A Publisher and His Friends eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about A Publisher and His Friends.

A Publisher and His Friends eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about A Publisher and His Friends.

Amongst the reviews of the biography was one by Lockhart in the Quarterly (No. 87), which was very favourable; but an article, by Mr. Croker in No. 91, on another of Moore’s works—­the “Life of Lord Edward Fitzgerald”—­was of a very different character.  Murray told Moore of the approaching appearance of the article in the next number, and Moore enters in his Diary, “Saw my ‘Lord Edward Fitzgerald’ announced as one of the articles in the Quarterly, to be abused of course; and this too immediately after my dinings and junketings with both author and publisher.”

Mr. Moore to John Murray.

October 25, 1831.

...  I see that what I took for a joke of yours is true, and that you are at me in this number of the Quarterly.  I have desired Power to send you back my copy when it comes, not liking to read it just now for reasons.  In the meantime, here’s some good-humoured doggerel for you: 

THOUGHTS ON EDITORS.

Editur et edit.

No!  Editors don’t care a button,
  What false and faithless things they do;
They’ll let you come and cut their mutton,
  And then, they’ll have a cut at you.

With Barnes I oft my dinner took,
  Nay, met e’en Horace Twiss to please him: 
Yet Mister Barnes traduc’d my Book,
  For which may his own devils seize him!

With Doctor Bowring I drank tea,
  Nor of his cakes consumed a particle;
And yet th’ ungrateful LL.D. 
  Let fly at me, next week, an article!

John Wilson gave me suppers hot,
  With bards of fame, like Hogg and Packwood;
A dose of black-strap then I got,
  And after a still worse of Blackwood.

Alas! and must I close the list
  With thee, my Lockhart of the Quarterly?
So kind, with bumper in thy fist,—­
  With pen, so very gruff and tartarly.

Now in thy parlour feasting me,
  Now scribbling at me from your garret,—­
Till, ’twixt the two, in doubt I be,
  Which sourest is, thy wit or claret?

Should you again see the Noble Scott before he goes, remember me most affectionately to him.  Ever yours,

Thomas Moore.

Mr. Murray now found himself at liberty to proceed with his cherished scheme of a complete edition of Lord Byron’s works.

John Murray to Mr. Moore.

February 28, 1832.

When I commenced this complete edition of Byron’s works I was so out of heart by the loss upon the first edition of the “Life,” and by the simultaneous losses from the failure of three booksellers very largely in my debt, that I had little if any hopes of its success, and I felt myself under the necessity of declining your kind offer to edit it, because I did not think that I should have had it in my power to offer you an adequate remuneration.  But now that the success of this speculation is established, if you will do me the favour to do what you propose, I shall have great satisfaction in giving you 500 guineas for your labours.

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A Publisher and His Friends from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.