Twenty Years of My Life

CHAPTER XXVIII

Chapter 297,688 wordsPublic domain

MY ARTIST FRIENDS

MY first connection with artists came through my cousin, David Wilkie Wynfield, who was the nephew and godson of the great Sir David Wilkie. He was a popular artist in both senses of the word, for engravers used to multiply his pictures like “The New Curate,” and there was no more popular figure at the Arts’ Club or in the homes of his brother artists. A repartee of his was the origin of the picture in _Punch_, where a painter who wants to know why he does not get into the Royal Academy is told that he should not wear such thick boots. He and some brother artists, of whom I think Marcus Stone and G. A. Storey are the only survivors, took Ann Boleyn’s castle of Hever (when, if not abandoned to the owls and bats, it had not yet become the home of the Astors), as a summer sketching-box, and I have a picture of them grouped round the entrance arch, which he painted.

So that he might have a better opportunity of introducing me to all his friends, he put me up for “The Arts,” of which I remained a member till his death. In those days it was located in a delightful old house in Hanover Square, which had belonged to and been frescoed by Angelica Kauffmann. There I made the acquaintance of the most famous artists of the day, both painters and sculptors, for your artist, unlike your author, loves to go to the club at night to relieve his mind after his long day’s work, by playing pool or demolishing the claims of his rivals to be considered artists in long technical conversations through clouds of smoke. The art of blowing smoke-rings is a speciality of artists. I have heard a famous R.A. recommend a young painter, who was complaining that _he_ could never get his pictures into the Royal Academy, to paint small grey pictures. “Why?” asked the disappointed aspirant. “Because they are the pictures which Leighton needs to show off his own pictures properly, and he always picks them out first.”

Another time, at the committee meeting when Herbert Schmaltz was up for election, the chairman asked, “Does anybody know anything about Mr. Schmaltz?” and the most popular landscape painter of the day replied, “Mr. Schmaltz is a man who has taken the illustration of the Bible into his own hands.”

It was Wynfield who introduced me to Joe Jopling. There have been few at-homes more popular than Mrs. Jopling-Rowe’s. Jopling, who was a great rifle-shot—he won the Queen’s Prize at Wimbledon—as well as a regular exhibitor in the Academy, died a few years after I came to know them, and his widow married George Rowe. Mrs. Jopling-Rowe, who is a popular and admirable portrait-painter, and a constant exhibitor at all the principal picture-shows, like the Academy and the Salon, when first I knew her lived at Beaufort Street, Chelsea, but an epidemic of burglars drove her from there to Pembroke Road, Earl’s Court, and from thence to an old house in Pembroke Gardens. It made no difference to her at-homes, which have always been crowded with really distinguished people, for she has known all the leading artists, most of the leading authors and actors, and not a few of the leading public men and women of her time. Millais painted her portrait in her youthful prime, and if one sees her standing near it, where it hangs in her house, one notices how little she has altered in those intervening years, which have been so full of painting triumphs and brilliant society.

Many artists used to come to Addison Mansions. West Kensington is not like St. John’s Wood or Chelsea; there was no West Kensington Arts’ Club, and artists had not many meeting-places except Phil May’s studio and our flat. Solomon, already nearing his zenith, used often to come with his brother Albert, and so did Arthur Hacker, though they both lived some way off. We were asked to Solomon’s wedding—we and Henry Arthur Jones, I think, were the only Gentiles present at this splendid ceremony, carried out with all the historical rites. Albert Solomon very good-naturedly sat with us to tell us the significance of everything. It was as interesting as an Easter service in a Sicilian cathedral.

It was easier for J. J. Shannon, for he lived quite close, in Holland Park Road, in an old farmhouse, which he gradually transformed into a charming mansion, where one used to meet most interesting people.

David Murray, the famous landscape painter, was another frequent visitor among the Academicians, very popular for his wit and camaraderie, very ready to help any one who needed a push in high quarters.

He has altered surprisingly little—only last summer I met him at a ball at Sir St. Clair Thompson’s, the eminent throat specialist’s, whom I knew as far back as 1886 when he was honorary secretary of the Club at Florence. David was dancing as much as most of the young men, and not looking perceptibly older than when I met him a quarter of a century ago. He is another of the intellectual artists who read deeply, and he is much interested in Japan. He very good-naturedly came to advise me about my pictures when I was selling the contents of Phillimore Lodge, but we had already parted with the celebrated Nattier of Louis XV dressed as Hercules—a Burke heirloom—my father sold that to Colnaghi for £1500.

Alfred Drury, that delightfully poetical sculptor, was another Academician who came often. Drury has a beautiful voice.

It was only in our last days at Addison Mansions, after we had given up those large evening at-homes, that William Nicholson, not an Academician, but one of the greatest artists of them all, came. Nicholson was not only one of the finest painters of the day in inspiration and technique, but was the pioneer of a new movement, being the first painter to have an artificial reproduction of daylight installed in his studio—a costly and highly scientific combination of various lights. By means of this painting is rendered independent of the weather and the time. He has painted all night before now. Mark Barr, a scientific friend of ours, who devised the apparatus for this, the most brilliant man I ever met, brought him.

Another pioneer of art who used to come to Addison Mansions often, when he had a studio in Brook Green, was Francis Bate, the moving spirit of the New English Art Club. His influence on art has been profound. The new English Art Club may have been identified with a certain extravagant phase by scoffers, but it has embraced men like Sargent and Shannon, as well as apostles of stiff blue cabbages.

