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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63204 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63204)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Biographical Notices of the Portraits at
-Hinchingbrook, by Mary Louisa Boyle
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Biographical Notices of the Portraits at Hinchingbrook
-
-Author: Mary Louisa Boyle
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2020 [EBook #63204]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES--PORTRAITS HINCHINGBROOK ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Fay Dunn and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
-images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
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-
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-
-
-
- _BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES_
- OF THE
- Portraits at Hinchingbrook:
-
- BY
- MARY L. BOYLE.
-
- _1876._
-
- LONDON:
- PRINTED AT THE VICTORIA PRESS, PRAED STREET, W.
- (OFFICE FOR THE EMPLOYMENT OF WOMEN.)
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- JOHN WILLIAM,
-
- SEVENTH EARL OF SANDWICH,
-
- THESE SKETCHES ARE INSCRIBED BY HIS FAITHFUL KINSWOMAN,
-
- MARY LOUISA BOYLE.
-
- MDCCCLXXVI.
-
-In the notices of the more celebrated characters in this Catalogue, it
-will be understood that historical and well-known events (which will be
-found in the annals of England), have been made purposely, to give way to
-details of a more domestic nature.
-
-
-
-
-UPSTAIRS-CORRIDOR, STAIRCASE, AND ADJOINING ROOMS.
-
-
-_Edward, First Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY FELIZIANO.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In a long black doublet, with the Star of the Garter, and
- the Jewel given him by the King of Sweden, over a long white
- waistcoat with innumerable buttons and gold embroidery; deep
- ruffles; holds his hat in one hand, the other rests on his hip.
- Painted during his Embassy in Spain.)
-
- Lord Sandwich is here much altered in appearance from his
- former portraits, but Pepys tells us he wore his beard in the
- Spanish fashion on his return from his Embassy; and a French
- correspondent about this time says: “Le Comte de Sandwich étoit
- bien fort, l’air doux, assez d’embonpoint, qui ne commençoit de
- l’incommoder qu’après son retour de l’Espagne.”
-
-Born, 1623. Died, 1672.—The second son of Sir Sidney Montagu, by Paulina,
-daughter of John Pepys, of Cottenham, near Cambridge. Sidney was the
-seventh son of Sir Edward Montagu, and brother to the first Lord Montagu
-of Boughton, was Groom of the Bedchamber to James I., and Master of
-Requests in the succeeding reign; sat for Huntingdon, and in 1640 was
-expelled the House for declining to subscribe to an oath framed by the
-Commons, “that they would live and die with their General, the Earl of
-Essex.” Montagu said he would not swear to live with Essex, as being an
-old man he would probably die before him, neither would he swear to die
-with him, as the Earl was in arms against the King, which he (Sidney) did
-not know how to separate from treason. For this boldness he was expelled
-the House by a majority of three, and sent prisoner to the Tower, where
-he remained a fortnight. Thus did he prove his loyalty, though he had
-nobly withstood on the other hand those measures which he considered
-detrimental to the liberties of the subject. He had two sons, and a
-daughter, married to Sir Gilbert Puckering of Tichmarch, in the County
-of Hunts. His eldest son Henry was drowned through the carelessness of
-a nurse, when only three years of age: his second son Edward became his
-heir; who married before he was twenty, Jemima, daughter of John, Lord
-Crewe of Stene, a family that sided with the Parliament.
-
-Clarendon tells us, that Sir Sidney Montagu never swerved from his
-allegiance; but his son being emancipated from his father’s control when
-very young, and married into a family which “trod awry,” was won over
-by the “caresses” of Cromwell to take command in his army, when new
-modelled by Fairfax, Montagu being then little more than twenty years of
-age. Indeed, when only eighteen he had already raised a regiment, and
-distinguished himself at its head in several actions, to wit; Lincoln,
-Marston Moor, and York; and the following year at Naseby, Bridgewater,
-and Bristol; his conduct at the storming of which last named town was
-reported to Parliament with the highest encomiums, not only for his
-gallantry, but for the successful manner in which he carried on the
-negociations with Prince Rupert. But notwithstanding Montagu’s military
-zeal, he opposed the undue influence of the army in the House of Commons,
-especially in their bringing about the seclusion of eleven members, and
-he formed and kept his resolution not to resume his seat (for Huntingdon)
-until the members were restored. In spite of this independent conduct, he
-was appointed (on the elevation of Cromwell to the Protectorate) one of
-the Supreme Council of Fifteen—and he only then in the twenty-fifth year
-of his age; and shortly afterwards he became Desborough’s colleague in
-the office of High Admiral.
-
-In 1656 he accompanied the gallant Blake to the Mediterranean, on whose
-death he succeeded to the sole command of the fleet, in the exercise
-of which, says Lord Clarendon, “he was discreet and successful.” But
-the death of Oliver Cromwell changed the whole face of affairs, and
-Montagu, who had been on a mission to carry on diplomatic negociations
-with Sweden and Denmark, returned from Copenhagen (without orders),
-resigned his command, and retired for a short time into the country. On
-the reinstalment of the secluded members, he was sworn Privy Councillor,
-and again appointed Admiral of the Fleet (or as Pepys has it, “one
-of the generals at sea”), conjointly with Monk, who was minded, as
-Montagu says, “to get into the saddle,” and would not be left out in
-anything; but Monk was to remain on shore, and Montagu to put to sea, an
-arrangement at which the latter did not cavil.
