safely landed on the
happy shores of that country, a sight of which has, for many years,
been my most earnest wish; and whither I have so often in imagination
transported myself. A few hours ago the green hills of England
yet swam imperfectly before our eyes, scarcely perceptible in the distant
horizon: they now unfold themselves on either side, forming as it were
a double amphitheatre. The sun bursts through the clouds, and
gilds alternately the shrubs and meadows on the distant shores, and
we now espy the tops of two masts of ships just peeping above the surface
of the deep. What an awful warning to adventurous men! We
now sail close by those very sands (the Goodwin) where so many unfortunate
persons have found their graves.
The shores now regularly draw nearer to each other: the danger of the
voyage is over; and the season for enjoyment, unembittered by cares,
commences. How do we feel ourselves, we, who have long been wandering
as it were, in a boundless space, on having once more gained prospects
that are not without limits! I should imagine our sensations as
somewhat like those of the traveller who traverses the immeasurable
deserts of America, when fortunately he obtains a hut wherein to shelter
himself; in those moments he certainly enjoys himself; nor does he then
complain of its being too small. It is indeed the lot of man to
be always circumscribed to a narrow space, even when he wanders over
the most extensive regions; even when the huge sea envelops him all
around, and wraps him close to its bosom, in the act, as it were, of
swallowing him up in a moment: still he is separated from all the circumjacent
immensity of space only by one small part, or insignificant portion
of that immensity.
That portion of this space, which I now see surrounding me, is a most
delightful selection from the whole of beautiful nature. Here
is the Thames full of large and small ships and boats, dispersed here
and there, which are either sailing on with us, or lying at anchor;
and there the hills on either side, clad with so soft and mild a green,
as I have nowhere else ever seen equalled. The charming banks
of the Elbe, which I so lately quitted, are as much surpassed by these
shores as autumn is by spring! I see everywhere nothing but fertile
and cultivated lands; and those living hedges which in England more
than in any other country, form the boundaries of the green cornfields,
and give to the whole of the distant country the appearance of a large
and majestic garden. The neat villages and small towns with sundry
intermediate country seats, suggest ideas of prosperity and opulence
which is not possible to describe.
The prospect towards Gravesend is particularly beautiful. It is
a clever little town, built on the side of a hill; about which there
lie hill and dale and meadows, and arable land, intermixed with pleasure
grounds and country seats; all diversified in the most agreeable manner.
On one of the highest of these hills near Gravesend stands a windmill,
which is a very good object, as you see it at some distance, as well
as part of the country around it, on the windings of the Thames.
But as few human pleasures are ever complete and perfect, we too, amidst
the pleasing contemplation of all these beauties, found ourselves exposed
on the quarter-deck to uncommonly cold and piercing weather. An
unintermitting violent shower of rain has driven me into the cabin,
where I am now endeavouring to divert a gloomy hour by giving you the
description of a pleasing one.
CHAPTER II.
London, 2nd June.
This morning those of us who were fellow passengers together in
the great cabin, being six in number, requested to be set on shore in
a boat, a little before the vessel got to Dartford, which is still sixteen
miles from London. This expedient is generally adopted, instead
of going up the Thames, towards London, where on account of the astonishing
number of ships, which are always more crowded together the nearer you
approach the city, it frequently requires many days before a ship can
finish her passage. He therefore who wishes to lose no time unnecessarily,
and wishes also to avoid other inconveniences, such as frequent stoppages,
and perhaps, some alarming dashings against other ships, prefers travelling
those few miles by land in a post-chaise, which is not very expensive,
especially when three join together, as three passengers pay no more
than one. This indulgence is allowed by act of parliament.
As we left the vessel we were honoured with a general huzza, or in the
English phrase with three cheers, echoed from the German sailors of
our ship. This nautical style of bidding their friends farewell
our Germans have learned from the English. The cliff where we
landed was white and chalky, and as the distance was not great, nor
other means of conveyance at hand, we resolved to go on foot to Dartford:
immediately on landing we had a pretty steep hill to climb, and that
gained, we arrived at the first English village, where an uncommon neatness
in the structure of the houses, which in general are built with red
bricks and flat roofs, struck me with a pleasing surprise, especially
when I compared them with the long, rambling, inconvenient, and singularly
mean cottages of our peasants. We now continued our way through
the different villages, each furnished with his staff, and thus exhibited
no remote resemblance of a caravan. Some few people who met us
seemed to stare at us, struck, perhaps, by the singularity of our dress,
or the peculiarity of our manner of travelling. On our route we
passed a wood where a troop of gipsies had taken up their abode around
a fire under a tree. The country, as we continued to advance,
became more and more beautiful. Naturally, perhaps, the earth
is everywhere pretty much alike, but how different is it rendered by
art! How different is that on which I now tread from ours, and
every other spot I have ever seen. The soil is rich even to exuberance,
the verdure of the trees and hedges, in short the whole of this paradisaical
region is without a parallel! The roads too are incomparable;
I am astonished how they have got them so firm and solid; every step
I took I felt, and was conscious it was English ground on which I trod.
We breakfasted at Dartford. Here, for the first time, I saw an
English soldier, in his red uniform, his hair cut short and combed back
on his forehead, so as to afford a full view of his fine, broad, manly
face. Here too I first saw (what I deemed a true English fight)
in the street, two boys boxing.
Our little party now separated, and got into two post-chaises, each
of which hold three persons, though it must be owned three cannot sit
quite so commodiously in these chaises as two: the hire of a post-chaise
is a shilling for every English mile. They may be compared to
our extra posts, because they are to be had at all times. But
these carriages are very neat and lightly built, so that you hardly
perceive their motion as they roll along these firm smooth roads; they
have windows in front, and on both sides. The horses are generally
good, and the postillions particularly smart and active, and always
ride on a full trot. The one we had wore his hair cut short, a
round hat, and a brown jacket of tolerable fine cloth, with a nosegay
in his bosom. Now and then, when he drove very hard, he looked
round, and with a smile seemed to solicit our approbation. A thousand
charming spots, and beautiful landscapes, on which my eye would long
have dwelt with rapture, were now rapidly passed with the speed of an
arrow.
Our road appeared to be undulatory, and our journey, like the journey
of life, seemed to be a pretty regular alternation of up hill and down,
and here and there it was diversified with copses and woods; the majestic
Thames every now and then, like a little forest of masts, rising to
our view, and anon losing itself among the delightful towns and villages.
The amazing large signs which at the entrance of villages hang in the
middle of the street, being fastened to large beams, which are extended
across the street from one house to another opposite to it, particularly
struck me; these sign-posts have the appearance of gates or of gateways,
for which I at first took them, but the whole apparatus, unnecessarily
large as it seems to be, is intended for nothing more than to tell the
inquisitive traveller that there is an inn. At length, stunned
as it were by this constant rapid succession of interesting objects
to engage our attention, we arrived at Greenwich nearly in a state of
stupefaction.
The Prospect of London.
We first descried it enveloped in a thick smoke or fog. St.
Paul’s arose like some huge mountain above the enormous mass of
smaller buildings. The Monument, a very lofty column, erected
in memory of the great fire of London, exhibited to us, perhaps, chiefly
on account of its immense height, apparently so disproportioned to its
other dimensions (for it actually struck us as resembling rather a slender
mast, towering up in immeasurable height into the clouds, than as that
it really is, a stately obelisk) an unusual and singular appearance.
Still we went on, and drew nearer and nearer with amazing velocity,
and the surrounding objects became every moment more distinct.
Westminster Abbey, the Tower, a steeple, one church, and then another,
presented themselves to our view; and we could now plainly distinguish
the high round chimneys on the tops of the houses, which yet seemed
to us to form an innumerable number of smaller spires, or steeples.
The road from Greenwich to London is actually busier and far more alive
than the most frequented streets in Berlin. At every step we met
people on horseback, in carriages, and foot passengers; and everywhere
also, and on each side of the road, well-built and noble houses, whilst
all along, at proper distances, the road was lined with lamp-posts.
One thing, in particular, struck and surprised me not a little.
This was the number of people we met riding and walking with spectacles
on, among whom were many who appeared stout, healthy, and young.
We were stopped at least three times at barriers or gates, here called
turnpikes, to pay a duty or toll which, however small, as being generally
paid in their copper coinage, in the end amounted to some shillings.
At length we arrived at the magnificent bridge of Westminster.
The prospect from this bridge alone seems to afford one the epitome
of a journey, or a voyage in miniature, as containing something of everything
that mostly occurs on a journey. It is a little assemblage of
contrasts and contrarieties. In contrast to the round, modern,
and majestic cathedral of St. Paul’s on your right, the venerable,
old-fashioned, and hugely noble, long abbey of Westminster, with its
enormous pointed roof, rises on the left. Down the Thames to the
right you see Blackfriar’s Bridge, which does not yield much,
if at all, in beauty to that of Westminster; on the left bank of the
Thames are delightful terraces, planted with trees, and those new tasteful
buildings called the Adelphi. On the Thames itself are countless
swarms of little boats passing and repassing, many with one mast and
one sail, and many with none, in which persons of all ranks are carried
over. Thus there is hardly less stir and bustle on this river,
than there is in some of its own London’s crowded streets.
Here, indeed, you no longer see great ships, for they come no farther
than London Bridge
We now drove into the city by Charing Cross, and along the Strand, to
those very Adelphi Buildings which had just afforded us so charming
a prospect on Westminster Bridge.
My two travelling companions, both in the ship and the post-chaise,
were two young Englishmen, who living in this part of the town, obligingly
offered me any assistance and services in their power, and in particular,
to procure me a lodging the same day in their neighbourhood.
In the streets through which we passed, I must own the houses in general
struck me as if they were dark and gloomy, and yet at the same time
they also struck me as prodigiously great and majestic. At that
moment, I could not in my own mind compare the external view of London
with that of any other city I had ever before seen. But I remember
(and surely it is singular) that about five years ago, on my first entrance
into Leipzig, I had the very same sensations I now felt. It is
possible that the high houses, by which the streets at Leipzig are partly
darkened, the great number of shops, and the crowd of people, such as
till then I had never seen, might have some faint resemblance with the
scene now surrounding me in London.
There are everywhere leading from the Strand to the Thames, some well-built,
lesser, or subordinate streets, of which the Adelphi Buildings are now
by far the foremost. One district in this neighbourhood goes by
the name of York Buildings, and in this lies George Street, where my
two travelling companions lived. There reigns in those smaller
streets towards the Thames so pleasing a calm, compared to the tumult
and bustle of people, and carriages, and horses, that are constantly
going up and down the Strand, that in going into one of them you can
hardly help fancying yourself removed at a distance from the noise of
the city, even whilst the noisiest part of it is still so near at hand.
It might be about ten or eleven o’clock when we arrived here.
After the two Englishmen had first given me some breakfast at their
lodgings, which consisted of tea and bread and butter, they went about
with me themselves, in their own neighbourhood, in search of an apartment,
which they at length procured for me for sixteen shillings a week, at
the house of a tailor’s widow who lived opposite to them.
It was very fortunate, on other accounts, that they went with me, for
equipped as I was, having neither brought clean linen nor change of
clothes from my trunk, I might perhaps have found it difficult to obtain
good lodgings.
It was a very uncommon but pleasing sensation I experienced on being
now, for the first time in my life, entirely among Englishmen: among
people whose language was foreign, their manners foreign, and in a foreign
climate, with whom, notwithstanding, I could converse as familiarly
as though we had been educated together from our infancy. It is
certainly an inestimable advantage to understand the language of the
country through which you travel. I did not at first give the
people I was with any reason to suspect I could speak English, but I
soon found that the more I spoke, the more attention and regard I met
with. I now occupy a large room in front on the ground floor,
which has a carpet and mats, and is very neatly furnished; the chairs
are covered with leather, and the tables are of mahogany. Adjoining
to this I have another large room. I may do just as I please,
and keep my own tea, coffee, bread and butter, for which purpose my
landlady has given me a cupboard in my room, which locks up.
