The Jenkins of Stowting—Fleeming’s
grandfather—Mrs. Buckner’s
fortune—Fleeming’s father; goes to sea; at St.
Helena; meets King Tom; service in the West Indies; end of his
career—The Campbell-Jacksons—Fleeming’s
mother—Fleeming’s uncle John.
In the reign of Henry VIII., a
family of the name of Jenkin, claiming to come from York, and
bearing the arms of Jenkin ap Philip of St. Melans, are found
reputably settled in the county of Kent. Persons of strong
genealogical pinion pass from William Jenkin, Mayor of Folkestone
in 1555, to his contemporary ‘John Jenkin, of the Citie of
York, Receiver General of the County,’ and thence, by way
of Jenkin ap Philip, to the proper summit of any Cambrian
pedigree—a prince; ‘Guaith Voeth, Lord of
Cardigan,’ the name and style of him. It may suffice,
however, for the present, that these Kentish Jenkins must have
undoubtedly derived from Wales, and being a stock of some
efficiency, they struck root and grew to wealth and consequence
in their new home.
Of their consequence we have proof enough in the fact that not
only was William Jenkin (as already mentioned) Mayor of
Folkestone in 1555, but no less than twenty-three times in the
succeeding century and a half, a Jenkin (William, Thomas, Henry,
or Robert) sat in the same place of humble honour. Of their
wealth we know that in the reign of Charles I., Thomas Jenkin of
Eythorne was more than once in the market buying land, and
notably, in 1633, acquired the manor of Stowting Court.
This was an estate of some 320 acres, six miles from Hythe, in
the Bailiwick and Hundred of Stowting, and the Lathe of Shipway,
held of the Crown in capite by the service of six men and
a constable to defend the passage of the sea at Sandgate.
It had a chequered history before it fell into the hands of
Thomas of Eythorne, having been sold and given from one to
another—to the Archbishop, to Heringods, to the
Burghershes, to Pavelys, Trivets, Cliffords, Wenlocks,
Beauchamps, Nevilles, Kempes, and Clarkes: a piece of Kentish
ground condemned to see new faces and to be no man’s
home. But from 1633 onward it became the anchor of the
Jenkin family in Kent; and though passed on from brother to
brother, held in shares between uncle and nephew, burthened by
debts and jointures, and at least once sold and bought in again,
it remains to this day in the hands of the direct line. It
is not my design, nor have I the necessary knowledge, to give a
history of this obscure family. But this is an age when
genealogy has taken a new lease of life, and become for the first
time a human science; so that we no longer study it in quest of
the Guaith Voeths, but to trace out some of the secrets of
descent and destiny; and as we study, we think less of Sir
Bernard Burke and more of Mr. Galton. Not only do our
character and talents lie upon the anvil and receive their temper
during generations; but the very plot of our life’s story
unfolds itself on a scale of centuries, and the biography of the
man is only an episode in the epic of the family. From this
point of view I ask the reader’s leave to begin this notice
of a remarkable man who was my friend, with the accession of his
great-grandfather, John Jenkin.
This John Jenkin, a grandson of Damaris Kingsley, of the
family of ‘Westward Ho!’ was born in 1727, and
married Elizabeth, daughter of Thomas Frewen, of Church House,
Northiam. The Jenkins had now been long enough
intermarrying with their Kentish neighbours to be Kentish folk
themselves in all but name; and with the Frewens in particular
their connection is singularly involved. John and his wife
were each descended in the third degree from another Thomas
Frewen, Vicar of Northiam, and brother to Accepted Frewen,
Archbishop of York. John’s mother had married a
Frewen for a second husband. And the last complication was
to be added by the Bishop of Chichester’s brother, Charles
Buckner, Vice-Admiral of the White, who was twice married, first
to a paternal cousin of Squire John, and second to Anne, only
sister of the Squire’s wife, and already the widow of
another Frewen. The reader must bear Mrs. Buckner in mind;
it was by means of that lady that Fleeming Jenkin began life as a
poor man. Meanwhile, the relationship of any Frewen to any
Jenkin at the end of these evolutions presents a problem almost
insoluble; and we need not wonder if Mrs. John, thus exercised in
her immediate circle, was in her old age ‘a great
genealogist of all Sussex families, and much
consulted.’ The names Frewen and Jenkin may almost
seem to have been interchangeable at will; and yet Fate proceeds
with such particularity that it was perhaps on the point of name
that the family was ruined.
