This
page contains:
William Edmonstoune Aytoun, Archibald Boyle, Thomas Babington Macaulay, Benjamin
Disraeli, Alexander Smith, William Makepeace Thackeray, Bulwer Lytton, the 14th
Earl of Eglinton, Henry Glassford Bell, Thomas Carlyle, Alfred Lord Tennyson,
Samuel Lover, Theodore Martin, James Crawford Lord Ardmillan, Prof. J S Blackie,
Arthur Helps, Prof. David Masson and Lord Stanley
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| His letter, written from 16 Gt Stuart Street, Edinburgh, on 27th January 1854: | Notes: |
| Sir, |
Prof. Aytoun lived in the same part of the capital as Archibald Boyle (see below) lived and worked. |
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| His letter, written from 11 Stafford Street, Edinburgh, on 27th January 1854: | Notes: |
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Dear Sir, |
We do not know whether the Edinburgh Ayrshire Club proved successful or not. The Stafford St address may have been his business address - he was certainly residing, with 4 siblings, a housekeeper and 8 servants (one a 70-year-old native of Irvine, designated as Head Nurse) at 28 Charlotte Square a few years before. |
Other nominees 1854 |
Sir Archibald Allison (1792-1867), a lawyer and historian, published a ten-volume 'Modern History of Europe from the French Revolution to the Fall of Napoleon' from 1833 to 1842, with further volumes on later years appearing from 1852 to 1859. A work of vast industry, it proved popular and was translated into many languages. He was created a baronet in 1852, during Lord Derby's administration. Douglas Jerrold (1803-1857), the English dramatist and writer, wrote dramas, melodramas and sparkling comedies from the age of 14 till 1854, but he was possibly better known as a contributor to magazines, particularly 'Punch' from 1841 until his death. In politics a Liberal, he gave eager sympathy to revolutionists such as Kossuth and Mazzini (see our article on Blind in 1870). In social politics, he never tired of declaiming against the horrors of war, the luxury of bishops, or the iniquity of capital punishment. His friends included others approached by Irvine Burns Club. Richard Doyle (1824-1883) was educated at home in London by his father, the cartoonist John Doyle. Richard Doyle, ann illustrator, worked for Punch from 1842 to 1850, when he resigned in protest at that magazine's hostility to the Pope. He later illustrated books, including works by Dickens and Thackeray. However, he had a much closer link to Irvine, in that his first published work, at the age of 15 in 1839, was a great success - his book 'The Eglinton Tournament' (though it is other contemporary accounts which receive mention in John Strawhorn's 'History of Irvine'). |
| These three nominees are named in our Minute Book, but no acceptances from them are on file, so we can not include them in our official list of Honorary Members. |
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| His letter, written from Albany, London, on 28th January 1854: | Notes: |
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Albany (completed as Melbourne House in 1775, and converted into an apartment house in 1802) had become a fashionable residence for bachelors for over a hundred years - home not only to Macaulay from 1841 to 1856, but also to many other literary figures, including, in their young days, Byron, Lytton and Prime Minister Edward Heath. The Albany had become "a byword for the celebration of a kind of ostentatious privacy peculiar to the English". |
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| The letter written on his behalf by Mrs Disraeli from Hughenden Manor (Bucks) on April 24th, 1854: | Notes: |
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His address is embossed on the writing paper, so does not show up in photocopies. He lived there from 1839 till his death in 1881. The reply is from Mary Ann Disraeli - about twelve years older than Disraeli, her second husband. Created Viscountess Beaconsfield in her own right in 1868, at the end of her husband's first term as Prime Minister, thus allowing him to remain in the Commons, she died in 1872. When Disraeli was created Earl of Beaconsfield in 1872, he continued as Prime Minister, leading the Goverment from the House of Lords. |
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| His letter, written from Glasgow on 2nd February 1854: | Notes: |
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| His letter, written from 36 Onslow Sq., Brompton, on 18th May 1854: | Notes: |
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The date of the letter is that on which the Thackeray family moved into this address. The letter was addressed to Club Chairman (President) Maxwell Dick. It was entirely appropriate that Maxwell Dick, being a bookseller, should nominate such a number of literary figures as honorary members in his year of office. |
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| His letter, written from 1 Park Lane, London, on Wednesday (no date!): | Notes: |
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A columnist in the New York Times of 1859 wrote: "Last evening I had the honor of dining with Sir EDWARD BULWER LYTTON, at his magnificent mansion No. 1 Park-lane, Piccadilly. Of all the living authors of England, Sir EDWARD was the one I most wished to see. As a novelist, a poet, an orator and a statesman - 'take him for all in all' - where shall we find his peer? For the last thirty years the reading world has fed upon his thoughts, and an entire generation has been stimulated and educated by his glowing poetry and his fine philosophy." |
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For the years 1855 to 1862 inclusive, there are no minuted nominations nor any letters of acceptance.
