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SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF George Holly n d . THE VETERAN COMEDIAN, WITH DRAMATIC REM I X [SC E XC ES. ANECDOTES, &c. Edition limited to 250 Copies, 50 of which are on quarto paper. NEW YORK : T . H . MORE E L L 78 Nassau Street. 1871. 7tf' ' MEMORIAL. as actors. AZLITT, an acute critic in all that relates to the stage, has justly observed that "the most pleasant feature in the profession of a player, and which, indeed, is peculiar to it, is that we not only admire the talents of those who adorn it, but we contract a personal intimacy with them. There is no class of society whom so many persons regard with affection We greet them on the stage ; we like to meet them in the streets ; they almost always recall to us pleasant associations ; and we feel our gratitude excited, without the uneasiness of a sense of obligation." As we grow older, and exchange the pleasures of hope for the pleasures of memory, old favorites, who have long passed away, reappear to the mind' s eye in the same character and habiliments as when, in the morning of our life, they min- istered to our amusement, and touched at will the chords of tears or laughter. We come to regard with a tenderer feeling those who have passed from "this bank and shoal of time." Especially is this true, when in our estimate of a departed performer, respect for his character mingles with admiration for his talents. The recent death of Geokue Hollaxd touched many hearts with the sadness of a personal bereavement. In many quarters the wish has been expressed, that, out of the kindly, but fugitive, notices which have ap- 2 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, peared, some memorial might be woven, which, while touching the salient points in his long career as an actor, should do justice, also, to that "characteristic integrity and benevolence which were always apparent in his simulated characters." We are conscious that this wish has been im- perfectly gratified in the following sketch ; but our task will not have been in vain if it lighten the labor of another and more skilful hand. The family Bible of Holland's mother has preserved the record of the date of the birth of seven children, between the years 1783 and 1S0.2. The third name on the list is "George Holland. Born, December Oth, 1791." His father, John Holland, who died in 1816, was a teacher of dancing in the city of London, where all of his children were born. Beside giving instruction in private schools, he also performed at the theatres. His name, as also those of two of his children, occurs in an old play-bill of the Roy- alty Theatre, dated Nov. 27, 1797. The entertainments on this occasion consisted of a serio-comic spectacle, interspers- ed Avith dances and songs, entitled "The Contrast; or, A Peep at the Nore and Texel in October, 1797." The dance and action by Mr. Delpiiixi, Mr. Holland, Master Hol- land, and Miss Holland and Miss Wybrow. The vocal parts by Mr. Hayne, Mr. Wallace, Mr. Burrows, Mr. Earle and Mrs. Francis. After the Brush will be present- ed a musical Tale called "Amurah the Fourth, or the Turkish Harem," by Mr. Digiiton, Mr. Wallace, Mr. King, Mr. Hayne, Mrs. Francis and Mrs. Haelowe. Choruses by Mr. Lewis, Mr. Williams, Mr. Earle, Mrs. Jefferies, Miss Grandy, Mrs. Caene, Mrs. Williams, Mrs. Allen, Mrs. Bypand, Mrs. D'Egville, Miss Taylor, &c." LISS TA¥IL®IE m ID>< - ¥E(STOIMA. THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 3 The whole play-bill from which this extract is made is re- printed in the Dramatic Mirror, London, April 26, 1847, with the following explanatory note : "The manager was the father of W. C. Macready, the eminent tragedian. Collins was the first, with Gf. A. Steven's, of "L3cture on Heads" notoriety, to introduce these table entertainments, which Mathews afterward made so popular. Delpiiini was a famous clown before and af- terward at Covent Garden. The Hollands were the fami- ly of Charles Holland, an admired actor of the days of GrARRicK, and also was born in 1733, first appeared at Dru- ry Lane 1754, and died in 1769. The " Master Holland" became a valuable member of the Drury Lane company daring the Elliston sway. The Mr. Wallace mentioned was the father of James and Henry Wallace. Mrs. Harlowe was the Mrs. Harlowe w T ho made her first ap- pearance at Covent Garden in 1770, and retired from the stage in 1826." There are one or two errors in this extract into which the writer has been betrayed, and which only serve to perplex instead of enlighten the reader. Neither Collins nor Stev- ens were the first to introduce the table performances to which Mathews' "At Home" succeeded. The hint of these entertainments at the time was probably derived from Worsdale, a comedian of a former day, avIio was accustom- ed to give humorous exhibitions, in which, by his fine pow- ers of mimicry, he satirized the foibles of the leading char- acters of the town, and thus eked out a scanty theatrical salary. But Sir William Davenant, a hundred years be- fore, had evoked the Puritanical scrutiny into any violation of the act closing the theatres by the Rutland House per- formances, "after the manner of the ancients." At a later period, Foote gave the English public his en- tertainments, called "The Diversions of the Morning," his "Auction" and his evenins; "Tea and Chocolate Parties." 4 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, However attractive to tlie throngs which flocked to see them they were sufficiently distasteful to the parties "taken off 1 ," as is evident from the lines preserved by Ciietwood, the prompter of Drury Lane, in which Foote is thus angrily addressed : " Thou mimic of Gibber — of Garrick thou ape, Thou fop in Othello — thou cypher in shape, Thou mummer in action — thou coffee-house jester, Thou mimic sans sense — mock hero in gesture," &c. Truth, also, compels us to deny the honor, erroneously attributed to George Holland, of being related to Charles Holland, who enjoyed the advantage of the instructions of Garrick, and when that great actor visited the continent in search of health, was left a joint manager of Drury Lane with George Garrick, Lacy and Powell. All cotempo- rary accounts concur in awarding him great merit as an ac- tor, for which nature, in a bountiful mood, had given him some important requisites, viz: "a fine appearance, a strong, melodious, articulate voice, and a good understand- ing. He died of small pox, at the early age of thirty-six, and a monumental insciTption from the pen of his friend and preceptor, Garrick, was placed in the chancel of Chis- wick Church. An anecdote connected with his funeral has been thus recorded: "George Garrick, who was one of Holland's executors, with his usual good nature, under- took to manage the funeral in a way suitable to his friend' s circumstances, for which purpose he went to Chiswick, and ordered a decent vault, and such other preparations as he thought necessary. Holland' s father was a baker. Foote was invited to the funeral, which, it is said, he attended with unfeigned sorrow ; for exclusive of his real concern for the loss of a convivial companion, whenever he had a seri- ous moment, he felt with very strong susceptibility. While the ceremony was performing, George Garrick remarked to Foote how happy he was, out of respect to his friend, to THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 5 see everything so decently conducted. 'You see,' lie said, ' what a snug family vault we have made here.' ' Family vault,' said Foote, with tears trickling down his cheeks, ' d me, if I did not think it was a family oven.'' ' After having obtained some elementary instruction at one of the preparatory schools in the Parish of Lambeth, George Holland was deemed by his father sufficiently advanced for a higher education than these establishments afforded. He was, accordingly, at the age of fifteen, sent to a board- ing school, of much repute in that day, in Berkhamstead, Hertfordshire, of which the Kev. Dr. Dupkee was the prin- cipal. At this institution he found some fifty pupils, who were preparing for entrance upon a course of collegiate in- struction. "The school house," he says, "was an old Gfothic structure, occupying almost the entire side of the churchyard, which contained also the parish church. It was built like a chapel, and was, indeed, frequently used as such on the Sabbath day by a select congregation, assem- bled to hear the Scriptures expounded by Dr. Dupeee. The external aspect of the place was gloomy enough, and resembled a prison. Adjoining the premises, however, and forming a part of the grounds, was a beautiful lawn, con- sisting of three acres, divided into a garden and play- ground. The latter was kept in order for the game of crick- et, the principal recreation of the scholars. The bats, balls, &c, were procured from "Lord's cricket ground," London, and were in the custody of a person from that establishment, who taught the scholars the rules of the game. The doctor was an experienced and skilful cricket player, and exces- sively fond of the sport, but being a very portly person, could not endure protracted fatigue. For this reason he usually selected me for his "double." When he struck the ball I ran the notches, and when he became wearied of bowling I took his place." These cricket matches were frequently graced by the pres - 6 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, ence of the neighboring gently, and bright eyes and animat- ing voices inspired a friendly rivalry among the players. Much practice made young Holland an adept ; and al- though he did not leave this school until two years elapsed, his proficiency in the game was greater than any of which he could boast in Greek or Latin. But, by that law of com- pensation Avith which Providence appears sometimes to bal- ance the good and ill in our experiences, what he lost in one way, he gained in another. This early out-of-door ex- ercise, at the forming period of life, disciplined the most genial of tempers, and served still further to harden a frame naturally robust, and has better enabled him to fulfil ardu- ous professional engagements at three-score. After leaving this school, Holland obtained a situation as a clerk in a silk warehouse in London. As his services were not immediately required, he enjoj'ed a few weeks va- cation at home. Astley's Amphitheatre was then under the management of Messrs. Crossmax, Smith, and Davis. Smith was an intimate friend of Hollaxd's father, and a frequent visitor at his house. "I well remember," says Hollaxd, " the pleasure he gave me when he first propos- ed to take me to the Amphitheatre." The performances commenced with an exhibition, entitled " Les Ombres Chi- nois," or Chinese shadows — a very ingenious contrivance of pasteboard figures, resembling men and animals, the joints being pliable, and worked with wires behind a painted gauze, or an illuminated screen. The whole was placed be- fore an opening in the curtain, "in such a manner as to ex- hibit various scenes according to pleasure, while the open- ing covered with gauze is illuminated, toward the apartment where the spectators sit, by means of light reflected back from a mirror, so that the shadows of the pegs are conceal- ed. A dialogue suitable to the action of the figures was de- livered, and afforded infinite amusement." This entertainment, which never failed to give pleasure to THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 7 the spectators, was not called "The Chinese Shadows" without reason. It was, doubtless, of Chinese origin, and among the earliest importations from China into England were boxes on which these movable figures were seen when held to the light. But the first city in Europe in which they were exhibited, according to the mode above described was Bologna. Then, as now, those who were accustomed to more expensive luxuries, despised these cheap entertain- ments. But they formed an addition to the sum of the homely joys of the poorer classes of society, and, as has been accurately observed, to say nothing of the amusement they afford, are often ennobled by being applied to more important purposes. A wandering Savoyard constructs a machine for the amusement of children, by means of these shadows, and Lieberkihn converts it into a solar micro- scope. Astley's Amphitheatre long continued one of the most popular places of amusement with the children of London, and its founder, Philip Astley, from whom it derived its name, has been justly denominated the father of the circus. He had enlisted, at the age of seventeen, in the Fifteenth Regiment of cavalry, and during the seven years' war dis- played not merely the daring horsemanship for which he was always distinguished, but so much intelligence mingled with his courage, that he was soon promoted to the rank of sergeant-major. He received, with his discharge from the army, a present of a horse, from General Elliot. With this animal, and another he had purchased, he commenced his first circus performances, in an open field, close to the Half Penny Hatch, Lambeth, receiving only such remuner- ation from the spectators as they voluntarily bestowed. Out of such humble beginnings, the first permanent structure arose, which, in 1790, was thrown open to the public, and called the " Amphitheatre Riding House," to avoid any 8 MEMOIR OF GEOEGE HOLLAND, seeming interference with the rights of the existing dramatic monopolies. To add to the attraction of the equestrian feats, a stage was erected with some attempt at scenery, and music and dancing made a part of the exhibition. For this violation of the legitimate drama, as by law established, he was arrest- ed and imprisoned. Fortunately, he had given instruction in riding to the daughters of Lord Tiiurlow, and with the generosity of their sex, they pleaded with their father, and not only obtained his release, but a license for future enter- tainments. His amphitheatre Avas now made more tasteful and spacious, and was known as the Boyal Grove, a name afterward changed to the "Amphitheatre of Arts," but " Astley's" was its familiar and popular designation. Philip Astlet died of gout, at Paris, in 1814. His ca- reer furnishes a striking illustration of the extent to which a quick observation, steadiness of purpose, and a natural vigor of understanding, may supply the deficiencies of edu- cation. He had a singular faculty of inspiring confidence in any undertaking, and a correct judgment even in matters where it might be supposed the aid of others was the most indispensable. Dramatic authors, who had vainly knocked at the doors of Drury Lane and Covent Garden, found a hearing at the Amphitheatre. Thomas Bibdin, the prolific parent of such a progeivy of plays and pantomimes, records with triumph that, after having fruitlessly essayed an en- trance into these temples of the legitimate drama, Astley purchased of him in one day "Blind Man's Bun ; or Who Pays the Beckoning," "The Glazier," "The Pirates; or Harlequin Woodcutter," and u Two Sides of the Question." The pleasure Holland had enjoyed in attending the Am- phitheatre expired with his vacation, and he entered upon his duties as a clerk with Messrs. Hill and JNewcombe, silk manufacturers, Cheapside. After the lapse of six months, this firm removed their business, and Holland THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. g obtained employment from a new one, Messrs. Ballou and LtjshIngton, Bankers, Cornnill. He was an out-door clerk, and was compelled in foul or fair weather to walk about ten miles each day, to collect the amount of bills due. Illness, occasioned, perhaps, by over-fatigue, which lasted three months, caused the loss of his situation, which had in the meantime been filled. He was soon afterward, how- ever, engaged by Messrs. Barber & Sons, Bill Brokers, Cowper's Court, Cornhill. His duties here were the reverse of those he had previously discharged, and consisted chiefly in writing, with little or no opportunity for out-door exercise. He remained here six months, scarcely sufficient to in- doctrinate him in the mysteries of kite-flying, when he lost his place by another severe attack of sickness. It now seemed impossible for him to obtain employment, which he sought diligently in every direction. He daily read the ad- vertisements in the papers— a much more expensive occu- pation than could now be imagined, for the newspaper had not yet become, what Bulwer happily calls it, "a law book for the indolent, a sermon for the thoughtless, and a library for the poor." Holland's next employment seems to have been deter- mined by accident. As he was one day walking through Soho Square, a placard in the window of a printing office arrested his attention. "It contained the following an- nouncement: ' Newman 's Echo Lists? giving a synopsis of advertisements published in all the daily papers, ar- ranged under their respective heads, and printed on lists, ready for the perusal of subscribers at ten o'clock every morning, (Sunday's excepted.) Subscription, one shilling per week." Holland introduced himself to the proprietor, and was forthwith employed to conduct the business of the office, which prospered exceedingly, and in a short time Newman might have acquired a comfortable independence. 