The family consists of the mistress of the house, her maid, and her
two sons, Jacky and Jerry; singular abbreviations for John and Jeremiah.
The eldest, Jacky, about twelve years old, is a very lively boy, and
often entertains me in the most pleasing manner by relating to me his
different employments at school, and afterwards desiring me in my turn
to relate to him all manner of things about Germany. He repeats
his amo, amas, amavi, in the same singing tone
as our common school-boys. As I happened once when he was by,
to hum a lively tune, he stared at me with surprise, and then reminded
me it was Sunday; and so, that I might not forfeit his good opinion
by any appearance of levity, I gave him to understand that, in the hurry
of my journey, I had forgotten the day. He has already shown me
St. James’s Park, which is not far from hence; and now let me
give you some description of the renowned
St. James’s Park.
The park is nothing more than a semicircle, formed of an alley of
trees, which enclose a large green area in the middle of which is a
marshy pond.
The cows feed on this green turf, and their milk is sold here on the
spot, quite new.
In all the alleys or walks there are benches, where you may rest yourself.
When you come through the Horse Guards (which is provided with several
passages) into the park, on the right hand is St. James’s Palace,
or the king’s place of residence, one of the meanest public buildings
in London. At the lower end, quite at the extremity, is the queen’s
palace, a handsome and modern building, but very much resembling a private
house. As for the rest, there are generally everywhere about St.
James’s Park very good houses, which is a great addition to it.
There is also before the semicircle of the trees just mentioned a large
vacant space, where the soldiers are exercised.
How little this famous park is to be compared with our park at Berlin,
I need not mention. And yet one cannot but form a high idea of
St. James’s Park and other public places in London; this arises,
perhaps, from their having been oftener mentioned in romances and other
books than ours have. Even the squares and streets of London are
more noted and better known than many of our principal towns.
But what again greatly compensates for the mediocrity of this park,
is the astonishing number of people who, towards evening in fine weather,
resort here; our finest walks are never so full even in the midst of
summer. The exquisite pleasure of mixing freely with such a concourse
of people, who are for the most part well-dressed and handsome, I have
experienced this evening for the first time.
Before I went to the park I took another walk with my little Jacky,
which did not cost me much fatigue and yet was most uncommonly interesting.
I went down the little street in which I live, to the Thames nearly
at the end of it, towards the left, a few steps led me to a singularly
pretty terrace, planted with trees, on the very brink of the river.
Here I had the most delightful prospect you can possibly imagine.
Before me was the Thames with all its windings, and the stately arches
of its bridges; Westminster with its venerable abbey to the right, to
the left again London, with St. Paul’s, seemed to wind all along
the windings of the Thames, and on the other side of the water lay Southwark,
which is now also considered as part of London. Thus, from this
single spot, I could nearly at one view see the whole city, at least
that side of it towards the Thames. Not far from hence, in this
charming quarter of the town, lived the renowned Garrick. Depend
upon it I shall often visit this delightful walk during my stay in London.
To-day my two Englishmen carried me to a neighbouring tavern, or rather
an eating-house, where we paid a shilling each for some roast meat and
a salad, giving at the same time nearly half as much to the waiter,
and yet this is reckoned a cheap house, and a cheap style of living.
But I believe, for the future, I shall pretty often dine at home; I
have already begun this evening with my supper. I am now sitting
by the fire in my own room in London. The day is nearly at an
end, the first I have spent in England, and I hardly know whether I
ought to call it only one day, when I reflect what a quick and varied
succession of new and striking ideas have, in so short a time, passed
in my mind.
CHAPTER III.
London, 5th June.
At length, dearest Gedike, I am again settled, as I have now got
my trunk and all my things from the ship, which arrived only yesterday.
Not wishing to have it taken to the Custom House, which occasions a
great deal of trouble, I was obliged to give a douceur to the officers,
and those who came on board the ship to search it. Having pacified,
as I thought, one of them with a couple of shillings, another came forward
and protested against the delivery of the trunk upon trust till I had
given him as much. To him succeeded a third, so that it cost me
six shillings, which I willingly paid, because it would have cost me
still more at the Custom House.
By the side of the Thames were several porters, one of whom took my
huge heavy trunk on his shoulders with astonishing ease, and carried
it till I met a hackney coach. This I hired for two shillings,
immediately put the trunk into it, accompanying it myself without paying
anything extra for my own seat. This is a great advantage in the
English hackney coaches, that you are allowed to take with you whatever
you please, for you thus save at least one half of what you must pay
to a porter, and besides go with it yourself, and are better accommodated.
The observations and the expressions of the common people here have
often struck me as peculiar. They are generally laconic, but always
much in earnest and significant. When I came home, my landlady
kindly recommended it to the coachman not to ask more than was just,
as I was a foreigner; to which he answered, “Nay, if he were not
a foreigner I should not overcharge him.”
My letters of recommendation to a merchant here, which I could not bring
with me on account of my hasty departure from Hamburgh, are also arrived.
These have saved me a great deal of trouble in the changing of my money.
I can now take my German money back to Germany, and when I return thither
myself, refund to the correspondent of the merchant here the sum which
he here pays me in English money. I should otherwise have been
obliged to sell my Prussian Fredericks-d’or for what they weighed;
for some few Dutch dollars which I was obliged to part with before I
got this credit they only gave me eight shillings.
A foreigner has here nothing to fear from being pressed as a sailor,
unless, indeed, he should be found at any suspicious place. A
singular invention for this purpose of pressing is a ship, which is
placed on land not far from the Tower, on Tower Hill, furnished with
masts and all the appurtenances of a ship. The persons attending
this ship promise simple country people, who happen to be standing and
staring at it, to show it to them for a trifle, and as soon as they
are in, they are secured as in a trap, and according to circumstances
made sailors of or let go again.
The footway, paved with large stones on both sides of the street, appears
to a foreigner exceedingly convenient and pleasant, as one may there
walk in perfect safety, in no more danger from the prodigious crowd
of carts and coaches, than if one was in one’s own room, for no
wheel dares come a finger’s breadth upon the curb stone.
However, politeness requires you to let a lady, or any one to whom you
wish to show respect, pass, not, as we do, always to the right, but
on the side next the houses or the wall, whether that happens to be
on the right or on the left, being deemed the safest and most convenient.
You seldom see a person of any understanding or common sense walk in
the middle of the streets in London, excepting when they cross over,
which at Charing Cross and other places, where several streets meet,
is sometimes really dangerous.
It has a strange appearance - especially in the Strand, where there
is a constant succession of shop after shop, and where, not unfrequently,
people of different trades inhabit the same house - to see their doors
or the tops of their windows, or boards expressly for the purpose, all
written over from top to bottom with large painted letters. Every
person, of every trade or occupation, who owns ever so small a portion
of a house, makes a parade with a sign at his door; and there is hardly
a cobbler whose name and profession may not be read in large golden
characters by every one that passes. It is here not at all uncommon
to see on doors in one continued succession, “Children educated
here,” “Shoes mended here,” “Foreign spirituous
liquors sold here,” and “Funerals furnished here;”
of all these inscriptions. I am sorry to observe that “Dealer
in foreign spirituous liquors” is by far the most frequent.
And indeed it is allowed by the English themselves, that the propensity
of the common people to the drinking of brandy or gin is carried to
a great excess; and I own it struck me as a peculiar phraseology, when,
to tell you that a person is intoxicated or drunk, you hear them say,
as they generally do, that he is in liquor. In the late riots,
which even yet are hardly quite subsided, and which are still the general
topic of conversation, more people have been found dead near empty brandy-casks
in the streets, than were killed by the musket-balls of regiments that
were called in. As much as I have seen of London within these
two days, there are on the whole I think not very many fine streets
and very fine houses, but I met everywhere a far greater number and
handsomer people than one commonly meets in Berlin. It gives me
much real pleasure when I walk from Charing Cross up the Strand, past
St. Paul’s to the Royal Exchange, to meet in the thickest crowd
persons from the highest to the lowest ranks, almost all well-looking
people, and cleanly and neatly dressed. I rarely see even a fellow
with a wheel-barrow who has not a shirt on, and that, too, such a one
as shows it has been washed; nor even a beggar without both a shirt
and shoes and stockings. The English are certainly distinguished
for cleanliness.
It has a very uncommon appearance in this tumult of people, where every
one, with hasty and eager step, seems to be pursuing either his business
or his pleasure, and everywhere making his way through the crowd, to
observe, as you often may, people pushing one against another, only
perhaps to see a funeral pass. The English coffins are made very
economically, according to the exact form of the body; they are flat,
and broad at top; tapering gradually from the middle, and drawing to
a point at the feet, not very unlike the case of a violin.
A few dirty-looking men, who bear the coffin, endeavour to make their
way through the crowd as well as they can; and some mourners follow.
The people seem to pay as little attention to such a procession, as
if a hay-cart were driving past. The funerals of people of distinction,
and of the great, are, however, differently regarded.
These funerals always appear to me the more indecent in a populous city,
from the total indifference of the beholders, and the perfect unconcern
with which they are beheld. The body of a fellow-creature is carried
to his long home as though it had been utterly unconnected with the
rest of mankind. And yet, in a small town or village, everyone
knows everyone; and no one can be so insignificant as not to be missed
when he is taken away.
That same influenza which I left at Berlin, I have had the hard fortune
again to find here; and many people die of it. It is as yet very
cold for the time of the year, and I am obliged every day to have a
fire. I must own that the heat or warmth given by sea-coal, burnt
in the chimney, appears to me softer and milder than that given by our
stoves. The sight of the fire has also a cheerful and pleasing
effect. Only you must take care not to look at it steadily, and
for a continuance, for this is probably the reason that there are so
many young old men in England, who walk and ride in the public streets
with their spectacles on; thus anticipating, in the bloom of youth,
those conveniences and comforts which were intended for old age.
I now constantly dine in my own lodgings; and I cannot but flatter myself
that my meals are regulated with frugality. My usual dish at supper
is some pickled salmon, which you eat in the liquor in which it is pickled,
along with some oil and vinegar; and he must be prejudiced or fastidious
who does not relish it as singularly well tasted and grateful food.
I would always advise those who wish to drink coffee in England, to
mention beforehand how many cups are to be made with half an ounce;
or else the people will probably bring them a prodigious quantity of
brown water; which (notwithstanding all my admonitions) I have not yet
been able wholly to avoid. The fine wheaten bread which I find
here, besides excellent butter and Cheshire-cheese, makes up for my
scanty dinners. For an English dinner, to such lodgers as I am,
generally consists of a piece of half-boiled, or half-roasted meat;
and a few cabbage leaves boiled in plain water; on which they pour a
sauce made of flour and butter. This, I assure you, is the usual
method of dressing vegetables in England.
The slices of bread and butter, which they give you with your tea, are
as thin as poppy leaves. But there is another kind of bread and
butter usually eaten with tea, which is toasted by the fire, and is
incomparably good. You take one slice after the other and hold
it to the fire on a fork till the butter is melted, so that it penetrates
a number of slices at once: this is called toast.
The custom of sleeping without a feather-bed for a covering particularly
pleased me. You here lie between two sheets: underneath the bottom
sheet is a fine blanket, which, without oppressing you, keeps you sufficiently
warm. My shoes are not cleaned in the house, but by a person in
the neighbourhood, whose trade it is; who fetches them every morning,
and brings them back cleaned; for which she receives weekly so much.