-
-A reaction of loyalty had set in lately; affairs were in a doubtful
-state; negociations were set on foot to recall Charles; the King’s health
-was drunk openly, whereas before, it had only been done in private, and
-Montagu became most zealous in the royal cause, although, as he told
-his kinsman Pepys, “he did not believe if the Protector [Richard] were
-brought in again, he would last long, neither the King himself, (although
-he believes he will come in), unless he behaves himself very soberly
-and well.” Indeed, before he embarked, Montagu had a conversation with
-Richard Cromwell in which he told him roundly that he would rather find
-him (on his return from sea) in his grave, than hatching mischief; upon
-which that mild man replied that he would do “whatever Montagu, Broghill
-(afterwards Earl of Orrery) and Monk would have him.”
-
-We now quote constantly from Samuel Pepys, (Montagu’s kinsman and
-“Boswell”) who had been appointed his secretary, and he says: “Yesterday
-there were bonfires, and people calling aloud ‘God bless King Charles
-the Second.’” While the fleet was fitting out, Clarendon records that
-Montagu sent over his cousin to the King in Holland, to say that as soon
-as the ships were ready, he would be on board and prepared to receive and
-obey His Majesty’s commands. He also sent word what officers he trusted,
-which he suspected, etc., and desired to know privately if Charles had
-faith in Monk; this was no small inconvenience to the King, seeing he was
-debarred from communicating to either the trust he had in both, which
-might have facilitated their designs. Pepys accompanied his patron on
-board the “Nazeby,” which the youthful Admiral had already commanded with
-honour, and for which ship “my Lord” (for so Pepys prematurely designated
-his noble kinsman) “discovered in his discourse a great deal of love.”
-Again, “a messenger from London brought letters which will make May-day
-1660, remembered as the happiest May-day in England for many years. In
-the House of Parliament a letter from the King had been read, during
-which time the Members remained uncovered, and an answer of thanks had
-been returned to His Majesty’s gracious communication, and better still
-a supply of £50,000 unanimously granted to him. Then the City of London
-made a declaration that they would have no other Government than King,
-Lords, and Commons, and ‘both Houses of Parliament did concur in the
-same.’ My Lord told me plainly that he thought the King would carry it,
-and that he did think himself happy that he was now at sea, as well for
-his own sake as that he thought he could do his country some service in
-keeping things quiet.” About this time, Montagu was elected M.P. for
-Dover. May 3rd, 1660, a letter and declaration were received on board the
-“Nazeby” from His Majesty, offering “grace” under certain conditions, and
-stating the royal wishes and requirements; upon which Admiral Montagu
-called a Council of War, and dictated to his secretary the form of a vote
-which was then read and passed unanimously. Afterwards Pepys accompanied
-“my Lord” to the quarter-deck, and there read the declaration to the
-ship’s company amid the loud cheers and “God bless King Charles!” of the
-seamen. After a merry dinner, Pepys took boat and visited every ship in
-the fleet to make known the royal message, and doubtless it was as he
-said, “a brave sight and pleasant withal” to be received with “respect
-and honour” and to bring “joy to all men.” On his return to the “Nazeby,”
-Montagu was much pleased to hear the fleet received the communication
-from the King with a transport of joy, and he showed his secretary two
-private letters that he had received from Charles, and the Duke of York,
-couched in the most friendly language.
-
-Montagu had now indeed, as Clarendon observes, betaken himself most
-generously to the King’s service. He was occasionally much tried by the
-over-interference of his colleague, Monk, “yet was he willing to do him
-all the honour in the world,” and let him have all the honour of doing
-the business, though “he will many times express his thoughts of Monk
-being a thick-skulled fool.” But Monk was most influential, and Montagu,
-with his wonted magnanimity, sacrificed his own pride to advance the
-cause of his royal master, and the prosperity of his country. So wise,
-judicious, and temperate was he, though still young.
-
-He dearly loved his profession, and seemed to take a pride and pleasure
-in adorning and ornamenting the vessels under his command. “My Lord
-went about to-day to see what alterations were to be made in the armes
-and flags, and did give me orders to write for silk flags and scarlet
-waist-clothes (to be hung round the hull of the ship to protect the men
-in action) for a rich barge, a noise of trumpets, and a set of fiddlers.
-He oftentimes played himself on the guitar with much contentment,” and
-appears to have been as hospitable in his house of wooden walls, as at
-his fine seat of Hinchingbrook, “receiving the gentlemen who visited him
-with great civility. Frequent messengers from and to the King at Breda,
-and divers bearing letters from the Houses of Parliament. On the 9th
-of May, a certain noble from the House of Lords, to desire my Lord to
-provide ships for the transport of the Commissioners to His Majesty, who
-had just been proclaimed in London with great pomp. On the same day the
-Admiral received his orders to sail presently for the King, a command
-which he obeyed with alacrity, and of which he was very glad.”
