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    Autobiography of Anthony Trollope

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    certainly was not taught. The assertion will scarcely be credited,

      but I do assert that I have no recollection of other tuition

      except that in the dead languages. At the school at Sunbury there

      was certainly a writing master and a French master. The latter was

      an extra, and I never had extras. I suppose I must have been in

      the writing master's class, but though I can call to mind the man,

      I cannot call to mind his ferule. It was by their ferules that I

      always knew them, and they me. I feel convinced in my mind that I

      have been flogged oftener than any human being alive. It was just

      possible to obtain five scourgings in one day at Winchester, and

      I have often boasted that I obtained them all. Looking back over

      half a century, I am not quite sure whether the boast is true; but

      if I did not, nobody ever did.

      And yet when I think how little I knew of Latin or Greek on leaving

      Harrow at nineteen, I am astonished at the possibility of such

      waste of time. I am now a fair Latin scholar,--that is to say, I

      read and enjoy the Latin classics, and could probably make myself

      understood in Latin prose. But the knowledge which I have, I have

      acquired since I left school,--no doubt aided much by that groundwork

      of the language which will in the process of years make its way

      slowly, even through the skin. There were twelve years of tuition

      in which I do not remember that I ever knew a lesson! When I left

      Harrow I was nearly at the top of the school, being a monitor, and,

      I think, the seventh boy. This position I achieved by gravitation

      upwards. I bear in mind well with how prodigal a hand prizes used

      to be showered about; but I never got a prize. From the first to

      the last there was nothing satisfactory in my school career,--except

      the way in which I licked the boy who had to be taken home to be

      cured.

      CHAPTER II MY MOTHER

      Though I do not wish in these pages to go back to the origin of

      all the Trollopes, I must say a few words of my mother,--partly

      because filial duty will not allow me to be silent as to a parent

      who made for herself a considerable name in the literature of her

      day, and partly because there were circumstances in her career

      well worthy of notice. She was the daughter of the Rev. William

      Milton, vicar of Heckfield, who, as well as my father, had been

      a fellow of New College. She was nearly thirty when, in 1809, she

      married my father. Six or seven years ago a bundle of love-letters

      from her to him fell into my hand in a very singular way, having

      been found in the house of a stranger, who, with much courtesy,

      sent them to me. They were then about sixty years old, and had been

      written some before and some after her marriage, over the space of

      perhaps a year. In no novel of Richardson's or Miss Burney's have

      I seen a correspondence at the same time so sweet, so graceful,

      and so well expressed. But the marvel of these letters was in the

      strange difference they bore to the love-letters of the present

      day. They are, all of them, on square paper, folded and sealed,

      and addressed to my father on circuit; but the language in each,

      though it almost borders on the romantic, is beautifully chosen,

      and fit, without change of a syllable, for the most critical eye.

      What girl now studies the words with which she shall address her

      lover, or seeks to charm him with grace of diction? She dearly likes

      a little slang, and revels in the luxury of entire familiarity with

      a new and strange being. There is something in that, too, pleasant

      to our thoughts, but I fear that this phase of life does not conduce

      to a taste for poetry among our girls. Though my mother was a writer

      of prose, and revelled in satire, the poetic feeling clung to her

      to the last.

      In the first ten years of her married life she became the mother of

      six children, four of whom died of consumption at different ages.

      My elder sister married, and had children, of whom one still lives;

      but she was one of the four who followed each other at intervals

      during my mother's lifetime. Then my brother Tom and I were left to

      her,--with the destiny before us three of writing more books than

      were probably ever before produced by a single family. [Footnote:

      The family of Estienne, the great French printers of the fifteenth

      and sixteenth centuries, of whom there were at least nine or ten,

      did more perhaps for the production of literature than any other

      family. But they, though they edited, and not unfrequently translated

      the works which they published, were not authors in the ordinary

      sense.] My married sister added to the number by one little anonymous

      high church story, called Chollerton.

      From the date of their marriage up to 1827, when my mother went

      to America, my father's affairs had always been going down in the

      world. She had loved society, affecting a somewhat liberal role

      and professing an emotional dislike to tyrants, which sprung from

      the wrongs of would-be regicides and the poverty of patriot exiles.