When the maid is displeased with me, I hear her sometimes at the door
call me “the German”; otherwise in the family I go by the
name of “the Gentleman.”
I have almost entirely laid aside riding in a coach, although it does
not cost near so much as it does at Berlin; as I can go and return any
distance not exceeding an English mile for a shilling, for which I should
there at least pay a florin. But, moderate as English fares are,
still you save a great deal, if you walk or go on foot, and know only
how to ask your way. From my lodging to the Royal Exchange is
about as far as from one end of Berlin to the other, and from the Tower
and St. Catharine’s, where the ships arrive in the Thames, as
far again; and I have already walked this distance twice, when I went
to look after my trunk before I got it out of the ship. As it
was quite dark when I came back the first evening, I was astonished
at the admirable manner in which the streets are lighted up; compared
to which our streets in Berlin make a most miserable show. The
lamps are lighted whilst it is still daylight, and are so near each
other, that even on the most ordinary and common nights, the city has
the appearance of a festive illumination, for which some German prince,
who came to London for the first time, once, they say, actually took
it, and seriously believed it to have been particularly ordered on account
of his arrival.
CHAPTER IV.
The 9th June, 1782.
I preached this day at the German church on Ludgate Hill, for the Rev.
Mr. Wendeborn. He is the author of “Die statischen Beyträge
zur nähern Kentniss Grossbrittaniens.” This valuable
book has already been of uncommon service to me, and I cannot but recommend
it to everyone who goes to England. It is the more useful, as
you can with ease carry it in your pocket, and you find in it information
on every subject. It is natural to suppose that Mr. Wendeborn,
who has now been a length of time in England, must have been able more
frequently, and with greater exactness to make his observations, than
those who only pass through, or make a very short stay. It is
almost impossible for anyone, who has this book always at hand, to omit
anything worthy of notice in or about London; or not to learn all that
is most material to know of the state and situation of the kingdom in
general.
Mr. Wendeborn lives in New Inn, near Temple Bar, in a philosophical,
but not unimproving, retirement. He is almost become a native;
and his library consists chiefly of English books. Before I proceed,
I must just mention, that he has not hired, but bought his apartments
in this great building, called New Inn: and this, I believe, is pretty
generally the case with the lodgings in this place. A purchaser
of any of these rooms is considered as a proprietor; and one who has
got a house and home, and has a right, in parliamentary or other elections,
to give his vote, if he is not a foreigner, which is the case with Mr.
Wendeborn, who, nevertheless, was visited by Mr. Fox when he was to
be chosen member for Westminster.
I saw, for the first time, at Mr. Wendeborn’s, a very useful machine,
which is little known in Germany, or at least not much used.
This is a press in which, by means of very strong iron springs, a written
paper may be printed on another blank paper, and you thus save yourself
the trouble of copying; and at the same time multiply your own handwriting.
Mr. Wendeborn makes use of this machine every time he sends manuscripts
abroad, of which he wishes to keep a copy. This machine was of
mahogany, and cost pretty high. I suppose it is because the inhabitants
of London rise so late, that divine service begin only at half-past
ten o’clock. I missed Mr. Wendeborn this morning, and was
therefore obliged to enquire of the door-keeper at St. Paul’s
for a direction to the German church, where I was to preach. He
did not know it. I then asked at another church, not far from
thence. Here I was directed right, and after I had passed through
an iron gate to the end of a long passage, I arrived just in time at
the church, where, after the sermon, I was obliged to read a public
thanksgiving for the safe arrival of our ship. The German clergy
here dress exactly the same as the English clergy - i.e., in
long robes with wide sleeves - in which I likewise was obliged to wrap
myself. Mr. Wendeborn wears his own hair, which curls naturally,
and the toupee is combed up.
The other German clergymen whom I have seen wear wigs, as well as many
of the English.
I yesterday waited on our ambassador, Count Lucy, and was agreeably
surprised at the simplicity of his manner of living. He lives
in a small private house. His secretary lives upstairs, where
also I met with the Prussian consul, who happened just then to be paying
him a visit. Below, on the right hand, I was immediately shown
into his Excellency’s room, without being obliged to pass through
an antechamber. He wore a blue coat, with a red collar and red
facings. He conversed with me, as we drank a dish of coffee, on
various learned topics; and when I told him of the great dispute now
going on about the tacismus or stacismus, he declared
himself, as a born Greek, for the stacismus.
When I came to take my leave, he desired me to come and see him
without ceremony whenever it suited me, as he should be always happy
to see me.
Mr. Leonhard, who has translated several celebrated English plays, such
as “The School for Scandal,” and some others, lives here
as a private person, instructing Germans in English, and Englishmen
in German, with great ability. He also it is who writes the articles
concerning England for the new Hamburgh newspaper, for which he is paid
a stated yearly stipend. I may add also, that he is the master
of a German Freemasons’ lodge in London, and representative of
all the German lodges in England - an employment of far more trouble
than profit to him, for all the world applies to him in all cases and
emergencies. I also was recommended to him from Hamburgh.
He is a very complaisant man, and has already shown me many civilities.
He repeats English poetry with great propriety, and speaks the language
nearly with the same facility as he does his mother language.
He is married to an amiable Englishwoman. I wish him all possible
happiness. And now let me tell you something of the so often imitated,
but perhaps inimitable
Vauxhall.
I yesterday visited Vauxhall for the first time. I had not
far to go from my lodgings, in the Adelphi Buildings, to Westminster
Bridge, where you always find a great number of boats on the Thames,
which are ready on the least signal to serve those who will pay them
a shilling or sixpence, or according to the distance.
From hence I went up the Thames to Vauxhall, and as I passed along I
saw Lambeth; and the venerable old palace belonging to the archbishops
of Canterbury lying on my left.
Vauxhall is, properly speaking, the name of a little village in which
the garden, now almost exclusively bearing the same name, is situated.
You pay a shilling entrance.
On entering it, I really found, or fancied I found, some resemblance
to our Berlin Vauxhall, if, according to Virgil, I may be permitted
to compare small things with great ones. The walks at least, with
the paintings at the end, and the high trees, which, here and there
form a beautiful grove, or wood, on either side, were so similar to
those of Berlin, that often, as I walked along them, I seemed to transport
myself, in imagination, once more to Berlin, and forgot for a moment
that immense seas, and mountains, and kingdoms now lie between us.
I was the more tempted to indulge in this reverie as I actually met
with several gentlemen, inhabitants of Berlin, in particular Mr. S--r,
and some others, with whom I spent the evening in the most agreeable
manner. Here and there (particularly in one of the charming woods
which art has formed in this garden) you are pleasingly surprised by
the sudden appearance of the statues of the most renowned English poets
and philosophers, such as Milton, Thomson, and others. But, what
gave me most pleasure was the statue of the German composer Handel,
which, on entering the garden, is not far distant from the orchestra.
This orchestra is among a number of trees situated as in a little wood,
and is an exceedingly handsome one. As you enter the garden, you
immediately hear the sound of vocal and instrumental music. There
are several female singers constantly hired here to sing in public.
On each side of the orchestra are small boxes, with tables and benches,
in which you sup. The walks before these, as well as in every
other part of the garden, are crowded with people of all ranks.
I supped here with Mr. S--r, and the secretary of the Prussian ambassador,
besides a few other gentlemen from Berlin; but what most astonished
me was the boldness of the women of the town, who often rushed in upon
us by half dozens, and in the most shameless manner importuned us for
wine, for themselves and their followers. Our gentlemen thought
it either unwise, unkind, or unsafe, to refuse them so small a boon
altogether.
Latish in the evening we were entertained with a sight, that is indeed
singularly curious and interesting. In a particular part of the
garden a curtain was drawn up, and by means of some mechanism of extraordinary
ingenuity, the eye and the ear are so completely deceived, that it is
not easy to persuade one’s self it is a deception, and that one
does not actually see and hear a natural waterfall from a high rock.
As everyone was flocking to this scene in crowds, there arose all at
once a loud cry of “Take care of your pockets.” This
informed us, but too clearly, that there were some pickpockets among
the crowd, who had already made some fortunate strokes.
The rotunda, a magnificent circular building in the garden, particularly
engaged my attention. By means of beautiful chandeliers, and large
mirrors, it was illuminated in the most superb manner; and everywhere
decorated with delightful paintings, and statues, in the contemplation
of which you may spend several hours very agreeably, when you are tired
of the crowd and the bustle, in the walks of the garden.
Among the paintings one represents the surrender of a besieged city.
If you look at this painting with attention, for any length of time,
it affects you so much that you even shed tears. The expression
of the greatest distress, even bordering on despair, on the part of
the besieged, the fearful expectation of the uncertain issue, and what
the victor will determine concerning those unfortunate people, may all
be read so plainly, and so naturally in the countenances of the inhabitants,
who are imploring for mercy, from the hoary head to the suckling whom
his mother holds up, that you quite forget yourself, and in the end
scarcely believe it to be a painting before you.
You also here find the busts of the best English authors, placed all
round on the sides. Thus a Briton again meets with his Shakespeare,
Locke, Milton, and Dryden in the public places of his amusements; and
there also reveres their memory. Even the common people thus become
familiar with the names of those who have done honour to their nation;
and are taught to mention them with veneration. For this rotunda
is also an orchestra in which the music is performed in rainy weather.
But enough of Vauxhall!
Certain it is that the English classical authors are read more generally,
beyond all comparison, than the German; which in general are read only
by the learned; or, at most, by the middle class of people. The
English national authors are in all hands, and read by all people, of
which the innumerable editions they have gone through are a sufficient
proof.
My landlady, who is only a tailor’s widow, reads her Milton; and
tells me, that her late husband first fell in love with her on this
very account: because she read Milton with such proper emphasis.
This single instance, perhaps, would prove but little; but I have conversed
with several people of the lower class, who all knew their national
authors, and who all have read many, if not all, of them. This
elevates the lower ranks, and brings them nearer to the higher.
There is hardly any argument or dispute in conversation, in the higher
ranks, about which the lower cannot also converse or give their opinion.
Now, in Germany, since Gellert, there has as yet been no poet’s
name familiar to the people. But the quick sale of the classical
authors is here promoted also by cheap and convenient editions.
They have them all bound in pocket volumes, as well as in a more pompous
style. I myself bought Milton in duodecimo for two shillings,
neatly bound; it is such a one as I can, with great convenience, carry
in my pocket. It also appears to me to be a good fashion, which
prevails here, and here only, that the books which are most read, are
always to be had already well and neatly bound. At stalls, and
in the streets, you every now and then meet with a sort of antiquarians,
who sell single or odd volumes; sometimes perhaps of Shakespeare, etc.,
so low as a penny; nay, even sometimes for a halfpenny a piece.
Of one of these itinerant antiquarians I bought the two volumes of the
Vicar of Wakefield for sixpence, i.e. for the half of an English
shilling. In what estimation our German literature is held in
England, I was enabled to judge, in some degree, by the printed proposals
of a book which I saw. The title was, “The Entertaining
Museum, or Complete Circulating Library,” which is to contain
a list of all the English classical authors, as well as translations
of the best French, Spanish, Italian, and even German novels.
The moderate price of this book deserves also to be noticed; as by such
means books in England come more within the reach of the people; and
of course are more generally distributed among them. The advertisement
mentions that in order that everyone may have it in his power to buy
this work, and at once to furnish himself with a very valuable library,
without perceiving the expense, a number will be sent out weekly, which,
stitched, costs sixpence, and bound with the title on the back, ninepence.
The twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth numbers contain the first and second
volume of the Vicar of Wakefield, which I had just bought of the antiquarian
above-mentioned.
