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Birth of Thomas
Babington Macaulay by Richard Cavendish
October 25th, 1800The
most famous English historian of his time was born, to his lasting satisfaction,
on St Crispin's Day - the anniversary of Henry
V's victory at Agincourt
- at Rothley Temple, the country mansion of Thomas Babington, his Aunt Jean's
husband and a friend of William Wilberforce. A sixteenth-century Babington had
conspired against Elizabeth I and paid for it with his life, and the house boasts
a memorial to Macaulay, as well as a thirteenth-century chapel of the Knights
Templar.
The Macaulays were Scottish, high-minded and exceedingly numerous.
The boy's grandfather John Macaulay, a minister in the Western Isles and the Highlands,
was himself one of a brood of fourteen and had twelve children by his Campbell
wife. His third son, Zachary Macaulay, would have nine surviving children of his
own. Sent to Jamaica as a teenager, Zachary was horrified by slavery and would
spend his life working for its suppression and causes which included missionary
work, the creation of London University and the Society for the Suppression of
Vice.
In his early thirties, at the time of his eldest son's birth, Zachary
was secretary to the Sierra Leone Company, founded by Wilberforce to create a
West African colony for freed slaves. He had been married for a little over a
year to Selina Mills, the pretty daughter of a Quaker bookseller in Bristol. Characteristically,
when he complimented Selina on how attractively she dressed, he hastened to assure
her that he admired her outfits only as evidence of her thoroughly well-ordered
mind. Selina Macaulay was almost as devout and earnest as her husband and when
her new-born child was put in her arms, she immediately recited an improving hymn
by Isaac Watts. Lord Macaulay used to say that he got his sense of humour from
her side of the family.
The baby, Tom, proved to be a prodigious infant,
whose precocity and soft-heartedness convinced his mother that he must be destined
for an early death. Uninterested in toys, he was reading avidly by the age of
three, and he already talked like a book. When hot coffee was accidentally spilled
on his legs and a kindly woman asked if he was all right, he replied, 'Thank you,
madam, the agony is abated.' He grew up in comfortable circumstances in the family's
South London home at 5, The Pavement (the house has a blue plaque today and there
is a Macaulay Road nearby) on the edge of Clapham Common, where the little boy
went roaming with his nurse and imagined himself in the Alps or beholding Mount
Sinai. Sent to a local day-school, at seven he wrote a complete history of the
world. At eight he penned an essay intended to convert the people of far-off Malabar
to Christianity and he was soon turning out quantities of hymns and poems - the
forerunners of his Lays of Ancient Rome.
Packed off to a boarding
school of impeccable Evangelical correctness near Cambridge in 1812, Tom suffered
badly from home-sickness. His loud voice and over-confident manner attracted criticism
and his total inability to play any species of game was against him, but the other
boys seem to have taken a certain amused pride in him as a peculiar specimen.
In 1818 he went up to Trinity College, Cambridge, where he covered himself in
glory. In the future lay a seat in the House of Commons, heavyweight book reviewing,
important work in India and a place in the Cabinet before he was forty. It was
not until his late thirties, when his father died, that he would settle down to
work on his History of England,
which would make his name known in every literate household in the English-speaking
world and bring him the country's first literary peerage. ©
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