Proofreading Lockhart's Scott: The
Dynamics of
Biographical Reticence
by
Francis Russell Hart
Caricatures of Victorianism, mercifully defunct in more sharply
defined areas of literary history, survive in chronicles of biography. Sir
Harold Nicolson's sketch was drawn in the anti-Victorian ether of a long
generation ago: "then came earnestness, and with earnestness hagiography
descended on us with its sullen cloud." It was redrawn recently by
Professor Garraty, who wrote of the year Victoria became queen, "Already
the fiery reformist spirit of romanticism was degenerating into the smug
moral earnestness of the era that bears her name. . . . John Lockhart's
Life of Sir Walter Scott . . . provided a foretaste of what was
to come."[1] Now, the ascription to
Lockhart of a culpable reticence would have seemed strange indeed to
contemporary readers; to them, the work seemed painfully candid.
However, the purpose of this essay is not to challenge the ascription.
Rather, it is to depict the processes of composition and revision through
which
a degree of reticence evolved. The depiction is made possible by the
survival of Lockhart's corrected proofsheets.[2] The proof-sheets
show Lockhart at work; but more than that, when considered in conjunction
with pertinent correspondence in the National Library of Scotland, they
allow us to detect the presence of significant influences on that work in its
final stages of preparation.
Ultimately, my thesis will be that Lockhart's procedures cannot be
properly understood without reference to those influences, to the conditions
imposed by his own ideas of biographical form and style and by his
inevitable dependence on the world of Scott's surviving contemporaries.
The proofsheets offer noteworthy evidence in support of such a view. But
it will be best to begin with their more obvious implications. During the
past thirty years, authoritative editions of Lockhart's major documents
—
specifically, Scott's letters and diary—have revealed much about
Lockhart's editorial attitudes toward his raw materials, and, incidentally,
about his considerable skill as a compiler.[3] The proofsheets corroborate and
illustrate
what has been revealed.
His "unscientific" habits of "manipulating"[4] documents and anecdotes have
been the
subject of many a modern preachment. These habits, however reprehensible
by modern editorial standards, were neither careless nor irresponsible, as
should be clear to anyone who studies his fastidious structural
workmanship. Obviously, Lockhart assumed that the responsibilities of the
editor/biographer necessarily implied the freedom to excerpt, edit, and
integrate his materials as form and emphasis required. Clearly indicative of
that assumption is the scissors-and-paste process of compilation he used. He
had before him a transcript of Scott's journal "from which I might when I
chose clip out a fragment to stick into my page as I went on."[5] Contributors aided by responding
to
requests for Scott letters with transcripts "each on a
separate sheet &
no writing on the
off
pages."
[6] Suppliers of reminiscences
and anecdotes understood that their contributions, too, were simply raw
materials for Lockhart to adapt as and where he saw fit. Sending his
memoranda, James Ballantyne assumed Lockhart would "desire to have no
more than the mere materials, and indeed I hardly expect to be able to put
them into shape; but this is to bring no disparagement on my taste, for I
shall give you them all unboulted."
[7]
The "boulting" of raw materials continued even on the margins of the
proofsheets, and so did the carrying out of the precept best expressed in a
letter to Lockhart from Scott's friend Morritt of Rokeby: "nor would I print
for another what he would not have printed himself."
[8]
Evident at once is Lockhart's practice of correcting quotations and
foreign expressions in Scott's letters and journals. One discovers such
marginal requests as the following: "To Mr C[adell]. get some good latinist
to see that this page is quite right—Archdeacon
Williams
E.g." (II, 184). If the request is to "be sure as to the Gaelic" (II, 315), the
response is in a hand I assume to be that of "T.T.," Scott's friend Thomas
Thomson, "first legal antiquary of our time in Scotland." Realizing Scott
has unconsciously quoted Burns, Lockhart sets off the line as verse and
corrects it from Scott's "when life draws near the closing" to the original,
"When ance Life's day draws near the gloamin" (V, 230). When Scott
misquotes II Henry IV II.3—"the old bore feeds in the
old
park"—Lockhart corrects it (VI, 80-81). Other letters and diary
excerpts
show, in proof, occasional clarifications of diction and syntax of the kinds
already familiar to anyone who has collated
Lockhart's versions with the originals.
The most significant of Lockhart's habits as manipulator is the
practice of amalgamating extracts from separate letters, or from journal
entries, into what appear to be single texts. Modern scholars are
understandably outraged by the practice; but it can be demonstrated that
such "contamination" was, for Lockhart, merely an effective means of
simplifying and clarifying the structure of his compilation. It allowed him
to satisfy the contemporary demand for ungarbled originals—"in
publishing letters," wrote one editor, "the epistolary form and manner must
be preserved"
[9] —and at the
same
time to eliminate irrelevant or repetitious portions of documents otherwise
valuable. Two good examples may be given from the proofsheets. The
portion of narrative (with letters) relating to Joanna Baillie's
The
Family Legend seemed long and repetitious; the proofsheets show
what was done about it. They contain a long letter of January 30, 1810, and
parts of two others (January 31 and February 6) which, essentially, were
continuations.
[10] In order to condense,
Lockhart crossed out the bulk of the other two letters and left two separate
passages, above the first of which he wrote "P.S." The published result is
a single letter with a coherent and relevant postscript (II, 260-267). The
other instance involves three letters from Scott to James Ballantyne.
[11] Whatever the Ballantyne
partisans might have found blameworthy in Lockhart's excisions, it is
significant that all three letters survived until the proofsheet stage. Then,
apparently with nothing more than the desire to reduce the number of
documents and eliminate irrelevancies, Lockhart made careful cuts. As a
result, the three letters (with openings and closings removed) became one
coherent whole (VI, 324-325). Thus did Lockhart retain the documentary
directness of the biographical compilation and at the same time function
successfully as a selective structural artist. The method must be understood
as an artistic device, and not as an editorial sin.
