Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5.

Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 387 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5.
“I wish to propose to Holmes, the miniature painter, to come out to me this spring.  I will pay his expenses, and any sum in reason.  I wish him to take my daughter’s picture (who is in a convent) and the Countess G.’s, and the head of a peasant girl, which latter would make a study for Raphael.  It is a complete peasant face, but an Italian peasant’s, and quite in the Raphael Fornarina style.  Her figure is tall, but rather large, and not at all comparable to her face, which is really superb.  She is not seventeen, and I am anxious to have her face while it lasts.  Madame G. is also very handsome, but it is quite in a different style—­completely blonde and fair—­very uncommon in Italy; yet not an English fairness, but more like a Swede or a Norwegian.  Her figure, too, particularly the bust, is uncommonly good.  It must be Holmes; I like him because he takes such inveterate likenesses.  There is a war here; but a solitary traveller, with little baggage, and nothing to do with politics, has nothing to fear.  Pack him up in the Diligence.  Don’t forget.”

[Footnote 33:  These lines—­perhaps from some difficulty in introducing them—­were never inserted in the Tragedy.]

* * * * *

LETTER 417.  TO MR. HOPPNER.

     “Ravenna, April 3. 1821;

“Thanks for the translation.  I have sent you some books, which I do not know whether you have read or no—­you need not return them, in any case.  I enclose you also a letter from Pisa.  I have neither spared trouble nor expense in the care of the child; and as she was now four years old complete, and quite above the control of the servants—­and as a man living without any woman at the head of his house cannot much attend to a nursery—­I had no resource but to place her for a time (at a high pension too) in the convent of Bagna-Cavalli (twelve miles off), where the air is good, and where she will, at least, have her learning advanced, and her morals and religion inculcated.[34] I had also another reason;—­things were and are in such a state here, that I had no reason to look upon my own personal safety as particularly insurable; and I thought the infant best out of harm’s way, for the present.
“It is also fit that I should add that I by no means intended, nor intend, to give a natural child an English education, because with the disadvantages of her birth, her after settlement would be doubly difficult.  Abroad, with a fair foreign education and a portion of five or six thousand pounds, she might and may marry very respectably.  In England such a dowry would be a pittance, while elsewhere it is a fortune.  It is, besides, my wish that she should be a Roman Catholic, which I look upon as the best religion, as it is assuredly the oldest of the various branches of Christianity.  I have
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Life of Lord Byron, With His Letters And Journals, Vol. 5 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.