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yet found exactly that opportunity we desired. Meantime, we looked, with curiosity, for what the British critics would say of a work which, in the boldness of its conception, and in the fresh originality of its management, would necessarily fall beyond the routine of their customary verbiage. We saw nothing, however, that either could or should be understoodnothing, certainly, that was worth understanding. The tragedy itself was, unhappily, not devoid of the ruling cant of the day, and its critics (that cant incarnate) took their cue from some of its infected passages, and proceeded forthwith to rhapsody and æsthetics, by way of giving a common-sense public an intelligible idea of the book.-POE, EDGAR ALLAN, 1844, Horne's "Orion," Works, ed. Stedman and Woodberry, vol. VI, p. 262.

When you get Mr. Horne's book you will understand how, after reading just the first and the last poems, I could not help speaking a little coldly of it-and in fact, estimating his power as much as you can do, I did think and do, that the last was unworthy of him, and that the first might have been written by a writer of one tenth of his faculty. But last night I read the "Monk of Swineshead Abbey" and the "Three Knights of Camelott" and "Bedd Gelert" and found them all of different stuff, better, stronger, more consistent, and read them with pleasure and admiration. . . Mr. Horne succeeds better on a larger canvass, and with weightier material; with blank verse rather than lyrics. He cannot make a fine stroke. He wants subtlety and elasticity in the thought and expression. Remember, I admire him honestly and earnestly. No one has admired more than I the "Death of Marlowe," scenes in "Cosmo," and "Orion" in much of it. But now tell me if you can accept with the same stretched out hand all these lyrical poems? I am going to write to him as much homage as can come truly.-BROWNING, ELIZABETH BARRETT, 1846, To Robert Browning, Jan. 6; The Letters of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barrett Browning, vol. 1, pp. 370, 371.

I am not sure that in natural gifts he is inferior to his most famous contemporaries. That he here receives brief attention is due to the disproportion between the sum of his productions and the length of his career, for he still is an occasional and eccentric contributor to letters. There is

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something Elizabethan in Horne's writings, and no less in a restless love of adventure which has borne him wandering and fighting around the world, and breaks out in the robust and virile, though uneven, character of his poems and plays. He has not only, it would seem, dreamed of life, but lived it. Taken together, his poetry exhibits carelessness, want of tact and wise method, but often the highest beauty and power. A fine erratic genius, in temperament not unlike Beddoes and Landor, he has not properly utilized his birthright. His verse is not improved by a certain transcendentalism which pervaded the talk and writings of a set in which he used to move.-STEDMAN, EDMUND CLARENCE, 1875-87, Victorian Poets, p. 248.

Perhaps it can be said that the name of the late Richard Hengist Horne is more widely known, in this country, than his works. But, however this may be, it certainly is a fact that he is more particularly remembered by the lovers of Mrs. Browning as having been the one to first introduce her to the literary world. He lived to see that that was an honor indeed.-GOULD, ELIZABETH PORTER, 1884, Mrs. Browning and "Orion" Horne, The Critic, vol. 4, p. 245.

I have always felt that R. H. Horne is one of the few modern poets likely to be remembered by future generations-at all events by the students of our literature-as having written really good and memorable poetry. I have never myself, indeed, been able thoroughly to sympathize with the almost unqualified eulogium which (if I remember rightly) Edgar Poe once passed upon "Orion," although there is assuredly very much to admire in it. But in an age singularly unfruitful in English dramatic poetry of a high order, Horne's "Cosmo de Medici" and "The Death of Marlowe❞ stand out as not unworthy of a place beside "Colombe's Birthday," "The Blot in the 'Scutcheon," and "Pippa Passes. NOEL, RODEN, 1884, Letter, March 24; Literary Anecdotes of the Nineteenth Century, ed. Nicoll and Wise, p. 246.

Horne was a talented, energetic, and versatile writer. His epic and his early tragedies have much force and fire, but they are not born for immortality.-BULLEN, A. H., 1891, Dictionary of National Biography, vol. XXVII, p. 359.

