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<h2> CHARLES READE AND LAURA SEYMOUR </h2>
<p>The instances of distinguished men, or of notable women, who have broken
through convention in order to find a fitting mate, are very numerous. A
few of these instances may, perhaps, represent what is usually called a
Platonic union. But the evidence is always doubtful. The world is not
possessed of abundant charity, nor does human experience lead one to
believe that intimate relations between a man and a woman are compatible
with Platonic friendship.</p>
<p>Perhaps no case is more puzzling than that which is found in the
life-history of Charles Reade and Laura Seymour.</p>
<p>Charles Reade belongs to that brilliant group of English writers and
artists which included Dickens, Bulwer-Lytton, Wilkie Collins, Tom Taylor,
George Eliot, Swinburne, Sir Walter Besant, Maclise, and Goldwin Smith. In
my opinion, he ranks next to Dickens in originality and power. His books
are little read to-day; yet he gave to the English stage the comedy "Masks
and Faces," which is now as much a classic as Goldsmith's "She Stoops to
Conquer" or Sheridan's "School for Scandal." His power as a novelist was
marvelous. Who can forget the madhouse episodes in Hard Cash, or the great
trial scene in Griffith Gaunt, or that wonderful picture, in The Cloister
and the Hearth, of Germany and Rome at the end of the Middle Ages? Here
genius has touched the dead past and made it glow again with an intense
reality.</p>
<p>He was the son of a country gentleman, the lord of a manor which had been
held by his family before the Wars of the Boses. His ancestors had been
noted for their services in warfare, in Parliament, and upon the bench.
Reade, therefore, was in feeling very much of an aristocrat. Sometimes he
pushed his ancestral pride to a whimsical excess, very much as did his own
creation, Squire Raby, in Put Yourself in His Place.</p>
<p>At the same time he might very well have been called a Tory democrat. His
grandfather had married the daughter of a village blacksmith, and Reade
was quite as proud of this as he was of the fact that another ancestor had
been lord chief justice of England. From the sturdy strain which came to
him from the blacksmith he, perhaps, derived that sledge-hammer power with
which he wrote many of his most famous chapters, and which he used in
newspaper controversies with his critics. From his legal ancestors there
may have come to him the love of litigation, which kept him often in hot
water. From those who had figured in the life of royal courts, he
inherited a romantic nature, a love of art, and a very delicate perception
of the niceties of cultivated usage. Such was Charles Reade—keen
observer, scholar, Bohemian—a man who could be both rough and
tender, and whose boisterous ways never concealed his warm heart.</p>
<p>Reade's school-days were Spartan in their severity. A teacher with the
appropriate name of Slatter set him hard tasks and caned him unmercifully
for every shortcoming. A weaker nature would have been crushed. Reade's
was toughened, and he learned to resist pain and to resent wrong, so that
hatred of injustice has been called his dominating trait.</p>
<p>In preparing himself for college he was singularly fortunate in his
tutors. One of them was Samuel Wilberforce, afterward Bishop of Oxford,
nicknamed, from his suavity of manner, "Soapy Sam"; and afterward, when
Reade was studying law, his instructor was Samuel Warren, the author of
that once famous novel, Ten Thousand a Year, and the creator of "Tittlebat
Titmouse."</p>
<p>For his college at Oxford, Reade selected one of the most beautiful and
ancient—Magdalen—which he entered, securing what is known as a
demyship. Reade won his demyship by an extraordinary accident. Always an
original youth, his reading was varied and valuable; but in his studies he
had never tried to be minutely accurate in small matters. At that time
every candidate was supposed to be able to repeat, by heart, the
"Thirty-Nine Articles." Reade had no taste for memorizing; and out of the
whole thirty-nine he had learned but three. His general examination was
good, though not brilliant. When he came to be questioned orally, the
examiner, by a chance that would not occur once in a million times, asked
the candidate to repeat these very articles. Reade rattled them off with
the greatest glibness, and produced so favorable an impression that he was
let go without any further questioning.</p>
<p>It must be added that his English essay was original, and this also helped
him; but had it not been for the other great piece of luck he would, in
Oxford phrase, have been "completely gulfed." As it was, however, he was
placed as highly as the young men who were afterward known as Cardinal
Newman and Sir Robert Lowe (Lord Sherbrooke).</p>
<p>At the age of twenty-one, Reade obtained a fellowship, which entitled him
to an income so long as he remained unmarried. It is necessary to consider
the significance of this when we look at his subsequent career. The
fellowship at Magdalen was worth, at the outset, about twelve hundred
dollars annually, and it gave him possession of a suite of rooms free of
any charge. He likewise secured a Vinerian fellowship in law, to which was
attached an income of four hundred dollars. As time went on, the value of