For the most part, such excisions and revisions had been made before
the work reached proof. In the area of Lockhart's textual emendations,
however, the proofsheets do have one important contribution to make to
Scott scholarship. Over two hundred of the Scott letters printed in the
twelve-volume Centenary Edition are, owing to the failure to recover
manuscripts, given in Lockhart's published versions. Some of these
received editorial attention in Lockhart's proofsheets. Now, whatever
changes may have been made before the letters reached
the proofsheet stage, it seems safe to assume that the proofsheet versions
are at least closer to the missing originals than the versions eventually
published. Specific examples will be given later; but to mention one
prominent instance, the proofsheets show considerable editing of Scott's
otherwise unrecovered letters to the actor-manager Daniel Terry, one of his
largest and most important correspondences.
Since the manuscript of Scott's journal is now available for collation
with Lockhart's extracts, we need not speak in detail here of the editorial
attention given those extracts in the proofsheets. Suffice it to say that even
at this late point in the work's composition, Lockhart still viewed such
extracts as plastic elements in the total work, open to revision. Nor is it
pertinent at present to scrutinize his manipulations of contributed
memoranda, since they, too, belonged mostly to an earlier phase of
composition. One example from the proofsheets will suffice. The minor
changes in Basil Hall's lengthy journal extracts are characteristic: three
paragraphs which open the published version were moved there from the
end; Hall's own opening was moved to the end; and four short passages,
repetitious or irrelevant, were eliminated (V, 374ff.).
Of greater interest to the student of biography is the fact that in the
proofsheets Lockhart was still touching up conversations and the Boswellian
"business" accompanying them. The specific instances are less important
than the general fact. Hogg's nickname is added to Scott's command: "Take
your pencil, [Jemmy] and I'll dictate your ballad to you" (V, 305). In the
conversation of Scott and Constable at the inception of plans for Constable's
Miscellany, Constable's remarks are stylistically modified, and the depiction
of one or two of Scott's actions is altered slightly. In another of the
exchanges which Lockhart reported from memory, the speech of John
Ballantyne is augmented as follows: "True, indeed? [not one word of
it!—] any blockhead may stick to truth" (IV, 171). In James
Ballantyne's
account of the conversation on the failure of The Lord of the
Isles, Scott's own remark is similarly clarified: "Well, well, James,
[so be it—] but you know we must not droop,
for we can't afford to give over" (III, 323). A rare instance of the
proofsheet revision of talk which alters fact is found in the account of
Scott's day of ruin (in January, 1826). Skene, his close friend, comes to
call in the morning and finds Scott at his table. Scott makes his famous
pronouncement—"My friend, give me a shake of your
hand—mine is
that of a beggar," which, incidentally, is Lockhart's rendering of Skene's
recollection: "Skene, this is the hand of a beggar.
Constable has failed and I am ruined
du fond au comble."
[12] The proofsheet revision follows:
Proof (VI, 214)
- He requested his friend to apologize for his absence from the
Court, and added, "Don't fancy I am staying at home to brood idly on what
can't be helped. I was at work upon Woodstock when you came in, and I
shall take up the pen the moment you go."
Revised
- He added, "Don't fancy I am going to stay at home to brood idly
on what can't be helped. I was at work upon Woodstock when you came
in, and I shall take up the pen the moment I get back from
Court."
Such is the sort of evidence the proofsheets offer in corroboration of
what has been known, though less directly, of Lockhart's editorial
procedures, of his confident manipulations of raw materials. Less obvious,
but of greater general importance, the proofsheets help make it possible to
trace the social circumstances of the work's completion, and lead to the
realization that this biography which contemporary readers found
distressingly candid would have been more so had Lockhart really enjoyed
and preserved the independent control of the work which his modern critics
assume.
Let me recall the circumstances. Lockhart commenced publication of
his seven volumes in March, 1837, a mere four-and-one-half years after the
death of a national institution and an international idol. Scott's life and
correspondence included a world of public prominence up to and including
the British throne; many of the participants were still alive, some at the
peak of their prominence. Nevertheless, Lockhart conceived his work
largely in terms of that correspondence and the relationships it embodied.
Named Scott's literary executor, Lockhart was one to whom Scott had been
father, patron, literary counsellor, and symbol of responsible aristocracy.
In the years following the dissolution of old Toryism and the passing of the
first Reform Bill, he might well have viewed Scott's career with the
jaundiced eye of Scott's crusty political persona Malachi
Malagrowther; further, the sympathies of the fellow Scot and the demands
of his role as Quarterly editor should have
been enough to complete his ruination as a responsible biographer. That he
accomplished even limited candor and objectivity, then, is a striking proof
of moral independence.
Edinburgh Whigdom, in the person of Lord Cockburn (no friend of
Lockhart's), was surprised: "nothing is kept back or misrepresented so as
to exhibit Scott in a false light." Cockburn could recall "no
biography which gives a truer account of its subject." For Robert Southey
it was "the most compleat biography that has ever appeared of a great
man." William Wordsworth conceded that nothing remained for Lockhart
"but to act as openly and sincerely as you have done." The historian Lord
Mahon acknowledged that Lockhart had avoided the dangers of his domestic
perspective; and R. H. Cheney praised the work's moderation of tone,
citing its "union . . . of the greatest candour with that affectionate
veneration which the public requires of those who approach one of its
former idols."
[13] For some, however,
this union was too subtle. Harriet Martineau and J. F. Cooper mistook
Lockhart's candor for moral obtuseness and censured as needless the
exposure of "motives that are never admitted by the upright, and never
avowed by the sensitive."
[14]
Cockburn, too, felt needless exposure to be the work's weakness; and
George Ticknor,
reporting on the transatlantic disillusionment the work had effected,
conceded that Scott's letters were delightful, but protested that "in some of
them Sir Walter is made to expose himself. There was no need of this, and
it has given great pain."
[15] Indeed,
some were so pained that they gave currency to the startling hypothesis,
ridiculed by Carlyle, "that Mr. Lockhart at heart had a dislike to Scott, and
has done his best in an underhand treacherous manner to dishero
him!"
