He didn't write, or try to write, the same sort of thing as anyone else; and no one tried to write the same sort of thing as him.
He could be very funny. Here's a letter to his long-standing friend, Miss Savage. It was written, not for money, but out of sheer fun.
15 Clifford's Inn, E.C.
Friday, Nov. 21st 1884
Dear Miss Savage,
....Yes, it was good of God to let Carlyle and Mrs Carlyle marry one another and so make only two people miserable instead of four.
Believe me, Yours very truly,
S. Butler.
Wicked, yes.
But thoroughly cherishable, all the same.
Word To Use Today: butler. A butler is the servant in charge of the wines and the table in a household. He (or nowadays sometimes she) is usually the head servant. The word butler comes from the Old French bouteillier, from bouteille, bottle.
Love that letter! Am fascinated by the Carlyles...what a household!
ReplyDeleteGood grief, yes. They even called the flipping dog Nero!
Delete