The John Jenkins had a family of one daughter and five
extravagant and unpractical sons. The eldest, Stephen,
entered the Church and held the living of Salehurst, where he
offered, we may hope, an extreme example of the clergy of the
age. He was a handsome figure of a man; jovial and jocular;
fond of his garden, which produced under his care the finest
fruits of the neighbourhood; and like all the family, very choice
in horses. He drove tandem; like Jehu, furiously. His
saddle horse, Captain (for the names of horses are piously
preserved in the family chronicle which I follow), was trained to
break into a gallop as soon as the vicar’s foot was thrown
across its back; nor would the rein be drawn in the nine miles
between Northiam and the Vicarage door. Debt was the
man’s proper element; he used to skulk from arrest in the
chancel of his church; and the speed of Captain may have come
sometimes handy. At an early age this unconventional parson
married his cook, and by her he had two daughters and one
son. One of the daughters died unmarried; the other
imitated her father, and married ‘imprudently.’
The son, still more gallantly continuing the tradition, entered
the army, loaded himself with debt, was forced to sell out, took
refuge in the Marines, and was lost on the Dogger Bank in the
war-ship Minotaur. If he did not marry below him,
like his father, his sister, and a certain great-uncle William,
it was perhaps because he never married at all.
The second brother, Thomas, who was employed in the General
Post-Office, followed in all material points the example of
Stephen, married ‘not very creditably,’ and spent all
the money he could lay his hands on. He died without issue;
as did the fourth brother, John, who was of weak intellect and
feeble health, and the fifth brother, William, whose brief career
as one of Mrs. Buckner’s satellites will fall to be
considered later on. So soon, then, as the Minotaur
had struck upon the Dogger Bank, Stowting and the line of the
Jenkin family fell on the shoulders of the third brother,
Charles.
Facility and self-indulgence are the family marks; facility
(to judge by these imprudent marriages) being at once their
quality and their defect; but in the case of Charles, a man of
exceptional beauty and sweetness both of face and disposition,
the family fault had quite grown to be a virtue, and we find him
in consequence the drudge and milk-cow of his relatives.
Born in 1766, Charles served at sea in his youth, and smelt both
salt water and powder. The Jenkins had inclined hitherto,
as far as I can make out, to the land service.
Stephen’s son had been a soldier; William (fourth of
Stowting) had been an officer of the unhappy Braddock’s in
America, where, by the way, he owned and afterwards sold an
estate on the James River, called, after the parental seat; of
which I should like well to hear if it still bears the
name. It was probably by the influence of Captain Buckner,
already connected with the family by his first marriage, that
Charles Jenkin turned his mind in the direction of the navy; and
it was in Buckner’s own ship, the Prothée,
64, that the lad made his only campaign. It was in the days
of Rodney’s war, when the Prothée, we read,
captured two large privateers to windward of Barbadoes, and was
‘materially and distinguishedly engaged’ in both the
actions with De Grasse. While at sea Charles kept a
journal, and made strange archaic pilot-book sketches, part plan,
part elevation, some of which survive for the amusement of
posterity. He did a good deal of surveying, so that here we
may perhaps lay our finger on the beginning of Fleeming’s
education as an engineer. What is still more strange, among
the relics of the handsome midshipman and his stay in the
gun-room of the Prothée, I find a code of signals
graphically represented, for all the world as it would have been
done by his grandson.
