Biographical introduction to Vathek
William Beckford, born in 1759, the year before the accession
of King George the Third, was the son of an Alderman who became twice Lord
Mayor of London. His family, originally of Gloucestershire, had thriven by
the plantations in Jamaica; and his father, sent to school in England, and
forming a school friendship at Westminster with Lord Mansfield, began the
world in this country as a merchant, with inheritance of an enormous West
India fortune. William Beckford the elder became Magistrate, Member of Parliament,
Alderman. Four years before the birth of William Beckford the younger he became
one of the Sheriffs of London, and three years after his son's birth he was
Lord Mayor. As Mayor he gave very sumptuous dinners that made epochs in the
lives of feeding men. His son's famous "History of the Caliph Vathek"
looks as if it had been planned for an Alderman's dream after a very heavy
dinner at the Mansion House. There is devotion in it to the senses, emphasis
on heavy dining. Vathek piqued himself on being the greatest eater alive;
but when the Indian dined with him, though the tables were thirty times covered,
there was still want of more food for the voracious guest. There is thirst:
for at one part of the dream, when Vathek's mother, his wives, and some eunuchs
"assiduously employed themselves in filling bowls of rock crystal, and
emulously presented them to him, it frequently happened that his avidity exceeded
their zeal, insomuch that he would prostrate himself upon the ground to lap
up the water, of which he could never have enough." And the nightmare
incidents of the Arabian tale all culminate in a most terrible heartburn.
Could the conception of Vathek have first come to the son after a City dinner?
Though a magnificent host, the elder Beckford was no glutton. In the year
of his first Mayoralty, 1763, Beckford, stood by the side of Alderman Wilkes,
attacked for his No. 45 of The North Briton. As champion of the popular cause,
when he had been again elected to the Mayoralty, Beckford, on the 23rd of
May, 1770, went up to King George the Third at the head of the Aldermen and
Livery with an address which the king snubbed with a short answer. Beckford
asked leave to reply, and before His Majesty recovered breath from his astonishment,
proceeded to reply in words that remain graven in gold upon his monument in
Guildhall. Young Beckford, the author of "Vathek," was then a boy
not quite eleven years old, an only son; and he was left three years afterwards,
by his father's death, heir to an income of a hundred thousand a year, with
a million of cash in hand.
During his minority young Beckford's mother, who was a granddaughter of the
sixth Earl of Abercorn, placed him under a private tutor. He was taught music
by Mozart; and the Earl of Chatham, who had been his father's friend, thought
him so fanciful a boy – "all air and fire" – that he
advised his mother to keep the Arabian Nights out of his way. Happily she
could not, for Vathek adds the thousand and second to the thousand and one
tales, with the difference that it joins to wild inventions in the spirit
of the East touches of playful extravagance that could come only from an English
humourist who sometimes laughed at his own tale, and did not mind turning
its comic side to the reader. The younger William Beckford had been born at
his father's seat in Wiltshire, Fonthill Abbey; and at seventeen amused himself
with a caricature "History of Extraordinary Painters," encouraging
the house-keeper of Fonthill to show the pictures to visitors as works of
Og of Basan and other worthies in her usual edifying manner.
Young Beckford's education was continued for a year and a half at Geneva.
He then travelled in Italy and the Low Countries, and it was at this time
that he amused himself by writing, at the age of about twenty-two, "Vathek"
in French, at a single sitting; but he gave his mind to it and the sitting
lasted three days and two nights. An English version of it was made by a stranger,
and published without permission in 1784. Beckford himself published his tale
at Paris and Lausanne in 1787, one year after the death of a wife to whom
he had been three years married, and who left him with two daughters.
Beckford went to Portugal and Spain; returned to France, and was present at
the storming of the Bastille. He was often abroad; he bought Gibbon's library
at Lausanne, and shut himself up with it for a time, having a notion of reading
it through. He was occasionally in Parliament, but did not care for that kind
of amusement. He wrote pieces of less enduring interest than "Vathek,"
including two burlesques upon the sentimental novel of his time. In 1796 he
settled down at Fonthill, and began to spend there abundantly on building
and rebuilding. Perhaps he thought of Vathek's tower when he employed workmen
day and night to build a tower for himself three hundred feet high, and set
them to begin it again when it fell down. He is said to have spent upon Fonthill
a quarter of a million, living there in much seclusion during the last twenty
years of his life. He died in 1844.
The happy thought of this William Beckford's life was "Vathek."
It is a story that paints neither man nor outward nature as they are, but
reproduces with happy vivacity the luxuriant imagery and wild incidents of
an Arabian tale. There is a ghost of a moral in the story of a sensual Caliph
going to the bad, as represented by his final introduction to the Halls of
Eblis. But the enjoyment given by the book reflects the real enjoyment that
the author had in writing it – enjoyment great enough to cause it to
be written at a heat, in one long sitting, without flagging power. Young and
lively, he delivered himself up to a free run of fancy, revelled in the piled-up
enormities of the Wicked Mother, who had not brought up Vathek properly, and
certainly wrote some parts of his nightmare tale as merrily as if he were
designing matter for a pantomime.
Whoever, in reading "Vathek," takes it altogether seriously, does
not read it as it was written. We must have an eye for the vein of caricature
that now and then comes to the surface, and invites a laugh without disturbing
the sense of Eastern extravagance bent seriously upon the elaboration of a
tale crowded with incident and action. Taken altogether seriously, the book
has faults of construction. But the faults turn into beauties when we catch
the twinkle in the writer's eye.
H[enry]. M[orley].