10 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, But, if poverty wants many things, ambition wants every- thing. Flushed with the success which had hitherto at- tended him, Newman's ideas expanded beyond the Echo Lists, and he, unfortunately, conceived the project of es- tablishing a weekly newspaper. So infatuated was he with the new scheme, that there was a perceptible decline in his attention to the supervision and printing of the Lists. It was his design to re-publish the various articles that appear- ed in the different leading journals, in the proposed weekly, so that at a glance, and in the same paper, the reader might see the diversity of opinion upon public occurrences and subjects of current interest. This, in fact, had been the plan (a novel one at that period) of the world-renowned " Gentleman's Magazine," so remarkable as a continuous publication, the first number of which was issued in 1733, under the title of ' ' The Gentleman s, or Monthly Intelligen- cer, by Sylvanus Urban, Gent," The original purpose of Cave, its projector, was to condense the more important articles which appeared in the weekly newspapers into a monthbv collection, "a method," he states in his advertise- ment, "much better calculated to preserve those things that are curious, than by transcribing." Hence, we see the title-page of the early volumes ornamented with a device t3 T pical of this general design, viz : A hand grasping a bou- quet of flowers, under which are the words, ' ' E Pluribus L T num," afterward adopted as our national motto. It is not necessary to follow the fortunes of Newman' s newspaper, which was called the "-Echo." Holland's employment in the office ended with its disastrous failure. For some time thereafter he lived at home, and it was during this period that he acquired a knowledge of fencing from his eldest brother, who was taking lessons in the use of the small-sword from the celebrated Professor Roland, with a view to teaching the art himself. In the course of two months, the young Geoege became THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. H sucli a proficient that in after years the knowledge thus ac- quired, from the lessons of his brother, was frequently turn- ed to good account. Holland spent the next two years in a vain attempt to become a printer, in the office of Thomas Davidson, whose establishment, at the White Friars, was then considered one of the largest book- printing houses in the city. The embryo actor, however, found something much more con- genial than the printing office, in rowing matches, sparring exhibitions, and other similar amusements. He had al- ready formed the acquaintance of such champions of the "Ring" as "Tom Cribb," "Molineaux," "Tom Bel- cher," "Dutch Sam," " Iky Solomons," and others. Boxing, so peculiar to England, and which dates no far- ther back than the earlier part of the eighteenth century, was then much in vogue, and among the patrons of the manly art of self-defence, were some of the most distin- guished of the nobility and gentry. Lord Byron, it is well known, took great delight in sparring, and in one of the notes of his last work, he refers to his old friend and cor- poreal pastor and master, Johx Jackson, professor of pugilism. The fashion, which had all the attraction of novelty, being set by such illustrious examples, . people of every condition endeavored to obtain some skill in what was considered a manly accomplishment. Boating, however, was the sport in which Holland's feats of skill and strength were exhibited to the most advantage. He had, very early, become a member of a boat club, and in a short time acquired a reputation as one of the most expert of the boatsmen. With the advantages of the tide, both ways, he would frequently pull to Richmond and back, with a pair of sculls. Richmond is reckoned twenty miles from London Bridge, and to row there and back was considered a great feat for an amateur boatman. The river Thames, especially where it winds round the classic banks of Rich- 12 MEMOIR OF GEOEGE HOLLAND, moncl and Twickenham, with its frequent villas, sloping lawns, and uplands, crowned with majestic trees, presents a succession of pleasing pastoral views, very charming to the eye of a Londoner. Spencer calls it " the silver streaming Thames,'' and other and later poets have sung its attrac- tions. Gray would not hear a word said against it. "Do you think,'" said he, in a letter to Walpole, dated August 13, 1754, "that rivers, which have lived in Lon- don and its neighborhood all their days, will run roaring and tumbling about like your Tramontane torrents in the North ? No, they only glide and whisper." With the increase of population, and the introduction of railroads, the Thames has long ceased to be, as of old, the common highway of London. The skill for which its water- men were famous, has been transmitted to their successors — if they can, with propriety, be so called — and has been fostered by annual regattas, the favor of the public, and permanent prizes. Among the latter may be mentioned the coat and silver badge, for which Doggett, the actor, be- queathed a portion of the fortune he so early acquired, that he took leave of the stage in the noon of his reputation. The terms of his legacy provided that the prize should be rowed for the first day of every August, by six watermen, whose terms of apprenticeship had expired the year before. No wonder that a stout, active boy, such as Holland was at this time, escaping from the confinement of the pent-up city, should have given more time to these fascinating sports than prudence warranted. After two years' service in the printing office, the pros- pect of commencing business on his own account was dissi- pated by the death of the friend who had persuaded him to learn the trade. He determined to seek other employment, if Mr. Davidson would consent to cancel his indentures. This was kindly acceded to, and he was again at liberty. For the next two years Holland was employed as a com- THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 13 mercial traveler in Ireland, visiting Drogheda, Newry, Downpatriok, Hillsborough, Belfast, Antrim, Coleraine, Londonderry, Sligo, Enniskillen and Armagh, and almost eveiy important town in the country. He is still remember- ed for the fair dealing and irresistible good humor, which made him the most popular commercial traveler in Ireland. In 1816, the death of the principal of the firm for which he acted, caused the business in Ireland to be discontinued. Holland was thereupon employed as an agent for a firm in Nottingham, and soon cards were in circulation bearing the inscription: "George Holland's Wholesale Thread Lace Warehouse, Crow street, Dublin. The old theatre was situated at the end of the street, and in front of his warehouse, was the famous house of enter- tainment kept by Peter Kearney, and frequented by members of the theatrical profession, whose acquaintance Holland then formed. It is not necessary for our present purpose to enter into any further detail respecting his resi- dence in Ireland. With lasting recollections of its kind- hearted people, he again returned to England. When Holland arrived in London, he found mercantile affairs in a very depressed state. Having imbibed a taste for the stage, and meeting several of its members whose ac- quaintance he had formed in Dublin, he was induced by their persuasions to enter upon his career as an actor. The eccentric Elliston, of whom it has been said that if he had been born in Paraguay, he must have found his way to Drury Lane, Avas at that time the lessee of the London Olympic Theatre. His stagemanager was Samuel Russell, or Jerry Sneak Russell, as he was professionally called, on account of his inimitable performance of that character. With this gentleman, Holland entered into an engagement of six weeks — all the unexpired time of the season — at a compensation of five pounds per week. Elliston subse- quently engaged him for his theatre at Birmingham ; but 14 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, the engagement was a verbal one, and when Holland and Mr. Brodie — a fellow actor at the Olympic, who was also included in the engagement — had walked on foot from Lon- don to Birmingham, they met Elliston in the street. No sooner had Holland made some allusions to the engage- ment, when Elliston exclaimed : ' ' Engagement ! why, my dear sir, have yon any articles of mine V ' " Not that I know of," said Holland, "your wardrobe- keeper loaned me a wig, which I returned at the end of the season." "Wig!" exclaimed Elliston, "I mean articles of en- gagement. ' ' After some further conversation, he left the moneyless pair staring at each other in mute astonishment, promising, however, that when he arrived in London the next day, he would consult Brunton, the stage manager, and endeavor to make room for them. Some days of anxiety were pass- ed, when the following letter was received : Stafford Place, May 19, 1817. To Mr. Brodie : Sir — The different applications and answers I have found in London, from persons whom I have promised to attend to, leave me in doubt whether I ought to extend my com- pany. If, however, you and Mr. Holland have nothing better to accept, and fifteen shillings a week is an object to you, I will very readily make situations for you. But, it must be distinctly understood by both, that you and Mr.' Holland are to assist in every department, as your services may be required, and if each of you do this with a willing spirit, it may lead to something permanent at the Olympic Theatre. I leave town on Thursday. If I do not hear, therefore, to the contrary, by the post of that day, you will be included in the list for the approaching season. R. W. Elliston. Mr. Brodie, " Holland. ' - "a 1 .' ? 1&.1B27, )■> JOHK ■..■;.■!■...■. ; .: ESTDfJFTB ■ ■ THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 15 Nothing but the pressure of necessity induced them to ac- cept Elliston's offer, which, with great unanimity on the part ot both, was regarded as very inadequate ; but Hol- land's spirits, which never had any great alacrity in sink- ing, rose when his companion informed him that, with prop- er management, a steady man might live sumptuously on fifteen shillings a week in Birmingham. So he repaired to the" theatre, and was duly enrolled by the stage manager, Mr. Brunton, whose son, Richard, was the scenic artist of the theatre, and whose beautiful daughter, afterward the Countess of Derby, was an actress so finished that while her style seemed borrowed from none, was yet a model for all. Her eldest sister, better known to us as Mrs. Wignell, of the earlier American stage, was an unfailing attraction at the Bark Theatre, in this city, as Horatio,, Palmira, Calis- ta, Eurasia, Belvidera, Alicia, Isabella, Juliet, and kin- dred creations of the drama. " In America," says Ireland, in his " Becords of the New York Stage," "she has since been equalled in pathos by Mrs. Duff, and surpassed in sublimity by Fanny Kemble ; but, excepting these two, every tragic actress since here would suffer by a comparison with this highly gifted woman." The opening plays on this occasion of Holland's appear- ance at Birmingham were Maturin's gloomy tragedy of "Bertram" and the "Broken Sword." He was cast for one of the monks in the the former, and for the Baron in the latter piece. The following is his own account of the personatiou of these characters. "I studied the parts of the Monk and the Baron, but had not a single theatrical property. Brodie told me he would get the wardrobe keeper to select the dresses, and that he himself would assist me at night. This, however, he failed to do, but requested one of the gentlemen who played one of the monks, and shared my room, to aid me dress. I flat- tered myself that I made a fair appearance as a monk and 16 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, cherished the further delusion that my performance had been without any particular fault. My associate monk, however, informed me, after the piece was over, that while I had a good voice, my articulation was so bad, he could only make out a word here and there. This did not snprise me, for I remember speaking in what I called my tragedy voice. " Bertram 1 ' being a tragedy, I thought it was requisite, and not being perfect, I did not stick for words, but kept wha, whaing, some rumbling, deep tones, until I gave the cue, which I took care to have perfectly. "After the play, I hurried to the dressing-room to prepare lor the Bare -n. There, I found a queer looking dress, much too large for me, red stockings, and an old pair of russet shoes with large white rosettes. My friend, the Monk, dressed me, completing the costume by placing a large ruff around my neck. He then surveyed me admiringly for a few moments from head to foot, and exclaimed, " now, for your face." Another gentleman, who was dressing in the same room, said he would hear me repeat my part while my face was being painted. I thanked him kindly for the of- fer, feeling rather doubtful about being perfect in it. My artistic friend, in the meantime, was busy lining my face, as it is termed, occasionally retiring back a few steps to ob- serve the effect, and then exclaiming, " Ah ! that is it — an- other line just here — there — now a dark shade for the hol- low cheek ! Is it not beautiful V ' appealing to the gentleman who was hearing me my part. He then in glowing terms al luded to the effect or enchantment produced by distance. Throwing up his hands with as much admiration as any ar- tist after the completion of the most elaborate portrait, he exclaimed, "Noav, for your wig!" which he stuck on my head without my seeing it. I felt it was too small, and told him so. But he still kept tugging at it, saying, "What a thundering thick head you have, to be sure. Ah ! a little of your hair seen. I will soon arrange that," ' and he forth- THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 17 with rubbed the whitening ball all around the edge of my own hair to make it agree with the wig. I asked for the looking glass, but he informed me that Mr. Elliot had taken it into his room ; being the first night, some of the rooms were not furnished with all the requisites. " You are all right, however, my boy, there is no need of a glass — I hear the curtain bell, better be at your post." The dressing- room was under the stage, and, on my way to the first wing I could hear the dialogue on the stage. Not wishing to be bothered by any observation, before I went on, I paused and kept repeating my part until the time arrived for me to be at the wing. Then up I went. Mr. Bruxtox, the stage manager, who played Esterven, was standing in the en- trance. As soon as he saAv me he started, and exclaimed : "My God, who are you?" " Rather confused by his manner and question, I replied, faintly : "I'm the Baron!*' "The Baron! the devil!" said he. " What on earth do you look like l You cannot go on the stage in that figure." "Just then Mr. Elliott, who played Claudio, linked his arm in mine, saying, "Holland, that's our cue," and dragged me on the stage, where we were greeted with a roar of laughter such as I have never heard equalled. This re- ception, with Mr. Bruxtox's furious manner of speaking to me, drove all recollection of my part out of my head. How- ever, I proceeded to say something, amid roars of laughter and loud shouts of "Beautiful! go it, AYigby ! bravo! bravo !" and when the noise subsided a little, some fellow in the gallery roared out in a hollow voice, "Very much bravo !" This settled the Baron. I dashed off the stage, ran to my dressing-room, crammed my shoes, stockings, cap, and all the small articles into my carpet-bag, and with my street clothes under my arm, bolted from the theatre. My lodgings were not far off. I ran at full speed, and did not 3 18 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, stop until safely domiciled in my own room, where I sank into a chair qnite exhausted, feeling a sort of choking sensa- tion in my throat and a moisture in my eyes. When a little more composed, I placed the looking-glass so as to get a full view of myself. Notwithstanding my vexation, and I may say sorrow, I could not help laughing. No part of my dress had the least appearence of adjustment. My face was one mass of black, red and white lines. Immense black eye- brows frowned over a gloomy red forehead. My head was surmounted with a dirty white wig, having a high topnot, side curls frizzed out to a point, the whole being in the form of a triangle, with a large black tail sticking out behind. Imagine this head gear stuck quite upon the top of my cra- nium, with a broad band of chalk around the edge of it to cover my own black hair, which was quite prominent. I gazed at myself for some time, occasionally exclaiming : " 'I'm the baron! Yes, I'm the baron ! and a damned handsome baron I am ! ' " The following morning I sent the various parts of the baron 1 s dress to the theatre, as I had resolved to go there no more until Mr. Ellistox's return. When the boy came back, he brought with him the pleasing intelligence that my name was chalked in large letters all about the doors of the the theatre, ' Holland, the Baron of Birmingham ! ' " When Ellistox came to Birmingham he sent for Hol- laxd, who, in the presence of Mr. Beuxtox, related the joke that had been played upon him by the person who dressed him for the Baron. The affair was satisfactorily ar- ranged, Holland returned to his engagement, and was ul- timately appointed as the prompter of the company, at a salary of a guinea a Aveek. Macready appeared, as a star in Bob Roy, and other characters, during this season, at Birmingham, and Vixcext De Camp, then a dashing come- dian, also played a short engagement. De Camp, at this period of his engagement at Birmingham, was negotiating THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 19 for a lease of the theatre at Newcastle-upon-Tyne, which, having succeeded in obtaining, he engaged Holland's ser- vices for the new enterprise. To London Holland now re- paired, to make arrangements for his journey to Newcastle. There was no railroad or steamboat communication in that day between these cities. The journey by coach was ex- pensive and tedious, and he was fain to take passage in a brig of some three hundred tons, lying at Tower wharf. Miss Povey, Mr. Grant, the elder Booth, and other thea- trical celebrities, were the companions of his voyage. The "School for Scandal" and the "Forty Thieves," were the plays selected for the opening night at Newcastle, Monday December 28th, 1818. Holland was cast in the comparatively unimportant part of Moses, in the comedy. The principal parts of a play may not be always those wdiich are best performed, but being commonly those upon which the interest hinges, they must always receive the greatest share of favor. Sheridan's brilliant comedy, how- ever, affords all the actors a scope which is denied them in many other plays, and Moses may share in the applause bestowed upon the sentimental Joseph, or the light-hearted Charles. Being not so much a copy of existing manners, as a vehicle for neat retort and brilliant antithesis, the " School for Scandal" calls for textual analysis, and a just elocution, not merely on the part of the leading actors, but also on the part of those who represent the subordinate characters. The overflowing wit of the principals falls upon the subordinates, whose dialogue is animated with like point, and sparkles with similar repartee. Baddeley, whose name has been perpetuated hy his be- quest for the relief of indigent persons belonging to the Drury Lane Theatre, and whose memory is pleasantly asso- ciated with cake and wine in the green-room on twelfth night, was the original representative of Moses — a part which he is said to have studied with uncommon dili°;ence. 20 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, In this respect lie had an imitator in Holland, who was naturally desirous of making a good impression upon his first appearance, and who was aided in this wish by the op- portunities his extended journeys had afforded him, for ob- serving the characteristics which everywhere distinguish the Jewish money-lender. His