Born:
Sir Thomas Browne, antiquary and
philosopher, 1605, Cheapside, London; James Butler,
Duke of Ormond, commander and statesman, 1610,
Clerkenwell London; James Gronovius, scholar and
author (Thesaurus Antiquitatum Graecarum), 1645,
Deventer; John Adams, distinguished American
statesman, 1735, Braintree, Massachusetts;
James Henry
Leigh Hunt, poet and miscellaneous writer, 1784,
Southgate, Middlesex.
Died:
King John of England, 1216, Newark
Castle; Jacobus Arminius (Jacob Harmensen), celebrated
Dutch theologian, 1609; Sir Thomas Browne, antiquary
and philosopher, 1682, Norwich; Dean Jonathan Swift,
humorous and political writer, 1745, Dublin; Henry
Kirke White, youthful poet, 1806, Cambridge;
Francis
Joseph Talma, great French tragedian, 1826, Paris.
Feast Day:
Saints
Ptolemy, Lucius, and a companion, 166. St. Ethbin or
Egbin, abbot, end of 6th century. St. Prides wide,
virgin, and patroness of Oxford, 8th century St. Peter
of Alcantara, confessor, 1562.
SIR THOMAS BROWNE
To many generations of gentle and meditative
readers, Sir Thomas Browne has been a choice classic.
Southey said, that were his library confined to a
dozen English authors, Browne should be one of them.
De Quincey describes Donne
Chillingworth, Jeremy
Taylor, Milton, South, Barrow, and Sir Thomas Browne,
as 'a pleiad or constellation of seven golden stars,
such as in their class no literature can match,' and
from whose works he would undertake to build up an
entire body of philosophy.
Browne was the son of a London merchant, and was
born within the sound of Bow Bells in 1605. His father
died and left him, in childhood, with a fortune of
�6000, out of a great part of which, says Dr. Johnson,
'he was defrauded by one of his guardians, according
to the common fate of orphans.' He was educated at
Winchester and Oxford, and after practising physic for
a while in Oxfordshire, he set out on a long tour
through Italy, France, and Holland. About 1634, he
returned to London, and in the following year he is
supposed to have written his Religio Medici. In 1636,
he settled in Norwich, and commenced business as a
physician; and in the enjoyment of an extensive and
lucrative practice, he passed in that city the
remainder of his long life. Of women he wrote very
slightingly, saying, that 'the whole world was made
for man, but only the twelfth part of man for woman;'
and 'that man is the whole world, but woman only the
rib or crooked part of man.' Nevertheless, in 1641, he
married a Mrs. Milehann, of a good Norfolk family, 'a
lady of such symmetrical proportion to her husband,
both in the graces of her mind and her body, that they
seemed to come together by a kind of natural
magnetism,' writes Whitefoot, one of Browne's
biographers. Together they lived happily for forty
years; she bore him ten children, and lived to be his
widow. Charles II, in a visit to Norwich in 1671,
knighted Browne. Such, in a few words, is the story of
Sir Thomas Browne's life. He died on his seventy
seventh birthday, the 19th of October 1682.
The chief incident in his life was the publication
of the Religio Medici the Religion of a Physician. It
was written, he declares, 'with no intention for the
press, but for his own exercise and entertainment' For
some six years it appears to have been handed about in
manuscript, and on the plea of its being
surreptitiously and imperfectly printed, he gave 'a
true and full copy,' under his own hand, to the world
in 1643. It at once excited the attention of the
public, even in that stormy age, as Johnson says, 'by
the novelty of paradoxes, the dignity of sentiment,
the quick succession of images, the multitude of
abstruse allusions, the subtilty of disquisition, and
the strength of language.' In the book he speaks much
of himself, but in such terms as to pique rather than
satisfy curiosity. Ho asserts, he understands six
languages; that he is no stranger to astronomy; that
he has seen many countries; and leaves us to puzzle
our heads over the mysterious and solemn announcement,
'that his life has been a miracle of thirty years,
which to relate were not history, but a piece of
poetry, and would sound like a fable.' So far as
concerns the autobiographical portions, the reader of
the Religio Medici will do well to bear in mind that
he is dealing with a humorist; and Browne's humour is
so irresistible, that it oozes through some of his
gravest passages. Coleridge describes the Religio
Medici as 'a fine portrait of a handsome man in
his best clothes; it is much of what he was at all
times; a good deal of what he was only in his best
moments. I have never read a book in which I have felt
greater similarity to my own make of mind active in
inquiry, and yet with an appetite to believe in short,
an affectionate visionary! It is a most delicious
book.'
