Life and Letters of Robert Browning [89]
of well-known popular airs.
While they were playing with great fervour the Hymn to Garibaldi --
an air strictly forbidden by the Papal Government, three blows at the door
resounded through the `Osteria'. The music stopped in a moment.
I saw Gigi was very pale as he walked down the room. There was a short parley
at the door. It opened, and a sergeant and two Papal gendarmes
marched solemnly up to the counter from which drink was supplied.
There was a dead silence while Gigi supplied them with
large measures of wine, which the gendarmes leisurely imbibed.
Then as solemnly they marched out again, with their heads well in the air,
looking neither to the right nor the left. Most discreet if not incorruptible
guardians of the peace! When the door was shut the music began again;
but Gigi was so earnest in his protestations, that my friend Browning
suggested we should get into carriages and drive to see the Coliseum
by moonlight. And so we sallied forth, to the great relief of poor Gigi,
to whom it meant, if reported, several months of imprisonment,
and complete ruin.
`In after-years Browning frequently recounted with delight this night march.
`"We drove down the Corso in two carriages," he would say.
"In one were our musicians, in the other we sat. Yes! and the people
all asked, `who are these who make all this parade?' At last some one said,
`Without doubt these are the fellows who won the lottery,'
and everybody cried, `Of course these are the lucky men who have won.'"'
==
The two persons whom Mr. Browning saw most, and most intimately,
during this and the ensuing winter, were probably Mr. and Mrs. Story.
Allusion has already been made to the opening of the acquaintance
at the Baths of Lucca in 1853, to its continuance in Rome in '53 and '54,
and to the artistic pursuits which then brought the two men
into close and frequent contact with each other. These friendly relations
were cemented by their children, who were of about the same age;
and after Mrs. Browning's death, Miss Browning took her place
in the pleasant intercourse which renewed itself whenever
their respective visits to Italy and to England again brought
the two families together. A no less lasting and truly affectionate intimacy
was now also growing up with Mr. Cartwright and his wife --
the Cartwrights (of Aynhoe) of whom mention was made
in the Siena letter to F. Leighton; and this too was subsequently to include
their daughter, now Mrs. Guy Le Strange, and Mr. Browning's sister.
I cannot quite ascertain when the poet first knew Mr. Odo Russell,
and his mother, Lady William Russell, who was also during this,
or at all events the following winter, in Rome; and whom afterwards in London
he regularly visited until her death; but the acquaintance was already
entering on the stage in which it would spread as a matter of course
through every branch of the family. His first country visit,
when he had returned to England, was paid with his son to Woburn Abbey.
We are now indeed fully confronted with one of the great difficulties
of Mr. Browning's biography: that of giving a sufficient idea
of the growing extent and growing variety of his social relations.
It is evident from the fragments of his wife's correspondence that during,
as well as after, his married life, he always and everywhere knew everyone
whom it could interest him to know. These acquaintances constantly ripened
into friendliness, friendliness into friendship. They were necessarily
often marked by interesting circumstances or distinctive character.
To follow them one by one, would add not chapters, but volumes,
to our history. The time has not yet come at which this could even
be undertaken; and any attempt at systematic selection would create
a false impression of the whole. I must therefore be still content
to touch upon such passages of Mr. Browning's social experience
as lie in the course of a comparatively brief record; leaving all such
as are not directly included in it to speak indirectly for themselves.
Mrs. Browning
While they were playing with great fervour the Hymn to Garibaldi --
an air strictly forbidden by the Papal Government, three blows at the door
resounded through the `Osteria'. The music stopped in a moment.
I saw Gigi was very pale as he walked down the room. There was a short parley
at the door. It opened, and a sergeant and two Papal gendarmes
marched solemnly up to the counter from which drink was supplied.
There was a dead silence while Gigi supplied them with
large measures of wine, which the gendarmes leisurely imbibed.
Then as solemnly they marched out again, with their heads well in the air,
looking neither to the right nor the left. Most discreet if not incorruptible
guardians of the peace! When the door was shut the music began again;
but Gigi was so earnest in his protestations, that my friend Browning
suggested we should get into carriages and drive to see the Coliseum
by moonlight. And so we sallied forth, to the great relief of poor Gigi,
to whom it meant, if reported, several months of imprisonment,
and complete ruin.
`In after-years Browning frequently recounted with delight this night march.
`"We drove down the Corso in two carriages," he would say.
"In one were our musicians, in the other we sat. Yes! and the people
all asked, `who are these who make all this parade?' At last some one said,
`Without doubt these are the fellows who won the lottery,'
and everybody cried, `Of course these are the lucky men who have won.'"'
==
The two persons whom Mr. Browning saw most, and most intimately,
during this and the ensuing winter, were probably Mr. and Mrs. Story.
Allusion has already been made to the opening of the acquaintance
at the Baths of Lucca in 1853, to its continuance in Rome in '53 and '54,
and to the artistic pursuits which then brought the two men
into close and frequent contact with each other. These friendly relations
were cemented by their children, who were of about the same age;
and after Mrs. Browning's death, Miss Browning took her place
in the pleasant intercourse which renewed itself whenever
their respective visits to Italy and to England again brought
the two families together. A no less lasting and truly affectionate intimacy
was now also growing up with Mr. Cartwright and his wife --
the Cartwrights (of Aynhoe) of whom mention was made
in the Siena letter to F. Leighton; and this too was subsequently to include
their daughter, now Mrs. Guy Le Strange, and Mr. Browning's sister.
I cannot quite ascertain when the poet first knew Mr. Odo Russell,
and his mother, Lady William Russell, who was also during this,
or at all events the following winter, in Rome; and whom afterwards in London
he regularly visited until her death; but the acquaintance was already
entering on the stage in which it would spread as a matter of course
through every branch of the family. His first country visit,
when he had returned to England, was paid with his son to Woburn Abbey.
We are now indeed fully confronted with one of the great difficulties
of Mr. Browning's biography: that of giving a sufficient idea
of the growing extent and growing variety of his social relations.
It is evident from the fragments of his wife's correspondence that during,
as well as after, his married life, he always and everywhere knew everyone
whom it could interest him to know. These acquaintances constantly ripened
into friendliness, friendliness into friendship. They were necessarily
often marked by interesting circumstances or distinctive character.
To follow them one by one, would add not chapters, but volumes,
to our history. The time has not yet come at which this could even
be undertaken; and any attempt at systematic selection would create
a false impression of the whole. I must therefore be still content
to touch upon such passages of Mr. Browning's social experience
as lie in the course of a comparatively brief record; leaving all such
as are not directly included in it to speak indirectly for themselves.
Mrs. Browning