performance on this occasion fairly entitled him to a share of the honors of the night, and made a very favorable impression both upon the per- formers and the audience. The cast of the plays on the night so eventful in the life of Holland, embraces the names of so many performers favorably known on both sides of the Atlantic, that we present it entire : SCHOOL FOE SCANDAL. Mr. Grant, Mr. Jefferson. Mr. George Butler. . Mr. Tyrone Power. Mr. De Camp. Sir Peter Teazle, Oliver Surface, Crabtree, . Joseph Surface, Charles Surface, Careless, Moses, Trip, . Lady Teazle, . Lady Sneerwell, Maria, Mrs. Candour, Hasserac, Morgiana, . Mr. FORTY THIEVES. Mr. Huntley. George Holland. Mr. Charles Hill. Miss Barry. Miss Forbes. Miss Povey. Mrs. Henry. Tyrone Power. . Mrs. Usher. Dances by the Misses Pincott. Stage Manager, Mr. Johnson. Leader of the Orchestra, Mr. Ives. Scenic Artist, Mr. Henry. Mrs. Usher Avas a sister of the late James "Wallace, V A THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 21 and possessed the aptitude for the stage which seems a fam- ily characteristic. Miss Povey was afterward at the Park Theatre, New York, and married Mr. Edward Knight, a highly popular vocalist in most of the cities of the United States. We have recorded his name at length for the bene- fit of the future illustrators of dramatic biography, who will be sufficiently plagued by the numerous Smiths, James, and Knights. The Misses Pincotts named in the cast, were daughters of Mrs. Usher. Ciiaeles Hill is still living, and now a resident of the City of New York. He is the father of the excellent comedian, Barton Hill. The friendship between Hill and Holland, thus begun at New- castle, we are glad to know, has never known a cloud since their first meeting. The leader of the orchestra was a brother of the celebrated Mrs. Orger, the Mrs. John Wood of her day, who had no superior as seconds in comedy, singing chambermaids, and in burlesque and characters of broad humor. She was an attractive star, even in the gal- axy in which Miss F. M. Kelly, Miss Lydia Kelly, and Miss Powell shone. Poor Tyrone Power, who had tried his prentice hand in Dublin, as Romeo, it will be seen was still groping his way in parts unsuited to his genius. Perhaps, like the elder Bannister, and many other aspirants, he was struck with the charms of the tragic muse. Nine years from, the night here spoken of, passed away before he played an original Irish character — O'Shaugiinessy, in Peake's farce of "The £100 Note" — and inscribed his name highest on the list of those who have made the representation of Irishmen on the English and American stages their specialty. John John- stone, the grandfather of Lester Wallace, or Irish Johnstone, as he was commonly called, from his popular representation of Irish characters, was superior to Power as a vocalist, and, perhaps, excelled him in such parts as Sir Callagiian O'Brallaghan, Sir Lucius O'Trigger, 22 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, and Major O 1 Flaherty, for which his handsome person and high-bred air gave him peculiar advantages. Owing to mistaken choice, persistence in error, or the exigencies of the managers, he resembled Power in his long years of ex- elusion from the line of characters in which both were ulti- mately to excel, and for which Nature had so evidently de- signed them. The contrast between them has been drawn with nice discernment. " Joiixstone brought to perfection an existing style, but Power created a new one for himself. Both studied from nature ; but Power, although by much the younger man, had opened more leaves of her polyglot volume, as he had seen greater varieties of human character, in different and far distant countries, and led a life of superior travel and adventure. He introduced a new school of acting, founded on his own inexhaustible energy. Authors began to write pieces for him, which partook of the mono-dramatic class. In these he was the Alpha and the Omega, seldom absent from the stage, while the laugh never ceased, and the audi- ence never yawned. As the curtain fell after three or four hours of joyous excitement, there stood Tyrone Power, fresh, smiling and untired as when he bounded on the stage under the first burst of acclamation which greeted his en- trance. Natural spirits made his labor light, and doubled the satisfaction of the spectators, who felt that he entertain- ed them without an effort." Power left the Newcastle company at the close of the season of 1S19, and parted from Hollaxd with the regret which is heightened on such occasions by mutual respect and friendship. Power was the most genial of men, and the abounding fun and good humor of Hollaxd had diffus- ed over their intercourse a continual sunshine. Twenty years afterward they met at the St. Charles Theatre, New- Orleans, Holland as the Treasurer of the establishment, and Power as the most attractive star of the season. Dur- THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 23 ing this engagement lie made an arrangement with Holland to join him in London, as he designed leasing one of the theatres in that city — a purpose which was never destined to be realized. He sailed from New York in the ill-fated steamship President, which was never heard of more. The following letter is among the last traced by the hand of poor Power : Charleston, February 4, 1840. My Dear Holland : — Here I am after four days have passed — picked up a fishing smack blown off the shore — landed here all right. The Shannon not in, nor while this wind lasts can she get in. I do not know that in my letter I fully explain to Caldwell my not treating with Martin. I found out that they were speculating on Esslee, and, therefore, thought it best not to mention the matter of let- ting the St. Charles. Mr. Caldwell woirid not let it very readily on any terms, and I did not meet with success with Essler, I understand this was the most polite course of dealing with these folks. I open here on the 8th, and in New York on the 1st of March. Let me hear from you, if I can do anything. Offer regards to Caldwell, and believe me, ever, Yours truly, Tyrone Power. At a termination of his engagement, Holland became prompter of one of the minor theatres in Manchester, but again returned to Newcastle, where he continued as a mem- ber of the company for five seasons. These began in De- cember and ended in May. The following performers, all of whom subsequently came to the United States, were at dif- ferent periods members of the Newcastle company : Thomas S. Hamblin, Thomas Flynn, Tyrone Power, William Mitchell, William Bellamy, Charles Hill, Mr. Plumer, Mr. Wm. Conway, who acted as prompter, Mrs. Stokes, Mrs. Pincot, Miss Povey, and Miss Blanchard. Darin,"' Holland's last season at Newcastle, an engagce- ment had been made with the celebrated ventriloquist, Mon- sieur Alexandre, avIio appeared in his amusing entertain- ment entitled " The Rogueries of St. Nicholas," which met 24 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, with great success, and induced Holland to try liis own powers in "The "Whims of a Comedian." Monsieur Alexandre was very much esteemed by the other per- formers, besides delighting the good people of Newcastle with his clever assumptions of various characters by means of quick changes of dress and a marvelous ventriloquism. The elder Mathews had much talent in this way, which was first exercised for the amusement of his personal friends, and afterward more elaborately in his "Adventures in a Mail Coach," and his various " At Homes." Like Francis Blissett, and the elder Jefferson, he invariably declined all invitations to appear for hire at private parties, and shared their wholesome horror of being the buffoon of a social gathering. His characteristic delicacy in this respect, his second wife has recorded with a mingled regret and ad- miration. He gave one of these exhibitions at Abbotsford, and Scott says in his Diaiy, "he confirms my idea of ven- triloquism (which is an absurd word) as being merely the art of imitating sounds at a greater or less distance, assisted by some little points of trick to influence the imagination of the audience — the vulgar idea of a peculiar organization (be- yond fineness of ear or of utterance) is nonsense." Like Mathews, and in fact every one of distinction in the king- dom, Alexandre found his way to Abbotsford, where, with other visitors, he was hospitably enteitainedby the dis- tinguished host. In the evening, Alexandre added great- ly to the pleasure of the party by his unrivalled imitations. Next morning, as he was about to depart, Sir Walter was sorely puzzled how to reward him ; for, perhaps, aware of his friend Matthew's known views, he feared lest a pecuni- ary offer might wound the feelings of one who had been honored as his guest. So, he concluded to pay him in his own coin, and, retiring for a few moments, returned and placed in the hands of Alexandre the following epigram, ■ ..,, - ■ ■ 1 BOTIKlg OF WEMIIHiBTOH. THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 25 which has additional point from the circumstance of Scott being at the time Sheriff of the county ! "Of yore, in Old England, it was not thought good To carry two visages under one hood, What should folks say to you ? who have faces so plenty, That under one hood, you last night showed us twenty. Stand forth, arch deceiver! and tell us in truth, Are you handsome or ugly, in age, or in youth? Man, woman, or child, — a dog, or a mouse, Or are you at once each live thing in the house- Each live thing did I say ! each dead implement, too, A workshop your person, saw, chisel, and screw T ! Ahove all, are you one individual ? I know You must he, at least, Alexandre & Co ; But I think you're a troop, an assemhlage, a mob, And that I, as the SheritF, should take up the job, And instead of rehearsing your wonders in verse, Must take the Riot Act, and bid you disperse." It was the boast of Mathews that the Duke of Welling- ton received him at his table, not as Punch, but as a pri- vate gentleman. Xot his gallery of faces, but his sterling character, opened such doors to him. Much of the consid- eration which Alexandre enjoyed, and of which the lines above quoted, which will long perpetuate his name, is a proof, was due to the same cause. He may have been a harlequin on the stage, but he was always a gentleman off it. Whatever his tricks, he was never a trickster, and de- spite his disguises, was a stranger to deception. We once spant a delightful evening with him — now many years ago — in the city of Washington. Like Pkospeeo, he had broken his wand and buried his book, and with a new name (for he was then Monsieur Tattermere), was enacting a new part "in this wide and universal theatre." He had visited our seat of government for the purpose of promoting the establishment of a system of national exchanges of works of art, science, and literature between Europe and America. But, on the occasion referred to, his thoughts £6 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, were diverted from this favorite project. He had, that evening, received a letter from a friend in Paris, describing the abdication of Louis Philippe and the downfall of his dynasty, events which had just occurred. A tri-color of no mean dimensions was emblazoned on the envelope. The bright-eyed, intelligent Frenchman was enthusiastic at the prospect of the new republic, which his correspondent as- sured him would usher in a reign of "liberty, fraternity and equality," when virtue, not wickedness, was to sit in high j)laces — power, like some beneficent deity, only seen when interposing to protect the weak from the oppression of the strong, and when rich and poor, sustaining more kindly relations toward each other, as in common they strove for the development and perfection of a new and better system of society, were "to share the altered world." " Alas ! since Time itself began That fable still hatli fooled the Lour, Each age that ripens power in man But ripens man for power." A shocking catastrophe occurred at the Newcastle Theatre on Wednesday evening, Feb. 19, 1823, caused by an alarm of fire, occasioned by the sudden appearance of a liame is- suing from a defective gas pipe leading to one of the chan- deliers which hung in front of the boxes. It occurred dur- ing the performance of "Tom and Jerry," which always at- tracted a crowded gallery. The spectators in that part of the theatre rushed to the stairs, and before the check-takers could open the gate of the second barrier the space became completely blocked up. Seven persons were crushed to death, and a large number seriously injured. The next day the following card appeared in the daily papers : "TO THE PUBLIC. " Mr. De Camp, deeply impressed with grief at the melan- choly occurrence at the theatre last evening, takes this op- portunity of publicly thanking the owners of the theatre, THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 27 the coroner and gentlemen of the jury, for the expression of their approbation of his conduct upon that terrible occasion. He also sincerely thanks the medical gentlemen who so as- sidously lent their professional aid to the suffering. As a mark of respect to the memory of the departed, the theatre will be closed until Monday, the 24th." About a month previous to the close of Holland's last season at Newcastle, Mrs. Usher, on behalf of her husband, a celebrated clown, engaged him as stage manager for the Manchester Theatre, when it was proposed, during the Summer, to give entertainments consisting of melo-drama, dancing and comic pantomime. Holland had never seen Usher, but was aware of his popularity, as also of his sin- gular feats outside the theatre. One of these was his being drawn for half a mile on the Waterloo Road by four cats, another, sailing on the Thames in a washing tub drawn by four geese. According to agreement Holland set out for Kendal, where he was to meet Mr. and Mrs. Usher. Arriv- ing in the town, he was surprised to read the following bill, which was conspicuously posted in different quarters : " The manager takes pleasure in announcing that he has at great expense engaged Mrs. Usher, from the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, who will perforin Mrs. Ilaller in the play of the "Stranger," the performance to conclude with a new "COMIC PANTOMIME, in which Mr. GEORGE HOLLAND, the Celebrated Harlequin, will appear. Also, Mr. Usher, the popular clown from the Royal Coburg Theatre, who will perform his wonderful feat, which has put all London in a furore, of being drawn round the stage by his four cats, Tibby ! Tabby ! ! Toddle ! ! ! and Tot ! ! ! ! " With nervous haste Holland posted after Mr. Usher, and remonstrated With him, expressing his astonishment at 28 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, being placarded as a celebrated harlequin, when he had never performed the character. Usher replied : "I was ex- tremely vexed myself when I saw the bills, but the gentle- man who has traveled and performed the character with us was taken suddenly ill a few days since, and we were com- pelled to leave him in a neighboring town. Upon my arriv- al here, T informed the manager of the fact, and supposed he would have selected one of his own company for the part. I casually mentioned that you would join me to-day, but made no suggestion as to your being cast in Harlequin. However, my dear Mr. Hollaxd, the role will give you very little trouble, as Mrs. Usher is, I am proud to say, the best pantomimic actress upon the stage, and Avill teach you all the attitudes in half an hour." Hollaxd at length reluctantly consented, and during the day received his first lesson in attitude and dancing for Harlequin. The following morning he accompanied Usher to the theatre, who showed him the wonderful machine in which he made the circuit of the stage apparently drawn by his celebrated cats. It consisted of a small plat- form, mounted upon three wheels. The wheel upon each side was worked by a crank, turned by his feet placed upon the treadles. The wheel in front he turned and guided by means of an iron rod, which being placed upright in front of him, had the appearance of being placed there merely for the purpose of resting his hand upon it as he held the reins. Upon the platform was a neat wicker basket about four feet high, made and decorated like a Roman chariot. The bottom of it was surrounded with a drapery which con- cealed the working of the machinery. Attached to the front was a small shaft, or pole, five feet long, with two grooves, which admitted cross-pieces, upon which the cats were previously strapped. When the feat was about to be p3rform3d the chariot is discovered upon the stage with the rear toward the audience. Usher made his appearance, THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 29 bowed, and stepped into the chariot. The cats were then brought on, carried under the arms of attendants, the cross- pieces, to which the cats were attached, were slipped into the grooves, (one on each side of the shaft,) and there secur- ly fastened by means of wooden buttons. The reins were then attached to the cat's head gear, and handed to Usher, who, during the operation above described, gave numerous orders respecting the harnessing. Then, cracking his whip, and working the treadles, away he went amid thunders of applause from the audience, driving the cat' s wherever he cliose to guide them. Their feet scarcely touched the ground, as the cross-pieces sustained them, and their fran- tic efforts to get loose had the appearance of a great and struggling endeavor to draw such a weighty vehicle. This novel motive power at that time (1818) had seldom been witnessed, and was one of the most successful clown tricks. Usher and his cats became the talk of the country. At rehearsal, Holland was introduced to the sisters Standard, the eldest of whom was to be the Columbine, and Avhom he met fifteen years afterward in Norfolk, Vir- ginia. The curtain rose to a crowded audience. Holland had a capital Harlequin's dress and a new mask, which, never having been used, had only a small puncture in each eye, so that during the performance he was much incon- venienced by his limited field of vision. It was owing to this circumstance that in the pas de deux, which he danced with his fair Columbine, both fell upon the stage, to the great amusement of the audience. A much more serious accident occurred to him from the overturning of a stage-coach, which was conveying a part of De Camp's company from the ancient city of Chester to Sheffield. Holland was carried into a baker's shop, and placed alongside of the prompter, Mr. Niblet, avIio was al- so among the injured. In fact, so many were bruised or wounded, as to