On the declaration of peace, Charles, because he had suffered
from scurvy, received his mother’s orders to retire; and he
was not the man to refuse a request, far less to disobey a
command. Thereupon he turned farmer, a trade he was to
practice on a large scale; and we find him married to a Miss
Schirr, a woman of some fortune, the daughter of a London
merchant. Stephen, the not very reverend, was still alive,
galloping about the country or skulking in his chancel. It
does not appear whether he let or sold the paternal manor to
Charles; one or other, it must have been; and the sailor-farmer
settled at Stowting, with his wife, his mother, his unmarried
sister, and his sick brother John. Out of the six people of
whom his nearest family consisted, three were in his own house,
and two others (the horse-leeches, Stephen and Thomas) he appears
to have continued to assist with more amiability than
wisdom. He hunted, belonged to the Yeomanry, owned famous
horses, Maggie and Lucy, the latter coveted by royalty
itself. ‘Lord Rokeby, his neighbour, called him
kinsman,’ writes my artless chronicler, ‘and
altogether life was very cheery.’ At Stowting his
three sons, John, Charles, and Thomas Frewen, and his younger
daughter, Anna, were all born to him; and the reader should here
be told that it is through the report of this second Charles
(born 1801) that he has been looking on at these confused
passages of family history.
In the year 1805 the ruin of the Jenkins was begun. It
was the work of a fallacious lady already mentioned, Aunt Anne
Frewen, a sister of Mrs. John. Twice married, first to her
cousin Charles Frewen, clerk to the Court of Chancery, Brunswick
Herald, and Usher of the Black Rod, and secondly to Admiral
Buckner, she was denied issue in both beds, and being very
rich—she died worth about 60,000l., mostly in
land—she was in perpetual quest of an heir. The
mirage of this fortune hung before successive members of the
Jenkin family until her death in 1825, when it dissolved and left
the latest Alnaschar face to face with bankruptcy. The
grandniece, Stephen’s daughter, the one who had not
‘married imprudently,’ appears to have been the
first; for she was taken abroad by the golden aunt, and died in
her care at Ghent in 1792. Next she adopted William, the
youngest of the five nephews; took him abroad with her—it
seems as if that were in the formula; was shut up with him in
Paris by the Revolution; brought him back to Windsor, and got him
a place in the King’s Body-Guard, where he attracted the
notice of George III. by his proficiency in German. In
1797, being on guard at St. James’s Palace, William took a
cold which carried him off; and Aunt Anne was once more left
heirless. Lastly, in 1805, perhaps moved by the Admiral,
who had a kindness for his old midshipman, perhaps pleased by the
good looks and the good nature of the man himself, Mrs. Buckner
turned her eyes upon Charles Jenkin. He was not only to be
the heir, however, he was to be the chief hand in a somewhat wild
scheme of family farming. Mrs. Jenkin, the mother,
contributed 164 acres of land; Mrs. Buckner, 570, some at
Northiam, some farther off; Charles let one-half of Stowting to a
tenant, and threw the other and various scattered parcels into
the common enterprise; so that the whole farm amounted to near
upon a thousand acres, and was scattered over thirty miles of
country. The ex-seaman of thirty-nine, on whose wisdom and
ubiquity the scheme depended, was to live in the meanwhile
without care or fear. He was to check himself in nothing;
his two extravagances, valuable horses and worthless brothers,
were to be indulged in comfort; and whether the year quite paid
itself or not, whether successive years left accumulated savings
or only a growing deficit, the fortune of the golden aunt should
in the end repair all.
On this understanding Charles Jenkin transported his family to
Church House, Northiam: Charles the second, then a child of
three, among the number. Through the eyes of the boy we
have glimpses of the life that followed: of Admiral and Mrs.
Buckner driving up from Windsor in a coach and six, two
post-horses and their own four; of the house full of visitors,
the great roasts at the fire, the tables in the servants’
hall laid for thirty or forty for a month together; of the daily
press of neighbours, many of whom, Frewens, Lords, Bishops,
Batchellors, and Dynes, were also kinsfolk; and the parties
‘under the great spreading chestnuts of the old fore
court,’ where the young people danced and made merry to the
music of the village band. Or perhaps, in the depth of
winter, the father would bid young Charles saddle his pony; they
would ride the thirty miles from Northiam to Stowting, with the
snow to the pony’s saddle girths, and be received by the
tenants like princes.
