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eantime, Sir Laureate, I proceed to dedicate,In honest simple verse, this song to you.And, if in flattering strains I do not predicate,'T is that I still retain my "buff and blue;"[12]My politics as yet are all to educate:Apostasy's so fashionable, too,To keep _one_ creed's a task grown quite Herculean;Is it not so, my Tory, ultra-Julian?[13] Venice, Sept. 16, 1818. FOOTNOTES: {3}[1] ["As the Poem is to be published anonymously, _omit_ theDedication. I won't attack the dog in the dark. Such things are forscoundrels and renegadoes like himself" [_Revise_]. See, too, letter toMurray, May 6, 1819 (_Letters_, 1900, iv. 294); and Southey's letter toBedford, July 31, 1819 (_Selections from the Letters, etc._, 1856, in.137, 138). According to the editor of the _Works of Lord Byron_, 1833(xv. 101), the existence of the Dedication "became notorious" inconsequence of Hobhouse's article in the _Westminster Review_, 1824. Headds, for Southey's consolation and encouragement, that "for severalyears the verses have been selling in the streets as a broadside," andthat "it would serve no purpose to exclude them on the presentoccasion." But Southey was not appeased. He tells Allan Cunningham (June3, 1833) that "the new edition of Byron's works is ... one of the veryworst symptoms of these bad times" (_Life and Correspondence_, 1850, vi.217).] {4}[2] [In the "Critique on _Bertram_," which Coleridge contributed tothe _Courier_, in 1816, and republished in the _Biographia Literaria_,in 1817 (chap, xxiii.), he gives a detailed analysis of "the old Spanishplay, entitled _Atheista Fulminato_ [_vide ante_, the 'Introduction to_Don Juan_'] ... which under various names (_Don Juan_, the _Libertine_,etc.) has had its day of favour in every country throughout Europe ...Rank, fortune, wit, talent, acquired knowledge, and liberalaccomplishments, with beauty of person, vigorous health, andconstitutional hardihood,--all these advantages, elevated by the habitsand sympathies of noble birth and national character, are supposed tohave combined in Don Juan, so as to give him the means of carrying intoall its practical consequences the doctrine of a godless nature, as thesole ground and efficient cause not only of all things, events, andappearances, but likewise of all our thoughts, sensations, impulses, andactions. Obedience to nature is the only virtue." It is possible thatByron traced his own lineaments in this too life-like portraiture, andat the same time conceived the possibility of a new Don Juan, "made up"after his own likeness. His extreme resentment at Coleridge's just,though unwise and uncalled-for, attack on Maturin stands in need of someexplanation. See letter to Murray, September 17, 1817 (_Letters_, 1900,iv. 172).] [3] ["Have you heard that _Don Juan_ came over with a dedication to me,in which Lord Castlereagh and I (being hand in glove intimates) werecoupled together for abuse as 'the two Roberts'? A fear of persecution(_sic_) from the _one_ Robert is supposed to be the reason why it hasbeen suppressed" (Southey to Rev. H. Hill, August 13, 1819, _Selectionsfrom the Letters, etc._, 1856, iii. 142). For "Quarrel between Byron andSouthey," see Introduction to _The Vision of Judgment_, _PoeticalWorks_, 1901, iv. 475-480; and _Letters_, 1901, vi. 377-399 (AppendixI.).] [4] [The reference must be to the detailed enumeration of "the powersrequisite for the production of poetry," and the subsequent antithesisof Imagination and Fancy contained in the Preface to the collected_Poems of William Wordsworth_, published in 1815. In the Preface to the_Excursion_ (1814) it is expressly stated that "it is not the author'sintention formally to announce a system."] {5}[5] Wordsworth's place may be in the Customs--it is, I think, in thator the Excise--besides another at Lord Lonsdale's table, where thispoetical charlatan and political parasite licks up the crumbs with ahardened alacrity; the converted Jacobin having long subsided into theclownish sycophant [_despised retainer_,--_MS. erased_] of the worstprejudices of the aristocracy. [Wordsworth obtained his appointment as Distributor of Stamps for thecounty of Westmoreland in March, 1813, through Lord Lonsdale's"patronage" (see his letter, March 6, 1813). _The Excursion_ wasdedicated to Lord Lonsdale in a sonnet dated July 29, 1814-- "Oft through thy fair domains, illustrious Peer,In youth I roamed ...Now, by thy care befriended, I appearBefore thee, Lonsdale, and this Work present."] {6}[6] [_Paradise Lost_, vii. 25, 26.] {7}[7] "Pale, but not cadaverous:"--Milton's two elder daughters aresaid to have robbed him of his books, besides cheating and plaguing himin the economy of his house, etc., etc. His feelings on such an outrage,both as a parent and a scholar, must have been singularly painful.Hayley compares him to Lear. See part third, _Life of Milton_, by W.Hayley (or Hailey, as spelt in the edition before me). [_The Life of Milton_, by William Hailey (_sic_), Esq., Basil, 1799,p. 186.] [8] Or-- "Would _he_ subside into a hackney Laureate--A scribbling, self-sold, soul-hired, scorned Iscariot?" I doubt if "Laureate" and "Iscariot" be good rhymes, but must say, asBen Jonson did to Sylvester, who challenged him to rhyme with-- "I, John Sylvester,Lay with your sister." Jonson answered--"I, Ben Jonson, lay with your wife." Sylvesteranswered,--"That is not rhyme."--"No," said Ben Jonson; "but it is_true_." [For Robert Stewart, Viscount Castlereagh, see _The Age of Bronze_, line538, _Poetical Works_, 1901, v. 568, note 2; and _Letters_, 1900, iv.108, note 1.] {8}[9] For the character of Eutropius, the eunuch and minister at thecourt of Arcadius, see Gibbon, [_Decline and Fall_, 1825, ii. 307, 308]. [10] ["Mr. John Murray,--As publisher to the Admiralty and of variousGovernment works, if the five stanzas concerning Castlereagh should riskyour ears or the Navy List, you may omit them in the publication--inthat case the two last lines of stanza 10 [_i.e_. 11] must end with thecouplet (lines 7, 8) inscribed in the margin. The stanzas on Castlerighi(as the Italians call him) are 11, 12, 13, 14, 15."--_MS. M_.] [11] [Commenting on a "pathetic sentiment" of Leoni, the author of theItalian translation of _Childe Harold_ ("Sciagurata condizione di questamia patria!"), Byron affirms that the Italians execrated Castlereagh "asthe cause, by the conduct of the English at Genoa." "Surely," heexclaims, "that man will not die in his bed: there is no spot of theearth where his name is not a hissing and a curse. Imagine what must bethe man's talent for Odium, who has contrived to spread his infamy likea pestilence from Ireland to Italy, and to make his name an execrationin all languages."--Letter to Murray, May 8, 1820, _Letters_, 1901, v.22, note 1.] {9}[12] [Charles James Fox and the Whig Club of his time adopted auniform of blue and buff. Hence the livery of the _Edinburgh Review_.] [13] I allude not to our friend Landor's hero, the traitor Count Julian,but to Gibbon's hero, vulgarly yclept "The Apostate."
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