Horne, in 1885, had already published his fine tragedy of "Cosmo de Medici," in

five acts, and "The Death of Marlowe," in one act, works with more of the vigorous character and high poetic quality of the Elizabethan dramatist than anything that has been written since the Elizabethan days. . . . A man of indubitable genius he yet wanted that one element of genius, humour. Still he merited far more than he had of contemporary appreciation, and very much of his verse may rank with the very best of that of the nineteenth century poets. . . . I always think of Horne as one who ought to have been great, he came so near to it in his work, in the greatness and nobility of his best writings. - LINTON, WILLIAM JAMES, 1894, Three Score and Ten Years, pp. 20, 21, 23.

It was a misfortune both for himself and for literature that his circumstances were not such as to take him out of the turmoil of earning his livelihood by the exercise of his really extraordinary talents. His ingenuity and inventiveness, which were almost without limit, were constantly in requisition to produce something remarkable. Had he been able to sit apart "out of the hurley-burley" and contemplate his best subjects in a philosophic spirit, concentrating his energies of mind on the production of the best result, we might have had greater work from him. As it is, it may be doubted whether he would not stand better with posterity if he had left, instead of a

vast mass of varied and clever literature, only some dozen or so of lyrical poems, "Orion," "Cosmo de Medici," "The Death of Marlowe," and "Judas Iscariot;" for these are in their own way masterly productions, and strong enough to bear each its burden of conscious instructiveness.-FORMAN, HARRY BUXTON, 1894, The Poets and the Poetry of the Century, John Keats to Lord Lytton, ed. Miles, p. 493.

He was a very remarkable poet for seven or eight years, and a tiresome and uninspired scribbler for the rest of his life. His period of good work began in 1837, when he published "Cosmo de Medici" and "The Death of Marlowe;" it closed in 1843, with the publication of "Orion," and the composition of all that was best in the "Ballad Romances." If any one wished to do honor to the name of poor old Horne-and in these days far less distinguished poets than he receive the honors of rediscovery - the way to do it would be to publish in one volume the very best of his writings, and nothing more. The badness of the bulk of his later verse is outside all calculation. How a man who had once written so well as he, could ever come to write, for instance, "Bible Tragedies" (1881), is beyond all skill of the literary historian to comprehend.-GOSSE, EDMUND, 1899, Recollections of "Orion" Horne, North American Review, vol. 168, p. 492.

Henry Fawcett

1833-1884

Born, at Salisbury, 26 Aug. 1833. Educated at school at Alderbury, 1841 (?)-47; at Queenwood Agricultural Coll., 3 Aug. 1847-49; at King's Coll. School, London, 1849-52. To Peterhouse, Cambridge, Oct. 1852; migrated to Trinity Hall, Oct. 1853; B. A., 1856; M. A., 1859. Fellowship at Trinity Hall, Dec. 1856. Entered at Lincoln's Inn, 26 Oct. 1854; settled there as student, Nov. 1856. Visit to Paris, 1857. Accidentally blinded while shooting, 17 Sept. 1858. Returned to Trinity Hall. Read papers on Political Economy at British Assoc., Sept. 1859; Member of Polit. Econ. Club, 1861. Prof. of Polit. Econ., Cambridge, 27 Nov. 1863 to 1884. Resigned Fellowship, 1866, to be re-elected same year under new statutes permitting marriage. Married Millicent Garrett, 23 April, 1867. Life spent in London, except during lectures at Cambridge. Read paper on "Proportional Representation" at Social Science Assoc., 1859. M. P. for Brighton, 12 July 1865; re-elected, Nov. 1868. M. P. for Hackney, 24 April 1874; re-elected, 31 March 1880, as Postmaster-General. Contrib., at various times to "Macmillan's Magazine," and "Fortnightly Review" (List of articles is given in Leslie Stephen's "Life" of Fawcett). Severe illness in Nov. 1882. Doctor of Polit. Econ. Würzburg, 1882. F. R. S., 1882. Lord Rector of Glasgow Univ., and Hon. LL. D., degree, 1883. Corresponding member of Institute of France, 1884. Died, at Cambridge, 6 Nov. 1884; buried at Trumpington. Works: "Mr. Hare's Reform Bill, simplified and explained," 1860; "The Leading Clauses of a new Reform Bill," 1860; "Manual of Political Economy," 1863; "The Economic Position of the British Labourer," 1865; "Pauperism," 1871; "Essays and Lectures," (with Mrs.

