The Ayrshire Legatees - Page 78/95

Within the bar, the talent is superior to what it is without; and I have

been often delighted with the amazing fineness, if I may use the

expression, with which the Chancellor discriminates the shades of

difference in the various points on which he is called to deliver his

opinion. I consider his mind as a curiosity of no ordinary kind. It

deceives itself by its own acuteness. The edge is too sharp; and,

instead of cutting straight through, it often diverges--alarming his

conscience with the dread of doing wrong. This singular subtlety has the

effect of impairing the reverence which the endowments and high

professional accomplishments of this great man are otherwise calculated

to inspire. His eloquence is not effective--it touches no feeling nor

affects any passion; but still it affords wonderful displays of a lucid

intellect. I can compare it to nothing but a pencil of sunshine; in

which, although one sees countless motes flickering and fluctuating, it

yet illuminates, and steadily brings into the most satisfactory

distinctness, every object on which it directly falls.

Lord Erskine is a character of another class, and whatever difference of

opinion may exist with respect to their professional abilities and

attainments, it will be allowed by those who contend that Eldon is the

better lawyer--that Erskine is the greater genius. Nature herself, with

a constellation in her hand, playfully illuminates his path to the temple

of reasonable justice; while Precedence with her guide-book, and Study

with a lantern, cautiously show the road in which the Chancellor warily

plods his weary way to that of legal Equity. The sedateness of Eldon is

so remarkable, that it is difficult to conceive that he was ever young;

but Erskine cannot grow old; his spirit is still glowing and flushed with

the enthusiasm of youth. When impassioned, his voice acquires a

singularly elevated and pathetic accent; and I can easily conceive the

irresistible effect he must have had on the minds of a jury, when he was

in the vigour of his physical powers, and the case required appeals of

tenderness or generosity. As a parliamentary orator, Earl Grey is

undoubtedly his superior; but there is something much less popular and

conciliating in his manner. His eloquence is heard to most advantage

when he is contemptuous; and he is then certainly dignified, ardent, and

emphatic; but it is apt, I should think, to impress those who hear him,

for the first time, with an idea that he is a very supercilious

personage, and this unfavourable impression is liable to be strengthened

by the elegant aristocratic languor of his appearance.

I think that you once told me you had some knowledge of the Marquis of

Lansdowne, when he was Lord Henry Petty. I can hardly hope that, after

an interval of so many years, you will recognise him in the following

sketch:--His appearance is much more that of a Whig than Lord Grey--stout

and sturdy--but still withal gentlemanly; and there is a pleasing

simplicity, with somewhat of good-nature, in the expression of his

countenance, that renders him, in a quiescent state, the more agreeable

character of the two. He speaks exceedingly well--clear, methodical, and

argumentative; but his eloquence, like himself, is not so graceful as it

is upon the whole manly; and there is a little tendency to verbosity in

his language, as there is to corpulency in his figure; but nothing

turgid, while it is entirely free from affectation. The character of

respectable is very legibly impressed, in everything about the mind and

manner of his lordship. I should, now that I have seen and heard him, be

astonished to hear such a man represented as capable of being factious.