Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals In Two Volumes, Volume I.
ter from Leslie.-Goes to New Hampshire to paint portraits.-Concord.-Meets Miss Lucretia Walker.-Letters to his parents concerning her.-His parents reply.-Engaged to Miss Walker.-His parents approve
.-Winter in Charleston, South Carolina.-John A. Alston.-Succe
is easy to picture the joy of that occasion, and to imagine the many heart-to-hea
r such large historical paintings as it was his ambition to produce. He was asked by a certain Mr. Joseph Delaplaine, of Philadelphia, to paint a portrait of ex-President John Adams for half price, the p
aits, for, in the following summer, he started on a painting tour through Ne
er, I shall quote from a letter written
April
el which sails to-morrow morning. I wrote Leslie by New P
you will have received notice, before this reaches you, that the Philadelphia Academy of
y; I find it is all forced. They can talk, and talk, and say what a fine thing it would be, but nothing is done. I find by experience that what you have often observed to me with respect to settling in Boston is well founded. I think it will be the last in the arts, though, without doubt, it is capable of being the fi
curred to make him alter all his plans.
nces; but I cannot forget them. If you had failings of the same kind and I could recollect any instances where you had spoken pettishly or ill-natured to me, our accounts would then have been balanced, they would have called for mutual forgetfulness and forgiveness; but when, on reflecti
wers this frank appe
ed to give you uneasiness. Be assured that they never were remembered by me a moment after, nor did they ever in the slightest degree diminish my regard or weaken my confidence in the sincerity of your friendship or the goodness of your heart. Besides, the consciousness of warmt
recollect that I considered the "Dead Man" (from the untoward fate he had hitherto experienced) almost literally as a caput mortuum, you may easily believe that I was most agreeably surprised to hear of the sal
writes: "Mr. West said your picture would have been more li
ie of September 6, 1816, oc
custom of the Greek nobility to strip and exhibit themselves naked to the artists in various attitudes, that they might have an opportunity of studying fine form. Accordingly those public
figure, but was found practising having the head of the Dying Gladiator, the body of the Hercules, one leg of the Apollo, and the other of the Dancing Faun, turned the wrong way. Lord Mulgra
rney, but it was characteristic of his buoyant and yet conscientious nature that, having once made up his mind to give up,
rk, by putting the best of himself into it, raised it to a very high plane; for many of his portraits are now held b
e writes to his pare
psh
Pond is very beautiful, though seen on a dull day. I think that one or two elegan
ce, I shall be able to find some. My stay in this place depends on that
r Contoocook Falls yesterday. I go this morning with Dr. McFarland to see some views. Colonel Kent's family are ver
August
re engaged and many more talked of. I think I shall get along well. I believe I could make an independent fortune in a few y
its in eight days; but, perhaps, on account of the very modest pr
recall his recent assertions concerning "Mrs
August
Next day after to-morrow I shall have received one hundred dollars, which I think i
and of an excellent disposition. This is her character in town. I have enquired particularly of Dr. McFarland respecting the family, and his answer is every way satisfactory, except that the
but I think I might
e continually falling in love in this way, but I have a dread o
n. But all this is thinking aloud to you; I make you my confi
ou and me, for it all may come to not
be to his glory and the good of his Kingdom, He will frustrate all; that, if He grants me prosperity, He will grant me a heart to use it aright; and,
our prayers, and especially in r
ise parents, they did not scoff. His mother wrote on August 23, 1816, in answer: "With respect to the other confidential matter, I hope the Lord will direct you to a proper choice. We
r own judgment. Be not hasty in entering into any engagement; enquire with caution and delicacy; do everything that is honorable and gentlemanly respecting yourself and those concerned. 'Pause,
ctions may be gathered from the follo
September
t 29. I leave town to-morrow morning, probably for H
ved just one hundred dollars in Concord. The last I took for ten dol
pen-hearted. Wherever I have enquired concerning her I have invariably heard the same character of-"remarkably amiable, modest, and of a sweet disposition." When you learn that this is the case I think you will not accuse me of being hasty in bringing the
so hasty. I have not yet mentioned it to her parents; she requested me to defer it till next summer, or till I see her again,
l wretch I have been. Pray for me that I may have a grateful heart, for I
his characteristic lett
at Concord.... So far as we can judge from your representations (which are all we have to judge from), we cannot refuse you our approbation, and we hope that the course
ed with the state of the business, as she is
state of the business. I feel some degree of awkwardness as it respects that part of the affair; I don't know the manner in which it ought to be done. I wish you would
and, for the first time, mentions the young lady
ia must have had some conversation with her mother on the subject, for she told me one day, when I asked her what her mother thought of my constant visits, that her mother said she 'didn't think I
ry in Concord. I meet with no success
's letters in spite of their great seriousness, as witness
r yourself and those you love a maintenance, as neither of you can subsist long upon air
nd that, if you and she form a connection for life, some five or six years hence, you may
ght to suppose we should be anxious to know. All you have told us is that she is handsome and amiab
rothers and sisters has she? How old are they? Is she healthy? How old are her parents?