-
-On arriving at the Hague they anchored before that “most neat place
-in all respects,” where “my Lord” kissed by proxy the hands of the
-Queen of Bohemia, and the Prince of Orange, sending a deputation on
-shore including his secretary and youthful son. The Prince of Orange
-himself, is a “pretty boy.” In the evening “my Lord showed me his fine
-cloaths, which are as brave as gold and silver can make them.” His royal
-master appears to have been in a different plight and badly off both
-for “cloaths” and gold and silver too, and when he received a supply
-of both his Majesty was so much overjoyed that he called the Princess
-Royal and the Duke of York to inspect the treasures, as they lay in the
-portmanteau. The Duke of York was now named High Admiral, and visited
-the “Nazeby,” (where he was received with due honour), accompanied by
-the Duke of Gloucester. On the 23rd, the King came off from shore, and
-entering Montagu’s boat (he having gone off to meet his Majesty), “did
-kiss my Lord most affectionately.” The two Dukes, the Queen of Bohemia,
-the Princess Royal, and the Prince of Orange accompanied Charles in his
-visit to the “Nazeby,” a proud day for Samuel Pepys as well as for the
-commander; and the “Nazeby” was re-christened “Charles” by her royal
-Sponsor; and no wonder, for the first name could be in no ways pleasing
-to any of the parties concerned. And so they set sail for England, “his
-Majesty walking up and down the quarter-deck, and telling mightily
-interesting stories of his escape from Worcester, and other adventures.”
-At Dover the King was received by General Monk with great acclamations,
-but Montagu remained in his barge, “transported with joy that he had done
-all this without any the least blur or obstruction in the world.” Two
-days afterwards he received the Order of the Garter, with which he was
-invested on shipboard; the like honour being conferred on General Monk,
-a rare occurrence, as it was seldom given to any one beneath the rank of
-Earl.
-
-On the Admiral’s arrival in London, he received the Office of the Great
-Wardrobe, and had the thanks of Parliament for his services and loyalty.
-Pepys describes with much perspicuity the constant labours in which he
-and his patron were engaged at the Admiralty, showing that habits of
-business were a part of this remarkable man’s qualifications, and that in
-whatever capacity he acted, it was done zealously and diligently. In July
-1660, he was raised to the Peerage, by the titles Baron of St. Neots,
-Viscount Hinchingbrook, and Earl of Sandwich.
-
-He was very merry at the expense of his matter-of-fact secretary when he
-dined at Whitehall soon after, and “my Lord talked very high how he would
-have a French cook, and a Master of Horse, and his Lady and child to wear
-black patches (which methought strange), and when my Lady said she would
-get a good merchant for her daughter ‘Jem,’ [afterwards Lady Carteret],
-he said he would rather see her with a pedlar’s pack at her back, than to
-marry a citizen. But my Lord is become quite a courtier.”
-
-At the coronation of Charles II. my Lord carried the staff of St.
-Edward, and when he accompanied the King from the Tower to Whitehall,
-even in “a show so glorious with gold and silver that we were not able to
-look at it, Lord Sandwich’s embroidery and diamonds were not ordinary;”
-and afterwards “he talked to me of his coat, which was made in France,
-and cost £200.” The prudent Pepys occasionally regrets in his patron a
-magnificence and generosity pushed to extravagance, which indeed caused
-great anxiety and trouble at different times, not only to himself but to
-his good wife and housewife, Jemima, and his trusty secretary. Likewise
-the noble Lord himself confessed, and lamented a taste for card playing.
-
-The marriage of Charles II. with Katherine, daughter of the King of
-Portugal, being now agreed on, the King chose Lord Sandwich to be his
-proxy on the occasion, and to fetch over the new Queen from Lisbon,
-proceeding also to Algiers to settle affairs there. On arriving at
-Lisbon, Lord Sandwich detached Sir John Lawson, and ordered him to the
-Mediterranean to curb the insolence of the Corsairs, after which he
-himself proceeded to Tangiers, where he did some execution on the Turks,
-and managed his negociations so well, that the place was given up to him
-by the Portuguese, and Lord Peterborough was appointed Governor. Pains
-were afterwards taken to preserve the fortress, and a fine mole built:
-but in 1683, the King sent Lord Dartmouth to bring home the troops and
-destroy the work, and it fell into the hands of the Moors. There still
-exists a gate named after Lord Sandwich. “When at Lisbon my Lord sent
-over presents of mellons and rare grapes to his Countess in London; the
-grapes so fine that Mistress Pepys packed some up in a basket to send to
-the King’s Majesty.” Lady Sandwich also received a civet cat, parrot,
-apes, and many other eccentric proofs of her Lord’s remembrance, which
-she showed to Mr. Pepys when he dined with her at the Wardrobe.
-
-The ambassador had some trouble with the matrimonial negociations, and
-“‘great clashing’ with the Portuguese Council, before he could get the
-portion paid. But the King of Portugall is a very foole almost, and his
-mother do all, and he is a poore prince.” The Queen was a great recluse
-on board and would never come on deck, but sent for Lord Sandwich’s
-“musique,” [he loved a band on board his vessel] and would sit within
-her cabin listening to it. Pepys did not admire the ladies her Majesty
-brought over, thought their farthingales a strange dress, and regrets
-that they have learned to kiss, and look up and down freely, already
-forgetting the recluse practice of their country. Queen Katherine gave no
-rewards to any of the captains or officers, save to “my Lord,” but that
-was an honourable present, a bag of gold worth £1400.
