Henry Halford Vaughan (August 27, 1811-April 1885) by Julia Margaret Cameron, 1864
Mrs. Henry Halford Vaughan,Adeline Vaughan (November 14, 1837-April 14, 1881) with her daughter Augusta by Julia Margaret Cameron,
Albumen Print, 1864
NOTE: If Adeline Vaughan looks familiar to you it could be
because she is the sister of Julia Jackson Duckworth Stephen, also the
niece of Julia Margaret Cameron. Adeline Vaughan was the aunt to her
sister Julia Stephen's daughter who became Virginia Woolf (Adeline
Stephen; her namesake). (The photograph is Julia Jackson on the left with her mother
Maria Jackson (nee Pattle) who was nicknamed 'Mia' by the Pattle family,
sister to Julia Margaret Cameron).
I am going to share one of Julia Margaret Cameron's letters in its entirety. It is a very long letter, very telling as she shares her religious beliefs, her spirituality, her empathetic nature and her desire to help comfort her friend, Henry Halford Vaughan upon the death of 'his only child' in April of 1859. Why is this a mystery, well, in doing some research, reading geneology pages and census forms, there is no record of a son born during the year 1859. Halford and Adeline Vaughan (nee Jackson) were married on 21 August 1856 in Hendon Middlesex. Together they had five children: four daughters and one son named WilliamWyamar Vaughan born on 25 February 1865. All of their children lived into old age. So, when Mrs. Cameron referes to 'he' or 'his only child' in writng to Halford, who is she referencing? I would love to find this out. In the letter, you will read that at the time Mrs. Cameron says herself she up until that point (1859) had not experienced the loss of a child of her own. So who is this baby boy who died in April 1859 'related' to Halford? Even if we never find out Julia Margaret Cameron's letter is so very emotionally telling helping to shed some light on the woman, the wife, the mother, behind her standing camera lens.
The Shadow of the Cross by Julia Margaret Cameron,
Albumen Print from wet collodian glass negative, August 1865
Ashburton Cottage
Putney Heath
SW0
Ap. 5th 59-
Dearest Halford,
I have been longing
to write to you all these past days yet my heart has kept uttering to itself
‘What can I who have never yet been called upon to part with a precious child
say to him who has been called upon to part with so precious and so perfect a
child. His only Child too-his one little Ewe Lamb the light and life of his
Soul-‘One thing I can most confidently say dear Halford that that
same Child is now more than ever, & will be so to all eternity more than
ever the Light and Life of your Soul.
Oh let that Light shine upon you through sepulchral
darkness-his little Grave seems to me transparent with Eternal Light &
lined with Eternal Love. Oh let that Love mingle with the Heavenly Love that
gave and that has now with equal Love taken away-altho’ the mystery of this
dispensation may stagger you now-it is so heavy and so seemingly crushing a
blow in its first weighty fall –Sweet little one-! Might we not all have seen
that it had an angel’s soul already blessed-I was always struck with the
majesty of that child-beauty-I did not then read the meaning of it as now I
do-& yet I felt all its preciousness to you in unfolding the many mysteries
of Earth – of Baby Life-of Parent Life-and Parent Love-of innocence-mysteries
your beautiful and ardently impressible nature loved to dwell upon, but that
was a part only-and a very small part of its relations with you-The mysteries
of Heaven it had to teach unto you, thro’ the memories of the sacred kisses,
your hand, and your foot can never forget-for I know his sweet habits and ways
of caress-its life of fruitful love.
That life is not over-it is & will be more fruitful
than ever-bearing fruit that will never turn to ashes, as has seemed to perish
this first fair fruit of your body-The shell will perish-the corruptible part
you consigned to its little mossy bed last Saturday - & I know the agony of
that consignment, but your Child is less dead now than when in full health on
Earth-Then it was surrounded by mortal influences, and had it continued on
Earth its immortal nature might have been dimmed and obscured by sin-by assault
by temptation-now it lives in its own native air of Heaven in bright realms
where it will watch over you, and pray for you, and see and feel those tears
you all three (Parents and Grand Parent) shed daily for its long absence and
your utter loss of present bliss-Having winged away its flight to a Kingdom of
Eternal peace, and unfading light it will eternally beseech God that that Light
may shine with full force of Love upon you, and when your own hour comes dear
Halford and in a little-twinkling of time this last hour will come to every one
of us-you will hear your Child’s voice once again even as you heard his last
words calling you & you will say ‘I come’ if you have been enabled thro’
this passage of darkness to feel the way to him and to Eternal life, and you
will then feel I die more in peace than if I left him on this busy stage of
life struggling-it is well-and even now at this present dreadful moment of
visitation you must say to yourself It is some comfort that my Boy can never
endure the agony I am enduring now-The cup of which I now drink these bitter dregs he can
never taste.