The public were quick to appreciate the charm of the soft grey studies, in which so little was indicated and so much implied, of Theodore Roussel and Paul Maitland. Maitland, in spite of his delicate health, was a student as well as a painter. He was a very clear thinker, like the late Sir Alfred East, another Academician who often joined our symposia. I always felt that East could have made his name as easily in literature as in art.

The artist who has played the greatest part in the book life of his time is, of course, Walter Crane, a really profound student and thinker, who has held all sorts of most important directorships in art, and delivered lectures of historical importance. No artist has such a record in _Who’s Who_, for Crane is not only an illustrator of books, but a writer, and as eminent a socialist as he is an artist. He describes himself as “mostly self-taught,” but he was apprenticed to W. J. Linton, and exhibited in the Royal Academy when he was only sixteen. He lives in ideal surroundings, in a rambling house, more than two centuries old, in Holland Street, Kensington. The thing which always struck me more than the old curios which find such a fitting niche in the house, are the rubbings of the brasses of his ancestors, for Crane has a long line of knightly ancestors, one of whom was Chancellor of England in Stuart times. Of his work I need not speak, for he has founded one of the schools of modern English Art.

When I asked Walter Crane if he had been turned into an artist by any sensational incident, he said—

“My progress—if I may so call it—has been very gradual and quite unsensational, I think—except to myself. I had the great advantage of having an artist for a father, and never remember the time when I did not handle a pencil of some kind, though it was often a _slate_ pencil. I had no early struggles to have my wish to be an artist allowed and encouraged, or any strife about the realisation of that ideal with a bourgeois-minded family, as one so often hears about in artists’ histories. I never started for anywhere with half-a-crown in my pocket—anything of the sort usually quickly burnt a hole in what little pocket I may have had—and no doubt that is the principal reason why I remain poor.

“My early fondness for drawing animals caused confident and friendly critics to say, ‘He will be a second Landseer!’ and nothing could have had a more glowing prospect for me at the time; but times have a way of changing, and ideals change with them, especially when one is ‘growing up.’

“At the age of sixteen I had what might be called my first picture accepted at the Royal Academy—first time of asking—but the subject was ‘The Lady of Shalott,’ and my source of inspiration was by no means Landseer, but rather the pre-Raphaelites, and I was already deeply read in Ruskin.

“You speak of the ‘paradox of my being a socialist’ in spite of my descent. Why should it be a paradox for one who loves beauty and harmony, and strives to realise it in his work, but who sees around him a world scrambling for money, glutted with riches at one end of the social scale, and penniless and destitute at the other, while all the time the bounty of Nature and the invention and labour of man provides abundance—but only for those who can exchange the necessary counters, and for those who hold the keys of the means of the maintenance of life?

“Socialism does not mean lowering the standard of life, but raising it, and with the abolition of the struggle for mere bread, and the substitution of co-operation for competition, it will be possible to build a society founded upon some better basis than cash, a surplus value. Indeed, it may be said that a true aristocracy might then become possible, since personal qualities and character would then have their real value, purged of the harrowing, selfish burden of private ownership of the means of life, and estimated by service to the community.”

My most intimate artist friend is Réné de l’Hôpital, who, in spite of his name and his descent, speaks not a word of French. De l’Hôpital is one of those happy portrait-painters who can get a likeness; but he is more than that; if he had a literary turn, he could write as good a book as any one on “collecting” economically, for he has a wonderful knowledge of old furniture and its West-end and East-end values. I know the extent of his knowledge because he and my brother-in-law, the late Frederick Robert Ellis, were my advisers when I sold the contents of Phillimore Lodge, and the auctioneer said they fetched half as much again as they were worth, because we knew their value and their points were so well brought out. De l’Hôpital owed his knowledge partly to the fact that he was born in a great old house full of treasures. Having known what it was to struggle himself, when he became an artist against the wishes of his family, he does a great deal for the poor.

De l’Hôpital, who is a French count, son of the sixth Duke de Vitry, has had the honour of painting Prince Arthur of Connaught and Pope Leo XIII, and was a Gold Staff officer at the coronation of King George V. He married a daughter of John Francis Bentley, the great architect who built the Westminster Cathedral. Mrs. de l’Hôpital has written a book entitled _The Westminster Cathedral and its Architect_, and collaborated with me in one of my books in which she would not allow her name to appear.

Two painters who used to come to Addison Mansions arise in my mind with East. Both were portrait-painters, recognised as among the soundest executants of their craft—J. H. Lorimer and Hugh de Trafford Glazebrook—for both were interested in literature as well as art—a not common trait among artists—and both of them paint portraits with enduring and outstanding merit. Lorimer, as I have said, was the son of the late Prof. Lorimer of Edinburgh University, the eminent international jurist who made the restoration of Kellie Castle his hobby, and brother of Sir Robert Lorimer, who restored St. Giles’ Cathedral at Edinburgh, and a cousin of Norma Lorimer, the novelist. Glazebrook was a brother of Canon Glazebrook, late head master of Clifton, an Oxford friend of mine who never won the high jump, though he could clear five feet eleven, because he happened to have for a contemporary the only man who ever cleared six feet in the ’Varsity sports.

A new school of black-and-white artists was coming rapidly to the fore. Pictorial journalism on an unprecedented scale had invaded England from America, and a number of new illustrated papers and magazines had started, and they relied for their pictorial side on ideas which must have seemed revolutionary to those who had been brought up on the old standard productions of the _Illustrated London News_. The foundation of _The Graphic_ a decade or two earlier had been a sign of the times.