The only translation from the German which has been particularly successful
in England, is Gesner’s “Death of Abel.” The
translation of that work has been oftener reprinted in England than
ever the original was in Germany. I have actually seen the eighteenth
edition of it; and if the English preface is to be regarded, it was
written by a lady. “Klopstock’s Messiah,” as
is well known, has been here but ill received; to be sure, they say
it is but indifferently translated. I have not yet been able to
obtain a sight of it. The Rev. Mr. Wendeborn has written a grammar
for the German language in English, for the use of Englishmen, which
has met with much applause.
I must not forget to mention, that the works of Mr. Jacob Boehmen are
all translated into English.
CHAPTER V.
London, 13th June.
Often as I had heard Ranelagh spoken of, I had yet formed only an
imperfect idea of it. I supposed it to be a garden somewhat different
from that of Vauxhall; but, in fact, I hardly knew what I thought of
it. Yesterday evening I took a walk in order to visit this famous
place of amusement; but I missed my way and got to Chelsea; where I
met a man with a wheel-barrow, who not only very civilly showed me the
right road, but also conversed with me the whole of the distance which
we walked together. And finding, upon enquiry, that I was a subject
of the King of Prussia, he desired me, with much eagerness, to relate
to him some anecdotes concerning that mighty monarch. At length
I arrived at Ranelagh; and having paid my half-crown on entrance, I
soon enquired for the garden door, and it was readily shown to me; when,
to my infinite astonishment, I found myself in a poor, mean-looking,
and ill-lighted garden, where I met but few people. I had not
been here long before I was accosted by a young lady, who also was walking
there, and who, without ceremony, offered me her arm, asking me why
I walked thus solitarily? I now concluded, this could not possibly
be the splendid, much-boasted Ranelagh; and so, seeing not far from
me a number of people entering a door, I followed them, in hopes either
to get out again, or to vary the scene.
But it is impossible to describe, or indeed to conceive, the effect
it had on me, when, coming out of the gloom of the garden, I suddenly
entered a round building, illuminated by many hundred lamps; the splendour
and beauty of which surpassed everything of the kind I had ever seen
before. Everything seemed here to be round; above, there was a
gallery divided into boxes; and in one part of it an organ with a beautiful
choir, from which issued both instrumental and vocal music. All
around, under this gallery, are handsome painted boxes for those who
wish to take refreshments: the floor was covered with mats, in the middle
of which are four high black pillars; within which there are neat fire-places
for preparing tea, coffee and punch; and all around, also, there are
placed tables, set out with all kinds of refreshments. Within
these four pillars, in a kind of magic rotundo, all the beau-monde of
London move perpetually round and round.
I at first mixed with this immense concourse of people, of all sexes,
ages, countries, and characters; and I must confess, that the incessant
change of faces, the far greater number of which were strikingly beautiful,
together with the illumination, the extent and majestic splendour of
the place, with the continued sound of the music, makes an inconceivably
delightful impression on the imagination; and I take the liberty to
add, that, on seeing it now for the first time, I felt pretty nearly
the same sensations that I remember to have felt when, in early youth,
I first read the Fairy Tales.
Being, however, at length tired of the crowd, and being tired also with
always moving round and round in a circle, I sat myself down in one
of the boxes, in order to take some refreshment, and was now contemplating
at my ease this prodigious collection and crowd of a happy, cheerful
world, who were here enjoying themselves devoid of care, when a waiter
very civilly asked me what refreshments I wished to have, and in a few
moments returned with what I asked for. To my astonishment he
would accept no money for these refreshments; which I could not comprehend,
till he told me that everything was included in the half-crown I had
paid at the door; and that I had only to command if I wished for anything
more; but that if I pleased, I might give him as a present a trifling
douceur. This I gave him with pleasure, as I could not help fancying
I was hardly entitled to so much civility and good attention for one
single half-crown.
I now went up into the gallery, and seated myself in one of the boxes
there; and from thence becoming all at once a grave and moralising spectator,
I looked down on the concourse of people who were still moving round
and round in the fairy circle; and then I could easily distinguish several
stars and other orders of knighthood; French queues and bags contrasted
with plain English heads of hair, or professional wigs; old age and
youth, nobility and commonalty, all passing each other in the motley
swarm. An Englishman who joined me during this my reverie, pointed
out to me on my enquiring, princes and lords with their dazzling stars;
with which they eclipsed the less brilliant part of the company.
Here some moved round in an eternal circle to see and be seen; there
a group of eager connoisseurs had placed themselves before the orchestra
and were feasting their ears, while others at the well-supplied tables
were regaling the parched roofs of their mouths in a more substantial
manner, and again others, like myself, were sitting alone, in the corner
of a box in the gallery, making their remarks and reflections on so
interesting a scene.
I now and then indulged myself in the pleasure of exchanging, for some
minutes, all this magnificence and splendour for the gloom of the garden,
in order to renew the pleasing surprise I experienced on my first entering
the building. Thus I spent here some hours in the night in a continual
variation of entertainment; when the crowd now all at once began to
lessen, and I also took a coach and drove home.
At Ranelagh the company appeared to me much better, and more select
than at Vauxhall; for those of the lower class who go there, always
dress themselves in their best, and thus endeavour to copy the great.
Here I saw no one who had not silk stockings on. Even the poorest
families are at the expense of a coach to go to Ranelagh, as my landlady
assured me. She always fixed on some one day in the year, on which,
without fail, she drove to Ranelagh. On the whole the expense
at Ranelagh is nothing near so great as it is at Vauxhall, if you consider
the refreshments; for any one who sups at Vauxhall, which most people
do, is likely, for a very moderate supper, to pay at least half-a-guinea.
The Parliament.
I had almost forgotten to tell you that I have already been to the
Parliament House; and yet this is of most importance. For, had
I seen nothing else in England but this, I should have thought my journey
thither amply rewarded.
As little as I have hitherto troubled myself with politics, because
indeed with us it is but little worth our while, I was however desirous
of being present at a meeting of parliament - a wish that was soon amply
gratified.
One afternoon, about three o’clock, at which hour, or thereabouts,
the house most commonly meets, I enquired for Westminster Hall, and
was very politely directed by an Englishman. These directions
are always given with the utmost kindness. You may ask whom you
please, if you can only make yourself tolerably well understood; and
by thus asking every now and then, you may with the greatest ease find
your way throughout all London.
Westminster Hall is an enormous Gothic building, whose vaulted roof
is supported, not by pillars, but instead of these there are, on each
side, large unnatural heads of angels, carved in wood, which seem to
support the roof.
When you have passed through this long hall, you ascend a few steps
at the end, and are led through a dark passage into the House of Commons,
which, below, has a large double-door; and above, there is a small staircase,
by which you go to the gallery, the place allotted for strangers.
The first time I went up this small staircase, and had reached the rails,
I saw a very genteel man in black standing there. I accosted him
without any introduction, and I asked him whether I might be allowed
to go into the gallery. He told me that I must be introduced by
a member, or else I could not get admission there. Now, as I had
not the honour to be acquainted with a member, I was under the mortifying
necessity of retreating, and again going down-stairs, as I did much
chagrined. And now, as I was sullenly marching back, I heard something
said about a bottle of wine, which seemed to be addressed to me.
I could not conceive what it could mean, till I got home, when my obliging
landlady told me I should have given the well-dressed man half-a-crown,
or a couple of shillings for a bottle of wine. Happy in this information,
I went again the next day; when the same man who before had sent me
away, after I had given him only two shillings, very politely opened
the door for me, and himself recommended me to a good seat in the gallery.
And thus I now, for the first time, saw the whole of the British nation
assembled in its representatives, in rather a mean-looking building,
that not a little resembles a chapel. The Speaker, an elderly
man, with an enormous wig, with two knotted kind of tresses, or curls,
behind, in a black cloak, his hat on his head, sat opposite to me on
a lofty chair; which was not unlike a small pulpit, save only that in
the front of there was no reading-desk. Before the Speaker’s
chair stands a table, which looks like an altar; and at this there sit
two men, called clerks, dressed in black, with black cloaks. On
the table, by the side of the great parchment acts, lies a huge gilt
sceptre, which is always taken away, and placed in a conservatory under
the table, as soon as ever the Speaker quits the chair; which he does
as often as the House resolves itself into a committee. A committee
means nothing more than that the House puts itself into a situation
freely to discuss and debate any point of difficulty and moment, and,
while it lasts, the Speaker partly lays aside his power as a legislator.
As soon as this is over, some one tells the Speaker that he may now
again be seated; and immediately on the Speaker being again in the chair,
the sceptre is also replaced on the table before him.
All round on the sides of the house, under the gallery, are benches
for the members, covered with green cloth, always one above the other,
like our choirs in churches, in order that he who is speaking may see
over those who sit before him. The seats in the gallery are on
the same plan. The members of parliament keep their hats on, but
the spectators in the gallery are uncovered.
The members of the House of Commons have nothing particular in their
dress. They even come into the House in their great coats, and
with boots and spurs. It is not at all uncommon to see a member
lying stretched out on one of the benches while others are debating.
Some crack nuts, others eat oranges, or whatever else is in season.
There is no end to their going in and out; and as often as any one wishes
to go out, he places himself before the Speaker, and makes him his bow,
as if, like a schoolboy, he asked tutor’s permission.
Those who speak seem to deliver themselves with but little, perhaps
not always with even a decorous, gravity. All that is necessary
is to stand up in your place, take off your hat, turn to the Speaker
(to whom all the speeches are addressed), to hold your hat and stick
in one hand, and with the other to make any such motions as you fancy
necessary to accompany your speech.
If it happens that a member rises who is but a bad speaker, or if what
he says is generally deemed not sufficiently interesting, so much noise
is made, and such bursts of laughter are raised, that the member who
is speaking can scarcely distinguish his own words. This must
needs be a distressing situation; and it seems then to be particularly
laughable, when the Speaker in his chair, like a tutor in a school,
again and again endeavours to restore order, which he does by calling
out “To order, to order,” apparently often without
much attention being paid to it.
On the contrary, when a favourite member, and one who speaks well and
to the purpose, rises, the most perfect silence reigns, and his friends
and admirers, one after another, make their approbation known by calling
out, “Hear him,” which is often repeated by the whole
House at once; and in this way so much noise is often made that the
speaker is frequently interrupted by this same emphatic “Hear
him.” Notwithstanding which, this calling out is always
regarded as a great encouragement; and I have often observed that one
who began with some diffidence, and even somewhat inauspiciously, has
in the end been so animated that he has spoken with a torrent of eloquence.
As all speeches are directed to the Speaker, all the members always
preface their speeches with “Sir” and he, on being
thus addressed, generally moves his hat a little, but immediately puts
it on again. This “Sir” is often introduced
in the course of their speeches, and serves to connect what is said.
It seems also to stand the orator in some stead when any one’s
memory fails him, or he is otherwise at a loss for matter. For
while he is saying “Sir,” and has thus obtained a
little pause, he recollects what is to follow. Yet I have sometimes
seen some members draw a kind of memorandum-book out of their pockets,
like a candidate who is at a loss in his sermon. This is the only
instance in which a member of the British parliament seems to read his
speeches.
The first day that I was at the House of Commons an English gentleman
who sat next to me in the gallery very obligingly pointed out to me
the principal members, such as Fox, Burke, Rigby, etc., all of whom
I heard speak. The debate happened to be whether, besides being
made a peer, any other specific reward should be bestowed by the nation
on their gallant admiral Rodney. In the course of the debate,
I remember, Mr. Fox was very sharply reprimanded by young Lord Fielding
for having, when minister, opposed the election of Admiral Hood as a
member for Westminster.
