“Now then, you boys!” said the officer.Young Pat: “Shure an’ it’s all him. Hitting me, an’ I’ve got a uncle a Mimber of Parliament, I have.”Young John: “And what of that? Why did he cheek me? I’m as good as him. I’ve got an uncle in Madame Tussaud’s.”
“Now then, you boys!” said the officer.
Young Pat: “Shure an’ it’s all him. Hitting me, an’ I’ve got a uncle a Mimber of Parliament, I have.”
Young John: “And what of that? Why did he cheek me? I’m as good as him. I’ve got an uncle in Madame Tussaud’s.”
The following adroit dialogue appeared in a humorous periodical beneath the picture of a Scottish minister addressing one of two dishevelled youths:
Minister (to small boy who has been fighting): “Ah, laddie, think what wad hae bin done tae ye if ye had kilt that laddie!”Small Boy: “I’d a bin had up.”Minister: “Ah, yes, ye’d a bin had up, but something waur than that.”Small Boy: “I’d a bin hang, mebbie.”Minister: “Yes! but something waur than that wad a happen’d.”Small Boy: “After that I’d a bin pit in Madame Tussaud’s.”
Minister (to small boy who has been fighting): “Ah, laddie, think what wad hae bin done tae ye if ye had kilt that laddie!”
Small Boy: “I’d a bin had up.”
Minister: “Ah, yes, ye’d a bin had up, but something waur than that.”
Small Boy: “I’d a bin hang, mebbie.”
Minister: “Yes! but something waur than that wad a happen’d.”
Small Boy: “After that I’d a bin pit in Madame Tussaud’s.”
The family name often appears in the public Press with more rhyme than reason. The following verse published at the time of the Hague Peace Conference in 1899 is somewhat apropos at the present moment:
When all are agreed in word and deedThat pacific intentions shall rule,When armies disband on every handAnd tin soldiers are not used at school,When rifles and swords are shown at Tussaud’sAs inventions quite obsolete,Then we might be pleasant, but just at presentWe’re thinking ’bout keeping our Fleet.
When all are agreed in word and deedThat pacific intentions shall rule,When armies disband on every handAnd tin soldiers are not used at school,When rifles and swords are shown at Tussaud’sAs inventions quite obsolete,Then we might be pleasant, but just at presentWe’re thinking ’bout keeping our Fleet.
When all are agreed in word and deedThat pacific intentions shall rule,When armies disband on every handAnd tin soldiers are not used at school,
When all are agreed in word and deed
That pacific intentions shall rule,
When armies disband on every hand
And tin soldiers are not used at school,
When rifles and swords are shown at Tussaud’sAs inventions quite obsolete,Then we might be pleasant, but just at presentWe’re thinking ’bout keeping our Fleet.
When rifles and swords are shown at Tussaud’s
As inventions quite obsolete,
Then we might be pleasant, but just at present
We’re thinking ’bout keeping our Fleet.
When the portrait model of Mr. Rudyard Kipling was added to the Exhibition, that gentleman was made the subject of the following lines:
What though from distant climesI, young, unknown,Swift from obscuritySprang to a throne?What though aforetimeWorship was paid me?Though offers fabulousPublishers made me?What though the critics allPleasantly flattered me?What though all this befell(As ifthismattered) me?Nowwith sublime headStrike I the stars;Better is this to meThan all their “pars.”Modelled in wax at last,Now they do show meWith other famous ones,Madame Tussaud me!Now may I pose supreme!Now to me,à la“Crowned heads,” the public grantTheir great Valhalla!Now may the universeEcho my name;Now nothing more remains,This—this isFame!
What though from distant climesI, young, unknown,Swift from obscuritySprang to a throne?What though aforetimeWorship was paid me?Though offers fabulousPublishers made me?What though the critics allPleasantly flattered me?What though all this befell(As ifthismattered) me?Nowwith sublime headStrike I the stars;Better is this to meThan all their “pars.”Modelled in wax at last,Now they do show meWith other famous ones,Madame Tussaud me!Now may I pose supreme!Now to me,à la“Crowned heads,” the public grantTheir great Valhalla!Now may the universeEcho my name;Now nothing more remains,This—this isFame!
What though from distant climesI, young, unknown,Swift from obscuritySprang to a throne?
What though from distant climes
I, young, unknown,
Swift from obscurity
Sprang to a throne?
What though aforetimeWorship was paid me?Though offers fabulousPublishers made me?
What though aforetime
Worship was paid me?
Though offers fabulous
Publishers made me?
What though the critics allPleasantly flattered me?What though all this befell(As ifthismattered) me?
What though the critics all
Pleasantly flattered me?
What though all this befell
(As ifthismattered) me?
Nowwith sublime headStrike I the stars;Better is this to meThan all their “pars.”
Nowwith sublime head
Strike I the stars;
Better is this to me
Than all their “pars.”
Modelled in wax at last,Now they do show meWith other famous ones,Madame Tussaud me!
Modelled in wax at last,
Now they do show me
With other famous ones,
Madame Tussaud me!
Now may I pose supreme!Now to me,à la“Crowned heads,” the public grantTheir great Valhalla!