The success of the Religio Medici, which was
translated into Latin, and thence into French, German,
Dutch, and Italian, probably tempted Browne into the
publication ofhis second work, in 1646, entitled
Pseudoxia Epidemica, 'or inquiries into very many
received tenets and commonly presumed truths, which
examined, prove but vulgar and common errors.' This
curious book treats in a pedantic way of a large
number of odd notions, such as, that Jews stink; that
the forbidden fruit was an apple; that storks will
only live in republics and free states; that the flesh
of peacocks corrupteth not; that elephants have no
joints; that a pot full of ashes will contain as much
water as it would without them; that men weigh heavier
dead than alive, and before meat than after; that
crystal is nothing but ice strongly congealed, &c.
Notwithstanding his zeal to discover old errors, he
was a prey to not a few himself. 'Natural diseases,'
he writes, 'are heightened to a great excess by the
subtlety of the devil cooperating with the malice of
those we term witches, at whose instance he cloth
those villanics.' Sir Matthew Hale fortified himself
by this opinion in condemning two poor women as
witches. Further he advises, 'that to those who would
attempt to teach animals the art of speech, the dogs
and cats, that usually speak unto witches, may afford
some encouragement.' The motion of the earth he never
mentions but with contempt and ridicule, though the
opinion was in his time growing popular.
The discovery of some urns in Norfolk, in 1658,
induced him to write Hydriotaphia; a discourse on
urn-burial, in which, with a strange mixture of
ideality and pedantry, he describes the funeral rites
of ancient nations. 'There is perhaps none of his
works,' says Dr. Johnson, ' which. better exemplifies
his reading or memory. It is scarcely to be imagined
how many particulars he has amassed, in a treatise
which seems to have been occasionally written.' To Hydriotaphia he added a
disquisition on The Garden of
Cyrus, or the Quincunxial Lozenge or Network
Plantations of the Ancients artificially, naturally.
Quincunx order is a plantation of trees disposed
originally in a square, consisting of five trees, one
at each corner, and a fifth in the middle, which.
disposition, repeated again and again, forms a regular
grove, wood, or wilderness. The quincunx, Browne
pursues through art and nature with a pertinacity that
almost leads his reader to conclude that on that
figure the universe was planned.
These were all the writings Sir Thomas Browne
published, but after his death a mass of papers was
discovered in his study, carefully transcribed, and
ready for the press. These miscellanies have been
printed, and supply fresh evidence of the versatility
and originality of his reading and meditation.
Considering the drudgery of his practice as physician,
it is surprising that he should have read and written
so much; but it is recorded that he was a skilful
economist of time, that he could never bear to be a
minute idle, and that the hours he could steal from
his patients were spent in his study. He was always
cheerful, though rarely merry; and, though in his
writing garrulous, in speech he was slow and weighty.
In his dress he affected plainness, and was averse to
all finery; and was a strong advocate for thick and
warm garments, as essential to health in the English
climate.
The stability the English language had acquired in
the age of Elizabeth was lost under her successors,
and Browne, along with Milton and others, poured a
multitude of exotic words into his compositions, to
the great injury of their effect. He uses
commensality, for the state of many living at the same
table; paralogical, for an unreasonable doubt; and
arthritical analogies, for parts that serve some
animals in the place of joints; besides a host of
other pedantries to even less propose; so that his
style in some parts is rather a tissue of many tongues
than honest English.
DEAN SWIFT
The life of the celebrated dean of St. Patrick's
presents a history at once singular and painful. Born
and educated in adversity, we find him emerging, after
a hard struggle, into prosperity and fame; then
disappointed in his canvass for clerical honours, we
see him retire from the contest, and devote himself to
literature and study; but cursed by a splenetic and
morbid disposition, little real enjoyment is seemingly
ever derived by him from any source, whilst the cold
calculating selfishness which prompted him to trifle
with the affections of a loving and self sacrificing
woman, entailed on him the pangs of a secret and
agonising remorse. Disease, bodily and mental, comes
to complete his miseries, and the last days of the
great satirist and politician are characterised by the
most melancholy and unqualified idiocy.
'From Marlborough's eyes the streams of dotage
flow,
And Swift expires a driveller and a show.'
Though born and resident in Ireland during the
greater part of his life, Swift was thoroughly English
both by extraction and disposition. His grandfather,
the Rev. Thomas Swift, was vicar of Goodrich, in
Herefordshire, four of whose sons, of whom he had ten,
besides four daughters, settled in Ireland. One of
these, Jonathan, who had been bred to the law, was
appointed steward of the King's Inns, Dublin, but died
about two years afterwards, leaving his widow in great
poverty, with an infant daughter, and also pregnant of
a son, who was born on 30th November 1667, and
received his father's name.