the first fellowship increased until it was worth twenty-five hundred
dollars. Therefore, as with many Oxford men of his time, Charles Reade,
who had no other fortune, was placed in this position—if he
refrained from marrying, he had a home and a moderate income for life,
without any duties whatsoever. If he married, he must give up his income
and his comfortable apartments, and go out into the world and struggle for
existence.</p>
<p>There was the further temptation that the possession of his fellowship did
not even necessitate his living at Oxford. He might spend his time in
London, or even outside of England, knowing that his chambers at Magdalen
were kept in order for him, as a resting-place to which he might return
whenever he chose.</p>
<p>Reade remained a while at Oxford, studying books and men—especially
the latter. He was a great favorite with the undergraduates, though less
so with the dons. He loved the boat-races on the river; he was a
prodigious cricket-player, and one of the best bowlers of his time. He
utterly refused to put on any of the academic dignity which his associates
affected. He wore loud clothes. His flaring scarfs were viewed as being
almost scandalous, very much as Longfellow's parti-colored waistcoats were
regarded when he first came to Harvard as a professor.</p>
<p>Charles Reade pushed originality to eccentricity. He had a passion for
violins, and ran himself into debt because he bought so many and such good
ones. Once, when visiting his father's house at Ipsden, he shocked the
punctilious old gentleman by dancing on the dining-table to the
accompaniment of a fiddle, which he scraped delightedly. Dancing, indeed,
was another of his diversions, and, in spite of the fact that he was a
fellow of Magdalen and a D.C.L. of Oxford, he was always ready to caper
and to display the new steps.</p>
<p>In the course of time, he went up to London; and at once plunged into the
seething tide of the metropolis. He made friends far and wide, and in
every class and station—among authors and politicians, bishops and
bargees, artists and musicians. Charles Reade learned much from all of
them, and all of them were fond of him.</p>
<p>But it was the theater that interested him most. Nothing else seemed to
him quite so fine as to be a successful writer for the stage. He viewed
the drama with all the reverence of an ancient Greek. On his tombstone he
caused himself to be described as "Dramatist, novelist, journalist."</p>
<p>"Dramatist" he put first of all, even after long experience had shown him
that his greatest power lay in writing novels. But in this early period he
still hoped for fame upon the stage.</p>
<p>It was not a fortunate moment for dramatic writers. Plays were bought
outright by the managers, who were afraid to risk any considerable sum,
and were very shy about risking anything at all. The system had not yet
been established according to which an author receives a share of the
money taken at the box-office. Consequently, Reade had little or no
financial success. He adapted several pieces from the French, for which he
was paid a few bank-notes. "Masks and Faces" got a hearing, and drew large
audiences, but Reade had sold it for a paltry sum; and he shared the
honors of its authorship with Tom Taylor, who was then much better known.</p>
<p>Such was the situation. Reade was personally liked, but his plays were
almost all rejected. He lived somewhat extravagantly and ran into debt,
though not very deeply. He had a play entitled "Christie Johnstone," which
he believed to be a great one, though no manager would venture to produce
it. Reade, brooding, grew thin and melancholy. Finally, he decided that he
would go to a leading actress at one of the principal theaters and try to
interest her in his rejected play. The actress he had in mind was Laura
Seymour, then appearing at the Haymarket under the management of
Buckstone; and this visit proved to be the turning-point in Reade's whole
life.</p>
<p>Laura Seymour was the daughter of a surgeon at Bath—a man in large
practise and with a good income, every penny of which he spent. His family
lived in lavish style; but one morning, after he had sat up all night
playing cards, his little daughter found him in the dining-room, stone
dead. After his funeral it appeared that he had left no provision for his
family. A friend of his—a Jewish gentleman of Portuguese extraction—showed
much kindness to the children, settling their affairs and leaving them
with some money in the bank; but, of course, something must be done.</p>
<p>The two daughters removed to London, and at a very early age Laura had
made for herself a place in the dramatic world, taking small parts at
first, but rising so rapidly that in her fifteenth year she was cast for
the part of Juliet. As an actress she led a life of strange vicissitudes.
At one time she would be pinched by poverty, and at another time she would
be well supplied with money, which slipped through her fingers like water.
She was a true Bohemian, a happy-go-lucky type of the actors of her time.</p>
<p>From all accounts, she was never very beautiful; but she had an instinct
for strange, yet effective, costumes, which attracted much attention. She
has been described as "a fluttering, buoyant, gorgeous little butterfly."