[16] Such were the earlyimpressions of Lockhart's candor.
Some of the honesty and fullness of his account was, of course,
unavoidable. "So much of Sir Walter's affairs" had become "objects of
public investigation," wrote Wordsworth, that there was no
alternative.[17] Lockhart was aware
that with Scott dead, the tourists and peeping Toms who had infested
Abbotsford would spring into print to capitalize on their eavesdroppings.
Disclosures had been made already, often in inaccurate or misleading form;
others would be made, and only by anticipating the efforts of those who
would flood the English-speaking world with irresponsible Scottiana could
Lockhart hope to control the inundation. "I feel that you are right in
anticipating all injurious disclosures," wrote one in close touch with
Lockhart's aims and procedures; "You have done this well, and by truly
exhibiting the
mixed motives on which Scott really acted you have done him full
justice."
[18]
Some of his candor was more deliberate. To B. R. Haydon he
expressed the faith that had sustained him: "I trusted to the substantial
greatness and goodness of the character, and thought I should only make it
more effective in portraiture by keeping in the few specks."[19] He voiced the same sentiment to
the Lord
High Commissioner Adam, while the work was still in progress: "I really
could not have any pleasure in my task unless I carried with me throughout
the strong and perfect faith that by telling the truth in all
things
I shall ultimately leave the character of Scott as high & pure as that of
perhaps any man ever can appear after being subjected to a close
scrutiny."[20] To Scott's factor and
amanuensis Laidlaw, he spoke of a "stern sense of duty" which impelled
him to tell the truth in all things.[21]
One feels that faith and that sense operative in the work.
However, Lockhart's duty was not just to an abstract ideal. Neither
the responsibility he espoused nor the image he struck off could be merely
personal. Boswell, wrote Geoffrey Scott, "knew the best he could do must
still fall short of that platonic standard, the idea of Johnson,
laid
up, in those who knew him, incommunicably, behind all words."[22] Lockhart's scepticism was even
stronger,
and in addition he was determined to avoid the disproportion and limited
perspective of Boswell's work. But though he had known Scott better and
had lived close to the center of Scott's life for several years, he recognized
that he alone could not measure the degree of verisimilitude. So much he
conceded to Laidlaw: "my chief anxiety on the appearance of the book will
be, not to hear what is said by the world, but what is thought
by you and the
few others who can really compare the representation as a whole with the
facts of the case."
[23] Thus, he was
ready to share his authority over the work with those few.
Of course, some of the control was delegated involuntarily. His
biographical ideal of copious detail and fullness made him hugely dependent
on living contributors, and every contributor was to some extent editor of
his own materials and memories. Some owners sent originals of Scott
letters; but often, their notes to Lockhart refer instead to "faithful
transcripts," even to such disquieting aids as that supplied by Harriet Scott
of Harden, who had difficulty reading Scott's hand and put in a few words
he seemed to have left out. Some contributors, like C. K. Sharpe, did their
own selecting: "what I think may be of use to you shall be transcribed."
Lady Louisa Stuart picked out the "most characteristic" of her letters.[24] Some transcribed and interwove
their
letters with reminiscences; while some, supplying reminiscences, sought to
retain editorial control by specifying what must or must not be
printed.
There were a few, however, to whom Lockhart delegated authority
more voluntarily, and the proofsheets supply evidence of the influence they
wielded. When the work reached proof, Lockhart's independent efforts had
been largely completed. He had begun the collection of materials at Scott's
death, September 21, 1832.[25] Two
years later he reported he was about to begin writing the work "for which
I have hitherto been collecting and arranging the vast mass of materials."
In March, 1836, it was again reported that he had commenced writing; he
worked throughout that year, but, as his wife explained, he had been
"arranging it so long in his mind" that it would not take long to write. Thus
the proofs, circulating throughout 1837, represented the biography after
Lockhart had worked over four years selecting, editing, compiling, and
integrating materials. Had it appeared as it then stood, it would have been
a fuller, darker picture, giving those who felt
pain additional cause for dismay. That it did not is, in some measure,
attributable to the influences we can trace in the proofsheets.
In a letter to Laidlaw, Lockhart named and defined the most
obvious influence: "I have waived all my own notions as to the manner of
publication, etc., in deference to the bookseller, who is still so largely our
creditor, and, I am grieved to add, will probably continue to be so for
many years to come." "Cadell," he specifies elsewhere, "is at my request
a copious annotator on my proofsheets & I fancy he will keep a pretty
strict watch over me when either Whigs or personal cronies of Constable
are handled. But indeed I shall on all serious points take good care that I
take him with me."
[26] That Cadell
was an unreliable traveling companion has been a principal theme of Sir
Herbert Grierson's strictures.
[27]
Cadell was cannily aware of his own position in the
Life:
"here
is Lockhart," he wrote, "telling about all of us to posterity. We will all be
handed down as appendages to the great man." Of the Ballantyne-Constable
part of Scott's world, he alone survived, "having cuckooed
all these men out of their nests."
[28]
Thus, he was in a position to shape the history of Scott's business affairs.
At the outset Lockhart's trust in him was considerable, as Basil Hall hints
in replying to a Lockhart letter: "I am truly glad to see you writing in such
terms of Cadell & I feel well assured that you will never have reason
to
alter this tone. At least I never yet met a person with whom I have acted
so confidentially & so long without a shade of suspicion." When the
shade crossed Lockhart's mind, it was too late. "I dare say," he wrote
Murray in 1838, "you have seen a Ballantyne pamphlet nominally against
me but really against Cadell whose evidence as to the affairs of Constable
& Co. I relied on & thought I might well do so as it seemed
criminative of his own
house at least as much as of the other
parties."
[29]
Lockhart's reliance may be seen in the proofsheets. He depended on
Cadell for bibliographical facts and figures: marginal notes and corrections
on the size of editions are signed "RC"; blanks left for the actual monetary
obligations of the various houses at the time of the crash are filled in by
Cadell. In his role as Edinburgh agent, he "saw to" Latin, Gaelic, and law
phraseology. He was Lockhart's intermediary with Scott's Edinburgh
friends, and through him their opinions and recollections were brought to
bear on the work in progress. For one example, in the margin beside
Lockhart's account of the advance printing of "Lenore," which Scott was
alleged to have presented to Miss
Belsches, Cadell has written: "Thomson and other comrades doubt the
separate printing."
