[Letter] 1842 August 22, India House [to Mrs Sarah Austin]
India House
22d August
1842
I write to you today without having much
to say, in order to tell you what I have
done or rather tried to do respecting your
commissions. Senior never viewed
your note, as he had set off before
it reached me. He could not therefore
have taken anything to you. I could
have sent through Mr. Klingemann
but I found that Laing's book was
out of print & a bookseller whom
I employed was not able to procure
me a copy. There is to be another
edition soon, & when it comes out I
will send it to you if you think of it. But
I would rather recommend your making
Napier get it, as he certainly ought to
do. I have no doubt a copy was sent
to him.‐I could not send any sheets
of my Logic because I have not yet
begun to print it. The delay is not
with me but with Parker who talked
of beginning to print in July but has
given no notice of being ready, & as the
thing really does not press & he has
behaved very well I do not chuse to
urge him on the subject. It is very
satisfactory that Napier has consented
to take an article on the book from Mr Austin
& I am particularly glad to hear of two
articles on the stocks. It is a sign at least
that Napier is not displeased with
the reception of the former article, &
he is likely to hear whatever complaints
there are. As for dryness it is a fault
belonging to the matter rather than the manner
which was considerably more lively than
I expected it to be though a little overcharged
with classification in the first few pages.
I had heard of that offer & of Mr. Austin's
refusal of it. Though I did not know the grounds
of the refusal I felt that he was the best judge-
& that no bystander can possibly judge
for any person in such a case, especially for
a person of his peculiarities & of his superiority
of intellect. The expression of regret, however, at
his determination, has been by no means confined
to the persons whom you mention. I have not heard
any of them speak of it but I have heard, & heard
of several others, of whose friendship for you & Mr Austin
you have less doubt, & who expressed, not dissent,
much less had they the presumption to express
disapprobation, but rather seemed to feel
discouragement, from an idea of its being very
unlikely that anything should offer itself which
would be liable to fewer objections than this Malta
plan. Now however when I know his reasons I do not
think so: & at all events if you are better as your
are than with this, you are better as you are than
with anything only as good as this.
I hope you will write other things like Steffens
both for Kemble & for Napier. I am sure they would
be successful & profitable. I should have thought
just the same of that article if it had been written
by anybody else‐it tells people with elegance & in
an amusing garb & lively manner a number of the
things which they most need to be told.
Thanks for your copious list of German books
on Rome: I wish there was a chance of meeting;
with half of them, without buying
chat en poche‐there are too many of them for
such an experiment, nor is the occasion worth it.
I shall read Wachsmuth & one or two others if
I can borrow them. I have already read to weariness
about Rome for if one is particular about
writing only what is true one has enough to do.
I could have written a dashing article on the Romans
such as Macaulay would write (though of course not so
brilliantly) in a week, with the knowledge I had
when I began to read up the subject. In the meantime
I have been writing again for the old Westminster.
Bailey of Sheffield has published a book to demolish
Berkeley’s theory of vision: & I have answered him,
feeling it my special vocation to stand up for the old
orthodox faith of that school. I will send the
article to Mr Austin for it will have a chance
of interesting him, though few people else. It is
the first fruits of my partial recovery from a
two months illness, or rather out-of-health-ness,
& it at least helps to pay my debt to Hickson who
used to write for the review without pay when I had it.
It will be some comfort to get a real philosophical
account of Prussia as the result of your winter
in Berlin & I hope to hear from yourself somewhat
at about the Berlinische aufklarüng from
personal knowledge. From what you say I imagine
it to be rather an un-German thing without
the simplicity, cordiality, & above all the quietness,
which are so agreeable in German life & ways
to a person wearied with discontented, struggling
(Benthamicè) devil-by-the-tail-pulling:England.
But my notion of it is quite vague & may be all
wrong.
adieu
J. S. Mill.