A Publisher And His Friends (Fiscle Part-4) by Samuel Smiles (the top 100 crime novels of all time txt) ๐
- Author: Samuel Smiles
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Borough, And Almost Within These Four Hours, To Mention Slight Affairs,
I Have Refused To Inscribe Myself A Member Of "The Conservative Club." I
Cannot Believe That You Will Place Your Critic's Feelings For A Few
Erased Passages Against My Permanent Interest.
But In Fact These Have Nothing To Do With The Question. To Convenience
You, I Have No Objection To Wash My Hands Of The Whole Business, And Put
You In Direct Communication With My Coadjutors. I Can Assure You That It
Is From No Regard For My Situation That Reform Was Omitted, But Because
They Are Of Opinion That Its Notice Would Be Unwise And Injurious. For
Myself, I Am Ready To Do Anything That You Can Desire, Except Entirely
Change My Position In Life.
I Will See Your Critic, If You Please, Or You Can Give Up The
Publication And Be Reimbursed, Which Shall Make No Difference In Our
Other Affairs. All I Ask In This And All Other Affairs, Are Candour And
Decision.
The Present Business Is Most Pressing. At Present I Am Writing A Chapter
On Poland From Intelligence Just Received, And It Will Be Ready For The
Chapter 28 (Benjamin Disraeli--Thomas Carlyle--And Others) Pg 154Printer Tomorrow Morning, As I Shall Finish It Before I Retire. I Await
Your Answer With Anxiety.
Yours Truly,
B.D.
Mr. Disraeli Was Evidently Intent Upon The Immediate Publication Of His
Work. On The Following Day He Wrote Again To Mr. Murray:
_Mr. Disraeli To John Murray_.
_March_ 31, 1832.
My Dear Sir,
We Shall Have An Opportunity Of Submitting The Work To Count Orloff
Tomorrow Morning, In Case You Can Let Me Have A Set Of The Proofs
Tonight, I Mean As Far As We Have Gone. I Do Not Like To Send Mine,
Which Are Covered With Corrections.
Yours Truly, B.D.
_Mr. Disraeli To John Murray_. _Monday Morning_, 9 _O'clock [April_ 2].
Dear Sir,
Since I Had The Honour Of Addressing You The Note Of Last Night, I Have
Seen The Baron. Our Interview Was Intended To Have Been A Final One, And
It Was Therefore Absolutely Necessary That I Should Apprize Him Of All
That Had Happened, Of Course Concealing The Name Of Your Friend. The
Baron Says That The Insertion Of The Obnoxious Passages Is Fatal To All
Chapter 28 (Benjamin Disraeli--Thomas Carlyle--And Others) Pg 155His Combinations; That He Has Devoted Two Months Of The Most Valuable
Time To This Affair, And That He Must Hold Me Personally Responsible For
The Immediate Fulfilment Of My Agreement, Viz.: To Ensure Its
Publication When Finished.
We Dine At The Same House Today, And I Have Pledged Myself To Give Him A
Categorical Reply At That Time, And To Ensure Its Publication By Some
Mode Or Other.
Under These Principal Circumstances, My Dear Sir, I Can Only State That
The Work Must Be Published At Once, And With The Omission Of All
Passages Hostile To Reform; And That If You Are Unwilling To Introduce
It In That Way, I Request From Your Friendliness Such Assistance As You
Can Afford Me About The Printer, Etc., To Occasion Its Immediate
Publication In Some Other Quarter.
After What Took Place Between Myself And My Coadjutor Last Night, I
Really Can Have For Him Only One Answer Or One Alternative, And As I
Wish To Give Him The First, And Ever Avoid The Second, I Look Forward
With Confidence To Your Answer.
B.D.
Mr. Disraeli Next Desires To Have A Set Of The Proofs To Put Into The
Hands Of The Duke Of Wellington:
_Mr. Disraeli To John Murray_,
_April_ 6, 1832.
My Dear Sir,
I Have Just Received A Note, That If I Can Get A Set Of Clean Proofs By
Sunday, They Will Be Put In The Duke's Hands Preliminary To The Debate.
I Thought You Would Like To Know This. Do You Think It Impossible? Let
This Be Between Us. I Am Sorry To Give You All This Trouble, But I Know
Chapter 28 (Benjamin Disraeli--Thomas Carlyle--And Others) Pg 156Your Zeal, And The Interest You Take In These Affairs. I Myself Will
Never Keep The Printer, And Engage When The Proofs Are Sent Me To
Prepare Them For The Press Within An Hour.
Yours,
B.D.
_Mr. Disraeli To John Murray_.