      An Italian marquis who had escaped with only a second shirt from

      the clutches of some archduke whom he had wished to exterminate,

      or a French proletaire with distant ideas of sacrificing himself to

      the cause of liberty, were always welcome to the modest hospitality

      of her house. In after years, when marquises of another caste had

      been gracious to her, she became a strong Tory, and thought that

      archduchesses were sweet. But with her politics were always an affair

      of the heart,--as, indeed, were all her convictions. Of reasoning

      from causes, I think that she knew nothing. Her heart was in

      every way so perfect, her desire to do good to all around her so

      thorough, and her power of self-sacrifice so complete, that she

      generally got herself right in spite of her want of logic; but it

      must be acknowledged that she was emotional. I can remember now her

      books, and can see her at her pursuits. The poets she loved best

      were Dante and Spenser. But she raved also of him of whom all such

      ladies were raving then, and rejoiced in the popularity and wept

      over the persecution of Lord Byron. She was among those who seized

      with avidity on the novels, as they came out, of the then unknown

      Scott, and who could still talk of the triumphs of Miss Edgeworth.

      With the literature of the day she was familiar, and with the poets

      of the past. Of other reading I do not think she had mastered much.

      Her life, I take it, though latterly clouded by many troubles, was

      easy, luxurious, and idle, till my father's affairs and her own

      aspirations sent her to America. She had dear friends among literary

      people, of whom I remember Mathias, Henry Milman, and Miss Landon;

      but till long after middle life she never herself wrote a line for

      publication.

      In 1827 she went to America, having been partly instigated by the

      social and communistic ideas of a lady whom I well remember,--a

      certain Miss Wright,--who was, I think, the first of the American

      female lecturers. Her chief desire, however, was to establish

      my bro
    ther Henry; and perhaps joined with that was the additional

      object of breaking up her English home without pleading broken

      fortunes to all the world. At Cincinnati, in the State of Ohio,

      she built a bazaar, and I fancy lost all the money which may have

      been embarked in that speculation. It could not have been much, and

      I think that others also must have suffered. But she looked about

      her, at her American cousins, and resolved to write a book about

      them. This book she brought back with her in 1831, and published

      it early in 1832. When she did this she was already fifty. When

      doing this she was aware that unless she could so succeed in making

      money, there was no money for any of the family. She had never before

      earned a shilling. She almost immediately received a considerable

      sum from the publishers,--if I remember rightly, amounting to two

      sums of (pounds)400 each within a few months; and from that moment till

      nearly the time of her death, at any rate for more than twenty

      years, she was in the receipt of a considerable income from her

      writings. It was a late age at which to begin such a career.

      The Domestic Manners of the Americans was the first of a series

      of books of travels, of which it was probably the best, and was

      certainly the best known. It will not be too much to say of it that

      it had a material effect upon the manners of the Americans of the

      day, and that that effect has been fully appreciated by them. No

      observer was certainly ever less qualified to judge of the prospects

      or even of the happiness of a young people. No one could have been

      worse adapted by nature for the task of learning whether a nation

      was in a way to thrive. Whatever she saw she judged, as most women

      do, from her own standing-point. If a thing were ugly to her eyes,

      it ought to be ugly to all eyes,--and if ugly, it must be bad.

      What though people had plenty to eat and clothes to wear, if they

      put their feet upon the tables and did not reverence their betters?

      The Americans were to her rough, uncouth, and vulgar,--and she

      told them so. Those communistic and social ideas, which had been so

      pretty in a drawing-room, were scattered to the winds. Her volumes

      were very bitter; but they were very clever, and they saved the

      family from ruin.

      Book followed book immediately,--first two novels, and then a book

      on Belgium and Western Germany. She refurnished the house which

      I have called Orley Farm, and surrounded us again with moderate

      comforts. Of the mixture of joviality and industry which formed

      her character, it is almost impossible to speak with exaggeration.

      The industry was a thing apart, kept to herself. It was not necessary

      that any one who lived with her should see it. She was at her table

      at four in the morning, and had finished her work before the world

      had begun to be aroused. But the joviality was all for others.

      She could dance with other people's legs, eat and drink with other

      people's palates, be proud with the lustre of other people's finery.

      Every mother can do that for her own daughters; but she could do it

      for any girl whose look, and voice, and manners pleased her. Even

      when she was at work, the laughter of those she loved was a pleasure

      to her. She had much, very much, to suffer. Work sometimes came

      hard to her, so much being required,--for she was extravagant, and

      liked to have money to spend; but of all people I have known she

      was the most joyous, or, at any rate, the most capable of joy.

