An Autobiography

An Autobiography
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Elizabeth Butler. An Autobiography

CHAPTER I. FIRST IMPRESSIONS

CHAPTER II. EARLY YOUTH

CHAPTER III. MORE TRAVEL

CHAPTER IV. IN THE ART SCHOOLS

CHAPTER V. STUDY IN FLORENCE

CHAPTER VI. ROME

CHAPTER VII. WAR. BATTLE PAINTINGS

CHAPTER VIII “THE ROLL CALL”

CHAPTER IX. ECHOES OF “THE ROLL CALL”

CHAPTER X. MORE WORK AND PLAY

CHAPTER XI. TO FLORENCE AND BACK

CHAPTER XII. AGAIN IN ITALY

CHAPTER XIII. A SOLDIER’S WIFE

CHAPTER XIV. QUEEN VICTORIA

CHAPTER XV. OFFICIAL LIFE – THE EAST

CHAPTER XVI. TO THE EAST

CHAPTER XVII. MORE OF THE EAST

CHAPTER XVIII. THE LAST OF EGYPT

CHAPTER XIX. ALDERSHOT

CHAPTER XX. ITALY AGAIN

CHAPTER XXI. THE DOVER COMMAND

CHAPTER XXII. THE CAPE AND DEVONPORT

CHAPTER XXIII. A NEW REIGN

CHAPTER XXIV. MOSTLY A ROMAN DIARY

CHAPTER XXV. THE GREAT WAR

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I WAS born at the pretty “Villa Claremont,” just outside Lausanne and overlooking Lake Leman. I made a good start with the parents Providence gave me. My father, cultured, good, patient, after he left Cambridge set out on the “Grand Tour,” and after his unsuccessful attempt to enter Parliament devoted his leisure to my and my younger sister’s education. Yes, he began with our first strokes, our “pot-hooks and hangers,” our two-and-two make four; nor did his tuition really cease till, entering on matrimony, we left the paternal roof. He adopted, in giving us our lessons, the principle of “a little and often,” so that we had two hours in the morning and no lessons in the afternoon, only bits of history, poetry, the collect for the Sunday and dialogues in divers languages to learn overnight by heart to be repeated to him next morning. We had no regular holidays: a day off occasionally, especially when travelling; and we travelled much. He believed that intelligent travel was a great educator. He brought us up tremendous English patriots, but our deepest contentment lay in our Italian life, because we loved the sun – all of us.

So we oscillated between our Ligurian Riviera and the home counties of Kent and Surrey, but were never long at a time in any resting place. Our father’s daughter by his first wife had married, at seventeen, an Italian officer whose family we met at Nervi, and she settled in Italy, becoming one of our attractions to the beloved Land. That officer later on joined Garibaldi, and was killed at the Battle of the Volturno. She never left the country of her adoption, and that bright lure for us remained.

.....

My misery at the view of our approach to London through that wilderness of slums that ushers us into the Great Metropolis is all chronicled, and, what with one thing and another, the Diary sinks for a while into despondency. But not for long. I cheer up soon.

In London I took in all the amusing details of the London streets, so new to me, coming from Italy. I seem, by my entries in the Diary, to have been particularly diverted by the colour of those Dundreary whiskers that the English “swell” of the period affected. I constantly come upon “Saw no end of red whiskers.” Then I read, “Mamma and I paid calls, one on Dickens (sic) – out, thank goodness.” Charles Dickens, whom I dismiss in this offhand manner, had been a close friend of my father’s, and it was he who introduced my father to the beautiful Miss Weller (amusing coincidence in names!) at an amateur concert where she played. The result was rapid. My vivid memory can just recall Charles Dickens’s laugh. I never heard it echoed by any other man’s till I heard Lord Wolseley’s. The volunteer movement was in full swing, and I became even more enthusiastic over the citizen soldiers than I had been over the Garibaldini. Then there are pages and pages filled with descriptions of the pictures at the Royal Academy; of the Zoological Gardens, describing nearly every bird, beast, reptile and fish. Laments over the fogs and the cold of that dreadful London April and May, and untiring outbursts in verse of regret for my lost Italy. But I stuffed my sketch books with British volunteers in every conceivable uniform, each corps dressed after its own taste. There was a very short-lived corps called the Six-foot Guards! I sent a design for a uniform to the Illustrated London News, which was returned with thanks. I felt hurt. Grandpapa attached himself to the St. George’s Rifles, and went, later on, through storm and rain and sun in several sham fights. Well, Punch made fun of those good men and true, but I have lived to know that the “Territorials,” as they came to be called, were destined in the following century to lend their strong arm in saving the nation. We next had a breezy and refreshing experience of Hastings and the joy of rides on the downs with the riding master. London fog and smoke were blown off us by the briny breezes.

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