Sweet little Lamb-one brief period of bright life he had
and then, oh you must feel sure of this, he was called to the service of
Heaven-and to you the blessed company of Angels-I have often felt that it was
no small destiny if that is the word-no small reward or solace-rather, to have
yielded to God an unspotted Angel and to feel for ever that so large a portion
of one’s life already lives eternally in Heaven.
I am thankful that I saw what that blessed little one was
to you-altho’ this makes me share your present pain more vividly. Ah me! If
when I parted with my little Juley on a sea voyage her empty garments were more
than I could bear to see, can I not understand what is and will be for ever
your aching memory-and ever increasing blank-I don’t think Time softens these losses-I am not tempted to
offer to you meaningless consolation-but I know out of my own heart what does
console-what does inspire-what does more than reconcile one so bereaved-and it
is this only certain truth that your child is not dead-Lost to sight for a
little time-‘Heaviness endureth for a night but joy cometh in the Moil-‘ you
will never see him a full grown man on Earth-you will meet him a full grown
Angel in Heaven if you will turn your full face of Love towards him even as you
always turned it when you heard his soft pattering footstep and felt his soft
balmy breath and if you will now let those little hands that still belong to
you help, by God’s bidding to open to you the golden gates of Eternal Life
wide-wide so that you his Father may like a King of Glory enter in & be at
rest an wear the crown of righteousness and redemption.
Every time you think of that child it will be a
prayer-every thought is a prayer-link prayer to prayer (with him) till prayer
becomes yr. Life with him-till Baby utterances have eternal meaning and he
teaches you as you used to teach him-because he has been the first perfected to
that perfectness you are both born unto-and both will attain for God so loved
you most tenderly to give you that precious Child and still more tenderly did
he love you when he removed it for a season to draw you all the nearer to Him
and Heaven-I believe all these things most deeply-More shame to me that I often
in conduct wander from the rooted belief I have-but God knows I believe it-and
God knows that at every conception as at every birth I prayed ardently for life
eternal for my offspring and every daily event that befalls every precious
child I have felt equally that they belong to God-and that I at best can do but
little for them if unaided by His mighty Power.
I have often lately
wondered why I held this present life so dear a thing for them & even now
if I did not pray perpetually that they might be granted strength & faith
to weather the storms of temptation and of trial I should I am quite sure
suffer as much in having, as you have suffered in losing a Child & who
knows what is reserved to a Parent who has children living of suffering for
them and in them-& with them yet I believe all is finally blessed so long
as we commend all to God.
It is because I love
you dear Halford and reverence you and honour you that I write thus in
confidence to you giving you the best of my Love the undying and unfading side
of our poor beating breaking bereaved hearts-We all have our losses &
cares-those of Earth weigh us down-those in Heaven will lift us up with Angels
Wings and bear us on high-above the storm. Your Babe was like a Cherub &
Seraph Babe-We did not see his Angel Wings but they were there and now the
divine Energies & Offices of Heaven are upon him and he is strong eno’ to
help you upwards all those who so devotedly loved him and so deeply grieve for
him-
His sweet mother
& my best beloved Mia know what I feel with my Mother Heart-
May God restore
their strength which is at a low ebb with both I too well know.
Yours in perfect
sympathy pity-tenderness and sadness of love
Julia Margaret Cameron
(A letter from Julia Margaret Cameron to H.H. Vaughan, 5
April 1859).
6 comments:
I am so glad you are sharing these letters from Julia Margaret Cameron, such a fascinating woman! What a sad letter indeed.
Hi Pamela,
Such a sad letter but it gives a rare glimpse into Julia Margaret Cameron's psyche. Thanks so much for stopping by.
Indeed a sad letter. Lovely photographs. Thank you for sharing Kimberly.
Hi Kevin,
I am just glad there are photographs to share along with this letter. Thanks for commenting.
It sounds like they must have had a son who died perhaps shortly after birth. If he died in 59, I think there would not have been any requirement to mention him in the census in 61? It is touching to see what a strong faith Julia Margaret Cameron had. I do find it slightly strange that she wrote the letter to Henry alone and it hardly mentions Mia or Adeline. I suppose she must have written to all 3 and this is the only one that survived? You would have expected her to write to her niece before she wrote to her niece's husband. Thanks for this beautiful and touching piece.
Hi WoofWoof,
I tend to agree with you about a baby dieing. I just wish there would have been a record of it. Good point about the letter. A few museums have her family letters archived. Who knows what remains unshared with the world! Thanks so much for your thoughts and for stopping by.
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