The most extraordinary artist of the movement could hardly be called a journalist proper, because most of his work was done for books published by John Lane, and for the _Yellow Book_. Beardsley, who was a mere boy, with his boyishness accentuated by his fair hair and consumptive’s pink-and-white complexion, came nearly every week with a very pretty sister who made her name rapidly on the stage. Beardsley, who had a workmanship of spiderish delicacy and an imagination like Edgar Allan Poe, which resulted in the creation of female types of appalling wickedness and snake-like fascination, did not talk much “shop”; he was more occupied with the studies on which these extraordinary creations were founded. He was a very interesting man to talk to, very modest. He always impressed me as a man with a wonderful future if he were not cut off, as he was, by an early death.

Phil May, another genius of the movement, was one of our most constant visitors. He lived, as I have said, in a studio improvised from a stable, almost opposite Shannon, in those days. He did more than most men to revolutionise black and white, because he was one of the first who grasped the value of Japanese effects and introduced them into his work. But his method of producing these Japanese effects was not Japanese. A Japanese artist fills the brush, which he uses as pen and pencil, with Indian ink, and secures his effects with a few dexterous sweeps. Phil May drew his picture in the English way with comparatively few lines, then studied his own work to see what was superfluous, and rubbed out every superfluity. He was not the rapid worker which one imagined from his style. After he left the Australian paper with which he was connected, he remained a free lance for years, drawing whatever came into his head as irresistible, and selling it to one or other journal, and bringing out collections of his drawings of the year in his famous annual. It was, perhaps, not the best way of making money, but it came very naturally to him, for he was as brilliant a wit as he was an artist. He was a man of inspirations; he could be irresistibly funny with such simple materials as the henpecked husband. He was the reverse of henpecked himself. He had a devoted and very pretty wife, who was forgiving to all the faults he committed in his bland and childlike way, and I often used to think that his jokes about henpecked husbands formed his way of crying “peccavi.” Who that had ever seen it could forget his picture of the husband coming home at three o’clock in the morning and being asked, “What do you mean by coming home at this time of night?” and pleading that there was nowhere else open? Or his picture of the drunken lion-tamer, who had taken refuge from his wife in the lion’s cage, with his wife outside the cage crying “You coward!”

I do not think he ever made his speech in the rooms of the Piscatorial Society the subject of a picture, but it was worth it. He was the guest of the evening and had dined a little too well—at any rate, as far as drink was concerned. When he rose to respond to the toast of his health, he looked round the room and saw dozens of glass cases stuffed with salmon and pike of monstrous size, the pride of the Society. He took them all in with a wave of his hand, and said, “I suppose you will tell me that there is only one ——y kipper on that wall!”

On another occasion I was with Phil and Corbould at the Savage Club. We stayed there very late, and when Phil finally made up his mind to go home, he could not remember where he lived. Of course, we knew his own studio quite well, because it was close to our homes, and we had been there scores of times, but he was not residing there; he was staying in lodgings, for he had just come back from the Japan fiasco. He had received a commission from the _Graphic_ to go to Japan for a year or more, and do sketches for them. They offered him very liberal terms, and he accepted them. He let his studio for a year, and started off full of good intentions. But he never got to Japan. He stopped somewhere on the way—a very long way from England—and abandoned himself to a lotus life of mild dissipation—we might, perhaps, have called him a lotus-drinker—and the _Graphic_ had to bring him home again. It was soon after he got home that this event at the Savage happened.

“Where to?” asked the cabby.

“I don’t know,” said Phil. “I have forgotten where I live; it is not my own house.”

“Well, how am I to get you there?” asked the cabby.

“I do not know what the name of the house is,” said Phil; “but I think I could draw it.”

“There are a good lot of houses in London,” said the cabby, “and they are mostly all alike.”

“But there is a church near it,” said Phil; “and I could draw that.”

A menu card and a pencil were procured, and he drew a picture of the ordinary London house and a rather toyshop church. The cabby looked at it and said, “I know where it is; that’s Osnaburgh Terrace,” so Phil got into the cab, and then the cabby turned round to Corbould and myself and said, “That’s Phil May, ain’t it?” We said yes, and he unbuttoned his coat and put the menu card carefully in his pocket, remarking, “It will be worth something some day.”

The extraordinary thing was that any one who was so witty and such a consummate artist should have been ignored by _Punch_ for so many years, though he became in the end one of its most honoured contributors. The editor approached him in a very curious way when he felt that he could not ignore him any longer. He did it through the firm who at that time reproduced illustrations for _Punch_.

Phil May was one of the best-hearted of men, generous to a fault, alike with his money and in his attitude to his rivals.

Very famous people used to come sometimes to those ultra-Bohemian gatherings in his studio, including some of the Queens of the music-hall stage.

It was Phil May, I believe, who drew the inimitable cartoon in the _St. Stephen’s Review_ of Mr. Gladstone, with a malevolent eye, gathering primroses on the banks of the Thames on the anniversary of his illustrious rival’s death, which had for its title—

“A primrose by the river’s brim, A yellow primrose was to him, And it was nothing more.”

The cartoon was received with universal acclaim, but the general public—_quorum pars fui_—did not bother as to who the artist was. I did not know Phil at the time. He was just back from Australia, where he had been working for the _Sydney Bulletin_.

Phil May had the head of a mediæval jester, and was fond of drawing himself in the cap and bells.

