'JcL under e Regenc v< my » (i t fZ w j B''i u-tJ«X fae vS !S^ S ft[f=^' tf'gfW^Hfti f ^'i ff 'i ' tr " "t'^*"i f ^f ^' ^ T '* - BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME FROM THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUNE THE GIFT OF Hcnrg W. Sage 189X ^.3..^.o.x.-5ni -\'\.\x\.' Cornell University Library OA 535.A82S6 1899 Social England under the Regency / b' 3 1924 028 026 932 The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924028026932 OPINIONS OF THE PRESS ON SOCIAL ENGLAND UNDER THE REGENCY ' Mr. Asbton's method, exemplified in a long series of always amusing and incidentally instructive documents, is to dive into contemporary documents and to bring up almost at hazard anything which may throw light upon the manners and customs of the period. In " Social England under the Regency " he has found a temptingly rich theme, and . . . he has turned out a handsome and entertaining volume. It matters not where you open the book, you are sure to light upon something good.' S/. James's Gazette. ' It is bright and pleasant reading. . . . It is almost hopeless to give an idea of the interesting farrago — arranged, of course, in chronological order — that fills these pages.' — Times. 'A delightful storehouse of quaint and curious information. . . . Collectors of books for a theatrical library, sportsmen, students of costume and manners, as well as the General reader in search of mere entertainment, ou^ht to possess themselves of this handsome volume.' — Sporting Life. 'Amusing reading, and full-crammed with amusing cuts.' — National Observer. ' The author may fairly claim particular credit for his skill in selecting his material and arranging and combining it in so en- tertaining a fashion. The student of the superficial movements of society will find much in the volume to arrest his attention.' — Scotsman. ' The most alluring part is to be found in the state of London, of country roads, gipsies, dairy work, the amusements of high life, food and drink, and ladies' dress. The volume, in fact, affords the means of obtaining a very good idea of the condition of England during the period.' — Vaify Telegraph. ' The Regency is a very picturesque and interesting chapter in the history of England, and we shall never be tired of reading about it.' — Daily News. ' Every variety of life, whether it be commercial or fantastic, finds its place in Mr. Ashton's pages; and his illustrations, copied from the pviblications of the time, if sometimes coarse, as was the wit of the Regency, are extremely helpful, and always of historical value. His volume is, in fact, very entertaining.'— Prt/Zyf/a/^ Gazette. BOOKS BY JOHN ASHTON. Crown 8vo. , cloth, 7s. 6ri. each. A HISTORY OF THE CHAP-BOOKS OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY. With 334 Illustrations. HUMOUR, WIT, AND SATIRE OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. With 82 Illustrations. ENGLISH CARICATURE AND SATIRE ON NAPOLEON THE FIRST. With 115 Illustrations. MODERN STREET BALLADS. With 57 Illustrations. Crown 8vo., cloth, 6s. each. FLORIZEL'S FOLLY. With Photogravure Frontispiece and 12 full- page Illustrations. SOCIAL ENGLAND UNDER THE REGENCY. With 90 Illus- trations. SOCIAL LIFE IN THE REIGN OF QUEEN ANNE. With 84 Illustrations. Crown 8vo. , cloth, 3s. 6cl. London: CHATTO & WINDUS, iii .St. Martin's Lane, W.C. GEORGE III., 1819. SOCIAL ENGLAND UNDER THE REGENCY JOHN ASHTON AUTHOR OF 'social life in the reign of queen ANNE,' * FLORIZEL's FOLLY,' ETC. A NEW EDITION WITH NINETY ILLUSTRATIONS LONDON CHATTO & WINDUS 1899 PREFACE. Certainly, it is not the least part of an Author's reward for all his pains and trouble, to find that the Public appreciates his efforts, and purchases and reads his books. I am thus emboldened to continue my work, and sketch the men and manners of the Regency. Most books of this class deal mainly with the great ones of the land, but I have only done so where necessary to illustrate the history of the times, my aim beiiij more to delineate the social condition of England and her people. I may add, that this work will be found perfectly reliable as history, nothing being taken at second- hand, but all compiled, even down to the illustrations, from original and contemporaneous authorities. JOHN ASHTON. f ^^^^ CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. The King's Malady — Former preparations for a Regency — King's recovery — The King at home — His love of music — Severe frost — Lucien Buonaparte a prisoner of war — French obstructions to commerce — A gallant merchantman - 1 CHAPTER II. A Regency inevitable — Prince of Wales waited on — He under- takes the Regency — French and English prisoners of war — Roman Catholic soldiers — Roughness of manners — Passing of Regency Bill — The Prince's companions — Inauguration of the Prince as Regent — Improvement in the health of the King ----■••- 11 CHAPTER III. Story of a crime — The Shanavests and the Caravats— Gluttony Smuggling bullion — A Tar at the theatre — Deposition of French" Colours in Whitehall Chapel— The Duke of York reinstated as Commander-in-Chief— The Regency Fete- Account of the entertainment - - - - 23 CHAPTER IV. Ladies' dresses at the Fete— The banquet— Carlton House thrown open to the public— The crush— Sir F. Burdett's action against the Speaker— Relief of British Prisoners in France — Scarcity of guineas — Lord King and his tenants- Stories respecting the Currency - - - - 33 CHAPTER V. A smuggler's victim— Illness of Gilray— A gallant highway, man— A Witch — Bartholomew Fair — The Comet — A practical joke on the Queen— Woman's Cricket Match- Ballooning — French prisoners of war— Luddite riots— The King and his physicians^His health - - - - 43 X CONTENTS OHA.PTER VI. The Regent's doings— The Royal Sprain— Colonel McMahon— Luddite and Factory Riots — Scarcity of Bullion— Murder of Mr. Perceval • - - - ■ • - 55 CHAPTER VII. French Prisoners of War— Repeal of the ' Orders in Council ' — Rejoicings for the Victory of Salamanca — Saturnalia thereat - ■ ----- 68 CHAPTER VIII. Chimney-sweeps — Climbing boys — Riot at Bartholomew Pair — Duelling — War with Prance — Declaration of war between England and America — Excommunication for bearing false witness — Early Steam Locomotives — Margate in 1812 — Resurrection men — Smithfield Cattle Club • - - 76 CHAPTER IX. 1813. High price of provisions — Luddites — Smuggling — Day of Humiliation — The Cossack — Mdlle. Platofi — Discovery of body of Charles I. at Windsor — The Queen and the mad woman — The fasting woman of Tutbury — Fight between the Shannon and the Chesapeake — Rejoicings for the Victory at Vittoria — Fete at Vanxhall — William Huntingdon, s.s. - 85 CHAPTER X. Emperor of Russia invested with the Garter — The Poet Laureate — French Prisoners of War — Joy over Napoleon's defeat at Leipaic — ' Orange boven ' — The Allies and the War with France — The War with America — The Princess Charlotte and her establishment— The Prince of Orange her suitor— The King's Health - - - - - 102 CHAPTER XI. A Cat in a Conflagration — Scramble for Exchequer Bills — A Matrimonial Dispute — An old Debtor — A Volunteer Dinner — A Man and Hedgehog — Torpedoes — Slavery — Gambling on Napoleon's Life — Gas Lighting - - - - 113 CHAPTER XII. 1814. The Fog— Condition of Ireland— State of the Navy— The Regent at Belvoir — Coming of age of Princess Charlotte — Day of Thanksgiving — Great Snowstorm — Thames frozen over — Sports thereon — Frost fair — The Country and the Snow 119 CONTENTS xi CHAPTEE XIII. PAGE Burning of the Custom House — De Berenger's fraud on the Stock Exchange — Lord Cochrane inculpated — Price of pro- visions — Arrival of the Duchess of Oldenburgh ■ — The Capitulation of Paris, and fall of Napoleon — Papa Violette —Elba - - - - - ■ - 133 CHAPTEE XIV. Illuminations for Peace — Ovation to Louis XVIII. — His de- parture for France — Peace with Prance — Cheaper provisions — Distinguished foreign guests in London — Arrival of Emperor of Eussia and King of Prussia — Movements of the great folk — Popularity of General Blilcher - - - 144 CHAPTEE XV. Eoyal festivities — The Emperor of Eussia, the King of Prussia, and General Bliicher at Oxford — Banquet at Guildhall;;— Departure of the Allied Sovereigns — Signature of Treaty of Peace — Proclamation of Peace — State Thanksgiving at St. Paul's Cathedral - - - - - - 160 CHAPTEE XVI. City banquet to the Duke of Wellington — Costly vegetables — The Princess Charlotte — Squabbles about her presentation at Court — The Eegent hooted — The Princess Charlotte and the Prince of Orange — Her future husband, Prince Leopold — Her flight from Warwick House, and return - -173 CHAPTEE XVII. State of Ireland — The Eegent /«<«» the Duke of Wellington — The Jubilee in the Parks — Public opinion thereon — The Celebration ....... 190 CHAPTEE XVIIL The celebration of the Jubilee continued — Sale of the Properties — Continuation of the Fair — Departure of Queen Caroline for the Continent — Scarcity of Gold — French prisoners of war — State of the streets — Eed tape in the Navy — English visit France — The War with America — Treaty of peace with America .... 203 CHAPTEE XIX. 1815. Health of the King — Extension of the Order of the Bath — Wife selling — A Sailor's frolic — ' Nelson's Lady Hamilton ' — 'The Pig-faced Lady' — The advantage of being able to play the violin — Napoleon's escape from Elba - - 215 xii CONTENTS CHAPTER XX. Anti-Corn Bill riots — Riots in the north — Ratification of the Treaty of Peace with America — Attempt to steal the Crown — Epithets applied to Napoleon — The Prince of Wales' dehts - - - - - - - -225 CHAPTER XXI. News of the Battle of Waterloo — Rejoicings — After career of Napoleon — His abdication and flight — Groes on board the Beilerophon — Arrives at Torbay — His habits on board — Ordered to Plymouth — Crowds try to get a glimpse of him — His protest against being sent to St. Helena — Transferred to the Northumberland — Opinion as to the Prince Regent's conduct towards him — Sails for St. Helena - - - 237 CHAPTER XXII. Effects of Napoleon's capture — The Navy in 1815— Margate and Ramsgate — French Prisoners of war — Treaty of Peace with France — Napoleon's house — A soldier's letter — A zealous Lord Mayor — ^Hotels and clubs in 1815 - - 25i CHAPTER XXIII. 1816. Day of Thanksgiving — ' Battle for the Standard ' — Return of the troops — Frozen game brought over by Esquimaux — The Regent's practical joke — Rejection of the Prince of Orange by the Princess Charlotte, and acceptance of Prince Leopold as her husband — Her marriage — ''The R 1 Whiskers' — The Regent's yacht ...... 263 CHAPTER XXIY. Riots and agrarian outrages — -Colliers, &c., coming to London — 'England in 1816' — Riots in Newgate — Marriage of the Duke of G-loucester — A chimney sweep's wedding — Cruelty to a ' climbing boy ' — The Mortar at St. James's Park — Lighting by means of G-as — The Coinage • - - 276 CHAPTER XXV. Smuggling — ' Resurrection Men ' — More riots — Orator Hunt — Meetings at Spa Fields — Riots arising therefrom — ^Execution of one of the rioters — The King's health . - . 387 CHAPTER XXVL 1817. Visit of the Grand Duke Nicholas of Russia — Stones thrown at the Regent — Issue of the new Silver Coinage — Riots and arrests for sedition — First issue of Sovereigns — The Case of CONTENTS PAOB Abraham Thornton and appeal by battle — The Queen at Bath — Death of the Princess Charlotte — Richard Owen and his scheme — ' The Fortunate Youth '— ' Caraboo ' - - 301 CHAPTER XXVII. 1818. Distress among discharged Seamen — Finding the Scotch Regalia — Strathfieldsaye bought for the Duke of Welling- ton — The Kyrle Society — Royal Marriages — Annoying the Queen — Riotous schoolboys — The Regent mobbed — Death of Queen Charlotte -....- 317 CHAPTER XXVIII. 1819. Sale of the Queen's effects — Duke of York has custody of the King — The ' Dandy horse ' — Loss of, and finding the King's jewellery — A public dinner — A Roj'al freak — Unqualified medical practitioners — Emigration to America — 'The fair Circassian ' — Birth of Queen Victoria — Napoleon's Carriage —An Irish witness ..--.- 323 CHAPTER XXIX. Reform Meetings — Peterloo — Orator Hunt's entry into London — The King's last illness and death - - - 341 CHAPTER XXX. A foreigner's view of England — The packets — Roads — People — Posting — Mail and Stage Coaches— Amateur coachmen — Fast driving — Perils of travelling — A lioness attacks the Mail — Dog - carts and donkey - riding — The Streets and Houses- ....... 346 CHAPTER XXXL London improvements — The Country — Gleaning — Dairying and out-door "Washing— The Gipsy - - • 361 CHAPTER XXXII. Ladies' dresses — The Dandizette — Waltzing — The Quadrille — Almack's — Women's education — Women's work — Women Soldiers and Sailors — Female rowing match — Female pedestrian — Gretna Green marriages — Some curious marriages ...---- 378 CHAPTER XXXIII. The man of the period — Drinking habits — Dandies— Lord Petersham— A Dandy's diary— Gaming— Prize fighting- Country Sports ...--. 391 xiv CONTENTS CHAPTEB XXXIV. PAGE Eating and drinking — Recipe for Punch — The Stage — Baron Geramb — Romeo Coates — Actors and Actresses — Mrs. Jordan .....-- 4,04 CHAPTER XXXV. The Italian Opera — An uproar — Catalani and her terms — Vauxhall — Musical prodigy — Painters, Sculptors, Art exhibitions — Literature and writers — Bibliomaniacs — G-eorge Bidder, the Calculating boy — Musicians — Medical men — The Clergy — Roman Catholic emancipation — Joanna Southcott ....... 415 Index .-----.. 429 ILLUSTRATIONS. PAGE Frontispiece 17 28 35 41 47 50 51 54 57 60 George III., 1819 .... Bobeing the Regent ; or, The Road to Preferment The Soldier's Welcome Home ! ! ! Gudgeon Fishing k la Conservatory . Jew depreciating Bank Notes . The Comet of 1811 .... Rural Sports ; or, A Cricket Match Extraordinary Rural Sports ; Balloon Hunting 1812 ; or. Regency k la Mode Princely Agility ; or. The Sprained Ancle . The Privy Purse and Political Beggars Mr. Perceval assassinated in the Lobby of the House of Commons. May 11, 1812 ...... Zemlanowhin, the Brave Russian Cossack, as he appeared at the Royal Exchange on Wednesday, April 14, 1813 . A Tit-bit for a Cossack ; or. The Platoff Prize for the Head of Buonaparte Meditations among the Tombs Shannon v. Chesapeake British Valour and Yankee Boasting . Part of Transparency at Ackermann's ' The Sea is open, Trade revives ' The Frost Fair Violettes .... ' Peace and Plenty ; or. Good News for John Bull ! ! !' Bliicher greeted by his Numerous Friends in the Park, 1814 Blucher surveying himself as a D.C.L. Doctor Blucher ...... Russian Condescension ; or, The Blessings of Universal Peace Miss endeavouring to excite a Glow with her Dutch Plaything The Devonshire Minuet The R 1 kicking up a Row ; or, Warwick House in an Uproar Plebeian Spirit ; or, Coachee and the Heir Presumptive The Fortress ..... The Temple of Concord A Whole Family lost .... The Fall of Washington ; or, Maddy in Full Flight Waltzing a Courtship Recruiting ..... 66 91 95 97 99 106 108 127 143 149 155 164 165 169 180 181 185 187 194 200 209 213 220 233 ILLUSTRATIONS ke Home ! ! !' ' Answer to John Bull's Complaint ' . Bonaparte on the Quarter-deck of H.M.S. Northumberland Boxiana, or the Fancy ..... ' A Single Life on the Continent, starving on Sour Krout !' The Prince is made a General .... 'R 1 Whiskers,' 1816 .... Henry Hunt, Esq. ..... ' The New Coinage ; or, John Bull's Visit to Mat of the Mint ! !' ' A Peep into the Pump Room ; or, The Zomersetshire Folk in a Maze,' October, 1817 ...... Robert Owen, August 21, 1817 . . . . . ' Sales by Auction ! or, Provident Children disposint; of their Deceased Mother's Effects for the Benefit of their Creditors !' . ' Making Most of £10,000 per An. ' The Hobby Horse Dealer ' ' The Lady's Accelerator ' ' High Life below Stairs ! !' The Massacre at St. Peter's ; or, ' Britons, str Market Women The Waggon The Post Chaise The Mail Coach The Plough Sowing Broadcast Using the Flail The Farm Labourer Gleaners Dairy Folk Washing Clothes Mounted Butcher Boy The Gipsies Walking Costume, 1812 Ladies' Head-dress Nos. 1 and 2, 1811 ; No. 3, 1812 ; Nos. 4 and 5, 181.3 '. Nos. 1 and 2, 1814 ; Nos. 3 and 4, 1815 Fashionables of 1816 taking the Air in Hyde Park . Belles and Beaus ; or, A Scene in Hyde Park, August 12, 1817 A Dandyess, 1819 Waltzing At the Spinning-wheel . Making Pillow Lace Milk Woman . Conviviality A Portrait (Lord Petersham) Lord Petersham, 1815 . A Dandy Dandy on Horseback . Playing at Bowls and Quoits Lothario, as performed by Mr. Coates at the December 9, 1811 . A Clown and a Grasshopper A Physician Two Opposite Characters Haymarket Tlieatre, PAGE 235 244 251 271 272 273 292 304 309 311 325 326 327 329 333 343 348 349 350 352 363 364 364 365 366 367 368 370 371 374 375 376 377 379 380 381 382 385 386 387 393 395 396 398 397 402 410 414 423 425 A.D. 1592. SOCIAL ENGLAND UNDER THE REGENCY. CHAPTER I. The King's Malady — Former preparations for a Regency — King's recovery — The King at home — His love of music — Severe frost — Luoien Buonaparte a prisoner of war — French obstructions to commerce — A gallant merchantman. 'State of His Majesty's Health. 'Windsor Castle, January 1, 1811. ' His Majesty has passed a quiet night, without much sleep, and continues the same as he was yesterday. 'H. Halford. 'W. Heberden. 'R. Willis.' Such was the announcement contained in The Times of 2nd of January, 1811, and, for some time, the subjects of George III. were fed with daily news of the King's health. By and by, as his mental disease was confirmed, they grew fewer, until they were furnished just once a month, and then only the very scantiest intelligence of his condition was vouchsafed to his people. This was not the first time that his mind had given way. In the early part of October, 1788, he had decided symptoms of mental aberration, and was totally incapable of undertaking any of the aifairs of State ; but his physicians were hopeful 2 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1789 of his recovery — and their hopes were gratified. But the Ministry thought differently, and, after suggesting that the Government should be carried on by a Commission, on the 30th of December, 1788, Pitt wrote a letter to the Prince of Wales, stating that his Majesty's Ministers had come to the conclusion to offer him the Regency of the kingdom under certain restrictions. The Prince of Wales replied at once, expressing his sorrow at the occasion of his proposed elevation, but accepting the trust. Of course, this suggestion of the Government could not be acted upon without mature deliberation, and it was not until the 30th of January, 1789, that the following resolutions of the Lords and Commons were presented to the Prince of Wales — 'That his Royal Highness be empowered to exercise the royal authority under the title of Regent.' ' That the power given, should not extend to the granting of any peerage, except to the Royal issue.' ' Nor to the grant of any office in reversion, or any office, salary, or pension, than during his Majesty's pleasure ; or to the granting his Majesty's real or personal estates.' 'That the Care of his Majesty be committed to the Queen, who should nominate all persons to the offices in the household.' Needless to say, the Prince made no objections, and by the 1 2th of February, the Regency Bill had gone through all its stages in the House of Commons, and was ordered to be sent to the Lords. But the proverbial ' slip 'twixt cup and hp ' occurred. On the 19th of February the Lord Chancellor informed the House of Lords that, according to the report of his physicians, the King's health was steadily mending, and they therefore abstained from further consideration of the Regency Bill. ■The physicians' hopes were fully justified ; the King got better rapidly, and, on the 27th of February, his perfect recovery was announced, the prayer for the same was dis- continued, and a form of prayer of thanksgiving for his restoration to health, was ordered to be read in all Churches and Chapels throughout England and Wales. Rejoicings and illuminations were the order of the day, and, on the 23rd of April, the day of general thanksgiving, the King, Queen, and Royal family went in state to St. Paul's Cathedral, to return thanks to God for His mercy in giving the King his reason and health once more. Years went on, and the King did not suffer from mental 1810] UNDER THE REGENCY 3 disease, until the year 1810, when to bodily illness of his own, was added the death of his daughter, the Princess Ameha, This shock his intellect, perhaps never too strong, could not stand, and, although his condition was concealed for some little time from the people — under the pretence that he had a cold — the truth was obliged to come out ; and we read in The Morning Post of October 31st — 'It is with heartfelt sorrow we announce that His Majesty's indisposition still continues. It commenced with the effect produced upon his tender parental feelings on receiving the ring* from the hand of his afflicted beloved daughter, the affecting inscription upon which, caused him, blessed, and most amiable of men, to burst into tears, with the most heart-touching lamentations on the present state, and approaching dissolution of the afflicted and interesting Princess. His Majesty is attended by Drs. Halford, Heberden, and Baillie, who issue daily bulletins of the state of the virtuous and revered monarch, for whose speedy recovery the prayers of all good men will not fail to be offered up.' This time the physicians held out no hopes of the King's recovery, or if they did, it was at some vague, indefinite future, the date of which none could prognosticate, and Pai'liament found itself in a serious situation. It met on the 1st of November, to which date it had been prorogued, only to find that there was no King to open the session, and no Commission for so doing had been named. So, in default of any other recognized authority, the Lord Chancellor, and the Speaker, took the lead in their different assemblies, and after vainly trying to find out how they should act, an Order in Council cut the Gordian Knot, adjourning Parliament to the 29th of November, a decision which was confirmed in the House of Commons by a majority of 285. When they again met, they, after discoursing of the King, set to work to concoct a Regency. But that may wait for a while, and come in its proper place, for King George is passing away from this history, and the full blaze of the Regency leaves very Uttle room for the * The Princess Amelia, when dying, ordered a valuable atone she possessed, to be set in a ring, for a keepsake of her to her father, and so urgent was she that it might be made before she died, that a jeweller was sent for, express, from London to make it. It con- tained a lock of her hair, and, on it, was her name, and, ' Remember me when I am gone. 1—2 4 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1810 shadow of the old King to show : yet, before he disappears altogether, it may be as well if we can recall a reminiscence of him, as late as possible, before his sad malady overtook, and mastered him. Not in his public capacity, but as it were en famille, let us see him ; and we get a good view of him through the medium of the Rev. John Evans, LL.D., of Islington, who wrote ' An excursion to Windsor,' and thus describes what he saw on the 10th of July, 1810 : — ' We entered Windsor about six o'clock, and, having refreshed ourselves at the inn with a cup of tea, hastened to The Terrace, where we found a considerable portion of genteel company. Intent on the gratification of a laudable curiosity, we felt peculiarly happy in joining them on this occasion. It was seven o'clock, and the good old King soon made his appearance with his accustomed punctuality. 'A little door in the Castle was thrown open, when two attendants were seen leading this venerable personage with great care down a flight of steps till he safely alighted upon the terrace. Then the Princesses Elisabeth and Augusta, who were present, accompanied him, one on each side, or rather took hold of his arm ; they paced backwards and forwards for an hour, two bands of music playing alternately ; and the fine tones of the several instruments being heightened by the stillness of the closing day. ' The King was dressed neatly : blue coat with gilt buttons and blue star, white waistcoat and small clothes, white stockings, and gold buckles in his shoes. His hat somewhat resembled that worn by the clergy, with the addition of a gold button and loop, mounted by a black cockade, which marks him out conspicuously from the rest of the company. His Majesty looked ruddy and full ; his voice is sonorous, and he converses with cheerfulness, though, when he attempts to speak rather hastily, it is with hesitation. ' His want of sight is very apparent, for his hat is drawn over the upper part of his face, and he feels about with his cane, especially ascending or descending a step. It is affect- ing to see him, though he appears cheerful when he speaks, and seems as if nothing were the matter with him. He now and then stops to converse either with the officers, or with the nobility and gentry. We saw him several times on the Terrace ; but on this first evening there was a more than ordinary degree of conversation. He was full of inquiries 1810] UNDER THE REGENCY 5 respecting the installation of Lord Granville as Chancellor of the University of Oxford, which had taken place during the week. He inquired also about the balloon in which Mr. Sadler* had ascended on this occasion, and was particularly anxious to know how long it continued in the air, and where it had alighted ; Harrow-on-the-Hill was mentioned, though the spot had not then been ascertained. He conversed at all times on a variety of topics with the utmost freedom and even hilarity. 'This daily promenade must benefit both his mind and body : while the presence, as well as the attention, of so many of his subjects, some coming from distant parts, must yield him no inconsiderable gratification. The countenances of the Princesses are replete with good nature, and most exemplary is their attention to their aged parent. . . . ' It should be mentioned that the King, in returning back to his apartments in the Castle, passing by the band of musicians on the steps, always touched his hat, and said, in an audible voice, " Gentlemen, good-night, I thank you." Indeed, his Majesty, during the whole time, seemed in perfect good humour with all the company. ' The only etiquette observed on the Terrace is, that when the King passes, the ladies and gentlemen withdraw on either side, the latter merely uncovering the head ; bows and curtsies being dispensed with on the occasion. A police officer is in attendance, who, with a little switch, keeps individuals from pressing too much on the King, when he stops to converse ; but this is done with the greatest urbanity. Owing to a slight indisposition, the Queen did not make her appearance on the Terrace ; but we saw her on other occasions. His Majesty was regular in his attendance at Chapel every morning, and seemed seriously engaged in his devotions. 'About ten o'clock, when the weather is fine (Sundays excepted), the King rides out on horseback ; and, considering his age, he mounted his horse with wonderful agility. He is, in his ride, accompanied by two of the Princesses, who have some of their maids of honour following in a landau or phaeton. The King has several attendants, two of whom are close by him, and one has a little stick, the crooked end of which catches that part of the bridle nearest the curb, so that, should the animal on which his Majesty rides stumble, instant assistance might be given.' * Then the principal aeronaut in England. 6 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 Music was his greatest solace fi-om his latter seizure till his death, and we learn of him in the beginning of the year 1811 (JSIorning Chronicle, Jan. 8th) : — 'Windsor, January 6th. — The Bulletin of to-day is of a very cheering nature, and for these five days past his Majesty has been gradually improving, both in mental and bodily strength. His Majesty has become more tranquillized in his general deportment, and there are daily visible signs that his malady is on the decline. His Majesty now uses the sitting-room in the Blenheim Tower ; takes his meals regularly, and at intervals amuses himself with playing the most familiar tunes, on the harpsichord, with a correctness surpassing the most sanguine expectations. As a striking proof of this fact, on some very recent occasions, when his Majesty, in consequence of his defective sight, struck a wrong key, he instantly cor- rected the error by modulating the tune, and finishing it with his accustomed science and judgment. . . . ' The Harpsichord on which his Majesty plays, formerly belonged to the great Handel, and is supposed to have been manufactured at Antwerp in the year l6l2. Handel's music is highly esteemed by his Majesty, and many of his most favourite compositions are now played by his Majesty from recollection.' And so let us leave him, for a while, to be soothed by his music. The year 1811 came in bitterly cold, and sad were the tales told in consequence. As to the Coaches, they suffered severely. On the 4th of January the fall of snow was so great, that the Northern roads were all but impassable, and the Mail Coach from Boston could only be dragged four miles through the snow, the guard having to do the iDCst he could, on horseback, with the mails, and the mails from London to Boston had to be conveyed in the same manner. The Leicester Coach, on the way to Stamford, was upset in the snow at Burton-Lazarus, and several of the passengers were hurt ; the Carlisle Mail was dug out of the snow at Ticken- cote, and with difficulty got to Stamford with eight horses, three hours later than usual ; but it could not proceed further than Thornhaugh, whence the guard was obliged to take the letter-bags on horseback. Three coaches from the north lay all night in the snow about a mile from Stamford, and as many near Winsford. Oh ! for the good old Coaching days ! when Pullman's Cars were unknown, and people with slender purses had to ride outside in all weathers — and it was 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 7 recorded that on the 5th of January, 1811, on the arrival of the Carlisle Coach in London two poor women, outside passengers, were frozen to death. The Coachman supposed them to be asleep, and did not attempt to disturb them until he arrived at his destination, when they were found stiff in death. Two persons near Lincoln perished in the snow, and the cold was so great, even so far south as London, that the Thames was nearly frozen over. Tender hearts felt for the Poor Debtors, and those in Ludgate record their thanks to M. A. Taylor, Esq., M.P., for his annual benevolent gift of two Chaldrons of Coals, 158 lbs. Beef, and 23 half-peck loaves ; and to Alderman Wood, the friend of Queen Caroline, for his present of £5 ; and an unknown donor for 40 lbs. Beef The poor debtors in New- gate had very many large sums to acknowledge, and were duly grateful for the kindly and thoughtful assistance thus rendered them. Sad, however, is it to find that during the Severe Frost, on the 7th of January, a poor prisoner died of Cold and Want in the Marshalsea prison. At this time we learn there were about 320 debtors in Newgate alone ; and those that were without private means, had to subsist on the prison allowance of 2d. worth of bread (the quartern loaf being, in January, Is. 3d.), so that their relief during the inclement winter, was a work of necessity, as well as of benevolence. In 1811 was living amongst us an illustrious Prisoner of War, no less a person than Lucien Buonaparte, Prince de Canino (his son. Prince Louis Lucien, also afterwards lived with us), who, not altogether falling in with his brother's policy, was on his way to the United States, when, on the 1st of August, 1810, he was taken and made prisoner by a British Cruiser. After some detention at Malta, he was sent on to England, and Ludlow was assigned as his place of detention ; and there he lived for some time, inhabiting Dinham House, the seat of the Earl of Powis. He seems to have accepted the inevitable cheerfully, according to The Times of Friday, January 4th : — ' Lucien Buonaparte arrived at Ludlow about 4 o'clock on the evening of Wednesday, sen'night, accompanied by his nephew, an interpreter, secretary, Mr. Mackenzie, and a few servants. He drove to the Angel Inn, where he dined and slept. On Thursday morning he walked about the town, viewed the Castle, and some of the principal streets ; but, as 8 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 the weather was rather unfavourable, and public curiosity great, he did not stay long.. On that evening, one of the Winter Dancing Assemblies took place, which Lucien, his nephew, and some of his friends attended. Some of the latter danced, but Lucien did not. He continued in the room till supper was announced ; he then attended Countess Powis to the supper rooms, and sat at her Ladyship's right hand during supper : after which he returned to the ball and card rooms. On Saturday he went to Stone-house, a seat of Lord Powis, about five miles from Ludlow, where Lucien is in future to reside, and from thence proceeded to Walcot, the principal residence of his Lordship, where he stayed a day or two, and returned to Ludlow.' The next day's Times says : ' Madame Lucien Buonaparte with her family, and a numerous train of servants, occupying, in all, four carriages, arrived at Ludlow on Wednesday; having performed the journey from Plymouth, in a week. Lucien removed, on the preceding day, from the Inn to Lord Powis's residence in that town, called Dinham-house • his Lordship's seat in the neighbourhood (Stone-house) being found too small for the reception of so numerous a suite.' In another Newspaper the ladies are described with almost American frankness : ' Madame Buonaparte is extremely handsome and fascinating ; Lucien's daughter, of whom so much has been said, has great claims to a genteel figure, and elegant demeanour, but she is not beautiful. The motto on Lucien's carriage is an extraordinary one, Luceo, non uro, "I shine without burning," ' On this motto the following Epigram was made : — ' A Wag, requested to translate The Motto, on the Coach of State That sets all Wales into a wonder. " It means," said he, and scratcht his pole, " It means I shine, with what I stole ; My foolish brother hums his plunder.' He afterwards, bought the estate of Thomgrove, near Worcester, and there lived until the restoration in 1814, when he went to Rome. Some explanation is needed, to elucidate the last line of the above epigram. Napoleon was determined to do the utmost damage to England, and endeavoured to injure her in her most vulnerable part, her commerce — so, whenever the 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY P goods of Great Britain, or her Colonies, were found, they were burnt. That this was not an idle threat is shown by the following excerpts from The Times of January 7th and 8th :— 'A Gentleman who has arrived within these three days from the Continent, and has been present at several burnings of British manufactures, informs us that in every place where the decrees to that effect were put in force, it was done at the point of the bayonet : French Soldiers being always present to prevent tumult and disorder, which, on such occasions, manifested themselves everywhere.' 'At the beginning of December, a number of French Officers of the Customs, with a detachment of the 17th regiment of Infantry, arrived at Brandenburg, to make searches for Colonial produce, which they immediately began with great strictness.' ' Parma, December 12th. Yesterday, there were burnt in this town 24 bales of spun cotton, 150 pieces of cotton hand- kerchiefs, and 74 pieces of stuffs of the same manufacture ; the whole being English manufactures, and seized by the Custom House agents on the frontiers of the department of the Po.' But, at sea, sometimes a Merchantman could look after its cargo itself, without need of the strong arm of a Convoy, as in the case of the good ship Cumberland, Barrett, master, bound from Quebec to England. On the 13th of January, 1811, she arrived in the Downs under a jury foremast and bowsprit, having lost both foremast and bowsprit in a heavy gale of wind off the banks of Newfoundland. This, one would have thought, would have been sufficient excitement for one voyage, but no ! when close home, between Deal and Folkestone, about seven and eight in the morning, she was attacked by four French lugger privateers, who approached under the pretence of knowing whether Captain Barrett wanted a pilot. But he was wary, and replied in the negative, whereupon the privateers declared themselves in their true colours, and poured in a volley of musketry. Captain Barrett ordered his men down below, arming them with boarding pikes, and as soon as about twenty of the enemy were aboard, his crew attacked them, and cleared the decks, killing most of them ; the others jumping overboard. Five times were they boarded, (the Frenchmen ceasing firing. 10 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 for fear of hurting their own men), and five times the enemy experienced a crushing defeat. Captain Barrett then dis- charged three of his Carronades, loaded with round shot and Canister. One shot carried away the mainmast of one of the privateers ; the second, the bowsprit of another, and doubtless injured some of their men, as there was a great cry heard. This proved enough for ' Mounseer,' and the four luggers sheered off. The Crew of the Cumberland was twenty-six men, and the force of the enemy was estimated at two hundred and seventy according to the statements of the prisoners taken. The loss to the Cumberland was one man killed, and the chief mate wounded ; the French loss is set down as about sixty. And what think you was the reward of the gallant crew ? ' The Lords of the Admiralty have, as a mark of their satisfac- tion at the gallantry exhibited on this occasion, expressed their intention to grant to each of the creiv of the Cumberland, a protection from the impress, for the space of three Years' .'