This life of delights, with the continual visible comings and
goings of the golden aunt, was well qualified to relax the fibre
of the lads. John, the heir, a yeoman and a fox-hunter,
‘loud and notorious with his whip and spurs,’ settled
down into a kind of Tony Lumpkin, waiting for the shoes of his
father and his aunt. Thomas Frewen, the youngest, is
briefly dismissed as ‘a handsome beau’; but he had
the merit or the good fortune to become a doctor of medicine, so
that when the crash came he was not empty-handed for the war of
life. Charles, at the day-school of Northiam, grew so well
acquainted with the rod, that his floggings became matter of
pleasantry and reached the ears of Admiral Buckner.
Hereupon that tall, rough-voiced, formidable uncle entered with
the lad into a covenant: every time that Charles was thrashed he
was to pay the Admiral a penny; everyday that he escaped, the
process was to be reversed. ‘I recollect,’
writes Charles, ‘going crying to my mother to be taken to
the Admiral to pay my debt.’ It would seem by these
terms the speculation was a losing one; yet it is probable it
paid indirectly by bringing the boy under remark. The
Admiral was no enemy to dunces; he loved courage, and Charles,
while yet little more than a baby, would ride the great horse
into the pond. Presently it was decided that here was the
stuff of a fine sailor; and at an early period the name of
Charles Jenkin was entered on a ship’s books.
From Northiam he was sent to another school at Boonshill, near
Rye, where the master took ‘infinite delight’ in
strapping him. ‘It keeps me warm and makes you
grow,’ he used to say. And the stripes were not
altogether wasted, for the dunce, though still very
‘raw,’ made progress with his studies. It was
known, moreover, that he was going to sea, always a ground of
pre-eminence with schoolboys; and in his case the glory was not
altogether future, it wore a present form when he came driving to
Rye behind four horses in the same carriage with an
admiral. ‘I was not a little proud, you may
believe,’ says he.
In 1814, when he was thirteen years of age, he was carried by
his father to Chichester to the Bishop’s Palace. The
Bishop had heard from his brother the Admiral that Charles was
likely to do well, and had an order from Lord Melville for the
lad’s admission to the Royal Naval College at
Portsmouth. Both the Bishop and the Admiral patted him on
the head and said, ‘Charles will restore the old
family’; by which I gather with some surprise that, even in
these days of open house at Northiam and golden hope of my
aunt’s fortune, the family was supposed to stand in need of
restoration. But the past is apt to look brighter than
nature, above all to those enamoured of their genealogy; and the
ravages of Stephen and Thomas must have always given matter of
alarm.
What with the flattery of bishops and admirals, the fine
company in which he found himself at Portsmouth, his visits home,
with their gaiety and greatness of life, his visits to Mrs.
Buckner (soon a widow) at Windsor, where he had a pony kept for
him, and visited at Lord Melville’s and Lord
Harcourt’s and the Leveson-Gowers, he began to have
‘bumptious notions,’ and his head was ‘somewhat
turned with fine people’; as to some extent it remained
throughout his innocent and honourable life.
In this frame of mind the boy was appointed to the
Conqueror, Captain Davie, humorously known as Gentle
Johnnie. The captain had earned this name by his style of
discipline, which would have figured well in the pages of
Marryat: ‘Put the prisoner’s head in a bag and give
him another dozen!’ survives as a specimen of his commands;
and the men were often punished twice or thrice in a week.
On board the ship of this disciplinarian, Charles and his father
were carried in a billy-boat from Sheerness in December, 1816:
Charles with an outfit suitable to his pretensions, a
twenty-guinea sextant and 120 dollars in silver, which were
ordered into the care of the gunner. ‘The old clerks
and mates,’ he writes, ‘used to laugh and jeer me for
joining the ship in a billy-boat, and when they found I was from
Kent, vowed I was an old Kentish smuggler. This to my
pride, you will believe, was not a little offensive.’
The Conqueror carried the flag of Vice-Admiral Plampin,
commanding at the Cape and St. Helena; and at that all-important
islet, in July, 1817, she relieved the flagship of Sir Pulteney
Malcolm. Thus it befel that Charles Jenkin, coming too late
for the epic of the French wars, played a small part in the
dreary and disgraceful afterpiece of St. Helena. Life on
the guard-ship was onerous and irksome. The anchor was
never lifted, sail never made, the great guns were silent; none
was allowed on shore except on duty; all day the movements of the
imperial captive were signalled to and fro; all night the boats
rowed guard around the accessible portions of the coast.
