“Woodbridge, Suffolk, Apl. 14th, 1814.
“MY LORD,—I received
this morning the reply with which your Lordship honour’d
my last, and now avail myself of the permission you
have so kindly granted to state as briefly as I can
the circumstances which have induced me to make this
application, and the extent of my wishes respecting
your Lordship’s interference.
“Eight years since, I went into
business in this place as a Merchant. I was then
just of age, and, shortly after, married. The
business in which I was engaged was of a very precarious
Nature; and after vainly trying for 4 Years to make
the best of it, I was compell’d to relinquish
it altogether. Just then, to add to my distress,
I lost my best, my firmest, my tenderest friend—the
only being for whose sake I ever desir’d wealth,
and the only one who could have cheer’d the gloom
of Poverty. My Capital being a borrow’d
one, I returned it as far as I could to the person
who had lent it. Since that time, my Lord, I have
been struggling to make the best of a Clerkship of
£80 per ann., out of which I have to meet every expence,
and still to maintain a respectable appearance in
a Place where I have resided under different circumstances.
Had I enter’d my present Situation free of all
debts, I should have made it an inviolable rule to
have limited my expenditure to my Income; but beginning
in debt, compell’d by peculiar circumstances
to mix with those much superior to myself, I have
gone on till I find it quite impossible to go on any
longer, and I am compelled to seek for some asylum
where, by rigid frugality and indefatigable exertion,
I may free myself from my present humiliating embarrassments;
but while I am here the thing seems impracticable.
Your Lordship will naturally inquire why I do not
avail myself of the influence of those friends by whom
I am known. As you have, my Lord, done me the
honour to encourage me to state my position frankly,
I will, without hesitation, inform you. I am,
nominally at least, a Quaker. The persons to whom
I should, in my present difficulties, naturally look
for assistance are among the most respectable of that
body; but my attachments to literary and metaphysical
studies, and a line of conduct not compatible with
the strictness of Quaker discipline, have, I am afraid,
brought me into disrepute with those to whom I should
otherwise have confided my situation. Were I
to disclose it, it would only be consider’d as
a fit judgment on me for my scepticism and infidelity.
“This, my Lord, is a brief but
faithful statement of my present situation; it is,
as I before told your Lordship, in every respect an
untenable one. I must relinquish it, and throw
myself an outcast on society. Can you, will you,
my Lord, exert your influence to save me from
irretrievable ruin? Can you, my Lord, in any possible
way, afford employment to me? Can you take me
into your service—a young man, not totally
destitute of talents, eager to exert them, and willing
to do anything or be anything in his power? If
you can, my Lord, I will promise to serve you not
servilely, but faithfully in any manner you shall
point out. Do not, I beg of you, my Lord, refuse
my application the moment you peruse it. The
mouse, you know, once was able to show its gratitude
to the lion; and it may be in my power, if your Lordship
will but give me the opportunity, to evince my deep
gratitude for any kindness you may show me, not by
words, but deeds. Be assur’d
you will not have cause to repent any interest you
have taken or may take in my concerns. For the
civility you shewed me on a former occasion, my Lord,
I felt, as I ought, much indebted; but infinitely more
for the generosity of feeling and soundness of judgment
which dictated the letter you then did me the honour
to address to me. Ever since then I have entertain’d
the highest opinion both of your head and your heart.
Is it, then, strange, my Lord, that, surrounded by
difficulties, perplexed at every step I take, I should
look up to your Lordship for advice, and, if
possible, for assistance? Be the consequences
what they may, I have ventur’d on the presumption
of doing so. If I have taken too great a liberty,
I beg you, my Lord, to forgive me, and let the tale
of my perplexities and my misfortunes, my impertinence
and its punishment, be alike forgotten; it can, at
any rate, only give your Lordship the trouble of reading
a letter. If, on the other hand, your Lordship
can in any way realize the hopes I have long enthusiastically
cherished, why, the ’blessing of him who is ready
to perish shall fall on you.’ Be the event
what it may, ‘Crede Byron’ is, your
Lordship sees, my motto.