      We continued this renewed life at Harrow for nearly two years,

      during which I was still at the school, and at the end of which

      I was nearly nineteen. Then there came a great catastrophe. My

      father, who, when he was well, lived a sad life among his monks and

      nuns, still kept a horse and gig. One day in March, 1834, just as

      it had been decided that I should leave the school then, instead

      of remaining, as had been intended, till midsummer, I was summoned

      very early in the morning, to drive him up to London. He had been

      ill, and must still have been very ill indeed when he submitted to

      be driven by any one. It was not till we had started that he told

      me that I was to put him on board the Ostend boat. This I did,

      driving him through the city down to the docks. It was not within

      his nature to be communicative, and to the last he never told me

      why he was going to Ostend. Something of a general flitting abroad

      I had heard before, but why he should have flown first, and flown

      so suddenly, I did not in the least know till I returned. When I got

      back with the gig, the house and furniture were all in the charge

      of the sheriff's officers.

      The gardener who had been with us in former days stopped me as I

      drove up the road, and with gestures, signs, and whispered words,

      gave me to understand that the whole affair--horse, gig, and

      barness--would be made prize of if I went but a few yards farther.

      Why they should not have been made prize of I do not know. The

      little piece of dishonest business which I at once took in hand

      and carried through successfully was of no special service to any

      of us. I drove the gig into the village, and sold the entire equipage

      to the ironmonger for (pounds)17, the exact sum which he claimed as being

      due to himself. I was much complimented by the gardener, who seemed

      to think that so much had been rescued out of the fire. I fancy

      that the ironmonger was the only gainer by my smartness.

      When I got back to the house a scene of devastation was in progress,

      which still was not without its amusement. My mother, through

      her various troubles, had contrived to keep a certain number of

      pretty-pretties which were dear to her heart. They were not much,

      for in those days the ornamentation of houses was not lavish as it

      is now; but there was some china, and a little glass, a few books,

      and a very moderate supply of household silver. These things, and

      things like them, were being carried down surreptitiously, through

      a gap between the two gardens, on to the premises of our friend

      Colonel Grant. My two sisters, then sixteen and seventeen, and the

      Grant girls, who were just younger, were the chief marauders. To

      such forces I was happy to add myself for any enterprise, and

      between us we cheated the creditors to the extent of our powers,

      amidst the anathemas, but good-humoured abstinence from personal

      violence, of the men in charge of the property. I still own a few

      books that were thus purloined.

      For a few days the whole family bivouacked under the Colonel's

      hospitable roof, cared for and comforted by that dearest of all women,

      his wife. Then we followed my father to Belgium, and established

      ourselves in a large house just outside the walls of Bruges. At

      this time, and till my father's death, everything was done with

      money earned by my mother. She now again furnished the house,--this

      being the third that she had put in order since she came back from

      America two years and a half ago.

      There were six of us went into this new banishment. My brother

      Hen
    ry had left Cambridge and was ill. My younger sister was ill.

      And though as yet we hardly told each other that it was so, we began

      to feel that that desolating fiend, consumption, was among us. My

      father was broken-hearted as well as ill, but whenever he could

      sit at his table he still worked at his ecclesiastical records. My

      elder sister and I were in good health, but I was an idle, desolate

      hanger-on, that most hopeless of human beings, a hobbledehoy

      of nineteen, without any idea of a career, or a profession, or

      a trade. As well as I can remember I was fairly happy, for there

      were pretty girls at Bruges with whom I could fancy that I was in

      love; and I had been removed from the real misery of school. But

      as to my future life I had not even an aspiration. Now and again

      there would arise a feeling that it was hard upon my mother that

      she should have to do so much for us, that we should be idle while

      she was forced to work so constantly; but we should probably have

      thought more of that had she not taken to work as though it were

      the recognised condition of life for an old lady of fifty-five.

      Then, by degrees, an established sorrow was at home among us. My

      brother was an invalid, and the horrid word, which of all words were

      for some years after the most dreadful to us, had been pronounced.

      It was no longer a delicate chest, and some temporary necessity

      for peculiar care,--but consumption! The Bruges doctor had said

      so, and we knew that he was right. From that time forth my mother's

      most visible occupation was that of nursing. There were two sick

      men in the house, and hers were the hands that tended them. The

      novels went on, of course. We had already learned to know that they

      would be forthcoming at stated intervals,--and they always were

      forthcoming. The doctor's vials and the ink-bottle held equal

      places in my mother's rooms. I have written many novels under many

      circumstances; but I doubt much whether I could write one when my

      whole heart was by the bedside of a dying son. Her power of dividing

      herself into two parts, and keeping her intellect by itself clear

      from the troubles of the world, and fit for the duty it had to do,

      I never saw equalled. I do not think that the writing of a novel

      is the most difficult task which a man may be called upon to do;

     

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