Many were drawn to her. She was careless of what she did, and her name was
not untouched with scandal. But she lived through it all, and emerged a
clever, sympathetic woman of wide experience, both on the stage and off
it.</p>
<p>One of her admirers—an elderly gentleman named Seymour—came to
her one day when she was in much need of money, and told her that he had
just deposited a thousand pounds to her credit at the bank. Having said
this, he left the room precipitately. It was the beginning of a sort of
courtship; and after a while she married him. Her feeling toward him was
one of gratitude. There was no sentiment about it; but she made him a good
wife, and gave no further cause for gossip.</p>
<p>Such was the woman whom Charles Reade now approached with the request that
she would let him read to her a portion of his play. He had seen her act,
and he honestly believed her to be a dramatic genius of the first order.
Few others shared this belief; but she was generally thought of as a
competent, though by no means brilliant, actress. Reade admired her
extremely, so that at the very thought of speaking with her his emotions
almost choked him.</p>
<p>In answer to a note, she sent word that he might call at her house. He was
at this time (1849) in his thirty-eighth year. The lady was a little
older, and had lost something of her youthful charm; yet, when Reade was
ushered into her drawing-room, she seemed to him the most graceful and
accomplished woman whom he had ever met.</p>
<p>She took his measure, or she thought she took it, at a glance. Here was
one of those would-be playwrights who live only to torment managers and
actresses. His face was thin, from which she inferred that he was probably
half starved. His bashfulness led her to suppose that he was an
inexperienced youth. Little did she imagine that he was the son of a
landed proprietor, a fellow of one of Oxford's noblest colleges, and one
with friends far higher in the world than herself. Though she thought so
little of him, and quite expected to be bored, she settled herself in a
soft armchair to listen. The unsuccessful playwright read to her a scene
or two from his still unfinished drama. She heard him patiently, noting
the cultivated accent of his voice, which proved to her that he was at
least a gentleman. When he had finished, she said:</p>
<p>"Yes, that's good! The plot is excellent." Then she laughed a sort of
stage laugh, and remarked lightly: "Why don't you turn it into a novel?"</p>
<p>Reade was stung to the quick. Nothing that she could have said would have
hurt him more. Novels he despised; and here was this woman, the queen of
the English stage, as he regarded her, laughing at his drama and telling
him to make a novel of it. He rose and bowed.</p>
<p>"I am trespassing on your time," he said; and, after barely touching the
fingers of her outstretched hand, he left the room abruptly.</p>
<p>The woman knew men very well, though she scarcely knew Charles Reade.
Something in his melancholy and something in his manner stirred her heart.
It was not a heart that responded to emotions readily, but it was a very
good-natured heart. Her explanation of Reade's appearance led her to think
that he was very poor. If she had not much tact, she had an abundant store
of sympathy; and so she sat down and wrote a very blundering but kindly
letter, in which she enclosed a five-pound note.</p>
<p>Reade subsequently described his feelings on receiving this letter with
its bank-note. He said:</p>
<p>"I, who had been vice-president of Magdalen—I, who flattered myself
I was coming to the fore as a dramatist—to have a five-pound note
flung at my head, like a ticket for soup to a pauper, or a bone to a dog,
and by an actress, too! Yet she said my reading was admirable; and, after
all, there is much virtue in a five-pound note. Anyhow, it showed the
writer had a good heart."</p>
<p>The more he thought of her and of the incident, the more comforted he was.
