As was the case with Fielding many years earlier, Smollett was
almost broken down with sedentary toil, when early in June 1763
with his wife, two young ladies ("the two girls") to whom she acted
as chaperon, and a faithful servant of twelve years' standing, who
in the spirit of a Scots retainer of the olden time refused to
leave his master (a good testimonial this, by the way, to a temper
usually accredited with such a splenetic sourness), he crossed the
straits of Dover to see what a change of climate and surroundings
could do for him.
On other grounds than those of health he was glad to shake the
dust of Britain from his feet. He speaks himself of being traduced
by malice, persecuted by faction, abandoned by false patrons,
complaints which will remind the reader, perhaps, of George
Borrow's "Jeremiad," to the effect that he had been beslavered by
the venomous foam of every sycophantic lacquey and unscrupulous
renegade in the three kingdoms. But Smollett's griefs were more
serious than what an unkind reviewer could inflict. He had been
fined and imprisoned for defamation. He had been grossly
caricatured as a creature of Bute, the North British favourite of
George III., whose tenure of the premiership occasioned riots and
almost excited a revolution in the metropolis. Yet after incurring
all this unpopularity at a time when the populace of London was
more inflamed against Scotsmen than it has ever been before or
since, and having laboured severely at a paper in the ministerial
interest and thereby aroused the enmity of his old friend John
Wilkes, Smollett had been unceremoniously thrown over by his own
chief, Lord Bute, on the ground that his paper did more to invite
attack than to repel it. Lastly, he and his wife had suffered a
cruel bereavement in the loss of their only child, and it was
partly to supply a change from the scene of this abiding sorrow,
that the present journey was undertaken.
The first stages and incidents of the expedition were not
exactly propitious. The Dover Road was a byword for its charges;
the Via Alba might have been paved with the silver wrung from
reluctant and indignant passengers. Smollett characterized the
chambers as cold and comfortless, the beds as "paultry" (with
"frowsy," a favourite word), the cookery as execrable, wine poison,
attendance bad, publicans insolent, and bills extortion, concluding
with the grand climax that there was not a drop of tolerable malt
liquor to be had from London to Dover. Smollett finds a good deal
to be said for the designation of "a den of thieves" as applied to
that famous port (where, as a German lady of much later date once
complained, they "boot ze Bible in ze bedroom, but ze devil in ze
bill"), and he grizzles lamentably over the seven guineas, apart
from extras, which he had to pay for transport in a Folkestone
cutter to Boulogne Mouth.
Having once arrived at Boulogne, Smollett settled down regularly
to his work as descriptive reporter, and the letters that he wrote
to his friendly circle at home fall naturally into four groups. The
first Letters from II. to V. describe with Hogarthian point,
prejudice and pungency, the town and people of Boulogne. The second
group, Letters VI.-XII., deal with the journey from Boulogne to
Nice by way of Paris, Lyon, Nimes, and Montpellier. The third
group, Letters XIII.-XXIV., is devoted to a more detailed and
particular delineation of Nice and the Nicois. The fourth, Letters
XXV.-XLI., describes the Italian expedition and the return journey
to Boulogne en route for England, where the party arrive safe home
in July 1765.
Smollett's account of Boulogne is excellent reading, it forms an
apt introduction to the narrative of his journey, it familiarises
us with the milieu, and reveals to us in Smollett a man of
experience who is both resolute and capable of getting below the
surface of things. An English possession for a short period in the
reign of the Great Harry, Boulogne has rarely been less in touch
with England than it was at the time of Smollett's visit. Even
then, however, there were three small colonies, respectively, of
English nuns, English Jesuits, and English Jacobites. Apart from
these and the English girls in French seminaries it was estimated
ten years after Smollett's sojourn there that there were
twenty-four English families in residence. The locality has of
course always been a haunting place for the wandering tribes of
English. Many well-known men have lived or died here both native
and English. Adam Smith must have been there very soon after
Smollett. So must Dr. John Moore and Charles Churchill, one of the
enemies provoked by the Briton, who went to Boulogne to meet his
friend Wilkes and died there in 1764. Philip Thicknesse the
traveller and friend of Gainsborough died there in 1770. After long
search for a place to end his days in Thomas Campbell bought a
house in Boulogne and died there, a few months later, in 1844. The
house is still to be seen, Rue St. Jean, within the old walls; it
has undergone no change, and in 1900 a marble tablet was put up to
record the fact that Campbell lived and died there. The other
founder of the University of London, Brougham, by a singular
coincidence was also closely associated with Boulogne. [Among the
occupants of the English cemetery will be found the names of Sir
Harris Nicolas, Basil Montagu, Smithson Pennant, Sir William
Ouseley, Sir William Hamilton, and Sir C. M. Carmichael. And among
other literary celebrities connected with the place, apart from
Dickens (who gave his impressions of the place in Household Words,
November 1854) we should include in a brief list, Charles Lever,
Horace Smith, Wilkie Collins, Mrs. Henry Wood, Professor York
Powell, the Marquis of Steyne (Lord Seymour), Mrs. Jordan, Clark
Russell, and Sir Conan Doyle. There are also memorable associations
with Lola Montes, Heinrich Heine, Becky Sharpe, and above all
Colonel Newcome. My first care in the place was to discover the
rampart where the Colonel used to parade with little Clive. Among
the native luminaries are Daunou, Duchenne de Boulogne, one of the
foremost physiologists of the last century, an immediate
predecessor of Charcot in knowledge of the nervous system, Aug.