-
-In the same year, 1662, “when the Duke of York went over to fetch the
-Queen Mother Henrietta Maria, they fell into foul weather and lost their
-cables, sayles and masts, but Mr. Coventry writes me word they are safe.
-Only my Lord Sandwich, who went before in the King’s yacht, they know
-not what is become of him;” which troubles his poor secretary much,
-“and there is great talk he is lost, but I trust in God the contrary.”
-A watery grave, indeed, awaited him, but after a nobler fashion. “He
-carried himself bravely in danger while my Lord Crofts did cry.”
-
-The same faithful chronicler, although uneasy at his Lord’s predilection
-for play, and for the little regret he evinced at losing £50 to the King
-at my Lady Castlemaine’s, is never tired of extolling his magnanimity
-and forbearance, especially in the matter of his kinsman, Mr. Edward
-Montagu, with whom he had altercations, and “who did revile him to the
-King,” as was supposed; but “my Lord,” pitied and forgave him. He was an
-ill-conditioned man, and got into great disfavour at Court, “through his
-pride and affecting to be great with the Queen.” In 1663, my Lord leased
-a house in Lincoln’s Inn Fields for £250 per annum. He determined to go
-to sea once more, and confides to Pepys the state of his finances, having
-£8000 a year, and being in debt £10,000; but there is much due to him
-from the Wardrobe. In the middle of this discourse Lady Crewe came in to
-inform his Lordship another son was born to him, upon which the devout
-Samuel remarks, “May God send my Lord to study the laying up something
-for it.”
-
-In the latter days of July 1664, our gallant sailor once more put to sea.
-The fleet in which he served under the Duke of York was most successful,
-striking such terror on the coast of Holland that the Dutch Admiral was
-afraid to venture out. There was also great success with his fleet in the
-Goree, and 150 ships of the Bordeaux fleet laden with wine brandy, etc.,
-were brought into our ports. In the meantime there were all manner of
-Cabals at home, not only ignoring Lord Sandwich’s prowess, but impugning
-his courage and disinterestedness. Pepys is much vexed with the silence
-maintained on my Lord’s account as regards some of those grand naval
-victories “to set up the Duke and the Prince, [Rupert] but Mr. Coventry
-did declare that Lord Sandwich, both in his councils and personal
-service, had done honourably and serviceably.”
-
-Jealous of his fame at sea and his favour at court, the Admiral’s
-enemies, with Monk at their head, sought for some pretext to undermine
-his prosperity, and they hit on the following. It appeared that it was
-contrary to the strict regulations of the Admiralty that Bulk, as it was
-called, should be broken into until the captured vessels were brought
-into port. Now in a noble engagement with the Dutch, Sandwich, Admiral
-of the Blue Squadron, broke through the enemy’s line, being the first
-who practised that bold expedient: and he, willing to reward his seamen
-for their gallant conduct in the action, gave them some portion of the
-prize money, (which was their due) at sea, not waiting until they had
-come into port. This was turned to his disadvantage, and his adversaries
-even dared to insinuate that he had helped himself, as well as his crew.
-But this accusation was too barefaced, and the King stood by him in these
-difficult times. Charles II. has often been accused of ingratitude, but
-at least he never forgot his obligations to, or his personal friendship
-for, Lord Sandwich, although His Majesty’s unconquerable indolence
-prevented his influence being as great and decisive as might have been
-expected in the Monarch of the Realm.
-
-In the intervals of his employment, Lord Sandwich, who was the fondest of
-fathers, came up to London frequently to settle the preliminaries of his
-daughter Jemima’s marriage to the son of Sir George Carteret, an alliance
-which gave great satisfaction to both families, and the negociations for
-which were carried on by the indefatigable Pepys. Indeed it was a good
-thing at that moment to find any cause for rejoicing, as our Diarist’s
-pages are now full of the record of calamities, caused by the Plague then
-raging—“no boats on the river, the grass growing up and down Whitehall;
-all the people panic stricken, and flying from one place to the other for
-safety”—with innumerable ghastly records of that terrible time.
-
-Lord Sandwich was appointed Ambassador Extraordinary to the Court of
-Madrid, to mediate a Treaty of Peace between Spain and Portugal. After
-some conference with the Queen-Regent Mariana, he prevailed with her to
-acknowledge the King of Portugal, and to agree that the King of England
-should be Mediator to the Peace. For this purpose he left Madrid and
-arrived at Lisbon, January 22, 1667. The Peace was concluded in the most
-satisfactory manner, and the King and the Duke of York wrote Sandwich
-autograph letters of thanks and commendation. He returned to Spain to
-take leave of the Queen-Mother, who was most friendly and grateful to the
-English Envoy, and presented him with full length portraits of herself
-and her son, the Child-King, painted, says Lord Sandwich, “by her Court
-painter, Don Sebastian de Herrera, and most excellent likenesses.” The
-portrait of himself, of which we are now speaking, was also painted
-during his residence in Spain, and he pronounces that also an excellent
-resemblance.