Another black-and-white humorist of a different type who was with us just as much was Dudley Hardy, whose satirical sketches of ballet girls and their admirers filled the periodicals of the day, obscuring Dudley Hardy’s claim as an artist. He was a son of the well-known marine painter, T. B. Hardy, and was lured from doing the really admirable work with which his friends are familiar, by the fatal popularity of his theatrical caricatures. It was long before he could make up his mind to break away from that and do himself justice in painting. His sister married a very great friend of ours, a water-colour painter of extraordinary cleverness and charm, Frank Richards. We have many of his pictures, mostly impressionist water-colours, which prove the heights to which Richards could have risen if he had continued to have the leisure to which he was born. He might have done very well in black-and-white too. He could have come nearer to Phil May than most people, for he too had caught the spirit of Japan in the simplicity and bold curves of his drawing; and he had considerable humour. His limpidity and the charm of his colouring were especially shown in his paintings of Venice.

His portrait of Dudley Hardy is simply admirable, for Dudley, with his whimsical smile and jaunty way of wearing his hat, looks like a Parisian notable.

For some years we saw more of Reginald Cleaver than any other artist. Cleaver was at that time the favourite artist of the _Graphic_, as well as a regular contributor to _Punch_. He was excellent in catching likenesses, and his crisp and beautiful handiwork made his pictures of passing events most attractive. The _Graphic_ always sent him to the most important functions, such as royal weddings. He hated this work, because he was far too gentlemanly and too shy to push, and the people in charge of royal functions seemed to take a pleasure in putting every disadvantage they could in the way of the artists and journalists who had to immortalise the occasion for their fellow-countrymen. The artist was expected to stand behind the organ or anywhere else provided he was sufficiently out of sight; whether he could see or not was of very little consideration. But one day Fate overtook the autocrat who used to browbeat the Press. It was in the days when the late King was Prince of Wales, and his brother, the Duke of Edinburgh, had just become a German reigning prince as Prince of Saxo-Coburg Gotha. Cleaver, who was posted where he could not see the procession as it entered, imagined that the Duchess of Edinburgh as a reigning princess would take precedence of the Princess of Wales, and gave her precedence in his picture in the _Daily Graphic_. Before ten o’clock the next morning a messenger from Marlborough House arrived at the _Graphic_ office to know the meaning of this libel, and the editor explained that the artist had been placed in a position where he could not see the Princess. The Princess was furious. She attached no blame to the artist, but she sent for the autocrat and gave him to understand that there must be no more accidents of this kind, and from that day forward there was a great change in the way in which artists were treated at royal functions.

We spent several of our summer holidays together. Cleaver’s sketches of famous people at historical functions will have a permanent value. He had no rival in fidelity and charm in this kind of work. In recent years the world has seen too little of his work owing to his being so much abroad. He is the elder brother of Ralph Cleaver, the well-known political caricaturist.

Holland Tringham, a very good-looking and well-bred man, of whom I saw a good deal at that time, had a battle royal with a millionaire duchess over a similar question. He went down to represent one of the chief illustrated papers at a great ball she was giving at her country house. When he got there, he was received with scant ceremony, but began his work. When supper-time came, the housekeeper arrived to tell him that he would find his supper in the still room. He showed her the beginnings of his sketch—and he was a brilliant artist—and said, “Take this to her Grace and tell her that if she does not come and fetch me to supper with her guests, I shall tear it up, and go home.”

Her Grace came, took him to supper, and introduced him to her friends galore, and the picture appeared. Of course, Tringham was very sure of his position as an artist with the paper, or he would not have risked the chance of being sacrificed on the altar of the offended duchess. I should like to have heard what the housekeeper told her.

There has not been so much of this snobbery lately among hostesses; the race for publicity having become too acute.

I must have met Sambourne, who succeeded Sir John Tenniel as chief artist of _Punch_, when I was a boy, for he married a Miss Herapath, and when we were children she and her brothers were generally having tea at our house in Upper Phillimore Gardens if we were not having tea at theirs a few yards away. I never lost sight of him, and in the last years of his life saw more rather than less of Sambourne, whose thoroughness was always a marvel to me. No pains were too great for him to be accurate in the details of his cartoons and whimsicalities. I forget how many thousand photographs he told me he had, which he could use like a dictionary. But I remember that his idea of the best day’s holiday one could take was to go to Boulogne in the morning on a day when there was a good sea on, lunch there, and come back in the afternoon.

His successor on _Punch_, Bernard Partridge, was very often at Addison Mansions in the old Idler and Vagabond days. He had already achieved fame in two directions—as a black-and-white artist whose handiwork was unexcelled for delicate beauty and romantic charm, and as an actor. But he did not act under his own name; he was Bernard Gould behind the footlights. Partridge’s father, the late Prof. Richard Partridge, was a Fellow of the Royal Society and one of the greatest surgeons of his day. Mrs. Partridge, then Miss Harvey, was also often at our at-homes.

Another _Punch_ and _Graphic_ artist often with us was Alexander Stuart Boyd, whose wife, Mary Stuart Boyd, is a favourite novelist of the great house of Blackwood. Boyd has the dry wit of his race, so it is not surprising that such a fine artist should have found his way to _Punch_. He now gives his time to painting and spends much of his time at a house he has in the Balearic Islands. He was a very old Vagabond. I met him there or at the Idler teas.

There, too, I met Hal Hurst, my neighbour and constant associate for years, though we do not often meet now. I have various pictures of his in my present house. Hurst, who was a very clever artist, and his friend Alyn Williams, the president of one of the two Miniature Painters’ Societies, not only shared a studio in Mayfair, but married beautiful young wives about the same time, who were constantly together, one very dark and the other very fair. Mrs. Williams was the picture of health, but suddenly she was struck down by a mysterious malady, and almost wasted to death, a terrible shock to all who had seen much of them. Then, for no apparently sufficient reason, she suddenly picked up again, threw off her malady completely, and was restored to her old radiant health; it was like coming back from the grave. The Royal Family have been great patrons of Williams’ miniatures.