This prolonged stagnation and petty watchfulness in what Napoleon
himself called that ‘unchristian’ climate, told
cruelly on the health of the ship’s company. In
eighteen months, according to O’Meara, the Conqueror
had lost one hundred and ten men and invalided home one hundred
and seven, being more than a third of her complement. It
does not seem that our young midshipman so much as once set eyes
on Bonaparte; and yet in other ways Jenkin was more fortunate
than some of his comrades. He drew in water-colour; not so
badly as his father, yet ill enough; and this art was so rare
aboard the Conqueror that even his humble proficiency
marked him out and procured him some alleviations. Admiral
Plampin had succeeded Napoleon at the Briars; and here he had
young Jenkin staying with him to make sketches of the historic
house. One of these is before me as I write, and gives a
strange notion of the arts in our old English Navy. Yet it
was again as an artist that the lad was taken for a run to Rio,
and apparently for a second outing in a ten-gun brig.
These, and a cruise of six weeks to windward of the island
undertaken by the Conqueror herself in quest of health,
were the only breaks in three years of murderous inaction; and at
the end of that period Jenkin was invalided home, having
‘lost his health entirely.’
As he left the deck of the guard-ship the historic part of his
career came to an end. For forty-two years he continued to
serve his country obscurely on the seas, sometimes thanked for
inconspicuous and honourable services, but denied any opportunity
of serious distinction. He was first two years in the
Larne, Captain Tait, hunting pirates and keeping a watch
on the Turkish and Greek squadrons in the Archipelago.
Captain Tait was a favourite with Sir Thomas Maitland, High
Commissioner of the Ionian Islands—King Tom as he was
called—who frequently took passage in the
Larne. King Tom knew every inch of the
Mediterranean, and was a terror to the officers of the
watch. He would come on deck at night; and with his broad
Scotch accent, ‘Well, sir,’ he would say, ‘what
depth of water have ye? Well now, sound; and ye’ll
just find so or so many fathoms,’ as the case might be; and
the obnoxious passenger was generally right. On one
occasion, as the ship was going into Corfu, Sir Thomas came up
the hatchway and cast his eyes towards the gallows.
‘Bangham’—Charles Jenkin heard him say to his
aide-de-camp, Lord Bangham—‘where the devil is that
other chap? I left four fellows hanging there; now I can
only see three. Mind there is another there
to-morrow.’ And sure enough there was another Greek
dangling the next day. ‘Captain Hamilton, of the
Cambrian, kept the Greeks in order afloat,’ writes
my author, ‘and King Tom ashore.’
From 1823 onward, the chief scene of Charles Jenkin’s
activities was in the West Indies, where he was engaged off and
on till 1844, now as a subaltern, now in a vessel of his own,
hunting out pirates, ‘then very notorious’ in the
Leeward Islands, cruising after slavers, or carrying dollars and
provisions for the Government. While yet a midshipman, he
accompanied Mr. Cockburn to Caraccas and had a sight of
Bolivar. In the brigantine Griffon, which he
commanded in his last years in the West Indies, he carried aid to
Guadeloupe after the earthquake, and twice earned the thanks of
Government: once for an expedition to Nicaragua to extort, under
threat of a blockade, proper apologies and a sum of money due to
certain British merchants; and once during an insurrection in San
Domingo, for the rescue of certain others from a perilous
imprisonment and the recovery of a ‘chest of money’
of which they had been robbed. Once, on the other hand, he
earned his share of public censure. This was in 1837, when
he commanded the Romney lying in the inner harbour of
Havannah. The Romney was in no proper sense a
man-of-war; she was a slave-hulk, the bonded warehouse of the
Mixed Slave Commission; where negroes, captured out of slavers
under Spanish colours, were detained provisionally, till the
Commission should decide upon their case and either set them free
or bind them to apprenticeship. To this ship, already an
eye-sore to the authorities, a Cuban slave made his escape.
