Born: Princess Anna
Comnena, historian, 1083, Constantinople; John Neill,
mathematician and natural philosopher, 1671,
Edinburgh.
Died: Henry I of
England, 1135, Rouen; Pope Leo X., 1521; Sir James
Ware, antiquary, 1666, Dublin; Susanne Centlivre,
dramatist, 1723, London; Alexander I, Emperor of
Russia, 1825, Taganrog; Dr. George
Birbeck, promoter
of scientific education, 1841, London; Ebenezer
Elliott, poet ('the anti-cornlaw rhymer'), 1849,
Barnsley.
Feast Day: St. Eligius
or Eloy, bishop of Noyon, confessor, 659.
SUSANNE CENTLIVRE
Literary success presupposes
talent and industry, but dramatic success not only
talent and industry, but patience and tact in dealing
with the world. An author, when he has acquired the
confidence of the publishers, may live quietly at home
and transact his business from his desk; but a
dramatist, when he has finished his work as a man of
letters, often finds himself at the beginning of his
troubles. He has to adapt his piece to the style and
caprice of the actors, to submit to the excision of
what he considers the finest efforts of his wit and
fancy, and to the insertion of what he thinks
clap-trap or commonplace. Hence, whatever may be
thought of the theatre, the writer of a dozen or two
of successful plays cannot but be regarded with a
certain reverence, as one who has passed through an
ordeal of which only a character of equal sweetness
and energy is capable.
Of the private life and
character of Mrs. Centlivre, not much is known; but,
in an age when female authorship was far from being so
common as in our own, she wrote some score of plays,
two or three of which hold their place on the stage to
the present day. With few advantages of education, she
managed to acquire a respectable stock of learning, to
write with sprightliness and ease, and to find herself
a welcome guest wherever literature was had in honour.
The date and place of her
birth are both uncertain. Her father, Mr. Freeman, had
an estate at Holbeach, Lincolnshire, was a zealous
dissenter and republican, and, after
the Restoration,
sought refuge from persecution in Ireland. There,
about 1680, it is supposed his daughter Susannah was
born. Whilst she was yet a girl, he died, leaving her
quite destitute. There is a romantic story, that
Susannah set out for London alone, either to find some
friends, or earn a livelihood; and that, when near
Cambridge, she was seen by a young gentleman, who was
so charmed by her loveliness, that he persuaded her to
dress as a boy, and live with him as a fellow-student
at the university. There seems no doubt that, at
sixteen, she was married to a nephew of Sir
Stephen
Fox, and that, within a year, she was a widow. Soon
after, Colonel Carrol made her his wife; but ere two
years were out, he was killed in a duel, and thus,
before she was twenty, the beauty was twice widowed.
Very fond of the theatre, she thought she would try
her hand at a tragedy, and was fortunate enough to
have it performed at Drury Lane in 1700, under the
title of The Perjured Husband. Thus encouraged, she
persevered, but abandoned tragedy for comedy, finding
it the line in which she could excel. At the same time
she procured an engagement as an actress, but, like
Mrs. Inchbald at a later date,
she discovered that her
pen was a more effective instrument than her voice and
face. Nevertheless, it was on the stage that she
gained her third husband. She was at Windsor in 1706,
performing as Alexander the Great in Lee's Rival
Queens, when she won the heart of Joseph Centlivre,
Yeoman of the Mouth, or, in other words, chief cook to
Queen Anne. They were married, and lived happily
together until her death, in 1723, at his house in
Spring Gardens, Charing Cross. She was buried in St.
Martin's in the Fields.
Mrs. Centlivre was lively if
not witty, and, for her good-humour, was loved
wherever she was known. The language of her plays has
little in it to attract the reader, but her plots are
well constructed, the scenes full of action, and her
characters natural and well marked. By these qualities
they sometimes succeeded in spite of the prognostics
of the players. In rehearsal, The Busy Body was
decried; but it ran for thirteen nights, then thought
an extraordinary success, whilst Congreve's Way of the
World, sparkling with wit and smartness, was a
failure. Mrs. Centlivre shares in the sin of her time,
in the occasional licentiousness of her dialogue.
During the rehearsal of her Bold Stroke for a Wife, a
comedy which, as well as the Busy Body, still appears
occasionally on modern play-bills, Wilks, the actor,
declared that not only would it be dee'd, but that she
would be dee'd for writing it.
