Produced by David Widger
FALKLAND
By Edward Bulwer-Lytton
PREFATORY NOTE TO THE PRESENT EDITION.
"FALKLAND" is the earliest of Lord Lytton's prose fictions. Published before "Pelham," it was written in the boyhood of its illustrious author. In the maturity of his manhood and the fulness of his literary popularity he withdrew it from print. This is one of the first English editions of his collected works in which the tale reappears. It is because the morality of it was condemned by his experienced judgment, that the author of "Falkland" deliberately omitted it from each of the numerous reprints of his novels and romances which were published in England during his lifetime.
With the consent of the author's son, "Falkland" is included in the present edition of his collected works.
In the first place, this work has been for many years, and still is, accessible to English readers in every country except England. The continental edition of it, published by Baron Tauchnitz, has a wide circulation; and since for this reason the book cannot practically be withheld from the public, it is thought desirable that the publication of it should at least be accompanied by some record of the abovementioned fact.
In the next place, the considerations which would naturally guide an author of established reputation in the selection of early compositions for subsequent republication, are obviously inapplicable to the preparation of a posthumous standard edition of his collected works. Those who read the tale of "Falkland" eight-and-forty years ago' have long survived the age when character is influenced by the literature of sentiment. The readers to whom it is now presented are not Lord Lytton's contemporaries; they are his posterity. To them his works have already become classical. It is only upon the minds of the young that the works of sentiment have any appreciable moral influence. But the sentiment of each age is peculiar to itself; and the purely moral influence of sentimental fiction seldom survives the age to which it was first addressed. The youngest and most impressionable reader of such works as the "Nouvelle Hemise," "Werther," "The Robbers," "Corinne," or "Rene," is not now likely to be morally influenced, for good or ill, by the perusal of those masterpieces of genius. Had Byron attained the age at which great authors most realise the responsibilities of fame and genius, he might possibly have regretted, and endeavoured to suppress, the publication of "Don Juan;" but the possession of that immortal poem is an unmixed benefit to posterity, and the loss of it would have been an irreparable misfortune.
"Falkland," although the earliest, is one of the most carefully finished of its author's compositions. All that was once turbid, heating, unwholesome in the current of sentiment which flows through this history of a guilty passion, "Death's immortalising winter" has chilled and purified. The book is now a harmless, and, it may be hoped, a not uninteresting, evidence of the precocity of its author's genius. As such, it is here reprinted.
[It was published in 1827]
FALKLAND.
BOOK I.
FROM ERASMUS FALKLAND, ESQ., TO THE HON. FREDERICK MONKTON.
L---, May --, 1822.
You are mistaken, my dear Monkton! Your description of the gaiety of "the season" gives me no emotion. You speak of pleasure; I remember no labour so wearisome; you enlarge upon its changes; no sameness appears to me so monotonous. Keep, then, your pity for those who require it. From the height of my philosophy I compassionate you. No one is so vain as a recluse; and your jests at my hermitship and hermitage cannot penetrate the folds of a self-conceit, which does not envy you in your suppers at D---- House, nor even in your waltzes with Eleanor.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: Falkland, Complete by Lytton
- 2: Et ou nous sommes forces de rendre les accens de la joie
- 3: And the solitudes unbroken by human footstep
- 4: I was thrown utterly upon my own resources
- 5: Une grande passion malheureuse est un grand moyen de sagesse
- 6: That though my mind has not been depraved
- 7: I glowed with philanthropy for the crowd which I knew not
- 8: And who have been accustomed to solitude
- 9: And Gloom is the Caliban she conceives
- 10: From the lady emily mandeville to mrs
- 11: Dalton seated herself on the ottoman
- 12: Falkland did not stay long after dinner
- 13: Le veggio in fronte amor come in suo seggio Sul crin
- 14: When Falkland met that guiltless yet thrilling eye
- 15: What to Falkland were resolutions which a word
- 16: Extracts from the journal of lady emily mandeville
- 17: Lady Margaret had left the room
- 18: She turned Falkland stood beside her
- 19: For Falkland would not trust himself to speak
- 20: But I have not mocked it with the appellation of Peace
- 21: Lady Margaret talked of the weather and the prospect
- 22: Since Falkland had known Emily
- 23: Falkland rushed out to the sands
- 24: Extracts from the journal of lady emily mandeville
- 25: My adored and beautiful friend
- 26: But it can reconcile no not reconcile
- 27: Mandeville I have thought it expedient to suppress
- 28: If I can persuade Falkland to aid us
- 29: Mandeville has arrived fortunately
- 30: If Falkland ever looked at me so
- 31: In the book of guilt another page
- 32: That Falkland roamed abroad that evening
- 33: Falkland turned towards the house which contained his world
- 34: Her own guilt is her punishment
- 35: John was not in the saloon when Falkland entered
- 36: Is never broken the breath grew gentler and gentler
- 37: Amidst the myrtle and the vine
- 38: When Falkland came that evening
- 39: The evening before her elopement
- 40: Emily is now quite out of danger
- 41: From lady emily mandeville to erasmus falkland
- 42: From lady emily mandeville to erasmus falkland
- 43: And revealed Lady Emily's attachment to Falkland
- 44: He drew her to his bosom in silence
- 45: His thoughts were scattered into a thousand indistinct forms
- 46: Falkland had by this time recovered himself
- 47: And saw on the livid and motionless banner For Ever
- 48: For the dead there are many mourners
- 49: As Riego concluded this desponding answer
- 50: Falkland was by the side of Riego
- 51: And when Falkland gave the alarm to Riego
- 52: As Falkland rode by the side of Riego
- 53: Said Riego to the remaining peasant
- 54: Falkland felt himself grow gradually weaker and weaker