-
-Lord Sandwich’s letters show his steady adherence to the Protestant
-religion, and to the interests of his country: likewise his excellent
-judgment. He was much opposed to the sale of Dunkirk, and strove to
-arrest the increasing power of France. In fact, the measures he advocated
-gained him the good will of the whole fleet and of the disinterested part
-of the nation, but gave great offence to the Duke of York. In the year
-1672, on a new war breaking out with the Dutch, Lord Sandwich served as
-Vice-Admiral under the man who had become his enemy. On May the 19th,
-the English fleet, which had been joined by a French squadron, came in
-sight of the Dutch fleet about eight leagues off Gunfleet, but being
-separated by hazy weather, the English stood into Southwold Bay, and
-there anchored till May 28th. Jollity and feasting seem to have been the
-order of the day on board the English ships, whereupon Lord Sandwich
-expostulated at such a critical moment, advising that they should stand
-out to sea, seeing they ran in danger of being surprised by the enemy,
-as the wind then stood. The Duke of York not only declined to follow
-this excellent advice, but is said to have returned an insolent and
-taunting reply. The next day proved the prudence of his wise Admiral’s
-advice, as the firing of the scout ship’s cannon gave notice of the
-enemy’s advance. Then the cables were cut and the vessels ranged in as
-good order as time would permit. Lord Sandwich, in his brave ship the
-“Royal James,” one hundred guns, sailed almost alone, and was the first
-to engage the enemy at seven o’clock in the morning: his Royal Highness
-was the next to fire, his vessel being becalmed; and this sudden calm,
-combined with the resolution and prompt bravery of Lord Sandwich, saved
-the fleet, otherwise endangered by the fireships. Interposing between
-his yet disordered squadron and the “Great Holland,” Captain Brakel,
-sixty guns, (which was followed by a fireship, and soon seconded by the
-whole squadron of Van Ghent,) the gallant Englishman defended himself
-for many hours, disabled several of the enemy’s men-of-war, and sank
-three of their fireships single handed! while Sir John Jordan, his own
-Vice-Admiral, and several others, instead of coming to the rescue of the
-Blue, sailed to the Red to assist the Duke of York. About noon, until
-which hour he stood at bay like the brave lion that he was, and after
-giving, as a Dutch historian has it, the utmost proofs of “unfortunate
-valour,” a fourth fireship, covered by the smoke of the enemy, grappled
-the “Royal James,” and set her in a blaze. Of one thousand men who formed
-his crew at the beginning of the action, six hundred were killed on the
-deck, (among whom was his son-in-law Carteret) many wounded, and only
-a few escaped. When Lord Sandwich saw it was all over with the “Royal
-James,” he ordered his first captain, Sir Richard Haddock, the officers,
-his own servants, etc., into the long-boat, peremptorily declining to
-leave the ship, in spite of every entreaty: and when the boat pushed off,
-the noble form of their commander still stood erect on the quarter-deck
-of the burning vessel. As Sir John Jordan, whose duty it was to relieve
-him, sailed past in the morning, Lord Sandwich had remarked to the
-byestanders that if they were not relieved they must fight it out to the
-last man, and bravely did he keep his word. Thus perished the man whose
-noble end to a noble life, called forth eulogiums from friend and foe.
-Bishop Parker, a partisan of the Duke of York, says: “He fell a sacrifice
-to the service of his country: endued with the virtues of Alcibiades,
-untainted by his vices; capable of any business; of high birth, full of
-wisdom, a great commander on sea and land; learned, eloquent, affable,
-liberal, magnificent.” The Duke of Buckingham, who was in the fleet says:
-“Lord Sandwich was such a loss, the Dutch might almost have called it a
-victory.” Gerard Brandt, a Dutchman, says: “He was valiant, intelligent,
-prudent, civil, obliging in word, and deed, and of great service to his
-King, not only in war, but in affairs of state and embassies.” We have
-seen by Pepys’ testimony, how beloved he was in domestic life.
-
-On the 10th of June, his body was found off Harwich, clad in the uniform
-he had worn with so much honour, still adorned with the insignia of
-England’s noblest Order, of which he had proved himself so worthy a
-knight, the gracious form, strange and almost miraculous as it may
-appear, unblemished in every part, save some marks of fire on the
-face and hands. Sir Charles Littleton, Governor of Harwich, received
-the remains, and took immediate care for the embalming and honourably
-disposing of the same, despatching the master of the vessel who had
-discovered the body to Whitehall, to present the George belonging to the
-late Earl, and to learn his Majesty’s pleasure, upon which the King,
-“out of his regard for the great deservings of the said Earl and his
-unexampled performances in this last act of his life, (and indeed it
-might have been said his life throughout) hath resolved to have the body
-brought to London, there at his charge to receive the rites of funeral
-due to his quality and merit.” The remains were conveyed to Deptford in
-one of the royal yachts, and there taken out, and a procession formed of
-barges, adorned with all the pomp of heraldry, the pride of pageantry,
-with nodding plumes of sable hue—attended by his eldest son as chief
-mourner, by eight Earls his peers, by the Lord Mayor and many companies
-of London, with drums all muffled, and trumpets, and minute guns
-discharged from the Tower and Whitehall: the body covered by a mourning
-pall of sumptuous velvet, beneath the shadow of the British Flag under
-which he had served so long and died so nobly. All that was mortal of
-Edward Montagu, first Earl of Sandwich, was interred on the north side of
-the altar in Henry VII.’s chapel in Westminster Abbey, on July 3rd, 1672.