.'.' '^K^^^ ifiSiilHIl ^^^^M Wijffl s ^^ '&»m m^^^M^^^&^ 1^ ^^^i^S ^^^m CHAPTER II. A Regency inevitable — Prince of Wales waited on — He undertakes the Regency — French and English prisoners of war — Roman Catholic soldiers — Roughness of manners — Passing of Regency Bill — The Prince's companions — Inauguration of the Prince as Regent — Improvement in the health of the King. All the year the Lords and Commons had been incubating a Regency, and matters were so far advanced, that on the 8th of January, the House of Commons received a message from the Lords that they had ' ordered the Lord President, and the Lord Privy Seal to attend his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales with the several Resolutions agreed to by the Lords and Commons, for the purpose of supplying the defect of the personal exercise of the royal authority during his Majesty's illness, on the part of their lordships, and desired that that House would appoint a proportionate number of their members to go with them. Also that they had ordered Earl Harcourt, and Earl Morton, to attend her Majesty with the Resolution and Address agreed to by the Lords and Commons respecting the care of his Majesty's royal person, and the direction of such part of his Majesty's household as may be requisite for the comfort of his Majesty, and for the maintenance of the Royal dignity ; and desired that the House would appoint a proportionate number of their members to go with them.' The Commons chose, as under, to go with the Lords to wait upon the Prince of Wales : The Chancellor of the Exchequer (the Right Hon. Spencer Perceval), the Secretary of State for the Home Department (the Right Hon. Richard Ryder), the President of the Board of Control for the affairs of India (the Right Hon. Robert Saunders Dundas, afterwards Lord Melville), and Sir William Grant, the Master of the Rolls ; whilst the members chosen to wait upon the Queen were Lord John 12 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 Thynne, Lord Palmerston (Secretary at War), Lord Clive, and Colonel Desbrowe. On the 11th of January these two deputations went in great state, the one to the Prince, the other to the Queen. The Prince received them in the grand drawing-room of Carlton House, standing with his Chancellor, William Adam, Esq., and Earl Moira on his right hand, the Duke of Cumberland and Mr. Sheridan on his left ; whilst behind him were four officers of his household, Mr. Tyrwhitt, Colonel M'Mahon, General Bloomfield, and General Turner. The Lord President, as chief of the deputation, then read a paper, informing the Prince that ' they were a Committee appointed to attend his Royal Highness with the resolutions which had been agreed to by the Lords and Commons, for the purpose of supplying the defect of the personal exercise of the royal authority, during his Majesty's illness, by empower- ing his Royal Highness to exercise that authority in the name and on the behalf of his Majesty, subject to such limitations and restrictions as shall be provided. ' And that they were directed to express the hope which the Lords, spiritual and temporal, and Commons entertain, that his Royal Highness, from his regard to the interests of his Majesty, will be ready to undertake the weighty and important trust proposed to be invested in his Royal High- ness, as soon as an Act of Parliament shall have been passed for carrying the said resolutions into effect.' The Lord President first read and then delivered to the Prince the Resolutions, and he replied : 'My Lords and Gentlemen, ' I receive the communication which the two Houses have directed you to make to me of their joint Resolutions, on the subject of providing for " the exercise of the Royal Authority during his Majesty's illness," with those sentiments of regard which I must ever entertain for the united desires of the two Houses. ' With the same sentiments I receive the expressed hopes of the Lords and Commons, that from my regard for the interest of his Majesty and the Nation, I should be ready to undertake the weighty and important trust proposed to be invested in me, under the Restrictions and Limitations stated in those Resolutions. ' Conscious that every feeling of my heart would have 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 13 prompted me, from dutiful affection to my beloved Father and Sovereign, to have shown all the reverential delicacy towards him inculcated in those Resolutions, I cannot refrain from expressing my regret, that I should not have been allowed the opportunity of manifesting to his afflicted and loyal subjects that such would have been my conduct. 'Deeply impressed, however, with the necessity of tran- quillizing the public mind, and determined to submit to every personal sacrifice, consistent with the regard I owe to the security of my Father's Crown, and the equal regard I owe to the welfare of his people, I do not hesitate to accept the office and situation proposed to me, restricted as they are, still retaining every opinion expressed by me upon a former and similar distressing occasion. ' In undertaking the trust proposed to me I am well aware of the difficulties of the situation in which I shall be placed ; but I shall rely with confidence upon the Constitutional advice of an enlightened Parliament, and the zealous support of a generous and loyal people. I will use all the means left to me to merit both. ' My Lords and Gentlemen, 'You will communicate this my answer to the two Houses, accompanied by my most fervent wishes and prayers, that the Divine Will may extricate us, and the nation, from the grievous embarrassments of our present condition, by the speedy restoration of his Majesty's health.' The Queen gave an answer, couched in a similar spirit to the deputation which waited upon her. Whilst the Lords and Commons are debating on the Regency Bill (and they took the whole of January to do it), let us see what was happening in England. There was a subject that touched many, and all over Britain, from the highest to the lowest, and that was the British prisoners of war in France. Truly we had many more French prisoners in England than there were English in France ; The Morning Post, October 15th, 1810, placing the numbers respectively at 50,000 and 12,000. The French prisoners here were not treated too well ; but the English prisoners in France were treated worse, and many thousands of hearts must have yearned towards those poor Captives, and many thousands were willing to part with their means, although there were 14 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 then many, and urgent, calls upon their purses, in order to alleviate their lot. Lloyd's was then the Centre of benevolence, as the Mansion House now is ; and the leading Merchants and Bankers issued an advertisement in The Times of January 7th, saying that their means of helping these prisoners were exhausted, and they appealed for fresh funds. 'The Committee beg to state that there are upwards of 10,000 British Prisoners in the different Prisons in France, for the most part in great distress, and that the subscription is intended for the alleviation of their sufferings in some degree, by assisting them with articles of clothing, bedding, fuel, and such other necessaries as they stand in most need of ' They think it proper to add that the relief from the last subscription was intrusted to the care of some of the most respectable persons detained in France, among whom were Clergymen, and several officers both Naval and Military, and that they have made so satisfactory a distribution of the funds, and rendered such particular details thereof, as to entitle them to the highest credit. The same Gentlemen, there is reason to expect, will kindly undertake the distribution of a new subscription.' Needless to say that the appeal was nobly responded to. Scant courtesy seems to have been paid to the prisoners on either side, almost degenerating into pettiness : for, this month, an Order was issued from Whitehall that no French women should be allowed to land in this countiy, who might have left France to see their husbands. The reason assigned for this very peculiar proceeding was, that the French Government would not permit Lady Lavie and family to join her husband, Sir Thomas, who was a prisoner at Verdun. But pettiness in official circles seems to have obtained. Can we barely imagine, at a time when every soldier was wanted, and it might be thought that good treatment, at all events, might have allured men to the ranks, that they trod upon their tenderest feelings } Yet so it was, and it was mainly owing to the exertions of The Dublin Evening Post that the following ' General Order ' was issued : ' Adjutant General's Office, Dublin, 'January, 1811. ' Reports have been circulated, that Catholic soldiers have been prevented from attending Divine worship, according to 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 15 the tenets of their religion, and obhged, in certain instances, to be present at that of the Established Church ; the Com- manding Officers of the several Regiments are to be attentive to the prevention of such practices, if they have, in any instance, existed in the Troops under their command, as they are in violation of the Orders contained in the Circular letter of the 14 May, 1806, and, since, repeated to the Anny. And the Catholic soldiers, as well as those of other Sects, are to be allowed, in all cases, to attend the Divine Worship of the Almighty according to their several persuasions, when duty does not interfere, in the same manner, and under the same regula- tions, as those of the Established Church. 'Wm. Raymond, Dep. Adjt. Gen. ' N. Ramsey, Maj. Assist. Adjt. Gen.' The Morning Chronicle, commenting upon this, says : ' So late as Friday morning last, some of the artillery, pi-ivates and drivers, quartered in Enniskillen, continued to do duty with turned coats, the most mortifying punishment ever inflicted on a brave man, and this, merely for having attended, accord- ing to law, to the Worship of their Church ; but on the evening of that day, the scene was somewhat changed, the General Order arrived, and on the following morning, the officer accused of the oppression departed for Dublin, and on Sunday, the Catholic soldiers of the garrison were marched to the Roman Catholic Chapel, accompanied by the officers of that religion.' It would seem that all parties were trying to make the Services unpopular : the navy, especially, by impressment — and even the Militia did not escape — for in January, a number of farmers and others were summoned before the magistrates at Stafford for making deductions from the wages of those servants who were enrolled in the Militia, and who had been absent for their training. It must be remembered that in those days farm labourers were hired at Statute fairs, for a twelvemonth, and the 15th clause of 48 Geo. III., cap. 3, had to be shown to those summoned, whereby they learned that no ballot, enrolment, or service under the Act should make void or in any manner affect, any indenture of apprentice- ship, or contract of service. And so they had to pay their men. They were rather a rough lot in the Country, and this anecdote is thus recorded in The Times of January 31, 1811 : — 16 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 ' The following ludicrous* circumstance occurred on Tuesday week at Bristol : — A couple of Jews being apprehended in the act of stealing several articles from the stables of the White Hart Inn, were hauled into the yard by two stout fellows, whither the whole fraternity of the currycomb were immediately summoned. The long beards of these disciples were then stuck together with pitch (their hands being previously tied behind them) ; and, whilst thus face to face, a profusion of snuff mixed with hellebore, was administered, which caused them to sneeze in such a manner, that by the frequent and violent bobbing of noses one against the other, a copious stream of blood issued from either nostril, whilst the enraged Culprits were kicking and capering about in all directions.' Chronologically, we must now turn to the Prince of Wales, who, one would imagine, was desirous of emulating the Squires of old, who spent the eve of their knighthood in vigil, prayer, fasting, and watching their armour — so before he became Prince Regent, he must needs partake of the Holy Eucharist, and did so at the Chapel Royal, St. James's, on Sunday the 27th of January ; the sole object of which mas to obtain a certificate that he rvas in the Communion of the Church of Engla7id. This public act of worship was a stately aiFair. The Prince was in the Royal Closet during the major portion of the service, the Bishop of London and sub-dean duly bowing to the royal presence, at their entrance. Afterwards, attended by the Earl of Moira, and Lords Dundas and Keith, he went up to the Altar, took his seat under a canopy, made his offering in a gold dish, and then the Dean, the Prince, and the three Lords Communicated. On the 5th of February the Lords and Commons had their final conference over the Regency Bill, they agreed to tlie interpolation of two words ' and Commons,' and the thing was all but finished. It only wanted what was done immediately afterwards, the Royal Commissioners to give the Royal Assent, the Deputy Clerk of the Crown to read the title of the Act, the Clerk Assistant of the Parliaments to utter the words ' Le Roi le vault ' — and the Prince of Wales was de facto Regent. Knowing his proclivities, it was imagined that he would give places to all his entourage, and, accordingly, we have the caricature of ' Robeing the Prince, or the Road to Preferment.' * The italics are mine. — 3. A. 18 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 To the extreme left is Earl Grey, who says ' A bason of Grey pease soup is better than porter for your Highness/ but Whitbread is of opinion that ' If his Highness should want any refreshment, here's a pot of my best brewing.' Grenville offers his services to the Prince. Sheridan hopes 'your Royal Highness will not forget Old Sherry ; pray allow me to brush the Royal shoes, they seem quite mouldy with lieing by so long.' Colonel Bloomfield is tying his garter. Whoever is holding the looking-glass exclaims, ' What an honour this is ! but I hope for greater.' The Regent tells Sheridan, ' Fear not, my friend, all in good time.' Col. McMahon says, ' Why ! can't you see you have given him the wrong sleeve ; do give it to me, you'll make a fine figure of him !' But the person holding the robe replies, ' Don't push so. Col., you won't let any one come near his Highness but yourself Mr. Adam, the Prince's Chancellor, soliloquises thus, ' A dam good prospect now, however.' Sir John Douglas calls out, ' Who wants me ?' and Col. Geo. Hanger, hopes ' you won't forget poor Georgy.' Perhaps the three best known of these Companions of the Prince are Sheridan, Col. McMahon, and George Hanger. The first belongs to history, and the second will be noticed by and by. Col. Hanger came of a noble Irish family, but in his youth led a wild harum scarum life. Of course he entered the army, and whilst holding the King's Commission he fell in with, and joined a gang of gipsies, when he fell in love with a dusky beauty, and married her according to the customs of her tribe, which, probably, only involved the jumping over a broomstick. He introduced her to his brother officers, and all went well for about a fortnight, when she eloped with a bandy- legged tinker. His tastes were congenial to those of the Prince, and he made himself useful, bought horses for him, looked after his racing arrangements, and was one of his equerries, which post he kept until he was, by his extravagance, compelled to resign it. He was more than once imprisoned for debt, but turned steady after the death of his brother Lord Coleraine (called bhie Hanger, from the colour of his garments) in 1814, when he succeeded to the title, which became extinct on his death in 1824. Meanwhile, all was being prepared for the assumption of the Regency, Carlton House was being brushed up, chandeliers cleaned, &c., a congenial task for its occupier, the Hanoverian creams were publicly exercised, and made to pass between files 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 19 of soldiers, and, at last, the 6th of February, the day appointed for the Prince to take the oaths, arrived. The following is probably an official communique, as it appears in all the News- papers of the period : — ' The 6th of February being the day appointed for swearing in the Prince of Wales as Regent, before his taking upon himself that important office, about twelve o'clock a party of the flank companies of the grenadiers, with their Colours, the band of the first regiment, drums and fifes, with white gaiters on, marched into the courtyard of Carlton House, where the colours were pitched in the centre of the grand entrance ; the band struck up " God save the King," and continued playing that national piece alternately with martial airs during the day, until near five o'clock. Colonel Bloomfield, one of the Prince's principal attendants, having written to the Earl of Macclesfield, the Captain of his Majesty's yeomen of the guard, informing him it was his Royal Highness' command that as many yeoman of the guard should attend at Carlton House, as usually attended upon councils being held by the King in state, the noble Earl not being in London, the letter was opened by the person in waiting, who ordered six yeomen and an usher to attend at Carlton House, which they accord- ingly did ; and they, together with the Prince's servants in state, lined the grand hall and staircase : several of the life- guards men were also in some of the rooms, in a similar manner as on Court-days at St. James' Palace. About a quarter before two o'clock, the Duke of Montrose arrived, being the first of the privy councillors who attended ; he was followed by all the royal dukes, and a very numerous assembly of privy councillors, who had all arrived by a quarter before three o'clock. The whole of the magnificent suite of state apartments were opened, and the illustrious persons were ushered into the Gold Room (so called from the style of the ornaments). Almost every privy councillor then in town was present — exceeding above a hundred in number. 'About half-past two o'clock. Earl Moira, of his Royal Highness' council, being also a privy councillor to the King, brought a message from the Prince to the President of the Council, Earl Camden, desiring his attendance on the Prince in an adjoining room, according to the usual form, to com- municate to him officially the return to the summons, &c. The noble Earl accordingly went with Earl Moira, made the 2—2 20 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 necessary intimation to his Royal Highness^ and returned to the company ; who, during this time of waiting were highly gratified with seeing the Princess Charlotte on horse-hack, accompanied by two grooms, make the tour of the beautiful gardens in the rear of the palace. Her Royal Highness appeared to be in excellent health and spirits. ' After Earl Camden's return, the Prince approached in grand procession, preceded by the officers of his own house- hold, and several of his own council, among whom were Earl Moira, Lords Keith, Cassilis, Hutchinson, Mr. Sheridan, Mr. M. Angelo Taylor, Mr. Tyrwhitt, Colonel McMahon, Colonel Bloomfield, General Hulse, Mr. Bicknell, &c., &c. (His Chancellor, Mr. Adam, was, by accident not present, and there was a delay, in consequence of his Royal Highness' anxious desire of his presence. ) The Prince was also accom- panied by all the Royal Dukes. They passed through the room where the privy councillors were assembled, through the Circular drawing room, into the grand saloon (a beautiful room in scarlet drapery, embellished with portraits of all the most distinguished Admirals who have fought the battles that have given us the dominion of the seas) ; and here the Prince seated himself at the top of the table, his Royal brothers and cousins seating themselves on each hand, according to seniority, and all the officers of his household, not privy councillors, ranging themselves on each side of the entrance to the Saloon. The privy councillors then proceeded, all in full dress, accord- ing to their rank — the Archbishop of Canterbury, the Lord Chancellor, the Archbishop of York, the Lord President, the Lord Privy Seal, &c., &c., &c., and, as they severally entered, they made their reverence to the Prince, who made a graceful return to each, and they successively took their places at the table ; and lastly, Mr. Fawkener and Sir Stephen Cottrell took their seats as Clerk, and Keeper, of the Records. ' The Prince then spoke to the following effect : — '"My Lords, ' " I understand that by the Act passed by the Parlia- ment, appointing me Regent of the United Kingdom, in the name, and on behalf of his Majesty, I am required to take certain oaths, and to make a declaration before your lordships, as prescribed by the said Act. I am now ready to take these oaths, and to make the declaration prescribed." ' The Lord Privy Seal then rose, made his reverence, ISnl UNDER THE REGENCY 21 approached the Regent^ and read from a Parchment the oaths as follows. The Prince with an audible voice pronounced after him : — ' " I do sincerely promise and swear that I will be faithful, and bear true allegiance to his Majesty, King George. '"So help me, God." ' "I do solemnly promise and swear, that I will truly and faithfully execute the office of Regent of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, according to an Act of Parlia- ment passed in the fifty-first year of the reign of his Majesty King George the Third (entitled ' An Act ' etc.), and that I will administer, according to law, the power and authority vested in me by virtue of the said Act ; and that I will in all things, to the utmost of my power and ability, consult and maintain the safety, honour, and dignity of his Majesty, and the welfare of his people. ' "So help me God !" ' And the Prince subscribed the two oaths. The Lord President then presented to his Royal Highness, the declara- tion mentioned in an Act made in the 30th year of King Charles H., entitled, " An Act for the more effectual preserv- ing the King's person, and government, by disabling Papists from sitting in either House of Parliament," and which declaration his Royal Highness audibly made, repeated, and subscribed. The Lord President signed first, and every one of the Privy Councillors in succession signed these instruments as witnesses, and the same was delivered into the hand of the Keeper of the Records. ' The Prince then delivered to the President of the Council a Certificate of his having received the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper at the Chapel Royal of St. James, on Sunday the 27th of January, which was also countersigned, and delivered to the Keeper of the Records, who deposited all these instruments in a box at the bottom of the table. 'The Lord President then approached the Regent, bent the knee, and had the honour to kiss his hand. The Royal Dukes followed, and afterwards, the Archbishop of Canter- bury, and all the rest, according to the order in which they sat at the long table, advancing to the chair on both sides. During the whole of this ceremony, his Royal Highness main- tained the most graceful and dignified deportment ; and it was remarked, that there was not the slightest indication of 22 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 partiality of behaviour to one set of men more than to another. ' The Ceremony being closed, a short levee took place in the drawing room, where his Royal Highness addressed himself to the circle ; and, afterwards, he gave an audience to Mr. Perceval, who had the honour of again kissing his hand as First Lord of the Treasury and Chancellor of the Exchequer.' The Regent did wisely in not changing his Ministry, and Perceval turned dutifully towards the rising sun. It was said that in a visit he and the Chancellor (Lord Eldon) paid the King on Jan. 26th, that he turned his back on the King, a monstrous piece of rudeness in Court etiquette. Probably the poor old blind, half-demented Monarch never observed it ; but others did, and there were several epigrams thereon, the following being the best — 'The people have heard, with delight and surprize, That his Minister's coDduct has op'd the K 's eyes ; That with just indignation his Royal breast burn'd, When he thought he saw Per I's back on him turned ; Exclaiming, " Thank G- — d ! I've recover 'd my sight, For 1 now see you, Sir, in your own proper light." ' The Queen had the custody of the King's person, but had to account to a Council consisting of the Archbishops of Canterbury and York and several Noblemen of high rank, and her first Council under the Regency was held on Feb 13th. About this time there was an improvement in the King's health ; so much so that on the 8th of February the Queen and the Princess Augusta were allowed to have an interview with him, and on the next day and for two or three others, he appeared on the Terrace and walked for a time accom- panied by the Physicians in attendance upon him. CHAPTER III. Story of a crime— The Shanavests and the Caravats— Gluttony- Smuggling bullion — A Tar at the theatre— Deposition of French Colours in Whitehall Chapel— The Duke of York reinstated as Commander-in-Chief- The Regency Fete— Account of the enter- tainment. And now, for a while, we will leave Royalty alone, and note anything particular that occurred — not that there ever was much general news recorded — there were no country corre- spondents to the London Newspapers, which were but of small size, and with very little space to spare for what we call News. As these little scraps of information will be scattered throughout this book, I may at once say that they will, per- force, have no sequence one to another except that of Chronological order. At the beginning of February, as a dragoon was returning from duty to his quarters, which were at a small public-house called ' Barndean Hut,' near Petersfield, in the New Forest, his attention was arrested by the cries of some person in dis- tress, which induced him to ride up to the spot from whence they proceeded, where his humanity was shocked on beholding a woman tied to a tree, with the tears, which her situation and suffering had produced, actually frozen to her cheeks, and, horrid to relate, quite naked, having been stripped and robbed of every article of dress, by two villains, who, afterwards, left her in that deplorable condition. The dragoon instantly cut the cords that bound her hands and feet to the tree, and, having in some measure restored her to the use of her limbs by rubbing them, wrapped her up in his cloak, placed her on his horse, and proceeded on to his quarters, where he soon after arrived ; and, as he was conducting the shivering object of his care into the house, she looked through a window that 24 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 commanded a view of the kitchen, and, in a faint voice, ex- claimed, ' There are the two men that robbed me of my all, and used me so cruelly.' The soldier, in consequence, entered the kitchen and secured the men, who were the next day taken before a magistrate, and, after the necessary examina- tion, fully committed to Winchester jail, for trial at the next assizes. Ireland has always been a sweet boon to England ever since the Union ; and faction fights used to abound. Among others were those of the Caravats and Shanavests — the Capulets and Montagues of their time ; and the etymon of the names of two formidable factions, v/hich embraced the greater part of the lower order of people in the two counties of Tipperary and Limerick, is thus given : — It was at a trial of some of these at a Special Commission at Clonmel, and James SlaUery was under examination. Chief Baron. What is the cause of quarrel between these two parties —the Shanavests and the Caravats .'' A. I do not know. Q. What's the true reason ? A. I cannot tell. Q. So, then, according to your account, I am to understand that each party attacks each other by way of defence. Q. (by a juror). Were the men who were concerned in the affray in the month of August, the same that were concerned at the races of Coolmoyne .'' A. They were. Q. Do you know a man of the name of Pauddeen Car .'' A. I do. Q. He is your uncle ; was not he the principal ringleader and commander of the army of Shanavests .'' A. He is a poor old man, and not able to take command. Q. (by Lord Norbury). What was the first cause of quarrel .'' A. It was the same foolish dispute made about May-poles. Q. (by the Chief Baron). Which is the oldest party ? A. The Caravats were going on for two years before the Shanavests stirred. Q. Why were they called Caravats ? A. A man of the name of Hanly was hanged ; he was pro- secuted by the Shanavests, and Pauddeen Car said he would not leave the place of execution until he saw the Caravat about the fellow's neck, and from that time they were called Caravats. 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 25 Q. For what oflFence was Hanly hanged ? A. For burning the house of a man who had taken land over his neighbour's head. Q. Hanly was the leader of the Caravats ? A. Before he was hanged, his party was called the Moyle Rangers. The Shanavests were called Pauddeen Car's party. Q. Why were they called Shanavests .'' A. Because they wore old waistcoats. We occasionally hear of feats of gluttony, but, as a piece of downright lunacy, the following can scarcely be matched. Morning Chronicle, Mar. 26th : ' A blacksmith at Strout ate on Tuesday, for a trifling wager, a pint of periwinkles with the shells, in the space of ten minutes. Being desired to repeat this disgusting feat he readily did it, but he is now so dangerously ill that he is not expected to recover.' Bullion both Gold and Silver got scarcer and scarcer, so much was exported: and, early in 1810, large quantities of Dollars were stamped at Birmingham with the image and superscription of George III. ; in fact, the dollars stamped in 1797 and down to 1810, inclusive, were about five millions — but they were smuggled out of the kingdom wholesale. On the 19th of March an official rise of 10 per cent, in their value took place, in the hopes that raising them to 5s. 6d. would be prohibitory to their exportation, but it was not : more still were needed, and on April 15th 300,000 dollars were sent to Boulton and Watts, Soho Works, Birmingham, to be stamped, 'and the same quantity are to be forwarded in a few days." The price fell on the 25th of April to 5s. Id. per dollar. On the 27th of March, the Duke of Gloucester was elected Chancellor of the University of Cambridge, by a majority of 114 over his opponent, the Duke of Rutland. We may take the following as an example of how Jack fooled away his prize-money : — 'A Tar, who had just received his prize-money, lately engaged a small provincial Theatre entirely to himself: he took his seat in the centre of the pit, furnished himself with an inordinate quantity of beer, punch, and tobacco, &c., and requested the performances to com- mence, as no one should enter the Theatre but himself ; at the close of every speech which pleased him, he presented the Actor with a glass, and when the curtain dropped, he trans- ferred his stores to the stage, and invited the whole of the Dram. Per., to partake.' Under date of the 8th of April, we read : ' A very singular 26 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 discovery has been made at Colchester, respecting the sex of a servant who had hved thirty years in a family in that town, as housemaid and nurse. Having lately paid the debt of Nature, it was discovered that the deceased was a man.' On the 5th of May, the Court of Common Council voted the Regent, the freedom of the City of London in are Oah box, but the presentation was abandoned as it was found that etiquette forbade the Regent accepting the Freedom, as he then stood in the position of Sovereign. On March 5th the English troops under the command of General Graham, engaged and defeated a much superior French force under the command of Marshal Victor, at Barrosa in Andalusia, after a severe conflict. How thoroughly the French were then beaten, may be judged by the fact that an Eagle and twelve standards were taken from them. A sergeant of the 87th, or Prince's Own Royal Irish Volunteers, who took the Eagle, was promoted to an Ensigncy, and ordered to be removed to his own regiment, on the first Vacancy. On the 18th of May, these Colours were taken, with great military ceremony, from the Parade in St. James's Park, to Whitehall Chapel, and deposited on each side of the Altar. It was a fine sight, and three Royal Dukes, York, Cambridge, and Gloucester, were present, besides many generals, and the Spanish and Portuguese Ambassadors. Apropos of the Duke of York, he formerly had a mistress named Mary Anne Clarke, who abused her position by selling Commissions in the Army at a cheap rate, and using her in- fluence over the Duke to confirm them. In 1809, Mr. War- dell, M.P. for Oakhampton, brought the scandal before the House of Commons, and, although the House eventually found that there was nothing in the evidence to prove personal cor- ruption, or criminal connivance on the part of his Royal Highness — yet public opinion against him was so strong, that he had to resign his position as Commander-in-Chief The Regent and the Duke of York were tied together by strong bonds of fraternal feeling, and the first important act of the Regent was to re-appoint his brother to his old position on the 25th of May. This naturally created great dissatis- faction, for his former resignation only saved the Duke from the ignominy of being cashiered, and Viscount Milton moved in the House of Commons on the 6th of June : ' That upon a deliberate consideration of the recent circumstances under which his Royal Highness the Duke of York retired from the 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 2? Command of the Army in March, 1809, it appears to this House that it has been highly improper and indecorous in the advisers of the Prince Regent to have recommended to his Royal Highness the re-appointment of the Duke of York to the Office of Commander-in-Chief.' It is astonishing how the opinion of the House of Commons varied during two years, for this motion, when put, was only supported by 47 members — against 296. But although he obtained the post, he had to run the gauntlet of public opinion, and which way that went is shown by the accompanying Satirical print, ' The Soldier's Welcome Home ! ! I ' where the Duke of York amid the Cheers of his friends, Buckingham, Temple, and Grenville, is leaping into the portals of the Horse Guards, the Regent standing just inside to welcome him. A figure, I presume meant to be John Walter, is pointing to The Times Newspaper. There were several others, but this is best suited to this book. The next event of public note, and next to the appointment of the Prince of Wales to the Regency, it was the principal topic of conversation of the year, was a grand fete given to upwards of 2,000 of the Nobility and gentry, including the French Royal Family, the foreign Ambassadors, &c. — at an estimated cost of £15,000. For fully six weeks previously all the available weavers, tailors, mantua-makers, and milliners, were put under requisition for it, and ample work was found for architects, upholsterers, painters, carpenters, cooks, and confectioners, and diamonds were borrowed for the night at 1 1 per cent. This wonderful fete took place on the 19th of June, and the company began to arrive between 9 and 10 o'clock. The whole of Carlton House, even down to the basements, which were utilized as supper rooms, was thrown open to the guests, but failed to afford sufficient accommodation, so a large portion of the garden was canvassed over and used for supper. It is impossible, in the limits of this book, to describe the luxury with which this palace was furnished, but I must be excused, as Carlton House has long been numbered with the things of the past, if I revive the description of the Throne and Ball Rooms, simply that my readers may form some idea of the splendour in which ' the first gentleman in Europe * lived. The first was hung with crimson velvet, with embroidered ornaments in pure gold, and most massive gold fringes and 4. , ~1^ 1811] SOCIAL ENGLAND 29 laces. The Canopy, superbly carved and gilt, was surmounted by four helmets of real gold, having plumes of the finest white ostrich feathers, many of them 17 inches in height. On each side the Canopy, were magnificent antique draperies ; decorated to correspond with it, and forming back-grounds to two superb candelabra, after the antique, executed in the finest manner, with lions couchant, and other appropriate ornaments. Under the Canopy stood a grand state chair and foot-stool. The compartments of the room were decorated with the richest gold ornaments on a crimson velvet ground, with draperies enriched with gold fringes, en suite. There were two superb glasses about twelve feet high, with oriental alabaster tables, on frames, carved and gilt, in the most magnificent style. On a chimney, decorated with or-molu foliage of the richest sculpture, was placed a large glass in a superb frame ; and on the chimney-piece and tables, were fine French girandoles of or-molu. In this room were no other seats than stools gilt and covered with crimson velvet. Here were whole length portraits in grand gold frames, of their Majesties, the Prince Regent, and the Duke of York. Through a door at one end of this room, a temporary stair- case presented itself to view, which communicated with the Conservatory ; this erection was intended as a private passage for the Prince Regent and his particular friends to pass down to the head of the tables, when supper was announced. Opposite the above door, a door leading to the Throne room being removed, and a large glass being placed in the opposite door, on the further side beyond the Throne, the whole range