Fox was sitting to the right of the Speaker, not far from the table
on which the gilt sceptre lay. He now took his place so near it
that he could reach it with his hand, and, thus placed, he gave it many
a violent and hearty thump, either to aid, or to show the energy with
which he spoke. If the charge was vehement, his defence was no
less so. He justified himself against Lord Fielding by maintaining
that he had not opposed this election in the character of a minister,
but as an individual, or private person; and that, as such, he had freely
and honestly given his vote for another - namely, for Sir Cecil Wray,
adding that the King, when he appointed him Secretary of State, had
entered into no agreement with him by which he lost his vote as an individual;
to such a requisition he never would have submitted. It is impossible
for me to describe with what fire and persuasive eloquence he spoke,
and how the Speaker in the chair incessantly nodded approbation from
beneath his solemn wig, and innumerable voices incessantly called out,
“Hear him! hear him!” and when there was the least sign
that he intended to leave off speaking they no less vociferously exclaimed,
“Go on;” and so he continued to speak in this manner for
nearly two hours. Mr. Rigby, in reply, made a short but humorous
speech, in which he mentioned of how little consequence the title of
“lord” and “lady” was without money to support
it, and finished with the Latin proverb, “infelix paupertas -
quia ridiculos miseros facit.” After having first very judiciously
observed that previous inquiry should be made whether Admiral Rodney
had made any rich prizes or captures; because, if that should be the
case, he would not stand in need of further reward in money. I
have since been almost every day at the parliament house, and prefer
the entertainment I there meet with to most other amusements.
Fox is still much beloved by the people, notwithstanding that they are
(and certainly with good reason) displeased at his being the cause of
Admiral Rodney’s recall, though even I have heard him again and
again almost extravagant in his encomiums on this noble admiral.
The same celebrated Charles Fox is a short, fat, and gross man, with
a swarthy complexion, and dark; and in general he is badly dressed.
There certainly is something Jewish in his looks. But upon the
whole, he is not an ill-made nor an ill-looking man, and there are many
strong marks of sagacity and fire in his eyes. I have frequently
heard the people here say that this same Mr. Fox is as cunning as a
fox. Burke is a well-made, tall, upright man, but looks elderly
and broken. Rigby is excessively corpulent, and has a jolly rubicund
face.
The little less than downright open abuse, and the many really rude
things which the members said to each other, struck me much. For
example, when one has finished, another rises, and immediately taxes
with absurdity all that the right honourable gentleman (for with this
title the members of the House of Commons always honour each other)
had just advanced. It would, indeed, be contrary to the rules
of the House flatly to tell each other that what they have spoken is
false, or even foolish. Instead of this, they turn
themselves, as usual, to the Speaker, and so, whilst their address is
directed to him, they fancy they violate neither the rules of parliament
nor those of good breeding and decorum, whilst they utter the most cutting
personal sarcasms against the member or the measure they oppose.
It is quite laughable to see, as one sometimes does, one member speaking,
and another accompanying the speech with his action. This I remarked
more than once in a worthy old citizen, who was fearful of speaking
himself, but when his neighbour spoke he accompanied every energetic
sentence with a suitable gesticulation, by which means his whole body
was sometimes in motion.
It often happens that the jett, or principal point in the debate is
lost in these personal contests and bickerings between each other.
When they last so long as to become quite tedious and tiresome, and
likely to do harm rather than good, the House takes upon itself to express
its disapprobation; and then there arises a general cry of, “The
question! the question!” This must sometimes be frequently
repeated, as the contending members are both anxious to have the last
word. At length, however, the question is put, and the votes taken,
when the Speaker says, “Those who are for the question are to
say aye, and those who are against it no.”
You then hear a confused cry of “aye” and “no”
but at length the Speaker says, “I think there are more ayes
than noes, or more noes than ayes. The
ayes have it; or the noes have it,” as the case
may be. But all the spectators must then retire from the gallery;
for then, and not till then, the voting really commences. And
now the members call aloud to the gallery, “Withdraw! withdraw!”
On this the strangers withdraw, and are shut up in a small room at the
foot of the stairs till the voting is over, when they are again permitted
to take their places in the gallery. Here I could not help wondering
at the impatience even of polished Englishmen. It is astonishing
with what violence, and even rudeness, they push and jostle one another
as soon as the room door is again opened, eager to gain the first and
best seats in the gallery. In this manner we (the strangers) have
sometimes been sent away two or three times in the course of one day,
or rather evening, afterwards again permitted to return. Among
these spectators are people of all ranks, and even, not unfrequently,
ladies. Two shorthand writers have sat sometimes not far distant
from me, who (though it is rather by stealth) endeavour to take down
the words of the speaker; and thus all that is very remarkable in what
is said in parliament may generally be read in print the next day.
The shorthand writers, whom I noticed, are supposed to be employed and
paid by the editors of the different newspapers. There are, it
seems, some few persons who are constant attendants on the parliament;
and so they pay the door-keeper beforehand a guinea for a whole session.
I have now and then seen some of the members bring their sons, whilst
quite little boys, and carry them to their seats along with themselves.
A proposal was once made to erect a gallery in the House of Peers also
for the accommodation of spectators. But this never was carried
into effect. There appears to be much more politeness and more
courteous behaviour in the members of the upper House. But he
who wishes to observe mankind, and to contemplate the leading traits
of the different characters most strongly marked, will do well to attend
frequently the lower, rather than the other, House.
Last Tuesday was (what is here called) hanging-day. There was
also a parliamentary election. I could only see one of the two
sights, and therefore naturally preferred the latter, while I only heard
tolling at a distance the death-bell of the sacrifice to justice.
I now, therefore, am going to describe to you, as well as can, an
Election for a Member of Parliament.
The cities of London and Westminster send, the one four, and the
other two, members to parliament. Mr. Fox is one of the two members
for Westminster. One seat was vacant, and that vacancy was now
to be filled. And the same Sir Cecil Wray, whom Fox had before
opposed to Lord Hood, was now publicly chosen. They tell me that
at these elections, when there is a strong opposition party, there is
often bloody work; but this election was, in the electioneering phrase,
a “hollow thing” - i.e. quite sure, as those who
had voted for Admiral Hood now withdrew, without standing a poll, as
being convinced beforehand their chance to succeed was desperate.
The election was held in Covent Garden, a large market-place in the
open air. There was a scaffold erected just before the door of
a very handsome church, which is also called St. Paul’s, but which,
however, is not to be compared to the cathedral.
A temporary edifice, formed only of boards and wood nailed together,
was erected on the occasion. It was called the hustings, and filled
with benches; and at one end of it, where the benches ended, mats were
laid, on which those who spoke to the people stood. In the area
before the hustings immense multitudes of people were assembled, of
whom the greatest part seemed to be of the lowest order. To this
tumultuous crowd, however, the speakers often bowed very low, and always
addressed them by the title of “gentlemen.” Sir Cecil
Wray was obliged to step forward and promise these same gentlemen, with
hand and heart, that he would faithfully fulfil his duties as their
representative. He also made an apology because, on account of
his long journey and ill-health, he had not been able to wait on them,
as became him, at their respective houses. The moment that he
began to speak, even this rude rabble became all as quiet as the raging
sea after a storm, only every now and then rending the air with the
parliamentary cry of “Hear him! hear him!” and as soon as
he had done speaking, they again vociferated aloud an universal “huzza,”
every one at the same time waving his hat.
And now, being formally declared to have been legally chosen, he again
bowed most profoundly, and returned thanks for the great honour done
him, when a well-dressed man, whose name I could not learn, stepped
forward, and in a well-indited speech congratulated both the chosen
and the choosers. “Upon my word,” said a gruff carter
who stood near me, “that man speaks well.”
Even little boys clambered up and hung on the rails and on the lamp-posts;
and as if the speeches had also been addressed to them, they too listened
with the utmost attention, and they too testified their approbation
of it by joining lustily in the three cheers and waving their hats.
All the enthusiasm of my earliest years kindled by the patriotism of
the illustrious heroes of Rome. Coriolanus, Julius Cæsar,
and Antony were now revived in my mind; and though all I had just seen
and heard be, in fact, but the semblance of liberty, and that, too,
tribunitial liberty, yet at that moment I thought it charming, and it
warmed my heart. Yes, depend on it, my friend, when you here see
how, in the happy country, the lowest and meanest member of society
thus unequivocally testifies the interest which he takes in everything
of a public nature; when you see how even women and children bear a
part in the great concerns of their country; in short, how high and
low, rich and poor, all concur in declaring their feelings and their
convictions that a carter, a common tar, or a scavenger, is still a
man - nay, an Englishman, and as such has his rights and privileges
defined and known as exactly and as well as his king, or as his king’s
minister - take my word for it, you will feel yourself very differently
affected from what you are when staring at our soldiers in their exercises
at Berlin.
When Fox, who was among the voters, arrived at the beginning of the
election, he too was received with an universal shout of joy.
At length, when it was nearly over, the people took it into their heads
to hear him speak, and every one called out, “Fox! Fox!”
I know not why, but I seemed to catch some of the spirit of the place
and time, and so I also bawled “Fox! Fox!” and he
was obliged to come forward and speak, for no other reason that I could
find but that the people wished to hear him speak. In this speech
he again confirmed, in the presence of the people, his former declaration
in parliament, that he by no means had any influence as minister of
State in this election, but only and merely as a private person.
When the whole was over, the rampant spirit of liberty and the wild
impatience of a genuine English mob were exhibited in perfection.
In a very few minutes the whole scaffolding, benches, and chairs, and
everything else, was completely destroyed. and the mat with which it
had been covered torn into ten thousand long strips, or pieces, or strings,
with which they encircled or enclosed multitudes of people of all ranks.
These they hurried along with them, and everything else that came in
their way, as trophies of joy; and thus, in the midst of exultation
and triumph, they paraded through many of the most populous streets
of London.
Whilst in Prussia poets only speak of the love of country as one of
the dearest of all human affections, here there is no man who does not
feel, and describe with rapture, how much he loves his country.
“Yes, for my country I’ll shed the last drop of my blood!”
often exclaims little Jacky, the fine boy here in the house where I
live, who is yet only about twelve years old. The love of their
country, and its unparalleled feats in war are, in general, the subject
of their ballads and popular songs, which are sung about the streets
by women, who sell them for a few farthings. It was only the other
day our Jacky brought one home, in which the history of an admiral was
celebrated who bravely continued to command, even after his two legs
were shot off and he was obliged to be supported. I know not well
by what means it has happened that the King of England, who is certainly
one of the best the nation ever had, is become unpopular. I know
not how many times I have heard people of all sorts object to their
king at the same time that they praised the King of Prussia to the skies.
Indeed, with some the veneration for our monarch went so far that they
seriously wished he was their king. All that seems to shock and
dishearten them is the prodigious armies he keeps up, and the immense
number of soldiers quartered in Berlin alone. Whereas in London,
at least in the city, not a single troop of soldiers of the King’s
guard dare make their appearance.
A few days ago I saw what is here deemed a great sight - viz., a lord
mayor’s procession. The lord mayor was in an enormous large
gilt coach, which was followed by an astonishing number of most showy
carriages, in which the rest of the city magistrates, more properly
called aldermen of London, were seated. But enough for the present.
CHAPTER VI.
London, June 17th, 1782.
I have now been pretty nearly all over London, and, according to my
own notions, have now seen most of the things I was most anxious to
see. Hereafter, then, I propose to make an excursion into the
country; and this purpose, by the blessing of God, I hope to be able
to carry into effect in a very few days, for my curiosity is here almost
satiated. I seem to be tired and sick of the smoke of these sea-coal
fires, and I long, with almost childish impatience, once more to breathe
a fresher and clearer air.