| His letter, written from Eglinton Castle in January 1863: | Notes: |
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| His letter, written from the Sheriff Chambers, Glasgow on Jan. 30th, 1863: | Notes: |
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| His letter, written from Chelsea on 1 Feby, 1863: | Notes: |
| Sir, |
The letter is addressed to Jas. Dickie, the Club's Hon. Secy. |
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| Alfred Tennyson (1809-1892) Honorary member 1863 | ||
| His life & work: |
The pre-eminent poet of the Victorian age, Alfred Tennyson was appointed Poet Laureate (succeeding Wordsworth) in 1850 and became a great favourite of Queen Victoria. A fine, and short, biography appears on another site. As a student at Cambridge, he won the chancellor's prize for poetry in 1829. Several volumes appeared in the 1830s, but his 1842 two-volume edition of his work contained some of his finest work and made his reputation. In 1859, his 'Idylls of the King' finally established his fame and popularity; this volume contained a cycle of twelve narrative poems relating to King Arthur. Although offered a baronetcy in 1865 and again in 1868, he declined on those occasions, but was persuaded by Gladstone to accept in 1883, and was created first Baron Tennyson in 1884. Alfred, Lord Tennyson was the first Poet Laureate to be invited to accept honorary membership of the Club. When he died, the post was left open for a few years as no living poet was considered suitable (Rossetti was female; Swinburne was in poor health). All subsequent ones except Day-Lewis, whose tenure was short, have been invited. It is possible that the contact for Tennyson may have been his friend Alexander Macmillan (1818-1896), who had been brought up in Irvine - Macmillans certainly published his 1849 volume of poems and probably published many others. The last years of Macmillan's life were spent in a house once owned by Tennyson. Macmillan's friendship with other authors, such as Kingsley, may have forged other links. |
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| His letter, written from Farringford (Isle of Wight) on Feby 9th 1863: | Notes: |
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The Tennysons had rented Farringford from 1853, and bought it in 1856, from the proceeds of publishing "Maud". As noted above, he was at this date still plain A. Tennyson. |
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| His letter, written from The Vine, Sevenoaks, on February 19th 1863: | Notes: |
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| His letter, written from Edinburgh on January 30, 1868: | Notes: |
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Lord Ardmillan lived at Charlotte Square, Edinburgh. |
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| His letter, written from Osborne (Isle of Wight) on 31 Jan. 1868: | Notes: |
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Osborne House was a residence of Queen Victoria. The letter is addressed to James Dickie, the Club's Hon. Secy. |
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| His letter, written from 24 Hill Street, Edinburgh on January 30, 1868: | Notes: |
| Dear
Sir |
This letter, more than some of the others in the collection, reflects the writer's enthusiasms. |
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| His letter, written from the Privy Council Office on 1st February, 1868: | Notes: |
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| His acceptance - written on his behalf at the Foreign Office on February 6, 1868: | Notes: |
| Lord
Stanley presents his compliments to Mr Vickie [sic] & begs
that he will express to members of the Irvine Burns Club Lord Stanley's
best thanks for the compliment which they have paid him on electing him
as an Honorary Member of the Club, and which Lord Stanley has much pleasure
in accepting. |
'Mr Vickie' is in fact James Dickie, of Irvine, the Club's Hon. Secy. |
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| His letter, written from 3 Rosebery Crescent, Edinburgh, on Feb 22, 1868: | Notes: |
| Dear
Sir, |
Alexander Macmillan, born in Irvine, had, with his late elder brother Daniel, set up Macmillan & Co., the London publishing house. |
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