of Candelabra, and the throne itself were reflected in it ; and a striking coup d'ceil was thereby produced. The Ball room was decorated with Arabesque ornament, and figures, painted in the finest style imaginable, on gold grounds, in panels, between pilasters richly carved and gilt ; the ceiling was decorated in compartments. The windows and recesses have circular tops, and they were decorated with rich blue velvet draperies, with massive gold fringes, lace, tassels, and ropes — the latter were likewise of gold. In the recesses were magnificent French plates of looking-glass, in gold frames, having sofas under them, richly carved and covered with blue velvet ; the chairs to suit. Before each pilaster was placed a rich gilt pedestal, on which was a superb French girandole, carrying eight waxlights, executed in or-molu. The two chimney-pieces of Statuary marble, were 30 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 ornamented with foliage and figures in bronze and or-molu, and, over them, were glasses in gold frames, and French Candelabra, worthy of the tout ensemble. The Prince Regent entered the State apartments about a quarter past nine, dressed in a scarlet coat, most richly and elegantly ornamented, in a very novel style, with gold lace, and a brilliant star of the Order of the Garter ; and he aiTived just at the same time as the dethroned Louis XVIII. — who was present as the Comte de Lille — and his family. Dancing began about half past eleven or twelve, and at half past two supper was announced. As one account says : ' Upon no previous occasion, and at no Court in Europe, was ever the experiment made to sit down 2,000 of the principal nobility and gentry of a kingdom to a regular supper, as was the case at the Prince Regent's fete. The largest entertain- ment, at the most brilliant period of the French Monarchy, was that given by the Prince of Conde at Chantilli, to the King of Sweden, when 400 covers were laid. Here covers were laid for 1,600 under canvas, and 400 in the house.' The Times gives a short, but succinct, account of this brilliant fete, and being so, I take it, as well fitted for this book, as all accounts, more or less, are by press corre- spondents, and relate only to the internal arrangement and decoration of Carlton House. ' It was totally impossible, capacious as the Mansion of the Prince is, to accommodate such a number of persons in the rooms of the Mansion itself From the central apartment of the lower range, which we have mentioned, on the south, or garden front, proceeded a broad and lofty wall, towards the southern wall of the garden, adjoining St. James's Park, which was crossed by three similar walks, from east to west, lengthwise in the garden. All these walks were closed in by walls, and covered over by awnings made for the occasion. In each of these cross walks were placed long supper tables, and at the end of each walk were communications to circular marquees, in which were tables containing all the necessary refreshments for the company, with space for the numerous servants, and assistants in attendance. The Great Walk from the house southward had in it six tables, leaving those spaces quite open where other walks crossed it. The intermediate spaces between these, were lawns, which communicated to the walks by suitable openings. The interior sides of these grand walks were lined with festoons of flowers, yielding the 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 31 most odoriferous perfumes, and relieved by the verdant and softer beauties that more towering plants and shrubs could bestow. The arched roofs were ornamented in the liveliest manner, and, from them, were suspended thousands of lights, in all the different forms and fashions by which illumination can be produced. The coup d'ceil of the whole, especially from the central south entrance to the gardens, was inex- pressibly delightful, and even magically impressive. The entrance was under an illuminated arch, and the southern end of the walk was filled by an immense mirror, and orna- mented at the top and sides with a superb drapery, and with artificial flowers and costly candelabra : particularly the long range of supper rooms on the grand level, at the head of which the Regent sat, at the west end of the Conservatory, inspired the highest ideas of real magnificence. ' This range, beginning from the east end, comprises the new Gothic rooms, not yet entirely finished, but temporarily hung with crimson, and the Library, beautifully ornamented with marbles. In these apartments there were two rows of tables, elegantly adorned. The centre room was left open. To the west, the eating room, &c., and the Conservatory had one long table running through both. The appearance of the Conservatory was truly striking and brilliant. The architecture of it is of the most delicate Gothic. The upper end was a kind of circular buffet surmounted by a Medallion, with the initials G. P. R. lined by festoons and antique draperies of pink and silver, and partly filled by mirrors, before which, on ornamented shelves, stood a variety of vases, candlesticks, &c., of the most gorgeous gold plate. Supplied, as indeed all the tables were, with every attainable delicacy and luxury which wealth and rank could command, or in- genuity suggest, and embellished by all the art and skill of the confectioner, with emblematical devices of every con- ceivable appropriate description, this table displayed a still more splendid exuberance. ' In the front of the Regent's seat there was a circular basin of water, with an enriched Temple in the centre of it, from whence there was a meandering stream to the bottom of the table, bordered with green banks. Three or four fantastic bridges were thrown over it, one of them with a small tower upon it, which gave the little stream a picturesque appearance. It contained also a number of gold and silver fish. The excellence of design, and exquisiteness of work- 32 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 manship could not be exceeded ; it exhibited a grandeur beyond description ; while the many and various purposes for which gold and silver materials were used were equally beautiful and superb in all their minute details.* ' The Company, who continued to arrive from nine till half- past twelve, were ushered into the state rooms, and soon filled the house. The hall was crowded with Peers and Peeresses and was made the same use of, as the apartments of State. Under the grand arched doorway between the halls, was a most elegant scarlet and gold drapery, after the antique. ' The male part of the nobility and gentry, were habited in court suits, many richly embroidered, or in naval and military uniforms. The waving plumes, the elegant, variegated dresses, the sparkling diamonds, and, still more, the native beauty and grace of the ladies, gave a sort of enchanting perfection to the whole of this brilliant courtly exhibition. The Vieille Cour de Versailles, with all its proud pretensions, could never have more attractively set forth the elegant fascinations of fashionable life, and exalted rank. ' The upper servants of his Royal Highness' household wore a rich costume of dark blue, trimmed with very broad gold lace ; the others wore their state liveries. A considerable number of the Yeomen of the Guard attended in different parts. The assistants, out of livery, were dressed uniformly, in black suits with white vests. Two of the bands of the Guards, in state uniforms, played various airs throughout the night. Parties of the Foot-guards protected all the immediate avenues, and the Horse-guards were stationed in Pall Mall, St. James's Street, St. James's Square, Piccadilly, &e. Every- thing was managed, with the assistance of the Police, with unexampled care and convenience.' * Nearly a waggon load of the family plate of the late Sir William Pulteney decorated the Tables at Carlton House. It is said that the weight of the whole of the gold and silver plate used on this occasion, was Six Tons. CHAPTER IV. Ladies' dresses at the Pete — The banquet — Carlton House thrown open to the public — The crush — Sir F. Burdett's action against the Speaker — Relief of British Prisoners in France — Scarcity of guineas — Lord King and his tenants — Stories respecting the Currency. The ladies had been requested to dress themselves in the productions of British industry, and some of their costumes were truly magnificent. They are so uniformly beautiful, that in the examples I give, I take them as they follow, and make the extracts for the sake of their brevity. The Marchioness of Donmshire wore a petticoat of white satin, trimmed at the bottom with a Spanish net of embossed silver, over which was a tunic of the most beautiful silver stuff, of Irish manufacture, on which was delicately woven the shamrock : over the shoulders were superb epaulettes of embossed Spanish silver. The tunic was laced with diamond chains, and fastened in front with large diamond brooches. Her ladyship's ear-rings were the largest diamonds at the fete, to which there was a corresponding necklace, and a profusion of diamond ornaments. The Marchioness of Sligo. A dress of white satin, with a superb border of brilliant embroidery round the train ; a robe richly embroidered in silver shamrock, round which was an elegant, and brilliant border, to correspond with the dress ; diamond stomacher, armlets, necklace, and brooches. Head- dress, diamonds and ostrich feathers. The Marchioness of Tavistock. Splendid dress, embroidered in white and gold. The Marchioness of Hertford. White satin dress, em- broidered in white and gold. 3 34 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 The Marchioness of Stafford. Violet satin dress, richly em- broidered in gold. The Marchioness of Exeter. White satin, embroidered in gold. The Marchioness Comwallis. White satin dress, richly em- broidered with amethysts. The Marchioness Waterford. White satin dress, richly em- broidered with silver. The Countess of Cavan. A dress of white and silver tissue, with a superb border of prominent silver jonquils ; body and sleeves splendidly ornamented with diamonds. Head-dress, diamonds and ostrich feathers. Needless to say, this grand fete was made fun of — and so we see in ' Gudgeon fishing a la Conservatory,' the meander- ing stream down the centre of the Regent's table is cari- catured, and the fair ladies are provided with rods and lines. The artist has taken liberties with his subject — the Prince, for instance, sat on a plain mahogany chair, and the ' stream ' was banked up with moss and flowers. The Earl of Moira, and Sheridan, are taking wine together, and on the right of the Regent sits the Duchesse d'Angouleme. A person in plain evening dress is in the extreme right, and points to a paper on the ground, ' Admission to John Bull to look at the Gold.' This was the subject of another caricature, called ' The Regency F6te, or John Bull in the Conservatory.' This shows John Bull, his wife, three men and one woman looking at the royal table loaded with gold plate and wine, a beef-eater and a butler guarding the plate on the table and on the buffet behind the royal chair. Says John Bull (scratching his head) to his wife : ' Why, odd Zookers ! this is marvellous fine indeed. Oh, Nan ! how we should enjoy a rasher on one of they monstracious beautiful plates. Why, now I think I shan't grumble to pay three or four Bank Tokens towards this grand treat ; methinks, 1 should just like a nippikin or two.' Mrs. Bull : ' Oh, John ! one of our milk-white chickens roasted by myself by our wood fire would be lusciosious indeed.' The speeches of the others are not worth re- printing. Needless to say the privilege of visiting the scene of festivity was eagerly embraced by the public, and they came in such shoals, that the Horse Guards had to keep order, and it was feared some accident would occur. And sure enough, 3—2 36 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 on the last day, the 26th of June, there was a pretty scrim- mage. This is The Times report : — ' Yesterday being the last day that the public were per- mitted to view the interior of Carlton House, the crowd, from an early hour in the morning, was immense ; and, as the day advanced, the scene excited additional interest. Every pre- caution had been adopted to facilitate the entrance of the visitors. The Horse-guards paraded in front of the House, and were stationed at both ends of Pall Mall, and the various streets leading from it. The pressure to gain admittance was so great, that early in the day several females fainted away ; many lost their shoes, and endeavoured to extricate them- selves from the crowd, but this was quite impossible. The gates were only opened at certain intervals, and, when this was the case, the torrent was so rapid, that many people were taken oEF their feet, some with their backs towards the entrance, screaming to get out. The scene, at last began to wear a still more serious aspect ; when it was deemed expedient that some measure should be resorted to, to prevent farther mischief Lord Yarmouth, and the Duke of Gloucester appeared, and announced to the public that the gates would not be again opened : and that, for the sake of preventing the loss of any lives, they had to express the strongest wish that the persons assembled would cease from endeavouring to gain admittance. This, however, had not the desired effect ; as many, who probably were ignorant of what had happened, remained, in the anxious hope of being admitted at last. ' The greatest pressure to obtain admittance took place about half-past two o'clock. About one, the crowd in the inside of Carlton House had accumulated so much, that it was found necessary to shut the gates. The line of carriages now extended the whole length of Pall Mall, up to the very top of St. James's Street, and, as there had been a complete stoppage for above half an hour, hundreds of ladies left their carriages, and hastened on foot towards the gates of Carlton House. At this time you might see ladies and gentlemen coming out of the crowd covered with perspiration, and unable any longer to bear the pressure. Those who thus made their retreat in time will be able to congratulate them- selves on their superior prudence. ' Hitherto all was comparatively well, and the scene rather 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 37 afforded amusement than excited alarm. But the case was most materially altered when the gate of entrance was next opened. It became exactly like some of those rushes at our Theatres, which have sometimes produced such melancholy consequences. Those behind, irresistibly pushed on those before, and of the number of delicate and helpless females who were present, some were thrown down, and, shocking to relate, literally trod upon by those behind, without the possibility of being extricated. When, at last, the crowd got inside Carlton House gates, four females were found in a life- less state, lying on their backs on the ground, with their clothes almost completely torn off. One young lady, elegantly attired, or, rather, who had been so, presented a shocking spectacle ; she had been trodden on, until her face was quite black from strangulation, and every part of her body bruised to such a degree, as to leave little hopes of her recovery : surgical assistance was immediately had, but her life was not expected to be saved. An elderly lady had her leg broken, and was carried away in a chair ; and two others were also seriously hurt, but, on being bled, were restored to animation. One of them was able to walk home, the other was led by two men. ' The situation of almost all the ladies who were involved in this terrible rush was truly deplorable ; very few of them could leave Carlton House until furnished with a fresh supply of clothes ; they were to be seen all round the gardens, most of them without shoes or gowns ; and many almost completely undressed, and their hair hanging about their shoulders. The crowd outside, at one time, literally carried away the Horse- guards for several paces, when the animals became restive to an alarming degree, rearing on their hind legs, and beating down all within their reach with their fore ones ; several women were trodden under foot, and received considerable injury ; and five or six men were so overcome, that they fainted, and were carried off.' The Morning Chronicle of the 29th of June says : ' The number of stray shoes in the courtyard of Carlton House, on Wednesday, was so great, they filled a large tub, from which the shoeless ladies were invited to select their lost property. Many ladies, however, and also gentlemen, might be seen walking away in their stockinged feet. About a dozen females were so completely disrobed in the squeeze, they were obliged 38 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 to send home for clothes, before they could venture out in the streets, and one lady was so completely disencumbered of all dress, a female domestic, in kind compassion, wrapped her up in an apron.' On the 6th of April, 1810, Sir Francis Burdett was, by a majority of 38 Members of the House of Commons, sentenced to be committed to the Tower, for a breach of privilege com- mitted by him against the house, in an address written by him in Cobbett's Weekly Political Register of March 24, 1810 : ' Sir Francis Bordett to his Constituents denying the POWER OF THE HoUSE OF CoMMONS TO IMPRISON THE PeOPLE OF England.' After some trouble, and a great deal of rodo- montade on his part, he was safely lodged in the fortress — after which a slight affray took place between the mob and the troops in which one of the former was killed, and eight wounded.'" The demagogue did not like the position in which he found himself, and breathed fire and fury. He would bring actions against the Speaker, the Sergeant-at-Arms, and the Earl of Moira, who was then Governor of the Tower. He was released, on the prorogation of Parliament, 21st of June, 1810, and on March 8, 1811, he brought an action against the Speaker (Abbott) for a trespass and assault in breaking open his house on the oth of April, 1810. The Speaker pleaded justification, and the case was tried on the 19th of June, when the jury found a verdict for the defendant, thereby admitting and enforcing the right of the House of Commons to commit for breach of privilege. Mention has already been made of a fund started by a number of Merchants, Bankers, and others of the City of London, at Lloyd's, for the ' Relief of British prisoners in France,' which, on the 29th of June, reached about £54,000. But their practical charity did not end here, for there was also another fund begun ' for Relief of Portuguese sufferers during the French Invasion,' which, on the 21st of June, amounted to nearly £52,000. The West End, evidently tried to emulate the City, and at Willis's Rooms, under the presidency of the Duke of York, there was a ' Fund for the Relief of the Un- fortunate Sufferers in Portugal — who have been plundered and treated by the French Armies with the most unexampled barbarity.' By June 29th this had reached £15,000. * See The Dawn of the Nineteenth Century, by John Ashton, i vol. edit., pp. 166 to 176." 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 39 Silver, as we have seen, had got, to use a mercantile phrase, ' a little easier,' but the Guinea ! it was almost as scarce as Russian gold coins are now, and, in spite of every effort, it was quoted at a premium, and yet was exported. Here is a Police report, anent it: 'Mansion House, 23rd of April. James King, guard of the Yarmouth mail coach, was brought up for examination, upon a charge of purchasing eight guineas, the Coin of this realm, at a price considerably beyond their current value. The Charge was brought by Mr. Nalder, the Under Marshal of the City of London ; who, in consequence of information received from the Treasury, that there were persons about town employed as agents to purchase guineas for exportation, made diligent enquiry, and having found out the defendant, he marked eight guineas, and went with Sayer, the Bow Street officer, who sold those guineas to the prisoner, and received for each .£1 5s. 6d. Mr. Nalder shortly after- wards took the prisoner into custody, found the marked guineas upon him, and brought him before the Lord Mayor ; the transac- tion being against the Statute of the third of Edward HL, which subjects offenders to the penalty of twelve months im- prisonment, and fine at the discretion of the Court. The defendant was admitted to bail.' Ultimately he was fined forty shillings. On the 6th of May the officers rummaged a smack called the Union, and found, in a hole between the timbers, seven canvas bags containing 4,500 guineas, making in all 11,128 guineas found in that vessel. The greater part of May was taken up by the discussion in the House of Commons of the Report of the Bullion Com- mittee, which recommended the resumption of specie payments by the Bank of England as speedily as possible. This was negatived, on the ground that the Bank paper was not depre- ciated — but, as a matter of fact, it was. Vide the following letter from Lord King to his tenants : — ' By lease, dated 1802, you have agreed to pay the annual rent of — — in good and lawful money of Great Britain. In consequence of the late depreciation of paper money, I can no longer accept of any bank notes at their nominal value in pay- ment of your rent in the legal coin of the realm ; at the same time, having no other object than to receive payment of the real intrinsic value of the sum stipulated by agreement, and being desirous to avoid giving you unnecessary trouble, I shall 40 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 be willing to receive payment in either of the manners follow- ing, according to your option — ' 1st. By payment in guineas. ' 2nd. If guineas cannot be procured, by a payment in Portugal gold coin, equal in weight to the number of guineas requisite to discharge the debt. ' 3rd. By a payment in Bank-paper of a sum sufficient to purchase (at the present market price) the weight of standard gold requisite to discharge the rent. The alteration of the value of paper money is estimated in this manner. 'The price of gold in 1802, the year of your agreement, was £4 per oz. ; the present market price is £4 14s., owing to the diminished value of paper — in that proportion, an addition of £l7 10s. per cent, in paper money will be required as equivalent for the payment of rent in paper. ' (Signed) King. 'N.B. — A power of re-entiy and ejectment is reserved by deed in case of non-payment of rent due. No draft will be received. ' This gave rise to a pictorial jeu d' esprit entitled 'Jew King , depreciating Bank notes.' A farmer, of the then typical John Bull type, has called on Lord King to pay his rent, and says to him, ' I be come to pay you some money ! but I cannot get Guineas for love nor money ! so you must take Bank Notes. — Why ! no person ever refused them before.' To which Lord King replies, ' I tell you I will have Guineas. If I take Bank Notes I will have 20 per cent. I like good profit' With one hand he points to some Guineas, and, on the table, are the ' Laws of Landlord and Tenant,' and ' Tables of Interest.' Earl Stanhope, on the 27th of June, in consequence of Lord King's action, introduced a Bill into the House of Lords to prevent the Gold coin from being paid or received for more than its nominal value, or the Bank paper for less. In the course of the debate he stated that guineas were publicly bought at Manchester, at an advance of twenty per cent, by persons from Ireland, for the purpose of paying their land- lords, who insisted on gold : and the Earl of Lauderdale declared that he knew an instance, where a landlord called upon his tenants to pay in gold ; and the latter having repre- sented to the steward the impossibility of procuring gold. 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 41 they were each told that there were 100 guineas at a Chandler's shop in the neighbourhood, which might be pur- chased ; and it was a fact, that with those 100 guineas, passing from one to another, a rent of £7,000 was actually paid. The Bill passed both Houses, and received the royal assent on the 24th of July. In The Morning Chronicle of the 11th of July we find : 'It has been for several weeks a known and common practice, at one shop Ln the City, for a man to have a twenty-shilling note. JEW DEPRECIATING BANK NOTES. (Published July, iSii, iy S. W. Fores.) and a dish of fish, for a guinea.' And so it was after the passing of Earl Stanhope's Act, the guineas were still bought at an advanced price, and the first Commitment under the Act is recorded in the same paper of Monday, the 9th of Septem- ber, 1811: 'On 'Friday sen'night Adkins, the Bow Street Officer, arrived at Worcester, in pursuit of one Thomas Wood- ford, who was known to have dealt pretty largely in guineas ; having found him, Adkins offered him eight guineas, and three half-guineas, for which Woodford gave him £10 18s, 6d. in 24 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 Bank of England Notes.— He was immediately apprehended, and committed to gaol.' It was no use trying to fight the purchase of these precious coins : every plan possible was put in force. — How is this ? ' Lost — Eight Guineas — Whoever may have found the same, and will bring them to shall receive ten pounds reward.' It was all of no use, the guineas used to be smuggled out of the Country as much as ever, and on July Srd, in the Court of King's Bench, in the case of De Yonge, who had been con- victed of purchasing guineas for more than 21 shillings, and whose case had been reserved for the opinion of the twelve judges, it was decided that such purchase was not an offence punishable under the existing laws. CHAPTER V. A smuggler's victim — Illness of Gillray— A gallant highwayman — A Witch — Bartholomew Fair — The Comet — A practical joke on the Queen — Women's Cricket Match — Ballooning — French prisoners of war — Luddite riots — The King and his physicians — His health. The odds and ends of gossip for July may be taken briefly as follows — Smuggling was very common, and our grandfathers had not the faintest notion that they were doing wrong in purchasing wares that had never paid the King his dues. In fact, many were proud of it. Sometimes they got sold, as the following story will vouch for. It happened that in Windsor and its neighbourhood, a woman, clad in a long red cloak, appeared, calling about dusk at several houses with a sample of excellent Cognac brandy. She stated that her husband was waiting at a little distance with several casks of the same, which they could sell at a very low price. Several people agreed to take Casks, which were duly delivered, and the money for which was properly paid. Alas ! alas ! when the brandy came to be tapped it was nothing but water. Poor Gillray, the Caricaturist, from whom I have so much borrowed, and who exemplified the manners of his times as well as ever Hogarth did, had been ill, and had knocked off work for some time — yet he still lived at Mrs. Humphrey's house in St. James's Street, attempted, while in a fit of delirium, to throw himself out of the attic storey window. Luckily for him there were iron bars to that window, and his head got jammed, which, being perceived by a Chairman waiting outside White's Club, who instantly went to render assistance, he was extricated, and proper persons were appointed to take care of him. Poor Gillray etched his last picture in 1811, and it was entitled, ' Interior of a Barber's Shop in Assize Time,' but it 44 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 was not published until May 15, 1818, nearly three years after his death, which took place on the 1st of June, 1815. It is a comfort to know that from the setting in of his mania until his death, he was well looked after by his old friend Mrs. Humphrey. It is hard to have to chronicle the rise and fall of a most useful invention, the percussion Cap, which was patented by the Rev. A. J. Forsyth, of Belhevie, Aberdeenshire, on the 11th of April, 1807. Lepage, the noted gunmaker of Paris pirated it ; and Napoleon, in 1811, ordered it to be generally introduced into the French Army. It has been superseded, or rather its form has been altered by the modern breech loader. Good manners and courtesy from Robber to robbed evidently had not gone out of fashion with Claude Duval, and a ' gentle thief was not unknown, as the Miss Somervilles could testify. They were in a carriage with their papa, who was a surgeon, when it was stopped, on Hounslow Heath, by a foot pad — for there were subtle distinctions in theft in those days. The Man who robbed you, and was on horseback, was at the top of his profession — he was a Highwayman ; but the poor, scurvy rogue whose financial arrangements could not compass the dignity of a horse, was a common thief, a wolf's head, a foot pad. This mean specimen of roguery, only armed with a Clasp Knife, with many oaths, declared that he would operate upon the Surgeon to his disadvantage, unless he gave him his money. Under this compulsion Mr. Somer- ville gave him all he had about him, two five-pound notes, and four shillings ; meanwhile the women folk, who saw what was being done to dear papa, besought the evil-doer, with tears in their eyes, and their money in their hands, to take what his strong arm had won, and depart in peace. Then the innate chivalry of that robber arose within him, and he said, in a somewhat mixed vein of politeness, and brutality, ' Nay, ladies, don't be frightened, I never did the least injury to a woman in my life, nor never will, d — n me ; as for your money, keep it yourselves : all that I ask from you is a kiss apiece ; if you grudge me that, I'm sure you are neither sensible, nor good humoured.' Vw Victis ! The soft penalty was paid, and the wicked man turned away from his wicked- ness after doing a mild ' Confiteor ' — that he had spent all his money very foolishly, and the sum in which he had mulcted papa would cari-y him to his friends, and then he should have 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 45 plenty. It was the first robbery he had ever committed, and it should be the last — and then he faded into the emigkeit. But how about the stout coachman and footman who drove, and sat behind the carriage ? Probably Somerville jiere had something to say to them on his return home. Here is another case of wickedness, by a supposed Witch, the belief in Witchcraft being a cult not yet thoroughly ignored in England, copied from the Aimtial Register of August 26th : ' At the Bridgewater assizes, Betty Townsend, a very old woman, aged 77, who for many years past has been considered by the superstitious as a Witch, was tried for obtain- ing money of a child under the following circumstances : The prosecutor, Jacob Poole, was a labouring man, residing in the hamlet of Taunton, in which parish the prisoner also resided, and he had been in the habit of sending his daughter, aged about thirteen, with apples in a basket, to market. About the 24th of January last, the old woman met the little girl, stopped her, and asked to see what she had in her basket ; which, having examined, she said to her, " Hast got any money.''" The child said she had none. " Then get some for me," said the old woman, " and bring it to the Castle (a tavern in Taunton) door, or I will kill thee." The child, terrified at such a threat from a witch, procured two shillings, and carried it to her ; when the old woman said, " 'Tis a good turn thou hast got it, or else I would have made thee die by inches." This was repeated seven times within five months, when Poole, the girl's father, going to the shop of Mr. Burford, a druggist in Taunton, to pay a little bill which he owed for medicine, found no less than seven different charges against him for money lent ; and, on inquiry, found that different small sums of two shillings, half a crown, five shillings, &c., had been borrowed by the little girl in her father's name, for the purpose, as she said, of going to market, but carried as a peace-offering to the old woman. The whole was now dis- covered, and Poole's wife, and another woman, took the girl with them to the prisoner's house, and interrogated her as to the facts. She admitted a knowledge of the girl, but, on being reprehended for her conduct, raved and swore, that if they dared to accuse her, she would make them "die by inches." " No," said Mrs. Poole, who appears to have thought that she knew much better how to deal with a Witch than her daughter, " that thee shall not — I'll hinder that " : and, taking a pin from her clothes, she scratched the 46 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 witch from her elbow to her wrist, in three places, to draw her blood, a process, believed to be of unfailing efficacy, as an antidote to witchcraft. The idea of this wicked woman's power has had such an effect upon the mind of the poor little girl, that she is now reduced to such a state of debility, that she is scarcely able to take any sustenance. The Jury found the prisoner guilty (ivhat of?); and the Judge observed that only her extreme old age prevented him from pronouncing on her the severest sentence the law would allow. She was sentenced to pay a fine of one shilling, and to be kept to hard labour in the House of Correction for six Calendar months.' Bartholomew Fair must be within the recollection of many of my readers, for it was not abolished until 1855. At one time it was always opened by the Lord Mayor — yet it reads with an old-world flavour that ' Yesterday Morning (Sept. 3) the Lord Mayor, attended by the City Marshals, &c., went in procession, after having partaken of a cool tankard at the house of Mr. Newman, the keeper of Newgate, to the corner of Long Lane, West Smithfield, where the fair was proclaimed, and all its usual din and bustle commenced.' The fair was not finally suppressed until 1855. It was not till 1835 that Bull baiting was made illegal in England, and it is refreshing to read that the bull, even for a very short time, had the best of his human persecutor, who on such an occasion ever cuts a sorry figure. Morning Chronicle, Sept. 4th : ' A dreadful catastrophe occurred at Chapel Wake, Birmingham, on Tuesday last. A concourse of people having assembled at the Fives Court, Lawrence Street, for the purpose of baiting a bull, the enraged animal broke loose, and ran with great fury into Coleshill Street. A Scene of the greatest confusion ensued. An infant, three months old, was killed on the spot : two women and boys were dreadfully trampled and bruised, and remain in the hospital with little hopes of recovery, and many others received injury.' Bravo Tore ! Annus Mirabilis ! A Regent and a Comet ! According to Shakespeare, when " beggars die, there are no Comets."* These Celestial aberrations are for far greater mundane per- sonages — they are for the great ones of the earth only ; and, again, from the same authority, we learn that 'Comets import- ing change,'! is fairly fulfilled in the Regency. Of course the Caricaturist got hold of it, and fixed it for all time. ' The Comet of 1811' has, as nucleus, the facile * Julius Ccesar, act ii. sc. 2. "("1 Henry IV., act i. so. i. 48 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 princeps of his age. Its tail is studded with celebrities, all of whom I cannot, unfortunately, make out. First is Earl Moira, then Sheridan and Erskine ; Lord Derby with his hydroce- phalous forehead, and the Duke of Norfolk. Behind Lord Derby is Col. Bloomfield ; behind him is Lord Grenville, and side by side with him are Temple and Buckingham, whose wig and spectacles betray him anywhere. The last face to be recognized is that of Earl Grey. This Comet was discovered at Viviers on the 25th of March, by M. de Flanguergues, and was again noticed by M. Pons at Marseilles on the 11th of April. It was seen at Paris on the 20th of May, but was not generally visible in England until the latter end of August or the beginning of September. It was nearest to the earth on the 24th of October, and then it went on its course, and in due time vanished. In September a practical joke was played, on no less a person than the Queen. For four consecutive days, ending Sept. 26th, Buckingham Palace, or, as it was then called, the Queen's House, was besieged by Washerwomen from morning till night. It seems that a woman, calling herself the head of the Queen's laundry, had gone round to hundreds of Washerwomen, telling them that she had held her present situation for five years, and that she had been obliged to discharge all her staiF, because they did not wash the royal linen clean, and also that they got drunk. She was very afiable with her dupes, and was not above drinking with them, or of borrowing from them, cloaks, shawls, umbrellas, and other trifles, promising some of them two guineas a week, others 4s. a day, a pot of porter, and as much rum, gin, and wine as they chose. Early on Monday morning they began to arrive, about six o'clock, so as to set to work, and it was in vain that the porters refused them admission. Their tale was, that the lady who had hired them, had given them the key of the laundry to let themselves in, so that they might get to work, light the fire, &c. But, as there was no laundry at Buckingham Palace, they sent the poor women to St. James's Palace, where there was one, and, when they got there, it was only to be told that none had been engaged, nor even wanted. One can imagine the scene, more especially as many of the poor women had come from great distances, some had left good situations to go there, and others had sent their children into the Country to nurse, in order to enable them to take the place. 