s. You see your mother has not lived twenty-seven ye
y answered in a letter which
816, he writes fro
as Concord. I think I shall be tempted to stay a week or two there.... I do not like Windsor very much. It is
MONT, Septem
eauty and, particularly, for her disposition; and this I have heard without there being the slightest suspicion of any attachment, or even acquaintance, between us. This augurs well most certainly. I know she is conside
portrait to do before I leave it.... I should have business, I presume, to l
at Dartmouth College, as large as life, with all the portraits of the trustees, overseers, officers of college, and students; and, if I finish it next week, to ask five thousand dollars for it and then come home in a coach and six
wspaper, the "Boston Recorder," founded and edited by him. It was one of the first of t
ful progress, he writes next fr
ged than I can do. I painted seven portraits at Windsor, one for my board and lodging at the inn, and one for ten dollars, very small, to be sent in a letter to
ord, so that I shall not probably
world. I think I can, with industry, average from two to three thousand do
October
. I painted four portraits altogether in Hanover, and have many engaged
ow you will love her. She has consented that I should inform her parents of our attachment. I have, accordingly, just sent a letter to her
to say: "I have Lucretia's parents' entire approbation." Everything successful! Praise be to the giver of every go
ker from a girl friend
u, for I have heard that several have become candidates for your affections, but that you remained unmoved until Mr. M.,
me a successful suitor, I have made some enquiries concerning him, and find he is possessed of every excellent and
r, for we find no more letters until the 14th of Dece
e thinks I shall meet with encouragement, and, on the strength of this, I have taken lodgings and a room at Mrs. Hinge's in Jaffrey Street; a very excellent and central situation.... I shall commence on Monday mornin
e piston-pump," from which they hoped great things. Edwards, always more or less of a wag, proposed
s written endorsement, and Eli Whitney, the inventor of the cotton-gin, thus recommends it: "Having examined the model of a fire-engine invented by Mr. Morse, with pistons of a
ncée, many long references are made to this pump and to the varying success in introducing it into general use.
meeting with success in his profession. Miss Walker was also there visiting
his parents, naturally, wishing to make the acquaintance of the yo
le necessity (shall I say) of postponing my return ... in consequence of a press of business. I shall have three begun to-night; one sat yesterday (a large one), and tw
time completely stopped me. Since I wrote I have taken a first sitting of a fourth (large),
acter to realize the depth of his religious convictions, I
the Revival, how many are admitted ne
t occasioned this was an occurrence on the evening of Sunday before last. I heard the bell ring for lecture and concluded
, and the singing the finest I have heard in Portsmouth. I was struck with the contrast it made to Mr. Putnam's sacramental lecture; fifteen or sixteen persons thinly scattered over the hous
te of society here but almost gave up as hopeless. I told him he never should yield a post like this to the Devil without a struggle; and, at any rate, I told him that the few Christians that th
bly led through Concord, and the pure love of the young people for each other increased as the months rolled by. I shall not profane the sacredness of this love by introducing any of the
e. He painted many portraits in Concord, Hanover, and other places, and finally concluded to venture on a trip to Charlesto
s arrival to his parents: "I find myself in a new climate, the weather warm as our Ma
d by Morse, aroused the enthusiasm of the Charlestonians, and orders began to pour in, so that in a few weeks he was engaged to paint one hundred and fifty portraits at sixty dollars each. Quite an advance over the me
th. I will pay you most willingly the two hundred dollars you require for it, and will consider myself a gainer by the bargain. I shall expect you to decorate this picture with the most superb landscape you are cap
he Judgment of Jupiter." Mr. Alston prized this picture highly during his lifetime, but after his death it was sold and for many years was lost sight of. It was purchased long afterwa
what he called a "peripneumony," which, from the description, must have been the term used in t
had carried with him in an unfinished state, and in painting such others as he could procure commissions for
ley, writing to hi
ge and happy meeting with your affectionate parents at your own home, came safe to hand in due ti
ub or two or you will be too much in the clouds and forget that you are
during your absence. I will perform the office of him who was placed near t
o much haste and his draperies are not well done. He must be more attentive or he will lose his reputa
requested you to draw his brother Thomas twenty years younger than he really was, so as to be a companion to his ow
es, and threw himself with enthusiasm into the painting of portraits. He had an added incentive, for he wished to marry at once, and his parents and those of his fian
1818, the following not
Concord: "Married in t
Samuel F.B. Morse (the
er, daughter of Ch
er the young man wr
s I ever travelled, all uphill and down and very rocky, and no tavern on the road. We enquired at New Ipswich our best route to Northampton, where we intended to go to meet Mr. and Mrs. Cornelius, but we found on enquiry that there were nothing but cr
me by Tuesday noon, probably to dinner. We are both well and send a great deal of love to you all. Mr. and Mrs. Walker wish me to p
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