Oddly enough, I knew the president of the other society of miniature painters equally well—Alfred Praga, an Italian by extraction, a well-known and popular member of the Savage Club. Praga lives in a picturesque grey house off Hornton Street. His wife is a well-known writer.

With them it is natural to mention the brilliant Robert Sauber, a German by extraction, who for years was one of the most popular artists in journalism; whatever paper or magazine you took up, it was almost sure to have a cover with a charming female figure designed by Sauber. I have a delightful specimen painted for the menu of the Vagabond Club on some important occasion. But Sauber was not only a journalistic artist; he has been painting large decorative panels and ceilings and portraits for the last thirteen years, and has done no illustrations for the last twelve years. He is an exhibitor at the principal Salons in London, Paris and Munich.

While mentioning _Punch_ artists, I forgot two who were constant visitors at Addison Mansions—John Hassall and Chantrey Corbould.

The man who helped to keep our at-homes going more than any one else was Chantrey Corbould, the artist, a godson of the great Sir Francis Chantrey, whose bequest is almost as famous as his sculpture; he was a nephew also of Charles Keene, the immortal _Punch_ artist and etcher, on the mother’s side. Edward H. Corbould, his father’s eldest brother, taught the Royal Family.

Corbould was a huge man, with a very jovial, high-coloured, handsome face, and a very horsey appearance, as becomes one of the best hunting-picture artists who ever drew for _Punch_. He had a very loud and hearty laugh, which could be heard all over the house, and told good stories, and always had a court of the ladies of Bohemia round him in the inner room. He had one golden quality; whenever he saw a woman sitting neglected, he went over and fetched her to join his circle, and the older and uglier she was, the more particular he was to do it.

I was wrong in saying that we never had an entertainment at our at-homes—Corbould’s stories were an entertainment, but people had not to keep silent with them; the more noise they made, the better he liked it. He was very funny sometimes.

When I asked Corbould what first turned his attention to Art, he said—

“I was always for the Arts. Charles S. Keene, my mother’s brother, took me in hand, saying ‘sketch from Nature,’ so I am altogether self-taught. I never went to any Art school. Keene’s idea was that I should eventually step into a ‘staff appointment on _Punch_.’ I began under Shirley Brooks, then Tom Taylor, and later under F. C. Burnand. Tom Taylor promised me the first vacancy at ‘The _Punch_ Table,’ but he died, and F. C. Burnand took on Furniss. I began with _Punch_ in the early ’seventies; later I worked for the _Graphic_, the _Illustrated London News_, the _Daily Graphic_ (1890), etc. I have always loved ‘gee-gees.’”

John Hassall is a universally popular man, and certainly one of the most capable artists of the day. One cannot be sure to what heights he will rise. He was not much more than a boy when he first came to our house, and he was not much more than a boy when he first got into _Punch_. As he is a brilliant caricaturist, with a strong political sense, he could be the Conservative F.C.G. whenever he chooses. Probably he would dislike the drudgery of producing constant political cartoons—all work done against time. G. R. H., the famous cartoonist of the _Pall Mall Gazette_, found the work too exacting, and Hassall, the most popular poster designer of the day, has many irons in the fire which require attending to. But he is a born caricaturist of the unexaggerating kind which the future will demand.

Joseph Pennell, the artist, and his charming wife, one of the best travel-writers in America, have been friends of ours for many years. They live in an old house in Buckingham Street, Strand, near the gate, which now does nothing on the Thames Embankment but is, I suppose, the last of the water-gates of the Thames. Pennell conferred one of the great pleasures of our lives on us by making us go to Le Puy, at the source of the Loire, which he had been drawing for some periodical. The statues of saints and tiny chapels standing up on needle rocks against the sky, which look so fascinating in his sketches, are not a whit less fantastic in real life, and, until quite lately, you could see from the plain High Mass being celebrated in the cathedral, which was at the western end of the rock. The great west doors were flung open for the purpose, until the mortality among the priests became too great. At Le Puy the old market-women wear their hats over their caps, and frogs are as cheap as dirt—real edible frogs.

I went to a banquet given by the town to its most famous son, M. Dupuy, who was then Prime Minister of France, and was, as it happened, a native, though he did spell the Puy in his name with a small p. We paid three francs a head—less than half-a-crown—for the banquet, including wine, and an introduction to the Premier.

INDEX

of the leading people about whom Personal Reminiscences or New Facts are related.

