It has constantly been made a subject
of reproach against artists and men of letters that
they are lacking in wholeness and completeness of
nature. As a rule this must necessarily be so.
That very concentration of vision and intensity of
purpose which is the characteristic of the artistic
temperament is in itself a mode of limitation.
To those who are preoccupied with the beauty of form
nothing else seems of much importance. Yet there
are many exceptions to this rule. Rubens served
as ambassador, and Goethe as state councillor, and
Milton as Latin secretary to Cromwell. Sophocles
held civic office in his own city; the humourists,
essayists, and novelists of modern America seem to
desire nothing better than to become the diplomatic
representatives of their country; and Charles Lamb’s
friend, Thomas Griffiths Wainewright, the subject
of this brief memoir, though of an extremely artistic
temperament, followed many masters other than art,
being not merely a poet and a painter, an art-critic,
an antiquarian, and a writer of prose, an amateur
of beautiful things, and a dilettante of things delightful,
but also a forger of no mean or ordinary capabilities,
and as a subtle and secret poisoner almost without
rival in this or any age.
This remarkable man, so powerful with
‘pen, pencil and poison,’ as a great poet
of our own day has finely said of him, was born at
Chiswick, in 1794. His father was the son of
a distinguished solicitor of Gray’s Inn and
Hatton Garden. His mother was the daughter of
the celebrated Dr. Griffiths, the editor and founder
of the Monthly Review, the partner in another literary
speculation of Thomas Davis, that famous bookseller
of whom Johnson said that he was not a bookseller,
but ‘a gentleman who dealt in books,’ the
friend of Goldsmith and Wedgwood, and one of the most
well-known men of his day. Mrs. Wainewright
died, in giving him birth, at the early age of twenty-one,
and an obituary notice in the Gentleman’s Magazine
tells us of her ’amiable disposition and numerous
accomplishments,’ and adds somewhat quaintly
that ’she is supposed to have understood the
writings of Mr. Locke as well as perhaps any person
of either sex now living.’ His father did
not long survive his young wife, and the little child
seems to have been brought up by his grandfather,
and, on the death of the latter in 1803, by his uncle
George Edward Griffiths, whom he subsequently poisoned.
His boyhood was passed at Linden House, Turnham Green,
one of those many fine Georgian mansions that have
unfortunately disappeared before the inroads of the
suburban builder, and to its lovely gardens and well-timbered
park he owed that simple and impassioned love of nature
which never left him all through his life, and which
made him so peculiarly susceptible to the spiritual
influences of Wordsworth’s poetry. He
went to school at Charles Burney’s academy at
Hammersmith. Mr. Burney was the son of the historian
of music, and the near kinsman of the artistic lad
who was destined to turn out his most remarkable pupil.
He seems to have been a man of a good deal of culture,
and in after years Mr. Wainewright often spoke of
him with much affection as a philosopher, an archaeologist,
and an admirable teacher who, while he valued the
intellectual side of education, did not forget the
importance of early moral training. It was under
Mr. Burney that he first developed his talent as an
artist, and Mr. Hazlitt tells us that a drawing-book
which he used at school is still extant, and displays
great talent and natural feeling. Indeed, painting
was the first art that fascinated him. It was
not till much later that he sought to find expression
by pen or poison.
Before this, however, he seems to
have been carried away by boyish dreams of the romance
and chivalry of a soldier’s life, and to have
become a young guardsman. But the reckless dissipated
life of his companions failed to satisfy the refined
artistic temperament of one who was made for other
things. In a short time he wearied of the service.
‘Art,’ he tells us, in words that still
move many by their ardent sincerity and strange fervour,
’Art touched her renegade; by her pure and high
influence the noisome mists were purged; my feelings,
parched, hot, and tarnished, were renovated with cool,
fresh bloom, simple, beautiful to the simple-hearted.’
But Art was not the only cause of the change.
’The writings of Wordsworth,’ he goes
on to say, ’did much towards calming the confusing
whirl necessarily incident to sudden mutations.
I wept over them tears of happiness and gratitude.’
He accordingly left the army, with its rough barrack-life
and coarse mess-room tittle-tattle, and returned
to Linden House, full of this new-born enthusiasm
for culture. A severe illness, in which, to use
his own words, he was ‘broken like a vessel
of clay,’ prostrated him for a time. His
delicately strung organisation, however indifferent
it might have been to inflicting pain on others, was
itself most keenly sensitive to pain. He shrank
from suffering as a thing that mars and maims human
life, and seems to have wandered through that terrible
valley of melancholia from which so many great, perhaps
greater, spirits have never emerged. But he was
young—only twenty-five years of age—and
he soon passed out of the ’dead black waters,’
as he called them, into the larger air of humanistic
culture. As he was recovering from the illness
that had led him almost to the gates of death, he
conceived the idea of taking up literature as an art.
‘I said with John Woodvil,’ he cries,
’it were a life of gods to dwell in such an
element,’ to see and hear and write brave things:-
’These high and gusty relishes of life
Have no allayings of mortality.’