It must, I think, be owned, that upon the whole, London is neither so
handsomely nor so well built as Berlin is; but then it certainly has
far more fine squares. Of these there are many that in real magnificence
and beautiful symmetry far surpass our Gens d’Armes Markt, our
Denhoschen and William’s Place. The squares or quadrangular
places contain the best and most beautiful buildings of London; a spacious
street, next to the houses, goes all round them, and within that there
is generally a round grass-plot, railed in with iron rails, in the centre
of which, in many of them, there is a statue, which statues most commonly
are equestrian and gilt. In Grosvenor Square, instead of this
green plot or area, there is a little circular wood, intended, no doubt,
to give one the idea of rus in urbe.
One of the longest and pleasantest walks I have yet taken is from
Paddington to Islington; where to the left you have a fine prospect
of the neighbouring hills, and in particular of the village of Hampstead,
which is built on one of them; and to the right the streets of London
furnish an endless variety of interesting views. It is true that
it is dangerous to walk here alone, especially in the afternoon and
in an evening, or at night, for it was only last week that a man was
robbed and murdered on this very same road. But I now hasten to
another and a more pleasing topic:
The British Museum.
I have had the happiness to become acquainted with the Rev. Mr.
Woide; who, though well known all over Europe to be one of the most
learned men of the age, is yet, if possible, less estimable for his
learning than he is for his unaffected goodness of heart. He holds
a respectable office in the museum, and was obliging enough to procure
me permission to see it, luckily the day before it was shut up.
In general you must give in your name a fortnight before you can he
admitted. But after all, I am sorry to say, it was the rooms,
the glass cases, the shelves, or the repository for the books in the
British Museum which I saw, and not the museum itself, we were hurried
on so rapidly through the apartments. The company, who saw it
when and as I did, was various, and some of all sorts; some, I believe,
of the very lowest classes of the people, of both sexes; for, as it
is the property of the nation, every one has the same right (I use the
term of the country) to see it that another has. I had Mr. Wendeborn’s
book in my pocket, and it, at least, enabled me to take a somewhat more
particular notice of some of the principal things; such as the Egyptian
mummy, a head of Homer, &c. The rest of the company, observing
that I had some assistance which they had not, soon gathered round me;
I pointed out to them as we went along, from Mr. Wendeborn’s German
book, what there was most worth seeing here. The gentleman who
conducted us took little pains to conceal the contempt which he felt
for my communications when he found out that it was only a German description
of the British Museum I had got. The rapidly passing through this
vast suite of rooms, in a space of time little, if at all, exceeding
an hour, with leisure just to cast one poor longing look of astonishment
on all these stupendous treasures of natural curiosities, antiquities,
and literature, in the contemplation of which you could with pleasure
spend years, and a whole life might be employed in the study of them
- quite confuses, stuns, and overpowers one. In some branches
this collection is said to be far surpassed by some others; but taken
altogether, and for size, it certainly is equalled by none. The
few foreign divines who travel through England generally desire to have
the Alexandrian manuscript shewn them, in order to be convinced with
their own eyes whether the passage, “These are the three that
bear record, &c.,” is to be found there or not.
The Rev. Mr. Woide lives at a place called Lisson Street, not far from
Paddington; a very village-looking little town, at the west end of London.
It is quite a rural and pleasant situation; for here I either do, or
fancy I do, already breathe a purer and freer air than in the midst
of the town. Of his great abilities, and particularly in oriental
literature, I need not inform you; but it will give you pleasure to
hear that he is actually meditating a fac-simile edition of the Alexandrian
MS. I have already mentioned the infinite obligations I lie under
to this excellent man for his extraordinary courtesy and kindness.
The Theatre in the Haymarket.
Last week I went twice to an English play-house. The first
time “The Nabob” was represented, of which the late Mr.
Foote was the author, and for the entertainment, a very pleasing and
laughable musical farce, called “The Agreeable Surprise.”
The second time I saw “The English Merchant:” which piece
has been translated into German, and is known among us by the title
of “The Scotchwoman,” or “The Coffee-house.”
I have not yet seen the theatres of Covent Garden and Drury Lane, because
they are not open in summer. The best actors also usually spend
May and October in the country, and only perform in winter.
A very few excepted, the comedians whom I saw were certainly nothing
extraordinary. For a seat in the boxes you pay five shillings,
in the pit three, in the first gallery two, and in the second or upper
gallery, one shilling. And it is the tenants in this upper gallery
who, for their shilling, make all that noise and uproar for which the
English play-houses are so famous. I was in the pit, which gradually
rises, amphitheatre-wise, from the orchestra, and is furnished with
benches, one above another, from the top to the bottom. Often
and often, whilst I sat there, did a rotten orange, or pieces of the
peel of an orange, fly past me, or past some of my neighbours, and once
one of them actually hit my hat, without my daring to look round, for
fear another might then hit me on my face.
All over London as one walks, one everywhere, in the season, sees oranges
to sell; and they are in general sold tolerably cheap, one and even
sometimes two for a halfpenny; or, in our money, threepence. At
the play-house, however, they charged me sixpence for one orange, and
that noways remarkably good.
Besides this perpetual pelting from the gallery, which renders an English
play-house so uncomfortable, there is no end to their calling out and
knocking with their sticks till the curtain is drawn up. I saw
a miller’s, or a baker’s boy, thus, like a huge booby, leaning
over the rails and knocking again and again on the outside, with all
his might, so that he was seen by everybody, without being in the least
ashamed or abashed. I sometimes heard, too, the people in the
lower or middle gallery quarrelling with those of the upper one.
Behind me, in the pit, sat a young fop, who, in order to display his
costly stone buckles with the utmost brilliancy, continually put his
foot on my bench, and even sometimes upon my coat, which I could avoid
only by sparing him as much space from my portion of the seat as would
make him a footstool. In the boxes, quite in a corner, sat several
servants, who were said to be placed there to keep the seats for the
families they served till they should arrive; they seemed to sit remarkably
close and still, the reason of which, I was told, was their apprehension
of being pelted; for if one of them dares but to look out of the box,
he is immediately saluted with a shower of orange peel from the gallery.
In Foote’s “Nabob” there are sundry local and personal
satires which are entirely lost to a foreigner. The character
of the Nabob was performed by a Mr. Palmer. The jett of the character
is, this Nabob, with many affected airs and constant aims at gentility,
is still but a silly fellow, unexpectedly come into the possession of
immense riches, and therefore, of course, paid much court to by a society
of natural philosophers, Quakers, and I do not know who besides.
Being tempted to become one of their members, he is elected, and in
order to ridicule these would-be philosophers, but real knaves, a fine
flowery fustian speech is put into his mouth, which he delivers with
prodigious pomp and importance, and is listened to by the philosophers
with infinite complacency. The two scenes of the Quakers and philosophers,
who, with countenances full of imaginary importance, were seated at
a green table with their president at their head while the secretary,
with the utmost care, was making an inventory of the ridiculous presents
of the Nabob, were truly laughable. One of the last scenes was
best received: it is that in which the Nabob’s friend and school-fellow
visit him, and address him without ceremony by his Christian name; but
to all their questions of “Whether he does not recollect them?
Whether he does not remember such and such a play; or such and such
a scrape into which they had fallen in their youth?” he uniformly
answers with a look of ineffable contempt, only, “No sir!”
Nothing can possibly be more ludicrous, nor more comic.
The entertainment, “The Agreeable Surprise,” is really a
very diverting farce. I observed that, in England also, they represent
school-masters in ridiculous characters on the stage, which, though
I am sorry for, I own I do not wonder at, as the pedantry of school-masters
in England, they tell me, is carried at least as far as it is elsewhere.
The same person who, in the play, performed the school-fellow of the
Nabob with a great deal of nature and original humour, here acted the
part of the school-master: his name is Edwin, and he is, without doubt,
one of the best actors of all that I have seen.
This school-master is in love with a certain country girl, whose name
is Cowslip, to whom he makes a declaration of his passion in a strange
mythological, grammatical style and manner, and to whom, among other
fooleries, he sings, quite enraptured, the following air, and seems
to work himself at least up to such a transport of passion as quite
overpowers him. He begins, you will observe, with the conjugation,
and ends with the declensions and the genders; the whole is inimitably
droll:
“Amo, amas,
I love a lass,
She is so sweet and tender,
It is sweet Cowslip’s Grace
In the Nominative Case.
And in the feminine Gender.”
Those two sentences in particular, “in the Nominative Case,”
and “in the feminine Gender,” he affects to sing in a particularly
languishing air, as if confident that it was irresistible. This
Edwin, in all his comic characters, still preserves something so inexpressibly
good-tempered in his countenance, that notwithstanding all his burlesques
and even grotesque buffoonery, you cannot but be pleased with him.
I own, I felt myself doubly interested for every character which he
represented. Nothing could equal the tone and countenance of self-satisfaction
with which he answered one who asked him whether he was a scholar?
“Why, I was a master of scholars.” A Mrs. Webb represented
a cheesemonger, and played the part of a woman of the lower class so
naturally as I have nowhere else ever seen equalled. Her huge,
fat, and lusty carcase, and the whole of her external appearance seemed
quite to be cut out for it.
Poor Edwin was obliged, as school-master, to sing himself almost hoarse,
as he sometimes was called on to repeat his declension and conjugation
songs two or three times, only because it pleased the upper gallery,
or “the gods,” as the English call them, to roar out “encore.”
Add to all this, he was farther forced to thank them with a low bow
for the great honour done him by their applause.
One of the highest comic touches in the piece seemed to me to consist
in a lie, which always became more and more enormous in the mouths of
those who told it again, during the whole of the piece. This kept
the audience in almost a continual fit of laughter. This farce
is not yet printed, or I really think I should be tempted to venture
to make a translation, or rather an imitation of it.
“The English Merchant, or the Scotchwoman,” I have seen
much better performed abroad than it was here. Mr. Fleck, at Hamburg,
in particular, played the part of the English merchant with more interest,
truth, and propriety than one Aickin did here. He seemed to me
to fail totally in expressing the peculiar and original character of
Freeport; instead of which, by his measured step and deliberate, affected
manner of speaking, he converted him into a mere fine gentleman.
The trusty old servant who wishes to give up his life for his master
he, too, had the stately walk, or strut, of a minister. The character
of the newspaper writer was performed by the same Mr. Palmer who acted
the part of the Nabob, but every one said, what I thought, that he made
him far too much of a gentleman. His person, and his dress also,
were too handsome for the character.
The character of Amelia was performed by an actress, who made her first
appearance on the stage, and from a timidity natural on such an occasion,
and not unbecoming, spoke rather low, so that she could not everywhere
be heard; “Speak louder! speak louder!” cried out some rude
fellow from the upper-gallery, and she immediately, with infinite condescension,
did all she could, and not unsuccessfully, to please even an upper gallery
critic.
The persons near me, in the pit, were often extravagantly lavish of
their applause. They sometimes clapped a single solitary sentiment,
that was almost as unmeaning as it was short, if it happened to be pronounced
only with some little emphasis, or to contain some little point, some
popular doctrine, a singularly pathetic stroke, or turn of wit.
“The Agreeable Surprise” was repeated, and I saw it a second
time with unabated pleasure. It is become a favourite piece, and
always announced with the addition of the favourite musical farce.
The theatre appeared to me somewhat larger than the one at Hamburg,
and the house was both times very full. Thus much for English
plays, play-houses, and players.
English Customs and Education.
A few words more respecting pedantry. I have seen the regulation
of one seminary of learning, here called an academy. Of these
places of education, there is a prodigious number in London, though,
notwithstanding their pompous names, they are in reality nothing more
than small schools set up by private persons, for children and young
people.
