Muller and Kinloch meeting for the first time
Lowkey didn't know what to do for the last panel lol
Uhm...more Mulloch
Ha. Imagine not having a mom. Could never be me
And uh...more mulloch...but this time Bonstetten is there too :)
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Muller and Kinloch meeting for the first time
Lowkey didn't know what to do for the last panel lol
Uhm...more Mulloch
Ha. Imagine not having a mom. Could never be me
And uh...more mulloch...but this time Bonstetten is there too :)
for full transparency, I saw this post made by @bludmd23 and I had the blinding desire to draw my own blorbos being pat, I just HAD to
Francis Kinloch, the scion and heir of a leading Carolina family, was like many of his class sent to England for his schooling. After Eton he went to Geneva for further education. There he found a small group of young Charleston aristocrats. He also formed intense friendships with the deist philosopher Claude Bonnet and especially with his tutor, the historian Johannes von Müller. After leaving Geneva, Kinloch wrote frequent, affectionate, frank, and discursive letters to Müller all his life, and it is from these letters that we know most about his own views and tastes. Clever and cosmopolitan and something of a dilettante, Kinloch found himself in London during the early years of the Revolutionary War. Though he was heir to a substantial estate at home, he could get only limited funds from his London merchant, so he tried hard to get an appointment from Lord North. He moved in London partly in a society of American exiles and had connections on both sides of the struggle. He also enjoyed fully the gaieties of the city. "I have been rather unchaste since my arrival. I am however very prudent, & can I think ensure Noses to my posterity. …"
From The Enlightenment in America by Henry F. May
My immediate inclination had been to interpret "Noses" in the euphemistic way, but substituting "penises" into the sentence really doesn't make much sense. The best interpretation that I could come up with is that Kinloch was literally referring to noses - particularly to the fact that that syphilis could destroy the cartilage of the nose. He was likely being careful about the number or type of sexual partners he had so that he could avoid contracting or spreading the disease.
This quotation also gives a little bit more info on the Kinloch-Lord North situation. I have more to discuss about that based on some findings from a Johannes von Müller biography - it will be in another post.
Francis Kinloch in Müller's letters to his family
These extracts are from Johannes von Müller: Sämmtliche Werke, volume 7 (1810).
My translations here, original German and French transcriptions below the cut. I have added some paragraph breaks for legibility.
From the introductory Lebensgeschichte, von ihm selbst beschrieben (Biography, as described by himself)
Meanwhile, at the home of Charles Bonnet, for whom and whose wife he [Müller] developed the tender attachment of a son and who was treated as such by them, he met a young man from South Carolina, Francis Kinloch. He had an extraordinary thirst for knowledge, a great fire, many fine qualities and very pleasant morals.
They determined a plan to live together; every day, for several hours in the morning, they would study Tacitus and Montesquieu, or any other authors found worthy enough to stand beside them, and in the rest of the time, the one friend would read Blackstone and other English or American books, and the other would study Swiss documents, and on top of that, between spending time in the company of Bonnet and others, they would alternate between Roman, French and English classics.
Tronchin was too much Müller’s friend to keep him from this plan, and even more pleased was Kinloch’s guardian, Thomas Boone - the former governor of South Carolina, and at the time the director of the large London Custom-house, a man in whom, in thirty years of acquaintance, Müller never found fault, though he always found exemplary reason, firmness and generosity.
The friends lived for a year and a half in a modest country house on the hill of Chambeisy, surrounded by the highest mountains in the old world, the majesty of Lac Leman*, the incomparable culture of the shore, enjoying the masterworks of the human spirit, in daily association with Bonnet, but also with Voltaire, and brought together for a while with Mr Alleyne Fitzherbert, who was already developing the talents with which he later shone as Lord St Helens. After that, the storms of the North American revolution tore them apart.
*Also known as Lake Geneva.
Undated, 1775, Müller to his sister
After this little introduction, I ask you to take a map of the Geneva region to hand. Here, on the Swiss side of the lake on the border of Geneva on French land, lies the town of Chambesis – on a hill that overlooks the lake, all of the estates, the entire republic and the glaciers. Now take the map of America. Here is Charlestown, the capital of Carolina. And here on the third map is Scotland; in the middle of which lives an ancient family called Kinloch; one of these left Europe at the time of the civil war of the Stuart kings, and found with many others there a beautiful country and freedom. One of these Kinlochs now commands 1200 negroes, and is a gentleman of great standing and much greater spirit and character; he is twenty years old.
He came to Geneva; in the last 5 to 6 months, we have seen each other for 23 hours each day and read the most profound writers together. Through this, we got to know and love each other’s characters.
Mr Kinloch has rented a small country house with six rooms in Chambesis, and is paying 12 new Louis d’or a month for this and table, breakfast and supper, for the next five summer months. In this solitude, he wants to study. He has such a noble character that he is highly estimated by everyone. Lord North, the prime minister of the king of England, is very fond of him; K risked his life for his son and saved him from mortal danger.
He has invited me to move in with him, and to spend this summer in the lap of scholarship and friendship. We would read and study together, occasionally go into the mountains, occasionally to Pays de Vaud. [...] And [Tronchin*], who loves me, and wants to see and promote my happiness, gave his permission, and his two children will spend this half of the year in a boarding house in the city and learn there. Thus, Mr Tronchin and they and I and Nassau and Bonnet and Kinloch are all content, and I will still see Mr Tronchin at Bessinge once every eight days.