-
-The compass which he wore during the last hours of his glorious life,
-and the Blue Ribbon which clung to the heart even when it beat no
-longer, still hang in the same frame with the miniature portraits of
-himself, and his wife, beside the spirited picture of his last action,
-by Vandevelde, in the ship-room at Hinchingbrook, where the hero’s name
-is still revered, and his memory cherished with honest pride by his
-descendants.
-
- “Pride in the just whose race is run,
- Whose memory shall endure,
- Binding the line from sire to son
- To keep the ’scutcheon pure!”
-
-
-_The Honourable John George Montagu_:
-
-BY HOPPNER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
-Born, 1767. Died, 1790.—The eldest son of Viscount Hinchingbrook,
-afterwards fifth Earl of Sandwich, by Lady Elizabeth Montagu, daughter
-of the Earl of Halifax. In 1790, he married Dorothy, daughter of Stephen
-Beckenham Esq., and died a few months afterwards at Mrs. Beckenham’s
-house in Grosvenor Square.
-
-
-_John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Crimson Robe, over a Cuirass.)
-
-
-_John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester_:
-
-BY WISSING.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In Armour, holding a Truncheon.)
-
-Born, 1648. Died, 1680.—Son of the second Earl, by Anne, daughter of
-Sir John St. John Bart., and widow of Sir Harry Lee, of Ditchley. The
-father, a staunch Royalist, died before the Restoration, and left his
-son little inheritance beyond his title; but that little was well and
-carefully managed by the widowed mother. Rochester distinguished himself
-at school, and also at the University, and although he fell into bad
-habits in early life, he always retained a love of learning which was
-most beneficial to him in his latter days. He travelled under the care of
-a learned Scotchman, Dr. Balfour, whose name he never mentioned without
-affection. He distinguished himself in several naval engagements under
-the brave Earl of Sandwich and other commanders, and married Elizabeth,
-daughter of John Mallet, Esq., “the beautiful heiress,” who, after
-supping with Mistress Stewart, was quietly returning to her lodgings
-when she was seized upon at Charing Cross by some emissaries of my Lord
-of Rochester. The lady did not incline to his suit, although it would
-appear the King himself had spoken to her in behalf of his favourite. But
-this violence so incensed his Majesty, that he ordered my Lord Rochester
-to the Tower, and there seemed every chance of his being supplanted by
-his numerous rivals. Pepys does not tell us how the adventurous lover
-at length prevailed on the lady to accept his hand, but he enumerates
-“Mistress Mallet’s servants:” “My Lord Herbert,” [afterwards 6th Earl
-of Pembroke,] “who would have had her, my Lord Hinchingbrook, who was
-indifferent to her, my Lord John Butler [son of the Duke of Ormond] who
-might not have her, Sir ... Popham who would do anything to have her, and
-my Lord Rochester, who would have run away with her.” Verily, she made a
-bad choice among so many.
-
-Lord Rochester was remarkable for his wit, but also for the extreme
-licentiousness of his manners and writings. He was a great satirist and
-had many readers in an age when grossness of style was not only tolerated
-but admired. His Poem on “Nothing,” and the satire against Man, showed
-great ability, lavished on a bad cause. Of an elegant person, easy
-address, and winning manners, he was, indeed, a dangerous companion, and
-his profligacy was notorious, even in the reign of Charles II. He was
-a great favourite with his royal master, who delighted in his sallies,
-and declared he preferred Rochester’s company, even when he was drunk,
-to that of any other man, when sober. In his pursuits after adventures
-he would assume all sorts of disguises, sometimes that of a beggar, or
-porter, or even a quack doctor; and he well knew how to sustain every
-kind of character. Horace Walpole says of him, “the Muses loved to
-inspire him, but were ashamed to avow him.” De Grammont said he had more
-wit, and less honour than any man in England.
-
-But it was reserved for Bishop Burnet, in whose society and conversation
-he fortunately took great delight, to effect a radical change in the
-opinions of a man whom the Divine himself had always declared born for
-better things. By gentle forbearance, considerate kindness, and honest
-candid friendship, Dr. Burnet brought the suffering and unhappy man, to a
-sense of the error of his ways, and the letter the Bishop received from
-the penitent shortly before the death of the latter, is most conclusive
-on this head:
-
- “Woodstock Park, June 25, 1680.