The position was invidious; on one side were the tradition of the
British flag and the state of public sentiment at home; on the
other, the certainty that if the slave were kept, the
Romney would be ordered at once out of the harbour, and
the object of the Mixed Commission compromised. Without
consultation with any other officer, Captain Jenkin (then
lieutenant) returned the man to shore and took the
Captain-General’s receipt. Lord Palmerston approved
his course; but the zealots of the anti-slave trade movement
(never to be named without respect) were much dissatisfied; and
thirty-nine years later, the matter was again canvassed in
Parliament, and Lord Palmerston and Captain Jenkin defended by
Admiral Erskine in a letter to the Times (March 13,
1876).
In 1845, while still lieutenant, Charles Jenkin acted as
Admiral Pigot’s flag captain in the Cove of Cork, where
there were some thirty pennants; and about the same time, closed
his career by an act of personal bravery. He had proceeded
with his boats to the help of a merchant vessel, whose cargo of
combustibles had taken fire and was smouldering under hatches;
his sailors were in the hold, where the fumes were already heavy,
and Jenkin was on deck directing operations, when he found his
orders were no longer answered from below: he jumped down without
hesitation and slung up several insensible men with his own
hand. For this act, he received a letter from the Lords of
the Admiralty expressing a sense of his gallantry; and pretty
soon after was promoted Commander, superseded, and could never
again obtain employment.
In 1828 or 1829, Charles Jenkin was in the same watch with
another midshipman, Robert Colin Campbell Jackson, who introduced
him to his family in Jamaica. The father, the Honourable
Robert Jackson, Custos Rotulorum of Kingston, came of a Yorkshire
family, said to be originally Scotch; and on the mother’s
side, counted kinship with some of the Forbeses. The mother
was Susan Campbell, one of the Campbells of Auchenbreck.
Her father Colin, a merchant in Greenock, is said to have been
the heir to both the estate and the baronetcy; he claimed
neither, which casts a doubt upon the fact, but he had pride
enough himself, and taught enough pride to his family, for any
station or descent in Christendom. He had four
daughters. One married an Edinburgh writer, as I have it on
a first account—a minister, according to another—a
man at least of reasonable station, but not good enough for the
Campbells of Auchenbreck; and the erring one was instantly
discarded. Another married an actor of the name of Adcock,
whom (as I receive the tale) she had seen acting in a barn; but
the phrase should perhaps be regarded rather as a measure of the
family annoyance, than a mirror of the facts. The marriage
was not in itself unhappy; Adcock was a gentleman by birth and
made a good husband; the family reasonably prospered, and one of
the daughters married no less a man than Clarkson
Stanfield. But by the father, and the two remaining Miss
Campbells, people of fierce passions and a truly Highland pride,
the derogation was bitterly resented. For long the sisters
lived estranged then, Mrs. Jackson and Mrs. Adcock were
reconciled for a moment, only to quarrel the more fiercely; the
name of Mrs. Adcock was proscribed, nor did it again pass her
sister’s lips, until the morning when she announced:
‘Mary Adcock is dead; I saw her in her shroud last
night.’ Second sight was hereditary in the house; and
sure enough, as I have it reported, on that very night Mrs.
Adcock had passed away. Thus, of the four daughters, two
had, according to the idiotic notions of their friends, disgraced
themselves in marriage; the others supported the honour of the
family with a better grace, and married West Indian magnates of
whom, I believe, the world has never heard and would not care to
hear: So strange a thing is this hereditary pride. Of Mr.
Jackson, beyond the fact that he was Fleeming’s
grandfather, I know naught. His wife, as I have said, was a
woman of fierce passions; she would tie her house slaves to the
bed and lash them with her own hand; and her conduct to her wild
and down-going sons, was a mixture of almost insane
self-sacrifice and wholly insane violence of temper. She
had three sons and one daughter. Two of the sons went
utterly to ruin, and reduced their mother to poverty. The
third went to India, a slim, delicate lad, and passed so wholly
from the knowledge of his relatives that he was thought to be
long dead. Years later, when his sister was living in
Genoa, a red-bearded man of great strength and stature, tanned by
years in India, and his hands covered with barbaric gems, entered
the room unannounced, as she was playing the piano, lifted her
from her seat, and kissed her. It was her brother, suddenly
returned out of a past that was never very clearly understood,
with the rank of general, many strange gems, many cloudy stories
of adventure, and next his heart, the daguerreotype of an Indian
prince with whom he had mixed blood.