Fawcett), 1872; "The Present Position of the Government" (from "Fortnightly Review"), 1872; "Speeches on Some Current Political Questions," 1873; "Free Trade and Protection," 1878; "Indian Finance" (from "Nineteenth Century"), 1880; "State Socialism" (from his "Manual of Polit. Econ."), 1883; "Labour and Wages" (from "Manual of Polit. Econ."), 1884. Life: by Leslie Stephen, 1885.-SHARP R. FARQUHARSON, 1897, A Dictionary of English Authors, p. 97.

PERSONAL

No one can look upon him but he will see on his face the characters of courage, frankness, and intelligence. He is six feet two inches in height, very blonde, his light hair and complexion and his smooth beardless face giving him something of the air of a boy. His features are at once strongly marked and regular. He narrowly escaped being handsome, and his expression is very winning. His countenance is habitually serene, and no cloud or frown ever passes over it. His smile is gentle and winning. It is probable that no blind man has ever before been able to enter upon so important a political career as Professor Fawcett, who, yet under forty years of age, is the most influential of the independent Liberals in Parliament. From the moment that he took his seat in that body he has been able and this is unusual-to command the close attention of the House. He has a clear fine voice, speaks with the utmost fluency, has none of the university intonation and none of the hesitation or uneasy attitudes of the average Parliamentary speaker. scorns all subterfuges, speaks honestly his whole mind, and comes to the point. At times he is eloquent, and he is always interesting.-CONWAY, MONCURE DANIEL, 1875, Professor Fawcett, Harper's Magazine, vol. 50, p. 353.

He

I have made a new Acquaintance here. Professor Fawcett. . . . when Wright was gone called on me, and also came and smoked a Pipe one night here. A thoroughly unaffected, unpretending man; so modest indeed that I was ashamed afterwards to think how I had harangued him all the Evening, instead of getting him to instruct me. But I would not ask him about his Parliamentary Shop: and I should not have understood his Political Economy: and I believe he was very glad to be talked to instead, about some of those he knew, and some whom I had known.-FITZGERALD, EDWARD, 1882, Letters to Fanny Kemble, Sep. 1, pp. 238, 239.

There were two or three questions on the papers this evening to Mr. Fawcett.

Among others one by Mr. Sexton in reference to the negotiations between the Post Office and the Midland Great Western Railway. Mr. Shaw Lefevre announced that Mr. Fawcett was ill with pleurisy, and that probably he would not be able to resume his duties for some time. There was immediately a murmur of sympathy throughout the House, where Mr. Fawcett was the most popular of men and of Ministers. Within two hours after this announcement it was known that he was dead. gret for this sudden and unexpected termination of a picturesque, useful, and manly career struck everybody with sorrow, and one could see how faces changed their expression as the information was passed from one member to another.— O'CONNOR, T. P., 1884, Gladstone's House of Commons, Nov. 6, p. 465.

The re

A momentary silence 'mid the strife
Of tongues, and thro' the land a deeper hush
Than broods o'er autum woodlands all aflush
With glory eloquent of fading life,

Bespeak a common loss and sorrow rife
In English hearts and homes, for one who sought
No selfish ends, but ever planned and wrought
For all men's good. Now fall'n upon the wife,
Whose love illumined his darkness, is the Night;
And he who, dutiful and undismayed,
Confronted adverse Fate, and, in despite
Of his own blindness, evermore essayed
To win for others larger hope and light,
Beholds the splendor that shall never fade.
In Memoriam, National Review, vol. 4, p.
—ROLPH, JOHN L. F., 1884, Henry Fawcett:
568.