[30]
Of greater importance are the proofsheet revisions of passages
relating to Cadell's own role in the Scott-Constable dealings. Especially
suggestive is the difficulty and delay over the proof of the third chapter of
the sixth volume.[31] This is the
chapter that introduces Scott's journal and deals extensively with
"commercial affairs." In it, Lockhart recalls the warning of financial chaos
he had brought Scott in the autumn of 1825, and describes Scott's midnight
ride for reassurance, allegedly from Abbotsford to Constable's house at
Polton and back to the Lockharts' at Chiefswood in time for breakfast. Sir
Herbert Grierson has argued that the ride could not have taken place; a
more moderate view is that Lockhart's incident is a narrative adaptation of
fact.[32] But what concerns us is that
it was Cadell who gave Scott deceptive reassurance at this time, and hence,
the proofsheet attempts to mystify or generalize the
account of this early warning can be explained only as effects of Cadell's
influence. Here is a short paragraph as it appears in the proof:
It is proper to add here that the story about the banker's throwing up
the book was, as subsequent revelations attested, wholly groundless. The
incident on which the rumour rested occurred in the first week of
November (VI, 100).
Several attempts were made at revision of the second sentence: "rested"
became "originated"; "A trifling enough" was added at the beginning of the
sentence; "in the first week" became "early in." Finally, the whole sentence
was vigorously crossed out, I believe by Cadell's pen,
and Lockhart substituted the vague second sentence of the published
version: "Sir Walter's first guess as to its origin proved correct." An
excision in the opening of the following paragraph further obscures the
timetable. Originally, Lockhart's allusion to Murray was followed by: "with
whom I had formed a very strict connexion in the preceding month."
Such exclusions of detail, when they conceal Cadell's role in the
commercial affairs of 1825-26, tend to increase the severity of Lockhart's
presentation of Constable. There is, for a related example, the mystery of
Lockhart's reported second meeting with Constable in London
(January, 1826), at which Constable is alleged to have proposed that Scott
borrow 20,000 pounds and forward it to Constable in London. James Glen
has concluded that no such proposal was made, and Grierson has recalled
that Scott's pointless advances were made at the insistence of Cadell.[33] In view of these assertions and
Grierson's
argument that the second Lockhart-Constable meeting did not occur, one
finds significance in the fact that this "scene of the same kind a day or two
afterwards" was written into the proofsheet by Lockhart after Cadell's
reading (VI, 177).
This is not the only instance in the proofs of the birth of an incident
by binary fission. Another influence on the Life was John
Wilson Croker, sometime Secretary of the Admiralty and longtime political
mainstay of the Quarterly Review. In January, 1837,
Lockhart
wrote to ask Croker if he could recall any circumstances of Scott's first
dinner as guest of the Prince Regent at Carlton House. "Can you recall for
instance what song it was that the Prince sung—for Scott in a minor
poem alludes to having heard him perform in that way & I take it on
that
occasion." Anxious to depict the Prince in song, he wrote to Adam with the
same request. Adam, who had already sent an account of the dinner, could
not help on "the subject of the songs": "it was the only dinner at Carlton
House where I met Sir Walter; . . . I soon after left London & was
never there at the same time again with Sir Walter— There was no
singing at that dinner. Croker was not there, indeed I never
dined with Croker at Carlton House." Croker was not sure he remembered
Adam's being there, either; and he reported Lord Hertford's certainty that
Adam was not present. Yet they all claimed to be recounting the same
dinner of twenty-two years before.[34]
But they agreed as to the absence of singing, and the proofsheets
show what Lockhart did about that. Originally, the account of the Prince's
"several capital songs" made up part of the account of the first dinner,
following the Prince's quoting of Tom Moore and immediately preceding
the "Author of Waverley" toast. In the proofs, the brief paragraph has been
cut out of that position and pasted in following the end of the account,
where it is introduced by these words written in the margin: "Before [Scott
deleted] he left town he again dined [w
deleted]
at
Carlton House, when the party was a still smaller one than before, and the
merriment if possible still more free." Thus, one dinner has become two
(III, 336-339). Croker found the account "disgraceful" even after this
change; and Lockhart, in a note added to his second edition, attributed the
misunderstanding to Adam's confusion of this 1815 dinner with another at
Dalkeith in 1822. Meanwhile, Adam was dead, and the account
stood—in
spite of Croker.
But his influence was by no means disregarded in other areas. Among
the Scott letters he forwarded to Lockhart were two of the 4th and 5th of
February, 1818, in which Scott tells Croker of the discovery of the Scottish
Regalia. The second of these letters is known only in Lockhart's published
version; the proofsheet version contains a hint of Scott's hope that a
traditional office associated with the Regalia might be revived in his favor.
The bracketed portion of the following has been crossed out:
I think that the Knight Marischal's office rested in the Kintore family
until 1715, when it was resumed on account of the bearded Earl's accession
to the Insurrection of that year. He escaped well, for they might have taken
his estate and his earldom. [It was not afterwards conferred on any other
person on account of the Regalia being shut up, but it appears for the credit
of the ancient kingdom of Scotland, that now they are brought to light, they
should have their proper offices as formerly.] I must save post . . . . (IV,
118)
The excision must have been dictated by Croker, for Lockhart, in his letter
of acknowledgment, expresses his "doubt about suppressing his hint as to
the Knight Marischalship."