render the next performance quite notice- 30 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, able. One entered with his arm in a sling, a second with a bandage over his eye, and a third limping with the aid of sx cane. The next day, one of the papers, in criticising the per- formance, remarked that occasionally considerable talent was displayed by the performers, but take them all in all, they were a very lame company. Mr. Niblet, the prompter, had a daughter who afterward appeared at the Broadway Theatre, New York, under the name of Rose Telbin. She reversed the letters of her sur- name "Niblet, 1 ' and thereby obtained a more pleasing one. Miss Rose Telbin was a very promising actress, and uni- versally beloved for her amiable disposition and kind and generous heart. She had no reason to ask to be taught to feel another 1 s wo. Such a sentiment sprung up in her heart whenever an occasion presented itself adapted to call it forth, and so naturally that the exercise of good disposi- tions on her part seemed hardly entitled to the commenda- tion which others might justly claim for them. During her engagement at the Broadway Theatre she was seized with a sudden illness, which terminated fatalty, March, 1849. Beside the theatres named Holland played at Shrews- bury, Wakefield, York and Leeds. The Royalty, Surrey and Haymarket also had the benefit of his services. One of the clauses in his contract with the establishment last named is sufficiently comprehensive. It provides that the said Holland shall "publicly act, sing, and perform in all tragedies, comedies, plaj^s, operas, choruses, farces, burlettas, masks, preludes, interludes, pantomimes, dances and processions," as often as required by the manager. At this period Macready was at the height of his reputation, exceedingly attractive as a star, but very unpopular with the company, as he was unnecessarily particular respecting stage situations, constantly changing the position of the per- THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 31 formers in the course of his various speeches. He made the rehearsals very protracted and annoying, and the cast would sometimes be altered three or four times, because the performers, however perfect or attentive, did not render the character in accordance with his caprice. An incident in connection with Holland affords a good illustration. At a rehearsal of Virginius, the performer cast for Icilius did not please him. Two others rehearsed the part with no bet- ter success. Turning to the manager, Macready said : " Have you not a Mr. Holland in your company V "Holland !" was the reply of the astonished manager, " why, he is our low comedian ; the audience laugh the mo- ment he shows his face." " No matter," said the tragedian ; "let me see him." Accordingly Holland, who, not being cast in the piece, was preparing for a holiday, was brought to the theatre. In vain he suggested that he knew nothing of the part, that his line was comedy, and that, however willing he might be to study and play any character assigned to him, he was cer- tain the audience would laugh at his attempt to be serious. " If you will play the part as you think it should be play- ed, and according to my directions of the scene," replied he, " I will risk any derision from the audience." Holland reluctantly consented. At night, when he en- tered upon the stage, there was a general titter among the audience, which soon broke into a laugh. Macready step- ped forward to the footlights, and looked sternly at the audience. The laughter was instantly checked. After a dead pause for a moment, he said, haughtily : "Ladies and gentlemen, with your permission, we (point- ing to himself and Holland) will proceed with the play." The audience applauded, and the tragedy was concluded without further interruption. While at the Haymarket, Holland had some correspon- dence with Messrs. Henry Wallace & Freeman, then in 32 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, London beating up recruits for the Chatham Theatre, New- York ; and there were other circumstances which suggested to his mind the propriety of emigrating to the United States. The American stage, for more than half a century, with only a few exceptional cases, has been recruited from En- glish actors or their descendants. The large fortunes which some of them have realized have made no change in the gen- eral judgment of our people, by whom the stage continues to be regarded rather as an elegant amusement than as an eligible profession. Clapp, in his "Records of the Boston Stage, 1 ' remarks that ' ' more than a century has elapsed since the first theat- rical representation in this country Avas given by a band of English actors in Virginia, and during that long period of time the histrionic art in this country has flourished, we re- gret to say, not by the representations of native actors, or native productions, but its most efficient supporters have been of English parentage, and the most popular plays of foreign emanation." Of the number of persons in England whose support is derived from the theatre, we may form some idea from the statement contained in the "Life of Elliston," that when Mr. Usher, the manager of the Royalty Theatre in 1790, advertised for unemployed actors, he received applications from seven hundred persons. Equally striking is the contrast in the number of those who resort to all the artifices of correspondence and importunity to make what is called " a first appearance on any stage." Our managers may be occasionally annoyed, but are not beset, as those in England are, by a crowd of prepared and unprepared aspirants, anxious to display their gifts and graces before the foot-lights. Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown of the manager. But his other perplex- ities are light compared with those which arise from his en- deavors to keep out intruders from his mimic realm. Argu- ment is lost upon them. If one of these untried tyros is Wiiaernan Del ■ ^EWP Wbolm " ' THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 33 told of the failure of Mrs. Siddons, after a trial of a season at Driuy Lane, or of the long and weary novitiate of the elder, as well as the younger Kean, "he poses } 7 ou," says Cole, in his life of the latter, " with ready instances, and tells you of Holland, and Powell, and Mossop, and the elder Sheridan, who became great actors all at once ; and of Spranger Barry, who stepped from behind the counter on the boards, a perfect Othello, Jaffier and Varanes, and two years after shook Caprice on his throne. All this, and more to the same effect, was once said to an experienced manager by a shambling, blear-eyed stripling, without a voice, and scarcely five feet one in stature, who panted to come out in Hamlet or Macbeth. It was remarked to him, in reply, that Barry was singularly gifted by nature with physical requisites such as are seldom combined in the same individual, and that, without some external advanta- ges, and, at least, moderate lungs, the case would be hope- less. "Oh," said he, contemptuously, "genius can do without such paltry aids. Le Kain, the great French trage- dian, was little and deformed, with a cast in one eye, a de- fective utterance, and an ugly, inexpressive face. Hender- son' s voice was thick. He spoke as if his mouth was stuff- ed with worsted, had flat features, and a clumsy figure. Garrick was diminutive, and inclined to be fat, and Ed- mund Kean was often husky." Heaven only knows where he had picked up these rebut- ting facts, for he seemed perfectly uneducated, and rejoiced in a broad provincial accent, which made the blood curdle. A trip to the United States at the time at which we speak seemed to enhance the reputation of an English actor, and what was of equal importance largely increased his compen- sation in the scene of his former labors. Charles Kemble before he came to America, received twenty pounds per week, and on his return to London twenty pounds per night. Ellen Tree had fifteen pounds per week just before she 5 34 MEMOIR OF GEOEGE HOLLAND, came to the United States, and on her return twenty-five pounds per night. "While Holland's thoughts were turn- ed to the United States with a view rather to a temporary sojourn than a permanent residence, he received the fol- lowing characteristic letter from Junius Brutus Booth. It is not without interest, both as a record of theatrical life at that period, and as a relic of an actor, who, with all his errors and eccentricities, is deservedly ranked among the brightest ornaments of the drama. New York, Xmas Eve, 1836. but direct y'r letter to the Theatre Balti- more U States. My Dear Sir : Messrs W t allack and Freeman, a few days since, shewed me your letter, with the inclosure sent last winter to you at Sheffield. It is requisite that I inform you Theatricals are not in so flourishing a condition in this Country as they were some two years ago. There are four Theatres in this City each endeavoring to ruin the others, by foul means as well as fair. The reduction of the prices of admission Las proved (as I always anticipated from the first suggestion of such a fool- ish plan) nearly ruinous to the Managers. The Publick here often witness a Performance in every respect equal to what is presented at the Theatres Royal D. L. and C. G. for these prices. Half a dollar to tlie boxes and a quarter do. to the Pit and Gallery ! The Chatham Theatre of which I am the Stage Manager, at these low prices one thousand dollars. — Acting is sold too cheap to the Publick and the result will be a general th eatrical bankruptcy. Tragedians are in abundance — Maceeady — Conway — Hamblin — Forrest (now No. 1) Cooper, Wallace — May- wood and self with divers others now invest New York. But it wont do ; a diversion to the South must be made — or to Jail — three-fourths of the Great men and managers must go. Now, sir, I will deal fairly with you. If you will pledge yourself to me for three j^ears, and sacredly promise that no inducement which may be held out by the unprincipled and daring speculators which abound in this country shall cause you to leave me, I will, for ten months in each year, THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 35 give you thirty dollars per weel% and an annual benefit which you shall divide with me. Beyond this sum I would not venture, the privilege of your name for Benefits Extra to be allowed me — and I should expect the terms on which you would be engaged to remain secret from all but our- selves. Mind this — Wether you play in my Theatres or elsewhere in the U States, I should look for implicit and faithful per- formances of your duty toward me or my colleagues ! In case I should require you to travel, when in the United States, which is most probable, I will defray all the charges of conveyance for you and your luggage — your living would not be included either by land or water — Boarding (three meals a day), and your Bed room, may be had in a very respectable house here, & in Baltimore at from four to six dollars per week — " Lodgings to let " are very scarce and expensive, and the customs of this country in this respect, are essentially different to those of the English. The M.S. and music of "Paul Pry," with Faustus's music Do. and Book of the "Pilot." The M. S. and Do. of a piece played some few years back at Sadlers' Wells, called "The GMieber or the Fire Worshippers." Two or three of Liston' s new pieces I should advise you to bring. And particularly the ' r Grheber ' ' for me. ' ' The Mogul Tale' ' here is out of print. In the Exeter Theatre last January were two actresses that I should like to engage. Miss P (not the Miss P. formerly of Drury Lane) and Miss H. If you will inquire after them — I will thank you. To each of these ladies a salary of fifteen dollars a week I can venture offering — 15 dollars are upward of three Guineas and Benefit annually. Now, sir, I have offered to you and those Ladies as much as I can in honesty afford to give, their travelling expenses to and from Theatres in the United States (not including board) I should defray, as I told you respecting your own — and the use of their names for benefits on Stock nights — Your line of business would be exclusively yours. For the ladies I would not make this guaranty — The greatest actress in the World I may say is now in this city (Mrs. D — ) and several very talented women — besides I would endeavor to make such arrangements for Miss P — and Miss II — as would not be very repugnant to their ambition. The reason Mrs. D — does not go to London is my strenu- ous advice to her against it. — The passages from Europe I should expect repaid to me out of the salaries, by weekly 36 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, deductions of three dollars each. The captain of the ship ■would call upon the parties or 3*011 might write to them on his visit to you, everything on board will be furnished that is requisite for comfort, and the expenses I will settle for her previous to starting. Mind the ship you Avould come over in, is one expressly bargained for, and will bring 3*011 where I shall (if living) be ready to welcome 3*011 — Let me recommend 3*011 to Econom3* — see what a number of our brethren are reduced to Indigence by their obstinate Vanity — I have here Mr. D — who was once in London the rival of Elltstox, and is now a better actor — approaching the age of sixt3*, and not a dollar put by for a raiir*.* day — too proud to accept a salaiy of twenty dollars per week in a regular engagement — he stars and starves. Maii3* have been deceived and misled in their calculations in coming to this country — some have cut their throats &c from disap- pointment—Mrs. Homer (once of the Surrey) Mrs. Alsop, Mr. Entwistle — Kirby the Clown — are all on the felo de se list — with others I now forget — The temptations to Drunkenness here are too common and too powerful for 11111113* weak beings who construe the approval of a boisterous circle of intoxicated fools as the cli- max of everything desirable in their profession — What do they find it, when a weakened shattered fiaim, with loss of memory and often reason, are the Results — The hangers on - — drop astern — and the poor wreck drives down. the Gulf despised or pitied, and totally deserted. If 3*011 choose accepting my offer — get for me those ladies. Sims' can perhaps tell 3*011 where they are, and I will on the first occasion send for 3*011 and them, with the articles of agreement to be signed in London and legally ratified on your arrival in America— recollect this — the Passages in Slimmer, owing to the calms are longer in performing, but they are much safer, and the Newfoundland Bank is an ugly place to cross in Winter, though it is often done, yet still it is a great risk. The Crisis which left London Docks, last January with all her passengers after being out for 68 days, and being spoken to on the banks b3* another vessel — is not 3*et come or will she ever— The icebergs no doubt struck her, as they have 1110113* — and the last farewell was echoed by the waves. Write me soon and glean the information I ask for — The letter bag for TJnitecl States vessels— from London is kept at the North American Coffee House near the Bank of England. Yours truly, Booth. GrEOEGE HOLLAND. the veteran comedian. 37 Holland's first appearance in the United States. Holland made his first appearance before an American audience at the old Bowery Theatre, September 12, 1827, as Jeriy, in the amusing burletta of " The Day after the Fair." Ireland, in his "Kecords of the New York Stage," has pre- served the names of the performers who assisted on the oc- casion — "Mr. Connee as Clod, and Mrs. G. Baeeett as Polly, who likewise assumed the parts of Sulkey Scrub, a washerwoman, and Mrs. Maypole, a manageress." Hol- land entered into the representation of the various charac- ters of the burletta with the greatest spirit, and his imita- tions of the drummer, the old ballad singer, and the French songstress, were received with roars of laughter.. The present may afford as good an opportunity as any other to refer to the peculiarly eccentric style of Holland' s acting. A critic of the time thus happily hits it off: " We can think of no standard by which he could be cor- rectly judged. He has, then, no genius. His appreciation of a part he had to play had nothing to do with the oppor- tunity it might afford him of developing a passion or eccen- tricity of mind, but simply from the amount of practical fun of which the part would admit. An opportunity of tum- bling over a chair, upsetting a table, or burning his nose with a candle, were worth to him more than all the finest sentences of wit and sentiment which could be written. It was so rarely we could detect in George Holland anything like a bit of legitimate acting, that we always attributed such an exhibition, when it did occur, to accident rather than thought or design. In the over-strained, unnatural and exaggerated style of farce incident which characterizes the modern school, G-eoege Holland was in many respects unequaled. No one could more successfully and gro- tesquely develop broad fun than he. Even the admirers of genuine comic acting could not resist the grossly funny 38 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, manner in which he would set all the rules, principles and purposes of legitimate acting at naught, while those less fastidious and more easily pleased, were in ecstacies of de- light at his humor." Of the satisfaction Avhich Holland gave to his new mana- gers, the best proof was afforded in the following paper, which was handed to him the fourth week of his engage- ment : "I propose giving to Holland one fifth, after gross re- ceipts for Wednesday, should the amount received exceed $800. Mr. Holland to be entitled to one-fourth of the re- ceipts. Oct. 12, 1827. GrlLFERT." This benefit accordingly took place Wednesday, Oct. 19, and from a statement of Mtee Moses, the Treasurer, now before us, Holland received, after deducting charges, $197.24. At the end of the month Mr. Gilfert informed him that he had made an arrangement for him to play six nights in the "Day After the Fair," with Mr. J. M. Pelby, manager of the new Tremont Theatre, Boston. Holland was paid his expenses and a bonus of $100. He went to Providence by steamer, and from thence by stage to Boston. The next day he met his old friend Thomas Flynn, of the Surrey Theatre, who had been engaged by Messrs. Finn & Kilner, of the Federal Street Theatre, as stage manager. He was afterward employed in the same capacity in several of the theatres in the city of New York — the Chatham, the Bowery, Broadway and Richmond Hill. Flynn was married March 30, 1828, by the Rev. Dr. A. Maclay, to Matilda Twibill, avIio was