Fawcett's friends always spoke of him as a man to be loved, and no doubt they were right, but to those outside of that circle he seemed pre-eminently a man to be respected. What has been said of him since his death proves how universal the respect was, and how high was the opinion

the world had formed of his character and abilities. It is sometimes said the world takes a man at his own valuation, and this It would he hard to name a man who had is perhaps true enough in Fawcett's case. a more complete confidence in himself. This confidence was not a vain egotism. It sprang from a reasoned conviction. He had

a habit of judging by the dry light of reason, and he applied this process to himself as to other subjects of interest. He had no doubts about anything. He was as sure of himself as of a proposition in geometry. His mind had a mathematical cast which to a certain extent unfitted him for politics. He argued in straight lines, and lacked the flexibility which is in most cases a condition of success in English public life. When he had demonstrated that a thing ought to be on principle, he became impatient of those who would have shown him it was impossible in the circumstances, or premature.SMALLEY, GEORGE W., 1884-91, Mr. Fawcett, London Letters and Some Others, vol. I, p. 81.

Various proposals were immediately made to honour Fawcett's memory. A statue is to be erected in the market-place of Salisbury,near a statue previously erected to Sydney Herbert, on the spot where he took his first childish steps, and to which he always returned with fresh affection. In Cambridge there is to be a portrait by Mr. Herkomer of the figure so familiar for a generation. Measures are still in progress for some appropriate memorial in India to the man who showed so unique a power of sympathy with a strange race. A national memorial is in preparation, which is to consist of a scholarship for the blind at Cambridge, some additional endowment for the Royal Normal College for the Blind at Norwood, and a tablet is to be erected in Westminster Abbey. A memorial is also to be erected in recognition of his services to women; and the inhabitants of Trumpington are placing a window to his memory in their church. Such monuments are but the outward symbols of the living influence still exercised upon the hearts of his countrymen by a character equally remarkable for masculine independence and generous sympathy.-STEPHEN, LESLIE, 1885, Life of Henry Fawcett, p. 468.

His commanding form would have been noticeable under any circumstances. Not less familiar was his well-known form to boaters on the Cam, or to skaters on the Fens in times of frost. His marvellous courage was seen in things small as well as great. Swimming, rowing, and skating, as well as riding, were amongst his accomplishments, and whatever skill he possessed was pardonably exaggerated by the admiration of sympathising beholders. When

to this general familiarity with his stalwart figure is added the unfailing kindliness and cheerfulness of his manner to every one, whether high or low, it becomes easy to understand why in his case the public loss has been mourned with something of the tenderness of private sorrow. His memory for the tones of a voice was remarkable, and people who had only spoken to him once or twice were astonished, as well as gratified, to find that when they addressed him again they had no need to remind him of their names, for scarcely had a word been spoken before the hearty response showed the readiness of his recognition.-PICTON, J. ALLANSON, 1885, Professor Fawcett, Good Words, vol. 26, p. 31.

The member for Brighton was soon a popular member. The tall, manly figure, led about by an attendant, was gazed at with reverence in the House of Commons. His political creed gave an emphasis of individuality to a man who could so completely master himself. Nor were his politics such as he put before the Housecalculated to give offence to honest adversaries. Perhaps his views upon India-a subject which was so dear to him, that he got the sobriquet of the "Member for India"-were more likely to stir party hostility than his views upon toleration or upon Reform. . . . It is, however, to Fawcett's management of the Post Office that we naturally turn with the greatest interest; for it was as Post Master General that he won the highest laurels which were bestowed on him by the national gratitude.MARSHALL, A. F., 1886, A Blind Worker, The Month, vol. 56, pp. 246, 247.

Mr. Henry Fawcett, the blind spectacled Postmaster-General, is one of the tallest and most sinewy looking men in the House. He is a man of great intellectual vigor, tenacity of purpose, and courage mingled with caution, and a trenchant parliamentary debater as well as an admirable platformspeaker. On account of his profound knowledge of Indian affairs and sympathy with the people of that country, he is sometimes called "the member for India;" and when, with little money, he was trying to force the portals of "the rich man's club" at Westminster, a great number of very poor Hindoos subscribed a sum sufficient to defray the cost of his return for Hackney.MATHEWS, WILLIAM, 1887, The House of Commons; Men, Places and Things, p. 197.