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 49 A more pleasing contest of women took place on the 3rd of October, 1811, in the shape of a Cricket Match between two teams, not the sort of thing as ' Actresses ' Cricket, which is now played between a team each of men and women, the former being armed with broom handles, the latter with cricket bats ; but a much rougher sort of thing, if we can believe the accompanying illustration, which is taken from an etching of Rowlandson's called ' Rural Sports, or a Cricket Match Extraordinary. On Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1811, a Singular Cricket Match took place at Ball s Pond, Newing- ton. The players on both sides were 22 Women, 1 1 Hamp- shire, against 11 Surrey. The Match was made between some amateur Noblemen of the respective Counties, for 500 Guineas a side. The performers in the Contest were of all ages and sizes.' The Match really began on the 2nd of October, and lasted three days, the Hampshire team winning. The ages varied from 14 to upwards of forty. Rowlandson sketched with a freedom approaching decided coarseness — but his sketches were natural, and in this instance valuable, as showing us Cricket as then played, although the game, with its two stump wickets, curved bats, and primitive scoring was then obsolete, at least in matches.* But, if we can believe the same artist, Baldwin and his con- geners were outdone this year by a woman descending from a balloon in a parachute. It is taken from an etching by Row- landson, dated the 25th of October, 1811, and entitled ' Balloon Hunting.' It represents the mishaps of a party of ladies who went balloon hunting across country, in a one- horse vehicle, the shafts of which are smashed, and the horse is being reduced to docility by the driver. I know of no woman who descended by means of a parachute, in this year. They were not novelties, for Andrl Jacques Garnerin, the Aeronaut, came down in one in 1802, and, according to Laroussc, Elisa, daughter of Jean Baptiste Olivier Garnerin, brother of the above, was the first woman who tried a ' drop from the clouds.' She made her first descent in 1815, and in 1820 had made over twenty. Taken as a whole, the French Prisoners of War, whose numbers were ever increasing, were not a bad lot of fellows. There were many breaches of parole, and large numbers of * The third stump was added by the Hambledon Club, 1775. 4 1811] SOCIAL ENGLAND 51 the rank and file, and seamen got away ; for, in a Trial in the Court of King's Bench, November 14, 1811, the Attorney- General asserted that, of the French Officers, prisoners of war, on their parole, in this country, one-fourth had effected their escape : and that one condition on which smugglers from this country were permitted to land their goods in France, was the bringing over with them, a French prisoner. W ■»- RURAL SPORTS ; BALLOON HUNTING. (By Rowlandson. Published October 25, 1811, by Thomas Tegg.) Those interned at Cupar fitted up a neat little Theatre, which was opened on the 3rd of September. A prologue composed by one of the Officers, complimentary to the in- habitants for their hospitality to the Captives, was spoken and acted. This was followed by a Comedy in verse, by Regnard, called ' Les Folies Amoureuses,' and an after piece ' Le Ouaterne." The Scene painting, interior decorations of 4—2 52 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1811 the theatre. Stage Apparatus, and Costumes, were all their own work : nor did they stop there, for they had an excellent band of their own. But they could behave sternly on occasion, if there is any truth in the following story. In May, 1811, the French prisoners confined on board the Sampson (prison ship lying in the Medway), formed a conspiracy to forcibly take possession of the ship, and effect their escape, which was prevented by one of their number imparting secretly their projected plan to the commanding officer. Enraged at the disappointment of their hopes, they used every effort to find out the individual by whose communication their secret had transpired ; and having, as they thought, fixed upon the right man, as soon as they were locked up for the night, they formed a Court, for his trial, at which a proces verbal was drawn up, declaratory of their proceedings. The suspected traitor was found guilty, but there was a difference of opinion as to his punishment, and it was at last resolved and carried into effect, that he should be tattooed on his forehead and cheeks ' J'ai vendu mes fr^res aux Anglais abord le ponton " Le Sampson," 31 Mai, 1811.' There is not much more to chronicle for the remainder of this year, except the Census, and we must glance at the figures to see the enormous difference in the population then, and now. In 1811, the whole population was 12,552,144, in 1881, 35,246,562, or, in other words, the population had all but trebled itself in 70 years. In the Census of 1881 the sexes were very evenly balanced, being 17,253,947 males, and 17,992,615 females, and so they were in 1811, 6,310,548, males, and 6,241,596 females. Still the Luddite Riots must not be forgotten, for, at one time, they threatened to be somewhat serious. They began in the neighbourhood of Nottingham, the Manufacturers there, having been obliged, from the decrease of demand for their manufactures, to discharge many of their workmen, and con- sequently much distress was caused. Nor was this all : a certain wide frame for weaving stockings had been intro- duced, which saved much labour, and, consequently, fewer hands were wanted. In November, these riots became rather serious, as, not only were the obnoxious frames smashed, and manufacturers' stock destroyed, but millers, corn dealers, &c., suffered, and the military had to be called out. Their name was taken from their imaginary leader, one Captain Ludd„ 1811] UNDER THE REGENCY 53 ■who never had any existence, but probably stood for the Com- mittee of Management. At this time, at all events, the public were free from the sickening details of illness such as they have more than once had recently — details which could do no good whatever to the outer world, and which must have been very painful to the relatives. They managed things better in George III.'s reign. If the medical men quarrelled, they did not openly wash their dirty linen, but it only was known to a few that Dr. Willis's treatment of his Royal patient, during his former illness, had been considered unnecessarily severe, and that, perhaps, the)' were not too well content to have him asso- ciated with them Ln the present crisis : still for the first year or so, the people, who really loved old Farmer George, were kept fairly acquainted with the state of his health, until it became hopeless — and then, perhaps very wisely, they only were fed with the merest details of his disorder. In February, the King was getting so well that the Queen and one of the Princesses, on more than one occasion visited him : then he suflFered from a paroxysm of mania, to which succeeded a calm, during which he took his constitutional walks on the Terrace. In March, he got better, so much so that on the 31st of March, the prayers for his recovery were discontinued in the Chapel Royal, and, at the Queen's Monthly Council, it was hoped that he would recover, so that he had the key of the Cabinet Council Despatch Boxes, and, in other ways, was treated as a responsible being. In May, his health was capricious, but still he was able to walk and ride in public. June brought a relapse, and his case was deemed hopeless, yet he still occasionally took walks. In July, he was in a very dangerous state, opiates had to be administered, and he pai-took of very little solid food. In August, it was said that his suite of apartments were padded to prevent his doing himself a mischief, but this was denied. September was a better month for him, but, in October, he retrograded. November and December only show him as leading a fairly healthy animal existence. l8l2, OR REGENCY X LA MODE. (Drawn and etched by ^V. Heath.) CHAPTER VI. 1812. The Regent's doings — The Royal Sprain — Colonel McMahon — Lnddite and Factory Riots — Scarcity of Bullion — Murder of Mr. Perceval. Judging by the barometer of public opinion, the satirical prints, the topic of conversation in the commencement of this year, was the Prince Regent. Occupying the exalted position that he did, he naturally was the observed of all, and his foibles and peccadilloes were made the laughing-stock, or were censured of all. And the Caricaturists did not spare him. Take this illustration as a sample; it is called ' 1812, or Regency a la Mode,' where we see our ' fat friend,' as Brummell called him, having his stays laced, and, during that operation, occupying himself by rouging his cheeks. He would allow very little of his doings to be known by the public, and the movements of Royalty, as we know it in the Court Circular, were recorded in the baldest manner possible, except on one occasion, when the Regent sprained his ancle, and there was a very long and elaborate report thereon. Morning Chronicle, Saturday, November l6, 1811 : — 'The Prince Regent. — His Royal Highness, we are concerned to state, was not well enough to come to town yesterday. At the Party given by the Duchess of York at Oatlands, on Wednesday evening, the Duchess made arrangements for a Ball. The Prince Regent agreed to lead off the dance with his daughter, the Princess Charlotte, for his partner. Whilst his Royal Highness was leading the Princess briskly along, his right foot came in contact with the leg of a chair or sofa, which gave his leg a twist, and sprained his ancle. His Royal 56 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 Highness took but little notice of it that night, but in the morning he found it worse than he expeetedj &c., &c.' Whatever was the matter with him, he did not leave Oat- lands till the 9th of December, or nearly a month after the Ball. Nobody believed in the royal sprain, but the story that did gain credence, and was made the most of by the Carica- turist and the Satirist, was that the Regent, at that Ball, grossly insulted Lady Yarmouth, for which he was most heartily, and soundly, thrashed by her husband. Lord Yar- mouth, and hence the royal indisposition. Walcot, as ' Peter Pindar, Esqre,' wrote one of his most scathing odes, and that is saying something, entitled ' The R l Sprain, or A Kick from Yah h to Wa s, being the particulars of an ex- pedition to Oat NDs, and the Sprained Ancle.' There were several Caricatures, all with the same tendency. One was 'A Kick from Yarmouth to Wales, December, 181],' which shows Lord Yarmouth holding the Regent by his coat collar and vigorously kicking him behind, the Regent yelling and trying to get away. Lady Yarmouth sitting on a sofa looking on. There is attached to this, a poetical effusion of fourteen verses, to be sung to the tune of ' The Love-sick Frog.' The first verse runs thus : ' A Prince he would a raking go. Heigh ho ! said Eowly. Whether his people would have him or no ; With a rowly-powly, gammon and spinach, Heigh ho ! said Anthony Rowly.' Then there was 'The Royal Milling Match,' published December, 1811, in which depicted Lord Yarmouth, who, by a paper sticking out of his coat pocket, was ' Late a pupil of the Champion of England,' ' fibbing merrily ' on the royal countenance ; at the same time exclaiming, ' There is plenty of fair game, but no poaching on my Manner. My action is quick, and put in strait forward — so !' The Regent calls out, ' Help, help, I have made a Jalse step, and sprained my Ancle.' A servant coming in, says to Lord Yarmouth, ' Lord, Sir, don't be so harsh, you'll sprain the gentleman's ancle. By goles, this is what they call Milling indeed !' Lady Yarmouth views the scene from behind a screen. The most amusing one I have seen, is given in the accom- panying illustration, which is by Geo. Cruikshank, published January, 1812. It is called 'Princely Agility; or, the Sprained Ancle.' The doctor at the foot of the bed (probably 58 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 meant for Halford) is fomenting the foot, which seems its normal size, and says to the attendant, ' Take that waistcoat away, or we shall make the town talk.' The Princess Charlotte is examining the foot^ and exclaims, ' Bless me, how it's swelled !' Lady Jersey, who is administering to the invalid prince, is inattentive to her duties ; while the Regent, with ' two lovely black eyes,' is calling to Colonel McMahon, ' Oh ! my Ancle, Oh ! — bring me my Wig — Oh ! my Ancle ! Take care of my Whiskers, Mac ! Oh, Oh, Oh, Oh, o— o — o — oh, o !' Sir John Douglas is feeling his pulse, saying, ' Out a way, Mon, you are always exposing yourself John Bull is coming in at the door, but is pushed back by Adams, with ' Indeed, Bull, 'tis only a sprained ancle.' But John Bull says, 'John Bull is not to be fobbed off so easily. Master Lawyer.' George Cruikshank was not very particular as to his like- nesses, as we may see by his ideal Colonel McMahon, who was a servant worthy of his master, to whom he was most useful. Walcot ' Pindarised ' him in an Ode, ' Mac the First,' in which he makes him say : ' Once a boy, in ragged dress, Who would little Mac caress ? When in the streets, starv'd and sad, I was a common errand lad.'' But, be his origin whatever it might have been, he was a tool well fitted for the use of his august master, who, it must be owned, endeavoured to repay him ; but, also, at the public expense. In 1811 General Fox died, and at his death, the office of Paymaster of the Widows' Pensions became vacant. It was a perfect sinecure, the duties being done by others, and the salary attached to the office was over £2,000 per annum. The Commissioners of 1783, and of 1808, both re- ported and recommended the abolition of Paymaster and Deputy-Paymaster of Widows' Pensions, as being unnecessary, the one having very little to do, the other, nothing at all. The office of Paymaster had, in particular, been recommended to be done away with, on the demise of General Fox : but it was given to Colonel McMahon. On January 9, 1812, on a Motion for Supply, Mr. Creevey spoke decidedly against this appointment, and moved as an Amendment, ' That the House would, to-morrow se'nnight. 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 59 resolve itself into a Committee of Supply, in order to give an opportunity, in the interim, for the consideration which he had suggested,' namely, that they would take into their earliest consideration, the various offices of emolument recently granted by the Crown to several of their members. This amendment was lost. On the 22nd of February, the question of the Army Estimates being on, Mr. Bankes moved as an Amendment, ' That the amount of the sum expected to be paid to the Paymaster of Widows' Pensions, being 12d. in the pound on the said Pensions (£2,790 Is.) be deducted from the said sum.' This amendment was lost by a majority of sixteen. But on the next night Mr. Bankes brought the matter up again, and moved the virtual abohtion of the office by omitting the sum necessary to pay it — and this was carried by a majority of three. There was consternation among the Regent's party at the temerity of the House in thus thwarting the Royal wishes, and, of course, the recalcitrant Commons must be taught a lesson, so McMahon was appointed Keeper of the Privy Purse, and Private Secretary to the Prince Regent ; and, in the caricature of ' The Privy Purse and Political Beggars ' we find McMahon installed in his new position. Sheridan says, ' Dear, good, worthy Countryman, thou Pine Apple of Erin ! consider I was burnt out,* not a penny in my purse, my credit very low — do — dear Mac, for the love of St. Patrick, give me a handful.' Buckingham : ' I have not above a Hundred Thousand a year, these hard times. Pray remember the Poor !' Temple : ' With my wife's fortune, and my own, I have not above Forty "Thousand a Year. Pray remember the Poor !' GrenviUe : ' I have not above Fifty Thousand a Year, a slender pittance. Pray remember the Poor !' Mac Mahon replies : ' Paws Oif ! no Blarney will do with me ! Fm up to all your Gammon ! and so is my dear Master. I'm cosy at last, in spite of all your speeches and paragraphs, and you may all go to the Devil, your Master! ! !' And, doubtless, he thought he was cosy, but the Commons would not stand the job, and on the 23rd of March his appointment was brought before Parliament, and the Hon. J. W. Ward asked whether it was a fact, and, if so, what * At Drury Lane Theatre, destroyed on the 24th of February, 1809. 1812] SOCIAL ENGLAND 6l salary was he to have ? Mr. Perceval, as Chancellor of the Exchequer, admitted the appointment, and pointed out that Colonel Taylor had occupied the same position towards the King for many years, and the same salary that was given to that gentleman had been continued to Colonel McMahon. Mr. Whitbread pointed out that Colonel Taylor's appointment was owing to the infirmities of the King, and that previously, there had been no such post. On the 14th of April, Mr. C. W. Wynn, in the House of Commons, moved for the Production of the Appointment of Colonel McMahon to the new Office of Private Secretary to his Royal Highness the Prince Regent. A very long dis- cussion took place, and on a division, the motion was negatived by a majority of seventy-six. But the Ministry felt that the House was decidedly against them, and the appointment was not persisted in — McMahon afterwards became a pensioner on the Privy Purse. During the whole of January the Luddites were very violent in, and about Nottingham, doing an immense amount of mischief, in spite of all the troops could do, and they were so well organized that very few prisoners were taken. In April the agitation spread to Leeds, where machinery was broken, and cloth &c., destroyed. Then there were food riots among the Cornish miners, which lasted until the arrival of troops. More Luddite riots at Leeds. Food riots among the Colliers at Macclesfield. Then Bristol got tainted with the same lawless spirit ; then Sheffield, Stockport, Carlisle, Manchester, Bolton, and elsewhere, but these riots were principally directed against machinery. At the latter end of April, one of the chief ringleaders, a man named Walker, was arrested, and safely lodged in Chester Gaol. He was said to be General Ludd himself In May, there still were riots in the manufacturing district, but these principally took the form of organized burglaries. At last, on May 24th, there was a Special Commission to try those who had been captured. Some were sentenced to imprisonment, some to transportation, which, in those days really meant being sent across the seas, and sixteen were condemned to be hanged — but five, only, were left for death. In other parts of the country some were hanged, but this really served only 'pour encourager les autres,' for the riots still went on during June, August, and part of September ; but they were then dying out, a letter from Huddersfield, dated 62 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 the 10th of September, saying, 'Several persons have been apprehended on various charges of Luddism, and are now in custody here. A number of others have, this week, abjured their illegal oath, and taken the oath of allegiance ; they see the calamities they have brought upon themselves and neigh- bours, by the atrocious depredations they have committed, and the delusions they have laboured under ; and it is to be hoped they will all follow the laudable example of those their associates, in discharging themselves from that unlawful and ruinous system in which they have, unfortunately, been engaged, and return to their allegiance before it is too late.' And so they did, for we do not hear much of them afterwards. They were very ignorant, the price of provisions, owing to the war, pressed heavily upon them, work was scarce, and, to their minds, looked likely to be scarcer, owing to the introduction of Machinery. Had the Home Government been a strong one, the riots might have been stifled at their birth, for there was not the false philanthropy preached then, as now, and the soldiery, both officers and men, were ready to obey orders un- flinchingly, and without fear of being called to trial afterwards for their obedience. Guineas and Bank Notes still exercised the public mind, and the former must indeed have been hoarded up when we learn, early in January, that 34,000 guineas in gold, the property of a gentleman deceased, were oifered for sale on 'Change at Belfast. Bank of England notes were forged to a great extent, so much so, that the total value of the forged Notes presented at the Bank of England for payment, and refused, during eleven years, from the 1st of January, 1801, to the 31st of December, 1811, was £l01,66l. ' Bank Notes, it is said, once Guineas defied To swim to a point in Wade's foaming tide ; But 'ere they could reach the opposite brink, Bank Notes cried to Gold, " Help me ! Cash us ! I sink." That Paper should sink, and guineas should swim, May appear to some folks a ridiculous whim ; But before they condemn, let them hear this suggestion — In pun-making, gravity's out of the question.' In September of this year Silver had risen to 6s. 8d. per oz., and Gold to £5 10s., equalling in value for a guinea £1 9s. 6d. There is a curious story of the value of money, told in 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 63 November of this year. 'A Gentleman in the Country sent to his banker in the City, a parcel of guineas which were both light and heavy, with directions to pass the value to his credit in account. The banker, being a good and loyal subject, and unwilling to do an unlawful act, credited his correspondent, with the heavy guineas at the rate of £l Is. each, the value by law established : but the light ones he sent to a Silver- smith, who returned for them Bank Notes, at the rate of £l 7s. each. A light guinea is thus proved to be worth 6s. more than one of standard weight.' In April, Napoleon put out a feeler for peace with Great Britain, on the basis that the Bourbons should reign in Spain ; but, when inquiry was made whether by that, he meant Ferdinand VII. he gave no reply, and the negotiation, if ever serious, fell through. One of the principal social events of the year was the Murder of the Right Hon. Spencer Perceval, Chancellor of the Exchequer, First Lord of the Treasury, and Prime Minister of England, who was shot by the hand of an assassin, John Bellingham, on the 11th of May, whilst passing through the lobby of the House of Commons. He was born November 1, 1762, so that, when he fell, he was in the prime of life. He was of very good family, being the second son of John, Earl of Egmont, in Ireland, and Baron Lovel and Holland in England. His family was one of the very few that really came over with the Conqueror, for Robert the second son of Eudes, sovereign Duke of Brittany, settled in Normandy, and there became possessed of the lordships of Brewehal and Ivery. As stated, he came over in the Norman filibuster's suite, and in the course of two or three generations the name of Brewehal, became changed into Perceval — and ever after- wards so remained. Spencer Perceval, studied for, and practised at, the Bar, being made King's Counsel in 1796. In the same year, his first cousin. Lord Compton, who was member for Northampton, succeeded to his father's title of Earl of Northampton ; and Perceval, offering himself for the vacant seat, was elected without opposition. His rise was rapid, and in 1801, being then in his 39th year, he joined Lord Addington's Govern- ment as Solicitor-General. In 1802 he was made Attorney- General. When Pitt resumed the government, he retained his appointment, but resigned it at Pitt's death. In Lord Portland's Ministry of 1807, he undertook the 64 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 duties of Chancellor and Under Treasurer of the Exchequer, and also Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster. In October, 1 809, he was First Lord of the Treasury, and Prime Minister, and so continued until his sad end. One may well ask why did Bellingham shoot Perceval > To this day I cannot tell. In the year 1 804, a Mr. John Bellingham — who had been brought up in a Counting House in London, and, afterwards, lived three years as clerk with a Russian Merchant at Archangel, whence he had returned to England — went back to Russia on Mercantile business — was there twice imprisoned — he said falsely — and treated, accord- ing to his own account, with very great indignity. He complained to the British Ambassador at Petersburg, and also to the Secretary of Legation, but did not obtain his desired redress. He returned to England in 1809, as he said, ruined in health and fortune. But the British Ambassador, Lord Gower, declared that he used all the influence he possessed (with propriety) in Bellingham's favour ; but that he was legally imprisoned for debt, upon the award of four arbitrators, two of them British Merchants chosen by himself, and the other two Russians ; that his confinement was far from severe ; that he was allowed to walk at large, only under the inspection of a police officer ; and that he had received help in money from the Secretary of Legation. But he was ' a man with a grievance,' and went about to different branches of the Government, detailing the laches of Lord Gower, and the Secretary, for their culpable neglect in not looking properly after the interests of a British Subject. He then determined to bring his case before Parliament, and asked General Gascoyne to back his petition, and the General promised to do so, provided it had the countenance of Mr. Perceval, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, which was considered necessary in all cases which involved a pecuniary grant. He wrote to poor Perceval ybr leave to bring in a Petition, but was answered that Mr. Perceval thought that his petition 'was not of a nature for the Consideration of Parliament' Then he went to the Regent and the Privy Council, but to no purpose : made applications all round, but met with no good, except a reference to the Chancellor of the Exchequer : but here he had been refused help. Then he wrote a letter to the Bow Street Magistrates, stating his case — saying that he would, once more solicit his Majesty's Ministers, through 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 65 them, and, failing redress from that, he continued, ' I shall then feel justified in executing justice myself ; in which case, I shall be ready to argue the merits of so reluctant a measure, with his Majesty's Attorney-General, wherever, and whenever I may be called upon to do so. In the hopes of averting so abhorrent but compulsive an alternative, — 1 have the honour to be, &c.' The Magistrates communicated the contents of this packet to the Secretary of State, but it only resulted in a fresh disappointment. He still kept on trying, and his idea of taking vengeance on some one, increased, until it not only became fixed, but he planned its carrying out. He had a pocket made in his coat of a peculiar size and shape, in order to carry a pistol ; and on the fatal 11th of May, he hid himself behind one of the folding doors of the lobby of the House of Commons ; and when, about a quarter past five, the ill-fated Chancellor made his appearance, Bellingham shot him through the heart. Poor Perceval only reeled a pace or two, faintly called out, that he was murdered, and then fell. The Illustration which I have reproduced is the best I know, and the likenesses of both murderer and victim are extremely good. Perceval was at once raised, and carried into the Speaker's apartments, but he died in two or three minutes. His murderer made no attempt to escape, but stood holding the pistol with which he had committed the foul crime, and, when some one called out — ' Where is the rascal that fired .'' he cooUy stepped forward, saying, ' I am the unfortunate man,' and quietly surrendered himself a prisoner. On being searched, a loaded pistol was found in his pocket — the fellow to that which he was still holding in his hand. He was equally calm when brought before the bar of the House, acknowledging the fact, and even attempting to justify it. He was committed to Newgate, where two men were constantly with him in his cell, to prevent any attempt at self- destruction. He was brought up for trial at the Old Bailey on the 15th of May. The facts against him were concisely and clearly stated, even to that of his having pockets specially made to hold the pistols : and he conducted his own defence. He gave an account of his sufferings for the past eight years, laying the blame principally on Lord Leveson Gower, whom he regretted he had not killed in place of Mr. Perceval. 'He was obliged to the Attorney-General and the Court for setting aside the plea of insanity urged by his counsel, and could 5 66 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 assure them, whenever he should appear before the tribunal of God, he should be adjudged innocent of the wilful murder of Mr. Perceval. That he perished by his hand he admitted ; but, to constitute felony, there must be malice prepense, the wilful intention, which had not been proved. In this case, he had been robbed of his property, his family ruined, and his MR. PERCEVAL ASSASSINATED IN THE LOBBY OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS, MAY II, l8l2. mind tortured through the conduct of Government Agents ; and he was now to answer for his life, because Mr. Perceval chose to patronize iniquity, and refuse him redress.' Of course, this style of argument availed him nothing with the jury, who, after a very brief consultation, brought him in 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 6l ' Guilty.' Sentence of death was passed upon him, and, as there was very little sickly sentimentality in those days, as to carrying out the penalty of the law, he was duly hanged on the 18th of May: his body being given over to the surgeons for dissection. It is said that after his body was opened, his heart continued its functions for four hours ; in other words, that he was living for that time. The day after Mr. Perceval's assassination, the Prince Regent sent a Message to Parhament recommending a provision being made for Mrs. Perceval and her family, and an annuity of £2,000 was granted her, together with a sum of £30,000 to her family. These were voted unanimously, and two other votes were passed by large majorities — one to provide a monument to his memory in Westminster Abbey, the other granting to his eldest son, Spencer Perceval, who was just about to go to College, an annuity of £1,000, from the day of his father's death, and an additional £1,000 yearly, on the decease of his mothei-. One would have thought that there could have been but one feeling throughout the nation, that of horror, at this dastardly murder, but one town was the base exception. When the news of his murder reached Nottingham, a numerous crowd publicly testified their joy by shouts, huzzas, drums beating, flags flying, bells ringing, and bonfires blazing. The Military being called out, and the Riot Act read, peace was restored. 5—2 CHAPTER VII. French Prisoners of War — Repeal of the ' Orders in Council '— Rejoicings for the Victory of Salamanca — Saturnalia thereat. There was always more or less trouble with the French Prisoners of War during the year — as we know, many escaped, and small blame to them — while many officers deliberately and disgracefully broke their parole and got away. Six Prisoners escaped from Edinburgh Castle, made for the sea, found a boat, and, sailing up the Firth, got as far as Hopetoun House, where they landed, intending to go to Glasgow by land, but the Commandant of the Linlithgow Local Militia had information that several men had been seen skulking about Lord Hopetoun's plantations, and, after some trouble, they were caught, lodged in Linlithgow gaol, and then sent back to Edinburgh. One gained his freedom by an act of gallantry, early in February. ' Fran9ois Goyette, a French Prisoner, lately em- ployed as a servant on board the hospital ship Pegase, has been released, and sent to France by the Transport Board, as a reward for his exertions in jumping overboard to the rescue of the Cook and boy of the Hydra frigate, when upset in her boat on Porchester Lake. ' We see, by the following, how systematic they became in their methods of escaping : — ' Upwards of 1,000 French prisoners have escaped from this country during the war, and so many persons have lately been detected in assisting their escape, that those concerned have had a vehicle made for the conveyance of Frenchmen, to avoid suspicion or detection, exactly resembling a covered cart used by the Calico printers, with strong doors at each end. 1812] SOCIAL ENGLAND 69 but with seats inside to hold a number of men. One of them was detected about a week since, in a very extraordinary way. Some Revenue Officers went into a public house near Canterbury, where two men were playing at cards, whom they suspected to be Frenchmen on their way to escape from this country. They communicated this suspicion to a magis- trate, who informed them that, at that hour of the night (about eight o'clock), the Constable was generally intoxicated, and it would be of no use applying to him ; but advised them to procure the assistance of some of the Military in the neigh- bourhood, which the officers accordingly did, and surrounded the house. ' The landlord refused to open the door, saying it was too late. The soldiers told him they were in search of deserters. A short time afterwards two men came out of the back door, and the Revenue Officers, suspecting they were two French- men, secured them. Another came out directly afterwards, whom the soldiers stopped ; he, also, was a Frenchman. They were conveyed away in Custody. This was a mere chance detection, as the two men whom the Revenue Officers had seen at Cards early in the evening proved, not Frenchmen, but tradesmen of the neighbourhood ; and, while the officers were gone to the magistrate, and after the military, a cart, such as we have described, arrived at the house with four Frenchmen. 'The fourth man, who was some time in coming out, after the others, escaped into the London road, whither he knew the cart had returned, and overtook it ; but the driver would not, for a considerable time, take him up, as he had only seen hira in the night-time, till he made him understand that he was connected with one Webb, the driver's employer. It being ascertained that the three Frenchmen in custody, had been brought there in a cart, pursuit was made, and it was overtaken, and the driver and the Frenchman were taken into custody. They were examined before a magistrate, when it appeared, from the confession of the driver, &c., that the four Frenchmen were officers, who had broken their parole from Ashby de la Zouche. The Cart had been fitted up with a seat, to hold a number of Frenchmen. He was employed by Mr. Webb to drive the cart. The Frenchmen only got out of the cart at night to avoid observation. They stopped at bye-places, and made fires under hedges. At a place near Brentford, a woman connected with Webb made tea for them. They stopped on Beckenham Common to rest 70 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 the horse, about ten o'clock at night, when, a horse patrol passing at the time, suspected something to be wrong, but could not ascertain what. He insisted on the driver moving off ; and when he was about putting the horse into the Cart, an accident happened which nearly led to their discoveiy. The Frenchmen all being at the back of the cart, the driver lost the balance, when he was putting in the horse, and the cart fell backwards, which caused the Frenchmen to scream violently ; but it is supposed the patrol had gone too far to hear the noise. Webb was apprehended, and examined before a magistrate in Kent, but he discharged him. How- ever, afterwards, the magistrate meeting with Webb, in Maid- stone, where he was attending the assize on a similar charge, he took him into custody.' What was it made these French Officers so dishonour them- selves by breaking their parole .'' The very fact of their being on parole, intimates a certain amount of freedom. It must have been either a dull moral perception, and the utter want of all the feelings and instincts of a gentleman, or else ungovernable nostalgia, which blunted their sense of honour. Here is a pretty list, June 30, 1812 : — ' The number of French commissioned Officers, and masters of Privateers and Merchantmen, who have broken their parole in the last three years ending 5 June is 692, of whom 242 have been retaken, and 450 escaped. A considerable number of officers have, besides, been ordered into confine- ment, for various other breaches of their parole engagements.' Something had to be done to stop this emigration, so the Government gave orders to seize all galleys of a certain description carrying eight oars: 17 were seized at Deal, and 10 at Folkestone, Sandgate, &c. They must have been built for smuggling, and illicit purposes, for they were painted so as to be perfectly invisible at night, and were so slightly built, and swift, that in those days of no steamers, no craft could catch them. However, the punishment, if caught, for aiding their escape, was severe, as three men found to their cost. They were sentenced to two years' imprisonment, and two of them 'to be placed in and upon the pillory on the sea- shore, near the town of Rye, and, as near as could be, within sight of the French Coast, that they might be viewed, as his lordship observed, by those enemies of their country, whom they had, by their conduct, so much befriended.' 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 71 The French papers had accused us of ill-treating our prisoners, so that a disclaimer was necessary : — ' French Prisoners. — As a proof of the good treatment of the prisoners of war in this country, the following comparative statement of those sick and in health will be the best answer to the calumnies of the Moniteicr : — Thursday, Aug. 20, 1812. In health. Sick. On board prison ships, Hamoaze ... 6100 ... 61 In Dartmoor dep6t 7500 ... 