Adcock, St. John, 200

Ainslie, Douglas, 114

Alamayu, Prince, 256-257

Albanesi, Madame, 133

Alden, H. M., 48

Alden, W. L., 102

Alexander, Boyd, 226

Alexander, Sir George, 277, 278

Alexander, Mrs. (Mrs. Hector), 119

Allen, Grant, 258-259

Allhusen, Mrs. Henry, 126

Angell, Norman, 171

Argonauts’ Club, The, 179-180

Arnim, Countess von, 244

Arnold, Sir Edwin, 116-117

Ashwell, Lena, 331-332, 345

Atherton, Gertrude Franklin, 131-132

Austin, Alfred, 263

Authors’ Club, The, 146-161

Ayrton, Edward, 319

Balfour, Rt. Hon. A. J., 153, 168, 235

Barker, Granville, 339

Barlass, Douglas, 111

Barr, Robert, 101-102, 162-163

Barrie, Sir J. M., 77, 157, 158

Bashford, Lindsay, 199-200

Bate, Francis, 348

Battye, Aubyn Trevor-, 320-321

Baumann, A. A., 194

Beardsley, Aubrey, 352

Becke, Louis, 242

Beerbohm, Max, 302-303

Belloc-Lowndes, Marie, 135

Beresford, Lord Charles, 171

Bernhardt, Sarah, 167-169, 341

Besant, Annie, 251

Besant, Sir Walter, 58, 147-150, 182, 251

Bigelow, Poulteney, 155

Bird, Isabella, 317

Boldrewood, Rolf, 241-242

Bond, Acton, 339-340

Boosè, J. R., 250

Boothby, Guy, 242

Bourchier, Arthur, 338-339

Bourget, Paul, 66

Bourne, Cardinal, 218-219

Boyd, A. K. H., 307-308

Boyd, A. S., 357-358

Brackenbury, Sir Henry, 303

“Braddon, Miss,” 119

Bradley, Dean, 128

Brandes, Georg, 6

Brinsmead, John, 4

Brodhurst, J. Penderel, 119

Bullen, Frank, 242, 288-289

Bulloch, J. M., 198-199

Bunning, Herbert, 66

Burgin, G. B., 162, 164-165, 166, 176

Burnett, Mrs. Frances Hodgson, 130

Burroughs, John, 260, 270

Burton, Sir Richard, 10

Cable, G. W., 260

Caine, Hall, 113, 157, 253-254

Callaghan, Admiral Sir G., 210-211

Calthrop, Dion Clayton, 289

Campbell, Frances, 243

Campbell, Mrs. Patrick, 278, 345

Cardigan, Lady, 141-142

Carman, Bliss, 111-112

Castle, Egerton, 267

Cave, George, K.C., M.P., 130, 191

Cawston, George, 169

Chambers, Haddon, 244

Churchill, Rt. Hon. Winston, 175

Clarke, Lewis, 327

Cleaver, Reginald, 355-356

“Cleeve, Lucas,” 138

Cleveland, President, 30, 50

Clifford, Mrs. W. K., 127-128

Coffin, C. Hayden, 329-330

Coke, Desmond, 289-290

Cook, Theodore Andrea, 195

Cooper, E. H., 290-291

Corbould, A. Chantrey, 353, 354, 358-359

Corelli, Marie, 25, 126

Cornish, Herbert, 202

Coronation, The, 200

Couch, Sir A. T. Quiller-, 283-284

Courtney, W. L., 194-195

Crane, Walter, R.I., 349-350

Craven, Miss Maude Chester, 140-142

Crawfurd, Oswald, 148

Creighton, Bishop, of London, 153, 170-171

Crockett, S. R., 255

Croker, Mrs. B. M., 120-121

“Danby, Frank,” 135

Darnley, Countess of, 245

Davidson, John, 107

De l’Hôpital, René, 350-351

De Lorey, Eustache, 67, 218, 226

De Morgan, William, 266-267

Denison, George Taylor, 32

Derby, late Earl, 310-311

Devonshire Club, 187

Dickens, Charles, 1

Dilettante Club, The, 62

Dilke, Sir Charles, M.P., 308-309

Dillon, Dr., 302

Diósy, Arthur, 177

Dobson, Austin, 104

Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan, 73-77, 156-157, 176

Dufferin, late Marquis of, 310

Dundonald, Earl of, 81, 169, 170

Dunn, James Nicol, 197

Edward, H.M. King, 181, 187, 309, 341

Egerton, George, 134-135

Eliot, George, 251

Escoffier, M., 198

Fagan, J. Bernard, 278

Farnol, Jeffery, 291-292

Fawcett, Edgar, 112

Fenn, Fred, 258

Fenn, G. M., 257

Field, Eugene, 54

Fletcher, Benton, 223

Forbes-Robertson, Sir J., 90, 334-336

Ford, I. N., 321-322

Fowler, Ellen Thorneycroft, 129, 164

France, Anatole, 67

Fraser, John Foster, 319-320

Frederic, Harold, 264-265

Freeman, Rev. H. B., 194

Fry, C. B., 172

Garvice, Charles, 280-283

George V., H.M. The King, 41

Gilbert, W. S., 237

Gissing, George, 269

Glazebrook, Hugh de Trafford, 351

Glazebrook, Canon M. G., 351

Gore, Right Rev. C., Bishop of Oxford, 10, 11, 153, 192

Gorst, Mrs. Harold, 138

Gorst, Sir John, 138

Gosse, Edmund, 26, 103

Grace, W. G., 198

“Grand, Sarah,” 124

“Gray, Maxwell,” 119

Gribble, Francis, 292-293

Grossmith, George, 176-177, 328-329

Grossmith, Weedon, 328, 338

Haggard, Sir H. Rider, 284-285

Hamilton, General Sir Ian, 154, 169

Hardy, Dudley, 355

Hardy, Thomas, 117, 208, 253

Harland, Henry, 288