It is impossible not to feel that
in this passage we have the utterance of a man who
had a true passion for letters. ’To see
and hear and write brave things,’ this was his
aim.
Scott, the editor of the London Magazine,
struck by the young man’s genius, or under the
influence of the strange fascination that he exercised
on every one who knew him, invited him to write a series
of articles on artistic subjects, and under a series
of fanciful pseudonym he began to contribute to the
literature of his day. Janus Weathercock, Egomet
Bonmot, and Van Vinkvooms, were some of the grotesque
masks under which he choose to hide his seriousness
or to reveal his levity. A mask tells us more
than a face. These disguises intensified his
personality. In an incredibly short time he
seems to have made his mark. Charles Lamb speaks
of ’kind, light-hearted Wainewright,’
whose prose is ‘capital.’ We hear
of him entertaining Macready, John Forster, Maginn,
Talfourd, Sir Wentworth Dilke, the poet John Clare,
and others, at a petit-diner. Like Disraeli,
he determined to startle the town as a dandy, and
his beautiful rings, his antique cameo breast-pin,
and his pale lemon-coloured kid gloves, were well
known, and indeed were regarded by Hazlitt as being
the signs of a new manner in literature: while
his rich curly hair, fine eyes, and exquisite white
hands gave him the dangerous and delightful distinction
of being different from others. There was something
in him of Balzac’s Lucien de Rubempre.
At times he reminds us of Julien Sorel. De
Quincey saw him once. It was at a dinner at Charles
Lamb’s. ‘Amongst the company, all
literary men, sat a murderer,’ he tells us,
and he goes on to describe how on that day he had been
ill, and had hated the face of man and woman, and yet
found himself looking with intellectual interest across
the table at the young writer beneath whose affectations
of manner there seemed to him to lie so much unaffected
sensibility, and speculates on ’what sudden
growth of another interest’ would have changed
his mood, had he known of what terrible sin the guest
to whom Lamb paid so much attention was even then
guilty.
His life-work falls naturally under
the three heads suggested by Mr. Swinburne, and it
may be partly admitted that, if we set aside his achievements
in the sphere of poison, what he has actually left
to us hardly justifies his reputation.
But then it is only the Philistine
who seeks to estimate a personality by the vulgar
test of production. This young dandy sought
to be somebody, rather than to do something.
He recognised that Life itself is in art, and has
its modes of style no less than the arts that seek
to express it. Nor is his work without interest.
We hear of William Blake stopping in the Royal Academy
before one of his pictures and pronouncing it to be
‘very fine.’ His essays are prefiguring
of much that has since been realised. He seems
to have anticipated some of those accidents of modern
culture that are regarded by many as true essentials.
He writes about La Gioconda, and early French poets
and the Italian Renaissance. He loves Greek
gems, and Persian carpets, and Elizabethan translations
of Cupid and Psyche, and the Hypnerotomachia, and
book-binding and early editions, and wide-margined
proofs. He is keenly sensitive to the value of
beautiful surroundings, and never wearies of describing
to us the rooms in which he lived, or would have liked
to live. He had that curious love of green,
which in individuals is always the sign of a subtle
artistic temperament, and in nations is said to denote
a laxity, if not a decadence of morals. Like
Baudelaire he was extremely fond of cats, and with
Gautier, he was fascinated by that ’sweet marble
monster’ of both sexes that we can still see
at Florence and in the Louvre.
There is of course much in his descriptions,
and his suggestions for decoration, that shows that
he did not entirely free himself from the false taste
of his time. But it is clear that he was one
of the first to recognise what is, indeed, the very
keynote of aesthetic eclecticism, I mean the true
harmony of all really beautiful things irrespective
of age or place, of school or manner. He saw
that in decorating a room, which is to be, not a room
for show, but a room to live in, we should never aim
at any archaeological reconstruction of the past,
nor burden ourselves with any fanciful necessity for
historical accuracy. In this artistic perception
he was perfectly right. All beautiful things
belong to the same age.
And so, in his own library, as he
describes it, we find the delicate fictile vase of
the Greek, with its exquisitely painted figures and
the faint [Greek text which cannot be reproduced]
finely traced upon its side, and behind it hangs an
engraving of the ‘Delphic Sibyl’ of Michael
Angelo, or of the ‘Pastoral’ of Giorgione.
Here is a bit of Florentine majolica, and here a rude
lamp from some old Roman tomb. On the table lies
a book of Hours, ’cased in a cover of solid
silver gilt, wrought with quaint devices and studded
with small brilliants and rubies,’ and close
by it ’squats a little ugly monster, a Lar,
perhaps, dug up in the sunny fields of corn-bearing
Sicily.’ Some dark antique bronzes contrast
with the pale gleam of two noble Christi Crucifixi,
one carved in ivory, the other moulded in wax.’
He has his trays of Tassie’s gems, his tiny
Louis-Quatorze bonbonniere with a miniature by Petitot,
his highly prized ’brown-biscuit teapots, filagree-worked,’
his citron morocco letter-case, and his ‘pomona-green’
chair.