One of the Englishmen who were my travelling companions, made me acquainted
with a Dr. G-- who lives near P--, and keeps an academy for the education
of twelve young people, which number is here, as well as at our Mr.
Kumpe’s, never exceeded, and the same plan has been adopted and
followed by many others, both here and elsewhere.
At the entrance I perceived over the door of the house a large board,
and written on it, Dr. G--’s Academy. Dr. G-- received me
with great courtesy as a foreigner, and shewed me his school-room, which
was furnished just in the same manner as the classes in our public schools
are, with benches and a professor’s chair or pulpit.
The usher at Dr. G--’s is a young clergyman, who, seated also
in a chair or desk, instructs the boys in the Greek and Latin grammars.
Such an under-teacher is called an usher, and by what I can learn, is
commonly a tormented being, exactly answering the exquisite description
given of him in the “Vicar of Wakefield.” We went
in during the hours of attendance, and he was just hearing the boys
decline their Latin, which he did in the old jog-trot way; and I own
it had an odd sound to my ears, when instead of pronouncing, for example
viri veeree I heard them say viri, of the man, exactly
according to the English pronunciation, and viro, to the man.
The case was just the same afterwards with the Greek.
Mr. G-- invited us to dinner, when I became acquainted with his wife,
a very genteel young woman, whose behaviour to the children was such
that she might be said to contribute more to their education than any
one else. The children drank nothing but water. For every
boarder Dr. G-- receives yearly no more than thirty pounds sterling,
which however, he complained of as being too little. From forty
to fifty pounds is the most that is generally paid in these academies.
I told him of our improvements in the manner of education, and also
spoke to him of the apparent great worth of character of his usher.
He listened very attentively, but seemed to have thought little himself
on this subject. Before and after dinner the Lord’s Prayer
was repeated in French, which is done in several places, as if they
were eager not to waste without some improvement, even this opportunity
also, to practise the French, and thus at once accomplish two points.
I afterwards told him my opinion of this species of prayer, which however,
he did not take amiss.
After dinner the boys had leave to play in a very small yard, which
in most schools or academies, in the city of London, is the ne
plus ultra of their playground in their hours of recreation.
But Mr. G-- has another garden at the end of the town, where he sometimes
takes them to walk.
After dinner Mr. G-- himself instructed the children in writing, arithmetic,
and French, all which seemed to be well taught here, especially writing,
in which the young people in England far surpass, I believe, all others.
This may perhaps be owing to their having occasion to learn only one
sort of letters. As the midsummer holidays were now approaching
(at which time the children in all the academies go home for four weeks),
everyone was obliged with the utmost care to copy a written model, in
order to show it to their parents, because this article is most particularly
examined, as everybody can tell what is or is not good writing.
The boys knew all the rules of syntax by heart.
All these academies are in general called boarding-schools. Some
few retain the old name of schools only, though it is possible that
in real merit they may excel the so much-boasted of academies.
It is in general the clergy, who have small incomes, who set up these
schools both in town and country, and grown up people who are foreigners,
are also admitted here to learn the English language. Mr. G--
charged for board, lodging, and instruction in the English, two guineas
a-week. He however, who is desirous of perfecting himself in the
English, will do better to go some distance into the country, and board
himself with any clergyman who takes scholars, where he will hear nothing
but English spoken, and may at every opportunity be taught both by young
and old.
There are in England, besides the two universities, but few great schools
or colleges. In London, there are only St. Paul’s and Westminster
schools; the rest are almost all private institutions, in which there
reigns a kind of family education, which is certainly the most natural,
if properly conducted. Some few grammar schools, or Latin schools,
are notwithstanding here and there to be met with, where the master
receives a fixed salary, besides the ordinary profits of the school
paid by the scholars.
You see in the streets of London, great and little boys running about
in long blue coats, which, like robes, reach quite down to the feet,
and little white bands, such as the clergy wear. These belong
to a charitable institution, or school, which hears the name of the
Blue Coat School. The singing of the choristers in the streets,
so usual with us, is not at all customary here. Indeed, there
is in England, or at least in London, such a constant walking, riding,
and driving up and down in the streets, that it would not be very practicable.
Parents here in general, nay even those of the lowest classes, seem
to be kind and indulgent to their children, and do not, like our common
people, break their spirits too much by blows and sharp language.
Children should certainly be inured early to set a proper value on themselves;
whereas with us, parents of the lower class bring up their children
to the same slavery under which they themselves groan.
Notwithstanding the constant new appetites and calls of fashion, they
here remain faithful to nature - till a certain age. What a contrast,
when I figure to myself our petted, pale-faced Berlin boys, at six years
old, with a large bag, and all the parade of grown-up persons, nay even
with laced coats; and here, on the contrary see nothing but fine, ruddy,
slim, active boys, with their bosoms open, and their hair cut on their
forehead, whilst behind it flows naturally in ringlets. It is
something uncommon here to meet a young man, and more especially a boy,
with a pale or sallow face, with deformed features, or disproportioned
limbs. With us, alas! it is not to be concealed, the case is very
much otherwise; if it were not, handsome people would hardly strike
us so very much as they do in this country.
This free, loose, and natural dress is worn till they are eighteen,
or even till they are twenty. It is then, indeed, discontinued
by the higher ranks, but with the common people it always remains the
same. They then begin to have their hair dressed, and curled with
irons, to give the head a large bushy appearance, and half their backs
are covered with powder. I am obliged to remain still longer under
the hands of an English, than I was under a German hair-dresser; and
to sweat under his hot irons with which he curls my hair all over, in
order that I may appear among Englishmen, somewhat English. I
must here observe that the English hair-dressers are also barbers, an
office however, which they perform very badly indeed; though I cannot
but consider shaving as a far more proper employment for these petit
maîtres than it is for surgeons, who you know in our country are
obliged to shave us. It is incredible how much the English at
present Frenchify themselves; the only things yet wanting are bags and
swords, with which at least I have seen no one walking publicly, but
I am told they are worn at court.
In the morning it is usual to walk out in a sort of negligée
or morning dress, your hair not dressed, but merely rolled up in rollers,
and in a frock and boots. In Westminster, the morning lasts till
four or five o’clock, at which time they dine, and supper and
going to bed are regulated accordingly. They generally do not
breakfast till ten o’clock. The farther you go from the
court into the city, the more regular and domestic the people become;
and there they generally dine about three o’clock, i.e. as
soon as the business or ‘Change is over.
Trimmed suits are not yet worn, and the most usual dress is in summer,
a short white waistcoat, black breeches, white silk stockings, and a
frock, generally of very dark blue cloth, which looks like black; and
the English seem in general to prefer dark colours. If you wish
to be full dressed, you wear black. Officers rarely wear their
uniforms, but dress like other people, and are to be known to be officers
only by a cockade in their hats.
It is a common observation, that the more solicitous any people are
about dress, the more effeminate they are. I attribute it entirely
to this idle adventitious passion for finery, that these people are
become so over and above careful of their persons; they are for ever,
and on every occasion, putting one another on their guard against catching
cold; “you’ll certainly catch cold,” they always tell
you if you happen to be a little exposed to the draught of the air,
or if you be not clad, as they think, sufficiently warm. The general
topic of conversation in summer, is on the important objects of whether
such and such an acquaintance be in town, or such a one in the country.
Far from blaming it, I think it natural and commendable, that nearly
one half of the inhabitants of this great city migrate into the country
in summer. And into the country, I too, though not a Londoner,
hope soon to wander.
Electricity happens at present to be the puppet-show of the English.
Whoever at all understands electricity is sure of being noticed and
successful. This a certain Mr. Katterfelto experiences, who gives
himself out for a Prussian, speaks bad English, and understands beside
the usual electrical and philosophical experiments, some legerdemain
tricks, with which (at least according to the papers) he sets the whole
world in wonder. For in almost every newspaper that appears, there
are some verses on the great Katterfelto, which some one or other of
his hearers are said to have made extempore. Every sensible person
considers Katterfelto as a puppy, an ignoramus, a braggadocio, and an
impostor; notwithstanding which he has a number of followers.
He has demonstrated to the people, that the influenza is occasioned
by a small kind of insect, which poisons the air; and a nostrum, which
he pretends to have found out to prevent or destroy it, is eagerly bought
of him. A few days ago he put into the papers: “It
is true that Mr. Katterfelto has always wished for cold and rainy weather,
in order to destroy the pernicious insects in the air; but now, on the
contrary, he wishes for nothing more than for fair weather, as his majesty
and the whole royal family have determined, the first fine day, to be
eye-witnesses of the great wonder, which this learned philosopher will
render visible to them.” Yet all this while the royal family
have not so much as even thought of seeing the wonders of Mr. Katterfelto.
This kind of rhodomontade is very finely expressed in English by the
word puff, which in its literal sense, signifies a blowing, or violent
gust of wind, and in the metaphorical sense, a boasting or bragging.
Of such puffs the English newspapers are daily full, particularly of
quack medicines and empirics, by means of which many a one here (and
among others a German who goes by the name of the German doctor) are
become rich. An advertisement of a lottery in the papers begins
with capitals in this manner, - “Ten Thousand Pounds for a Sixpence!
Yes, however astonishing it may seem, it is nevertheless undoubtedly
true, that for the small stake of sixpence, ten thousand pounds, and
other capital prizes, may be won, etc.” - But enough for this
time of the puffs of the English.
I yesterday dined with the Rev. Mr. Schrader, son-in-law to Professor
Foster of Halle. He is chaplain to the German chapel at St. James’s;
but besides himself he has a colleague or a reader, who is also in orders,
but has only fifty pounds yearly salary. Mr. Schrader also instructs
the younger princes and princesses of the royal family in their religion.
At his house I saw the two chaplains, Mr. Lindeman and Mr. Kritter,
who went with the Hanoverian troops to Minorca, and who were returned
with the garrison. They were exposed to every danger along with
the troops. The German clergy, as well as every other person in
any public station immediately under Government, are obliged to pay
a considerable tax out of their salaries.
The English clergy (and I fear those still more particularly who live
in London) are noticeable, and lamentably conspicuous, by a very free,
secular, and irregular way of life. Since my residence in England,
one has fought a duel in Hyde Park, and shot has antagonist. He
was tried for the offence, and it was evident the judge thought him
guilty of murder; but the jury declared him guilty only of manslaughter;
and on this verdict he was burnt in the hand, if that may be called
burning which is done with a cold iron; this being a privilege which
the nobility and clergy enjoy above other murderers.
Yesterday week, after I had preached for Mr. Wendeborne, we passed an
English church in which, we understood the sermon was not yet quite
finished. On this we went in, and then I heard a young man preaching,
with a tolerable good voice, and a proper delivery; but, like the English
in general, his manner was unimpassioned, and his tone monotonous.
From the church we went to a coffee-house opposite to it, and there
we dined. We had not been long there before the same clergyman
whom we had just heard preaching, also came in. He called for
pen and ink, and hastily wrote down a few pages on a long sheet of paper,
which he put into his pocket; I suppose it was some rough sketch or
memorandum that occurred to him at that moment, and which he thus reserved
for some future sermon. He too ordered some dinner, which he had
no sooner ate, than he returned immediately to the same church.
We followed him, and he again mounted the pulpit, where he drew from
his pocket a written paper, or book of notes, and delivered in all probability
those very words which he had just before composed in our presence at
the coffee-house.
In these coffee-houses, however, there generally prevails a very decorous
stillness and silence. Everyone speaks softly to those only who
sit next him. The greater part read the newspapers, and no one
ever disturbs another. The room is commonly on the ground floor,
and you enter it immediately from the street; the seats are divided
by wooden wainscot partitions. Many letters and projects are here
written and planned, and many of those that you find in the papers are
dated from some of these coffee-houses. There is, therefore, nothing
incredible, nor very extraordinary, in a person’s composing a
sermon here, excepting that one would imagine it might have been done
better at home, and certainly should not have thus been put off to the
last minute.