74 ' This small percentage of sick, is not the common average of persons not confined as Prisoners of War. At Dartmoor 500 prisoners, such as labourers, carpenters, smiths, &c., are allowed to work from sun-rise to sun-set ; they are paid four- pence and sixpence per day, according to their abilities, and have each their daily rations of provisions, viz., a pound and a half of bread, half a pound of boiled beef, half a pound of cabbage, and a proportion of soup and small beer. They wear a tin plate in their Caps, with the title of the trade they are employed in, and return every evening to the depot to be mustered.' They had a rough sense of justice among themselves, their punishments to delinquents not quite coming up to the rigorous ' mort aux voleurs,' but still very severe. Here is a case : The French prisoners who were brought to the depot at Perth, on August 13th, from Dundee, were lodged the preceding night, in the Church at Inchture, where, it is said, they contrived to draw many of the nails from the seats, and break a number of the panes of the windows ; and one of their number stole the two mort chtlis, or palls, belonging to the Church. The beadle being sent after them to the depot, the theft was instantly discovered, which so incensed the prisoners against the thief, that they called out to have him punished, and asked permission to do so by a Court-martial. Having held this Court, they ordered him a naval flogging of two dozen, with the end of a hard rope. The Culprit was tied to a lamp-post, and, with the first lash, the blood sprung. The punishment went on to 17 lashes, when the poor man fainted away, but he had the other 7 at another time. They kicked over the traces sometimes, as we learn by the Annual Register, September 8th : — ' The French prisoners at Dartmoor depot, on Sunday last. 72 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 had worked themselves up to the highest pitch of rage, at having a pound and a half of biscuit, and not bread, per day. The use of biscuit, it is to be observed, was to be discontinued as soon as the bakehouse had been rebuilt ; but the French- men were absolutely deaf to remonstrances. A detachment of the Cheshire militia, and of the South Gloucester regiment, was drawn up on the walls surrounding the prison ; and, although they had loaded their pieces with ball, the prisoners appeared undaunted, and insulted them in the grossest terms. A sentinel on duty had the bayonet wrenched off his piece, yet nobly reserved his fire ; an officer, however, followed the Frenchman, struck him over the shoulder with his sword, and brought oif the bayonet. The Frenchmen even bared their breasts to the troops, and seemed regardless of danger. ' The number of prisoners is about 7,500 ; and so menacing was their conduct, that an express was sent off to Plymouth Dock at eleven o'clock on Sunday night, soliciting immediate assistance. Three pieces of Artillery were, in consequence, sent off early on Monday morning ; and, on their arrival at the principal gate, the bars of which, of immense size, had been previously broken by stones hurled against them by the insurgents, they were placed in such directions as to command the whole of the circle which the prison describes. This had the desired effect, and order was restored. It is to be noticed that the allowance of biscuit, at which these men had so indignantly spurned, is precisely the same as that which is served out to our own sailors and marines.' At another time (Sunday, October 11th) the Ganges prison ship, at Portsmouth, with 750 prisoners on board, was set on fire by one of them, and had actually a great hole burned in her, before the fire was discovered. The incendiary was soon detected, and put in irons ; he confessed his guilt, and declared it was his intention to destroy himself and com- panions, who were tired of confinement. To the credit of his compatriots, they all helped to extinguish the flames, and were, with difficulty, restrained from lynching the offender. One pretty little story anent them, and I have done. A prisoner, located at Perth, was released, on account of his humanity. At the storming of Badajoz, General Walker fell at the head of his brigade, and was found by this young Frenchman lying wounded, and bleeding, in the breach. In his arms he bore the General to a French Hospital, where he was cured. General Walker gave him his address, and 1S12] UNDER THE REGENCY 73 promised to serve him, if ever it lay in his povirer. The fortune of war brought the young man, a captive, to England, and, on his application to his friend the General, the latter so used his influence as to procure his release. An act was done in this year which removed many restric- tions from our trade, and promoted the manufacturing in- dustry of the Country. It was all very well to be victorious in war, but the fact of being at war, more especially with opponents whose great efforts were to cripple the trade of the Nation, and thus wither the sinews by which war is greatly maintained, was felt throughout all classes of the Manufac- turing Interest all over the Country, a power which was then beginning to make itself felt. The Act of which I speak, was the abolition of the Orders in Council which prohibited trade with any port occupied by the French, being a reprisal for Napoleon's Berlin and Milan Decrees, which interdicted commerce with England. Petitions poured into Parliament in favour of their abroga- tion, and on the 24th of April Lord Liverpool laid on the table of the House of Lords, the following ' DECLARATION of the Court of Great Britain RESPECTING THE OrDERS IN CoUNCIL. 'At the Court at Carlton-house the 23rd day of April, 1812. Present his Royal Highness the Prince Regent in Council. ' Whereas his Royal Highness the Prince Regent was pleased to declare, in the name, and on the behalf of his Majesty, on the 21st day of April, 1812: "That if at any time hereafter, the Berlin and Milan Decrees shall, by some authentic act of the French Government, publicly promul- gated, be absolutely and unconditionally repealed, then, and from thenceforth, the Order in Council of the 7th of January, 1807, and the Order in Council of the 26th of April, 1809, shall without any further Order be, and the same are hereby declared from thenceforth to be, wholly and absolutely revoked.' On this being known, there were great rejoicings through- out the Country, especially at Sheffield, Leeds, and other manufacturing towns ; the beneficial effects of the alteration became immediately apparent, there being more purchases made at the Cloth Hall at Leeds, in one day, than had been known for many years. At Liverpool 1,500,000 yards of 74 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 bounty goods were shipped in one week, worth £125,000, and 2,500,000 were in progress of shipment. In the same week £12,000 Convoy duty, at 4 per cent., was paid, indi- cating further shipments to the amount of £300,000, at the same port. The wages of Spinners, &c., advanced at once, in some cases as much as 2s. 3d. a week. But all rejoicings were not so quiet — witness those which took place in London in honour of the Victory of Salamanca, when Wellington totally defeated the French Army under Marshal Marmont, July 22, 1812. The French left in the hands of the British 7,141 prisoners, 11 pieces of cannon, 6 stands of colours, and 2 eagles. The Illuminations in London took place on August 17th and two following days, but they seem to have been of the usual kind. If the sightseers could not get hold of the hero of the day, they managed to lay hands on the Marquis Wellesley, his brother, who was driving about, looking at the illuminations ; and, having taken the horses out of his car- riage, they dragged him about the streets ; finally, and luckily, depositing him at Apsley House. After this, they returned down Piccadilly, calling out for lights, which had a little time before been brilliant, but since had gone out. The inhabi- tants got from their beds and showed candles, but this did not satisfy the mob, who set to work demolishing the windows with sticks, brick-bats, stones, &c., to the great danger of life and limb. Some glass, in Mr. Coutts's house, which cost £4 10s. a square (for plate glass was very dear then) was broken, as were also several windows at Sir Francis Burdett's, and yet both had been well lighted throughout the night. This dis- graceful scene was kept up till past three a.m., and damage was done, estimated at five or six hundred pounds. On the third and last night of their Saturnalia the outrages were, perhaps, worse than before. Not only were fire-arms freely discharged, and fireworks profusely scattered, but balls of ton), dipped in turpentine, were thrown among crowds and into carriages ; horses ran away in affright — can-iages were overturned — and many deplorable accidents ensued in broken limbs and fractured skulls. Here are a few accidents. In Bow Street, a well-dressed young lady had her clothes set in a blaze. In the Strand, at one time, three women were on fire, and one burned through all her clothes, to her thigh. Likewise in the Strand, a hackney coach, containing two 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 75 ladies and two gentlemen, was forced open by the mob, who threw in a number of fireworks, which, setting fire to the straw at the bottom of the coach, burned an eye of one of the gentlemen, his coat, and breeches ; one of the ladies had her pelisse burned, and the other was burned across the breast. In St. Clement's Churchyard, a woman, of respectable appear- ance, hearing a blunderbuss suddenly discharged near her, instantly dropped down, and expired. Apropos of Salamanca, there was a little Jeu d'esprit worth preserving. 'Salamanca Lobsters. Though of Soldiers, by some in derision 'tis said, They are Lobsters, because they are cloathed in red, Yet the maxim our army admit to be true, As part of their nature, as well as their hue ; A proof more decisive, the world never saw, For every man in the Field had " Eclat." ' On the 30th of September, there was a great military function, in depositing the captured French Eagles in White- hall Chapel. They were five in number, two taken at Sala- manca, two at Madrid, and one near Ciudad Rodrigo. CHAPTER VIII. Chimney-sweeps — Climbing boys — Riot at Bartholomew Fair — Duelling — War with France — Declaration of war between England and America — Excommunication for bearing false witness — Early Steam Locomotives— Margate in 1812 — Resur- rection men — Smithfield Cattle Club. The Social life of a nation includes small things, as well as great, deposition of Eagles, and Chimney-sweeps, and the latter have been looked after, by the legislature, not before the intervention of the law was needed. In 1789, 28 Geo. III., an Act was passed to regulate Chimney-sweeping. In 1834, another Act regulated the trade, and the apprenticeship of Children. Again, by 3 and 4 Vic. cap. 85, it was made illegal for a master sweep to take as apprentice, any one under sixteen years of age, and the Act further provided that no one, after the 1st of July, 1842, should ascend a chimney unless he were twenty-one years of age. In 1864 the law was made more stringent, and even as late as 1875, 38 and 39 Vic. cap. 70, an Act was passed 'for further amending the Law relating to Chimney Sweepers.' That all this legislation was necessary is partially shown by a short paragraph of the date 7th of August : ' Yesterday, Charles Barker was charged at Union Hall* with kidnapping two young boys, and selling them for seven shillings, to one Rose, a chimney sweep at Kingston.' And, again, the 25th of August : — 'An interesting occurrence took place at Folkingham.f A poor woman who had obtained a pass billet to remain there all night, was sitting by the fire of the kitchen of the Grey- * Union Hall was at the east end of Union Street, Borough, and was built by subscription in 1781 — for the use of the magistrates, f Or Falkingham, Lincolnshire. 1812] SOCIAL ENGLAND 77 hound Inn, with an infant child at her breast, when two chimney sweeps came in, who had been engaged to sweep some of the chimneys belonging to the inn early next morn- ing. They were, according to custom, treated to a supper, which they had begun to eat, when the younger, a boy about seven years of age, happening to cast his eyes upon the woman, (who had been likewise viewing them with a fixed attention from their first entrance,) started up, and exclaimed in a frantic tone — " That's my mother !" and immediately flew into her arms. ' It appears that her name is Mary Davis, and that she is the wife of a private in the 2nd Regiment of Foot-guards, now serving in the Peninsula ; her husband quitted her to embark for foreign service on the 20th of last January, and on the 28th of the same month she left her son in the care of a woman who occupied the front rooms of her house, while she went to wash for a family in the neighbourhood : on her return in the evening, the woman had decamped with her son, and, notwithstanding every eifort was made to discover their retreat, they had not since been heard of: but having lately been informed that the woman was a native of Leeds, she had come to the resolution of going there in search of her child, and with this view had walked from London to Folkingham (106 miles) with an infant not more than six weeks old in her arms. ' The boy's master stated, that about the latter end of last January, he met a woman and boy in the vicinity of Sleaford, where he resides. She appeared very ragged, and otherwise much distressed, and was, at that time, beating the boy most severely ; she then accosted him (the master) saying she was in great distress, and a long way from home ; and after some further preliminary conversation, said, if he would give her two guineas to enable her to get home, she would bind her son apprentice to him ; this proposal was agreed to, and the boy was regularly indentured, the woman having previously made aflidavit as to being his mother. This testimony was corroborated by the boy himself, but, as no doubt remained in the mind of anyone respecting the boy's real mother, his master, without further ceremony, resigned him to her. The inhabi- tants interested themselves very humanely in the poor woman's behalf, by not only paying her coach fare back to London, but also collecting for her the sum of £2 5s.' Among the home news of 1811, I mentioned Bartholomew 78 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 Fair ; but for rowdyism, the fair of 1812 seems to have borne the palm : — ' The scene of riot, confusion and horror exhibited at this motley festival, on this night, has seldom, if ever, been ex- ceeded. The influx of aU classes of labourers who had received their week's wages, and had come to the spot, was immense. At ten o'clock every avenue leading through the conspicuous parts of the fair was crammed, with an impene- trable mass of human creatures. Those who were in the interior of the crowd, howsoever distressed, could not be extricated ; while those who were on the outside, were exposed to the most imminent danger of being crushed to death against the booths. The females, hundreds of whom there were, who happened to be intermixed with the mob, were treated with the greatest indignity, in defiance of the exertions of husbands, relatives, or friends. This weaker part of the crowd, in fact, seemed to be, on this occasion, the principal object of persecution, or, as the savages who attacked them, were pleased to called it, of fiin. Some fainted, and were trodden under foot, while others, by an exertion, almost supernatural, produced by an agony of despair, forced their way to the top of the mass, and crept on the heads of the people, until they reached the booths, where they were received and treated with the greatest kindness. We lament to state that many serious accidents in consequence occurred ; legs and arms innumerable were broken, some Uves were lost, and the surgeons of St. Bartholomew's Hospital were occu- pied the whole of the night in administering assistance to the unfortunate objects who were continually brought in to them. ' The most distressing scene that we observed arose from the suffocation of a child about a twelvemonth old, in the arms of its mother, who, with others, had been involved in the crowd. The wretched mother did not discover the state of her infant until she reached Giltspur Street, when she rent the air with her shrieks of self-reproach ; while her husband, who accompanied her, and who had the appearance of a decent tradesman, stood mute with the dead body of his child in his arms, which he regarded with a look of inde- scribable agony. Such are the heartrending and melancholy scenes which were exhibited, and yet this forms but a faint picture of the enormities and miseries attendant upon this disgraceful festival.' Duelling was dying out, and if anything would help its 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 79 decline in public opinion, it would be something like the following remarks of Lord Ellenborough. They arose from an application to the Court of King's Bench, for a criminal information against two persons, for posting a Merchant at Lloyd's as a coward for refusing a Challenge. These are the learned judge's remarks on the case : — ' Really it is high time to put a stop to this spurious chivalry of the counting-house and the counter. The Court has been for these two days occupied with cases of this sort ; yesterday it was an angry linendraper of Bristol, who had been a little time in the local militia, long enough to imbibe all the worst prejudices of the army, that thought proper to post a prac- tising surgeon for not accepting a challenge ; and, to-day, we have a mercantile man in the same predicament ; instead of posting their books, these tradesmen are posting one another. The Court desires it to be understood, that it is not necessary for the party applying for a remedy against such an outrage as this, to come perfectly unblemished before them : and that if it shall be shown to be necessary for public quiet and justice, they will interpose the remedy sought for. If the challenge in this case had been sent eo imtanii upon the defendant's quitting the Coffee-house, the Court would have contem- plated it as emanating from the venial irritation of the moment ; but it appears that he at first applied to the prosecutor for an apology, upon the refusal of which, his friend, the other defendant, was sent upon this mischievous and malignant mission to the prosecutor, in the countiy ; and then, because a man refuses to be hunted down when dining out at a friend's house, and challenged at six o'clock in the evening, he is to be posted for a Coward at Lloyd's CoflPee- house the next morning ! Rule Absolute.' Abroad we were humbling the power of Napoleon. Ciudad Rodrigos and Badajos had been captured. Marmont had had a crushing defeat at Salamanca. Madrid had been occupied, and Wellington had been made Commander-in-Chief of the Spanish Army. The Russian Campaign had proved more than disastrous to Napoleon, it was his ruin. France could scarcely get over her awful losses, which Buturlin estimates as follows : — ' Slain in battle, one hundred and twenty-five thousand ; died from fatigue, hunger, and cold, one hundred and thirty-two thousand ; prisoners (comprehending forty- eight generals, three thousand officers, and upwards of one hundred and ninety thousand men), one hundred and ninety 80 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 three thousand ; total, four hundred and fifty thousand, and this does not include the thousands of non-combatants who perished.' Our relations with America had been strained for a long time ; in fact, it was evident at the end of 1811 that war was not only imminent, but all but present. The quarrel arose out of the Orders in Council, which Napoleon's decrees of Berlin and Milan had brought forth, and which the Americans asserted interfered unjustly with their trade. Of course both sides thought they were right, and the Americans, knowing we had a big war on our hands, probably imagined that here was their opportunity. They provided money, and began hostilities, almost even before declaring war, which was formally done in June. The following is the Act of Con- gress : — ' An Act declaring War between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Dependencies thereof, and the United States of America and their Territories. ' Be it enacted, by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America, in Congress assembled, that War be, and the same is hereby declared to exist, between the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Dependencies thereof, and the United States of America and their territories ; and that the President of the United States be, and is hereby authorised, to use the whole land and naval forces of the United States, to carry the same into effect ; and to issue to the private armed vessels of the United States, commissions, or letters of Marque and general reprisal, in such form as he shall think proper, and under the Seal of the United States, against the Vessels, goods, and effects of the Government of the said United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and the Subjects thereof. ' Approved. Jas. Maddison. 'June 18, 1812.' On the 13th of October England declared war against America, all hopes of peace having been abandoned. The Americans, by every means in their power, endeavoured to seduce our Colonists from their allegiance, but without success. They suffered severely at the hands of the Canadians, and, generally speaking, they got the worst of it on land ; but, at sea, the balance was in favour of the Americans, until, 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 81 on the 26tli of Dec, the ports and harbours of the rivers Chesapeake and Delaware were declared to be blockaded. The King's health did not improve, and all hopes of his restoration to reason were abandoned ; after the Meeting of the Queen's Council on the 29th of Feb., it was decided that only one bulletin should be issued monthly— which, certainly, was very regularly done, but they were so bald, as to give little or no indication of the real condition of the King. Before closing the chronicle of this year, I will mention some miscellaneous facts, which throw light on the times. The wife of a respectable farmer, near Liverpool, died under the following melancholy circumstances. About two years previously she discharged a maidservant, who, in revenge, spread a report that her mistress was behaving im- properly with a man in the neighbourhood. This rumour came to her husband's ears, and he took it so much to heart, that he quitted his home, and did not return to it until a few weeks before his wife's death. She assured him on the word of a dying woman, that she was innocent. He believed her, and they were reconciled a few days before her death. The maidservant, being threatened with a prosecution for slander, confessed her guilt, and attested the innocence of her Mistress; the result being that she was not prosecuted, but was excom- municated in the neighbouring Churches. In 1802 Trevethick and Vivian obtained a patent for a high-pressure locomotive. It seems to have been very similar to this: — 'July 1. On Wednesday last, an experiment was made with a machine at Leeds, under the direction of Mr. John Blenkinsop the patentee, for the purpose of substituting the agency of steam for the use of horses, in the conveyance of Coals on the iron railway from the mines at Middleton, to Leeds. This machine is, in fact, a steam engine of four- horses power, which, with the assistance of Cranks turning a Cogwheel, and iron Cogs placed at one side of the railway, is capable of moving at the rate of ten miles an hour.' In 1813, William Hedley, of Wylam Colliery, made 'Puff- ing Billy,' which was the first locomotive which ran on smooth rails. Owing to the difficulties of locomotion, and the total want of Railroads, there were very few watering-places for summer resort, at which the Londoner, who really might be excused for wishing to be away from the London of that day, could go to. Brighton, or Brighthelmstone, was then the abode of 6 82 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 Royalty, and never dreamed of being as it is now, the earthly paradise of the parvenu City man, and the Israelite : Rams- gate, and all other southern places of relaxation were not in vogue, or were only confined to a very few : but Margate ! that, indeed, was a place of earthly pleasure ! Here were very few restrictions of decorum, and a contemporary account may not be uninteresting. It is dated Sept. 3rd : — 'This sudden change of weather, from stormy gloom to welcome sunshine, has produced a corresponding effect on the visitors of this watering-place, who engage themselves in every species of amusement that ingenuity can contrive, or experience has invented. The streets, which were deserted, as being the mere channel for the rain, are now filled with sprightly misses, hurrying from library to library, in search of some favourite Novel. The News Room, instead of being attended only by dismal politicians, prognosticating disasters, are crowded with all kinds of Company : the politicians quit their Newspapers, and, rattling the dice box, anticipate the certain destruction, not only of Bonaparte, and his army in the North, but of his whole Empire : their fortune is crossed, and again they begin to doubt. ' The young females busy themselves in hunting for new Novels ; and a tender love tale, or a sprightly satire, usurps the place of horrid mysteries, or dreadful catastrophes. The more elderly ladies amuse themselves with those everlasting topics, the price of things, the fashions, and the weather. The pier and the Cliffs are crowded during the whole day ; thither, young and old, healthy and sickly, rich and poor, repair, and all inhale with rapture the fresh sea breezes, glowing with new vigour, strength, and beauty, at every respiration. ' The gardens at Dandelion were fully attended yesterday, and (such is the wonderful metamorphose) at two o'clock those sat down to breakfast, who had been usually in the habit of dining at one. The dancing soon afterwards com- menced, although it was declared to be immensely hot, and did not conclude, until a foot race, in an adjoining field, called off the attention of the visitors. ' On Tuesday, was given the third Masquerade, at the Theatre. The characters were more numerous and better supported than at the last, with the assistance of the dresses belonging to the house. The principal were Vestals, without virtue, coquetting with frail Friars. Knights, whose only claim to the title was, that they were errant, excepting a 1812] UNDER THE REGENCY 83 chosen few, who claimed the distinction of the Garter; Yorkshiremen with the dialect of the Weald of Kent; Farmers, whose experience was derived from Mark Lane letters ; together with a profusion of ballad singers. Flower girls, Gipsies, and Servants wanting places. Among the latter was an Irish woman, who, by the bye, was a man, in the character of a Servant of all work ; having lost her own character, presented the following from Father Delany : ' " I, Father Delany, aver and declare, This is Judy O'Cloggin's own true character. She is never prophane, nor swears, by my troth — Except, now and then, when she raps out an oath ; She is sober, indeed, — except when she's frisky, With tasting her own Mother's Milk — Irish Whiskey ; She's as honest as any, with two legs to stand on — She leaves nothing alone that she once lays her hand on : She's Cook, Housemaid, and Scullion or I am a dunce, For sure, in my house, she was all these at once : Besides Lady's Maid, so nate and so clane, aye, To my beautiful wife, sweet Mrs. Delany : Our mansion she scour'd with a new birchen broom, Compos'd of a pig-stye, besides a large room." 'The Assembly at the Rooms is fixed for to-night, and to-morrow is to be given, at the same place, a grand Masqued Ball.' The gentleman mentioned in the following advertisement in The Kentish Gazette, Sept. 11th, must have been a pleasant and kindly country neighbour. ' Game and Rabbits. — A general invitation to qualified Gentlemen. — Manor of Dennie, alias Dane, in the parishes of Chilham and Molash. The interest of agriculture on this manor, and the surrounding country, being much injured by the great numbers of hares, pheasants, and rabbits, the proprietor feels the necessity of giving this General Invitation to Qualified Gentlemen, to sport at their pleasure. The manor-house is in the parish of Chilham, very near to a place called Shottenton Thorn, and John Packman (a servant) who resides there, has orders to accommodate gentlemen, as well as he can, with stabling for their horses, and with any refreshment for themselves, that his homely mode of living can oifer. The house is large, and a limited number of gentlemen, by sending their own bedding, may be accommodated with house room in this and future shooting seasons ' ! ! 6—2 84 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1812 Here is a paragraph which shows how the horrid traffic in dead bodies was on the increase. A more perfect knowledge of anatomy was necessary to medical practitioners, for medical and surgical science was rapidly advancing, and there was not the facility now afforded by having the bodies of unclaimed paupers, legally placed at their disposal. The only subjects which might, properly, be operated upon, were those of Criminals who had been hanged, and although, in those days, these were far more numerous than nowadays, they fell far short of the requirements. So recourse was had to ' body snatching,' or the removal of bodies very recently buried — which were sold to Surgeons, 'and no questions asked.' It was so lucrative that, at last, the wretches who pursued this traffic would not take the trouble, nor encounter the risk of exhuming the bodies, but they deliberately suffo- cated living people, a practice which actually introduced a new word into the English language, ' Burking,' from one Burke, who was executed at Edinburgh, in 1829, for this crime. Others followed in his steps, notably one villain named Bishop, who was hanged in 1831. ' The Resurrection Men, of London, like other combinations of Workmen, struck, it seems, the other day, and refused to supply the Edinburgh and Glasgow Schools of Surgery with dead bodies, under an advance of two guineas per subject.' A very good thing was done this year. Hitherto parish registers had been kept very much at the sweet will of the clergyman, or of his clerk, and there was so much want of uniformity in these very valuable books that every Church and Chapelry throughout England was furnished with one — before the 1st of January, 1813, thus ensuring the similarity we now enjoy. There were 36,000 copies printed, and the paper employed, amounted to over 3,000 Reams. The Smithfield Club Cattle Show was a very small affair to that we are accustomed to see at the Agricultural Hall at Islington. In 1812, the money value of the prizes competed for was only 210 Guineas, and the Show was held at Mr. Sadler's Yard, Goswell Street. During this year, as last, we gave practical proof of our kindness towards our Allies, by Subscriptions being opened for ' British Assistance to the Spanish Nation,' and for ' The Relief of poor Suffering Inhabitants of the Different Govern- ments of Russia.' ^^i^^i-' ' H CHAPTER IX. 1813. High price of provisions — Luddites — Smuggling — Day of Humilia- tion — The Cossack — Mdlle. PlatofE — Discovery of body of Charles I. at Windsor — The Queen and the mad woman — The fasting woman of Tutbury — Fight between the Shannon and the Chesapeahe — Bejoicings for the Victory at Vittoria — Fete at Vauxhall — William Huntingdon, s.s. This Year began somewhat gloomily, for the Wars made themselves felt. Porter rose to 6d. a pot, Mutton 2d. per lb., the latter, owing, it was said, to the rot, which had carried off whole flocks of sheep. But, if we felt the pinch, our adversaries, or, rather, one of them, the French, felt it as well. There was a great deal of illicit trading done with France, especially in our Colonial goods ; and, to facihtate matters, and make them legal. Napo- leon would issue licenses to import such a quantity of such goods. As is pointed out in the following quotation, the poor French had to pay very dearly for these commodities. 'Bonaparte has lately granted 250 more licenses for the im- portation of Colonial produce ; and these licenses are a source of considerable profit to himself and his favourites. Instead of granting to one of these a pension or a sinecure, he gives him a few licenses, which the latter sells at exorbitant prices — so high, for example, as 75 livres {£3 2s. 6d. sterl.), for every hundredweight of Sugar imported ; from which sugar Bonaparte himself, afterwards derives a high duty, as he does from every other article so imported : — a pound of Coffee, for instance, purchased here for eightpence, pays him a duty of four shillings. In addition to these burdens, besides exorbitant charges for freight, there is another imposition, which renders 86 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 the Colonial produce enormously expensive to the Continental consumer, viz., that the persons importing it under those licenses are bound previously to export from France, a stated proportion, in value, of wrought silks and other articles utterly prohibited in England, vphich, therefore, they are obliged to throw overboard on the passage, and afterwards indemnify themselves for this loss by an additional charge on the articles imported. Notwithstanding all these disadvantages, near twenty millions of pounds' weight of Sugar have gone from England to France during the last year.' During the latter part of the past year the Luddites were again troublesome, and it was found necessary to make a severe example, which had the desired effect. On the l6th of January fourteen of these rioters were hanged, at York, in two batches of seven each, and these outrages ceased. I have already said that Smuggling was considered a very venial sin, and sometimes smuggling adventures had some- thing amusing in them — vide the following : — A party of Smugglers had landed a valuable cargo near Dungeness, and, having been informed that a party of Dragoons from Hastings were to be on the look-out for them, they sent word that they would resign half their goods, if they might cany away the other half unmolested. At the same time they gave notice that they had left 180 tubs of gin in a chalk pit, well known to the officer of the troop. The soldiers rode off immediately to act on the smugglers' information, and the latter, of course, were equally prompt in getting their newly-run Cargo out of haiTn's way. The troops duly found the tubs at the place indicated, and, with triumph, escorted them to the Custom House, where, when they came to be examined, they were found to contain nothing stronger than water. On the 1st of February a proclamation was issued from Carlton House. It is deliciously vague about 'the War,' not saying whether it was that in which we were engaged, with the French, or with the Americans. It was probably left to the imagination and option of the taxpayers, who might ' pay their money, and take their choice.' ' George, P. R. ' We, taking into our most serious consideration the just and necessary war in which His Majesty is engaged, and putting our trust in Almighty God, that He will graciously bless His Majesty's arms, both by sea and land, have resolved, 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 87 and do, in the name, and on the behalf of His Majesty, and by, and with the advice of His Majesty's Privy Council, hereby command, that a Public Day of Fasting and Humiliation be observed throughout those parts of the United Kingdom called England and Ireland, on Wednesday the Tenth Day of March next ensuing, so that both we, and His Majesty's people, may humble ourselves before Almighty God, in order to obtain pardon of our sins, and in the most devout and solemn manner, send up our prayers and supplications to the Divine Majesty, for averting those heavy judgments, which our manifold provocations have most justly deserved : and for imploring His Blessing, and assistance on His Majesty's Arms, for the restoration of peace and prosperity to His Majesty and His Dominions,' &c., &c. Another Proclamation made it applicable to Scotland. On the day appointed, the Regent, his daughter, and the Dukes of York, Cumberland, and Cambridge went to the Chapel Royal, St. James's ; and the two Houses of Parliament went — the Lords, to Westminster Abbey ; the Commons, to St. Margaret's, Westminster. About this time of the year — with the exception of the bickerings of the Prince and Princess of Wales — there was very Uttle to interest the public ; so little, indeed, that even the advent of a Cossack, who came in the suite of a Russian Officer, created an immense sensation. Here is as early an account as any, of this important individual. Morning Chronicle, Thursday, April 15, 1813 : 'The Cossack, and a Russian Officer, who arrived in London on Friday last, made their appearance in the City, agreeably to the notice which had been given in some of the papers. They met the Lord Mayor at the Mansion House, who accompanied them to the Royal Exchange, and Lloyd's Coffee House, where they were received with the greatest marks of approbation by the merchants, and an immense concourse of spectators. After passing through Lloyd's, they were stationed at one of the balconies looking into the Exchange, when the Lord Mayor appeared, and, after silence was obtained, gave " Success to the Emperor Alexander," with three times three, which was given with enthusiasm by all present. The Cossack's spear was ten feet long, and it was said he had killed thirty-seven Frenchmen with it.' I give an illustration of this formidable warrior ' Zemlano- 88 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 WHIN, the Brave Russian Cossack, as he appeared at the Royal Exchange, on Wednesday, April 14, 1813.' In the evening he was taken to Freemasons' Hall, where the Grand Master, the Duke of Sussex, conversed with him through the medium of an interpreter, for some minutes. He was a great lion. Besides the etching by Heath, here given, two other artists, Heapley and Pyne, were at him, and Ackerman, the print-seller, gave him his choice of four beautiful swords, of which he chose a Turkish scimitar. He was taken to Westminster, and was allowed to play with the large sword therein preserved. The last we hear of him is that he visited, on the 30th of April, Exhibition Rooms at Spring Gardens, where he heard a new March played on an awful instrument called the Panhar- monicon. On this fiendish invention the combined noise of 200 instruments was ground out by machinery. ' The trumpets sounding victory, and the bells, with the horns and kettledrums, rejoicing for glory, gave joy to all present. The Cossack, on being introduced to the fair Albiness, seemed, by the ex- pression of his countenance, to be much pleased ; and, on shaking hands, and giving her a salute, said, " I leave London this evening, may I take with me a lock of your hair ?" ■ This being granted, Mr. Wigley, the Proprietor of the Rooms, presented him with an elegant locket to enclose the same.' They made a paper model of him, which was shown at Mrs. Aberdeen's Papyruseum, 19, Frith Street, Soho. The Cossacks were wonderfully popular with the English just then. Their Hetnian, or Commander, Count PlatofF, was reported to have offered to give his daughter, and a small dowry, to any soldier who would bring him Napoleon's head. In some verses relative to Napoleon's reverses in Russia is one : — ' But, take care, Master Nap, you meet with no trap, To poke either leg, or your head in ; Loss of legs stops your flight, lose your head, why the sight Will be welcome at Miss Platoff's wedding.' She figures in another Satirical print, published on Novem- ber 9, 1813, called 'Cossack Sports — or, the Platoff Hunt in full cry after French Game.' Leipsig is in the background, and the Cossacks plunge into the river Elster in full chase after the ' Corsican Fox.' Count Platoff cries, ' Hark forward ! my boys, get along ! He runs in view. Yoics, Yoics. There he ZEMLANOWHIN, THE BRAVE RUSSIAN COSSACK, AS HE APPEARED AT THE ROYAL EXCHANGE ON WEDNESDAY, APRIL I4, 1813. (Drawn and etched by Heath.) 