well entitled to be called the beauty of the stage. Such was the fascination which her personal charms exercised over the spectators, that, as in the case of Mrs. Morris, of our earlier stage, they were frequently received as a substitute for dramatic excellence. Mr. Pelby was highly gratified with the result of the six THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 39 nights, and Holland returned to New York to find his old Newcastle manager, Mr. Vincent DeCamp, acting as stage manager of the Bowery Theatre — a position which had only been temporarily filled by Mr. Geo. Baeeett. De Camp's course as stage manager, was far from pleasing to the com- pany, and much dissatisfaction was expressed. The inter- ference of the proprietor settled the difference for the time, both parties receding from their positions — the stage mana- ger promising to be less domineering, and the company more attentive to their duties. At this period, Mr. Henry Wallace was manager of the Lafayette Theatre, and Mr. McGeaey of the Chatham Theatre. A new arrangement was now made with Charles G-ilfeet, Thomas L. Smith, and Samuel L. Governeur, for three months from the 14th of January, 1828, by which Holland agreed to play in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, and Baltimore, receiving $1,500 in monthly payments. He played first in Boston, at the Federal Street Theatre, when he again met Mr. Finn, Mr. KilNer, and Mr. and Mrs. Duff, who were then play- ing at the same establishment. Upon his return from Bos- ton, he played a short engagement at the Bowery, and was then sent to Albany to perforin for six nights at the Pearl Street Theatre, then under the management of Wji. Forrest and Mr. Duffy. Having fulfilled his agreement then, lie again returned to New York, when Mr. James H. Cald- well, who had been playing a limited engagement at the Park Theatre, secured his services for the Camp Street Thea- tre, New Orleans. Before going South, he performed a few nights with Mr. W. Dinneford at the Providence Theatre, at Salem with A. J. Phillips, and at the Arch Street Theatre and the Walnut Street Theatre, Philadelphia — the former managed by Mr. William Wood, and the latter by Mr Joe Cowell. He also played an engagement of seven nights for Mr. Edmund Simpson, manager of the Park Theatre, for the sum of $250. He now started on his Southern trip, per- 40 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, forming at Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Richmond, and succeeding Mr. Thomas S. Hamblin at the theatre in Au- gusta, of which John J. Adams was manager. At Mobile, he was hospitably entertained by Mr. N. M. Sudlow, and performed four nights at his theatre. He made his first ap- pearance at the Camp Street Theatre, New Orleans, the 21st January, 1829, in the comedy of "Sweethearts and Wives, ' ' and the burletta of the l ' Day after the Fair. ' ' The cast of the comedy embraced the following names : SWEETHEARTS AND WIVES. Billy Lackaday, Mr. Holland, With the comic song of "Pity Bilty Lackaday." Admiral Franklin, Mr. Gray. Sandford, Mr. Sol. Smith. Charles Franklin, Mr. Clarke. Curtis, Mr. Henderson. Eugenia, Mrs. Crooke. Laura, Kenny. Mrs. Bell, Higgins. Susan, Russell. This proved a very successful engagement. He afterward performed Paul Pry, and was the original representative of the character in New Orleans ; after which he appeared as Thomas, in the laughable farce of "The Secret," with the song of " Wedlock is a Ticklish Thing." He afterward played at Natchez, and became connected with a company under the management of Junius Brutus Booth. It was at this time he renewed his acquaintance with Mr. Pear- man, a vocalist of much repute, who had played an engage- ment with De Camp, at Sheffield, in 1821, where he had met Holland as a member of the company. Pearman was a native of Manchester, and in early life had enlisted in the Royal navy, as a common sailor. He was present at the bombardment of Copenhagen, under Nelson, and the pecu- I® IPHAIRMIAW, AS LIE . ( i/tr/tr/ rr,/ /// . /.yi'y 1,1 Aft,,/ ,/,, ,'itrl/ /Mf/fhw/ ///I /// //"yr //i THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 41 liarity of his stage walk was owing to a slight lameness, oc- casioned by a wound received in that engagement. At first connected with the minor theatres, at Newcastle, Bath, Is- lington, &c, he eventually rose to the position of first singer in English opera, at Covent Garden and Drury Lane, de- lighting the audiences of London, in Frederick, in "No Song, No Supper," Apollo, in "Midas," Leander, in "The Padlock," Orlando, in "The Cabinet," and Figaro, in " The Marriage of Figaro." He first appeared in the Uni- ted States as Count Belino, in "The Devil's Bridge," Nov- ember 5, 1823, at the Park Theatre, then jointly managed by Stephen Price and Edmund Simpson. His voice was a low tenor, and though not remarkable for compass, was particularly soft and pleasing. There were some airs — as the beautiful one, "Has she, then, failed in her truth?" — which he sang with the happiest effect. In 1834, Holland united with Mr. Sol. Smith in the management of the theatre at Montgomery, Alabama, but for a single season. Miss Jane Placide and Mr. E. P. Barrett were among the stars. Mr. Caldwell, who had made arrangements to erect a new theatre in New Orleans — the St. Charles — engaged Hol- land as his secretary and treasurer of the theatre. A plot of ground was selected, extending from St. Charles street to Camp street. The edifice erected upon it cost upward of $500,000, the entire payment of which passed through Hol- land's hands. Quite a feature of the interior of the thea- tre was an immense chandelier, resembling in form an in- verted umbrella, and having no less than one hundred and seventy-six lights. It was made in London, and presented a very beautiful appearance as suspended airily from the top over the large circle beneath. During the first season, Miss Charlotte Ccshman performed Patrick, in "The Poor Soldier," Helen McGregor, Peter Wilkins, Lady Mac beth, &c, &c. Sunday, March 6, 1836, was the first night 6 42 MEMOIR OF GEOEGE HOLLAND, of the Italian Opera. "II Pirata" was selected, and among the members of the troupe were Signor G-. B. Monteesoe, Antonio De Eosa, Sapignoli Lucagaedenghi, Adelaide Pedeotti, and E. Salyiani. The next season, many favorite performers appeared at the new theatre. Among them we may mention Mr. and Mrs. Keely, Mr. J. W. Wallace, Mr. C. Mason, Mr. Balls, Mr. Finn, Mr. Baeton, Master Bueee, Mrs. and Miss Barnes, Celeste, Mr. A. A. Adams, Latham, S. Bishop, Pearson, De Bar, Page, Lyons, Hunt, Bad- cliffe, Bannister, Corri, Manly, Keppell, Mrs. H. Cramer, Miss Melton, Mrs. Hunt, Mrs. Pritchard, Mrs. Kinloce, &c. Before the opening of the fourth season, in 1838 and 1839, the whole interior of the theatre was repaired, and engagements made with the best dramatic talent in the cpuntry, in order, as one of the play-bills of the period in- forms us, "to sustain the high character which the St. Charles has obtained, both at home and abroad, of being one of the first dramatic establishments in the world." The following performers appeared in the course of this season: Mrs. Conduit, who was connected with the diffi- culty which drove Mr. Joseph Wood, the singer, from the Park Theatre, New York ; Celeste, Scott, J. B. Booth, James S. Beowne, John Baenes, Edwin Foeeest, H. J. Finn, J. M. Field, Samuel and Sidney Cowell, Far- ren, a nephew of the celebrated Fareen, Gr. Holland, Williams, Plumes, Pearson, &c. The drama of the Flying Dutchman was put upon the stage during this season, at the St. Charles, and in order to give greater effect to the scene of the phan- tom ship, Holland imported two magic lanterns from London. The one was made by E. Pelby, optician, Tavistock Street, Covent Garden, and the other was the lantern used by T. P. Cooee, at the Theatre Eoyal, Drury Lane. Both were constructed for the purpose *, 0-i~— <^> ^A^*^ <^~ s/S&jfit^.f ' */ *A~^~- &*~~y &*~~£-'7^'*vC ^ ^^- £^ttj THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 55 famous comic singer of years gone by; George F. Browne, M. H. Leffingwell, Augustin Daly, Les- ter Wallace, John Cline, Jas. Stoddart, G. L. Fox, J. K. Mortimer, "Dan Bryant, Nelse Seymour, Wm. Birch, John Gilbert, Wm. Davldge, Chas. Fisher, Geo. Clark, B. T. Ringgold, A. W. Fenno, Miss Lydia Thompson, Mr. Magonigle, of Booth 1 s, Mr. Sciionberg, of Wallack's, Joe Pentland, Mrs. El- DRIDGE, J. LANAGAN, CHARLES KeMBLE MASON, J. Polk, Jas. Maeder, Thos. Barry, D. Anderson, N. B. Clarke, Stage Manager of the Bowery Theatre ; Mrs. E. Wright, E. T. Stetson, George France, and a host of others. The Church indeed was completely filled by the members of the profession and persons on terms of intimacy with the deceased. The Rev. Dr. Houghton read the burial service, after which the cas- ket was closed, and borne by six men to the hearse, the congregation following, the cortege wended its way to Cypress Hill Cemetery and the body was laid in a lot belonging to the American Dramatic fund." Dr. H. F. Quackenbos, who is well known as among the most intelligent and skilful of our physicians and surgeons, attended Holland in his last illness, and has, at our request, obligingly furnished us the following No. 15 E. 18th St., New York, 24th January, 1871. Dear Sir : In reply to your note, asking for the particulars of the last illness of my old patient, Mr. George Holland, I state as follows : Mr. Holland, for a period of nearly thirty years that I knew him, enjoyed most excellent health, and it was only within a little over a year that the fatal dis- order, 3Iorbus Brig/dii, (Blight's disease of the Kidneys,) which terminated his existence, showed itself. You are aware that Mr. Holland had passed his seventy-ninth birth day, and consequently had seen more years than are generally allotted to man. 56 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, During the Avhole of the period that he was suffering from this formidable disease, his intellect was clear and his patience admirable. I was obliged to remove the dropsical effusion in the cavity of the abdomen four times, so that he, by reason of the removal of weight and pressure, could move about his room, and not so constantly require the help of his wife and children to aid him in so doing. This operation was always performed with his full con- sent, and though not a painful one, was always consented to in a pleasant and cheerful manner, and his fear of a re- turn of the difficulty was only alluded to once, and then in a manner that showed he was fully aware of the dangerous nature of his illness. When I told him fully of the nature of his disease and the impossibility of its cure, he said that he was aware of his condition, and that he only grieved at leaving his family in circumstances which, with all his labor and time, did not meet his desires. Of himself, Mr. Holland was the last to speak ; his entire thoughts being directed to those around him. He was a most affectionate father and husband. His wants were few, and he seemed ever to be thinking of the welfare of those nearest and dearest to him. He was a great reader, and was well versed in the works of all the great English authors. To the very last, he was engaged in reading, and it was seldom that I made a visit, but his book was before him. He was kind to all ; his ex- pressions of good feeling to me at each visit, marked the goodness of his heart, and the full appreciation of every act of attention. He took great interest in the education of his children, and experienced especial pleasure in noting my questions to his young son Joe, about his studies. In the course of a long professional career, I have been constantly brought in contact with members of the drama- tic profession, having been the physician to the Dramatic Fund Association from its very commencement, and it affords me great pleasure to state, that I have ever met among its members great charity, kindness and honor. If a calamity happens, the members of the dramatic pro- fession are ever ready, and the first to aid, in purse and in person. This has been my experience, and I have seen nothing, in my intercourse with the ladies and gentlemen connected therewith, to change in the least my early im- pressions. THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 57 Mr. Holland was a true man, kind and good to all, an admirable actor, a finished gentleman, and an example worthy of imitation. Yours truly, H. F. QdACKENBOS. T. H. Morrell, Esq. • Our record would bo incomplete without some reference to an incident connected with the burial of Holland, which has since been the subject of so much comment by the press, and by which, at the time, the feelings of the whole community were at once surprised, saddened, and outraged. Nor need we wonder that the sentiment of indignation was so decided and general, at the Pharisai- cal attempt to place the whole theatrical fraternity, through the person of one of its most blameless members, outside the pale of christian recognition. The American people, in consequence of their training under a system of government which, in its inception, repudiated a union of church and state, understand better than other communities that peculiar condition and frame of mind out of which proceed the acts usually charac- terized by the word bigotiy. Dean Trench in his work on the study of words, where he has thrown around a dry disquisition the fascination of romance, attributes the origin of the word to the Spaniards of the 15th and 16th centuries, who wore "bigots," a Spanish word for mou- stache, differing in this respect from the people of other countries at that period, as in their more rigid adherence to their forms of faith. "What then," says this author, "more natural, or more entirely according to the law of the generation of names, than that this striking, and dis- tinguishing outward feature of the Spaniard, should have been laid hold of to express that character and condition of mind, which eminently were his, and then transferred it to all others who shared the same." 58 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, The origin of the word, however, is of little consequence — the thing signified by it concerns us all, and has been well defined as "an undue and intolerant tenacity of our own principles and opinions." The manner in which this has been exemplified, in the conduct of the Rev. Mr. Sabine, is uoav known to thousands, and the general judgment of the public is well set forth in the following article from the New Yor 7c Herald, of January 8th, 1871. Silly Sabine. It is told of Fexelon, that half divine man, the beauty of whose life and the loveliness of whose nature, so ex- quisitely pictured by Victor Hugo, in the good Bishop of "Les Miserables," has enshrined his name in the heart of good Christians of every shade of creed, that a young priest in his diocese having once refused to read the ser- vice over the remains ot a dissolute young actress, he sent for him and said " Young man, when this girl, on the day of judgment, comes up before her God, do you think He will ask to what profession she belonged, or that He who sees into all hearts will not judge her with tenderness and mercy, by what she did, or strove to do, in the path in which she was placed I Who are you that 3-011 should dare to judge and assume a prerogative which belongs to God alone?" So spoke Fexelox. Some weeks since an old artist died in this city ; a kindly, gentle, good old man, upon the mirror of whose life no" breath of badness had ever fallen. How many among us remember when young to have listened with delighted smile to the merry mimicry of old George Holland ! How many of us caught the sweet music of our children's joyous laughter as they revelled in in- nocent delight over his quirks and jests and patent snuf- fle ! And during the many years in which he played many parts there is not a man within this city who can • THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 59 point to a word which ever passed his lips which could touch with the faintest wound the delicate sensibility of a girl ! His life was one of manly work and blameless goodness, and he brought up a numerous family to walk in the ways their father did. When he died, a brother artist called on a clergyman — a young priest, — to read over his remains the service of the dead. One would have thought the discharge of such a duty, over what was left of such a man, would have been to a Christian clergyman a labor of love. It was not to the Rev. Mr. Sabine. His answer was, " I want to Lave nothing to do with an actor. There is a little place round the corner where they do these things" — that place round the corner where they do these things of which this minister of God speaks with this tone of arrogant contempt being a church dedicated to God and devoted to the preaching of the creed to which he himself belonged. A green grocer who had not the article you re- quired could hardly direct you to another corner grocery with an air of more savage sulkiness. This answer is the broken feather which fixes this man to the Earth. It needs no comment. If it was a thing sinful to be done, why send to another church of his own creed to do it % Qui faclt per alium facit per se. So spoke the Rev Mr. Sa- bine. There was no Fenelon to chide and to teach here ; but the Rev. Dr. Tyng christens him "Silly Sabine." As to "the little church round the corner," it has since become garlanded with roses in the affections of all char- itable souls. The Rev. Mr. Sabine, in his Sunday sermon, seems to think that every man should mind his own business ; but this is the business of every man. If such acts of brutal bigotry are permitted to be perpetrated in the name of reli- gion, where are they to stop % Up to this act of barbarism one would hardly be driven into believing that, at a season when the star which stood over the stable at Bethlehem 60 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, seems to slied its gentle radiance around, and the thoughts and hearts of all men warm up to gentle and charitable emotions, and all discordant feelings are hushed in the cul- tivation of the amenities of life, and the realization for once of the sense of human brotherhood and evangelical love, New York would be shocked and aggrieved at the sight of a minister of the Gospel scorning to perform the rites of the Church at the funeral of a fellow Christian ; a man who led not only an honorable life, but who acquired a distinguish- ed position in a profession which has been recognized by the Church itself as the most appropriate medium for sym- bolizing religious truth and the history of Christ and His apostles. Long before the days of Mrs. Slddoxs and