Her Wonder, or a Woman
keeps a Secret, if not her best, is the most popular
of her productions. In it, as Don Felix,
Garrick took
his farewell in 1776. As became the daughter of a
suffering dissenter, Mrs. Centlivre was an ardent Whig
and advocate of the Hanoverian succession, and not
unfrequently introduced her politics into her plays.
Pope gave her a line in the Dunciad:
'At last Centlivre found her
voice to fail'
for writing a ballad against
his Homer before she had read it.
THE YOUNG ROSCIUS
Precocity of genius, or of
ability, has always a certain attraction for the
world; partly on account of a kindly feeling towards
the young, but principally owing to a love of the
marvellous, which leads most of us to run after that
which is new and wonderful. If the encouragement thus
afforded to precocious boys and girls had the effect
of strengthening the powers thus early developed, this
would be a great point in its favour; but such is
certainly not the case. The youthful prodigy generally
becomes, if he or she lives, a very prosaic adult.
This was illustrated in the instance of The Young Roscius, a boy-actor
who made the public almost crazy
in the early part of the present century.
William
Henry West Betty, the boy in question, was born near
Shrewsbury in 1791. Almost from a child he evinced a
taste for dramatic recitations, which was encouraged
by a strong and retentive memory. Having been taken to
see Mrs. Siddons act, he was so powerfully affected,
that he told his father 'he should certainly die if he
was not made a player.' He gradually got himself
introduced to managers and actors; and at eleven years
of age, he learned by heart the parts of Rollo, Young
Norval, Osman, and others high in popular favour in
those days. On the 16th of August 1803, when under
twelve years of age, he made his first public
appearance at Belfast in the character of Osman; and
went through the ordeal without mistake or
embarrassment. Soon afterwards he undertook the
characters of Young Norval and Romeo. His fame having
rapidly spread through Ireland, he soon received an
offer from the manager of the Dublin theatre. His
success there was prodigious, and the manager
endeavoured, but in vain, to secure his services for
three years. Addresses were presented to the Young
Roscius, as he was now called; and pamphlets were
written in advocacy of plans for insuring the
happiness and completing the education of one who was
to be the bright star of the age. He next played nine
nights at the small theatre at Cork, whose receipts,
averaging only ten pounds on ordinary nights, amounted
to a hundred on each evening of Master Betty's
performance.
In May 1804, the manager of
the Glasgow theatre invited the youthful genius to
Scotland. When, a little after, Betty went to the
sister-city of Edinburgh, one newspaper announced that
he 'set the town of Edinburgh in a flame;' and, at a
loss apparently how to account for so brilliant a
phenomenon, put forth a theory that the boy's 'pleasing movements of perfect and
refined nature, had
been incorporated with his frame previous to his birth
Mr. Home went to see the character of Young Norval in
his own play of Douglas enacted by the prodigy, and is
said to have declared: ' This is the first time I ever
saw the part played according to my ideas of the
character. He is a wonderful being!'
The manager of
the Birmingham playhouse then sent an invitation, and
was rewarded with a succession of thirteen
closely-packed audiences. Here the Rosciomania, as
Lord Byron afterwards called it,
appears to have
broken out very violently; it affected not only the
inhabitants of that town, but all the iron and coal
workers of the district between Birmingham and Wolverhampton. In an article in
one of the early
volumes of the Penny Magazine, descriptive of the
South Staffordshire district and its people, it is
said:
'One man, more curious or more idle than his
fellows, determined to leave his work, and see the
prodigy with his own eyes. Having so resolved, he
proceeded, although in the middle of the week, to put
on a clean shirt and a clean face, and would even have
anticipated the Saturday's shaving, but he was
preserved from such extravagance by the motive which
prevented Mrs. Gilpin from allowing the chaise to draw
up to her door on the eventful morning of the journey:
�" lest all
Should say that she was proud."
But, notwithstanding this
moderation, he did not pass unobserved. The unwonted
hue of the shirt and face were portents not to be
disregarded, and he had no sooner taken the road to
Birmingham, than he was met by an astonished brother,
whose. amazement, when at last it found vent in words,
produced the following dialogue: "0i say, sirree,
where be'est thee gwain?" "Oi 'm agwain to Brummajum."
"What be'est thee agwain there for?" "0i'm agwain to
see the Young Rocus." "What?" "Oi tell thee oi'rn
agwain to see the Young Rocus." "Is it aloive?" 'The
'Young Rocus,' who was certainly 'aloive' to a very
practical end, then went to Sheffield, and next to
Liverpool.