[35]
Lockhart continues with a request for further information: "At all
events tell me whether the P.R. at the time shewd any disposition to comply
w Scotts request." The direct embodiment of Croker's reply in a passage
of narrative must, to Croker, have seemed disturbingly indiscreet, for the
passage in the proofsheet was cancelled. Originally it followed the sentence
ending "a revenue sufficient for remunerating responsible and respectable
guardianship":
The merely honorary office which Scott had fancied might be revived
in his own favour, would have been so, Mr. Croker informs me, without
delay, had the then Prime Minister attended to the wishes expressed on the
occasion by the Regent. But the dull moderating of Lord Liverpool's
intellect, and the coldness of his feelings, prevented his either appreciating
Scott's claim to such a distinction, or the interest with which his Royal
Master had received the results of the question itself. It was obvious,
however, that some gentleman must be appointed to the post which Scott
had, from the beginning, been anxious to see conferred on Captain
Ferguson, and on this score he was gratified (IV, 120).
In the published
Life, only a revised allusion to Captain
Ferguson's appointment remains.
But the area in which Croker's restraining influence was most apt to
appear was that of Scott's later political activities. Years after the
Life was published, Lockhart explained to Croker his editing
of
Scott's journal. He looked ahead to the time when an heir would "sell the
complete Diary for a larger sum than my book brought for the relief of his
immediate representative," and predicted: "Posterity will know that I at
least endeavoured to avoid the offending of Scotts surviving contemporaries
and you will not doubt that I had to spare Tories about as often as Whigs
the castigation of diarizing Malagrowther."[36] The problematical relationship of
Croker,
Malagrowther, and Malagrowther's Tory biographer may account for other
signs of reticence in the proofsheets. Some such influence, at least, is
apparent in chapters and journal extracts dealing with the London reaction
to Malagrowther's defense of the Scottish banks. Journal entries have
received considerable excision and modification, but of greater practical
interest here is a small group of letters pertaining to the same subject,
whose suppressed passages have never been published.
For example, there is the undated letter (early Spring, 1826), to Sir
Robert Dundas, pertaining to Lord Melville's continued kind feelings for
Scott, and expressing Scott's continued resistance to Lord Melville's
policies. But this expression is faint once Lockhart has suppressed the end
of the long first paragraph (following "opinions are waxing old"):
Their tenants are as yet faithful and steady, especially in consequence
of the late indulgence of their landlords. What a check may do, if this
small-note measure be followed by such consequences as are generally
apprehended, no man can pretend to foretell. The question is not entirely,
as Lord Melville apprehends, of abstract policy; it is wagering a speculation
against the length of experience, and the probability of great and extensive
distress. I wish to God they would back out of it, and let Malachi be
considered as the greatest liar and calumniator ever existed. I would rather
it were so than that my friends should have fatal reason to find I had been
a true, though unregarded prophet (VI, 270).
Such exchanges occurred during Lockhart's first months in London. That
his career was implicated in Malagrowther's wars is evident from this
passage, suppressed in the Croker letter that follows Scott's to Dundas:
if an opportunity should occur of doing him any service or kindness,
I think you will see that Lord Melville and your other friends will not
recollect that he has any relationship with Malachi, or if they should, it will
only make them more anxious to convince you that they bear no malice to
the cynical ancient (VI, 274-275).
Scott's reply, published by Grierson from Lockhart and the
Croker
Papers,
[37] is much fuller in the
proofsheet, where it has been considerably altered. From it have been cut
Scott's assurances of Malagrowther's local support, and also, two months
after the financial disaster, this bland denial of concern for his loss:
I cannot say it broke my sleep for a night, and why should it? I have
a much larger provision remaining than admirals and generals who have
fought and bled for their country receive for their services, and I should be
ashamed of myself (as Lady Anne Hamilton says) if I were giving myself
much trouble about a loss which cannot be helped. Besides, I have means
of retrieving my affairs, and if the effort misgives in that respect, it will at
least furnish me some amusement, as my attempts must be of a literary
character (VI, 277).
Such cuts are better understood as parts of a larger pattern of
reticence, a pattern which points to the influence of a far more important
adviser than Croker. Lockhart dedicated the work to Scott's intimate friend,
Morritt of Rokeby—and with good reason. Though it has been
known
that Morritt helped Lockhart select the diary extracts to be published, it has
not, to my knowledge, been previously remarked that Morritt exerted a
considerable influence on the Life as a whole.[38]
Morritt's letters to Lockhart make clear that he and W. S. Rose read
and annotated Lockhart's proofsheets. For example, "I sent you this
morning the proofs of the whole 2nd Volume with a swinging long
letter enclosing also a sheet of references and comments noted on the
margin."
[39] We needn't—nor
can
we—identify all Morritt's alterations. But we can see that he wasn't
ignored. It was Morritt who contributed the sceptical comment on Scott's
report of "50,000 blackguards . . . ready to rise between Tyne and Wear"
for which Cockburn credited Lockhart. It was Morritt who urged the
cutting of two passages which "clog the march of narrative"—the
account
of Joanna Baillie's
Family Legend, and the extracts from
Scott's
"Essay on Judicial Reform"; and they were cut. Some of his suggestions
signify nothing more than a desire to protect or conceal himself. To conceal
his authorship of the account of Scott and Jeffrey in 1808, he has, he tells
Lockhart, "mystified and generalized" the description. Finding a letter
written by himself to Scott, in which he speaks impertinently of "the Earl
of Darlington now Duke of Cleveland," he insists it be
changed: "I will recast it as I wish it to stand or leave it out altogether in
revising the proof."
In themselves, these are insignificant; yet they indicate his general
attitude. Consider his support of a cut urged by Cadell. Cadell had
questioned some early expressions of Scott's financial fears and a hint of
subsequent dubious transactions. Morritt's position is clear: "it were better
to suppress even the heart rending appeal here made to our posthumous
sympathy than to expose his character to malignant comment, for
subsequent inadvertency at a more sanguine moment." Concerning the same
passage he adds this broad directive to Lockhart: "I would at all events not
name Gillies, or indeed any innocent or unfortunate name in
private transactions. I have on the same principle &
stronger
feeling begged quarter for other more distinguished names as you will see.
Do not 'make one worthy man' (or woman) his foe, or your
own. 'Non est tanti,' for rogues, fools, & coxcombs lay
it
on & spare not; & there are plenty to season the book."