*Müller was employed as a tutor to Tronchin’s two young children at the time.
Undated, 1775, Tronchin to Müller’s father
Have no concern, sir, about your son; everybody loves him, he is lively and good, his conduct has always been very wise, and all of our men of letters would vouch for him. The choice that he makes, to go and live with Mr Kinlock [sic] shall not, I hope, be without utility for him. He is a young man who has lived here for a long time, and who is generally and singularly esteemed both by his compatriots and by the Genevese, whether for his morals or for his character. The desire that he has to benefit from your son’s knowledge must be a guarantee of what I have told you.
Charles Bonnet was a naturalist and philosophical writer, responsible for coining the term phyllotaxis to describe the arrangement of leaves on a plant. A condition, Charles Bonnet Syndrome was dubbed after his namesake, in which he described in 1760.
Charles Bonnet was a naturalist and philosophical writer, responsible for coining the term phyllotaxis to describe the arrangement of leaves on a plant. A condition, Charles Bonnet Syndrome was dubbed after his namesake, in which he described in 1760.
The year and a half that followed Müller's departure from the Tronchin family was determined by his friendship and his life with the young American Francis Kinloch. The then twenty-year-old youth came from a family that emigrated from Scotland to North America during the Stuart reign and was wealthy in Charlestown in Carolina, where Francis' mother and siblings still lived. On the advice of his guardian, the former English governor of Carolina, Thomas Boone, who later became director of the Customhouse in London, he went to Europe at the age of 13 to receive his education there and one day in England to be able to enter government service. For a year and a half he had been living in Geneva, where he soon became popular with everyone through his eager pursuit of perfection, his modesty and amiability. The news that was just then reaching Europe by sea of the beginning of unrest in the English colonies of North America aroused increased interest in Geneva for the Son of the West. Müller got to know him in Bonnet's hospitable house, and the noble couple at Genthod were heartily pleased that the two young men had bonded so quickly and intimately with each other. They were soon treated like sons of the house - "good day, my children, love your parents of Genthod as they love you," wrote Madame Bonnet to them. By the end of 1774, they were already meeting four or five times a week to read together. Tacitus, Montesquieu and Pope initially occupied them. Müller attached particular importance to this acquaintance because he was able to practice the English language. Kinloch undertook real speaking exercises with him. Müller praised his new friend's fiery, sharp mind, his extraordinary curiosity, his natural and engaging politeness that endeared him to men and women. "He is the noblest, kindest and most virtuous youth; even his faults are amiable". Kinloch had explained to him that it would take at least years of observation before he would call an acquaintance a friend; but after a short time he addressed his letters to Müller, "to the beloved of my heart".
From Johannes von Müller, 1752-1809, Volume 1 by Karl Henking
The original text was in German/French and was translated with Google Translate.
When he [Kinloch] noticed that his friend's [Müller's] stay in Tronchin's house had become unpleasant, he offered to live with him for an indefinite period of time in order to be able to make the most of the instructive interaction with his well-read and intelligent friend. Müller's closest friends, Bonstetten, Bonnet, even Tronchin, approved the idea, and so the two young men, brought together by mutual inclination and common striving, began their summer plan on May 1, 1775. Kinloch had rented a small country house with six rooms in the village of Chambésy on the right bank of Lake Geneva, an easy hour from the city, halfway between Geneva and Versoix, one of the advantages of which was its short distance from Bonnet's estate. In addition, all the English people with whom Müller liked to socialize so much lived on this side of the lake. He felt very happy here for a long time. He wrote to Captain Peyer about the timing of the summer plan: "At 5 o'clock my friend rides into town and listens to physics. After I have worked on Swiss history, we have our breakfast at 8 a.m., during which we read Mr. Bonstetten's letters or a pleasant French writer. At 9 a.m. we study the spirit of the laws together. From 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. my friend deals with English laws, I study either national history or other sciences. I'm so happy with it that I haven't read a book about it for many months, but only unprinted documents about it. At 1 o'clock we almost always read Tacitum, the Roman Montesquieu. We eat at 2 o'clock. At 3 o'clock we read or walk or entertain or visit until 9 o'clock, when we dine at night. Busy with perfecting ourselves on both sides, we are each other's keen censors, correcting as much the mistakes we make in society and manners as those we make in reasoning. We have also invented certain words which we alone understand and which we use as a warning to one another when we notice that one of our discourses is not pleasant enough for those we deal with. If science, friendship, health, pure air, good table, good company and good conscience, not lacking funds, are the main elements of human happiness, then I am currently enjoying the most perfect one and all the more fondly because Kinloch shares them with me."
From Johannes von Müller, 1752-1809, Volume 1 by Karl Henking
The original text was in German/French/Latin and was translated with Google Translate (original below).
The fact that Kinloch and Müller developed secret code words is interesting. It sounds like they used it to discreetly correct or advise each other when in the company of others, but I wonder if they ever used it to navigate discussions of sexuality.
Who doesn't love some healthy background practice? I've been more than exhausted with never being fully able to capture a good scene or a scenario to put my characters in so I thought why not change that! So expect these little backgrounds to show up more often, I think I got a much better groove on it now