

c AND ORGANIST AT BATH 



this tour and concert Her brother William aeenm to 



have at that tiino fallen enti life, and 



to ba education, to become A houflo- 



hoi. I .Irudgeand the alav<- -.f I.-T I .other Jacob. Bat 



itihed a waa 



y depressing, acorned to be the one or 



In fit.- l "..! ,;, Will 



he became a teach, r 



nf til,- <k-t.i-,.n Chapel v yean after, 



obacurity again settle** on ires. All 



that Caroline recordji IB that Jacob joint <! hi.s brother 



tii and showed the same flightinesa of dispoai- 



liv\ ioiisly s,-.-n in his 



cham To apeak of William as w. 11 known in Un- 



it h waa then famous, or among 

 tii-- learned men and physicians hy whom the town 

 waa frequented, IB to people ; 



of wh.it wo think should liave been hut waa not 1I<- 

 waalittl.- known there or elsewhere, till he took the 



1 by storm . hut at tint jn-ri.*.! , \, nt> wen t. 

 place in Bath which help* 

 tain <>f 'l.iiknesa off his lii',- in 1772. He was 



eara of age. 



musical director of Bnth in those days waa 

 LiinVy, whose daughter Eliza) the age of twelve 



years, waa brought forward publicly at the Rooms, 

 where she so charmed the company !.\- h< r taste and 

 execution" as a singer, that she at once received the 

 name of the Siren. Two years later she got a more 

 attractive name, and waa called the Angel. 1 1 

 took place in the very year Herschel came to Bath. 

 ! o she was seventeen she had turned the heads 