Morritt was free to revise, and one of his characteristic revisions
involves a particular editorial license for which Lockhart has been blamed.
Among other "improvements" of his documents, Lockhart has been charged
with the cultural betrayal of "correcting" Scott's Scotticisms. The charge
seems most peculiar in the face of other evidence. One thinks, for example,
of the strong cultural nationalism of Dr. Peter Morris's view of Scott. One
recalls this statement in a letter from Lockhart to Allan Cunningham: "I
shall never cease to have some difference of opinion w you as to the Scotch
tongue—which nobody uses quite to my satisfaction but Sir Walter.
. .
. he alone writes what
is all over Scotland Scotch National." One thinks of Lockhart's later
enjoyment of Lord Cockburn's style in the
Life of Jeffrey:
"the
locality of all his views with the Scotch of his style are to
me
among the attractions of the book."
[40]
Why, then, would Lockhart have yielded to the murderous snobbery of
Anglicization in the case of his
ultimus Scotorum?
The answer is simply that he did not. Morritt's sheet of "References
and Comments" identifies the ubiquitous editorial hand sprinkling "shalls"
and "shoulds" through the proofsheets. "Rose agrees with me in all the
substitutions I have made of words and sometimes of collocations, except
where he has dissented in red ink. They are chiefly in Scott's own letters,
and are Scotticisms or at least not English, (shalls, wills, etc.) I would alter
these that they may not be of example to our hackney writers, and confound
the language by giving them authority and precedent like this." Lockhart
yielded to Morritt and Rose. He yielded to Morritt's pleas, too, in the
excision of "damns" from diary and letters: "they are banished from print,"
Morritt argues, quoting Bob Acres on their obsolescence; "nor would I
print for another what he would not have printed himself."
Apparently applying the same principle, Morritt urged reticence in the
depiction of Scott's mental deterioration during his last months. Nor was
he alone in this. Laidlaw had found a few letters written from Malta and
Naples and vowed he would not even give them to Lockhart if he thought
they would be printed: "Although it seems to be well known that this
powerfull [sic] mind went utterly out of joint it is not for you
or me to print his letters written in that state."[41] Lockhart answered with a plea to
see what
use might be made of them, and the proofsheets indicate that he had gone
far in trying to accomplish the purpose he described to Laidlaw: "to put
together a picture that will be highly touching of a great mind shattered, but
never degraded, and always to the last noble."[42] Then came Morritt's plea: "Do not
print
a line of the diary that indicates decay of mind, or relate except in a general
way the
painful close of the scene in which he only partook of the universal lot of
all mortality. Facts serviceable to medical science may be
medically told, but as Benjamin Constant told Lady Davy
when
she objected to some superfluous improprieties of his heroine
as indecorous in his book, 'Je mettrai cela dans une note.'"

The result is obvious in the proofsheets. References to and
manifestations of the mental effects of Scott's illness have been cut from
letters, journals, narrative links, and reminiscences. The following is cut
from Lockhart's narrative: "His bookseller and printer had before them
daily evidence that, whatever the origin of the ailment might have been, it
had not left either the mind or the hand exactly what they had used to be"
(VII, 202). Also cut (and hence absent from the Grierson edition) is a long
extract of a letter to Cadell on Castle Dangerous and Scott's
pathetic determination to salvage Count Robert. It ends: "I
will
talk to you about my plan when I see you, for which I am sufficiently
eager, and will show you also what I have thought of as to Count
Robert—but I fear it will always be liker mended china than whole.
However, it must not be lost; but I wish to start with something on which
I have bestowed the pains I am now taking. We must play our best
bout at the ceasing of this long frost, and show, if we can, that Richard is
himself again" (VII, 289). Large cuts are made in accounts by Sir William
Gell and Edward Chency of Scott in Italy. Gell's manuscript is in
print.[43] The whereabouts of Cheney's
are unknown to me; but the proofsheets contain valuable suppressed
passages. "He spoke of his last work with contempt," says Cheney. "'Never
read it,' he said, 'it smells of the apoplexy.'" Lockhart prints: "'No
author,' he continued, 'has ever had so much cause to be grateful to the
public as I have. All I have written has been received with indulgence.'" He
suppresses all that follows: "'I was astonished at my own success. At first
I wrote for amusement, and from the pleasure I had in spending money I
acquired so readily, and surely no man's money was ever more his own
than mine, for I made every halfpenny by the sweat of my own
brain—latterly I wrote from necessity, and to satisfy my creditors;
and my last thing has served my turn—for it cleared me'" (VII, 378).
Suppressed, too, is the opening of Dr. Ferguson's account of Scott's
homecoming: "During Sir Walter's absence from this country, I heard from
his family that he had lost all control over his appetite, and was at times so
irritable and excitable, as to render him nearly unmanageable. He was
tormented by an incessant desire to return home, but believed there was a
conspiracy to prevent his doing so. This fixed wish extinguished every
other; and he scarcely ever evinced the slightest desire to see or explore any
of the objects which his situation presented" (VII, 384).
Such suppressions are in keeping with Morritt's views—and,
incidentally,
with the views of other older members of the Scott circle whose influence
was less directly felt. But it will be suggested that Lockhart accepted only
that advice with which he agreed. In answer we might appeal to the very
fact that the suppressions were not made earlier, to the fact that Morritt had
to state his case so strongly and repeatedly, to the fact that surviving
correspondence shows Lockhart for years in the position of one pleading for
permission to be honest and full in his use of materials. But there is an
admirable bit of evidence to show that on a crucial moral issue Lockhart
might yield somewhat to Morritt's demands that the portrait be softened,
and yet persist in his own judgment. On Scott's blacksheep brother Daniel,
Morritt wrote:
I think the facts of Scott's conduct on his brother Daniel's death
though truly given do not leave a true
impression
of his feelings. The particular misconduct and stigma on poor Dan's
character are not and should not be specified, but then, in justice to Scott,
the detail of his refusal to see him, even in extremis, and his
not attending the funeral or wearing mourning should also be suppressed,
and only mentioned in general terms. I write this in justice
to
the tenderest and kindest heart I ever knew, which ever open to the
distress even of an enemy, still recoiled from the
disgrace even of a brother.
