Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay eBook

George Otto Trevelyan
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 553 pages of information about Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay.

Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay eBook

George Otto Trevelyan
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 553 pages of information about Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay.

One word about your maid.  You really must choose with great caution.  Hitherto the Company has required that all ladies, who take maidservants with them from this country to India, should give security to send them back within two years.  The reason was, that no class of people misconducted themselves so much in the East as female servants from this country.  They generally treat the natives with gross insolence; an insolence natural enough to people accustomed to stand in a subordinate relation to others when, for the first time, they find a great population placed in a servile relation towards them.  Then, too, the state of society is such that they are very likely to become mistresses of the wealthy Europeans, and to flaunt about in magnificent palanquins, bringing discredit on their country by the immorality of their lives and the vulgarity of their manners.  On these grounds the Company has hitherto insisted upon their being sent back at the expense of those who take them out.  The late Act will enable your servant to stay in India, if she chooses to stay.  I hope, therefore, that you will be careful in your selection.  You see how much depends upon it.  The happiness and concord of our native household, which will probably consist of sixty or seventy people, may be destroyed by her, if she should be ill-tempered and arrogant.  If she should be weak and vain, she will probably form connections that will ruin her morals and her reputation.  I am no preacher, as you very well know; but I have a strong sense of the responsibility under which we shall both lie with respect to a poor girl, brought by us into the midst of temptations of which she cannot be aware, and which have turned many heads that might have been steady enough in a quiet nursery or kitchen in England.

To find a man and wife, both of whom would suit us, would be very difficult; and I think it right, also, to offer to my clerk to keep him in my service.  He is honest, intelligent, and respectful; and, as he is rather inclined to consumption, the change of climate would probably be useful to him.  I cannot bear the thought of throwing any person who has been about me for five years, and with whom I have no fault to find, out of bread, while it is in my power to retain his services.

Ever yours

T. B. M.

London:  December 5, 1833

Dear Lord Lansdowne,—­I delayed returning an answer to your kind letter till this day, in order that I might be able to send you definite intelligence.  Yesterday evening the Directors appointed me to a seat in the Council of India.  The votes were nineteen for me, and three against me.

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Life and Letters of Lord Macaulay from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.