Another long walk that I have taken pretty often, is through Hanover
Square and Cavendish Square, to Bulstrode Street, near Paddington, where
the Danish ambassador lives, and where I have often visited the Danish
Charge d’Affaires, M. Schornborn. He is well known
in Germany, as having attempted to translate Pindar into German.
Besides this, and besides being known to be a man of genius, he is known
to be a great proficient in most of the branches of natural philosophy.
I have spent many very pleasant hours with him.
Sublime poetry, and in particular odes, are his forte; there are indeed
few departments of learning in which he has not extensive knowledge,
and he is also well read in the Greek and Roman authors. Everything
he studies, he studies merely from the love he bears to the science
itself, and by no means for the love of fame.
One could hardly help saying it is a pity that so excellent a man should
be so little known, were it not generally the case with men of transcendent
merit. But what makes him still more valuable is his pure and
open soul, and his amiable unaffected simplicity of character, which
has gained him the love and confidence of all who know him. He
has heretofore been secretary to the ambassador at Algiers; and even
here in London, when he is not occupied by the business arising from
his public station, he lives exceedingly retired, and devotes his time
almost entirely to the study of the sciences. The more agreeable
I find such an acquaintance, the harder it will be for me to lose, as
I soon must, his learned, his instructive, and his friendly conversation.
I have seen the large Freemasons’ Hall here, at the tavern of
the same name. This hall is of an astonishing height and breadth,
and to me it looked almost like a church. The orchestra is very
much raised, and from that you have a fine view of the whole hall, which
makes a majestic appearance. The building is said to have cost
an immense sum. But to that the lodges in Germany also contributed.
Freemasonry seems to be held in but little estimation in England, perhaps
because most of the lodges are now degenerated into mere drinking clubs;
though I hope there still are some who assemble for nobler and more
essential purposes. The Duke of Cumberland is now grand master.
CHAPTER VII.
London, 20th June, 1782.
At length my determination of going into the country takes effect; and
I am to set off this very afternoon in a stage; so that I now write
to you my last letter from London, I mean till I return from my pilgrimage,
for as soon as ever I have got beyond the dangerous neighbourhood of
London, I shall certainly no longer suffer myself to be cooped up in
a post-coach, but take my staff and pursue my journey on foot.
In the meantime, however, I will relate to you what I may either have
forgotten to write before, or what I have seen worth notice within these
few days last past; among which the foremost is
St. Paul’s.
I must own that on my entrance into this massy building, an uncommon
vacancy, which seemed to reign in it, rather damped than raised an impression
of anything majestic in me. All around me I could see nothing
but immense bare walls and pillars. Above me, at an astonishing
height, was the vaulted stone roof; and beneath me a plain, flat even
floor, paved with marble. No altar was to be seen, or any other
sign that this was a place where mankind assembled to adore the Almighty.
For the church itself, or properly that part of it where they perform
divine service, seems as it were a piece stuck on or added to the main
edifice, and is separated from the large round empty space by an iron
gate, or door. Did the great architects who adopted this style
of building mean by this to say that such a temple is most proper for
the adoration of the Almighty? If this was their aim, I can only
say I admire the great temple of nature, the azure vaulted sky, and
the green carpet with which the earth is spread. This is truly
a large temple; but then there is in it no void, no spot unappropriated,
or unfulfilled, but everywhere proofs in abundance of the presence of
the Almighty. If, however, mankind, in their honest ambition to
worship the great God of nature, in a style not wholly unsuitable to
the great object of their reverence, and in their humble efforts at
magnificence, aim in some degree to rival the magnificence of nature,
particular pains should be taken to hit on something that might atone
for the unavoidable loss of the animation and ampleness of nature; something
in short that should clearly indicate the true and appropriated design
and purpose of such a building. If, on the other hand, I could
be contented to consider St. Paul’s merely as a work of art, built
as if merely to show the amazing extent of human powers, I should certainly
gaze at it with admiration and astonishment, but then I wish rather
to contemplate it with awe and veneration. But, I perceive, I
am wandering out of my way. St. Paul’s is here, as it is,
a noble pile, and not unworthy of this great nation. And even
if I were sure that I could, you would hardly thank me for showing you
how it might have been still more worthy of this intelligent people.
I make a conscience however of telling you always, with fidelity, what
impression everything I see or hear makes on me at the time. For
a small sum of money I was conducted all over the church by a man whose
office it seemed to be, and he repeated to me, I dare say, exactly his
lesson, which no doubt he has perfectly got by rote: of how many feet
long and broad it was; how many years it was in building, and in what
year built. Much of this rigmarole story, which, like a parrot,
he repeated mechanically, I could willingly have dispensed with.
In the part that was separated from the rest by the iron gate above
mentioned, was what I call the church itself; furnished with benches,
pews, pulpit, and an altar; and on each side seats for the choristers,
as there are in our cathedrals. This church seemed to have been
built purposely in such a way, that the bishop, or dean, or dignitary,
who should preach there, might not be obliged to strain his voice too
much. I was now conducted to that part which is called the whispering
gallery, which is a circumference of prodigious extent, just below the
cupola. Here I was directed to place myself in a part of it directly
opposite to my conductor, on the other side of the gallery, so that
we had the whole breadth of the church between us, and here as I stood,
he, knowing his cue no doubt, flung to the door with all his force,
which gave a sound that I could compare to nothing less than a peal
of thunder. I was next desired to apply my ear to the wall, which,
when I did, I heard the words of my conductor: “Can you hear me?”
which he softly whispered quite on the other side, as plain and as loud
as one commonly speaks to a deaf person. This scheme to condense
and invigorate sound at so great a distance is really wonderful.
I once noticed some sound of the same sort in the senatorial cellar
at Bremen; but neither that, nor I believe any other in the world, can
pretend to come in competition with this.
I now ascended several steps to the great gallery, which runs on the
outside of the great dome, and here I remained nearly two hours, as
I could hardly, in less time, satisfy myself with the prospect of the
various interesting objects that lay all round me, and which can no
where be better seen, than from hence.
Every view, and every object I studied attentively, by viewing them
again and again on every side, for I was anxious to make a lasting impression
of it on my imagination.
Below me lay steeples, houses, and palaces in countless numbers; the
squares with their grass plots in their middle that lay agreeably dispersed
and intermixed, with all the huge clusters of buildings, forming meanwhile
a pleasing contrast, and a relief to the jaded eye.
At one end rose the Tower - itself a city - with a wood of masts behind
it; and at the other Westminster Abbey with its steeples. There
I beheld, clad in smiles, those beautiful green hills that skirt the
environs of Paddington and Islington; here, on the opposite bank of
the Thames, lay Southwark; the city itself it seems to be impossible
for any eye to take in entirely, for with all my pains I found it impossible
to ascertain either where it ended, or where the circumjacent villages
began; far as the eye could reach, it seemed to be all one continued
chain of buildings.
I well remember how large I thought Berlin when first I saw it from
the steeple of St. Mary, and from the Temple Yard Hills, but how did
it now sink and fall in my imagination, when I compared it with London!
It is, however, idle and vain to attempt giving you in words, any description,
however faint and imperfect, of such a prospect as I have just been
viewing. He who wishes at one view to see a world in miniature,
must come to the dome of St Paul’s.
The roof of St. Paul’s itself with its two lesser steeples lay
below me, and as I fancied, looked something like the background of
a small ridge of hills, which you look down upon when you have attained
the summit of some huge rock or mountain. I should gladly have
remained here sometime longer, but a gust of wind, which in this situation
was so powerful that it was hardly possible to withstand it, drove me
down.
Notwithstanding that St. Paul’s is itself very high, the elevation
of the ground on which it stands contributes greatly to its elevation.
The church of St. Peter at Berlin, notwithstanding the total difference
between them in the style of building, appears in some respects to have
a great resemblance to St. Paul’s in London. At least its
large high black roof rises above the other surrounding buildings just
as St. Paul’s does.
What else I saw in this stately cathedral was only a wooden model of
this very edifice, which was made before the church was built, and which
suggests some not unpleasing reflections when one compares it with the
enormous building itself.
The churchyard is enclosed with an iron rail, and it appears a considerable
distance if you go all round.
Owing to some cause or other, the site of St. Paul’s strikes you
as being confined, and it is certain that this beautiful church is on
every side closely surrounded by houses.
A marble statue of Queen Anne in an enclosed piece of ground in the
west front of the church is something of an ornament to that side.
The size of the bell of St. Paul’s is also worthy of notice, as
it is reckoned one of those that are deemed the largest in Europe.
It takes its place, they say, next to that at Vienna.
Everything that I saw in St. Paul’s cost me only a little more
than a shilling, which I paid in pence and halfpence, according to a
regulated price, fixed for every different curiosity.
Westminster Abbey.
On a very gloomy dismal day, just such a one as it ought to be,
I went to see Westminster Abbey.
I entered at a small door, which brought me immediately to the poets’
corner, where the monuments and busts of the principal poets, artists,
generals, and great men, are placed.
Not far from the door, immediately on my entrance, I perceived the statue
of Shakespeare, as large as life; with a band, &c., in the dress
usual in his time.
A passage out of one of Shakespeare’s own plays (the Tempest),
in which he describes in the most solemn and affecting manner, the end,
or the dissolution of all things, is here, with great propriety, put
up as his epitaph; as though none but Shakespeare could do justice to
Shakespeare.
Not far from this immortal bard is Rowe’s monument, which, as
it is intimated in the few lines that are inscribed as his epitaph,
he himself had desired to be placed there.
At no great distance I saw the bust of that amiable writer, Goldsmith:
to whom, as well as to Butler, whose monument is in a distant part of
the abbey, though they had scarcely necessary bread to eat during their
life time, handsome monuments are now raised. Here, too you see,
almost in a row, the monuments of Milton, Dryden, Gay, and Thomson.
The inscription on Gay’s tombstone is, if not actually immoral,
yet futile and weak; though he is said to have written it himself:
“Life is a jest, and all things shew it,
‘I thought so once but now I know it.”
Our Handel has also a monument here, where he is represented as large
as life.
An actress, Pritchard, and Booth, an actor, have also very distinguished
monuments erected here to their memories.
For Newton, as was proper, there is a very costly one. It is above,
at the entrance of the choir, and exactly opposite to this, at the end
of the church, another is erected, which refers you to the former.
As I passed along the side walls of Westminster Abbey, I hardly saw
any thing but marble monuments of great admirals, but which were all
too much loaded with finery and ornaments, to make on me at least, the
intended impression.
I always returned with most pleasure to the poets’ corner, where
the most sensible, most able, and most learned men, of the different
ages, were re-assembled; and particularly where the elegant simplicity
of the monuments made an elevated and affecting impression on the mind,
while a perfect recollection of some favourite passage, of a Shakespeare,
or Milton, recurred to my idea, and seemed for a moment to re-animate
and bring back the spirits of those truly great men.
Of Addison and Pope I have found no monuments here. The vaults
where the kings are buried, and some other things worth notice in the
abbey, I have not yet seen; but perhaps I may at my return to London
from the country.
I have made every necessary preparation for this journey: In the first
place, I have an accurate map of England in my pocket; besides an excellent
book of the roads, which Mr. Pointer, the English merchant to whom I
am recommended, has lent me. The title is “A new and accurate
description of all the direct and principal cross roads in Great Britain.”
This book, I hope, will be of great service to me in my ramblings.
I was for a long time undecided which way I should go, whether to the
Isle of Wight, to Portsmouth, or to Derbyshire, which is famous