“I am, my Lord,
“Your Lordship’s very obt. servt,
“B. BARTON.
“P. S.—I shall
wait with no common anxiety to see whether your Lordship
will so far forgive this intrusion as to answer it.”
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2.
“Woodbridge, April 15th, 1814.
“My Lord,—I should
be truly sorry if my importunity should defeat its
own purpose, and, instead of interesting your Lordship
on my behalf, should make you regret the indulgence
you have already granted me; but I really feel as
if I had staked every remaining hope on the cast of
the die, and, therefore, before it is thrown, I wish,
my Lord, to make one or two more observations.
“Although in my last, which,
as I before observed, was hastily written, I express’d
my wish to be allow’d, in some capacity or
other, to serve your Lordship, yet I am not so
foolish as to think of fastening myself on you, my
Lord, bon gré ou malgré. One reason for
my expressing that wish, was an idea that your Lordship
might go abroad before long; and, added to my own
wish to see something of the world on which fate has
thrown me, it occurred to me at the moment, that on
such an occasion the services of one who is warmly
attach’d to you, perhaps romantically,
for I know nothing of your Lordship but by your writings,
might be acceptable.
“But, my Lord, although I have
thus alluded to what would most gratify my own wishes,
it was not intended to dictate to you the manner in
which you might promote my interest. If your
Lordship’s superior judgment and greater knowledge
of the world can suggest anything else for my consideration,
it shall receive every attention.
“One more remark, my Lord, and
I have done. I am very sensible that in this
application to your Lordship I have been guilty of
what would be term’d by some a piece of great
impertinence, and by most an act of consummate folly.
Will you allow me, my Lord, frankly to state to you
the arguments on which my resolutions were founded?
“I have not address’d
you, my Lord, on the impulse of the moment, dictated
by desperation, and adopted without reflection.
No, my Lord; I had, or, at least, I thought I had,
better reasons. I remembered that you had once
condescended to address me ’candidly, not
critically,’ that you had even kindly interested
yourself on my behalf. I thought that, amid all
the keenness and poignancy of your habitual feelings,
as powerfully pourtrayed in your writings, I could
discern the workings of a heart truly noble.
I imagin’d that what to a superficial observer
appear’d only the overflowings of misanthropy,
were, in reality, the effusions of deep sensibility.
I convinc’d myself, by repeated perusals of
your different productions, that though disappointments
the most painful, and sensations the most acute, might
have stung your heart to its very core, it had yet
many feelings of the most exalted kind. From
these I hoped everything. Those hopes may be disappointed,
but the opinions which gave rise to them have not
been hastily form’d, nor will any selfish feeling
of mortification be able to alter them.
“I do not, my Lord, intend the
above as any idle complimentary apology for what I
have done. I am not, God knows, just now in a
complimentary mood; and if I were, you, my Lord, are
one of the last persons on earth on whom I should
be tempted to play off such trash as idle panegyrics.
I esteem you, my Lord, not merely for your rank, still
less for your personal qualities. The former
I respect as I ought; of the latter I know nothing.
But I feel something more than mere respect for your
genius and your talents; and from your past conduct
towards myself I cannot be insensible to your kindness.
For these reasons, my Lord, I acted as I have done.
I before told you that I consider’d you no
common character, and I think your Lordship will
admit that I have not treated you as such.
“Permit me once more, my Lord,
to take my leave by assuring you that I am,
“With the truest esteem,
“Your very obt. and humble servt.,
“BERNARD BARTON.
“P. S.—I hope
your Lordship will find no difficulty in making out
this scrawl; but really, not being able to mend my
pen, I am forced to write with it backwards.
When I have the good luck to find my pen-knife, I
will endeavour to furnish myself with a better tool.”
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