Talma, both of whom innumerable dignitaries of the Church recognized as their equals, or before those of Rachel, who, notwithstanding the fact that she was born outside the pale of Christianity, was constantly received as a guest by the Archbishop of Paris, the stage was regarded not only as the theatre of histrionic art, but of the Church itself, and for many centuries since the advent of the Savior to the present day, theatrical performances were used for the illustration of religious history. Especially in the South of Europe has the connection between the stage and reli- gion continued up to the present day, where year after year pilgrims from every part of the world throng Oberamergau, in the Bavarian Tyrol, to witness the ever-thrilling scenes of the life of Christ, as personated by artists in whom reli- gious ardor is so much blended with artistic genius that the audience is thrilled with evangelical rapture as well as by a sense of admhalon for the actors engaged in this extra- ordinary annual performance. One would think, did one of these artists die, that the whole world would be ransack- ed in vain to find a clergyman to turn his back upon his grave save that unfortunate one who presides over the ill- fated church corner Twenty-eighth Street and Madison Ave- ~f) THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 61 nue, who refused to discharge his Christian duty at the funeral of old George Holland. The difference between a religious and a secular dramatic performance is simply one of degree, and had the Rev. Mr. Sabine happened to be at Oberamergau he would have, of course, displayed the same contempt for the dead actors there as he exhibited here for the remains of good, old George Holland. Is it necessary to remind a minister of the Gospel in this country and at this period of civilization that, even if a deceased fellow man was a murderer, he would outrage the lessons of his Master if he coldly stood aloof from the sinner's grave 1 What, then, can be said in a case like the present, where all voices unite in proclaiming this old man' s life not only to be without stain, but a noble, useful one, concen- trated on a profession not deemed unworthy of commemora- ting the imposing incidents of sacred history itself? It were vain and idle, in the present day, after Shakspeare has transformed the stage into a high school of humanity, and Schiller and Goethe have crystallized it into a hand- maid of ethics and Christian thought, to enter on any de- fence of its recognized authority as a moral agent. It is true there are actors, who derogate from the dignity of their profession, as there are clergymen who derogate from the dignity of theirs ; and it would obviously be as rational to revile the Church on account of the degradation of some of its public servants as to heap obloquy on the stage on ac- count of the vagaries of some of its votaries. The stage, in its highest conception, is a powerful coadjutor of the Church in making men better, wiser, and happier, and even in its less lofty attributes it lights up with mirth and merri- ment the hard lot of the toiling masses, and to that extent even the lowest harlequin may be said to be a worker of good deeds. But when we come to the higher realms of art — of comedy, as in this instance — who has ever witnessed Holland's sweet and tender performance of Humphrey ,i ,, v i wrsmrAiN. V n C T O IFQ i h - THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 63 against any social extravagance ; but to anathematize the stage in sweeping generalities is excommunicating human- ity itself in the personator of its most salient and compre- hensive characteristics. In what canon, we should like to know, save in the un charitableness of his own heart, did the Rev. Mr. Sa- bine find any forbiddal of the performance of the burial service over an actor's grave? Within the past six years some twenty artists have been buried out of churches of his communion. But a short time since, at our neighbor church of St. Paul's, not one only, but several clergymen of his creed, assisted at the funeral of Mr. Henry Placide. An actor has a niche in Westminster Abbey, among the worthies of England, and Charles Dickens, proud to be considered an actor, sleeps there now. Some of the first Church dignitaries of England officiated at the funeral of Charles Kean. The stage has, beyond any other profession, been ever the hand- maid of charity. Does a disaster occur, has a suffering to be healed, has a charity to be lifted up, the eye of the suppliant first looks to the stage, and never looks there in vain. It has been the favorite because at the same time, the most innocent and intellectual, recreation of the gen- tlest and noblest of every land. The head of the Episco- pal Church, to which this gentleman himself belongs, the good Queen Victoria might be seen almost nightly sur- rounded by her family at some London theatre, following with delighted interest the progress of the play, and she has a series of theatricals every season at a theatre within her own house. In our own city during the past few winters, at Mr. Jerome's most charming theatre, some of the most beau- tiful and best and kindliest of the women of our city, in- cluding some of this reverend gentlemen' s own flock, took delight in giving performances, the proceeds of which 64 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, brought relief and comfort to many a suffering home. How, then, does this man dare to insult the memory of a good old artist and throw a fresh soitoav into an already afflicted home? The result is simply this, that the Rev. Mr. Sabine's name will forever remain a scandal and a byword in the annals of the Church and of the stage, and his bigotry will pave the way for a broader Christianity and for a more generous appreciation of a profession which he has so wantonly outraged in the person of one of its most honored members. It may be easy and pleas- ant for the Rev. Mr. Sabine to say "Pass on, this is my business," and doubtless most of the world will pass on and think no more ; but we should like to lead this man to the grave he has insulted and to the household whose hearts he has wrung, and say to him, as Fekelon said to that other proud young priest, clad in a little brief authority, "Who are you that you should dare to judge and assume a prerogative wbich belongs to God alone?" Matures' s tragedy of Bertram — a work of the highest dramatic excellence — when first played in this country, was made the subject of much unnecessary censure, on the ground of its alleged immoral character. W. B. Wood, the then manager of the Arch Street Theatre, Philadelphia, says that "these severe strictures were not confined to oc- casional essays or notices, but, in one case, at least, pro- ceeded from the pulpit ; no doubt from the error of refer- ring only to the original printed edition, unaware of the fact, that every doubtful line or allusion had been carefully struck out by the licenser, whose authorized copy alone we followed. On one occasion, the speaker became so much hur- ried away by a mistaken impression, as boldly to appeal to his audience, and ask what estimate could any one make of the feelings or the principles of that woman — of her percep- tions of right and wrong — who could be found capable of 'a™M*$ — i THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 65 representing the heroine of this shameful production. I know not whether the gentleman was aware that the unfor- tunate person who, the week before, in the discharge of her professional engagements, had been representing this char- acter, was at that very time a regular member of his own congregation, and was seated on that Sunday, as she usual- ly was, in her accustomed place at church, which was in close vicinity to the speaker, and in full view of every per- son present. The lady was the manager's wife." AVe have cited this instance of cruel clerical insolence, before return- ing to Mr. Sabine, as showing that the pulpit, quite as much as the stage, requires to be made amenable to public opinion. As a teacher of religion, Mr. Sabine seems to be one of those persons who might be described as being wise above what is written. His opposition to players and plays certainly receives no countenance from any of the teachings of Christ and his Apostles, who have nowhere stigmatized them. The lessons of the New Testament are enforced by quota- tions from three different Greek comedians. In the time of our Savior a theatre existed in Jerusalem, unrebuked and unopposed by the Founder of Christianity. ' ' That theatri- cal establishment," says Campbell, " we know was forced upon the Jews at the expense of several lives, by Herod the Great, and, after his death, if Jesus Christ had thought a theatre among the evils to be extirpated by Chris- tianity, he would have found no topic more popular than an innovation so violent to Jewish feelings. But he has left upon it not the slightest denunciation, and in this cir- cumstance he is imitated by all his apbstles." We do not say that a theatre, any more than a church, is necessarily a school of morals ; for the former may pan- der to a vitiated public taste instead of endeavoring to counteract it ; and the latter, from the narrowness of its 9 66 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, teachings, the corruption of its members, or a languid for- malism that never raises its eyes above the "mint, anise, and cumin," may be the tomb, instead of the nursery of that practical piety which is at the same time the highest morals. The existence of the drama, in one form or an- other, among all civilized nations, proves it to be a public instinct, implanted in our nature, and incapable of eradi- cation. ' ' We do not find, ' ' says an eloquent writer, ' ' that the nations which have been devoid of theatrical representa- tions have surpassed, either in dignity of thought or deco- rum of manners, the far greater number "which have cher- ished and developed a national stage ; on the contrary, we are disposed to consider these exceptional races — and the exceptions are singularly few — as deficient in the higher arts also, and wanting some of the nobler elements of civil- ization. Admitting the transitory nature of histrionic pow- ers, and their consequent inferiority to the genius which impresses the canvas and the stone with enduring grace and life, we cannot but remember that the names of Roscius and JEsopus are as immortal as those of Cicero and CLesar ;. and that the fame of Gaerick and Siddons is scarcely less a possession forever than the conversation of Johnson, the portraits of Reynolds, and the eloquence of Burke. That the stage has too often been applied to unworthy purposes, and reflects too much the coarser features of an era, we al- low ; but the fault rests as much with the age as with the theatre. The theatre, depending more than any other de- partment of art, upon public opinion, complies with, rather than thwarts, its caprices, and public opinion and the press have it at all times in their power to correct the errors of the stage. Yet it would be unjust to the theatre to deny that it has, in an equal degree, responded to the highest impul- ses of the age. We possess the loftiest and most various drama in the world — the exponent of sublime and various "yp = \Kl n . ■ DR. YOUNG. THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 07 intellect at epochs of great deeds and thoughts : and to decry the drama as a whole, because some of its component phases have been censurable, is on a par with the prejudices which would banish sculpture, painting, and poetry, from the pur- suits of Christian men, because there are objectionable sta- tues or licentious pictures and poems." If we turn to a former day, we find, among the friends of the drama, or contributors to it, the honored names of Mil- ton, Addison, Dr. Young, Bueke, Johnson, Gold- smith, Sir Walter Scott, Dr. Moore, Cumberland, Revd. J. Home, Knowxes, Dean Milman, Coleridge, and Smollett, who, in his History, refers to the improved exhibitions of the stage as evidence of the social progress of England. There was no antagonism between the stage and the pulpit in Garrick's time. Clergymen, more re- markable for their number than their genius, besieged the green-room of Drury Lane with tragedies, ' ' of the same wearisome old pattern, full of Zelirtis, Ottomans, Achmets, and Barbarossas, of bombastic Easterns, and turgid de- clamation." When, on one occasion, George the Third attended the performance at the Haymarket, during the management of Foote, the play was damned, notwithstand- ing the presence of royalty. It was called the Contract, taken by Dr. Thomas Franklin from the Tripte Marriage of Destouches, and was played after one of Foote" s com- edies. When Foote lighted the King to his chair, his Majesty asked who the piece was written by ? " By one of your Majesty's chaplains," said Foote, unable even then to repress his wit ; ' ' and dull enough to have been written by a bishop." In our own time and country, Chief Justice Gibson, of Pennsylvania, thought it not derogatory to the bench he adorned, to lay a marble slab over the remains of Joseph Jefeerson, and to pen an epitaph, — a memorial of his own and the public admiration of "An actor whose un* 68 MEMOIR OP GEORGE HOLLAND, rivalled powers took in the whole range of comic character, from pathos to soul-shaking mirth." Few men have written with more ability upon the eviden- ces of revealed religion, than the late Gulian C. Ter- planck, whose edition of Shakespeare attests his critical skill, and whose love of dramatic representations continued throughout his long and useful life. The Hon. Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice of the Court of Common Pleas — a Court which his learning and integrity has anchored in the confidence of the community — has found relief from graver studies in an examination into the origin of the drama in this country, and the paper on this subject, read by him before the Historical Society, is justly deemed an important contribution to the history of our earlier drama. The habit of investigation, once formed, is easily, and sometimes advantageously, transferred from one field of enquiry to another. Besides, the learned Judge merits the encomium bestowed by Sir James Mackintosh upon a friend whose well regulated mind "submitted to that in- dustry which is the excellence of a subordinate station, and the basis of higher usefulness in a more elevated sphere." We need not cite other names to show that Mr. Sabine's objections to the stage, and his dislike of those who people it, are not shared by many wise and good men. We, how- ever, in conclusion, commend to him, and to all clergymen who entertain like sentiments, an incident in the life of an actress, known to fame and sorrow as Mrs. Jordan. " During her short stay at Chester, where she had been performing, her washerwoman, a widow with three small children, was, by a merciless creditor, thrown into prison ; a small debt of about forty shillings had been increased in a short time, by law expenses, to eight pounds. As soon as Mrs. Jordan heard of the circumstance, she sent for the THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 69 attorney, paid him the demand, and observed, with as much severity as her good-natured countenance could as- sume, " You lawyers are certainly infernal spirits, allowed on earth to make poor mortals miserable." The attorney, however, pocketed the affront, and with a low bow, made his exit. " On the afternoon of the same day the poor woman was liberated, as Mrs. Jordan was taking her usual walk with her servant, the widow, with her children, followed her, and just as she had taken shelter from a shower of rain, in a kind of porch, dropped on her knees, and, with much grateful emotion, exclaimed, "God for ever bless you, madam ! you have saved me and my poor children from ruin." The children, beholding their mother's tears, added by their cries to the affecting scene, which a sensitive mind could not behold without strong feelings of sympathy. The natural liveliness of Mrs. Jobdan's disposition was not easily damped by sorrowful scenes ; however, although she strove to hide it, the tear of feeling stole down her cheek, and stooping to kiss the children, she slipped a pound note into the mother s hand, and in her usual playful way replied, " there, there, now it's all over ; go, good woman, God bless you ; don't say another word." The grateful creature would have replied, but her benefac- tress insisted upon her silence and departure. It happened that another person had taken shelter under the porch, and witnessed the whole of this interesting scene, who, as soon as Mrs. Joedan observed him, came forward, and he, taking her hand, exclaimed with a deep sigh, "Lady, pardon the freedom of a stranger, but would to the Lord the world were all like thee \ " The figure of this man bespoke his calling ; his counte- nance was pale, and a suit of sable, rather the worse for wear, covered his tall, spare person. The penetrating eye of Thalia's favorite votary soon developed his character and 70 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND. profession, and, with her wonted good humor, retreating a few paces, she replied, "no, I won't shake hands with you" — why? — "because you are a methodist preacher, and when you know who I am you'll send me to the devil." "The Lord forbid ! I am, as you say, a preacher of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, who tells us to clothe the naked, feed the hungry, and relieve the distressed ; and do you think I can behold a sister fulfil the commands of my great Master, without feeling that spiritual attachment, which leads me to break through worldly customs, and offer you the hand of friendship and brotherly love." "Well, well, you are a good old soul, I dare say, — but — I — I don't like fanatics ; and you'll not like me, when I tell you who I am." " I hope I shall." "Well then, I tell you, I am a player." The preacher sighed. " Yes, I am a player, and you must have heard of me; Mrs. Jordan is my name." After a short pause he again extended his hand, and with a complaisant countenance, replied, "the Lord bless thee, whoever thou art. His goodness is unlimited. He has bestowed on thee a large portion of his spirit ; and as to thy calling, if thy soul upbraid thee not, the Lord forbid that I should." TilE ClIUKCII OF THE TEANSFIGU RATION. " The little Church around the comer." Joseph Jefferson, the celebrated comedian, on behalf of the family of Mr. Holland, made application to the Rev. Mr. Sabine, to officiate at his funeral, but learning that he had been an actor, he declined to do so. He recom- mended Mr. Jefferson to go to the "little church around the corner," where such things were done — who according- ly left him exclaiming " all honor to the little church around the corner." 