Now may I pose supreme!
Now to me,à la
“Crowned heads,” the public grant
Their great Valhalla!
Now may the universeEcho my name;Now nothing more remains,This—this isFame!
Now may the universe
Echo my name;
Now nothing more remains,
This—this isFame!
Last scene of all—Madame Tussaud’s appearance and character—HerMemoirs, published in 1838—Her last words.
Last scene of all—Madame Tussaud’s appearance and character—HerMemoirs, published in 1838—Her last words.
If I have recounted many stories relating to incidents that have taken place long after Madame Tussaud passed away, it is because the flow of anecdote prompted by her genius has continued in an unbroken course down to the present times.
But the atmosphere of romance that pervades this history belongs in the main to her days, and it is only fitting that with the close of her days it should practically come to an end.
She died some eight years before I was born, but from my father and from those of his generation who spent the best part of their lives in her company I learnt so much about her that it is difficult for me to realise that I had not enjoyed her personal acquaintance. Her model that stands at the head of the “Sleeping Beauty,” I have always been given to understand, is a speaking likeness.
In figure she was small and slight, and her manner was vivacious. Her complexion was fresh, her hair dark brown with never more than a sprinkling of grey, and her soft brown eyes were keen and alert when her interest was aroused. She was a great talker,her conversation was replete with reminiscences, and, moreover, she was blessed with a faultless memory. Austere in her habits of life, exacting in her likes and dislikes, she showed a ready sympathy with those in distress, and, above all, she was generous to a fault.
Unfortunately herMemoirs, published in 1838, although they were penned more than a decade before she died, do not bring us into any very close relationship with either her personality or her life.
This would not be surprising to those who knew her, or who were acquainted with the circumstances in which they were written. She seldom could be brought to speak of herself and her own painful experiences; and at no time did she betray the slightest disposition to thrust herself upon the public. She was seventy-eight years old at the time, and her desire for seclusion grew stronger as years advanced, until her entourage became narrowed down to the simple companionship of her immediate family circle.
TheMemoirscame to be written in this wise:
Her two sons, Joseph and Francis, in collaboration with an old literary friend of the name of Francis Hervé, settled in their minds that the old lady should be induced to leave behind her an account of her career.
FRANCIS TUSSAUDYounger son of Madame Tussaud. Born 1800, died 1873. Modeled by his son Joseph and exhibited at the Royal Academy.
FRANCIS TUSSAUD
Younger son of Madame Tussaud. Born 1800, died 1873. Modeled by his son Joseph and exhibited at the Royal Academy.
As she had declared her unwillingness to busy herself with the task of compiling her autobiography—and in certain matters we knew her to have been immovable—they decided that the best way of accomplishing their design would be to record the substance of those conversations in which they rightlysurmised they would have little difficulty in inducing her to take part when in the humour.
In spite of the facilities these gentlemen had for obtaining the matter used in their publication, it may be well conjectured that they did not always find their course run smooth, and at times they must have been put to odd shifts and a good deal of careful strategy when gathering what they wanted from the shrewd old lady without arousing her suspicions.
For these reasons theMemoirshave failed to supply what is best worth knowing, such as details giving an insight to her own life—an omission which, I fear, can never now be made entirely good. That work is, therefore, made up of disjointed, scrappy matter, avowedly well written, but somehow obviously strung together for the making of a book.
In perusing its pages the reader thus finds himself confronted by a mere procession of notables whom the old lady happened to have known or to have seen in her day, each with an encyclopædic quantum of information tagged to his or her name that might well have been culled from any biographical treasury. So it is she is to be found speaking of others when her reader’s one desire is that she should be induced to talk of herself.
Neither does this “Romance” claim to be a biography. Such an undertaking would demand of us closer and more careful study than these brief sketches have entailed, and much diligent research. Moreover, such has not been the purpose of these pages.
By those who had the best authority to speak of her I have been often reminded of the trials andhardships against which she had to battle during her long and strenuous career, showing a courage and determination that might well have broken the spirit of many a man. In estimating her character and her achievements, my mind turns to events of the past few years which have demonstrated how capable women are of enacting a great part in the drama of human life.
Madame Tussaud brought cheerfulness and geniality to bear upon the tasks that lay before her, and therein lay the secret of her triumphs. She was diligent and attentive to her business, devoted to her family, and attached to her friends.
The measure of her years far exceeded the allotted span, and she was rewarded, despite the slightness of her frame, with an almost unbroken continuation of good health, until, on the 15th of April, 1850 she passed peacefully and painlessly away at her house attached to the Exhibition in Baker Street.
Forty years of her life had been chiefly spent in Paris and the latter fifty years mostly in London; so that her biography may be said to comprise a tale of two cities. She was buried in the catacombs of St. Mary’s Church, Cadogan Place, Chelsea.
The last words she spoke in this world were characteristic of this wonderful woman’s indomitable spirit. Calling her sons, Joseph and Francis, to her bedside, she gently upbraided them for showing distress at her departure, rather than gratitude that she had been spared to them so long. Her farewell exhortation was, “I divide my property equally between you, and implore you, above all things, never to quarrel.”