Lockhart added Morritt's last phrases in the proof—but only after
they
had been fused with his own: "Thus sternly, when in the height and pride
of his blood, could Scott, whose heart was never hardened against the
distress of an enemy, recoil from the disgrace of a brother" (II,
247).
When issues were less crucial, the proofsheets stand as evidence that
during the final months of work, when Lockhart was in "painful anxiety"
about his wife, or in mourning for her, he was willing to delegate authority.
This is not to say that the delegates ever took sharp exception to his views.
Lockhart, a bafflingly complex man, experienced strikingly various feelings
and attitudes in his relationship with Scott. His combination of Calvinist
severity with philosophic hero-worship recalls that other West Scot, his
admirer Carlyle. At times, provoked by the worldliness of Scott's
"energetic & tumultuous existence," the austere puritan would prevail.
To Commissioner Adam, for example, he revealed the limits of his
sympathy for Scott:
He had various faults if I may venture to speak openly to you who
knew him & loved him as well as anybody did—but I think they
may
all be traced to the same boundless energy of imagination that gave us his
immortal
works. This imagination exalted & embellished for him things which
I
never could bring myself to respect & worship as he did — rank
—
fortune — mere worldly distinction — even
down
to the
investing wt. a chivalrous dignity objects which a tithe of his observation
wd have made any man less under the sway of romantic association
contemplate as (especially with reference to Scott's own self-won position
in the eye of all mankind) mere nothings.
[44]
An influence such as Morritt's sanctioned some feelings at the expense of
others. Had Lockhart heard less from Morritt, and from interested parties
such as Cadell and Croker, had he received more of Adam's frank
encouragement, more backthumping adjurations like Basil Hall's
—"be
bold—let yourself out—d-n the expence—dont be
afraid—express
heartily and manfully all you yourself feel and think—and be well
assured
that this is the genuine inspiration in matters of biography especially"
[45] —perhaps the sterner tone
would have
sounded more insistently.
Notes
[1]
The Development of English
Biography, orig. pub. 1928 (1947), p. 110; The Nature of
Biography (1957), p. 98. An admirable exception is provided by
Edgar Johnson, One Mighty Torrent, New Edn. (1955), pp.
305-307.
[2]
They are owned by Prof. F. W. Hilles of Yale
University, with whose kind permission my study has been made. I am
grateful to him, and to Prof. R. D. Altick for calling them to my attention
and encouraging me to make this study. Refs. to the proofs will be found
in my text, but some explanation is needed. The proofsheets are neither
complete nor of one stage. They are bound in six vols. Vols. I-III, printed
on one side of wide-margined sheets, correspond to the first three published
vols.; V and VI, printed the same way, correspond to the last
two—published vols. VI and VII. Refs. to the latter ignore the
present
binding and cite the published vol. numbers: my "VII" is 1st edn. VII,
bound at present in the sixth vol.; my "VI" is at present bound in the fifth.
The fourth vol. of the present binding contains the first 228 pages of
published Vol. IV, printed as above; it also contains entire published Vol.
V in its "last proof" stage, printed on both sides of
narrow-margined sheets. My "IV" and "V" are first edn. IV and V, both
at present bound in the fourth vol., with part of IV missing. Another
complication: with the exception of this "V", these proofs are not
necessarily either the first or the last. Indeed, at the beginning of Chap. I
of Vol. IV is this note in Cadell, the publisher's, hand: "Mr. L has now
seen to p. 38 thrice & to p. 144 twice may go to
stereotype
after revise."
[3]
Cf. D. Cook, "Lockhart's Treatment of Scott's
Letters," The Nineteenth Century, CII (1927), 382-398;
Grierson, D. Cook, W. M. Parker, et al., edd., The
Letters of Sir Walter Scott, 12 vol. (1932-7); Grierson, "Lang,
Lockhart, and Biography," Andrew Lang Lecture, Univ. of St. Andrews,
6 December 1933 (pub. 1934); and Sir Walter Scott, Bt.: A New
Life (1938); The Journal of Sir Walter Scott, [ed. J.
G.
Tait & W. M. Parker] (1950). Indispensable are two lectures given by
James C. Corson: "Scott Studies I & II," pub. in University of
Edinburgh Journal, Autumn, 1955, pp. 23-32, and Summer, 1956,
pp. 104-113.
[4]
The word is Lockhart's: cf. his letter to Cadell,
quoted in Letters of Scott, I, xxvii.
[5]
May 22, 1843, Lockhart-Croker Corresp.,
Croker Papers, William L. Clements Library, Univ. of Michigan (hereafter
cited as "Croker Papers").
[6]
When originals were sent,
Lockhart's
wife Sophia and "her assistants" made the transcripts. Lockhart resigned
himself to "innumerable blunders." Cf. Sir Robert Rait, "Boswell and
Lockhart," Essays by Divers Hands, N.S. XII (1933),
123-124;
also, letters to Lockhart in MSS. 929, 932, 934, 935, and 3653, National
Library of Scotland, to whose MS. Dept. I am grateful for many months
of patient help.
[7]
"bolt": "sift, separate, grade." For Ballantyne's
letter, see Lockhart, The Ballantyne-Humbug Handled (1839),
pp. 9-10.
[8]
Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 932; for Morritt's influence,
see below.
[9]
Letters from Mrs. Elizabeth Carter, to
Mrs.
Montagu (1817), I, xi-xii. A letter from Maria Edgeworth to
Lockhart in 1832 (Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 923) best expresses the taste he had
to satisfy. She objects to publishing unedited letters; still,
"Garbling—destroys the value—not only the
texture—but the value
of wholeness—the integrity—the unity of
purpose—sentiment—mind." Lockhart convinced her that he
could both
edit and preserve (or re-create) the value of wholeness, by what we call
"contamination."