'that little church around the corner." All honor to that little Church, The Church around the corner, That needs no gems or jewels rare Or presents to adorn her. With charity she shows to all, The Saint as well as scorner, That Christian spirit still exists In the Church around the corner. 72 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, With Christian love she dries the tears That fall from every mourner, By giving faith and hope to all In the Church around the corner Faith, Hope, and Charity are hers ; To her be ever honor ; The Church built on our Saviour s word — The-Church around the corner. — BMimore American, The Church of the Transfiguration, or, as it has been of late so generally called, "the little church around the cor- ner," has been lifted out of the obscurity of an ordinaiy place of worship into an object of general interest. Its worthy Rec- tor, the Rev. Dr. G. H. Houghton, tells us, in a discourse which he delivered, December 11th, 1864, that "there were three reasons that led to the selection of the name of the Transfiguration. It was a designation not already appro- priated, it commemorated a chief and yet a seldom consider- ed event in the life of our Lord. It seemed a fit appellation for what was then the least of the Parishes, so few having been present with Christ on Tabor ; and for a Parish in which it was hoped that there might ever be the endeavor, as well as the desire, for that whiteness, which none but the heavenly Father could give a Parish, which if undistinguish- ed for reflecting much of the glory of Tabor, might not be altogether so for fulfilling in some measure to the afflicted its associated ministry of relief/ ' The church of the Trans- figuration has a place among the illustrations of New York which appeared in Applet on' s Magazine, and is thus de- scribed : It is " situated on the north side of Twenty-ninth street, just east of Fifth Avenue, and, with its adjoining Chapel and Rectory, more interesting from its quaint irregularity and air of seclusion, than for any architectural pretensions. Indeed, it may be said to have no architecture at all. The original edifice was erected about fourteen years ago, with THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 73 the Rev. G. H. Houghton as Rector and congregation of three members. From time to time, as the congregation grew in numbers and wealth, additions were made, by ap- pending a little chapel at this end, a porch at that end, and a wing at the side, until finally the original building itself disappeared, and gave place to another equally quaint and plain. A glimmer of the Gothic seems to pervade the low, simple eaves, with here and there, in a short slender column or two, perhaps, a shadow of the Arabesque, or something else ; so that it is in vain to place the whole structure within the confines of any specific order of art. ""With its attendant buildings, the church occupies about ten lots on the street ; and with the row of small trees in front, and the little green between the buildings, and the iron railing enclosing them, it would seem, were it not for the out-door bustle and life of the near Avenue, much like one might imagine that little church wherein Tom Pinch was wont to play the organ near the residence of the architectur- al Pecksniff. "The size of the interior, however, is far greater than one would suppose. When the chapel is given into the main body of the church, as is the custom, by means of folding- doors, this, with the interior of the wing, stretching south- ward to the street, affords accommodations for a much larger congregation than those of many buildings of far more pre- tentious exterior. The ceiling is very low, and of smooth, simply-arched oaken wood — the material of all the furniture. The chancel is comparatively small, and contains, besides the altar, a font of simple and exquisite design, and of the pure Parian. The windows are small and narrow, and pret- tily stained, as are also the windows over the chancel recess. " The principal feature of the interior is the picture, direct- ly behind the pulpit, of the Transfiguration, a copy from Raphael ; and the entire interior is in keeping with the picturesqueness of the church as seen from the street." 10 74 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, The little church around the corner, which has now be- come historical, is endeared to many hearts as the sanctuary to which the remains of George Holland were conveyed, where his venerable features were gazed upon by his weep- ing family and friends for the last time, and where the appropriate services for the dead, which inhumanity, clothed in the garb of religion, elsewhere denied to his ashes, were fittingly and cheerfully rendered. The gratitude felt by the members of the theatrical profession towards the Rector of the church is pleasingly exemplified in the following corres- pondence which is so creditable to all the parties concerned. Holliday Street Theatre (Manager's Office), Baltimore, Jan. 6, 1871. The Rev. Dr. Houghton — Dear Sir : On behalf of the company at present engaged in this theatre, I beg leave to offer for your acceptance a copy of the Holy Scriptures, illustrated by Dore, in token of the appreciation which the ladies and gentlemen who make this testimonial entertain of your high Christian character, and of the services render- ed by j^ou in officiating at the last funeral rites of deceased members of our profession, particularly in the obsequies of the late venerable George Holland. It has been truly said, Reverend Sir, by an esteemed pre- late of your Church, " that there is one name — the name of Jesus — which makes the whole world of kin;" and the same may be said of the chief of those virtues which our Divine Master inculcated when upon earth, the immortal grace of Charity — that Charity which is declared by the Apostles greater than even Faith and Hope ; and which, if generally exercised, would draw into one loving brother- hood the whole family of man. "We thank you irom our hearts for the beautiful ill ustration ycu have just given of this crowning Christian virtue, over the remains of our lamented brother, and feel sure that "the little Church around the corner," graced by such a spirit, will be more acceptable and noble in the eyes of Heaven than the proud- est cathedral, resplendent with costly shrines and echoing to angelic eloquence, which has not Charity. With sincere respect, I beg to subscribe myself your obedient servant, J. T. Ford. THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 75 No. 1 East Twenty-ninth St., New York, Jan. 10, 1871. My Dear Sir: — I received on Saturday last your most kind and gratifying letter, asking my acceptance Horn your- self and associates of a copy of the Holy Scriptures illus- trated by Do re. It is owing to the part which I have been permitted to bear in paying the last tribute of respect to deceased mem- bers of your profession, and especially to the late venerable George Holland, that you tender to me the gift of these rare and costly volumes. I thank you for a letter which no one could receive with- out satisfaction, and which I shall always retain among my most valued treasures — and I thank you and your asso- ciates for proposing to enrich my library with a book which I might not otherwise possess. I shall be most happy to accept your gift, not as a some- thing due in any possible measure, for anything which it may have been in my power to do for members of your pro- fession, but as a token of friendly feeling and regard awak- ened on your part by acts to which you refer. It has been altogether as a matter of course, — as that which was no more than meet, right, and my bounden d uty, — that I have perform- ed the duties in question, and I desire to say that I most truly count it a privilege to discharge a single office of my holy calling, or minister in any way to those who have need. I am so great a debtor to the Master whose commission I bear ; the Master who laid down His life for me, and for all men, that I would fain see His likeness in my every fellow- creature, and so withhold from no one, when in my power, the ministering of mercy and loving kindness. Again thanking you for your letter, and thanking you and your associates for your proposed gift, which I shall be truly happy to receive, and praying God to send us and all men a merciful judgment at the last, I remain, yours, very sincerely, G. H. Houghton. Mr. J. T. Ford. P. S. — I send you two small publications which will give you some information concerning the church from which the funeral of the late Mr. Holland took place, a funeral remarkable for the unusual number and great respectability of those who attended it — many of whom have since borne testimony to the blamelessness and worthiness of the de- ceased. 76 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND. The Revd. Dr. G. H. Houghton" is a native of Massa- chusetts. His father was a merchant of that State, and was liberally educated — a graduate of Harvard College. Dr. Houghton is an alumnus of the University of the City of New York, but he received his degree of D.D. from Colum- bia College. He was for some time an Instructor in the Hebrew language at the Theological Seminary, corner of Fourteenth Street and Ninth Avenue, in the City of New York. Not without reason did Mr. Sabine refer to him as one who would say a prayer over a deceased actor, for he has officiated at the funerals of Miss Mary Gannon, Mrs. Jane Vernon, John Sefton, C. W. Clarke, Henry Wallace, and others. The New York correspondent of the Boston Journal, says : "Except the laborers at Five Points he is better ac- quainted with the sorroAving ones of New York than any other clergyman. A distinguished organist took to drink to such a degree that he was unlit for his position. When everybody cast him off Dr. Houghton took him up and tried to save him. For several months he took care of him on Saturday nights, that he might be fit to play on Sunday, and not become a beggar. A clergyman of very brilliant talents, of fine family connections, became intemperate, and was shunned and discarded by all. In his distress and dis- grace he called on the benevolent clergyman, who took him in, furnished him with a comfortable room in the tower of his church, gave him a chance to reform, and held on to him to the last. Such a man would allow no human being to want for the consolation of religion while living, nor would he wound the feelings of relatives, however a man might die. ' ' The epithet, "little church," as applied by Mr. Sabine to the church of the Transfiguration, is somewhat ambigu- ous. If he meant that a little church and a dead actor were J THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 77 both, in his estimation, contemptible, what becomes of tho little churches, the memory of which can never perish, which met in " dens and caves of the earth," by "the river side," and " in upper chambers ? " If he meant that " the little church round the corner," as compared with the gen- erality of churches, was small in point of dimensions, and limited to the accommodation of a few hearers, he was sim- ply mistaken. For example, the little church is a third lar- ger than his own, the former seating a thousand persons, and the latter some six hundred. Besides, the church of the Transfiguration is a growing church, and deserves to grow, numbering among its members or attendants many of our citizens whose names are synon3~ms for intelligence and worth — Dr. Aloxzo Clarke, Wm. Buckmaster, Dr. Jones, and William Kingsland. The refusal of Mr. Sabine to read the funeral service at his church, over the remains of Holland, and the discharge of this duty by Dr. Houghton, has been the subject of much comment both in prose and verse. Among the latter contributions, we select for insertion some of the best pieces which have appeared in the columns of the daily press. " THE LITTLE CHURCH ROUND THE CORNER." BY A. E. LANCASTER, Dramatic Editor of the Sunday Times. " Bring him not here, where our sainted feet Are treading the path to glory ; Bring him not here where our Saviour sweet Repeats, for us, His story. Go take him where ' such things ' are done (For he sat in the seat of the scorner,) To where they have room, for we have none, To that little church round the eorner." So spake the holy man of God Of another man, his brother, Whose cold remains, ere they sought the sod, Had only asked that a Christian rite Might he read above them by one whose light 78 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, Was, " Brethren, love one another:" Had only asked that a prayer be read Ere his flesh went down to join the dead, "Whilst his spirit looked, with suppliant eyes, Searching for God throughout the skies. But the priest frowned " No," and his brow was bare Of love in the sight of the mourner, And they looked for Christ, and found Him — where? In that little church round the corner ! Ah ! well, God grant, when, with aching feet, We tread life's last few paces, That we may hear some accents sweet, And kiss, to the end. fond faces. God grant that this tired flesh may rest, ('Mid man}' a musing mourner,) While the sermon is preached, and the rites are read, In no church where the heart of love is dead, And the pastor a pious prig at best, But in some small nook where God's confessed — Some little church round the corner ! YE PRIEST AND YE PLAYER. Once upon a time a player who had contributed much to cheer and amuse his fellow men, died at a great age, beloved, respected, and regretted by all who knew him. A priest living in ye same place, was asked to give ye body ye usual funeral rites, but he refused, saying : " Ye man was an actor, and there- fore I will not do that which you ask." What afterward befel ye player, and how St. Peter received ye priest, these lines will tell : One evening, weary at ye gate Of heaven, a pilgrim stood ; And cried, " O Lord, if not too late, And thou shoulds't deem it good ; Give rest to one whose strength is spent In traveling Life's rough way ; Whose eyes are dim, whose back is bent, Whose locks with age are gray." Ye Master heard ye pilgrim's cry, And threw ye portals wide ; " Come rest with those who never die, O servant true and tried." THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 79 " Full many a cup of joy below Thy genial humor crowned ; And hearts oppressed with weight of woe, Their burden lighter found." " Poor man had need of all thy mirth, And since to thee 'twas given To sooth with joy ye ills of earth, Come share ye joy of heaven " Next night another pilgrim called And raised a mighty din. "It's I, Lord," he loudly bawled, " Why don't you let me in ? " He had a self-important air That plainly seemed to say ; " Why do you keep me waiting here ? I'm holier, Lord, than they." His clothes were of ye latest style, His choker snowy white, He wore a bran new beaver tile And breeches much too tight. No evidence of travel stain Or dust these garments bore, By easy stages it was plain He'd got to heaven's door. While none who cared that face to scan Would hesitate to say He had refreshed ye " inner man " Quite frequent by ye way. • : What ho ! Within there — don't you hear ? " With louder voice he cried : " I say. let some one quick appear, A Saint awaits outside." Then fiercer still ye " saint " essaye.1, But no one inside stirred ; Nor was there token that he'd made His " saintly " summons heard. They must be all asleep, he thought, " I'll fish with different bait," So quick a huge round stone he brought, And hurled it at ye gate. 30 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND Both far and near the echoes ran, Apart ye portals flew, Disclosing Peter, keys in hand, To his astonished view. " Art thou ye meek and lowly ' Saint,' " Said Peter, drawing near, ■' Whose knock so very soft and faint Fell on my sleeping ear?" " That lowly worm before you stands," Ye pilgrim sighed profound ; Then cringed and squirmed, and rubbed his bands And rolled his eyes around. " Sweet Saint," quoth Peter, " that'll do, And since you're but a worm, Methinks 'tis only right that you Should have some cause to squirm." And having thus his conscience eased, Without the least delay, A mighty club he quickly seized, And clubbed ye " Saint " away. THE LITTLE CHURCH ROUND THE CORNER. By Tudor Horton. It was thought of old, when a man was cold, And dress' d for his last long journey, A parson should come to direct him home By clerical pow'r of attorney ; But one man of grace from a holy (?) place, One who acts like a gospel factor, Could not condescend his breath to expend O'er the corpse of a dead play-actor. How could he have read all his Master said, And turned from a sorrowing mourner. With u Not in our way"? Perhaps it will pay " The little church ' - ound the corner." A sold with the stain and the brand of Cain, When truss'd for the hangman's halter, Is dismiss'd with grace to a holy place By the sons of— the christian altar ; But a man of worth, who has cheer'd the earth, By promoting harmless laughter, THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 81 Is thrust in the cold, from the sacred fold, With no hope in the Great Hereafter. But all are not lost of the Christian host, So we'll silence the jeering scorner, And honor pay one for an act well done At " the little church round the corner." 11 THAT LITTLE CHURCH. By an Episcopalian. 'Twas not beneath that grandly steepled fane, Within its high arched portal's bold relief That came the gentlest words of charity, So kindly uttered in the hour of grief; Nor yet behind that well-carved chancel rail, With velvet hassock and with cushioned chair, The purest breath of piety was found, That floats aloft upon the sacred air. Nor 'neath that silken robe, the priestly garb, The whitened surplice, beat the truest heart That spoke thro' words of soul-deep kindness felt, That best had learned the sincere Christian part. Ah ! no, not there was found the faithful man, Not one to teach forgiveness, pity, love, Not there the truthful follower of our Lord, To tell of charity all good above. Not one who'd own his saintship could do wrong, Who'd make one moment's pause to look within, To judge his own earth-tempted words and deeds, And watch his own vain heart's approach to sin ; But one who stands a self-appointed judge, Condemns the calling of an honest man, Refuses Christian rites unto the dead, Thus ranking chief of all the bigot clan. This goodly (?) priest has deemed it just to judge His fellow-man ! and thus can think no sin ; If his late act by others be adjudged, If by his words ive judge the heart within, While God forgives the crime-stained souls of men, While we beg mercy at his footstool low, Dares sinful man refuse a heav'n born form A grace that Christians e'en to felons show ? 