-
- “My most honoured Dr. Burnet,
-
- “My spirits and body cling so equally together, that I shall
- write you a letter as weak as I am in person. I begin to value
- Churchmen above all men in the world. If God be yet pleased
- to spare me longer in this world, I hope in your conversation
- to be exalted to that degree of piety, that the world may see
- how much I abhor what I so long loved, and how much I glory
- in repentance, and in God’s service. Bestow your prayers upon
- me that God would spare me (if it be His good will) to show a
- true repentance and amendment of life for the time to come, or
- else, if the Lord please to put an end to my worldly being now,
- that He would mercifully accept of my death-bed repentance, and
- perform His promise that He has been pleased to make, that at
- what time soever a sinner doth repent, He would receive him.
- Put up these prayers then, dear Doctor, to Almighty God, for
- your most obedient, and languishing servant,
-
- ROCHESTER.”
-
-During his last, and most painful illness, he listened with meek
-deference to the exhortations of many godly men, and received the
-Sacrament with his Lady, which he told Dr. Burnet gave him the more
-satisfaction, as for a time she had been misled by the errors of the
-Church of Rome.
-
-Towards the wife who had so much cause of complaint against him he
-expressed the sincerest affection and contrition, so much so as to call
-forth the most passionate grief on her side. He took leave of all, sent
-messages to many of his thoughtless comrades, hoping that as his life
-had done much hurt, so by the mercy of God his death might do some good;
-called often for his children, his young son, and three daughters,
-thanked God in their presence for the blessing they were to him; and died
-quietly, and peacefully at the last, after suffering terrible anguish of
-body, on the morning of the 26th of July, 1680, at the Ranger’s Lodge at
-Woodstock.
-
-
-_Frances, Lady Carteret_:
-
-BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In a White Dress, playing on a Spinnet.)
-
-Born, 1694. Died, 1713.—The daughter of Sir Robert Worsley, of
-Appledurcombe, Isle of Wight, by Frances, only daughter and heiress of
-the first Viscount Weymouth. Married in 1710 at Longleat, the seat of her
-grandfather, to John, Lord Carteret, great grandson of the first Earl
-of Sandwich, Ambassador Extraordinary to the Court of Sweden, principal
-Secretary of State, and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, and one of the Chief
-Justices for England, during the Sovereign’s absence beyond seas; in fact
-the holder of many offices and dignities which he filled with honour.
-Lady Carteret accompanied her husband when he attended the Queen to
-Hanover, and in that city she died, quite suddenly, while playing on the
-harp. She was a friend and correspondent of Jonathan Swift.
-
-
-_Charles, Lord Wilmot_:
-
-BY HAWKER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH: OVAL.
-
- (A Boy in a Blue Mantle.)
-
-Born, ——. He was the only son of John, Earl of Rochester. Died in 1681, a
-minor and unmarried, when the title became extinct. With all his faults
-Lord Rochester appears to have loved his only boy tenderly, and to have
-earnestly desired to keep him from the evils into which he himself had
-fallen. The following letter addressed by the father to the son is a
-touching proof of these better feelings:
-
- “To my Lord Wilmot:—
-
- I hope, Charles, when you receive this and know that I have
- sent this gentleman to be your tutor, you will be very glad
- to see I take such care of you, and be very grateful, which
- is the best way of showing your obedience. You are now grown
- big enough to be a man, if you are wise enough, and the way
- to be truly wise, is to serve God, learn your books, observe
- the instructions of your parents first, and next your Tutor,
- to whom I have entirely resigned you for these seven years,
- and according as you employ that time you are to be happy or
- unhappy for ever. But I have so good an opinion of you that I
- am glad to think you will never deceive me. Dear child, learn
- your book and be obedient, and you shall see what a father will
- be to you. You shall want no pleasure, while you are good, and
- that you may be so is my constant prayer.
-
- ROCHESTER.”
-
-
-_Lady Brooke_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Blue Dress.)
-
-This portrait has no name in the original catalogue, but it appears
-almost certain that it represents the Lady Anne Wilmot, eldest daughter
-of the Earl of Rochester, and sister to Lady Lisburne, and Elizabeth,
-Countess of Sandwich. She married Francis Greville, son and heir to Lord
-Brooke (he died in 1710, eleven days before his father), by whom she
-had Fulke, who succeeded his grandfather in the title, William, and two
-daughters.
-
-
-_Viscountess Lisburne_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Loose Blue Dress, Blue Veil.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1716.—Lady Mallet Wilmot, was the third and youngest
-daughter, and co-heiress, of John, Earl of Rochester, by Elizabeth,
-daughter of John Mallet, Esq. She married John Vaughan, Esq., afterwards
-created Baron Feathard and Viscount Lisburne, County Antrim, Ireland.
-They had two sons and several daughters. Lord Lisburne died in 1721.
-
-
-_Lady Anne Montagu_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Oval. As a Child, White Dress.)
-
-Born, 1674. Died, 1746.—Daughter of Ralph, Duke of Montagu, by his first
-wife. Married first, Alexander Popham, Esq., and secondly, her cousin,
-Lieutenant-General Daniel Harvey, Governor of Guernsey.
-
-
-_Jemima, First Countess of Sandwich_:
-
-BY ADRIAN HANNEMANN.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Blue Satin Dress. Scarf in the Left Hand.)
-
-The eldest daughter of John, first Baron Crewe of Skene, North Hants, by
-Jemima, daughter and co-heiress of Edward Waldegrave, Esq., Co. Essex.