One can fancy him lying there in the
midst of his books and casts and engravings, a true
virtuoso, a subtle connoisseur, turning over his fine
collection of Mare Antonios, and his Turner’s
’Liber Studiorum,’ of which he was a warm
admirer, or examining with a magnifier some of his
antique gems and cameos, ’the head of Alexander
on an onyx of two strata,’ or ’that superb
altissimo relievo on cornelian, Jupiter AEgiochus.’
He was always a great amateur of engravings, and
gives some very useful suggestions as to the best
means of forming a collection. Indeed, while
fully appreciating modern art, he never lost sight
of the importance of reproductions of the great masterpieces
of the past, and all that he says about the value
of plaster casts is quite admirable.
As an art-critic he concerned himself
primarily with the complex impressions produced by
a work of art, and certainly the first step in aesthetic
criticism is to realise one’s own impressions.
He cared nothing for abstract discussions on the
nature of the Beautiful, and the historical method,
which has since yielded such rich fruit, did not belong
to his day, but he never lost sight of the great truth
that Art’s first appeal is neither to the intellect
nor to the emotions, but purely to the artistic temperament,
and he more than once points out that this temperament,
this ‘taste,’ as he calls it, being unconsciously
guided and made perfect by frequent contact with the
best work, becomes in the end a form of right judgment.
Of course there are fashions in art just as there
are fashions in dress, and perhaps none of us can ever
quite free ourselves from the influence of custom
and the influence of novelty. He certainly could
not, and he frankly acknowledges how difficult it
is to form any fair estimate of contemporary work.
But, on the whole, his taste was good and sound.
He admired Turner and Constable at a time when they
were not so much thought of as they are now, and saw
that for the highest landscape art we require more
than ‘mere industry and accurate transcription.’
Of Crome’s ‘Heath Scene near Norwich’
he remarks that it shows ’how much a subtle
observation of the elements, in their wild moods, does
for a most uninteresting flat,’ and of the popular
type of landscape of his day he says that it is ’simply
an enumeration of hill and dale, stumps of trees,
shrubs, water, meadows, cottages and houses; little
more than topography, a kind of pictorial map-work;
in which rainbows, showers, mists, haloes, large beams
shooting through rifted clouds, storms, starlight,
all the most valued materials of the real painter,
are not.’ He had a thorough dislike of
what is obvious or commonplace in art, and while he
was charmed to entertain Wilkie at dinner, he cared
as little for Sir David’s pictures as he did
for Mr. Crabbe’s poems. With the imitative
and realistic tendencies of his day he had no sympathy
and he tells us frankly that his great admiration
for Fuseli was largely due to the fact that the little
Swiss did not consider it necessary that an artist
should paint only what he sees. The qualities
that he sought for in a picture were composition,
beauty and dignity of line, richness of colour, and
imaginative power. Upon the other hand, he was
not a doctrinaire. ’I hold that no work
of art can be tried otherwise than by laws deduced
from itself: whether or not it be consistent
with itself is the question.’ This is one
of his excellent aphorisms. And in criticising
painters so different as Landseer and Martin, Stothard
and Etty, he shows that, to use a phrase now classical,
he is trying ’to see the object as in itself
it really is.’
However, as I pointed out before,
he never feels quite at his ease in his criticisms
of contemporary work. ‘The present,’
he says, ’is about as agreeable a confusion
to me as Ariosto on the first perusal. . . .
Modern things dazzle me. I must look at them
through Time’s telescope. Elia complains
that to him the merit of a MS. poem is uncertain;
“print,” as he excellently says, “settles
it.” Fifty years’ toning does the
same thing to a picture.’ He is happier
when he is writing about Watteau and Lancret, about
Rubens and Giorgione, about Rembrandt, Corregio, and
Michael Angelo; happiest of all when he is writing
about Greek things. What is Gothic touched him
very little, but classical art and the art of the
Renaissance were always dear to him. He saw what
our English school could gain from a study of Greek
models, and never wearies of pointing out to the young
student the artistic possibilities that lie dormant
in Hellenic marbles and Hellenic methods of work.
In his judgments on the great Italian Masters, says
De Quincey, ’there seemed a tone of sincerity
and of native sensibility, as in one who spoke for
himself, and was not merely a copier from books.’
The highest praise that we can give to him is that
he tried to revive style as a conscious tradition.
But he saw that no amount of art lectures or art
congresses, or ’plans for advancing the fine
arts,’ will ever produce this result. The
people, he says very wisely, and in the true spirit
of Toynbee Hall, must always have ‘the best
models constantly before their eyes.’
As is to be expected from one who
was a painter, he is often extremely technical in
his art criticisms. Of Tintoret’s ’St.
George delivering the Egyptian Princess from the Dragon,’
he remarks:-
The robe of Sabra, warmly glazed with
Prussian blue, is relieved from the pale greenish
background by a vermilion scarf; and the full hues
of both are beautifully echoed, as it were, in a lower
key by the purple-lake coloured stuffs and bluish iron
armour of the saint, besides an ample balance to the
vivid azure drapery on the foreground in the indigo
shades of the wild wood surrounding the castle.