90 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 goes. Tally ho !' His daughter is in mid-stream, thrashing her horse, and calling out, ' Hi ! Ho ! Tally ho ! for a Husband !' There was another thing much talked about at this time, and that was the discovery of the Body of Charles I. at Windsor. This was not the first body of a Sovereign found there unexpectedly: for on March 13, 1789, the workmen employed in re-paving the Choir of St. George's Chapel, discovered the entrance into the vault where Edward IV. had been deposited ; the royal body was found enclosed in a leaden and wooden coffin, reduced to a skeleton ; on the King's Coffin lay another of wood, much decayed, which contained the skeleton of a woman, supposed to have been his Queen, Elizabeth Woodville. The Duchess of Brunswick (mother of the Princess of Wales) died in England on March 23, 1813, and was buried with much pomp, at Windsor on the 31st of March. The following is a newspaper account of ' The Discovery of THE BODY OF Charles I. On Wednesday last, at the interment of the Dowager Duchess of Brunswick, an important discovery was made. It had been long suspected that the remains of Charles I. were deposited in a vault at Windsor. Indeed Wood, in his Athenw, states the supposition. On Wednesday a search was made, a Coffin was opened, which was found to a certainty to contain the long-sought-for body. It was not at all decayed ; the severed head had been carefully adjusted by a cement to the shoulders, and the most perfect resem- blance to the portraits, was remarked in the shape of the head, the pointed beard, &c., fragments of which were carefully taken oiFas relics, as well as to identify the body.' Laurence Eachard (who wrote in the reign of Anne) in his ' History of England ' (vol. ii. p. 649), speaking of Charles I. being buried at Windsor, and refuting a rumour that it was not so, says, ' But to remove all imaginations, we shall here insert a memorandum, or certificate sent by Mr. John Sewell, Register at Windsor, Anno I696, September 21. The same Vault in which King Charles the First was buried was opened to lay in a still born child of the then Princess of Denmark, now our gracious Queen. On the King's Coffin the velvet pall was strong and sound, and there was about the Coffin a leaden band, with this inscription cut through it — King Charles, l648. ' Queen Jane's* Coffin was whole and entire ; but that of * Seymour. ^S> O OcP A TIT-BIT FOR A COSSACK ; OR, THE PLATOFF PRIZE FOR THE HEAD OF BUONAPARTE. (Etched by Win. E s. Published January 4, 1813, by Thos. Tegg.) 92 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 King Henry the Eighth was sunk in upon the breast part, and the lead and wood consumed by the heat of the gums he was embalmed with.' Sir Henry Halford published, in April, 1813, a narrative of the examination of the royal remains, which took place in the presence of the Prince Regent, and we see how it bears out Eachard's account. ' On removing the pall, a plain leaden Coffin with no appearance of ever having been enclosed in wood, and bearing an inscription, " King Charles, l648," in large, legible characters, on a scroll of lead, encircling it, im- mediately presented itself to view. A square opening was then made in the upper part of the lid, of such dimensions as to admit a clear insight into its contents. These were an internal wooden coffin, very much decayed, and the body care- fully wrapped in cere cloth.' After this was unrolled, they had a perfect view of the King's face, and, although it had suffered from decay, 'the pointed beard, so characteristic of the period of the reign of King Charles, was perfect. The shape of the face was a long oval ; many of the teeth remained, and the left ear . . . was found entire. . . . When the head had been entirely disen- gaged from the attachments which confined it, it was found to be loose, and without any difficulty was taken up, and held to view. . . . ' The hair was thick at the back part of the head, and in appearance nearly black. A portion of it, which has since been cleaned and dried, is of a beautiful dark brown colour : that of the beard was a redder brown. On the back part of the head, it was not more than an inch in length, and had probably been cut so short for the convenience of the execu- tioner, or, perhaps, by the piety of friends soon after death, in order to furnish memorials of the unhappy King.' An examination of the muscles of the neck clearly proved that the head had been severed from the body by a heavy blow with a very sharp instrument, and this thoroughly con- firmed the identification of the King. ' After this examination of the head, which served every purpose in view, and without examining the body below the neck, it was immediately restored to its situation, the Coffin was soldered up again, and the vault closed. ' Neither of the other coffins had any inscriptions upon them. The larger one, supposed, on good grounds, to contain the remains of King Henry VIII., measured six feet, ten inches 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 93 in length, and had been enclosed in an elm one, two inches in thickness ; but this was decayed, and lay in small fragments near it. The leaden coffin appeared to have been beaten in by violence about the middle ; and a considerable opening in that part of it, exposed a mere skeleton of the King. Some beard remained upon the chin, but there was nothing to dis- criminate the personage in it.'* * In 1888-9, an exhibition of Stuart Relics was held at the New G-allery in Regent Street, and, on December 17, 1888, the following Paragraph appeared in the Standard: — 'The Prince of Wales visited St. George's Chapel, Windsor, on Thursday last, and replaced in the vault containing the coffin of Charles I. certain relics of that Monarch, which had been removed during some investigations more than 70 years ago. These relics, having ultimately come into the possession of the Prince of Wales, his Royal Highness decided, with the sanction of the Queen, to replace them in the vault from which they had been taken, but not to disturb the coffin of the King. This task was successfully accomplished on Thursday last in the presence of the Dean of Windsor.' There was some discussion as to what these relics were, which was set at rest by the Globe, January 10, 1889 : — ' The Pkince of Wales and the Relic op Charles I. Considerable curiosity, says the Whitehall Review, was aroused the other day as to what the relic could have been which the Prince of Wales deposited in the tomb of Charles I. at Windsor. The relic in question was, we believe, part of the vertebrae joining the head to the body of the unfortunate monarch. It appears that when the coffin of Charles I. was opened in 1813, and the king's head fell on the ground, as so graphically described in Mr. Frith's " Reminiscences," a portion of the vertebras of the beheaded king was taken away and preserved by the eminent physician, Sir Henry Halford, from whose custody it was subsequently stolen. Luckily, full written particulars were attached to the relic, and it was, two years ago, sent anonymously to the Prince of Wales, who, fearing that it might be wanted for the Stuart Exhibition, judiciously arranged to have the relic returned. It was placed on, but not in, the coffin in the vault at Windsor Chapel.' A further paragraph in the same Newpaper of the 14th of January, thoroughly elucidates whatever mystery there might have been about the ' relics ' : — ' The Relic op Chaeles I. Sir H. St. John Halford writes to us from Wistow Hall, Leicester, with reference to the Relic of Charles I. recently placed on the coffin of that Monarch by the Prince of Wales, as follows : ' The true history of the relic is that it was given to my grandfather. Sir Henry Halford, by His Majesty George IV., at the time that the coffin of Charles I. was opened, and was given by me ta H^S Rejal Highness the Prince of Wales two years ago." ' 94 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 After the publication of this report it was but a very few days before the Caricaturist had made the subject his own, and we see George Cruikshank's idea of it in the accompany- ing ' Meditations among the Tombs.' Sir Henry Halford is going to cut off some of Henry VHL's beard: the Regent saying to him, ' Aye ! There's great Harry ! great indeed ! ! ! ! ! for he got rid of many wives, whilst I, poor soul, can't get rid of one. Cut off his beard. Doctor, 'twill make me a prime pair of Royal Whiskers.' Lord Castlereagh (Privy Purse) behind him, says, ' How queer King Charley looks without his head, doesn't he .'' ! ! ! Faith and sure, and I wonder how WE should look without our heads ! ! !' Whilst on the subject of Royalty, I may as well chronicle a shock which poor old Queen Charlotte had — on the 2nd of May — which must have frightened her terribly, for she actually sent for the Prince Regent. A woman named Davenport was assistant Mistress of the Robes, and she was born in the Queen's palace, and had lived constantly in it, with her mother, who was housekeeper at the Lower Lodge, Windsor, having previously filled the onerous, and arduous task of rocker to the infant princesses. Miss Davenport was about thirty years of age, and, when she was young, had a fit of insanity, of which, however, she was considered cured ; and, except an occasional period of melancolia, was quite harmless. However, on Sunday, the 2nd of May, she broke out, the balance of her mind having been overthrown ever since the death of the Princess Amelia. She slept in the Tower over the Queen's bedroom, and her Majesty was aroused at five in the morning by a violent noise at her door, hearing some one shrieking and screaming, and calling on the Queen of England to redress her wrongs. The bedroom had double doors, and the poor maniac, having smashed the outer door, was en- deavouring to force the inner one, when Mrs. Beckendorf, the Queen's dresser, who slept in her room, opened it, and there found the poor woman clad only in her night-clothes, with a letter in her hand, which she insisted upon delivering to her Majesty. For twenty minutes Mrs. Beckendorf kept her at bay, ringing a bell all the while. A page, two footmen, and a porter, at length appeared on the scene, and over- powered the mad woman. Then Dr. Willis, who was in attendance upon the King, was sent for, and she was put into a straight jacket — which, owing to her violence, was with difiSculty got on her. She was then carried into a chaise, and 96 SOCIAL ENGLAND [18LS driven away to a private lunatic asylum. The Queen's nerves must soon have recovered, for she was at a grand dinner given in her honour at Carlton House, by the Prince of Wales on the 4th of May. On this day the fasting woman of Tutbury, Ann Moore, who professed to live without food, confessed her imposture. Her miraculous abstention from nourishment was disbelieved in, and, at her own request, a committeeof gentlemen watched her. Their vigilance proved too much for her, for nine days of such inspection reduced her to such a state of emaciation, that she put her mark to the following confession : ' I, Ann Moore, of Tutbury, humbly asking pardon of all persons whom I have attempted to deceive and impose upon, and above all, with the most unfeigned sorrow and contrition, imploring the divine mercy, and forgiveness of that God whom I have so greatly offended, do most solemnly declare that I have occasionally taken sustenance for the last six years.' The following epigram was made on ' TuTBDEY Ann. ' She kept, what none would wish to keep, her bed, And, what few more would do, deoHn'd a dinner ; Liv'd an eternal Lent, and shamm'd half dead, O Lord ! forgive this ever-lying sinner.' In the war with America the British fleet was not always successful. On the contrary, and when the Shannon beat the Chesapeake, there were great rejoicings. In Boston harbour lay the United States frigate Chesapeake, Capt. Laurence, 49 guns, IS and 32 pounders, and a crew of 400 men. Capt. Broke, commanding H.M. frigate Shannon, which was inferior both in weight of metal, and number of men, had long been watching it, anxiously awaiting an opportunity of an encounter. At length, on the 1st of June, he challenged a combat, by standing close in to Boston Lighthouse. He had not to wait long, for he had the pleasure of seeing the Chesapeake sailing out of the harbour. He took up a position within sight of the land, and the American frigate came proudly on, conscious of victory, so much so, as to have omitted providing accommoda- tion for the wounded. After two or three broadsides the Chesapeake closed with the Shannon, and they were locked together, so Captain Broke gave orders for boarding, himself setting the example. The Americans made a desperate, but undisciplined, defence, and 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 97 the assault was so fierce, that after two minutes only, of hand- to-hand fighting, the Americans were driven from every post. In another minute they ceased firing from below, and cried for quarter. The Union Jack was then run up, and the whole was over in fifteen minutes from its commencement. The British lost 23 killed, and 56 wounded, out of a crew of 330 men: the Americans about 70 killed and 100 wounded. Captain Laurence, who was among the latter, subsequently died, and was honourably buried at Halifax. One can SHANNON V. CHESAPEAKE. {Published September I, 1813, for the proprietor of ' Town Talk.') scarcely believe the astonishment and humiliation of the spectators on shore of this combat, when they saw their fine ship which sailed away so shortly before, in all the pride of expected victory, taken away in bondage, instead of returning with her captor. George Cruikshank gives us his idea of the naval engage- ment in a long etching (which I have divided into two) published in ' Town Talk,' of the 1st of September, 1813. It 7 98 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 is called ' British Valour, and Yankee Boasting, or Shannon versus Chesapeake/ and is full of bombast, both in drawing, and words. The Americans are evolved out of his inner consciousness, but I presume it was the current type of the time, as our delineation of a Citizen of the United States of America, is, when pourtrayed in one of our comic papers. Evidently they were considered as Puritans, and depicted as Maw-worms. Captain Broke has hold of one by the hair, and is crying out, ' Down with your Stripes, you Swabs, or D me, we'll stripe you.' The sailor who has hold of one of the dead, by his pigtail and breeches, calls out to another, ' Stand clear. Mess-mate, whilst I heave a few of these lubberly Yankee Doodles overboard.' The sailor kicking a Yankee into the sea, says, ' Go along, d n you, don't you see they are waiting dinner for you .''' This probably refers to a dinner which was to be given to the victors on their return. In the dinner tent one is saying, ' Friends, I think you had better come and sit down, for if we wait till the Chesapeake comes back, I am afraid the dinner will be cold.' Another replies, ' Why, I don't think they will want much dinner, for they seem to have got their Belly full.' On the 21st of June, near the town of Vittoria, the Allied forces under Lord Wellington, attacked the French Army under Joseph Bonaparte, aided by Marshal Jourdain, and gained a most complete victory ; having driven them from all their positions, and taken from them 151 pieces of cannon, 415 waggons of ammunition, all their baggage, provisions, cattle, treasure, &c., and a large number of prisoners. On the 5th and 6th of July there were brilliant and general illumina- tions in London in celebration of this victory. Much mischief was done by fireworks being let off" in the streets, but at Bow Street, fifty people were punished for so doing, and very properly too, one man at least, who for the sake of throwing his squibs with surer aim, attached to each of them a leaden weight, of weight sufficient, it was believed, to kill a man, if it had struck him on the head. On the 20th of July there was a grand public f^te at Vauxhall, in honour of the same event, which commenced with a dinner at 5 p.m., the Duke of York presiding, ac- companied by all his brothers, except the Prince Regent. At this dinner was shown Marshal Jourdain's baton, which was picked up on the field of battle by a sergeant of the 87th Regiment. Then the gardens were illuminated on a scale of 7—2 100 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 grandeur never before attempted, bands played, the visitors promenaded, and there were three displays of fireworks, and the whole closed with dancing, the company not separating until 2 a.m. Numbers of tickets for the evening fete, not including the dinner, were sold at from three to ten guineas each. On the 1st of July, at Tunbridge Wells, died a curious character, William Huntingdon (his proper name being Hunt), S. S., ' Sinner Saved,' as he delighted to call himself. Minister of the Gospel at Providence Chapel, Gray's Inn Lane. Bom in the Weald of Kent, of very poor parents, he had a rough early life, as errand boy, labourer, and cobbler. Then he was ' saved,' and began preaching, first at Thames Ditton, then in London, at Margaret Street Chapel, and, by the power of faith and prayer, he finally built the Chapel of Providence. In his ' Bank of Faith ' he tells his reader somewhat of the commencement of this Chapel : — ' I will now inform my reader of the kind providence of my God at the time of building the Chapel, which I named Providence Chapel (1788) : and also mention a few free-will offerings which the people brought. They first offered about eleven pounds, and laid it on the foundation at the beginning of the building. A good gentleman, with whom I had but little acquaintance, and of whom I bought a load of timber, sent it in with a bill and receipt in full, as a present to the Chapel of Providence. Another good man came with tears in his eyes and blessed me, and desired to paint my pulpit, desk, &c., as a present to the Chapel. Another person gave me half-a-dozen chairs for the Vestry ; and my friends Mr. and Mrs. Lyons furnished me with a tea-chest well stored, and a set of china. My good friends Mr. and Mrs. Smith furnished me with a very handsome bed, bedstead, and all its furniture and necessaries, that I might not be under the necessity of walking home in the cold winter nights. A daughter of mine in the faith gave me a looking-glass for my chapel study. Another friend gave me my pulpit cushion and a bookcase for my study. Another gave me a bookcase for the vestry. And my good friend Mr. E. seemed to level all his displeasure at the devil ; for he was in hopes I should be enabled, through the gracious arm of the Lord, to cut Rahab in pieces ; there- fore he furnished me with a sword of the Spirit — a new Bible, with Morocco binding and silver clasps !' His preaching was of a decidedly ' Revivalist ' type ; but his 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 101 enthusiasm doubtless reclaimed to order and decency many of the lower classes. He mingled his religion with much worldliness, and he married Lady Sanderson (the widow of Sir James Sanderson^ Bart., Lord Mayor of London), who was a constant attendant at his chapel, by which he became possessed of a considerable addition to his property. After the demolition of his Chapel in Margaret Street, the wealthier portion of his congregation proposed to build him another ; and accordingly erected a Chapel in Gray's Inn Lane, at an expense of £9,000. A day was appointed for opening it ; but he refused to officiate in it at all, until it should be made his own personal freehold : and, so great was the devotion of his followers, they resigned their shares in his favour. He had a nice house at Pentonville, and it was there that his effects were sold on the 24th of September. All his disciples wanted some personal relic of him, and the conse- quence was, that the goods fetched fancy prices. As an instance, an old arm-chair, intrinsically worth about fifty shillings, fetched sixty guineas, and other articles in like pro- portion. There were several caricatures of this auction, but they afford neither profit nor amusement to the modern reader. CHAPTER X. Emperor of Russia invested with the Garter — The Poet Laureate — French Prisoners of War — Joy over Napoleon's defeat at Leipsic — ' Orange boven' — The Allies and the war with France — The War with America — The Princess Charlotte and her establishment — The Prince of Orange her suitor — -The King's Health. Russia was an Ally against Napoleon, worth courting, and, consequently, the Emperor was made a Knight of the Garter. The Mission that was sent out to invest him was splendidly appointed. The King of Arms had a new tabard, robes, &c., and he, and all his suite, had new carriages especially built for the occasion. They took out with them the Statute passed at the last Chapter, authorizing the election of the Emperor as a member of the Order, with the Great Seal of England in a gold box and blue velvet case ; and also the proceedings of the Election, similarly garnished. They took out a complete set of habiliments, decorations, and ornaments, necessary for his investiture, and, as my readers may not know what was then necessary for turning out a respectable and regulation Knight of the Garter, I transcribe them. Shoes of white kid, ornamented with silver lace and roses. Stockings and pantaloons of white silk, manufactured for the purpose, in one. The Jacket, or Doublet, and trunk, of rich white silver tissue, ornamented with silver lace, in imitation of point lace. A sword with gold hilt, the belt and scabbard covered with rich crimson velvet. A surcoat of rich Crimson Velvet. A large silver lace rosette for the right knee. The Installation Garter, richly embroidered, for the left knee. A superb mantle of Garter blue Velvet, lined with white lustring : the badge of the Order richly embroidered. The 1813] SOCIAL ENGLAND 103 mantle is fastened on the neck with blue and gold rope, with two long rich tassels. A hood of Crimson Velvet, which is worn on the right shoulder. The gloves, white kid, trimmed with very broad silver lace. A Spanish hat of black velvet, with a beautiful large plume of Ostrich and Heron's feathers. The splendid Gold Collar of the Order, with the medal of St. George, to hang on the breast, with large bunches of broad white ribbons and rosettes. Two Stars of the Order richly embroidered. Flowing ringlets of hair, with a bunch of white ribbons to tie them. This latter item shows how minutely the Emperor's outfit was provided. It was an age of wigs — and the Emperor's close, military cut hair, was not en regie. Another event, which people talked about, at the time, was the death, on the 11th of August, of Henry James Pye, Poet Laureate, aged 69- He was the son of a Country gentleman, and was educated at Magdalen College, Oxon. After his father's death he lived at Faringdon, was made J. P., held a Commission in the Militia, and, in 1784, was elected M.P. for his County. His circumstances becoming involved, he had to sell his paternal estate. In 1790 he was made Poet Laureate, and, in 1 792, was appointed one of the Magistrates for West- minster. He was not very remarkable as a poet, and, probably, his best read poems were ' Faringdon Hill,' and ' The Progress of Refinement.' There were several candidates for the honour of being his successor, including Sir Walter Scott. There is a little epigram concerning two of them, worth repeating — ' Croker and Wharton are roasted so dry By every impartial Review, That, combined, they would make but a bad kind of stew, But, certainly, never a — Pye.' The choice eventually fell on Robert Southey (Nov. 29, 1813). During the year we hear occasionally of the French Prisoners. On the 14th of April, two of them, on board the Samson, prison ship, of which we have heard before, in connection with a traitor being tattooed, fought a duel, and one was killed. Having no swords, they used two sticks, on the end of each of which was fastened a pair of scissors. The duel 104 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 was meant to be <} Foutrance, for one received a mortal wound in the stomach, from which his bowels protruded, yet he still fought on as long as he could. The prisoners, at last, applied to the ship's surgeon, who sewed up the wound, but the man died very shortly afterwards. There must have been a bad lot on board that ship Samson, for we read : — 'July 19- A most diabolical conspiracy has been charged to have been formed on board the Samson prison ship, at Gillingham Reach, by three French prisoners, to murder the master's mate, and the sergeant of marines, belonging to the ship, together with several of their own countrymen. The murders were to have been perpetrated on each victim singly, as opportunities presented : when the escape of the murderer, by mixing instantly with the great body of the prisoners, was to be facilitated by the other conspirators, and lots were drawn who should commit the first murder. ' The first lot fell to Charles Mansereaux ; but this man, being troubled by some compunctious visiting of conscience, on reflecting that the sergeant was a married man, with a family, who would be left destitute by his death, determined to despatch one of the private marines in his stead. On Tuesday se'n-night, when this wretch was watching for an opportunity to effect this purpose, Thomas King, a private marine, came on the forecastle, when Mansereaux stepped behind him, and plunged a knife into his back, which passed through the kidneys, and inflicted a dreadful wound, of which the poor fellow lingered till Saturday morning, when he expired. Mansereaux was observed by a fellow prisoner, who instantly knocked him down, and secured him, or he would, probably, have escaped without being detected. Mansereaux on being confined, made a discovery of the whole plan, and named his associates, both of whom were standing by at the time of the murder.' The three prisoners were at once secured, but I fail to trace their fate. On the 22nd of September, three French prisoners escaped, and murdered a boatman, and the story is thus told in the Hants Courier : — ' Three French prisoners, Fran9ois Relif, Jean Marie Dantz, and Daniel Du Verge, having effected their escape from Forton depot, engaged the wherry of the above-named George Brothers, to take them to Ryde. When off the Block-house, (according to their own assertions), they proposed 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 105 to the boatman to take them to France, promising ample reward, and liberty to return immediately ; but he, not to be corrupted by promises or reward, resisted their proposition, and, in consequence, they stabbed him in sixteen places, (three of which were mortal,) and threw him overboard. ' The Frenchmen immediately directed their course to sea, and were promptly pursued by several wherries, in one of which were Lieut. Sullock, and three seamen of the Centaur, at anchor at Spithead. In consequence of a heavy swell, and bad management, the Frenchmen were overtaken, after a run of about 15 miles; one of the men belonging to the Centaur leaped into the wherry among the Frenchmen alone, armed with nothing but the stretcher, with which he knocked one of them down : they then surrendered. ' They were taken on board the Centaur for the night, and, on being searched, a large sum of money was found about them in silver, and three knives ; one of them was very bloody ; and on Thursday morning they were delivered into the hands of the civil power, and landed at the sally-port. They were taken to the Borough Gaol, when they were again examined. They confessed that Brothers was killed by two of them, but that the third was no further concerned than in lending his knife to the other, when the waterman resisted them. More money was here taken from them, one having, actually, concealed in his pantaloons under his boots (.wc) thirty-three 5s. 6d. pieces. It appears that, by the manu- facture of lace, toys, &c., the prisoners accumulated a suffi- cient sum of money to procure a suit of genteel clothes each, (besides the sums taken from their persons), dressed in which they mingled with the crowd of visitors that were walking in the dep6t, eluding by their metamorphosed appearance the vigilance of the turnkeys and military sentinels.' What ultimately became of them I cannot find out, but, doubtless, two were hanged. The period of Captivity for these Prisoners of War was drawing to a close, for Napoleon's power was waning fast, and the reverses which he experienced at the hands of the Allies at Leipsic on October l6th, 17th, 18th, 19th may be con- sidered as having determined his final overthrow. The News was told in England in a London Gazette extraordinary, of November 3rd, and, on the 5th and 6th, London was brilliantly illuminated. ' Everywhere, except opposite Somerset House, there was 106 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 the most perfect decorum and order, the crowds, both on foot, and in carriages, passed along without the shghtest annoy- ance ; but, in the Strand, the old disgraceful nuisance of scattering dirt and crackers, and throwing every species of combustible at females, and into carriages, was practised the whole evening.' Looking at the list of Illuminations, they were not very grand, when judged by our standard ; but there was one transparency shown at Ackermann's Repository of Arts, which, although very grisly and grim in its conception, was of decidedly artistic merit. It was called ' The Two Kings of Terror/ and I have here reproduced a portion of it. The PART OF TRANSPARENCY AT ACKERMANN S. {November 5-6, 1813, in honour of the victories of the Allies at Leipsig, &^c.) whole composition is thus contemporaneously described : ' A design representing Buonaparte sitting upon a drum, in a field of battle, his hands under his chin, his elbows on his knees ; opposite is seated Death upon a dismounted cannon, in the same position, his elbows upon his knees, " staring the tyrant in the face ;" his right foot has crushed the insolent French trophy, the ci devant invincible French eagle, his left rests upon a cannon ball. In the background is seen the French legions, filled with dismay, flying before the conquer- ing Germans, Russians, Prussians, and Swedes. The whole was surmounted by an emblematic Circle, indicative of Union 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 107 and Strength, which was lighted by gas, and of dazzling brightness.' In October Bavaria joined the Allies. In November a revolution took place in Holland ; the people of Amsterdam rose in a body, and hoisted the Orange Colours, and, with the ancient cry of ' Orange boven ' (Orange in the ascendant, or victorious) proclaimed the sovereignty of that house. The example of the Capital was followed by the other principal towns of Holland ; which the French troops were compelled to evacuate. The Prince of Orange was in England, the sure asylum of unfortunate Royalty, and on the 21st of November a deputa- tion came to London from Holland, inviting him to return. On the 28th he embarked at Deal for Holland, on board the Warrior, of 74 guns, and landed at Scheveningen on the 30th. The Dutch, having thrown off the French yoke, were no longer our enemies, so that we had no further reason for keeping any of that Nation as Prisoners of War, and they, amounting to 10,000 in number, were ordered to be sent back to their own country, to assist in liberating it from the domination of France. On the 2nd of December the Prince of Orange made his solemn entry into Amsterdam, when he declared his acceptance of the sovereignty, and the title of Sovereign Prince of the United Netherlands. The entente cordiale, which thus, of necessity, sprung up between the English and Dutch, among other things produced the illustration overleaf, wherein is shown an English and a Dutch Sailor fraternizing. Above them, is a label ' Fendracht maakt Magt.' {Concord makes Power), and 'The Sea is Open, Trade revives.' On the 1st of December the Allied Sovereigns issued a declaration at Frankfort, in which they affirmed that they did not make war upon France, but against the preponderance exercised by the Emperor Napoleon beyond the limits of his empire ; that the first use they made of victory was to offer him peace upon conditions founded on the independence of the French Empire, as well as on that of the other States of Europe ; that they desired that France might be great, powerful, and happy, and that they confirmed to the French Empire an extent of territory which France, under her kings, never knew ; that, wishing, also, to be free, tranquil, and happy themselves, they desired a state of peace, which, by a just equilibrium of strength might preserve their people from y •JencUuj C<^ru<'U^m •the sea is open, trade revives.' (Published December 13, 1813, Ackermann.) 1813] SOCIAL ENGLAND 109 the calamities which had overwhelmed Europe, for the last twenty years ; and that they would not lay down their arms until they had obtained this beneficial result. But, either this declaration was only meant as a political display, or else they entirely misjudged Napoleon's character, when they imagined they could put bounds to his ambition, and dictate terms to him who had had all Europe at his feet — so nothing came of it. The American War still went on. Madison was again elected President. At the commencement of the year the Americans attacked Canada direct. General Winchester attacked and took Detroit, but the English, under Colonel Proctor, with 500 regulars and militia, and about 600 Indians, advanced against him, the result being, that half his men surrendered at discretion, and the other half were nearly all cut to pieces by the Indians. On the other hand, the Americans captured and held possession of York, the Capital of Upper Canada, seated on Lake Ontario. Henceforth, the war was principally confined this year to the Lakes, with varying fortunes, until we hear from Sir G. Provost, on the 12th of December, that both provinces of Canada were freed from the invaders, who re- tired to winter quarters. This war was, occasionally, con- ducted on curious principles, as the following will show. It is taken from the general orders issued by the Commander of the British Forces at Montreal, dated October 27th. The facts stated are, that 23 Soldiers of the United States Infantry, being made prisoners, were sent to England, and kept in close confinement, as British subjects ; that General Dearborn had been instructed to put into similar confinement 23 British soldiers as hostages for the safety of the former ; that the Prince Regent had given directions to put in close confine- ment 46 American Officers, and non-commissioned Officers to answer for the safety of the last 23 soldiers ; and, also, to apprize General Dearborn, that if any of them should suffer death in consequence of executing the law of Nations upon the first 23 confined as British subjects, double the number of the confined American Officers should immediately be selected for retaliation ; and, moreover, that the commanders of his Majesty's armies and fleets had received orders to prosecute the war with unmitigated severity against all the cities, towns, and villages of the United States, in case their Government should persist in their intention of retaliation. no SOCIAL ENGLAND [181S The Princess Charlotte was, naturally, a prominent subject for conversation among all ranks, for she was the only child of the Regent, and, as such, heir-presumptive to the throne. She began, too, to make herself talked about a little. She was now in her seventeenth year, on the completion of which she would become of age, and she began to kick over the traces somewhat, and to show that she had a will of her own. Her childhood had not been a happy one, and she had served as a shuttlecock with which papa and mamma had played many a game. She had a mother whom she seldom saw, and a father whose habits were the reverse of domestic ; she knew, perfectly well, what her future prospects were, and occasionally she showed a little temper and wilfulness. In January, 1813, her governess. Lady de Clifford resigned her office, and Miss immediately wrote a letter, through the Queen, to her papa, saying that now she was old enough to do without a governess, and desiring that whoever should be appointed to be about her person, in the place of Lady de Clifford, should occupy the position of a lady of the bed- chamber, and not that of gouvernante. The Queen, the Prince Regent, and the Lord Chancellor took sweet counsel together on the subject, and their unanimous opinion was that Mademoiselle must still continue in statu pupillari, at all events until she came of age. The young lady was rebellious, but the higher authorities were too strong for her, and, with many sighs, she had to give in, and accept the inevitable in the shape of the Duchess of Leeds as governess. In January, too, her mother, the Princess Caroline, wrote a very long letter to the Prince Regent, in which she animad- verted very strongly on the manner in which her daughter was being brought up, especially in her being debarred from all social intercourse with young ladies of her own age. The history of this letter is interesting, as showing the relations existing between this unhappy husband and wife. The story is thus told : — * ' It is curious to trace the manner in which this cele- brated letter at last reached the hands for which it was destined. 