Mariette, the Egyptologist, Aug. Angellier, the biographer of
Burns, Sainte-Beuve, Prof. Morel, and "credibly," Godfrey de
Bouillon, of whom Charles Lamb wrote "poor old Godfrey, he must be
getting very old now." The great Lesage died here in 1747.] The
antiquaries still dispute about Gessoriacum, Godfrey de Bouillon,
and Charlemagne's Tour. Smollett is only fair in justifying for the
town, the older portions of which have a strong medieval
suggestion, a standard of comparison slightly more distinguished
than Wapping. He never lets us forget that he is a scholar of
antiquity, a man of education and a speculative philosopher. Hence
his references to Celsus and Hippocrates and his ingenious
etymologies of wheatear and samphire, more ingenious in the second
case than sound. Smollett's field of observation had been wide and
his fund of exact information was unusually large. At Edinburgh he
had studied medicine under Monro and John Gordon, in company with
such able and distinguished men as William Hunter, Cullen,
Pitcairn, Gregory, and Armstrong—and the two last mentioned were
among his present correspondents. As naval surgeon at Carthagena he
had undergone experience such as few literary men can claim, and
subsequently as compiler, reviewer, party journalist, historian,
translator, statistician, and lexicographer, he had gained an
amount of miscellaneous information such as falls to the lot of
very few minds of his order of intelligence. He had recently
directed the compilation of a large Universal Geography or
Gazetteer, the Carton or Vivien de St. Martin if those days—hence
his glib references to the manners and customs of Laplanders,
Caffres, Kamskatchans, and other recondite types of breeding. His
imaginative faculty was under the control of an exceptionally
strong and retentive memory. One may venture to say, indeed,
without danger of exaggeration that his testimonials as regards
habitual accuracy of statement have seldom been exceeded. Despite
the doctor's unflattering portraits of Frenchmen, M. Babeau admits
that his book is one written by an observer of facts, and a man
whose statements, whenever they can be tested, are for the most
part "singularly exact." Mr. W. J. Prouse, whose knowledge of the
Riviera district is perhaps almost unequalled out of France, makes
this very remarkable statement. "After reading all that has been
written by very clever people about Nice in modern times, one would
probably find that for exact precision of statement, Smollett was
still the most trustworthy guide," a view which is strikingly borne
out by Mr. E. Schuyler, who further points out Smollett's shrewd
foresight in regard to the possibilities of the Cornice road, and
of Cannes and San Remo as sanatoria." Frankly there is nothing to
be seen which he does not recognise." And even higher testimonies
have been paid to Smollett's topographical accuracy by recent
historians of Nice and its neighbourhood.
The value which Smollett put upon accuracy in the smallest
matters of detail is evinced by the corrections which he made in
the margin of a copy of the 1766 edition of the Travels. These
corrections, which are all in Smollett's own and unmistakably neat
handwriting, may be divided into four categories. In the first
place come a number of verbal emendations. Phrases are turned,
inverted and improved by the skilful "twist of the pen" which
becomes a second nature to the trained corrector of proofs; there
are moreover a few topographical corrigenda, suggested by an
improved knowledge of the localities, mostly in the neighbourhood
of Pisa and Leghorn, where there is no doubt that these corrections
were made upon the occasion of Smollett's second visit to Italy in
1770. [Some not unimportant errata were overlooked. Thus Smollett's
representation of the droit d'aubaine as a monstrous and
intolerable grievance is of course an exaggeration. (See
Sentimental Journey; J. Hill Burton, The Scot Abroad, 1881, p. 135;
and Luchaire, Instit. de France.) On his homeward journey he
indicates that he travelled from Beaune to Chalons and so by way of
Auxerre to Dijon. The right order is Chalons, Beaune, Dijon,
Auxerre. As further examples of the zeal with which Smollett
regarded exactitude in the record of facts we have his diurnal
register of weather during his stay at Nice and the picture of him
scrupulously measuring the ruins at Cimiez with packthread.] In the
second place come a number of English renderings of the citations
from Latin, French, and Italian authors. Most of these from the
Latin are examples of Smollett's own skill in English verse making.