GENERAL

True heart! We feel in England and o'er sea The whole of thy great life-work nobly planned Not only for thyself the victory,

But in thy triumph triumphs all thy land,
Which, sad from end to end for loss of thee,
Of civic heroes counts no life more grand.
-MARSTON, PHILIP BOURKE, 1884, In
Memory of Right Hon. H. Fawcett, M. P.
O strenuous spirit, darkling hast thou shined!
O light unto thy country, who hast lent
Eyes to the dim hope of the ignorant!
Why the great form of Justice standeth blind
Thou dost make plain. From thy immur'd
mind

Thou, as from prison-walls, thy voice has sent
Forceful for faculty's enfranchisement,
And free commerce of sympathies that bind
Men into nations; even thy harsh divorce
From the familiar gossip of the eyes
Moved thee to speed sweet human intercourse
By art's most swift and kindly embassies:
So didst thou bless all life, thyself being free
Of faction, that last bond of liberty.
-FIELD, MICHAEL, 1884(?) Henry Faw-
cett.

The language was lucid, the arrangement good, the ideas just. You read with pleasure, because you felt yourself in the hands of a man who thoroughly understood his subject and instructed you; but the light had little warmth, and seemed to shine with equal monotony on every part. There was even in his way of applying economic doctrines to practical problems a touch of what people called pedantry, but which might be better described as an extreme rigidity, a disposition to see only the blacks and whites of a question, and not to appreciate the subtler considerations which come in, and must be allowed to modify the broader conclusions of economic science.BRYCE, JAMES, 1884, The Late Mr. Fawcett, The Nation, vol. 39. p. 457.

He

Fawcett's writings display a keen and powerful, if rather narrow, intellect. adhered through life to the radicalism of J. S. Mill; he was a staunch free-trader in economic questions, an earnest supporter of co-operation, but strongly opposed to socialism, and a strenuous advocate of the political and social equality of the sexes. His animating principle was a desire to raise the position of the poor. He objected to all such interference as would weaken their independence or energy, and though generally favourable on this account to the laissez-faire principle, disavowed it when, as in the case of the Factory Acts, he held

that interference could protect without enervating.-STEPHEN, LESLIE, 1885, Dictionary of National Biography, vol. XVIII.

Certainly, nobody has less rubbish in his mind than Fawcett. But he did not escape the dangers which attend an exclusive devotion to work which promises to yield a directly useful result. As his biographer frankly admits, he had some of that narrowness and rigidity from which the practical man seldom escapes. He was not an original thinker. Even in political economy he did no more than illustrate and spread the ideas of minds broader and subtler than his own. But he had a healthy love of facts, and a power of using them which made him, wherever a calm judgment was needed, a man to lean upon. If, moreover, his intellectual interests were comparatively few, there was no trace of narrowness in his moral nature.-MACDONELL, G. P., 1885, Life of Henry Fawcett, The Academy, vol. 28, p. 385.

This book ["Manual of Political Economy"] probably did more to popularise the study than almost any other that has been published.-PICTON, J. ALLANSON, 1885, Professor Fawcett, Good Words, p. 33.

With great thinkers of the eighteenth century Fawcett firmly believed in Reason, and was prepared to make Reason, as far as she would carry him, the guide of his life. This earnest desire to follow out in practice the truths which his mind grasped, is visible both in his dealings with others and in his conduct of his own life, and it is this simple acting upon simple convictions which so greatly distinguishes him from the crowd who have neither definite beliefs nor fixed courses of action. . . . It is curious to see, as one follows Fawcett's political career, what simplicity and vigor the genuine adherence to very elementary economical or moral axioms could give to the conduct of a member of Parliament.-DICEY, A.V., 1886, Stephen's Fawcett, The Nation, vol. 42, p.

15.

He published, besides his manual, "Pauperism: Its Causes and Remedies," "Speeches on Some Current Political Questions," and "Free Trade and Protection," etc. In his economic writings Professor Fawcett was an uncompromising advocate of free trade. and the individualistic economic doctrines with which that party is associated; in politics he was a Liberal.-GILMAN, PECK, AND COLBY, 1903, The New International Encyclopædia, vol. VII, p. 256.

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