fashion, there was at this time a famous pugilistic battle -
the last of the old kind - fought between the English
champion, Tom Sayers, and the American
champion, Heenan.
Bertie Mitford and I agreed to go and see it.
The Wandering Minstrels had given a concert in the Hanover
Square Rooms. The fight was to take place on the following
morning. When the concert was over, Mitford and I went to
some public-house where the 'Ring' had assembled, and where
tickets were to be bought, and instructions received. Fights
when gloves were not used, and which, especially in this
case, might end fatally, were of course
illegal; and every
precaution had been taken by the police to prevent it. A
special train was to leave London Bridge Station about 6 A.M.
We sat up all night in my room, and had to wait an hour in
the train before the men with their backers arrived. As soon
as it was
daylight, we saw mounted police galloping on the
roads
adjacent to the line. No one knew where the train
would pull up. Ten minutes after it did so, a ring was
formed in a
meadow close at hand. The men stripped, and
tossed for places. Heenan won the toss, and with it a
considerable
advantage. He was nearly a head taller than
Sayers, and the ground not being quite level, he chose the
higher side of the ring. But this was by no means his only
'pull.' Just as the men took their places the sun began to
rise. It was in Heenan's back, and right in the other's
face.
Heenan began the attack at once with
scornful confidence; and
in a few minutes Sayers received a blow on the
forehead above
his guard which sent him slithering under the ropes; his head
and neck, in fact, were outside the ring. He lay perfectly
still, and in my
ignorance, I thought he was done for. Not a
bit of it. He was merely reposing quietly till his seconds
put him on his legs. He came up smiling, but not a jot the
worse. But in the course of another round or two, down he
went again. The fight was going all one way. The Englishman
seemed to be completely at the mercy of the giant. I was so
disgusted that I said to my
companion: 'Come along, Bertie,
the game's up. Sayers is good for nothing.'
But now the luck changed. The bull-dog tenacity and splendid
condition of Sayers were proof against these
violent shocks.
The sun was out of his eyes, and there was not a mark of a
blow either on his face or his body. His
temper, his
presence of mind, his defence, and the
rapidity of his
movements, were perfect. The
opening he had watched for came
at last. He
sprang off his legs, and with his whole weight
at close quarters, struck Heenan's cheek just under the eye.
It was like the kick of a cart-horse. The shouts might have
been heard half-a-mile off. Up till now, the betting called
after each round had come to 'ten to one on Heenan'; it fell
at once to evens.
Heenan was completely staggered. He stood for a minute as if
he did not know where he was or what had happened. And then,
an
unprecedented thing occurred. While he thus stood, Sayers
put both hands behind his back, and
coolly walked up to his
foe to
inspect the damage he had inflicted. I had hold of
the ropes in Heenan's corner,
consequently could not see his
face without leaning over them. When I did so, and before
time was called, one eye was completely closed. What kind of
generosity prevented Sayers from closing the other during the
pause, is difficult to
conjecture. But his
forbearance did
not make much difference. Heenan became more
fierce, Sayers
more
daring. The same
tactics were
repeated; and now, no
longer to the
astonishment of the crowd, the same success
rewarded them. Another sledge-hammer blow from the
Englishman closed the remaining eye. The difference in the
condition of the two men must have been
enormous, for in five
minutes Heenan was completely sightless.
Sayers, however, had not escaped scot-free. In countering
the last attack, Heenan had broken one of the bones of
Sayers' right arm. Still the fight went on. It was now a
brutal scene. The blind man could not defend himself from
the other's terrible
punishment. His whole face was so
swollen and distorted, that not a feature was recognisable.
But he
evidently had his design. Each time Sayers struck him
and ducked, Heenan made a swoop with his long arms, and at
last he caught his enemy. With
gigantic force he got Sayers'
head down, and
heedless of his captive's pounding, backed
step by step to the ring. When there, he forced Sayers' neck
on to the rope, and, with all his weight, leant upon the
Englishman's shoulders. In a few moments the face of the
strangled man was black, his tongue was forced out of his
mouth, and his eyes from their sockets. His arms fell
powerless, and in a second or two more he would have been a
corpse. With a wild yell the crowd rushed to the rescue.
Warning cries of 'The police! The police!' mingled with the
shouts. The ropes were cut, and a general
scamper for the
waiting train ended this last of the greatest prize-fights.
We two took it easily, and as the mob were scuttling away
from the police, we saw Sayers with his backers, who were
helping him to dress. His arm seemed to hurt him a little,
but
otherwise, for all the damage he had received, he might
have been playing at football or lawn tennis.
We were quietly getting into a
first-classcarriage, when I
was seized by the shoulder and
roughly spun out of the way.
Turning to
resent the rudeness, I found myself face to face
with Heenan. One of his seconds had pushed me on one side to
let the gladiator get in. So completely blind was he, that
the friend had to place his foot upon the step. And yet
neither man had won the fight.
We still think -
profess to think - the barbarism of the
'Iliad' the highest
flight of epic
poetry; if Homer had sung
this great battle, how
glorious we should have thought it!
Beyond a doubt, man 'yet
partially retains the
characteristics that adapted him to an antecedent state.'
CHAPTER XLIII
THROUGH the Cayley family, I became very
intimate with their
near relatives the Worsleys of Hovingham, near York.
Hovingham has now become known to the
musical world through
its festivals,
annually held at the Hall under the patronage
of its late owner, Sir William Worsley. It was in his
father's time that this fine place, with its delightful
family, was for many years a home to me. Here I met the
Alisons, and at the kind
invitation of Sir Archibald, paid
the great
historian a visit at Possil, his seat in Scotland.
As men who had achieved
scientific or
literarydistinction
inspired me with far greater awe than those of the highest
rank - of whom from my
childhood I had seen
abundance -
Alison's
celebrity, his
courteous manner, his oracular
speech, his voluminous works, and his voluminous dimensions,
filled me with too much diffidence and respect to admit of
any freedom of approach. One listened to him, as he held
forth of an evening when surrounded by his family, with
reverential silence. He had a strong Scotch
accent; and, if
a wee bit prosy at times, it was sententious and polished
prose that he talked; he talked
invariably like a book. His
family were
devoted to him; and I felt that no one who knew
him could help
liking him.
When Thackeray was giving readings from 'The Four Georges,' I
dined with Lady Grey and Landseer, and we three went to hear
him. I had heard Dickens read 'The Trial of Bardell against
Pickwick,' and it was curious to compare the style of the two
great novelists. With Thackeray, there was an entire absence
of either tone or colour. Of course the
historical nature of
his subject precluded the
dramaticsuggestion to be looked