'It was transmitted, on the 14th of January, to Lord Liverpool, and Lord Eldon, sealed, by Lady Charlotte * ' Memoirs of her late Eoyal Highness, Charlotte Augusta Princess of Wales,' &c., by Robert Huish, Esq., London, 181 8, p. 68. 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 111 Campbell, the lady in waiting for the Month, expressing her Royal Highness's pleasure that it should be presented to the Prince Regent, and there was an open Copy for their perusal. ' On the 15th, the Earl of Liverpool presented his Com- pliments to Lady Charlotte Campbell, and returned the letter unopened. ' On the 1 6th, it was returned by Lady Charlotte, inti- mating, that, as it contained matters of importance to the State, she reUed on their laying it before his Royal Highness. It was again returned unopened, with the Earl of Liverpool's compUments to Lady Charlotte, saying that the Prince saw no reason to depart from his determination. 'On the 17th, it was returned in the same way by com- mand of her Royal Highness, expressing her confidence, that the two noble lords would not take upon themselves the responsibility of not communicating the letter to his Royal Highness, and that she should not be the only subject in the empire, whose petition was not permitted to reach the throne. To this, an answer was given, that the contents of it had been made known to the Prince. ' On the 19th, her Royal Highness directed a letter to be addressed to the two noble Lords, desiring to know whether it had been made known to his Royal Highness, by being read to him, and to know his pleasure thereon. ' No answer was given to this letter ; and, therefore, on the 26th, she directed a letter to be written, expressing her surprise that no answer had been given to her application for a whole week. ' To this an answer was received, addressed to the Princess ; stating that in consequence of her Royal Highness's demand, the letter had been read to the Prince Regent on the 20th, but that he had not been pleased to express his pleasure thereon. ' Here the correspondence closed ; and no ulterior benefit accrued from it to the afflicted mother, nor to the daughter.' The Princess Charlotte, however, did see more of Society, for she went to the Splendid Fete given by her father, at Carlton House, on the 5th of February, in honour of her Majesty's birthday, and at the ball which followed she danced with her uncle, the Duke of Clarence, afterwards William IV. Then she went to the Opera with the Duchess of York, and she also kept her birthday with great festivities, but she was 112 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 not presented at Court, as she was resolute in being presented by no one except her mother. In February, Warwick House was allotted to her, as a residence, and all her baggage, saddle horses, &c., were removed thither. Here, however, her mother was forbidden to visit her, and the chronicles of the times dilate strongly on an accidental meeting of the mother and daughter in Hyde Park, where they drew their respective carriages close to- gether, and embraced each other through the windows, con- versing together for some ten minutes. When her maternal grandmother, the Duchess of Bruns- wick died, her father hinted to her the propriety of a visit to her mother, leaving it to her whether it should be before or after the funeral. Needless to say, but very few hours elapsed before she, accompanied by the Duchess of Leeds, and Miss Knight, were at Blackheath, where the Princess of Wales then lived. She was now a young woman, and would be of age early next year, so it was time to look about for a husband for her ; and the person pitched upon was none other than the Prince of Orange, whom we have lately seen as going back to Amsterdam, to enjoy his own again. At this time he was serving in Spain as aide-de-camp to Lord Wellington ; but it was represented to him that there were other things for him to do, and he quitted the seat of war, and came over to England, possibly rejoicing in the anticipation of the good things coming to him ; and on the 14th of December, he was formally introduced at Warwick House, by the Prince Regent, to the Princess Charlotte, whom he was expected to woo and win. His suit and its success belong to 1814, and will be told in its place. Of the condition of the poor old King, this year, we hear very little ; the monthly bulletins were certainly issued, but they were of the most meagre description. Madame d'Arblay, even, although she was over here, and had the best of oppor- tunities for hearing about him, only mentions him once, in her letters to her father, in May : — ' The beloved King is in the best state possible for his present melancholy situation : that is, wholly free from bodily suifering, or imaginary mental misery, for he is persuaded that he is always conversing with Angels.'* * ' Memoirs, vol. vii. p. 6. CHAPTER XI. A Cat in a Conflagration — Scramble for Exchequer Bills — A Matri- monial Dispute — An old Debtor — A Volunteer Dinner — A Man and Hedgehog — Torpedoes — Slavery — Gambling on Napoleon's Life — Gas Lighting. And now to wind up the year with a little de omnibus rehus, which would not fall into any particular place, yet are worth keeping, as indicative of the times of which I write : they have no connection with each other, so are taken in chronolo- gical order. On the 4th of April, a fire broke out at the ' Commercial Hall,' Skinner Street, Newgate Street, the Hall which, valued at £25,000, was the capital prize in the City Lottery. It was a bad fire, and two firemen were injured, but no lives lost. When at its fiercest, a Cat was seen on a part of the buildings which would soon inevitably be in flames. There was no human being to be burnt, so the sympathy of the crowd went out towards Pussy. There was no way of escape for her, except by an alarming leap, for the walls had crumbled and fallen in, and this leap Pussy could not make up her mind to take. The flames were encroaching, and gathering round her, and the mental tension of the Crowd was getting tighter and tighter every minute, when a gentleman enthusiastically offered £5 to anyone who would rescue the Cat. A fireman was induced to make the attempt, and with great difliculty got behind the Cat, and forced her to take the leap, from the fifth storey, when she fell into the midst of the spectators unhurt ! The fireman immediately received his promised reward. The following scene, of ' hastening to be rich,' is almost on a par with what might be witnessed in the time of John Law and the South Sea Bubble, or that of King George (Hudson) 8 114 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 of Railway fame. It is thus recorded in the Annual Register : ' April 7 : This morning, as early as five o'clock, a crowd of brokers and others, beset the Exchequer-bill office, in order to put down their names for funding Exchequer Bills. Such was the scramble to get in, that a number of the persons were thrown down, and many of them injured ; some fainted by the excessive pressure of the crowd, and a few had their coats literally torn off their backs. The first 14 names (chiefly bankers) subscribed seven millions out of the twelve required ; and, very early in the day, notice was given that the sub- scription was full. . . . That the first characters in the country, as bankers, merchants, and others, are to be marshalled by police officers, exhorted to be patient, cool, and passive, till they can enter the Exchequer through a door, a third part opened by a chain, and of which the aperture is scarcely sufficient for a moderate sized man to get in, is disgraceful in the extreme.' {Ibid.') April 11th: 'For the first time this season nine Mackerel were brought to the beach at Brighton, which were immediately purchased for the London Market at 6s. 6d. each. The following day, another boat arrived with 28 more, which were bought with equal avidity at the same price. On Thursday, a third boat brought 93, which fetched after the rate of £40 per hundred. Not a single Mackerel has been retailed there, but all have been sent off to the metropolis.' At the Quarter Sessions held at Truro early in May a certain Joseph Little was placed at the bar, charged with having violently assaulted his wife. When Mrs. Little appeared to give evidence against her turbulent mate, he addressed her in a plaintive tone, and the following dialogue took place : — ' My dear, I am son-y to see you here.' ' So am I.' ' I hope you will forgive me this once, and I will never lift my hand to you again.' ' You have broke your promise so often that I cannot trust you.' ' My dear life, don't send me back to prison again ; you have always been a good, honest, sober, and virtuous wife to me.' ' It is for the good of your soul that you should be punished.' ' You need not fear me, I will give you all my property, and part from you, if you wish it.' 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 115 ' I know it is for my safety, and for your salvation, that you should be confined a little longer.' And after this billing and cooing, John Little brought a counter charge of assault against his wife, and was ultimately bound over to keep the peace. One would have thought that the great age of the under- mentioned debtor would have protected him from his ruthless creditor, who, however, was no gainer by his act. May 13th : ' A few days since, a poor infirm man, aged 103, from York- shire, was delivered into the custody of the Marshal of the King's Bench, for a debt of Twenty Pounds ! ! The poor man's appre- hensions were so great on entering the prison, that he was seized with a sudden and violent illness, which induced the Marshal, on a representation of the case, to have him removed to a comfortable apai-tment in Belvidere Place ; but, notwith- standing every alleviation which humanity could suggest, was promptly administered, he expired the same evening.' Next ' silly season ' — London Newspapers please copy : 'July 21 : On Saturday se'nnight was pulled, in the garden of Mr. Jones, at Lodge-my- Loons, a little north from Glasgow, a strawberry, which weighed fully one ounce, and measured 6'^ inches by 3.' Our Volunteer officers grumble somewhat at the expenses contingent upon their position, but they had a harder time of it under the Regency. August 14th : ' At Lincoln Assizes an action was tried, brought by the Landlord of the Bull Inn, at Market Deeping, against the Cornet of the Ness Volunteers for the expenses of a dinner and liquor for 54 of the corps. The party sat down to dinner about half-past four o'clock, and mostly retired before ten. The quantity of liquor charged was as follows : One hundred and twenty-six bottles ofportjfortij- eight oj" sheny, sixty-Jcmr half-crown bowls of pujich, and twenty of negus, besides ale and porter. The Jury gave a verdict in favour of the innkeeper, only taking off sixpence per bottle on the port wine.' Have we yet forgotten ' Brummy ' and the ' Man and Dog fight ' so graphically described in The Daily Telegraph by Mr. James Greenwood ? Here is a variation on the brutal theme. October 25th : ' W. Moore of Loughborough, bricklayer, a few days ago, laid a wager of three shillings, that he could, with his hands tied behind him, worry to death a hedgehog, with his face. He commenced his extraordinary undertaking by prostrating himself on the ground, and attacking the 8—2 116 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 exterior of his prickly antagonist with his nose. In a few minutes his face was covered with blood, and he appeared to have little chance of success ; however, at length having pressed the little animal till it had protruded its head, he snatched at it, and bit it off, thereby winning the wager, to the great amusement of the brutal spectators.' Another illustration of there being nothing new under the sun, is that Torpedoes were known early in the Century, nay, even before that. The Morning Chronicle of October 29th has an article upon them, part of which I transcribe : — 'American Torpedoes. ' Much abuse has been heaped on the American Govern- ment for endeavouring, in their present contest with this country to avail themselves, for the destruction of English vessels, of submarine machines disgraceful to humanity, and contrary to the laws of war ; and it has been said that such machines would only have been encouraged in a Jacobin State, with a Jacobin president at its head. We are far from ap- proving the introduction into warfare of any such machineiy as that in question. But, while we deliver this opinion we think it but fair to state what is not so generally known ; that, in the encouragement of this disgraceful plan, we are as much concerned as the Americans. ' In 1804 Robert Fulton, styling himself an American citizen, was invited by Lord Liverpool, then Lord Hawkesbury, to this country, to show his Majesty's ministers his plans of submarine navigation and attack ; and on the 20th of July that year, he entered into a contract with Mr. Pitt and Lord Melville, the principal conditions of which were — ' "■ His Majesty's Dockyards and Arsenals to make and furnish all such articles as may be required, which are appli- cable to this purpose. ' " If any circumstance should arise to prevent Government carrying this plan into execution, then the parties are to name two commissioners, for the purpose of examining the principles, and trying such experiments as they may think proper ; and, if it should appear to the majority of the members, that the plan is practicable, and offers a more effectual mode of destroy- ing the enemy's fleets at Boulogne, Brest, or elsewhere, than any mode in practice, and with less risk, then Government is to pay the said Robert Fulton, forty thousand pounds, as a 1813] UNDER THE REGENCY 117 compensation for demonstrating the prineiples^ and making over the entire possession of his submarine mode of attack." ' When the Administration, of which Mr. Fox, and Lords Grey and Granville were at the head, came into office, they were a good deal surprised, on Mr. Fulton's claiming per- formance of this contract, to find that such an instrument actually was in existence. The plan would never have met with any encouragement from that Administration ; but, as it had already been accepted, they were under the necessity of agreeing to allow the necessary experiments to be made, or paying the forty thousand pounds. Earl Grey, then at the head of the Admiralty, gave orders, reluctantly enough, that Mr. Fulton should be supplied with whatever he required as necessary for the success of his experiment, and the execution was entrusted to one of the ablest and most enterprising officers of the Navy. Several attempts were made on the enemy's vessels at Boulogne ; but from one circumstance or other, the plan was found impracticable. On Mr. Fulton's still insisting on the payment of the forty thousand pounds, the matter was submitted to four arbitrators, who, after a full investigation, pronounced the plan not so far novel, practical, or effective, as to entitle Mr. Fulton to the sum in question.' The Slave Trade Bill of 1807, it must be remembered, did not abolish Slavery, but only prohibited the Traffic in Slaves ; so that no vessel should clear out from any port within the British Dominions, after May 1, 1807, with Slaves on board, and that no Slave shoidd be landed in the Colonies after March 1, 1808. So that the following advertisement in The Morning Chronicle of November l6th was strictly within the bounds of legality : — 'Jamaica Slaves to be Let or Sold, being Fifty-four in Number, all young or middle-aged, of both sexes, and well seasoned, having for some years worked together in the parish of Clarendon. Any purchaser with good security would have every reasonable indulgence for his payments.' I am bound to say that this advertisement was a novelty in an English Newspaper ; and in the same journal of No- vember 19th, appeared an indignant letter on the subject. ' Sir, — Nothing can be more repugnant to the feelings of Englishmen, than to read in an English Newspaper, peculiarly 118 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1813 devoted to the cause of Freedom, the advertisement which appeared in the first page of Tuesday's Chronicle, relative to the offer of " Fifty-four Jamaica Slaves." Surely, Sir, this offensive advertisement must have been inserted without due consideration, and, I am sure, without your knowledge; espe- cially at the time when we are about to Christianize the whole world ! ' For the sake of humanity, and the best feelings of every true Briton, I trust that this abominable advertisement will not make its appearance a second time in your respectable Paper, and remain, yours, &c., ' Libert AS.' ' Among the gambling policies ever open in the city, the " life of Bonaparte " has long been a favourite object for scandalous speculations, and for the last twelve months had been done at from 2 to 2^ per cent, per month, as the dangers to which he was exposed seemed to diminish or increase. In the beginning of this present December, policies to a very large amount have been negotiated, and Twelve Guineas given to receive One Hundred, if the Tyrant be alive on the 1st of January.' Gas lighting in the streets of London was first introduced in August, ] 807, when Golden Lane Brewery, and a portion of Beech and Whitecross Streets were illuminated by its means. The Gaslight and Coke Company got their Charter in 1810, and had lamps outside their offices in Pall Mall; but progress in this direction was very slow, and the old oil lamps died hard. We read in The Morning Chronicle of De- cember 20th : 'The Gas lights which have been exhibited in the two Palace Yards, and in some of the streets of the neighbourhood, during the sitting of Parliament, will, upon its adjournment, be discontinued ; and those places only be lighted, for which the Company has contracts.' CHAPTER XII. 1814. The Fog — Condition of Ireland — State of the Navy— The Kegent at Belvoir — Coming of age of Princess Charlotte^Day of Thanksgiving — Great Snowstorm — Thames frozen over — Sports thereon — Frost fair — The Country and the Snow. The year 1814 was an annus mirabilis for England, as will be seen as it is unfolded. It began with a fog, not an ordinary fog, but one which, from its exceptional character, was en- shrined as part of the history of the Country. It prevailed in London, and many miles round, during the whole of the last week of 1813 until the 4th of January, when it cleared ofi' — the mails and other conveyances were delayed, and many accidents happened. It was no respecter of persons, for the Regent, who was going to visit the Duke of Rutland at Belvoir, in order to stand personally as Godfather to the baby Marquis of Granby, was delayed a day by this fog, so that the Christening had to be postponed, and the young Marquis had to be a day longer in an unregenerate state. A dragoon, who left London for Windsor at 6 p.m. with particulars of the passage of the Nive by the Allied Armies, did not arrive until 4 a.m. in consequence of the fog, although he got a lanthorn and candle at Hounslow. A sergeant of the West Kent Militia, which corps was then garrisoning the Tower, stepped off the wharf into the river, and was drowned — and there were other fatalities. Ireland was in its chronic state of bloodthirsty rebellion, as the two following paragraphs in The Morning Chronicle of January 1st show. ' The Barony of Lower Ormond, in the County of Tipperary, has lately manifested a spirit of wicked- ness unknown in that part of the country. A few nights 120 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 sincCj the Haggards of the Rev. Edward Farmer, of Spring- mount, near Cloughjordan, of Mr. Thompson, and the Rev. Mr. Conolly, near Ballingarry, were maliciously set on fire, and totally consumed. The ruffians also posted notices that if a reward was offered, they would burn the haggards of the subscribers.' ' On the evening of the 8th instant half-past five o'clock, as George Wayland, Esqre, was going out of his house at Toureen, near Dundrum, in the County of Tipperary, accom- panied by his herdsman, one of a party, who were perceived lying in wait at a short distance from the hall door, discharged a blunderbuss at him, loaded with balls and slugs, the con- tents of which grazed his legs and passed through his clothes. Immediately after, a servant boy of Mr. Wayland, going towards the house, was fired at by the same party, and so dreadfully wounded, that he has since died.' The number of troops required then, as now, in Ireland, together with the fact that we had two wars on our hands, at the same time, caused stock to be taken of the available ' food for powder ' remaining, and we find, according to a statistical account taken this year, that the number of men in Great Britain, capable of bearing arms, from 15 to 60 years of age, amounted to 2,744,847 ; or about four in every seventeen males. Our Navy was a large one, on paper, for the total number of ships at the commencement of this year was 1032 (including those in ordinary, &e.) : of which there were, in commission, ll6 sail of the line, 20 from 50 to 44 guns, 157 frigates, 110 sloops of war, 7 fire-ships, 199 brigs, 40 cutters, and 50 schooners, the total of ships in commission being 768. The Regent set out on his journey to Belvoir Castle, having, of course, to do the distance in his travelling carriage. At Denton, he was met by some two or three hundred horsemen, the gentry and yeomanry of the County, who had assembled to welcome him to Belvoir. On the arrival of the Prince, the air was rent with a general burst of loyal enthusiasm. Many females, wives and daughters of the tenantry of the House of Rutland, joined in the cavalcade, and galloped like lunatics to keep up with the Regent's carriage. Arrived at Belvoir, on the descent from his carriage of the ' vir illustrissimus,' a Royal salute of 21 guns was fired from the Castle, and the Regent's dme damnee, the Duke of York, also was similarly honoured. 1814] UNDER THE REGENCY 121 It was with great difficulty and much persuasion, that the good folk of Rutlandshire were prevented from making greater asses of themselves, and debasing themselves by removing the horses from the Royal Carriage, and transforming themselves into beasts of draught. The honoured host, of course, was at the door to receive his guest, and the Rev. Dr. Staunton, by virtue of the tenure of a Manor of Staunton, in Nottingham- shire, did his devoir, suit, and service, by presenting the Regent, as representative of the King, with an exquisitely worked gold key of Staunton tower, which is an outwork, and yet the chief stronghold of the Castle, the command of which is held by the family of Staunton, and the tenure by which they held the Manor of Staunton is, that they were formerly required to appear, with soldiers, to defend this strong post, in case of danger, or at the requisition of the Lord of the Castle. January 4th, the day of the christening of the little Marquis of Granby, was also the birthday of his father, the Duke of Rutland, so that the two events, combined with the Royal visit, made an event of unexampled rarity in the annals of Rutlandshire. Whenever was babe received into the fold of Christ, under more illustrious mundane auspices .'' His two godfathers were the Prince Regent and the Duke of York, in person j his godmother was the Queen, represented by her Grace the Dowager Duchess of Rutland. The Archbishop of Canterbury himself ' performed the baptismal ceremony with solemnity, and graceful expression,' and what more could be done for the child ? After this ceremony, the swine were fed. Open house and lavish hospitality were the order of the day, and the ' piggies ' availed themselves of it. The grand seigneurs sit down to dinner — and the oi iroXXoC go to their troughs, to eat as much, and drink as much, as they possibly could. ' At Belvoir Castle all partake of the festivities, for, although the doors are not immediately thrown open to admit improper persons, yet the tenantry, and persons of respectability have access thereto, and such is the affability and condescending amiable manners of her Grace the Duchess of Rutland, that her whole suite of rooms are open for the inspection of all ranks, and even the curiosity of seeing the young Marquis is acceded to. Mr. Douglas, the Duke's butler, entertained the tenantry with an oval Cistern of strong punch, containing 50 gallons, when the tenantry drank " Long life to the young Marquis " — " Many 122 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 returns of the day to the Duke " — and " God preserve our Noble Prince Regent." ' This latter was attired, in compliment to his host in ' the Belvoir uniform of scarlet and buff/ and, to the toast of his health, ' His Royal Highness replied with much eloquence, but evidently at first, labouring under the affection of fine feeling, and concluded by assuring the noble host, that, as long as he lived, he should never forget the respectful manner in which he had been received at Belvoir Castle.' This hospitality went on for days ; and we read, ' The house contains more than two hundred individuals, who partake daily of the festivities. The Cistern of punch, under the management of Mr. Douglas, administered in the Servants' Hall on Tuesday, to the household and tenantry, laid many a brave fellow prostrate. The passages of the house reminded one of a Castle taken by storm, and the young Marquis, the Noble Host, and the Prince Regent, were toasted until articu- lation ceased. Many were found the next day in the sub- terraneous passages of the Castle, with symptoms of recover- ing animation. The punch was not out at 10 o'clock on Wednesday morning. ' This cistern, according to the history of the County, was filled with Cordial when John, Duke of Rutland, father of the present Duke, was born. The silver Cistern is 16 feet in circumference, holds 60 gallons, and is a matchless piece of Workmanship. Ale, at the rate of 21 strike to the hogshead, is now making, to be kept till the young Marquis comes of Age.' This Saturnalia ceased on January 7th, when the Prince left on a visit to the Earl of Winchilsea at Burleigh ; but whilst in the country, he was keenly scanned by the eyes of critical sportsmen, and the result, as regards his horsemanship, is thus given : — 'Letter from General T. to J. Mc.M., Esq., in London. Dear Mac, we are passing our time here most gaily. Events by the dozen are happening daily : We left Burleigh the 2nd — you never were there ? The house stands in a quadrangle forty feet square ; 'Tis built on a terrace, with fine freestone walls, On a level 'tis said with the top of Saint Paul's. Winchilsea, you know,'s a mechanical man. For having it measured, he's forming a plan. 18U] UNDER THE REGENCY 123 Lonsdale, you know, is a noble old fellow, With a fine open heart, and a capital cellar, We do just as we like, and have excellent cheer, For guests, horses, and doga, are all treated well here. Wales would have a hunt, so we hunted on Monday, In spite of the fog, and the hard frost of Sunday. And O ! some gentle Muse indite My bold, aspiring lay. While in hasty verse I write " The hunting of that day !" Now I think on't, the task would be rather too hard. And you'll hear it describ'd by our Treasury Bard : — For I watch'd him all thro' the field, and I saw He was scanning the picturesque look of a thaw, He hated a Fox from the time of his birth. And ran foul of a Pit, as Reynard took earth. As for Wales, he soon staked a thorough bred mare. His legs, arms, and chest, were all quite militaire. A mere Bond Street rider, Tom Musters would say. Sits damn'd well by rule, as I told him one day ; He's abroad in all cases not taught in menage, And rides at a leap, as he would at a charge ; In short, one might swear he ne'er hunted before. By his heading the hounds, as he would do his corps ; And York on the fences made desperate attack. And was giving the word of command to the pack ; Determined to give his Conscience relief. And, for once, be in person. Commander in Chief.' What a contrast was the keeping of the coming of age of the Princess Charlotte, the heir to the throne ! which hap- pened at the same time, on the 7th of January. ' In the morning her Royal Highness's tutors and principal attendants were introduced to her Royal Highness at Warwick House, and paid their respects in due form. A number of nobility, persons of distinction, and her private circle of friends, called at the house, and left their respectful inquiries and con- gratulations on the return of the day.' She spent the re- mainder of the day quietly, and without fuss, with her mother, at Connaught House. The Regent returned from his tour in time for the Day of Thanksgiving, 13th of January, and he attended Divine service at the Chapel Royal, St. James's, in state. He wore ' a purple top wrapping coat, ornamented in a most splendid manner with gold lace, fringe, and frogs, with the Order of the Garter.' Besides a great number of the nobility, the procession was formed as follows : — 124 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 ' The Gentlemen Ushers and Grooms in waiting. ' Six Heralds, with their superb and splendid Mantles, with other ornaments. ' Four Sergeants at Mace, with gold Maces, and their elegant Collars ; King at Arms, in his superb dress, with his sceptre of Office, Sir Isaac Heard. ' York Herald, and Genealogist of the Bath, Sir George Naylor, in his splendid dress, with the Order of the Bath. ' Windsor Herald, Francis Townsend, Esqre., also in his splendid dress and appropriate ornaments. ' The Duke of York. ' The Sword of State. ' The Prince Regent, followed by his Lord in Waiting, &c. ' Eight of the Gentlemen Pensioners, with their Battle Axes, closed the procession.' The phenomenal fog, which obtained at the end of 1813 and the commencement of 1814, was immediately followed by very heavy falls of snow, unprecedented in the memory of man. On one occasion it snowed incessantly for 48 hours. Few carriages could travel, and the land seemed deserted. In London, the water-pipes in houses were all frozen, and open plugs were running in the streets. Of course this water froze, and added to the general inconvenience, and the state of the streets maybe judged by the following: 'Mr. Maxwell, of skating celebrity, agreed for a considerable wager, to skate from Long Acre to the Parade in St. James's Park in five minutes, which he performed with ease, ten seconds within the time, to the no small amusement of a numerous concourse of spectators.' Coals went up to any price ; and no wonder. There were no railways, and the large inland beds of coal were only worked for local use, so that London was dependent upon Sunderland, and the north-eastern ports, for her coal supply ; and this, of course, came at once to an end with such a frost as this was. A remedy was proposed, but was never acted on. ' Supposing nine-tenths of the housekeepers of the metropo- lis to have laid in coals sufficient for their consumption — some to the month of June, but generally throughout the whole of the summer season — it would be an act of benevo- lence on their part without affecting their interest, to sell their overplus stock, at reduced prices, to the needy individuals in their respective neighbourhoods, who are unprovided with 1814] UNDER THE REGENCY 125 that fuel, or who can afFord to supply themselves only from week to week. This, it is conceived, might he done at Qs. 6d. or 7s. a sack, whereas double that sum is now asked.' The snow-drifts were terrible all over the country, and even near London, in many places, the snow drifted higher than the Coaches. On Finchley Common, in the course of one night, it drifted to a depth of sixteen feet ; on Bagshot Heath, and about Cobham and Esher, all traffic was stopped. The Kent and Essex roads were the only ones passable. From the country came worse news. The snow in the Midland Counties was very deep ; indeed at Dunchurch, a small village on the road to Birmingham, through Coventry, for a few miles round, the snow was twenty-three feet deep, and no tracks of tra- vellers were seen for many days. The Cambridge Mail Coach was snowed up, and completely covered, for eight hours, when, at last it was dragged out by fourteen waggon-horses, the poor passengers, meanwhile, being almost frozen to death. These examples must suffice, for my space cannot accommodate any- thing like one hundredth part of the snow-stories of this time. The Thames was frozen over, and upon it was held a ' Frost Fair,' which, as, owing to the greater width of the arches of the bridges which span it, it is hardly likely to occur again, I must be pardoned, if I somewhat dilate upon. Sunday, Jan. 30. — Immense masses of ice that had floated from the upper part of the river, in consequence of the thaw on the two preceding days, now blocked up the Thames between Blackfriars and London Bridge ; and affiarded every probability of its being frozen over in a day or two. Some venturous persons, even now, walked upon the ice. Monday, Jan. 31. — This expectation was realized. During the whole of the afternoon, hundreds of people were assembled on Blackfriars and London Bridges, to see several adventurous men cross and re-cross the Thames on the Ice ; at one time seventy persons were counted walking from Queenhithe to the opposite shore. The frost on Sunday night so united the vast mass, as to render it immovable by the tide. Tuesday, Feb. 1. — The floating masses of ice having been stopped by London Bridge, now assumed a solid surface over the river from Blackfriars Bridge to some distance below Three Crane Stairs, at the bottom of Queen Street, Cheapside. The watermen, taking advantage of this circumstance, placed notices at the end of all the streets leading to the City side 126 SOCIAL ENGLAND [18U of the river, announcing a safe footway over it, which, as might be expected, attracted immense crowds to witness so novel a scene. Many were induced to venture on the ice, and the example thus afforded, soon led thousands to perambulate the rugged plain, where a variety of amusements were pre- pared for their entertainment. Among the more curious of these was the ceremony of roasting a small sheep, which was toasted, or rather, burnt over a coal fire placed in a large iron pan. For a view of this spectacle sixpence was demanded, and willingly paid. The delicate meat when done, was sold at a shilling a slice, and termed Lapland Mutton. Wednesday, Feb. 2. — The Thames now was a complete Frost Fair. The Grand Mall, or walk, was from Blackfriars Bridge to London Bridge. This was named ' The City Road,' and was lined on both sides with booths and petty tradesmen of all descriptions. Eight or ten printing presses were erected, and numerous pieces commemorative of the ' Great Frost ' were printed on the Ice. Many of these have come down to us ; among them are the following : ' Amidst the Arts which on the Thames appear, To tell the wonders of this icy year, Printing claims prior place, which, at one view, Erects a monument of That and Tor.' ' You that walk here, and do design to tell Tour children's children what this year befell, Come, buy this print, and it will then be seen That such a year as this hath seldom been.' ' Friends, now is your time to support the Freedom of the Press. Can the Press have greater liberty ? Here yovjind it working in the middle of the Thames ; and if you encotirage us by buying our impressions, we will keep it going in the true spirit of liberty, during the Frost.' ' Behold, the River Thames is frozen o'er, Which, lately, ships of mighty burden bore ; Now, difEerent arts and pastimes here you see, But printing claims superiority.' Besides the above, the Lord's Prayer, and several other pieces were issued from these Presses, and they were bought, as mementos, with great avidity. Thursday, Feb. 3. — More people than ever ventured on the 128 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 ice. Swings, book-stalls, dancing in a barge, drinking and eating booths, skittles, knock-' em-downs, and all the appur- tenances to a Fair on land were there on the Thames. The ice was strong and firm, and although there were fairly smooth parts, yet, in the main, it was very rough. Friday, Feb. 4. — Every day brought more people, and addi- tions to the petty merchants who vended their wares, at twice or thrice their value, because of the rarity. Any old goods could be passed off if only duly labelled 'Bought on the Thames,' 'From Frost Fair,' &c., and money was literally shovelled into their pockets, as everyone wanted some lasting reminiscence of this great Frost. The watermen mulcted all who visited the Fair, of 2d. or 3d. , and you were expected to repeat the compliment on your return. They were said to have taken as much as £6 each, in the course of the day. An ugly accident was nearly happening this day, for three persons — an old man, and two lads — having ventured on a piece of ice above London Bridge, it suddenly detached itself from the main body, and was carried by the tide through one of the arches. They threw themselves flat upon the ice for safety, and, luckily, were observed by the boatmen at Billings- gate, who, with laudable activity, put oif to their assistance, and rescued them from their impending danger. One of them was able to walk, but the other two were carried, in a state of insensibility, to a public-house, where they received every attention their situation required. Saturday, Feb. 5th. — The morning of this day augured rather unfavourably for the continuance of Frost Fair. The wind had shifted to the south, and a light fall of snow took place. The visitors to the Thames, however, were not to be deterred by trifles. Thousands again ventured, and there was still much life and bustle on the ice. The footpath in the centre, or ' City Road,' was hard and secure, and thousands promenaded thereon. Gaming had now its votaries ; there were E. O. Tables, Rouge-et-Noir, Tee- totums, Wheels of Fortune, Prick the Garter, &c., and a brisk business they plied in emptying the pockets of their dupes. Skittles were being played in many places, drinking tents were filled with females, and their companions, dancing reels to the sound of fiddles, while others sat round large fires, drinking rum, grog, and other spirits. There were for the more temperate, tea and coffee, and people were earnestly requested to eat, in order that in after years they might be 814] UNDER THE REGENCY 129 able to say that they had indulged in a good meal in mid Thames. The Morning Chronicle of February 4th says : — ' Notwith- standing the heavy thaw of Tuesday night, an immense multitude continues to assemble between London and Black- friars Bridges. Booths, hoisting the flags of all nations, and painted with Cherokee taste, everywhere gladdened the sight, while bands of Pandean minstrels, relieved by the dulcet strains of the tin trumpet from all sides, delighted the ear. ' In the centre of the river, a narrow stream defied the power of the frozen region, and marked the path "where once the current ran." This interruption, however, so far from impeding the gambols of the day, increased the sport, and added to the profit of the stewards of the scene. A few small planks in some cases, and an old boat or two in others, with the addition of Charon's fare, kept the communication entire, and enlivened the pastime. ' In some parts of the stream where the width of the un- irozen water admitted of it, boats completely bent for sail, with their full equipments, attracted the heedless throng. In these were placed food for the hungry, and for the thirsty, relief ; gin and gingerbread, with other cordials, were here on sale, at moderate prices — " Ubi mel — ibi apes." The Crowd poured toward this magnetic point with extraordinary avidity. Men, women, and children were often seen in one promiscuous heap. Although it is impossible not to feel anxious to afford every opportunity of cheering, by playful pastime, the nipping severity of the season, yet we cannot disengage our mind from the hazardous consequences of such an exhibition as we are now noticing. ' Between the bridges the river is entirely covered, not with a regular, even frozen surface, but with an incongruous accumulation of icy fragments, and congealed piled snow, which, during the partial thaws, was disengaged up the river, and wafted downwards ; this having been intercepted by the intervention of the bridges, and partially united hy the frosts of the last two or three days, has completely covered the surface of the water. It is yet extremely dangerous, and was, in many places, last night, set in motion by the influx of the tide, and carried, with extreme velocity, against the piers of the bridges. Some watermen, more foolhardy than others, ventured to cross opposite Temple Gardens, and one of them nearly lost his life by the experiment. The public ought 9 130 SOCIAL ENGLAND [18U carefully to prevent the young men and thoughtless part of the community from indulging in experiments of this de- scription, which may terminate fatally.' Towards the evening of the 5th of February rain fell in some quantity, the ice gave some loud cracks, and large pieces were detached, and floated off with booths, printing- presses, and people on them. No lives, however, were lost. Perhaps the last thing printed on the ice was a letter : — ' To Madam Tabitha Thaw. ' Dear dissolving dame, ' Father Frost, and Sister Snow, have boneyd my borders, formed an idol of ice upon my bosom, and all the Lads of London come to make merry : now, as you love mischief, treat the multitude with a few Cracks by a sudden visit, and obtain the prayers of the poor upon both banks. Given at my own jJ^'ess, the 5th Feby., 1814. ' Thomas Thames.' The thaw had now fairly set in, the ice, broken up, swept everything in the shape of light craft, barges, &c., irresistibly before it, and damage was done to the extent of many thousands of pounds. There was some loss of life, but it was small, and altogether every one was very well rid of ' The Great Frost of 1814.' Before I finish with the subject, 1 must quote some verses (which, although doggerel, are very original) attached to 'A View of Frost Fair, as it appeared on the Ice on the River Thames, February 3, 1814.' 