Such was the boy who, on
December 1, 1804, made his first bow to a London
audience. After a desperate competition between the
managers of Drury Lane and Covent Garden theatres, the
former succeeded in securing the treasure. The flaming
accounts from the country newspapers had driven the
Londoners to a high pitch of excitement. The pressure
at the theatre was unparalleled. As early as one
o'clock in the day, persons began to take their
stations near the doors; and the inhabit-ants in the
neighbouring streets looked out from their upper
windows upon the tremendous array of people that
assembled by six o'clock. Bow-Street officers were
posted in great force within the theatre, and
Foot-guards without, to endeavour to maintain order.
At the opening of the door, after many faintings in
the crowd, hundreds were in danger of suffocation from
the mad endeavours of those behind them to force
themselves forward. Although no places were inlet in
the boxes, gentle-men paid box-prices to have a chance
of jumping over the fronts of the boxes into the pit;
and then others who could not find room for a leap of
this sort, fought for standing-places with those who
had hired the boxes days or weeks before. In short, it
was a frightful scene, which long impressed itself on
the memories of those who were present.
The play, Browne's
Barbarossa, in which the Young Roscius played the
part of Selim, was to have been preceded by an address
from Mr. Charles Kemble; but as not a word of it could
be heard in the tumultuous house, he wisely gave up
the attempt. Half the first scene of the play was then
gone through; nothing could 'be heard. Kemble came
forward again, but again could not be heard; and the
first act of the play proceeded in dumb-show. At
length, in the second act, Selim appeared, and the
perspiring audience gave up their frantic noise for
equally frantic admiration. Audiences as full as the
theatre could hold, though without such wild
paroxysms, afterwards witnessed his performance of
Tancred, Romeo, Frederick, Octavian, Hamlet, Osman,
Aehmet, Young Norval, and other favourite characters.
An arrangement was made by the patrons and managers of
the two Theatres Royal, that this golden talisman
should be made available for both; and he played at
the two theatres on alternate nights�earning about
�1000 a week altogether. Young Betty was 'presented to
the king, and noticed by the rest of the royal family
and the nobility, as a prodigy. Prose and poetry were
put in requisition to celebrate his praise; prints of
his person were circulated throughout the kingdom; and
even the university of Cambridge was sufficiently
hurried away by the tide of the moment, to make the
subject of Sir William Browne's prize-medal, Quid
nester Roscius eyet? It was even in public
contemplation to erect statues to him; and Opie
painted a full-length portrait of him, in which the
Young Roscius was represented as having drawn
inspiration from the tomb of Shakspeare. But the best
proof of the sensation he created is the fact, that
the amount which twenty-eight nights of his
performances at Drury Lane brought into the house was
�17,210, an average of nearly �615 per night.'
It is supposed that the receipts at Covent Garden were
nearly as much, and that thus �30,000 was earned by
this boy for the managers in fifty-six performances.
Fortunately for young Betty,
his friends took care of his large earnings for him,
and made a provision for his future support. He soon
retired from the stage, and then became a person of no
particular note in the world, displaying no more
genius or talent than the average of those about him.
When he became a man, he appeared on the stage again,
but utterly failed; he would not and could not 'draw.'
The Young Roscius and Mr. Betty were two entirely
different persons in the public estimation.
MR.
HEBER'S LIBRARY: BIBLIOMANIACS
The sale by auction of Mr.
Richard Heber's library, the disposal of one
department of which commenced on the 1st of December
1834, illustrated in a significant way that exclusive
fondness for books which is frequently styled
Bibliomania, or book-madness. If the collectors were
in the habit of reading the works which they buy, all
would be well; or if, when collected, the books were
sold or given in a mass to those who would know how to
value them, this again would be well; but the real
bibliomaniac collects books merely for the pleasure of
collecting, and the collection is generally dispersed
after a time. Mr. Heber was a man of great learning,
whose knowledge really extended over a vast range of
literature; and it is a pity that there is no '
Heber's Library' in existence, as a testimony to his
taste and knowledge; the library which he formed
having shared the usual fate of such ponderous
collections.
Born in 1773, Mr. Heber (who
was half-brother to the celebrated bishop of Calcutta,
of the same name) inherited property which permitted
him to spend immense sums in the purchase of books,
and he received an education which enabled him to
appreciate the books when purchased. He formed the
habit of making excursions from the family-seats in
Yorkshire and Shropshire to London, to attend
book-sales; and the first collection which he made,
consisted of curious old works relating to early
English poets and dramatists. When the termination of
the war, in 1815, opened the continent to English
travellers, Heber visited France, Belgium, and the
Netherlands, making large purchases of books in each
country. Again, in 1825, he went abroad, purchasing
books everywhere; and at the same time he kept an
agent employed in buying largely for him at all the
book-sales in England. All the hopes once entertained
of him as a public man, or a country gentleman, were
disappointed; he cared for nothing but books.