Harraden, Beatrice, 129-130

Harris, Sir Augustus, 149

Harte, Bret, 94-95

Harvey, Martin, 337

Hassall, J., 358, 359-360

Hatton, Joseph, 254-255

Hay, Colonel John, 30, 50, 150, 321-322

Hearn, Lafcadio, 68

Hedgcock, Walter, 185

Helmsley, C. T. H., 278

Henley, W. E., 26, 117-118

Henniker-Heaton, Sir J., 263

Hentschel, Carl, 86-87, 176

Henty, G. A., 256

Hichens, Robert, 277-278

Hicks, Seymour, 183

Hind, Lewis, 188-189

Hird, Frank, 293

“Hobbes, John Oliver,” 131, 175

Holmes, Oliver Wendell, 27, 96, 145, 252

“Hope, Anthony” (A. H. Hawkins), 78-79, 175-176, 180

Houghton, H. O., 27

Howells, W. D., 259

Humphris, Edith M., 324-325

Hunt, Violet, 135-136

Hurst, Hal, 358

Ingram, Rt. Rev. A. F. Winnington-, Bishop of London, 153

“Iota” (Mrs. Mannington Caffyn), 243

Irving, Sir Henry, 167, 344

Jackson, Frederick, 321

Jacobs, W. W., 98-99

James, Henry, 261-262

Jefferies, Richard, 258

Jepson, Edgar, 293-294

Jerome, Jerome K., 65, 82-91, 96, 158, 162-163, 167, 188, 334

Jerrold, Walter, 195-196

Jeyes, S. H., 25, 191-194

Jones, Henry Arthur, 154, 209, 336-337, 347

Jowett, Rev. Benjamin, Master of Balliol, 10, 338

Kenealy, Alexander, 201

Kenealy, Arabella, 201

Kernahan, Coulson, 165-166, 270-271

Key, K. J., 295

“Kingston, Gertrude,” 342

Kipling, Rudyard, 77

Knight, Joseph, 334

Knoblauch, Edward, 287

Lamb, Captain Thomas, 298-299

Lambs, The, 297, 298-299

Lambton (Meux), Admiral Sir Hedworth, 171

Landor, A. H. Savage, 30, 37, 314-316, 322

Lane, John, 134, 269, 352

Lang, Andrew, 104, 308

Larisch, Countess Marie, 141

Lawrence, Sir Walter, Bart., G.C.I.E., 8

Le Gallienne, R., 108, 259

Lehmann, Rudolf, 94

Leighton, Marie Connor, 137, 275-276

Leighton, Robert, 275-276

Le Queux, William, 294

Lewin, P. Evans, 250

Lindsay, Lady, 114, 124-125

Linton, Mrs. Lynn, 119-120

Locke, W. J., 269

Longfellow, Miss Alice, 27

Lorimer, Norma, 139-140, 212-213, 215, 327

Lovatelli, Countess, 293

Low, Sidney, 191

“Maartens, Maarten,” 66

McCarthy, Justin, M.P., 108

McCarthy, Justin Huntly, 108

Mackay, Charles, 25

Mackellar, C. D., 323-324

Mackenzie, Compton, 296-297

“Maclaren, Ian,” 161

Maclaughlan, Hugh, 238

“Malet, Lucas,” 129

Markino, Yoshio, 69-72, 226-227, 228

Marriott, Charles, 295

Marryat, Florence, 137

Marston, R. B., 199

Martin, A. Patchett, 183, 249, 250

Martin, Robert Jasper, 151-154

Mason, A. E. W., 273-274

“Mathers, Helen,” 130

Maude, Cyril, 344

Maugham, W. Somerset, 286-287

Maxwell, Gen. Sir J. G., 318

Maxwell, W. B., 279

May, Phil, 92, 352-355

Meredith, George, 181, 252

Miles, Eustace, 172

Millais, Sir J. E., P.R.A., 7

Mitford, Bertram, 294-295

Monkswell, Lord, 297

Montrésor, Miss, 136-137

Moore, T. Frankfort, 79-80, 166

Mordaunt, Elinor, 245-246

Morris, Sir Lewis, 103

Morrison, Arthur, 276

Morrison, Dr. G. E., 15, 246-248, 312

Moulton, Louise Chandler, 26, 52

Murray, David, 348

Myers, F. W. H., 104-106

Nansen, Frithjof, 187, 320-321

“Neilson, Julia,” 329, 330, 345

Neish, Mrs. Charles, 306

Nethersole, Olga, 337

Nevill, Lady Dorothy, 125

Newman, Cardinal, 8-9, 219

Nicholson, William, 348

Nicoll, Sir W. Robertson, 197, 282

Nimr, Dr., 224

Norman, Sir Henry, M.P., 247

Nye, Bill, 154, 177

O’Connor, T. P., 168, 198

Odell, J. S., 186

Ohrwalder, Father, 317-318

Oliver, Edwin, 201

O’Rell, Max, 100-101

Osgood, Irene, 131

Pain, Barry, 102

Pankhurst, Christabel, 172, 173

Parke, Ernest, 200

Parker, Sir Gilbert, 262

Parker, Louis Napoleon, 287

Partridge, Bernard, 357

Paternoster, G. Sidney, 62, 200

Pemberton, Max, 274-275

Pennell, Joseph, 360

Percival, Bishop of Hereford, 23

Perrin, Mrs. Charles, 121-123

Phillpotts, Eden, 276-277

Praed, Mrs. Campbell, 241

Prowse, R. O., 297

Raper, R. W., 10, 192-193

Ratti, Henry, 240

Reid, Rt. Hon. Sir George, 178-179

Reid, Sir H. Gilzean, 201-202

Reid, Whitelaw, 322

Renshaws, The, 297-298

Richards, J. M., 322-323

Ridge, W. Pett, 98, 172

“Rita,” 244

Rives, Amelie, 131

Roberts, Field-Marshal Earl, V.C., 120, 167, 169

Roberts, Morley, 285-286

Robertson, Rt. Rev. A., Bishop of Exeter, 10

Robertson, Sir George Scott, M.P., 177-178

Robertson, Mrs. Ian, 334

