seemed to have the same interest. Her salary, originally
five pounds a week, was raised to twenty pounds before the end of the season, and her first benefit realised eight hundred pounds.
On this latter occasion she addressed a letter to the public:—
"Mrs. Siddons would not have remained so long
without expressing the high sense she had of the great
honours done her at her late benefit, but that, after
repeated trials, she could not find words adequate to
her feelings, and she must at present be content with
the plain language of a grateful mind; that her heart
thanks all her benefactors for the distinguished and,
she fears, too partial encouragement which they bestowed
on this occasion. She is told that the splendid
appearance on that night, and the emoluments arising
from it, exceed anything ever recorded on a similar
account in the annals of the English stage; but she
has not the vanity to imagine that this arose from
any superiority over many of her predecessors or
some of her contemporaries. She attributes it wholly
to that liberality of sentiment which distinguishes
the inhabitants of this great metropolis from those
of any other in the world. They know her story—they
know that for many years, by a strange fatality,
she was confined to move in a narrow sphere, in which
the rewards attendant on her labours were proportionally
small. With a generosity unexampled, they
proposed at once to balance the account, and pay off
the arrears due, according to the rate, the too partial
rate, at which they valued her talents. She knows
the danger arising from extraordinary and unmerited
favours, and will carefully guard against any approach
of pride, too often their attendant. Happy shall she