The last of this wild family, the daughter, Henrietta Camilla,
became the wife of the midshipman Charles, and the mother of the
subject of this notice, Fleeming Jenkin. She was a woman of
parts and courage. Not beautiful, she had a far higher
gift, the art of seeming so; played the part of a belle in
society, while far lovelier women were left unattended; and up to
old age had much of both the exigency and the charm that mark
that character. She drew naturally, for she had no
training, with unusual skill; and it was from her, and not from
the two naval artists, that Fleeming inherited his eye and
hand. She played on the harp and sang with something beyond
the talent of an amateur. At the age of seventeen, she
heard Pasta in Paris; flew up in a fire of youthful enthusiasm;
and the next morning, all alone and without introduction, found
her way into the presence of the prima donna and begged
for lessons. Pasta made her sing, kissed her when she had
done, and though she refused to be her mistress, placed her in
the hands of a friend. Nor was this all, for when Pasta
returned to Paris, she sent for the girl (once at least) to test
her progress. But Mrs. Jenkin’s talents were not so
remarkable as her fortitude and strength of will; and it was in
an art for which she had no natural taste (the art of literature)
that she appeared before the public. Her novels, though
they attained and merited a certain popularity both in France and
England, are a measure only of her courage. They were a
task, not a beloved task; they were written for money in days of
poverty, and they served their end. In the least thing as
well as in the greatest, in every province of life as well as in
her novels, she displayed the same capacity of taking infinite
pains, which descended to her son. When she was about forty
(as near as her age was known) she lost her voice; set herself at
once to learn the piano, working eight hours a day; and attained
to such proficiency that her collaboration in chamber music was
courted by professionals. And more than twenty years later,
the old lady might have been seen dauntlessly beginning the study
of Hebrew. This is the more ethereal part of courage; nor
was she wanting in the more material. Once when a
neighbouring groom, a married man, had seduced her maid, Mrs.
Jenkin mounted her horse, rode over to the stable entrance and
horsewhipped the man with her own hand.
How a match came about between this talented and spirited girl
and the young midshipman, is not very I easy to conceive.
Charles Jenkin was one of the finest creatures breathing;
loyalty, devotion, simple natural piety, boyish cheerfulness,
tender and manly sentiment in the old sailor fashion, were in him
inherent and inextinguishable either by age, suffering, or
injustice. He looked, as he was, every inch a gentleman; he
must have been everywhere notable, even among handsome men, both
for his face and his gallant bearing; not so much that of a
sailor, you would have said, as like one of those gentle and
graceful soldiers that, to this day, are the most pleasant of
Englishmen to see. But though he was in these ways noble,
the dunce scholar of Northiam was to the end no genius.
Upon all points that a man must understand to be a gentleman, to
be upright, gallant, affectionate and dead to self, Captain
Jenkin was more knowing than one among a thousand; outside of
that, his mind was very largely blank. He had indeed a
simplicity that came near to vacancy; and in the first forty
years of his married life, this want grew more accentuated.
In both families imprudent marriages had been the rule; but
neither Jenkin nor Campbell had ever entered into a more unequal
union. It was the captain’s good looks, we may
suppose, that gained for him this elevation; and in some ways and
for many years of his life, he had to pay the penalty. His
wife, impatient of his incapacity and surrounded by brilliant
friends, used him with a certain contempt. She was the
managing partner; the life was hers, not his; after his
retirement they lived much abroad, where the poor captain, who
could never learn any language but his own, sat in the corner
mumchance; and even his son, carried away by his bright mother,
did not recognise for long the treasures of simple chivalry that
lay buried in the heart of his father. Yet it would be an
error to regard this marriage as unfortunate. It not only
lasted long enough to justify itself in a beautiful and touching
epilogue, but it gave to the world the scientific work and what
(while time was) were of far greater value, the delightful
qualities of Fleeming Jenkin. The Kentish-Welsh family,
facile, extravagant, generous to a fault and far from brilliant,
had given the father, an extreme example of its humble
virtues. On the other side, the wild, cruel, proud, and
somewhat blackguard stock of the Scotch Campbell-Jacksons, had
put forth, in the person of the mother all its force and
courage.