Robins, Elizabeth, 341-342

Robinson, F. W., 255-256

Robinson, Fletcher, 275

Rockman, Ray, 340-341

Rolfe, Eustace Neville, 207

Roosevelt, Theodore, 224

Rose, Algernon, 159-160

Rosebery, Lord, 235

“Ross, Adrian,” 113-114

Rowe, Mrs. Jopling, 64, 347

Rusden, G. W., 248-249

St. Helier, Lady, 125, 293

Salisbury, late Marquess of, 264

Sambourne, Linley, 357

Sarrûf, Dr., 224

Sauber, Robert, 358

Savage Club, 181-187

Saxony, Ex-Crown Princess of, 141, 142

Schmalz, Herbert, 347

Scott, Capt., R.N., 173

Seaman, Sir Owen, 200

Seddon, Rt. Hon. J. R., 171

Selous, F. C., 313-314

Seton, Sir Bruce, 26

Seton, Ernest Thompson, 173-174, 302

Seymour, Admiral Sir Edward, 151

Seymour, Admiral Sir Michael Culme, 34

Shannon, J. J., R.A., 348

Sharp, William, 25, 112, 113

Shaw, Bernard, 65, 237

Shaylor, Joseph, 301-302

Sherman, Gen. W. Tecumseh, 30

Shorter, Clement, 196-197

Shorter, Dora Sigerson, 115-116

Sickert, B., 92-93

Sidgwick, Henry, 105-106

Sidgwick, Mrs. A., 136

Sidney, F. E., 80

Sinclair, Archdeacon, 155, 156, 304-305

Sladen, Arthur, C.M.G., 6

Sladen, Sir Charles, K.C.M.G., 14

Sladen, Douglas Brooke (my father), 1

Sladen, Col. Sir Edward, 120

Sladen, Gen. John, 120

Sladen, John Baker, D.L., J.P., 1

Sladen, Lieut. Sampson, R.N., 6, 69

Smith, Frank Hopkinson, 265-266

Smith, Goldwin, 32

Solomon, Solomon J., R.A., 347

Southesk, the late Earl of, 238

Spender, Harold, 200

Spender, J. A., 200

Spielmann, M. H., 306

Stanley, Lady (Dorothy), 316-317

Stanley, Sir H. M., 105, 316

Stanton, Father, 10, 80-81, 170-171

Stedman, Edmund Clarence, 27, 52, 96

Steel, Mrs. Flora Annie, 123, 175

Steevens, G. W., 318

Stepniak, Sergius, 67, 154

“Stevens, Miss E. S.,” 143-145

Stockdale _versus_ Hansard, 1

Stockton, Frank, 97-98, 154

Stoker, Bram, 80

Strindberg, August, 67

Stubbs, Bishop of Oxford, 12

“Swan, Annie S.,” 137

“Swift, Benjamin,” 285

Taylor, J. H., 72

Tedder, H. R., 158

Tennyson, 309

Terry, Fred, 329

“Thirlmere, Rowland,” 114

Thomas, Brandon, 183

Thomas, Margaret, 249

Thomson, Basil, 325

Thring, G. Herbert, 158-160

Thurston, Katherine Cecil, 136

Tree, Sir H. Beerbohm–, 344

Trench, Herbert, 110

Tringham, Holland, 356-357

Turner, Henry Gyles, 248, 249

“Twain, Mark,” 53, 95-97, 303

Tynan, Katherine, 116

Vachell, H. A., 271-273

Vagabonds’ Club, The, 162-182

Van Horne, Sir William, 31

Victoria, H.M. Queen, 189-190

Villiers, Fred, 326

Visetti, Albert, 115

Ward, Sir Edward, K.C.B., 178

Ward, Mrs. Humphry, 126-127, 241

Ward, John, F.S.A., 318

Watson, A. E. T., 202-203

Watson, H. B. Marriott, 279-280

Watson, R. Seton-, 323

Watson, William, 106

Watt, A. P., 204

Watts-Dunton, Theodore, 113

Webbe, A. J., 191-192

Webster, Ben, 330-331

Weigall, A. E. P., 318-319

Welch, James, 107, 332-333

Wells, H. G., 99-100

Weyman, Stanley, 255

Wheelton, Mr. John, Sheriff, 1

Wheelton, Mary (my mother), 4, 5, 6

Whistler, J. MacNeill, 64

Whitaker, G. H., 199

White, Gleeson, 112

White, Herbert K., 197

White, Percy, 267-268

Whittier, John Greenleaf, 27

Wilberforce, Archdeacon, 305-306

Wilde, Oscar, 64, 108-111

Wilkins, Mary E., 145

Wilkins, W. H., 300-301

Williamson, Alice (Mrs. C. N.), 132-133, 163

Williamson, C. N., 132-133

Williamson, Dr. G. C., 304

Willoughby de Broke, Lord, 174-175

Wills, C. J., 320

Wingate, Sir Reginald, 317, 318

“Winter, John Strange,” 133-134

Wolf, Lucien, 154-155

Wolseley, Field-Marshal Viscount, 151-152

Wood, Field-Marshal Sir Evelyn, V.C., 154

Wood, J. S., 201

Woods, Rev. H. G., Master of the Temple, 11

Woods, Margaret, 128-129

Worsfold, Dr. Cato, 159

Wright, Huntley, 330

Wyndham, Sir Charles, 343-344

Wynfield, David Wilkie, 346

Yeats, W. B., 106-107

Zangwill, Israel, 88, 91-94

Zola, Emile, 67, 154

RICHARD CLAY & SONS, LIMITED, BRUNSWICK STREET, STAMFORD STREET, S.E., AND BUNGAY, SUFFOLK.

● Transcriber’s Notes: ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected. ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected. ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant form was found in this book. ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).