He called on her the next day without making an appointment; and when she
received him, he had the five-pound note fluttering in his hand.</p>
<p>She started to speak, but he interrupted her.</p>
<p>"No," he said, "that is not what I wanted from you. I wanted sympathy, and
you have unintentionally supplied it."</p>
<p>Then this man, whom she had regarded as half starved, presented her with
an enormous bunch of hothouse grapes, and the two sat down and ate them
together, thus beginning a friendship which ended only with Laura
Seymour's death.</p>
<p>Oddly enough, Mrs. Seymour's suggestion that Reade should make a story of
his play was a suggestion which he actually followed. It was to her
guidance and sympathy that the world owes the great novels which he
afterward composed. If he succeeded on the stage at all, it was not merely
in "Masks and Faces," but in his powerful dramatization of Zola's novel,
L'Assommoir, under the title "Drink," in which the late Charles Warner
thrilled and horrified great audiences all over the English-speaking
world. Had Reade never known Laura Seymour, he might never have written so
strong a drama.</p>
<p>The mystery of Reade's relations with this woman can never be definitely
cleared up. Her husband, Mr. Seymour, died not long after she and Reade
became acquainted. Then Reade and several friends, both men and women,
took a house together; and Laura Seymour, now a clever manager and amiable
hostess, looked after all the practical affairs of the establishment. One
by one, the others fell away, through death or by removal, until at last
these two were left alone. Then Reade, unable to give up the companionship
which meant so much to him, vowed that she must still remain and care for
him. He leased a house in Sloane Street, which he has himself described in
his novel A Terrible Temptation. It is the chapter wherein Reade also
draws his own portrait in the character of Francis Bolfe:</p>
<p>The room was rather long, low, and nondescript; scarlet flock paper;
curtains and sofas, green Utrecht velvet; woodwork and pillars, white and
gold; two windows looking on the street; at the other end folding-doors,
with scarcely any woodwork, all plate glass, but partly hidden by heavy
curtains of the same color and material as the others.</p>
<p>At last a bell rang; the maid came in and invited Lady Bassett to follow
her. She opened the glass folding-doors and took them into a small
conservatory, walled like a grotto, with ferns sprouting out of rocky
fissures, and spars sparkling, water dripping. Then she opened two more
glass folding-doors, and ushered them into an empty room, the like of
which Lady Bassett had never seen; it was large in itself, and multiplied
tenfold by great mirrors from floor to ceiling, with no frames but a
narrow oak beading; opposite her, on entering, was a bay window, all plate
glass, the central panes of which opened, like doors, upon a pretty little
garden that glowed with color, and was backed by fine trees belonging to
the nation; for this garden ran up to the wall of Hyde Park.</p>
<p>The numerous and large mirrors all down to the ground laid hold of the
garden and the flowers, and by double and treble reflection filled the
room with delightful nooks of verdure and color.</p>
<p>Here are the words in which Reade describes himself as he looked when
between fifty and sixty years of age:</p>
<p>He looked neither like a poet nor a drudge, but a great fat country
farmer. He was rather tall, very portly, smallish head, commonplace
features, mild brown eye not very bright, short beard, and wore a suit of
tweed all one color.</p>
<p>Such was the house and such was the man over both of which Laura Seymour
held sway until her death in 1879. What must be thought of their
relations? She herself once said to Mr. John Coleman:</p>
<p>"As for our positions—his and mine—we are partners, nothing
more. He has his bank-account, and I have mine. He is master of his
fellowship and his rooms at Oxford, and I am mistress of this house, but
not his mistress! Oh, dear, no!"</p>
<p>At another time, long after Mr. Seymour's death, she said to an intimate
friend:</p>
<p>"I hope Mr. Reade will never ask me to marry him, for I should certainly
refuse the offer."</p>
<p>There was no reason why he should not have made this offer, because his
Oxford fellowship ceased to be important to him after he had won fame as a
novelist. Publishers paid him large sums for everything he wrote. His
debts were all paid off, and his income was assured. Yet he never spoke of
marriage, and he always introduced his friend as "the lady who keeps my
house for me."</p>
<p>As such, he invited his friends to meet her, and as such, she even
accompanied him to Oxford. There was no concealment, and apparently there
was nothing to conceal. Their manner toward each other was that of
congenial friends. Mrs. Seymour, in fact, might well have been described
as "a good fellow." Sometimes she referred to him as "the doctor," and
sometimes by the nickname "Charlie." He, on his side, often spoke of her
by her last name as "Seymour," precisely as if she had been a man. One of
his relatives rather acutely remarked about her that she was not a woman
of sentiment at all, but had a genius for friendship; and that she
probably could not have really loved any man at all.</p>
<p>This is, perhaps, the explanation of their intimacy. If so, it is a very
remarkable instance of Platonic friendship. It is certain that, after she
met Reade, Mrs. Seymour never cared for any other man. It is no less
certain that he never cared for any other woman. When she died, five years
before his death, his life became a burden to him. It was then that he
used to speak of her as "my lost darling" and "my dove." He directed that
they should be buried side by side in Willesden churchyard. Over the
monument which commemorates them both, he caused to be inscribed, in
addition to an epitaph for himself, the following tribute to his friend.
One should read it and accept the touching words as answering every
question that may be asked:</p>
<p>Here lies the great heart of Laura Seymour, a brilliant artist, a humble
Christian, a charitable woman, a loving daughter, sister, and friend, who
lived for others from her childhood. Tenderly pitiful to all God's
creatures—even to some that are frequently destroyed or neglected—she
wiped away the tears from many faces, helping the poor with her savings
and the sorrowful with her earnest pity. When the eye saw her it blessed
her, for her face was sunshine, her voice was melody, and her heart was
sympathy.</p>
<p>This grave was made for her and for himself by Charles Reade, whose wise
counselor, loyal ally, and bosom friend she was for twenty-four years, and
who mourns her all his days.</p>
<p>END OF VOLUME FOUR <br/> <br/></p>
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