The marriage fell in evil days. In 1823, the bubble of
the Golden Aunt’s inheritance had burst. She died
holding the hand of the nephew she had so wantonly deceived; at
the last she drew him down and seemed to bless him, surely with
some remorseful feeling; for when the will was opened, there was
not found so much as the mention of his name. He was deeply
in debt; in debt even to the estate of his deceiver, so that he
had to sell a piece of land to clear himself. ‘My
dear boy,’ he said to Charles, ‘there will be nothing
left for you. I am a ruined man.’ And here
follows for me the strangest part of this story. From the
death of the treacherous aunt, Charles Jenkin, senior, had still
some nine years to live; it was perhaps too late for him to turn
to saving, and perhaps his affairs were past restoration.
But his family at least had all this while to prepare; they were
still young men, and knew what they had to look for at their
father’s death; and yet when that happened in September,
1831, the heir was still apathetically waiting. Poor John,
the days of his whips and spurs, and Yeomanry dinners, were quite
over; and with that incredible softness of the Jenkin nature, he
settled down for the rest of a long life, into something not far
removed above a peasant. The mill farm at Stowting had been
saved out of the wreck; and here he built himself a house on the
Mexican model, and made the two ends meet with rustic thrift,
gathering dung with his own hands upon the road and not at all
abashed at his employment. In dress, voice, and manner, he
fell into mere country plainness; lived without the least care
for appearances, the least regret for the past or discontentment
with the present; and when he came to die, died with Stoic
cheerfulness, announcing that he had had a comfortable time and
was yet well pleased to go. One would think there was
little active virtue to be inherited from such a race; and yet in
this same voluntary peasant, the special gift of Fleeming Jenkin
was already half developed. The old man to the end was
perpetually inventing; his strange, ill-spelled, unpunctuated
correspondence is full (when he does not drop into cookery
receipts) of pumps, road engines, steam-diggers, steam-ploughs,
and steam-threshing machines; and I have it on Fleeming’s
word that what he did was full of ingenuity—only, as if by
some cross destiny, useless. These disappointments he not
only took with imperturbable good humour, but rejoiced with a
particular relish over his nephew’s success in the same
field. ‘I glory in the professor,’ he wrote to
his brother; and to Fleeming himself, with a touch of simple
drollery, ‘I was much pleased with your lecture, but why
did you hit me so hard with Conisure’s’
(connoisseur’s, quasi amateur’s)
‘engineering? Oh, what presumption!—either of
you or myself!’ A quaint, pathetic figure,
this of uncle John, with his dung cart and his inventions; and
the romantic fancy of his Mexican house; and his craze about the
Lost Tribes which seemed to the worthy man the key of all
perplexities; and his quiet conscience, looking back on a life
not altogether vain, for he was a good son to his father while
his father lived, and when evil days approached, he had proved
himself a cheerful Stoic.
It followed from John’s inertia, that the duty of
winding up the estate fell into the hands of Charles. He
managed it with no more skill than might be expected of a sailor
ashore, saved a bare livelihood for John and nothing for the
rest. Eight months later, he married Miss Jackson; and with
her money, bought in some two-thirds of Stowting. In the
beginning of the little family history which I have been
following to so great an extent, the Captain mentions, with a
delightful pride: ‘A Court Baron and Court Leet are
regularly held by the Lady of the Manor, Mrs. Henrietta Camilla
Jenkin’; and indeed the pleasure of so describing his wife,
was the most solid benefit of the investment; for the purchase
was heavily encumbered and paid them nothing till some years
before their death. In the meanwhile, the Jackson family
also, what with wild sons, an indulgent mother and the impending
emancipation of the slaves, was moving nearer and nearer to
beggary; and thus of two doomed and declining houses, the subject
of this memoir was born, heir to an estate and to no money, yet
with inherited qualities that were to make him known and
loved.
