Robert Buchanan | Page 2

Harriett Jay
wondering all the time
whether she could possibly be my mother, or whether she was some
"strange person" whom I was told to regard in that light. I turned away
with a great sob and threw myself into my sister's arms, clinging to her
as the only mother whom I was thenceforth to know. As to the Poet, I
was always taught both by his wife and his mother, to look up to him as
a model of all the virtues, and my line of conduct was invariably
determined by his approval or the reverse. If I proffered some childish
request it was always met with, "Yes, if Robert says you may," or "No,
I don't think Robert would like that," and though I was sometimes
wayward and wilful as children too often are, I never wavered, I trust,
in that great love which it was my duty as well as my pleasure to give.
His frown always made me wretched, his smile made me glad, and I
was never so happy as when I had earned his praise. When my sister
died, it was her dying wish that I should remain with him, when his
mother died the request was again whispered into my ear by lips which
were fast growing cold. During his last sad, terrible illness my friends
wrote to me praising me for what they called my "generosity and
self-sacrifice," when indeed there was neither generosity nor
self-sacrifice to praise. The greatest pleasure in life, it seems to me, is
to be able to minister to the wants of those we love, and I did what I did
because in the doing of it lay my only chance of happiness. When at
length my task was ended I felt only as if all the happiness had been
taken out of my life, but for his sake I rejoiced that his pains were
ended, and that he had gone to rejoin those whom he had so
passionately loved.
HARRIETT JAY.
SOUTHEND-ON-SEA.
---
CONTENTS
PREFACE

I. HIS BIRTH
II. EARLY MEMORIES, 1841-50
III. BOYHOOD, 1850-56
IV. YOUTH, 1856-58
V. FLIGHT TO LONDON, 1859
VI. EARLY STRUGGLES, 1859
VII. DAVID GRAY, 1860
VIII. FRIENDSHIPS, 1864
IX. MARRIAGE, 1861
X. G. H. LEWES AND ROBERT BROWNING, 1862
XI. FIRST BOOKS, 1863-66
XII. RETURN TO SCOTLAND, 1866
XIII. SPORT
XIV. HUMANITARIANISM. (By Henry S. Salt)
XV. READINGS, 1868-69
XVI. THE FLESHLY SCHOOL OF POETRY, 1870
XVII. LIFE IN IRELAND
XVIII. FIRST IDEAS OF NOVEL WRITING
XIX. AN IMPRESSION, WRITTEN BY R. E. FRANCILLON
XX. "THE SHADOW OF THE SWORD," "GOD AND THE MAN"

XXI. "BALDER THE BEAUTIFUL"
XXII. THE DEATH OF HIS WIFE
XXIII. "THE CITY OF DREAM"
XXIV. PLAY-WRITING
XXV. A REMINISCENCE, (By George R. Sims)
XXVI. ON THE TURF. WRITTEN BY MR. HENRY MURRAY
XXVII. "THE WANDERING JEW"
XXVIII. THE LAST SHADOW
XXIX. CLOSING SCENES
XXX. THE LAST SCENE OF ALL
---
CHAPTER I
HIS BIRTH
ROBERT BUCHANAN, poet, novelist, dramatist, was born at
Caverswall in Lancashire on the 18th of August, 1841.
An unworldly man, whose life was chiefly occupied with the child's
puzzle of natural religion. A worker, yet a dreamer who fought Don
Quixote-like with many windmills; a lover of truth and beauty, yet
darkly doomed to much ignoble pot-boiling, a dweller between the
fringe of literary Bohemia and the beginning of mere cloudland, who,
while giving a careless glance at the present generation, ever fixed a
long, hopeful, wistful look towards posterity.
The story of his life which to the best of my ability I am about to set
down, is in many respects a sad one. He had few friends and many

enemies, and he received from the world many cruel blows. From the
beginning I fear he lacked the true literary temper, but he always tried
to preach the truth as he saw it, never counting the cost to himself. A
fearless, upright, honest man, whose life, if rightly studied, cannot fail
to be of interest to the world.
It was perhaps because he heard the name of God for the first time so
late in boyhood that the mention of that name never grew tiresome to
him. He was born in the strangest odour of infidelity, hence infidelity
amused him less than most men, but for infidels and revolters he had
ever a kindly feeling quite irrespective of their creed or his. His life was
a lonely one--he was from first to last a lonely man; not unsociable by
disposition, not unsympathetic, but seldom travelling far for
sympathy--always climbing, climbing, but never quite reaching the
heights on which he had set his intellectual ideals. Had his father not
broken down in health and fortune all might have been very different
with him; he would at least have had a foothold apart from
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