And elsewhere he talks learnedly of
’a delicate Schiavone, various as a tulip-bed,
with rich broken tints,’ of ’a glowing
portrait, remarkable for morbidezza, by the scarce
Moroni,’ and of another picture being ‘pulpy
in the carnations.’
But, as a rule, he deals with his
impressions of the work as an artistic whole, and
tries to translate those impressions into words, to
give, as it were, the literary equivalent for the
imaginative and mental effect. He was one of
the first to develop what has been called the art-literature
of the nineteenth century, that form of literature
which has found in Mr. Ruskin and Mr. Browning, its
two most perfect exponents. His description of
Lancret’s Repas Italien, in which ’a dark-haired
girl, “amorous of mischief,” lies on the
daisy-powdered grass,’ is in some respects very
charming. Here is his account of ‘The Crucifixion,’
by Rembrandt. It is extremely characteristic
of his style:-
Darkness—sooty, portentous
darkness—shrouds the whole scene:
only above the accursed wood, as if through a horrid
rift in the murky ceiling, a rainy deluge—’sleety-flaw,
discoloured water’— streams down
amain, spreading a grisly spectral light, even more
horrible than that palpable night. Already the
Earth pants thick and fast! the darkened Cross trembles!
the winds are dropt—the air is stagnant—a
muttering rumble growls underneath their feet, and
some of that miserable crowd begin to fly down the
hill. The horses snuff the coming terror, and
become unmanageable through fear. The moment
rapidly approaches when, nearly torn asunder by His
own weight, fainting with loss of blood, which now
runs in narrower rivulets from His slit veins, His
temples and breast drowned in sweat, and His black
tongue parched with the fiery death-fever, Jesus cries,
‘I thirst.’ The deadly vinegar is
elevated to Him.
His head sinks, and the sacred corpse
’swings senseless of the cross.’
A sheet of vermilion flame shoots sheer through the
air and vanishes; the rocks of Carmel and Lebanon
cleave asunder; the sea rolls on high from the sands
its black weltering waves. Earth yawns, and
the graves give up their dwellers. The dead and
the living are mingled together in unnatural conjunction
and hurry through the holy city. New prodigies
await them there. The veil of the temple—the
unpierceable veil—is rent asunder from top
to bottom, and that dreaded recess containing the
Hebrew mysteries— the fatal ark with the
tables and seven-branched candelabrum—is
disclosed by the light of unearthly flames to the God-deserted
multitude.
Rembrandt never painted this sketch,
and he was quite right. It would have lost nearly
all its charms in losing that perplexing veil of indistinctness
which affords such ample range wherein the doubting
imagination may speculate. At present it is like
a thing in another world. A dark gulf is betwixt
us. It is not tangible by the body. We
can only approach it in the spirit.
In this passage, written, the author
tells us, ’in awe and reverence,’ there
is much that is terrible, and very much that is quite
horrible, but it is not without a certain crude form
of power, or, at any rate, a certain crude violence
of words, a quality which this age should highly appreciate,
as it is its chief defect. It is pleasanter,
however, to pass to this description of Giulio Romano’s
’Cephalus and Procris’:-
We should read Moschus’s lament
for Bion, the sweet shepherd, before looking at this
picture, or study the picture as a preparation for
the lament. We have nearly the same images in
both. For either victim the high groves and forest
dells murmur; the flowers exhale sad perfume from
their buds; the nightingale mourns on the craggy lands,
and the swallow in the long-winding vales; ‘the
satyrs, too, and fauns dark-veiled groan,’ and
the fountain nymphs within the wood melt into tearful
waters. The sheep and goats leave their pasture;
and oreads, ’who love to scale the most inaccessible
tops of all uprightest rocks,’ hurry down from
the song of their wind-courting pines; while the dryads
bend from the branches of the meeting trees, and the
rivers moan for white Procris, ‘with many-sobbing
streams,’
Filling the far-seen ocean with a voice.
The golden bees are silent on the
thymy Hymettus; and the knelling horn of Aurora’s
love no more shall scatter away the cold twilight
on the top of Hymettus. The foreground of our
subject is a grassy sunburnt bank, broken into swells
and hollows like waves (a sort of land-breakers),
rendered more uneven by many foot-tripping roots and
stumps of trees stocked untimely by the axe, which
are again throwing out light-green shoots. This
bank rises rather suddenly on the right to a clustering
grove, penetrable to no star, at the entrance of which
sits the stunned Thessalian king, holding between
his knees that ivory-bright body which was, but an
instant agone, parting the rough boughs with her smooth
forehead, and treading alike on thorns and flowers
with jealousy-stung foot—now helpless,
heavy, void of all motion, save when the breeze lifts
her thick hair in mockery.
From between the closely-neighboured
boles astonished nymphs press forward with loud cries
—
And deerskin-vested satyrs, crowned
with ivy twists, advance; And put strange pity in
their horned countenance.