'All you that are curious downright, And fond of seeing every sight, If to the Thames you had repair'd, You might have seen a famous fair. Diversions of every kind you'd see, With parties drinking of coflEee and tea. And dancing too I do declare, Upon the Thames, they call Fbost Faik. It was really curious for to see Both old and young, so full of glee. The drinking booths they enter'd in And call'd away for purl and gin. Some play'd at Threadle my Needle, Nan, The lasses slipt down as they ran, Which made the men quite full of glee, The young girls legs' all for to see. 1814] UNDER THE REGENCY 131 The Watermen, so neat and trim, With bottle fill'd with Old Tom Gin, And others bawl'd among the throng, " Who's for a Glass of Sampson strong ?" '' Here's Nuts, and Gingerbread, who buys ?" " Come, boys, and win my Mutton Pies. Come, ladies, they're both hot and nice, Fear not to eat them on the Ice." Boys and women, not a few. Upon the Ice, they ventured too, And swings there were, I do declare, To take a ride up in the air. And booths, wherein you might regale, And have a pint of beer, or ale. And skittle playing, I do declare, Upon the Thames, they call Frost Fair. Now to conclude my Icy song, I'm glad to see the Frost is gone, And ships, and barges, all afloat, And watermen rowing of their boats. Black diamond barges to appear. That coals, they may not be so dear. So, toss a bumper off with cheer, And bid adieu to Frosty Fair.' With regard to this frost, for once. Justice was rendered to Ireland, and she shared its pleasures, with ' the bloody Saxon ' (Gentleman's Magazine, vol. 84, part i. p. 1 89) : ' So completely suspended has been the internal intercourse between Dublin and the interior, that on 1 7th January, no fewer than fifteen hundred country mails were due in the Irish Capital ; and, in consequence of the obstruction to the regular mails, arising from the severity of the weather, the accumulated news- papers, at the Post Office, amounted to no less than ten tons in weight.' On the same page it is recorded that ' Fifty Gentlemen dined in a tent fixed on the ice on the river Tweed. One of the company was present at a similar fete held on the Tweed in 1740.' The Lords Lieutenant of the different counties had a circular sent them from Lord Sidmouth, conveying the Regent's wishes for their guidance in this juncture, part of which is as follows : — ' It will be obvious to your Lordship, that the first and immediate duty to which your attention should be directed, is 9—2 132 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 that of providing all practical means for removing from the highways and principal roads of communication lying within your Lordship's County, the obstructions which have taken place from the late heavy falls of snow, so that his Majesty's subjects may be able to traverse the same, without danger or impediment, as occasion shall require. ' The discharge of this duty is, fortunately, most compatible with the further object which his Royal Highness has anxiously in view, inasmuch as it will enable your Lordship to ensure employment for various classes of individuals, who, for the present, are deprived of their usual earnings by the inclemency of the season. ' Your Lordship will be aware of the necessity of giving immediate attention to the Prince Regent's commands on this important subject; and you will accordingly communicate, without delay, with the magistracy, and through them with the trustees of turnpike roads, the overseers of the poor, the surveyors of the highways, and other subordinate officers within the districts and parishes of the County, in such manner, as to insure the most speedy and effectual means of carrying his Royal Highness' s pleasure into effect.' After the melting of this snow, came very heavy floods in almost every part of the country. CHAPTER XIII. Burning of the Custom House — De Berenger's fraud on the Stock Exchange — Lord Cochrane inculpated — Price of provisions — Arrival of the Duchess of Oldenburgh— The Capitulation of Paris, and fall of Napoleon— Papa "Violette — Elba. On the morning of Saturday, February 12th, the Custom House in London was burnt down. The first Custom House stood on the same site as the present one, and was rebuilt in 1385. In Queen Elizabeth's time a larger House was built on the same spot, which was burnt in the Great Fire. Wren was the architect to a new one, which was destroyed by fire in 1715. Its successor was doomed to the same fate ; its ruin was complete, and for a time it paralyzed the Commerce of the Port of London. ' The actual loss to Government by the sudden destruction of the Custom House cannot be calculated ; books, bonds, debentures, pearls, coral, valuable property of every de- scription, and securities of all kinds have been consumed. Business is, and must be, quite at a standstill for some time ; numerous vessels ready to sail cannot clear out, and, con- sequently, the injury to the mercantile world will be most severe and distressing. The private property lost within the building is very considerable. We have heard of several Gentlemen who had left large sums of money in their desks, ready to make payments on the following day. One has lost upwards of £6,000 in bank notes, which will be irrecoverable, as the memorandum of the numbers was in the desk with the notes, and met the same fate. ' A very fine collection of pictures which the Commissioners had permitted a gentleman to leave in deposit, till it would be convenient for him to pay the duties, amounting to £1,500, were destroyed. A very genteel young man, in appearance. 134 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 was stopped by some police officers in Thames Street, and, on searching him, his pockets and breeches were found to be stuffed with coral beads, silk handkerchiefs, and other valuables of small bulk. It appeared that his boldness in venturing nearer the gunpowder than even the firemen dared to do, had enabled him to obtain this booty.' This month is remarkable for one of the most daring attempted frauds on the Stock Exchange ever perpetrated. It was executed by one Charles Random de Berenger, a French refugee, and an officer in one of the foreign regiments. It was alleged that with him were associated Lord Cochrane, the Hon. Andrew Cochrane Johnstone, and several others. It appears from the evidence on the trial, that early on the morning of the 21st of February, a gentleman, dressed in a grey great-coat over a scarlet uniform, on which was a star, knocked at the door of the Ship Inn at Dover, and said that he was the bearer of very important despatches from France. This gentleman, all the Witnesses swore, was Berenger. He sent a letter signed R. Du Bourg, Lieut. -Colonel, and Aide-de-Camp to Lord Cathcart, to Admiral Foley, the Port Admiral at Dover, advising him that he had just arrived from Calais with the news of a great victory obtained by the Allies over Bonaparte, who was slain in his flight by the Cossacks, and that the Allied Sovereigns were in Paris. Berenger posted up to London, which he entered, having his horses decked with laurels, in order to make a stir. It was felt on the Stock Exchange. Omnium, which opened at 27^, rose to 33 ; but as the day wore on, and no confirmation came of the news, they receded to 28|. Business in that Stock was done that day to the tune of half a million of money. Lord Cochrane and others had previously given instructions to several Stockbrokers to sell Omniums for them on the 21st of February to an enormous amount. One deposed that on that date he sold — • For Lord Cochrane, £139,000 Oimiium. „ Cochrane Johnstone, £120,000 do. Do. £100,000 Consols. „ Mr. Butt, £124,000 Omnium. Do. £168,000 Consols. And he further deposed that he always considered that any business he did for Mr. Butt was to be placed to Lord Coch- rane's account. 1814] UNDER THE REGENCY 135 Anothei- Stockbroker sold for the same three gentlemen, about £565,000 Omnium. Another had sold £80,000 on then- account ; and yet another had had instructions to sell a very large sum for the same parties, but had refused. In the end Lord Cochrane and Mr. Butt were condemned to pay to the King a fine of a thousand pounds each, and ,T. P. HoUoway five hundred ; and these three, together with De Berenger, Sandon, and Lyte, were sentenced to imprison- ment in the Marshalsea for twelve Calendar Months. Further, Lord Cochrane, De Berenger, and Butt, were to stand on the pillory for one hour before the Royal Exchange once during their imprisonment. This latter part of their punishment was afterwards remitted. Lord Cochrane's name was struck off the Navy list, he was expelled from the House of Commons, his arms were taken down from his stall as Knight of the Bath, his banner torn down, and kicked ignominiously out of Henry VH.'s Chapel in Westminster Abbey. By very many he was believed innocent, and, on his seat for Westminster being declared vacant, he was enthusiastically re-elected. He escaped from Custody, was captured, and had to serve his time. On June 20, 181 5, he was told that his imprisonment was at an end if he would pay the fine imposed upon him ; and on July 3rd he reluctantly did so with a iil,000 bank note, on the back of which he wrote : — ' My health having suffered by long and close confinement, and my oppressors being resolved to deprive me of property or life, I submit to robbery, to protect myself from murder, in the hope that I shall live to bring the delinquents to justice.' On the very day he was released, he took his seat again in the House of Commons. It is not my province to follow his life, but in 1832 he received a 'free pardon' ; he was restored to the Navy List, gazetted a rear-admiral, and presented at a levee ! There is a little bit of domestic news chronicled on March 9th, which is interesting when we contrast the prices at which we are now supplied with the same commodities. ' Covent Garden Market. — The extreme severity of the weather has rendered all the fruits and vegetables of the season dear beyond all precedent. The following are the prices of some of the articles : — Asparagus, £l 4s. per hundred ; Cucumbers, £l Is. per brace ; best Pines, £2 12s. each ; Grapes, £3 3s. per pound; Endive, 8s. per dozen; best Broccoli, l6s. per bundle ; second ditto, 7s. per ditto ; French Beans, 8s. per 136 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814. 100 ; Mushrooms, 5s. 6d. per pottle ; best Kale, 12s. per basket ; Nonpareil Apples, 8s. per dozen ; Colmar Pears, £l 10s. per dozen; Cos Lettuce, 4s. per dozen; Mint, Is. 6d. per bunch ; Greens, l6s. per dozen ; Spanish Onions, 12s. per dozen.' This scale of prices would never have done for the Clergy- man mentioned in the next day's paper. ' A Clergyman, of the name of Matheson, was minister of Patterdale, in West- moreland, for sixty years, and died lately, at the age of ninety. During the early part of his life his benefice brought him only twelve pounds a year ; it was afterwards increased (perhaps by Queen Anne's bounty) to eighteen, which it never exceeded. On this income he married, brought up four children, and lived comfortably with his neighbours, educated a son at the University, and left upwards of one thousand pounds behind him. With that singular simplicity, and in- attention to forms which characterize a country life, he him- self read the burial service over his mother, he married his father to a second wife, and afterwards buried him also. He published his own banns of marriage in the church, with a woman whom he had formerly christened, and he himself married all his four children.' On March 31st an illustrious lady, the Duchess of Olden burgh, sister to the Emperor of Russia, entered London in great state, having been met at Sheemess by the Duke of Clarence on behalf of the Regent, who sent one of his Car- riages for her accommodation and use. Ostensibly she only came to pay a complimentary visit to the Regent, but every one surmised that such was merely a blind to cover a political mission, for which she was well adapted. To show what importance was attached to her visit, I give an official account of her reception. ' The procession entered London, by Parliament Street, at a quarter before four o'clock, in the following order : — Two Light Horsemen. The Duke of Clarence's travelling Chariot and four, in which were his Royal Highness and Colonel Bloomfield. Two Light Horsemen. Two footmen and an outrider in the Royal liveries. 'The Prince Regent's Carriage, drawn by four bays, in which was her Imperial Highness the Grand Duchess, 1814] UNDER THE REGENCY 137 Duchess of Oldenburgli, accompanied by the Princess Volo- chowsky, Madame Aladensky, and the Countess Lieven. ' At each door of the Carriage one of the Prince Regent's footmen rode. The Carriage was followed by a party of Light Horse. ' The third carriage was another of the Prince Regent's, in which were the Prince Gargarine, General Turner, &c. ' The Russian Ambassador's Carriage, with his Excellency in it, finished the procession. 'They proceeded through the Horse Guards, out at the Stable Yard, St. James's, up St. James' Street to the Pulteney Grand Hotel, where her Imperial Highness was received by sentinels placed at the door for that purpose. She was handed out of the carriage by the Duke of Clarence and Colonel Bloomfield, who conducted her to the apartments prepared for her. 'The Duke of Clarence took his leave, and proceeded to Carlton House, and had an interview with his Royal brother, the Prince Regent. He afterwards returned to her Imperial Highness, to express the Prince Regent's congratulations on her safe arrival in England. ' A grand dinner was given in the evening in her honour at Carlton House. The table was laid for twenty-five covers, and the Queen, the Princesses, the Duke and Duchess of York, &c., were all assembled to receive her Highness.' And now we come to the great event of the year, beside which all other news, however important, pales, and is a thing of nought. The fall of Napoleon, and manner of it, hardly belongs, in a strict sense, to Social England of the time, and yet it is so indissolubly bound up with it, that a succinct account of it is necessary for the perfection of this book, and, as the shortest and best contemporary narrative of these events, that I know of, is contained in the Anmial Register, I use it. The French occupied the heights before Paris — the Allies were about to storm them ; in fact, the heights of Romainville had been carried. ' A redoubt and battery in the enemy's centre kept d' Yorck in check for some part of the day ; but their flank being exposed by the loss of the heights of Romainville, and their losses in every part of the field, reduced them to the necessity of sending a flag of truce to propose a cessation of hostilities, on the condition of their yielding all the ground 138 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 without the barrier of Paris, till further arrangements could be made. The heights of Montmartre were at this time about to be stormed, and the village of La Villette had been carried by Woronzow's division, which was pushing on to the barrier ; the Sovereigns of Russia and Prussia, and Prince Schwartzenberg, however, being desirous of saving the Capital from being sacked, most humanely agreed to the proposal : two aides-de-camp were sent to put the terms in execution ; the battle ceased ; and, at four in the afternoon. Count Nesselrode, the Russian Minister, went into Paris. Thus terminated this important day (March 30th), which was not without considerable loss to the Allies ; but it was final. ' The Metropolis of France being thus laid prostrate at the feet of hostile armies, no determination ever occurred of greater moment, in a moral and political view, than the treat- ment it was to receive. Besides the lust of rapine and pillage which prevails in the mass of all military bodies, feelings of resentment for the long and atrocious injuries inflicted upon the countries of Europe, by the relentless ambition of the French ruler, must have inspired a strong feeling of retaliation : and the flames of Moscow, in particular, must have kindled in the Russian troops an impatient ardour for spreading the same destruction through the streets of Paris. So fiercely did this passion rage, that the Emperor Alexander is said almost to have descended to supplications, with the more indisciplined of his bands, to induce them to forego their vindictive purposes. But this benevolent sovereign, with his illustrious confederates, must have shud- dered at the idea of involving the innocent, as well as the guilty, inhabitants of a vast city in the direst calamities. Moreover, the declarations of the Allied Powers had been filled with sentiments of goodwill towards the French Nation, the happiness, and, even, prosperity of which, they professed to have in view, as far as was compatible with the welfare of its neighbours. Mere retaliatory mischief is always ignoble, and generally unjust, since its effects cannot be limited to suitable objects. From these considerations, though we may justly praise, we cannot wonder at the pacific and conciliatory measures that were immediately adopted by the victors on this great event. ' The first important act was the capitulation which resulted from the armistice granted by the Allied Powers. Its most material articles were the evacuation of Paris, by the troops 1814] UNDER THE REGENCY 139 of Marraont and Mortier, at seven in the morning of the 31st, taking with them all their military appurtenances ; the entire separation of the National Guard and Municipal Gendarmerie from the troops of the Line, leaving their future condition to the determination of the Allied Powers ; and the relinquish- ment of the Arsenals, Magazines, &c., in the same state as when the Capitulation was proposed. On the same day, the entrance of the Sovereigns into Paris took place, the cere- monial of which is thus described by Sir C. Stewart: "The Cavalry, under the Grand Arch-Duke Constantine, and the guards of all the different allied forces, were formed in columns early in the morning on the road from Bondi to Paris. The Emperor of Russia with all his Staff, his Generals, and their suites present, proceeded to Pantin, where the King of Prussia joined him with a similar Cortege. These Sovereigns, surrounded by all the Princes in the Army, together with the Prince Field Marshal, and the Austrian Etat-Major, passed through the Faubourg St. Martin, and entered the barrier of Paris about eleven o'clock, the Cossacks of the Guard forming the advance of the March. Already was the crowd so enoi-mous, as well as the acclamations so great, that it was difficult to move forward ; but, before the monarchs reached the Porte St. Martin to turn on the Boulevards, there was a moral impossibility of proceeding. All Paris seemed to be assembled and concentrated in one spot ; one spring evidently directed all their movements : they thronged in such masses round the Emperor and King, that, with all their condescending and gracious familiarity, extending their hands on all sides, it was in vain to attempt to satisfy the populace." In the French account it is added that, before the Chiefs of the three armies entered any house, they made their troops file off before them, to preserve discipline, and prevent disorders. They then alighted at the house of the Prince of Benevento (Talleyrand), and the Emperor of Russia issued a declaration expressing the inten- tions of himself and Colleagues. It affirmed that the Allied Sovereigns would no more treat with Napoleon Bonaparte, nor with any of his family ; that they respected the integrity of Ancient France, as it existed under its legitimate kings, and would, perhaps, do more for it; and that they would recognize and guarantee the Constitution which France should adopt. 'On April 1st, the members of the Senate assembled in 140 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 consequence of an Extraordinary Convocation, the Prince of Benevento being President. They passed a Decree, " that there shall be established a Provisional Government, charged to provide for the wants of the Adminittration, and to present to the Senate the plan of a Constitution which may suit the French People." This Government was to consist of five members, who were then nominated, Talleyrand's name standing first. On the proposal of a Senator, the following Articles were voted. That the Senate and Legislative Body are integral parts of the intended Constitution : that the Army, as well as the retired officers and soldiers, shall retain the ranks, honours, and pensions they at present enjoy : that the Public Debts shall be inviolable : that the sale of the National Domains shall be irrevocable : that no Frenchman shall be responsible for the public opinions he may have expressed : that liberty of worship and conscience shall be maintained, as well as liberty of the Press, subject to legal penalties for its abuse. ' At a sitting of the Senate on the following day, a Decree passed, which, after a preamble asserting " that in a Con- stitutional Monarchy the Monarch exists only in virtue of the Constitution or Social Compact," proceeded to show, in a number of Articles, in what manner Napoleon Buonaparte had violated his compact with the French people ; and, as the consequence declared : ' 1. That Napoleon Bonaparte had forfeited the throne, and the hereditary right established in his family is abolished. ' 2. That the French people and the Army are released from their oath of fidelity towards Napoleon Bonaparte. ' 3. That the present Decree shall be transmitted by a message to the Provisional Government of France, conveyed forthwith to all the Departments and the Armies, and immediately proclaimed in all the Quarters of the Capital. A similar resolution was, on the same day, adopted by the Legislative body. ' During these transactions in the Capital, Napoleon moved his army from Troyes by Sens towards Fontainbleau. He arrived at Fromont on the 30th, and would have been in Paris had it not been in the possession of the Allies. On learning what had passed, he retired to Corbeil, and thence to Fontainbleau, whence, on April 4th he sent Marshals Ney and Macdonald, and General Caulaincourt, to carry to the Senate his proposal of submitting to the decision of that body. 18U] UNDER THE REGENCY 141 and of the French people, and to abdicate in favour of his son. ' This proposition being rejected, he announced an un- conditional abdication in the following terms : " The Allied Powers having proclaimed that the Emperor Napoleon was the only obstacle to there-establishment of the peace of Europe, the Emperor Napoleon, faithful to his oath, declares that he renounces, for himself, and heirs, the thrones of France and Italy; and that there is no personal sacrifice, even that of life, which he is not ready to make for the interests of France." ' So fell Napoleon, deserted by all ; his valet. Constant, ran away and robbed him of 100,000 francs; his Mameluke, Rustan, left him, and reaching Paris, would not accompany his master to Elba. Madame Junot says : ' Few persons are aware that Napoleon was doomed to death daring the few days which preceded his abdication, by a band of Conspirators composed of the most distinguished chiefs of the Army. '"But," said one of them in the council in which these demons discussed their atrocious project, " what are we to do with him .'' There are two or three among us, who, like Antony,* would exhibit their blood-stained robes to the people, and make us play the part of Cassius and Brutus. I have no wish to see my house burned, and to be sent into Exile." " Well," said another, " we must leave no trace of him. He must be sent to heaven like Romulus." The others applauded, and then a most horrible discussion com- menced. It is not in my power to relate the details. Suffice it to say, that the Emperor's death was proposed and discussed for the space of an hour, with a degree of coolness which might be expected among Indian savages, armed with tomahawks. " But," said he who had spoken first, " we must come to some determination. The Emperor of Russia is impatient. The month of April is advancing, and nothing has been done. Now, for the last time, we will speak to him of his abdication. He must sign it definitely, or " A horrible gesture fol- lowed the last word.' Baron Fain, in 'The Manuscript of 1814,' says that on the night of the 12th of April, Napoleon attempted to kill him- self by poison : all weapons of destruction having been re- * They alluded to the Due de Bassano, Caulaincourt, Bertrand, and some others. 142 SOCIAL ENGLAND [1814 moved out of his reach, but he had kept the poison by him too long, and it had lost its virtue. It simply gave him great pain. A treaty between the Allied Powers and Napoleon was signed on the 11th of April. By its articles, after his solemn renunciation for himself and his descendants, of the Sove- reignty of France and Italy, it was stipulated that Napoleon, and Maria Louisa, should retain their rank and titles for life, and that all the branches of his family should also possess the title of Princes : that the Island of Elba should form a sepa- rate principality, to be held by him in full sovereignty and property for life ; that there should be granted to him an annual revenue of six million of francs,* with reversion of one million to the Empress, and that, to the members of his family, a revenue of two and a half millions of francs should be assigned. That the Duchies of Parma, Guastalla, and Pla- centia should be granted in full sovereignty to the Empress, with succession to her son and descendants. That the pro- perty possessed by Napoleon in France, as Domain, should form a capital not exceeding two millions of francs, to be expended in gratifications to persons according to a list given in by him ; that free passage should be given to all of the family, and their suites, who chose to establish themselves out of France, and an escort of 1,200 or 1,500 of the Impe- rial Guard to Napoleon himself, to the place of embarkation ; and that he should be allowed to take with him, and retain, 400 men, as his guard. There were a few other Articles to the treaty which was signed by the Ministers of the Allied Powers — England dis- senting and refusing signature to the assignment of Elba to Napoleon, and that of the Italian Duchies to Maria Louisa. And so for a time he fades away, but many, very many Frenchmen thought, and spoke, lovingly of Papa Violette, and Caporal Violette, and hugged themselves with the idea ' En printemps il reviendra :' a prophecy which we know was fulfilled. Bunches of violets similar to the illustration on the opposite page were freely sold in France, and my reader * There was an epigram made on this allowance — ' Celui qui devora de nombreux bataillons, Qui nagea dans le sang, qui vi^out dans la crime, N'a de rente que six millions — Oe n'est pas un sou par victime.' 1814] UNDER THE REGENCY 143 will find that it contains portraits of the Emperor, Maria Louisa, and the King of Rome. But he was supposed to be safely caged at Elba, and the Caricaturists held high revel over his downfall. I should have liked to have reproduced some of them, but I have already VIOLETTES. done so in another book.* Monsieur, the French King's brother, afterwards Charles X., made his public entry into Paris, and was received with every demonstration of joy by the inhabitants. * ' English Caricature and Satire on Napoleon I.' Chatto and Windus. London : CHAPTER XIV. Illuminations for Peace — Ovation to Louis XVIII. — His departure for France — Peace with France — Cheaper provisions — Distin- guished foreign guests in London — Arrival of Emperor of Russia and King of Prussia — Movements of the great folk — Popularity of General Bliicher. Easter Monday fell on the 11th of April, and on that day London yvas brilliantly illuminated, very much better than usual ; but then lights and transparencies had only been, hitherto, used for Victories — this was for Peace, which was welcomed by all with heartfelt thankfulness. The Duchess of Oldenburgh, at the Pulteney Hotel, had 'Thanks be to God ' in variegated lamps. The Duke of Northumberland wreathed the head of his immortal lion with laurels ; the statue of King Charles I. close by, was covered with laurels. Carlton House had its pillars entwined with lamps, the enta- blature marked out with them. On the parapet were six large stars ; in the centre were the Arms of France sup- ported by the figure of Fame, with laurels, under which was Louis XVIH. A pedestal of fire supported two large stars : on the left, were Russia and Austria ; on the right, Prussia and England ; whilst in the centre was a bit of deliciously bad French — 'Five les Bourbons,' all done in silver lamps. I have but space to mention one more, and that is Acker- mann's in the Strand, which was, if possible, more emble- matical than usual. It is thus described: ' A Transparency : The Tyrant Corsican is attacked by Death under the walls of Paris ; the grisly Monarch has placed his foot upon his breast, and holds in one hand an hour-glass, which, almost expended, leaves him just time enough to reflect upon the murders and other atrocities which have attended his wicked Career. The other hand grasps a massive iron spear, with which he is sup- 1814] SOCIAL ENGLAND 145 posed to have been dealing out destruction among the armies of Bonaparte. The fallen Tyrant, in an attitude of terror, supplicates Death to arrest his fatal purpose. Beneath him are broken eagles, torn National Flags, &e., and in his hand he grasps the shattered bloody remains of a sword. On the Walls of Paris are seen Cossacks, and other Russians, Prussians, Austrians, &c., who are raising the standard of the Bourbons. This transparency was surmounted by a brilliant circle of gas- lights, indicative of the union of the world in the Holy Cause ; over this circle was a large white flag spotted ■wiihjleurs de lys, hung out in triumphant display over the tattered, debased, tricoloured banner of the Revolution. On each side of the principal transparency was a smaller one ; the first representing Bonaparte blowing bubbles, which burst as fast as created ; in the other, he was seen amusing himself with building houses and Castles of Cards, which, tumbling down as fast as they are put up, are truly emblematic of the vast achievements of his reign ; a bottle under the table indicative that all his designs have ended in smoke, and a lanthorn to be useful to him should he be inclined to look after his vanished Crown.' The Illuminations were general throughout the Country, and one transparency at Aberdeen (April 14.th) deserves jiotice. It was in the window of a Stocking Manufacturer, and represented a Dutch woman fitting herself with a comfortable worsted stocking, exclaiming, ' Thank God ! Aberdeen hose again.' Louis le desire was laid up with gout at Hartwell in Buck- inghamshire, and did not hurry himself to enter into his kingdom. It had to be done, however, and, moreover, he had to face a public reception in London on the 20th of April. The Prince Regent, and many of the Nobility, met him at the Abercorn Arms at Stanmore : his postilions being clad in white, with white hats, and white cockades. This fancy for exhibiting white, in honour of the colour of the Bourbon flag, took odd expression, for some people exhibited sheets, and even pillow-cases were requisitioned. All the nobility and gentry of that part of Middlesex, and, indeed, almost all who could muster a horse, went a mile or so from Stanmore to meet the King, and accompany him ; nay, there •were even the regulation fools, who took the horses out of his ■Carriage, and drew him in what they called triumph to the Abercorn Arms, where the poor old gouty King was lifted ■out, and tottered to the Inn, where the Regent awaited him. 10 146 SOCIAL ENGLAND [18)4 No longer the Comte de Lisle, he was now Louis the Eighteenth, the desire of his people, and a very important person. They waited at the Inn until the procession was formed, and then they set out in the following order, at twenty minutes past three : — One hundred Gentlemen on horseback. Horse Trumpeters in their splendid gold lace dresses. A numerous party of the Boyal Horse Guards. Six Royal Carriages, beautiful bays to each, the servants with white Cockades. An outrider to each Carriage. A party of the Royal Horse Guards. 1st Carriage. The great Officers of the French Crown ; the Dukes d'Havre and de Grammont, Captains of his Majesty's Guards ; Count de Blacas, Grand Master of the Wardrobe ; and Chevalier de Riviere, his Majesty's first Equerry. 2«rf Carriage. The King of France, the Prince Regent, the Duchesse d'Angouleme, the Prince de Conde. 3rd Carriage, The Due de Bourbon. 4