Page:Journal of the Conversations of Lord Byron (1824).djvu/109

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
LORD BYRON.
93

rules prescribed by the ancients, from the classical simplicity of the old models? It is very difficult, almost impossible, to write any thing to please a modern audience. I was instrumental in getting up ‘Bertram,’ and it was said that I wrote part of it myself. That was not the case. I knew Maturin to be a needy man, and interested myself in his success: but its life was very feeble and ricketty. I once thought of getting Joanna Baillie’s ‘De Montfort’ revived; but the winding-up was faulty. She was herself aware of this, and wrote the last act over again; and yet, after all, it failed. She must have been dreadfully annoyed, even more than Lady —— was. When it was bringing out, I was applied to, to write a prologue; but as the request did not come from Kean, who was to speak it, I declined. There are fine things in all the Plays on the Passions: an idea in ‘De Montfort’ struck me particularly; one of the characters said that he knew the footsteps of another.[1]


  1. De Montfort.—’Tis Rezenvelt: I heard his well-known foot!
    “From the first staircase, mounting step by step.
    Freberg.—How quick an ear thou hast for distant sound!
    “I heard him not.”
    Act II. Scene 2.