Laelaps lies beneath, and shows by
his panting the rapid pace of death. On the
other side of the group, Virtuous Love with ’vans
dejected’ holds forth the arrow to an approaching
troop of sylvan people, fauns, rams, goats, satyrs,
and satyr-mothers, pressing their children tighter
with their fearful hands, who hurry along from the
left in a sunken path between the foreground and a
rocky wall, on whose lowest ridge a brook-guardian
pours from her urn her grief-telling waters.
Above and more remote than the Ephidryad, another
female, rending her locks, appears among the vine-festooned
pillars of an unshorn grove. The centre of the
picture is filled by shady meadows, sinking down to
a river-mouth; beyond is ’the vast strength
of the ocean stream,’ from whose floor the extinguisher
of stars, rosy Aurora, drives furiously up her brine-washed
steeds to behold the death-pangs of her rival.
Were this description carefully re-written,
it would be quite admirable. The conception
of making a prose poem out of paint is excellent.
Much of the best modern literature springs from the
same aim. In a very ugly and sensible age, the
arts borrow, not from life, but from each other.
His sympathies, too, were wonderfully
varied. In everything connected with the stage,
for instance, he was always extremely interested,
and strongly upheld the necessity for archaeological
accuracy in costume and scene-painting. ‘In
art,’ he says in one of his essays, ’whatever
is worth doing at all is worth doing well’;
and he points out that once we allow the intrusion
of anachronisms, it becomes difficult to say where
the line is to be drawn. In literature, again,
like Lord Beaconsfield on a famous occasion, he was
‘on the side of the angels.’ He was
one of the first to admire Keats and Shelley—’the
tremulously-sensitive and poetical Shelley,’
as he calls him. His admiration for Wordsworth
was sincere and profound. He thoroughly appreciated
William Blake. One of the best copies of the
‘Songs of Innocence and Experience’ that
is now in existence was wrought specially for him.
He loved Alain Chartier, and Ronsard, and the Elizabethan
dramatists, and Chaucer and Chapman, and Petrarch.
And to him all the arts were one. ‘Our
critics,’ he remarks with much wisdom, ’seem
hardly aware of the identity of the primal seeds of
poetry and painting, nor that any true advancement
in the serious study of one art co-generates a proportionate
perfection in the other’; and he says elsewhere
that if a man who does not admire Michael Angelo talks
of his love for Milton, he is deceiving either himself
or his listeners. To his fellow-contributors
in the London Magazine he was always most generous,
and praises Barry Cornwall, Allan Cunningham, Hazlitt,
Elton, and Leigh Hunt without anything of the malice
of a friend. Some of his sketches of Charles
Lamb are admirable in their way, and, with the art
of the true comedian, borrow their style from their
subject:-
What can I say of thee more than all
know? that thou hadst the gaiety of a boy with the
knowledge of a man: as gentle a heart as ever
sent tears to the eyes.
How wittily would he mistake your
meaning, and put in a conceit most seasonably out
of season. His talk without affectation was
compressed, like his beloved Elizabethans, even unto
obscurity. Like grains of fine gold, his sentences
would beat out into whole sheets. He had small
mercy on spurious fame, and a caustic observation
on the fashion for men of genius
was a standing dish. Sir Thomas Browne was a
‘bosom cronie’ of his; so was Burton, and
old Fuller. In his amorous vein he dallied with
that peerless Duchess of many-folio odour; and with
the heyday comedies of Beaumont and Fletcher he induced
light dreams. He would deliver critical touches
on these, like one inspired, but it was good to let
him choose his own game; if another began even on the
acknowledged pets he was liable to interrupt, or rather
append, in a mode difficult to define whether as misapprehensive
or mischievous. One night at C-’s, the
above dramatic partners were the temporary subject
of chat. Mr. X. commended the passion and haughty
style of a tragedy (I don’t know which of them),
but was instantly taken up by Elia, who told him ’that
was nothing; the lyrics were the high things—the
lyrics!’
One side of his literary career deserves
especial notice. Modern journalism may be said
to owe almost as much to him as to any man of the
early part of this century. He was the pioneer
of Asiatic prose, and delighted in pictorial epithets
and pompous exaggerations. To have a style so
gorgeous that it conceals the subject is one of the
highest achievements of an important and much admired
school of Fleet Street leader-writers, and this school
Janus Weathercock may be said to have invented.
He also saw that it was quite easy by continued reiteration
to make the public interested in his own personality,
and in his purely journalistic articles this extraordinary
young man tells the world what he had for dinner,
where he gets his clothes, what wines he likes, and
in what state of health he is, just as if he were
writing weekly notes for some popular newspaper of
our own time. This being the least valuable
side of his work, is the one that has had the most
obvious influence. A publicist, nowadays, is
a man who bores the community with the details of
the illegalities of his private life.