Young Jonathan received his first education at a
school in Kilkenny, and was afterwards sent to Trinity
College, Dublin, being indebted for these advantages
to his uncle, Godwin Swift, who formed the main
support of his mother and her family, but seems to
have bestowed his bounty in a niggardly and ungracious
manner. While at college, Swift made himself specially
distinguished in no way, except idling, and the
perpetration of many reckless pranks. In 1688, he
passed over to England, and joined there his mother,
who had been residing for some time in Leicestershire.
She was a relation of the wife of Sir William Temple.
Introduced to this celebrated statesman, the young man
was appointed private secretary, and took up his abode
with Sir William, at the latter's seat of Moor Park,
in Surrey. Here a reformation took place in his
habits; and having both gained the approbation of his
patron and his patron's master, King William, who used
frequently to visit at Moor Park, he was enabled in
1692 to proceed to Oxford, where he obtained the
degree of M.A. in the seine year. Returning to his
former employment under Sir William, a disagreement
arose, and Swift set off to Ireland, with the hope of
pushing his way in the church. He had the
mortification of being obliged to solicit his patron
for a certificate before he could obtain preferment,
but in 1695 was made prebend of Kilroot, in the
diocese of Connor, with a revenue of a hundred a year.
Life, however, in this remote locality was far too
dull for hum, and he was, consequently, very happy to
adjust his difference with Sir William Temple, and
return to his secretaryship at Moor Park. On the death
of Sir William, he proceeded to London, and
superintended there the publication of his patron's
posthumous works.
Having accompanied Lord Berkeley to Ireland in
1699, as his chaplain, Swift was presented by him to
the rectory of Agher and the vicarages of Rathbeggan
and Laracor, in the diocese of Meath. At the
last-named of these livings he took up his residence,
and continued there, during nearly the whole of the
reign of Queen Anne, to pass the life of a country
clergyman, varied by occasional visits to England,
with which he kept up a constant correspondence; and
employing himself, from time to time, in various
literary lucubrations, including the celebrated Tale
of a Tub, and the Battle of the Books, published
anonymously in 1704, and the Predictions of Isaac
Bickerstaff, Esq., in 1708. He also gave to the world
several tracts, in one of which, the Letter on the
Sacramental Test, he opposed strenuously the
relaxation of the penal laws regarding dissenters.
Swift was thoroughly a High Churchman; and though in
politics attached, both by disposition and the
connections of early life, to the principles of the
Revolution, he became, latterly, the sworn friend and
associate of Bolingbroke, Lord Oxford, and the rest of
that class of statesmen who maintained a
correspondence with the exiled family in France.
The utmost, however, which the Tory party bestowed
on him, was the deanery of St. Patrick's Cathedral, in
Dublin; and shortly afterwards, the death of Queen
Anne, and the accession of the Hanoverian dynasty,
shut him out effectually from all hopes of further
preferment. He refrained for many years from visiting
England, but earned an immense popularity in Ireland
by his denunciation of the unworthy system of
restriction imposed on that country by the English
parliament. His famous Drapier's Letters, on the
patent right granted to William Wood to coin farthings
and halfpence for Ireland, exposed him to considerable
danger from the authorities, but with the Irish raised
him to the dignity of a patriot, a position which he
ever afterwards maintained in their estimation. A
reward of �300 having been offered for the discovery
of the author of the Drapier's fourth letter, and a
bill against the printer being about to lie presented
to the grand jury, the following quotation from
Scripture was largely circulated in Dublin: 'And the
people said unto Saul, shall Jonathan die, who hath
wrought this great salvation in Israel? God forbid as
the Lord liveth, there shall not one hair of his head
fall to the ground; for he bath wrought with God this
day.
So the people rescued Jonathan, that lie died not'
The grand jury's verdict was ignoramus, and the patent
was ultimately withdrawn from Wood, who received in
compensation a yearly grant of �3000 for twelve years.
In 1726, Swift once more visited England, and in
the same year appeared the celebrated Gulliver's
Travels, which, published anonymously like most of
Swift's writings, achieved ere long a European
popularity, and more than any other work has conferred
on him an immortal reputation. But the moody, misanthropical author cared little
for the applause of
mankind, whose judgments he regarded with the most
withering scorn and contempt. No better proof could
he afforded of the general bent of his disposition
than the work just alluded. to, and more especially
time description of the country of the Houynhnhnms.
For ironical and sarcastic humour, nothing can be more
piquant than his Directions to Servants, which, with
the utmost gravity, inculcates on domestics the
performance of every act which they should not do, and
the omission of every duty which they should. It was
about the last literary work in which Swift engaged,
and was not published till after his death.
In thus sketching the life of Swift, we have as yet
said nothing of a circumstance which has found a
prominent place in every biography. Need. we say that
we allude to his attachments to Stella and Vanessa?