My Dear Sir,
I Am Very Glad To Receive The Copy. I Think That One Should Be Sent To
The Editor Of The _Times_ As Quickly As Possible; That At Least He
Should Not Be Anticipated In The Receipt, Even If In The _Notice_, By A
Sunday Paper. But I Leave All This To Your Better Judgment. You Will
Send Copies To Duke Street As Soon As You Have Them.
B.D.
After The Article In The _Times_ Had Appeared, Baron De Haber, A
Mysterious German Gentleman Of Jewish Extraction, Who Had Taken Part In
The Production Of "Gallomania," Wrote To Mr. Murray:
_Baron De Haber To John Murray_.
2 _Mai_, 1832.
Mon Cher Monsieur,
J'espere Que Vous Serez Content De L'article De _Times_ Sur La
"Gallomania." C'est Un Grand Pas De Fait. Il Serait Utile Que Le
Chapter 28 (Benjamin Disraeli--Thomas Carlyle--And Others) Pg 157_Standard_ Et Le _Morning Post_ Le Copie En Entier, Avec Des
Observations Dans Son Sens. C'est A Vous, Mon Cher Monsieur Murray, De
Soigner Cet Objet. J'ai Infiniment Regrette De Ne M'etre Pas Trouve Chez
Moi Hier, Lorsque Vous Etes Venu Me Voir, Avec L'aimable Mr. Lockhart.
Tout A Vous,
De H.
_Baron De Haber To John Murray_.
_Vendredi_.
Mon Cher Monsieur Murray,
Vous Desirez Dans L'interet De L'ouvrage Faire Mentionner Dans Le
_Standard_ Que Le _Times_ D'aujourd'hui Paroit Etre Assez D'accord Avec
L'auteur De La "Gallomania" Sur M. Thiers, Esperant Que De Jour En Jour
Il Reviendra Aux Idees De Cet Auteur.
Il Seroit Aussi Convenable De Dire Que La _Prophetie_ Dans La Lettre A
_My Lord Grey_ Etait Assez Juste: Allusion--"In Less Than A Month We
Shall No Doubt Hear Of Their _Warm_ Reception In The Provinces, And Of
Some Gratifying, Perhaps Startling, Demonstrations Of National
Gratitude." Voyez, Mon Cher Monsieur, Comme Depuis 8 Jours Ces Pauvres
Deputes Qui Ont Vote Pour Le Ministre Sont Traites, Si Vous Etes A La
Maison Ce Soir, Dites-Le-Moi, Je Desire Vous Parler. Dinez-Vous
Chez-Vous?
Votre Devoue,
De H.
The Following Announcement Was Published By Mr. Disraeli In Reply To
Chapter 28 (Benjamin Disraeli--Thomas Carlyle--And Others) Pg 158Certain Criticisms Of His Work:
"I Cannot Allow Myself To Omit Certain Observations Of My Able Critic
Without Remarking That Those Omissions Are Occasioned By No
Insensibility To Their Acuteness.
"Circumstances Of Paramount Necessity Render It Quite Impossible That
Anything Can Proceed From My Pen Hostile To The General Question Of
_Reform_.
"Independent However Of All Personal Considerations, And Viewing The
Question Of Reform For A Moment In The Light In Which My Critic
Evidently Speculates, I Would Humbly Suggest That The Cause Which He
Advocates Would Perhaps Be More United In The Present Pages By Being
Passed Over _In Silence_. It Is Important That This Work Should Be A
Work Not Of _Party_ But Of National Interest, And I Am Induced To
Believe That A Large Class In This Country, Who Think Themselves Bound
To Support The Present Administration From A Superficial Sympathy With
Their Domestic Measures, Have Long Viewed Their Foreign Policy With
Distrust And Alarm.
"If The Public Are At Length Convinced That Foreign Policy, Instead Of
Being An Abstract And Isolated Division Of The National Interests, Is In
Fact The Basis Of Our Empire And Present Order, And That This Basis
Shakes Under The Unskilful Government Of The Cabinet, The Public May Be
Induced To Withdraw Their Confidence From That Cabinet Altogether.
"With This Exception, I Have Adopted All The Additions And Alterations
That I Have Yet Had The Pleasure Of Seeing Without Reserve, And I Seize
This Opportunity Of Expressing My Sense Of Their Justness And Their
Value.
"_The Author Of 'Gallomania_.'" [Footnote: Several References Are Made
To "Contarini Fleming" And "Gallomania" In "Lord Beaconsfield's Letters
To His Sister," Published In 1887.]
The Next Person Whom We Shall Introduce To The Reader Was One Who Had
But Little In Common With Mr. Benjamin Disraeli, Except That, Like Him,
He Had At That Time Won Little Of That World-Wide Renown Which He Was
Afterwards To Achieve. This "Writer Of Books," As He Described Himself,
Chapter 28 (Benjamin Disraeli--Thomas Carlyle--And Others) Pg 159
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