Like most artificial people, he had
a great love of nature. ’I hold three
things in high estimation,’ he says somewhere:
’to sit lazily on an eminence that commands
a rich prospect; to be shadowed by thick trees while
the sun shines around me; and to enjoy solitude with
the consciousness of neighbourhood. The country
gives them all to me.’ He writes about
his wandering over fragrant furze and heath repeating
Collins’s ‘Ode to Evening,’ just
to catch the fine quality of the moment; about smothering
his face ’in a watery bed of cowslips, wet with
May dews’; and about the pleasure of seeing
the sweet-breathed kine ’pass slowly homeward
through the twilight,’ and hearing ‘the
distant clank of the sheep-bell.’ One
phrase of his, ’the polyanthus glowed in its
cold bed of earth, like a solitary picture of Giorgione
on a dark oaken panel,’ is curiously characteristic
of his temperament, and this passage is rather pretty
in its way:-
The short tender grass was covered
with marguerites—’such that men called
DAISIES in our town’—thick as stars
on a summer’s night. The harsh caw of the
busy rooks came pleasantly mellowed from a high dusky
grove of elms at some distance off, and at intervals
was heard the voice of a boy scaring away the birds
from the newly-sown seeds. The blue depths were
the colour of the darkest ultramarine; not a cloud
streaked the calm aether; only round the horizon’s
edge streamed a light, warm film of misty vapour,
against which the near village with its ancient stone
church showed sharply out with blinding whiteness.
I thought of Wordsworth’s ’Lines written
in March.’
However, we must not forget that the
cultivated young man who penned these lines, and who
was so susceptible to Wordsworthian influences, was
also, as I said at the beginning of this memoir, one
of the most subtle and secret poisoners of this or
any age. How he first became fascinated by this
strange sin he does not tell us, and the diary in
which he carefully noted the results of his terrible
experiments and the methods that he adopted, has unfortunately
been lost to us. Even in later days, too, he
was always reticent on the matter, and preferred to
speak about ’The Excursion,’ and the ‘Poems
founded on the Affections.’ There is no
doubt, however, that the poison that he used was strychnine.
In one of the beautiful rings of which he was so
proud, and which served to show off the fine modelling
of his delicate ivory hands, he used to carry crystals
of the Indian nux vomica, a poison, one of his biographers
tells us, ’nearly tasteless, difficult of discovery,
and capable of almost infinite dilution.’
His murders, says De Quincey, were more than were
ever made known judicially. This is no doubt
so, and some of them are worthy of mention. His
first victim was his uncle, Mr. Thomas Griffiths.
He poisoned him in 1829 to gain possession of Linden
House, a place to which he had always been very much
attached. In the August of the next year he
poisoned Mrs. Abercrombie, his wife’s mother,
and in the following December he poisoned the lovely
Helen Abercrombie, his sister-in-law. Why he
murdered Mrs. Abercrombie is not ascertained.
It may have been for a caprice, or to quicken some
hideous sense of power that was in him, or because
she suspected something, or for no reason. But
the murder of Helen Abercrombie was carried out by
himself and his wife for the sake of a sum of about
18,000 pounds, for which they had insured her life
in various offices. The circumstances were as
follows. On the 12th of December, he and his
wife and child came up to London from Linden House,
and took lodgings at No. 12 Conduit Street, Regent
Street. With them were the two sisters, Helen
and Madeleine Abercrombie. On the evening of
the 14th they all went to the play, and at supper that
night Helen sickened. The next day she was extremely
ill, and Dr. Locock, of Hanover Square, was called
in to attend her. She lived till Monday, the
20th, when, after the doctor’s morning visit,
Mr. and Mrs. Wainewright brought her some poisoned
jelly, and then went out for a walk. When they
returned Helen Abercrombie was dead. She was
about twenty years of age, a tall graceful girl with
fair hair. A very charming red-chalk drawing
of her by her brother-in-law is still in existence,
and shows how much his style as an artist was influenced
by Sir Thomas Lawrence, a painter for whose work he
had always entertained a great admiration. De
Quincey says that Mrs. Wainewright was not really
privy to the murder. Let us hope that she was
not. Sin should be solitary, and have no accomplices.
The insurance companies, suspecting
the real facts of the case, declined to pay the policy
on the technical ground of misrepresentation and want
of interest, and, with curious courage, the poisoner
entered an action in the Court of Chancery against
the Imperial, it being agreed that one decision should
govern all the cases. The trial, however, did
not come on for five years, when, after one disagreement,
a verdict was ultimately given in the companies’
favour. The judge on the occasion was Lord Abinger.
Egomet Bonmot was represented by Mr. Erle and Sir William
Follet, and the Attorney-General and Sir Frederick
Pollock appeared for the other side. The plaintiff,
unfortunately, was unable to be present at either
of the trials. The refusal of the companies to
give him the 18,000 pounds had placed him in a position
of most painful pecuniary embarrassment. Indeed,
a few months after the murder of Helen Abercrombie,
he had been actually arrested for debt in the streets
of London while he was serenading the pretty daughter
of one of his friends. This difficulty was got
over at the time, but shortly afterwards he thought
it better to go abroad till he could come to some
practical arrangement with his creditors. He
accordingly went to Boulogne on a visit to the father
of the young lady in question, and while he was there
induced him to insure his life with the Pelican Company
for 3000 pounds. As soon as the necessary formalities
had been gone through and the policy executed, he
dropped some crystals of strychnine into his coffee
as they sat together one evening after dinner.
