Life of Lord Byron, Vol. I eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 367 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, Vol. I.

Life of Lord Byron, Vol. I eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 367 pages of information about Life of Lord Byron, Vol. I.
according to the account of this same attendant, bordered on distraction, and her shrieks were so loud as to be heard in the street.  She was, indeed, a woman full of the most passionate extremes, and her grief and affection were bursts as much of temper as of feeling.  To mourn at all, however, for such a husband was, it must be allowed, a most gratuitous stretch of generosity.  Having married her, as he openly avowed, for her fortune alone, he soon dissipated this, the solitary charm she possessed for him, and was then unmanful enough to taunt her with the inconveniences of that penury which his own extravagance had occasioned.

When not quite five years old, young Byron was sent to a day-school at Aberdeen, taught by Mr. Bowers,[13] and remained there, with some interruptions, during a twelvemonth, as appears by the following extract from the day-book of the school:—­

     George Gordon Byron.
     19th November, 1792.
     19th November, 1793—­paid one guinea.

The terms of this school for reading were only five shillings a quarter, and it was evidently less with a view to the boy’s advance in learning than as a cheap mode of keeping him quiet that his mother had sent him to it.  Of the progress of his infantine studies at Aberdeen, as well under Mr. Bowers as under the various other persons that instructed him, we have the following interesting particulars communicated by himself, in a sort of journal which he once began, under the title of “My Dictionary,” and which is preserved in one of his manuscript books.

“For several years of my earliest childhood, I was in that city, but have never revisited it since I was ten years old.  I was sent, at five years old, or earlier, to a school kept by a Mr. Bowers, who was called ‘Bodsy Bowers,’ by reason of his dapperness.  It was a school for both sexes.  I learned little there except to repeat by rote the first lesson of monosyllables (’God made man’—­’Let us love him’), by hearing it often repeated, without acquiring a letter.  Whenever proof was made of my progress, at home, I repeated these words with the most rapid fluency; but on turning over a new leaf, I continued to repeat them, so that the narrow boundaries of my first year’s accomplishments were detected, my ears boxed, (which they did not deserve, seeing it was by ear only that I had acquired my letters,) and my intellects consigned to a new preceptor.  He was a very devout, clever, little clergyman, named Ross, afterwards minister of one of the kirks (East, I think).  Under him I made astonishing progress; and I recollect to this day his mild manners and good-natured pains-taking.  The moment I could read, my grand passion was history, and, why I know not, but I was particularly taken with the battle near the Lake Regillus in the Roman History, put into my hands the first.  Four years ago, when standing on the heights of Tusculum, and looking down upon the little round

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Life of Lord Byron, Vol. I from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.