Libraries which he possessed
in different localities, sale-rooms, and booksellers'
shops, were almost the only places which had
attractions for him. He kept up a correspondence with
all the great dealers in old books throughout the
kingdom, and had all their catalogues regularly sent
to him. On hearing of a curious book, he was known to
have put himself into a mail-coach, and travelled
three or four hundred miles to obtain it, fearful to
intrust his commission to any one else. One of his
biographers says: ' He has been known to seriously say
to his friends, on their remarking on his many
duplicates, "Why, you see, sir, no man can do
comfortably without three copies of a work. One he
must have for a show-copy, and he will probably keep
it at his country-house. Another, he will require for
his own use and reference; and unless he is inclined
to part with this, which is very inconvenient, or risk
the injury of his best copy, he must needs have a
third at the service of his friends! This was a
handsome speech to address to a borrower; but it
cannot be denied that Mr. Heber's duplicates were
often purchased, through that passion of collectors
which demands not only that an article should be
possessed, but that it should also be kept from the
possession of others. The fact was, that collecting
had grown into an uncontrollable habit; and that it
was only satisfied in him, as in others, by an almost
unlimited indulgence. The desire of possessing
duplicates, or (which is the same thing under another
name) preventing other collectors obtaining them, was
not peculiar to Mr. Heber, but was more remarkable in
him, because exhibited on a large scale and with ample
means.'
The taste strengthened as he
grew older. Not only was his collection of old English
literature unprecedented, but he brought together a
larger number of fine copies of Latin, Greek, French,
Spanish, Italian, and Portuguese books than had ever
been possessed by a private individual. His house at
Hodnet, in Shropshire, was nearly all library. His
house in Pimlico (where he died in 1833) was filled
with books from top to bottom: every chair, table, and
passage containing ' piles of erudition.' A house in
York Street, Westminster, was similarly filled. He had
immense collections of books, in houses rented merely
to contain them, at Oxford, Paris, Antwerp, Brussels,
and Ghent. When he died, curiosity was naturally
excited to know what provision he had made in
reference to his immense store of books; but when his
will was discovered, after a long and almost hopeless
search among bills, notes, memoranda, and letters, it
was found, to the astonishment of every one on reading
it, that the library was not even mentioned! It seemed
as if Heber cared nothing what should become of the
books, or who should possess them, after his decease;
and as he was never married, or influenced greatly by
domestic ties, his library was considered by the
executors of his will as merely so much 'property,'
to be converted into cash by the aid of the
auctioneer. What was the number of books possessed by
him, or the amount of money paid for them, appears to
have been left in much doubt.
Some estimated the library at
150,000 volumes, formed at a cost of �100,000; others
reckoned it at 500,000 volumes, at an aggregate value
of �250,000. The truth was, his executors did not know
in how many foreign towns his collections of books
were placed. Thus it could not accurately be
ascertained what portion of the whole was sold by
auction in London in 1834�6; but the mere catalogue of
that portion fills consider-ably more than two
thousand printed octavo pages. The sales were
conducted by Mr. Evans, Messrs Sotheby, and other
book-auctioneers, and occupied two hundred and two
days, extending through a period of upwards of two
years from April 10th, 1834, to July 9, 1836. One copy
of the catalogue has been preserved, with marginal
manuscript notes relating to almost every lot; and
from this a summary of very curious information is
deducible.
It appears that, whatever may have been the
number of volumes sold by auction, or otherwise got
rid of abroad, those sold at this series of auctions
in London were 117,613 in number, grouped into 52,672
lots. As regards the ratio borne by the prices
obtained, to those which Mr. Heber had paid for the
books in question, the account as rendered shewed that
the auctioneer's hammer brought �56,775 for that which
had cost �77,150. It would appear, therefore, that the
losses accruing to Mr. Heber's estate through his
passion for book-collecting, amounted to upwards of
�20,000, and this irrespective of the fate, whatever
it may have been, of the continental libraries. We can
hardly come to any other conclusion, than that Mr.
Heber's life was nearly a useless one�performing
unnecessary work, which was undone soon after his
death.