He himself did not gain any monetary advantage by
doing this. His aim was simply to revenge himself
on the first office that had refused to pay him the
price of his sin. His friend died the next day
in his presence, and he left Boulogne at once for
a sketching tour through the most picturesque parts
of Brittany, and was for some time the guest of an
old French gentleman, who had a beautiful country house
at St. Omer. From this he moved to Paris, where
he remained for several years, living in luxury, some
say, while others talk of his ’skulking with
poison in his pocket, and being dreaded by all who
knew him.’ In 1837 he returned to England
privately. Some strange mad fascination brought
him back. He followed a woman whom he loved.
It was the month of June, and he was
staying at one of the hotels in Covent Garden.
His sitting-room was on the ground floor, and he
prudently kept the blinds down for fear of being seen.
Thirteen years before, when he was making his fine
collection of majolica and Marc Antonios, he had forged
the names of his trustees to a power of attorney,
which enabled him to get possession of some of the
money which he had inherited from his mother, and had
brought into marriage settlement. He knew that
this forgery had been discovered, and that by returning
to England he was imperilling his life. Yet
he returned. Should one wonder? It was
said that the woman was very beautiful. Besides,
she did not love him.
It was by a mere accident that he
was discovered. A noise in the street attracted
his attention, and, in his artistic interest in modern
life, he pushed aside the blind for a moment.
Some one outside called out, ‘That’s
Wainewright, the Bank-forger.’ It was
Forrester, the Bow Street runner.
On the 5th of July he was brought
up at the Old Bailey. The following report of
the proceedings appeared in the Times:-
Before Mr. Justice Vaughan and Mr.
Baron Alderson, Thomas Griffiths Wainewright, aged
forty-two, a man of gentlemanly appearance, wearing
mustachios, was indicted for forging and uttering a
certain power of attorney for 2259 pounds, with intent
to defraud the Governor and Company of the Bank of
England.
There were five indictments against
the prisoner, to all of which he pleaded not guilty,
when he was arraigned before Mr. Serjeant Arabin in
the course of the morning. On being brought before
the judges, however, he begged to be allowed to withdraw
the former plea, and then pleaded guilty to two of
the indictments which were not of a capital nature.
The counsel for the Bank having explained
that there were three other indictments, but that
the Bank did not desire to shed blood, the plea of
guilty on the two minor charges was recorded, and the
prisoner at the close of the session sentenced by the
Recorder to transportation for life.
He was taken back to Newgate, preparatory
to his removal to the colonies. In a fanciful
passage in one of his early essays he had fancied
himself ‘lying in Horsemonger Gaol under sentence
of death’ for having been unable to resist the
temptation of stealing some Marc Antonios from the
British Museum in order to complete his collection.
The sentence now passed on him was to a man of his
culture a form of death. He complained bitterly
of it to his friends, and pointed out, with a good
deal of reason, some people may fancy, that the money
was practically his own, having come to him from his
mother, and that the forgery, such as it was, had been
committed thirteen years before, which, to use his
own phrase, was at least a circonstance attenuante.
The permanence of personality is a very subtle metaphysical
problem, and certainly the English law solves the
question in an extremely rough-and-ready manner.
There is, however, something dramatic in the fact that
this heavy punishment was inflicted on him for what,
if we remember his fatal influence on the prose of
modern journalism, was certainly not the worst of
all his sins.
While he was in gaol, Dickens, Macready,
and Hablot Browne came across him by chance.
They had been going over the prisons of London, searching
for artistic effects, and in Newgate they suddenly
caught sight of Wainewright. He met them with
a defiant stare, Forster tells us, but Macready was
’horrified to recognise a man familiarly known
to him in former years, and at whose table he had
dined.’
Others had more curiosity, and his
cell was for some time a kind of fashionable lounge.
Many men of letters went down to visit their old
literary comrade. But he was no longer the kind
light-hearted Janus whom Charles Lamb admired.
He seems to have grown quite cynical.
To the agent of an insurance company
who was visiting him one afternoon, and thought he
would improve the occasion by pointing out that, after
all, crime was a bad speculation, he replied:
’Sir, you City men enter on your speculations,
and take the chances of them. Some of your speculations
succeed, some fail. Mine happen to have failed,
yours happen to have succeeded. That is the
only difference, sir, between my visitor and me.
But, sir, I will tell you one thing in which I have
succeeded to the last. I have been determined
through life to hold the position of a gentleman.
I have always done so. I do so still. It
is the custom of this place that each of the inmates
of a cell shall take his morning’s turn of sweeping
it out. I occupy a cell with a bricklayer and
a sweep, but they never offer me the broom!’
When a friend reproached him with the murder of Helen
Abercrombie he shrugged his shoulders and said, ’Yes;
it was a dreadful thing to do, but she had very thick
ankles.’
From Newgate he was brought to the
hulks at Portsmouth, and sent from there in the Susan
to Van Diemen’s Land along with three hundred
other convicts. The voyage seems to have been
most distasteful to him, and in a letter written to
a friend he spoke bitterly about the ignominy of ‘the
companion of poets and artists’ being compelled
to associate with ‘country bumpkins.’