The former of these, whose proper name was Esther
Johnson, and who is said to have been a natural
daughter of Sir William Temple, was a pretty girl of
fourteen when she first made Swift's acquaintance at
Moor Park, where she was an inmate. The young
secretary acted the part of tutor towards her, and a
life-long attachment, on the part of Esther at least,
was the result. After Swift was settled as vicar of Laracor, Stella and a female
friend, named Mrs.
Dingley, followed him to Ireland. They generally
resided in the town of Trim, but took up their abode
in the vicarage at Laracor whenever its master was
absent. Up to 1716, the intercourse between them seems
to have been entirely of a Platonic character, but in
that year Swift having by this time become dean of St.
Patrick's they were married in the deanery garden by
the bishop of Clogher. This circumstance, however, was
carefully concealed, and the cold blooded indifference
with which Swift could thus expose the character of a
generous and loving woman to the world's aspersion
exhibits him in a very repulsive light.
Neither did he remain constant in his attachment to
her. During his visits to London about 1712, he made
the acquaintance of a young lady of good position,
Miss Esther Vanhomrigh, who, like Stella, has been
handed down to posterity by a poetic appellation
Vanessa. Unlike her rival, however, she appears to
have been of a forward, enterprising disposition, and
actually made known to Swift the state of her
affections; a declaration which he treated at first
jestingly, and after-wards replied to by a proffer of
everlasting friendship. There can be no doubt that the
conduct of the dean in his friendship with Vanessa was
wholly unjustifiable, and he reaped the just
punishment of his double dealing in the misery to
which. he was subjected by the opposing claims of the
two rivals on his affections. This embarrassment was
considerably increased by the circumstance of Vanessa
coming over to Ireland, and fixing her residence in
Dublin, from which she afterwards removed to Marley
Abbey, near Celbridge. Here Swift used frequently to
visit her; and our opinion of his character is by no
means heightened, when we know that at the very time
when the was indulging in the language of love and
affection towards Miss Vanhomrigh, he was himself
bound to another by the irrevocable tie of marriage.
After the death (about 1720) of a younger sister who
lived with her, the attachment of Vanessa to Swift
became more violent than ever; and, determined to
elicit the nature of his mysterious connection with
Stella, she despatched a letter of inquiry to that
effect to Mrs. Johnson.
The tragical consequence is well known. Stella's
jealousy being roused by the receipt of this
communication, she at once sent the letter to Swift,
whom it stirred to a paroxysm of fury. He mounted his
horse, rode to Marley Abbey, and entering the
apartment where Miss Vanhomrigh was sitting, glared at
her with such a terrible expression of countenance,
that the unfortunate woman could scarcely muster
courage to speak. He threw on the table a packet
containing the letter to Stella, quitted the house
without a word, and returned to Dublin.
Disappointment, indignation, and terror combined,
brought Vanessa to her grave in the space of a few
weeks after this interview, but not till she had
revoked a will by which she had bequeathed the whole
of her large fortune to Swift.
Mrs. Johnson survived Vanessa by a few years, and
died of a decline on the 8th of January 1728. It may
be stated, that in addition to these world renowned
names of Stella and Vanessa, there was another lady
with whom Swift had contracted an attachment previous
to his acquaintance with Stella. She was a Miss Jane
Waryng, the sister of a fellow student at Trinity
College, Dublin, and was courted by him under the
designation of Varine. This, his first love, Swift
regarded for a time with all the ardour of boyish
affection, but in a few years his passion cooled, and
an estrangement took place. Alluding to these passages
in his history, it is beautifully remarked by Mr.
Thackeray in Tie' English Humorists, that the book of
Swift's life may be said to open at places kept by
these blighted flowers!
One of the best traits in Swift's character, was
his large hearted and unostentatious benevolence.
About a third of his income was devoted to charitable
objects, and by his will the bulk of his fortune was
devised for the foundation of an hospital for idiots,
a bequest very suggestive of the melancholy fate of
the testator. The anecdotes related of him as a
humorist have been so often repeated as to have
become, for the most part, utterly threadbare. It may
be remarked on this subject, that however fond Swift
might be of a joke where the weight of sarcasm rested
on the shoulders of another, he had little relish for
it when any of the shafts of ridicule rebounded
against himself. On such occasions, he would fairly
lose temper, and betray a contemptible littleness of
mind. Thus he was so incensed at a Catholic priest
whom he met in a friend's house, and who smartly
replied to his sarcastic interrogation, Why the
Catholic Church used pictures and images when the
Church of England did not? with the retort: 'Because
we are old housekeepers, and you are new beginners,'
that he quitted the room, and refused to remain to
dinner. Another time, he complained to the mistress of
an inn of the sauciness of her cookmaid, who, when the
dean asked her how many maggots she had got out of a
piece of mutton she was scraping, answered: 'Not so
many as are in your head!'