[10]
Letters of Scott, II, 290-296; the
"contamination" is not noticed by the editors.
[11]
Letters of Scott, X, 64,
77.
[12]
Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 924 has Skene's
recollections. Several of Scott's most memorable remarks receive their
strength and colloquial point from Lockhart's revisions of the memories of
others.
[13]
Journal of Henry Cockburn (1874),
I, 134, 174-177; Southey, ML. to Lockhart, transcpt. in MS. Notebooks of
Dr. A. Mitchell, Nat. Lib. Scot.; Letters of William and Dorothy
Wordsworth: The Later Years, ed. E. de Selincourt
(1939), II, 927; Mahon, MS. 930; Cheney, MS. 923—Nat. Lib.
Scot.
[14]
Cooper, Knickerbocker, XII
(1838),
349, 351, 359; Martineau, Biographical Sketches (1869), p.
31.
[15]
Cockburn, I, 174-175; Ticknor, Life,
Letters and Journals (1909), II, 188-189.
[16]
Crit. and Misc. Essays (1900), IV,
29.
[18]
Morritt, Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 932. The
pre-Lockhart publications—the sources of rumor, true and
false—are
listed by Dr. Corson in his Bibliography of Sir Walter Scott.
Obviously, the early announcement of Lockhart's plans caused such
memoirists as Hall, Ballantyne, and Gell to refrain from separate
publication and give their materials to Lockhart. The notable exception was
James Hogg, for the story of whose erratic disloyalty, see A. L. Strout,
"James Hogg's Familiar Anecdotes of Sir Walter Scott,"
SP, XXXIII (1936), 456-474.
[19]
Andrew Lang, Life and Letters of J. G.
Lockhart (1897), II, 182.
[20]
London, April 24-25, 1837. This valuable and
hitherto unpublished letter is owned by Dr. Corson, who has kindly
furnished me with a copy and with permission to quote from it.
[21]
London, Jan. 19, 1837; see R. Carruthers,
"Abbotsford Notanda," in the 1871 edn. of Robert Chambers, Life
of
Scott, p. 192.
[22]
The Making of the Life of Johnson,
Private
Papers of James Boswell from Malahide Castle, VI, 16.
[24]
Nat. Lib. Scot. MSS. 929 & 935;
Lady
Louisa Stuart, ed. J. A. Home (1899), pp. 268-270.
[25]
Letters to Lockhart in Nat. Lib. Scot. MSS.
1554 & 924 show the collection underway in October. For the rest of
the
timetable, see Mrs. Oliphant, William Black-wood and His
Sons
(1897), II, 124; Lang, Lockhart, II, 114-115; M. Lochhead,
John Gibson Lockhart (1954), pp. 202-204; W. M. Parker,
TLS, March 20, 1937, p. 210.
[26]
Loc. cit., notes 20-21.
[27]
"Lang, Lockhart, and Biography," pp. 13-15;
Letters of Scott, I, xliiiff.; New Life, p.
viii.
[28]
Quoted by Carruthers, in Chambers,
Scott, p. 193n.
[29]
Hall, 20 Sept. 1832, Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 932;
Lockhart, 18 Aug. 1838, Croker Papers, Clements Lib.
[30]
Knowledge of the comment would have helped
Sir H. Grierson two decades ago. In his New Life (p. 32n.)
he
reports his inability to find any reference to the early printing other than
that sent Lockhart from the Baroness Purgstall (J. A. Cranstoun) by Basil
Hall. Cadell's note was ignored, and the Purgstall story stayed.
[31]
Lockhart held it up for further proof, sent the
following to press.
[32]
"Lang, Lockhart, and Biography," pp. 31-34.
His argument is that the ride could have been made only after Nov. 11, and
that after Nov. 11 Scott was in Edinburgh, Lockhart at Chiefswood. Dr.
Corson, in conversation, recalled Una Pope-Hennessy's guess that the ride
was actually to see Cadell: The Laird of Abbotsford (1932),
p.
264n. But it would be wrong to absolve Constable of blame in the deceptive
reassurance of Scott. The day after the news came from London (Nov. 22),
Constable, in the presence of "J. B. and R. Cadell," "convinced me we will
do well to support the London House" (Journal, p. 11). Is it
so
unlikely that at some time during the last ten days of November, Scott rode
from Edinburgh to Polton, and then, late at night, decided to
go
on to Chiefswood (c. 35 m.), arriving for breakfast? The only contradictory
detail would be Lockhart's strolling over to Abbotsford to warn Scott the
evening of the drive; but this might well have
occurred at an earlier date. It was not uncommon for Lockhart to
amalgamate incidents in such a way; it was not part of his
practice to invent incidents ex nihilo.
[33]
Letters of Scott, I, xciii; Grierson,
New Life, p. 260 & n., and "Lang, Lockhart, and
Biography," pp. 35-36.
[34]
Lockhart, late Jan., 1837, Croker Papers,
Clements Lib.; Adam, MS. 924, and Croker, MS. 927, Nat. Lib.
Scot.
[35]
Letter cit. note 34, Croker Papers.
[36]
May 26, 1853, Croker Papers, Clements
Lib.
[37]
Letters of Scott, IX,
471-474.
[38]
Cf. Grierson, LE "Scott's Journal,"
TLS, Aug. 8, 1936, p.648; Reginald Heber had died years
before; the other reader was H. H. Milman.
[39]
Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 932. All other quotations
of Morritt in what follows are from letters in MSS. 932 and 935.
[40]
Peter's Letters to His Kinsfolk, "2nd
Edn." (1819), II, 299-362 passim; to Cunningham, April 27,
1830, Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 1553; to Croker, April 10, 1852, Croker
Papers.
[41]
Jan. 11, 1837, Nat. Lib. Scot. MS.
924.
[43]
Reminiscences of Sir Walter Scott's
Residence in Italy, 1832, by Sir William Gell, ed. J.
C.
Corson (1957).
[45]
Nat. Lib. Scot. MS. 932, Oct. 9, 1836.