The phrase that he applies to his companions need
not surprise us. Crime in England is rarely
the result of sin. It is nearly always the result
of starvation. There was probably no one on board
in whom he would have found a sympathetic listener,
or even a psychologically interesting nature.
His love of art, however, never deserted
him. At Hobart Town he started a studio, and
returned to sketching and portrait-painting, and his
conversation and manners seem not to have lost their
charm. Nor did he give up his habit of poisoning,
and there are two cases on record in which he tried
to make away with people who had offended him.
But his hand seems to have lost its cunning.
Both of his attempts were complete failures, and
in 1844, being thoroughly dissatisfied with Tasmanian
society, he presented a memorial to the governor of
the settlement, Sir John Eardley Wilmot, praying for
a ticket-of-leave. In it he speaks of himself
as being ’tormented by ideas struggling for outward
form and realisation, barred up from increase of knowledge,
and deprived of the exercise of profitable or even
of decorous speech.’ His request, however,
was refused, and the associate of Coleridge consoled
himself by making those marvellous Paradis Artificiels
whose secret is only known to the eaters of opium.
In 1852 he died of apoplexy, his sole living companion
being a cat, for which he had evinced at extraordinary
affection.
His crimes seem to have had an important
effect upon his art. They gave a strong personality
to his style, a quality that his early work certainly
lacked. In a note to the Life of Dickens, Forster
mentions that in 1847 Lady Blessington received from
her brother, Major Power, who held a military appointment
at Hobart Town, an oil portrait of a young lady from
his clever brush; and it is said that ’he had
contrived to put the expression of his own wickedness
into the portrait of a nice, kind-hearted girl.’
M. Zola, in one of his novels, tells us of a young
man who, having committed a murder, takes to art,
and paints greenish impressionist portraits of perfectly
respectable people, all of which bear a curious resemblance
to his victim. The development of Mr. Wainewright’s
style seems to me far more subtle and suggestive.
One can fancy an intense personality being created
out of sin.
This strange and fascinating figure
that for a few years dazzled literary London, and
made so brilliant a debut in life and letters, is
undoubtedly a most interesting study. Mr. W.
Carew Hazlitt, his latest biographer, to whom I am
indebted for many of the facts contained in this memoir,
and whose little book is, indeed, quite invaluable
in its way, is of opinion that his love of art and
nature was a mere pretence and assumption, and others
have denied to him all literary power. This
seems to me a shallow, or at least a mistaken, view.
The fact of a man being a poisoner is nothing against
his prose. The domestic virtues are not the true
basis of art, though they may serve as an excellent
advertisement for second-rate artists. It is
possible that De Quincey exaggerated his critical
powers, and I cannot help saying again that there is
much in his published works that is too familiar, too
common, too journalistic, in the bad sense of that
bad word. Here and there he is distinctly vulgar
in expression, and he is always lacking in the self-restraint
of the true artist. But for some of his faults
we must blame the time in which he lived, and, after
all, prose that Charles Lamb thought ‘capital’
has no small historic interest. That he had a
sincere love of art and nature seems to me quite certain.
There is no essential incongruity between crime and
culture. We cannot re-write the whole of history
for the purpose of gratifying our moral sense of what
should be.
Of course, he is far too close to
our own time for us to be able to form any purely
artistic judgment about him. It is impossible
not to feel a strong prejudice against a man who might
have poisoned Lord Tennyson, or Mr. Gladstone, or
the Master of Balliol. But had the man worn
a costume and spoken a language different from our
own, had he lived in imperial Rome, or at the time
of the Italian Renaissance, or in Spain in the seventeenth
century, or in any land or any century but this century
and this land, we would be quite able to arrive at
a perfectly unprejudiced estimate of his position
and value. I know that there are many historians,
or at least writers on historical subjects, who still
think it necessary to apply moral judgments to history,
and who distribute their praise or blame with the
solemn complacency of a successful schoolmaster.
This, however, is a foolish habit, and merely shows
that the moral instinct can be brought to such a pitch
of perfection that it will make its appearance wherever
it is not required. Nobody with the true historical
sense ever dreams of blaming Nero, or scolding Tiberius,
or censuring Caesar Borgia. These personages
have become like the puppets of a play. They
may fill us with terror, or horror, or wonder, but
they do not harm us. They are not in immediate
relation to us. We have nothing to fear from
them. They have passed into the sphere of art
and science, and neither art nor science knows anything
of moral approval or disapproval. And so it
may be some day with Charles Lamb’s friend.
At present I feel that he is just a little too modern
to be treated in that fine spirit of disinterested
curiosity to which we owe so many charming studies
of the great criminals of the Italian Renaissance
from the pens of Mr. John Addington Symonds, Miss
A. Mary F. Robinson, Miss Vernon Lee, and other distinguished
writers. However, Art has not forgotten him.
He is the hero of Dickens’s Hunted Down, the
Varney of Bulwer’s Lucretia; and it is gratifying
to note that fiction has paid some homage to one who
was so powerful with ’pen, pencil and poison.’
To be suggestive for fiction is to be of more importance
than a fact.