“CECILIA”: A PAEAN OF PRAISE: LAMENTATIONS.
[“This is the last visit remembered, or, at least, narrated,
of Streatham.” With these words Madame D'Arblay concludes
the account given in the “Memoirs of Dr. Burney,” of her
meeting with General Paoli. In the autumn Of 1782 Mrs.
Thrale went, with her daughters and Dr. Johnson, to
Brighthelmstone, where Fanny joined them. On their return
to London, November 20, the Thrales settled for the winter
in Argyle-street, and Fanny repaired to her father's
residence in St. Martin's Street. She saw much of Mrs.
Thrale during the winter, but in the following April that
lady quitted London for Bath, where she resided until her
marriage with Signor Piozzi in the summer of 1784. She
maintained an affectionate correspondence with Fanny until
after the marriage, but from the date of their parting in
London, they saw no more of each other, except for one brief
interval in May, 1784, for several years.
We must here give an account, as concise as possible, of the
transaction which was so bitterly resented by the friends of
Mrs. Thrale, but in which her conduct seems to us, taking
all the circumstances fairly into consideration, to have
been less deserving of condemnation than their
uncharitableness. She had first seen Piozzi, an Italian
singer, at a party at Dr. Burney's in 1777, and her
behaviour to him on that occasion had certainly afforded no
premonition of her subsequent infatuation. Piozzi, who was
nearly of the same age as herself, was, as Miss Seward
describes him, “a handsome man, with gentle, pleasing,
unaffected manners, and with very eminent skill in his
profession.” He was requested by Dr. Burney to sing; rather
unfortunately, it would appear, for the company, which
included Johnson and the Grevilles, was by no means composed
of musical enthusiasts, and Mrs. Thrale, in particular,
“knew not a flat from a sharp, nor a crotchet from a
quaver.” However, he complied; and Mrs. Thrale, after
sitting awhile in silence, finding the proceedings dull, was
seized with a desire to enliven them. “In a fit of utter
recklessness, she suddenly, but softly, arose, and stealing
on tiptoe behind Signor Piozzi, who was accompanying himself
on the pianoforte to an animated aria parlante, with his
back to the company and his face to the wall, she
ludicrously began imitating him by squaring her elbows,
elevating them with ecstatic shrugs of the shoulders, and
casting up her eyes, while languishingly reclining her head;
as if she were not less enthusiastically, though somewhat
more suddenly, struck with the transports of harmony than
himself.
“But the amusement which such an unlooked-for exhibition—
caused to the party, was momentary; for Dr. Burney, shocked
lest the poor signor should observe, and be hurt by this
mimicry, glided gently round to Mrs. Thrale, and, with
something between pleasantry and severity, whispered to her,
'Because, madam, you have no ear yourself for music, will
you destroy the attention of all who, in that one point, are
otherwise gifted?'”[153]
This deserved rebuke the lively lady took in perfectly good
part, and the incident passed without further notice. She
does not appear to have met with Piozzi again, Until, in
July, 1780, she picked him up at Brighton. She now
finds him “amazingly like her father,” and insists that he
shall teach Hester music. From this point the fever
gradually increased. In August, 1781, little more than four
months after her husband's death, Piozzi has become “a
prodigious favourite” with her; she has even developed a
taste for his music, which “fills the mind with emotions one
would not be without, though inconvenient enough sometimes.”
In the spring Of 1783, soon after her arrival at Bath, they
were formally engaged, but the urgent remonstrances of her
friends and family caused the engagement to be broken off,
and Piozzi went to Italy. Her infatuation, however, was too
strong to be overcome. Under the struggle, long protracted,
her health gave way, and at length, by the advice of her
doctor, and with the sullen consent of Miss Thrale, Piozzi
was summoned to Bath. He, too, had been faithful, and he
lost no time in obeying the summons. They were married,
according to the Roman Catholic rites, in London, and again,
on the 25th of July, 1784, in a Protestant church at Bath,
her three elder daughters, of whom the eldest, Hester
(“Queeny”), was not yet twenty years of age, having quitted
Bath before his arrival.
Mrs. Piozzi left England with her husband and her youngest
daughter, Cecilia, and lived for some years in Italy, where
she compiled her well known “Anecdotes of Dr. Johnson.” Her
wedded life with Piozzi was certainly happy, and he gave her
no reason to repent the step she had taken. The indignation
of her former friends, especially of Dr. Johnson, was
carried to a length which, the cause being considered,
appears little short of ridiculous. Mrs. Thrale's second
marriage may have been ill-advised, but it was neither
criminal nor disgraceful. Piozzi was incontestably a
respectable man and a constant lover; but that an Italian
musician, who depended upon his talents for his livelihood,
should become the husband of the celebrated Mrs. Thrale, and
the stepfather of four young ladies of fashion, the
daughters of a brewer, and the heiresses to his large
fortune,—there was the rub! The dislike of Dr. Johnson and
his friends to the marriage was, from a worldly point of
view, justifiable enough, but it argues ill for their
generosity of mind that they should have attached such
overwhelming importance to such petty considerations. Mrs.
Piozzi has been blamed for deserting her three elder
daughters; but the fact is, it was her daughters who
deserted her, and refused to recognise her husband. Her
only fault, if fault it can be called, was in declining to
sacrifice the whole happiness of her life to the supposed
requirements of their rank in society. In condemning her
friends for their severity and illiberality, we must,
however, make an exception in favour of Fanny. She, like
the rest, had been averse to the match, but her cordiality
to Mrs. Piozzi remained undiminished; and when, soon after
the marriage, their correspondence was discontinued, to be
renewed only after the lapse of many years, it was not
Fanny, but Mrs. Piozzi, who broke it off, instigated, Fanny
always believed, by her husband.
Her separation from Mrs. Thrale was not the only event which
brought sorrow to Fanny during the years to which the
following section of the Diary relates. Mr. Crisp, the
person dearest to her of all human beings outside her own
family, died at Chesington, of an attack of his old malady,
the gout, on the 24th of April, 1783, aged seventy-five.
Fanny and Susan were with him at the last, and Fanny's love
was rewarded, her anguish soothed yet deepened, when, almost
with his dying breath, her Daddy Crisp called her “the
dearest thing to him on earth.”
Towards the end of 1784 another heavy blow fell upon Fanny,
in the loss of Dr. Johnson, who died on the 13th of
December. The touching references in the Diary to his last
illness form an interesting supplement to Boswell's
narrative.
But the picture of Fanny's life during these years is not
without bright touches. As such we may reckon the great,
and deserved success of her novel, “Cecilia”; the
commencement of her acquaintance with two ladies who were
hereafter to be numbered among her dearest friends—the
venerable Mrs. Delany, and Mrs. Locke, of Norbury Park,
Surrey; and last, not least, the growing intimacy between
Edmund Burke and the family of Dr. Burney.—ED.]