Thirdly come one or two significant admissions of overboldness in
matters of criticism, as where he retracts his censure of Raphael's
Parnassus in Letter XXXIII. Fourthly, and these are of the greatest
importance, come some very interesting additional notes upon the
buildings of Pisa, upon Sir John Hawkwood's tomb at Florence, and
upon the congenial though recondite subject of antique Roman
hygiene. [Cf. the Dinner in the manner of the Ancients in Peregrine
Pickle, (xliv.) and Letters IX. to XL in Humphry Clinker.]
After Smollett's death his books were for the most part sold for
the benefit of his widow. No use was made of his corrigenda. For
twenty years or so the Travels were esteemed and referred to, but
as time went on, owing to the sneers of the fine gentlemen of
letters, such as Walpole and Sterne, they were by degrees
disparaged and fell more or less into neglect. They were reprinted,
it is true, either in collective editions of Smollett or in various
collections of travels; [For instance in Baldwin's edition of 1778;
in the 17th vol. of Mayor's Collection of Voyages and Travels,
published by Richard Phillips in twenty-eight vols., 1809; and in
an abbreviated form in John Hamilton Moore's New and Complete
Collection of Voyages and Travels (folio, Vol. 11. 938-970).] but
they were not edited with any care, and as is inevitable in such
cases errors crept in, blunders were repeated, and the text
slightly but gradually deteriorated. In the last century Smollett's
own copy of the Travels bearing the manuscript corrections that he
had made in 1770, was discovered in the possession of the Telfer
family and eventually came into the British Museum. The second
volume, which affords admirable specimens of Smollett's neatly
written marginalia, has been exhibited in a show-case in the King's
Library.
The corrections that Smollett purposed to make in the Travels
are now for the second time embodied in a printed edition of the
text. At the same time the text has been collated with the original
edition of 1766, and the whole has been carefully revised. The old
spelling has been, as far as possible, restored. Smollett was
punctilious in such matters, and what with his histories, his
translations, his periodicals, and his other compilations, he
probably revised more proof-matter for press than any other writer
of his time. His practice as regards orthography is, therefore, of
some interest as representing what was in all probability deemed to
be the most enlightened convention of the day.
To return now to the Doctor's immediate contemplation of
Boulogne, a city described in the Itineraries as containing rien de
remarquable. The story of the Capuchin [On page 21. A Capuchin of
the same stripe is in Pickle, ch. Ill. sq.] is very racy of
Smollett, while the vignette of the shepherd at the beginning of
Letter V. affords a first-rate illustration of his terseness.
Appreciate the keen and minute observation concentrated into the
pages that follow, [Especially on p. 34 to p. 40.] commencing with
the shrewd and economic remarks upon smuggling, and ending with the
lively description of a Boulonnais banquet, very amusing, very
French, very life-like, and very Smollettian. In Letter V. the
Doctor again is very much himself. A little provocation and he
bristles and stabs all round. He mounts the hygienic horse and
proceeds from the lack of implements of cleanliness to the lack of
common decency, and "high flavoured instances, at which even a
native of Edinburgh would stop his nose." [This recalls Johnson's
first walk up the High Street, Edinburgh, on Bozzy's arm. "It was a
dusky night: I could not prevent his being assailed by the evening
effluvia of Edinburgh… . As we marched along he grumbled in my ear,
'I smell you in the dark!'"] And then lest the southrons should
escape we have a reference to the "beastly habit of drinking from a
tankard in which perhaps a dozen filthy mouths have slabbered as is
the custom in England." With all his coarsenesses this blunt Scot
was a pioneer and fugleman of the niceties. Between times most
nations are gibbetted in this slashing epistle. The ingenious
boasting of the French is well hit off in the observation of the
chevalier that the English doubtless drank every day to the health
of the Marquise de Pompadour. The implication reminded Smollett of
a narrow escape from a duello (an institution he reprobates with
the utmost trenchancy in this book) at Ghent in 1749 with a
Frenchman who affirmed that Marlborough's battles were purposely
lost by the French generals in order to mortify Mme. de Maintenon.
Two incidents of some importance to Smollett occurred during the
three months' sojourn at Boulogne. Through the intervention of the
English Ambassador at Paris (the Earl of Hertford) he got back his
books, which had been impounded by the Customs as likely to contain
matter prejudicial to the state or religion of France, and had them
sent south by shipboard to Bordeaux. Secondly, he encountered
General Paterson, a friendly Scot in the Sardinian service, who
confirmed what an English physician had told Smollett to the effect
that the climate of Nice was infinitely preferable to that of
Montpellier "with respect to disorders of the breast." Smollett now
hires a berline and four horses for fourteen louis, and sets out
with rather a heavy heart for Paris. It is problematic, he assures
his good friend Dr. Moore, whether he will ever return. "My health
is very precarious."