82 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, But just '' around the corner" humbly stands " That little church," whose kindly pastor prays A blessing on the upright, faithful soul That's told on earth it's sum of mortal days. A pastor, aye ! in name, in deed and truth ; A tear he'd drop upon the stranger's grave, A prayer he'd raise above the passing soul, What'er had lived the dead, a saint or knave. We grant " All honor to the little church," That stands "around the corner." Bless it's shade ! God's benison upon it's pastor's head, Ills blessing and it's memory ne'er will fade. ROUND THE CORNER. A mourner stood at a preacher's door Asking a boon of a prayer said o'er The clay cold form of a brother. The preacher stands with lofty mein Lifting his priestly hand between, And with pious glare at the other, Says, " When an actor passes away Not mine the task o'er his corse to pray, But then, oh sad faced mourner, Though the thought to my soul a sorrow brings I doubt not they may do such things, In a little church round the corner." The mourner turned and bowing his head, Thought of the words the Saviour said When the Magdalen was kneeling, And of him whom the patriarch's arms enfold, Of Lazarus worn and poor and old, At the door of the proud appealing. That night the preacher had a dream, In which his imagining made it seem . That Death laid his hand on his shoulder ; And ere he had time to kneel and pray, He breathed his dignified soul away,. And left his body to moulder. A blaze of glory dazzled his eyes As he saw the gates of heaven arise, But he gathered his robes about him, THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 83 ,; r And bowed to Saint Peter who held the keys, Wondering much as he stood at ease, How the saints got along without him. The gates were ajar, but the saint said, " Here _ You never can enter till it appear Of what good works you've been factor." And the preacher said " I've made beautiful prayers, Built a brown stone Church which my fold still shares, And I wouldn't bury an actor." The gates shut close and a voice from above, Cried, " None enter here but for works of love," And that dignified soul was a mourner As Saint Peter's touch on a little bell Calle:! up an angel and sent him to — well, Hi sent him around the corner. F. G. S. Jan. 10, 1871. THE LITTLE CHURCH AROUND THE CORNER. Words by George Cooper. Music by D. S. Wambold, and sun25kIi J eta nil HfilH^ : tF ; " v ^^H ^« EmhI WMMm^BBMgffi^^'Jtm- . \v I ■ Nil iM^'-^'ii ( ; 1 " ■ ■ ~^2l&&3x&^. m IPs vS Jf ^MB H^ni W ■''■ ■'' al*5"g Pamua by II W 3 :':■!-. i;:/iM. R. / HANNAH MORE, ) 1 . .'•' ■■ ■ THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 117 himself to be taught not to attemjDt to separate two things which must not be put asunder, viz., the stage and the drama. Neither can be unproductive without injury to both, nor ought the one, any more than the other, to be an object of hostility or indifference. "If it be deemed desir- able that the thought of every age should be embodied in words, colors, marble, or bronze, — if it be important that our material progress should be accompanied by a corres- ponding moral and intellectual development, — not less de- sirable and important is it that the drama, which claims from all the arts " suit and service " in their turn, should retain its station among the educational instruments of the age. But without a great school of actors, the drama it- self necessarily pines and dwindles. Men capable of cast- ing their thoughts into dramatic forms will not be at the pains to write when none are competent to embody them worthily." We turn with pleasure to the second sermon, on the same Sabbath, that of the Rev. Dr. L. W. Bacon, widely known as the accomplished translator of PereHyacinthe's works, and make a few extracts : " The friends of an aged actor, deceased, against whom I hear nothing alleged but that he was an actor, applied to the rector of a certain church to conduct funeral services for the old man, at the church. He declined, on the sole ground, as I understand, of the dead man's profession, and referred the applicants to the rector of a " little church around the corner," by whom, and at whose church, the funeral was attended. ' ' As for the unfortunate person in the pillory, there seems nothing to be said in mitigation of the public judg- ment against him — that is, supposing the facts to be as rep- resented. He appears before the public as one perfectly willing that the scandal against the church (if it be one,) should be enacted, provided it is done by his brother 118 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, around the corner, and It is name does not get mixed np with it. He stands, not only as one ''judging another's servant, 1 ' but as enforcing against an individual a sweeping- condemnation which he has passed in his own mind, upon a profession which he would not dare deliberately to say was necessarily a criminal one. He seems to shut out from his church a solemn religious service, on the ground that it will be attended by a throng of ungodly and unbelieving people — as if he had come to call the righteous to repent- ance. " It seems to me a disgusting piece of Pharisaism — what Frederick Robertson was wont to stigmatize as "the dastardly condemnation of the weak for sins that are venial in the strong ;" what a greater than Robertson — his Master and mine — used to denounce with woe upon woe. " We must acknowledge, in the first place, that some of the objections to the theatre which prevailed two genera- tions, or even one generation ago, are now in some cases either entirely done away or very much modified. The abominable accessories of the theatre which old writers, and recent writers who depend on the old for their ideas, inveigh against as inseparable from the theatre itself, have been separated from it. "Have we no language but that of denunciation and contempt for a literature to which Sir Edward Lytton has contributed his superb historical picture of Richelieu, and that great scholar, the late Dean Milman, of St. Paul's Cathedral, his drama of the Italian Wife, and which, by translation or adaptation, has been enriched from the mas- ter-pieces of Schiller and Dickens and Charles Reade I By personal knowledge I know almost nothing — less, per- haps, than, as a public instructor, I ought to know — of the stage. But, for ten years past, I have been a pretty con- stant observer of theatrical advertisements and dramatic criticisms in the New York press, and I recognize, with i ast&szJ^e, uUyA^l THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 119 thankful satisfaction, that, alongside of another tendency, which I will speak of by-and-by, there has been a growing tendency to the production of a class of plays of domestic interest and faultless purity — like those derived from the stories of Charles Dickens. How far these may be de- formed by bad acting, I have no knowledge ; but it must take a very ingeniously vicious player to make the repre- sentation of ' ' Little Nell ' ' and the ' ' Cricket on the Hearth ' ' anything but wholesome and humanizing — and Christian- izing. "There are certain traits of most excellent virtue — a gen- erous overflow of kindness towards the unfortunate, a quick sympathy with noble acts and public causes, which we can hardly look to find more honorably exemplified than in the guild of actors. We haven't all the virtues in the church ; they cannot claim a monopoly of sins in the green- room. "Let us find exactly what those things are which we object to, and then deal with them explicitly — faithfully — and we shall not deal with them the less effectively if we ab- stain from including in the same censure, perfectly innocent things with which they are associated. If we object that there are multitudes of bad men and women in the profes- sion of the stage, let us learn how to spare those who, for that very reason, are the more honorably and illustriously virtuous, while we smite the guilty. If we condemn bad theatres, why should we find any advantage in bringing here and there the good theatres, if there be such, under the same condemnation % If you abhor and denounce corrupt plays, why should you pretend to denounce dramatic litera- ture, the evil and the good together ? "I know no one class of society so much interested in the reform of the theatre as the profession of the stage ; the community of actors who should resolutely refuse to be associated with persons of known infamous character ; such 120 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, as these could do more for the reforming and ennobling of the stage than all the preachers in Christendom. But, how often do we hear of such managers and such players i There have been those, in every generation since David Garrick, whose private character has done something towards re- deeming the character of the profession. There are more such to-day, doubtless, than ever before since the beginning of history." On the Sunday following the Rev. J. F. W. Wake, said : " Very marvellous is it sometimes the way in which chance and trilling things, things small or done in a corner, get life and publicity — enter into the thought, plow up the opinion of society, get handed down to future ages and become im- mortal. Accidental expressions get caught ; are repeated or sung, become universal ; are the pivot upon which reforms turn ; rouse men who have slumbered daily over the old truth they newly phrase, while other words as true, other truths as big, somehow get lost, die and are forgotton. Who knows the Divine condition to the life of any human thing '. "The thing made painfully elaborate for fit occasion or audience gasps but that once, and a little thing, some un- noticed thing, getting some divine inspiring, becomes prophet and pioneer and immortal. Little did that man, who shut not the door of his church merely, but the door of his chari- ty, against the dead bod}' of a fellow-being supplicating the last rites of the church and of humanity — little did that man dream how his deed would get the quick ears of the world and be made the stinging text of many a searching sermon from lips unanointed, perhaps, but righteous in the indigna- tion that they uttered. Little did he, "not caring," as he said, "to get mixed up with such a thing," dream how fearfully he would become "mixed up" in a broad and general reprobation of a deed the memory of which will haunt his name forever. Of all men who have had great- THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 121 ness thrust upon them, few will so little excite a human envy as he whose narrow blunder has given a ii lip to a torpid public sentiment and roused it to one of its indignant spasms. "Whatever sects or churches may succeed in doing, uttering or repressing, thank God, one thing is every day more and more evident, that the great heart of this nine- teenth century beats too true to be long confused when great principles are at stake. Once it was the Church that was mighty. Once the priest could stand and forbid rite and sepulture. That tyranny is over, and the untrammelled, emancipated spirit of God's child will hear God's voice and know God's voice whenever it speaks, whatever it says, let churches and dogmas say as they will. It is God's voice, the power of God' s truth j ust now, lifting ' ' The Little Church Around the corner" into a passing notoriety and pressing close home upon the convictions of this generation a lesson of charity broader far than the one lesson its action covers. It is quite pardonable to public sentiment that when it fairly rouses from its torpidity it should become a little extravagant in its morality. At such times it conies clearly out how little the general heart is allied to the inane and in- sane bigotry of the sect-theology. "It may be that the individual clergyman shall get an amount of personal abuse which should at least be shared with that system of religious faith or order which makes such an attitude as his possible ; it may be that the other clergyman shall receive too much approval for the dis- charge of the simplest act of professional duty. These are inevitable, but not wholly bad results, provided we catch and hold the eternal, underneath principle. A petty bigot has proved false to the instincts of nature. The affront is many-sided. Its spirit is subversive of every thing Chris- tian. Tt ought to be a lesson ; nor will its mission be right- ly conchrded till the repetition of such a thing shall be 16 122 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND, impossible, and the spirit that dictated it shall be dead. This ill- wind has blown a deal of good, many ways. Can we do nothing toward encouraging it into a whirlwind that shall clean church and heart ofthe black lingering shadows of such intolerance I "I find this said of him who was repulsed from the Church hospitality : " [The Doctor here quoted a glowing eulogy on CtEOR&e Holland, written by Winter, of New York, and remarked that perhaps it had been over-drawn, but under the circum- stances he who had written it was pardonable, for there must have been some merit to have caused it to be written.] "This ostracism of a class is something that the genius of Christianity does not recognize." On Sunday, the 4th of February, the same eloquent pas- tor discoursed from the theme, "May I go to the Theatre ?" " The drama stands recognized as one of the methods in which the human mind has in all ages striven to utter it- self. No branch of literature is more various, more fasci- nating, more useful ; none with wider range, attracting or arousing broader sympathy. Into none can a writer throw more power, or come closer to the heart and the life of the people. It has been the chosen vehicle of sense of the greatest and best minds of all ages, its works surviving all shocks and changes of languages, times and tastes. There is a dramatic element in our common nature which the lit- erature of the drama, and more especially the representa- tions of the stage, meet, minister to, and satisfy — a normal demand by these supplied. " The poet sees in the drama not merely the best method of preserving his thought, but his best hope of audience and influence. The .orator knows that he requires it as one of the elements in his success, and the cold stupidity of the pulpit is much increased because of its neglect. It is the dramatic element that has made largely the success of that THE VETERAN COMEDIAN. 123 wisest of all churches, the Catholic ; it has made largely the success of the Methodists. "In the community there is a difference of opinion as to the drama, the theatre, and the actors. "Unqualified con- demnation on the one side, unqualified approbation on the other, and between all shades settling down into an average public opinion in favor of theatrical performances. " The Catholic Church took up the theatre, and used it as an engine for effectiug that which the pulpit had not suc- ceeded in ; nuns and priests were the players. Then later the Protestants used it, until in England the Puritans de- stroyed it ; while to the unwearied defence of Voltaire, who, with chivalrous unselfishness stood out in their behalf, is it owing that the profession of the actor was wrested from the position of infamy, and a people long friendless and de- spised began to find their way back to the level of an hon- orable and common humanity." Said Dr. Wake, "What am I, in my profession as a clergyman, to say of all this % Shall I join the Church cry, and go unqualifiedly against a class and their vocation ; shall I say that the theatre is ' a snare and peril which true Christians in all ages have ab- horred,' when both Protestant and Catholic Churches have used it to their ends when it Avas convenient, and as good Christians attend and approve it as those who stay away and condemn it?" "A high art and a noble calling has been dragged down and made to become a minister to the low tastes if not pro- pensities. I say high art and noble power — that with which God has blessed men like Booth and Jefferson in our own day, whose grand impersonations minister not merely to momentary delight, but may be made by ourselves valu- able help in our own self-culture, and certainly must be elevating and refining in their influence upon the more ordinary mind. However it may be with men and women of debauched lives and tastes — and such are found in all. 124 MEMOIR OF GEORGE HOLLAND. vocations, and by such ought we to condemn none — there is no doubt but the leading men and women lament the degra- dation of their art which they are powerless to prevent. Dr. Wake ascribed the degradation of the dramatic art not to the individual actor, but to the public, and it is there that the axe must be laid. There is not a profession so utterly dependent on the public as that of the actor, nothing is so unqualifiedly the servant of the public as the stage. The theatre was created by public demand, exists for and must subsist upon it. Like all other vocations, it is shrewd in the direction of bread and butter, it studies, understands and meets the public better than the clergy do. Although it is one of the reformatory agencies, its place is behind pub- lic sentiment, not bej'ond the average morality. Its duty is to take its cue from society, and give back what it de- mands and will accept. Reform the public, and the theatre is of necessity reformed." . [In the course of his sermon the Rev. Mr. Ware spoke incidentally of Maggie Mitchell as one of the bright and pure lights of the dramatic profession. It happened that the lady mentioned was one among the very large congrega- tion present, and the unexpected tribute to her character created quite a sensation. She had been recognized on en- tering, and quite a buzz of whispering occurred before the service. This the pastor took occasion to rebuke before he began his sermon, not imagining the innocent cause of it would be afterwards used to illustrate the strong point he made as to the character of the stage and its lessons of purity. He also spoke in this connection of Faxxv Kem- ble, Booth, Jefferson and Feciitek.] ' CC cc «Cfi> * cCC C :£gccCi> - C c, r C c&ieC' <•<■■•-< c? 3r«r -f^c -<--c- tt*i i c - c c: • C - - ■••- <"•-•.;•' C-< " • • c ■■'■•<' C< c -■ . • --c ess ^ <- f : -".i < <&$ * i , c c c <<- .CCC ccc ccc (C< G ■ i _ C .^ 4 c « c< , c c ■ t c c c • - c -■<•- <-' c: ex cc '• ( C«' - OC: CQ' J _T < c..-c cc co C XL C > CCsC_C< CCC -:;-ojc i CICCCCCC^ ccccgrc C C'. 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