-Married in 1642, to Edward Montagu, first Earl of Sandwich, by whom she
-had five sons and four daughters.
-
-That useful gossip Pepys was very proud of his acquaintance with Lady
-Sandwich and he seems to have neglected no opportunity of getting news
-for his “Chronicle,” from her, as well as from her housekeeper, Sarah,
-who knew a great deal about Court matters and was most communicative,
-particularly in affairs of scandal. His first mention of Lady Sandwich
-is where he goes to dine with her and tell her the news (by order of Sir
-William Pen,) how that “an expresse had come from my Lord [then with
-the fleet] that by a great storm and tempest the mole at Argier had been
-broken down and several of our ships sunk,” and he thanks God, “that
-unlucky business is ended.” In another dinner at the “Wardrobe,” my Lady
-showed him a civet cat, parrot, and ape, which her Lord had sent her as
-a present from beyond seas. Her Ladyship, moreover seems to have taken
-Mr. Pepys into her councils, as regarded matrimonial alliances for her
-daughters, as we find him commissioned to inquire into the estate of Sir
-George Carteret, whose son Phillip was a suitor for my Lady Jemima, a
-marriage which afterwards took place, and every particular of which is
-detailed with a great sense of reflected importance by Pepys “who wore
-his new coloured silk suit on the occasion.” He assisted Lady Sandwich to
-settle accounts at that time, and he does not forget to inform us that he
-was invited down to Hinchingbrook, to keep her company, “so mighty kind
-is my Lady; but for my life I could not.”
-
-On the 28th of May, 1665, he goes to my Lady Sandwich’s, “where to my
-shame I had not been a long time,” primed with a highly spiced story
-of “how my Lord of Rochester had run away with Mistress Mallet, the
-great beauty and fortune of the north,” and he found Lady Sandwich both
-interested and distressed by the news, as she had intended the fair
-heiress for her son, Hinchingbrook; and even now, she hoped the match
-might be broken off between the lady, and Lord Rochester, in which
-particular she was disappointed. But strangely enough, the daughter of
-the run-away couple did, unfortunately for her poor husband, become
-Countess of Sandwich.
-
-Pepys goes all alone with my Lady to Dagenham, near Romford, in Essex,
-where Lady Jemima Carteret and her husband resided: “and a pleasant
-going it was, very merry, and the young couple well acquainted; but
-Lord! to see what fear all the people here do live in”—on account of
-the Plague. Two years afterwards we find our Chronicler walking up from
-Brampton, where he resided for some time, to Hinchingbrook, to spend
-the afternoon with that most excellent discreet and good lady, who was
-mightily pleased, as she informed him, with the lady who was to be her
-son Hinchingbrook’s wife. He found the two Ladies Montagu “grown proper
-ladies and handsome enough;” and the Countess, as was often the case,
-conferred with Mr. Pepys on financial matters, complaining they were much
-straitened in circumstances, and she had had to part with some valuable
-plate, and one of the best suites of hangings. We are assured by the same
-gentleman that “the House of Hinchingbrook is excellently furnished, with
-brave rooms and good pictures,” and that “it pleased infinitely beyond
-Audley End.”
-
-Lady Sandwich died at the house of her daughter, Lady Anne Edgecumbe,
-at Cothele, County Devon, and was buried at Carstock, in Cornwall. The
-children of the first Earl and Countess of Sandwich were: Edward, who
-succeeded as second Earl; Sydney, who married the daughter and heiress
-of Sir Francis Wortley, of Wortley, County York, which patronymic
-he assumed, and was father-in-law to the famous Lady Mary Wortley
-Montagu; Oliver, who died unmarried, aged 38; John, in Holy Orders,
-died unmarried, aged 73; Charles married first, Elizabeth, daughter
-of Francis Forster, and secondly, Sarah, daughter of —— Rogers, of
-Newcastle-on-Tyne, Esq., by both of whom he left issue. The daughters:
-Jemima, married to Sir Philip Carteret, who fell with his father-in-law
-in the battle of Southwold Bay, May, 1672, in consideration of whose
-services the King elevated his son George to the peerage, as Baron
-Carteret; Paulina, who died unmarried; Anne, married to Sir Richard
-Edgecumbe, by whom she was mother of the first Lord Edgecumbe, of Mount
-Edgecumbe, County Devon; she was married secondly, to Christopher
-Montagu, brother to the Earl of Halifax, and died in 1727; Catherine,
-married to Nicholas, son and heir to Sir Nicholas Bacon, of Shrubland
-Hall, Suffolk, and afterwards to the Rev. Mr. Gardeman. She died at the
-age of ninety-six.
-
-
-_Edward, First Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY ADRIAN HANNEMANN.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (In Armour. Badge of the Order of the Garter, or lesser George,
- suspended from the Neck by Gold Chain, Lace Cravat, Long Hair.)
-
-
-_Elizabeth, Viscountess Hinchingbrook_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Seated, holding a Book. White Satin Dress. Blue Ribbon in
- Front.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1761.—The only daughter of Alexander Popham, Esq., of
-Littlecote, Wilts, by Lady Anne, daughter of Ralph, Duke of Montagu.
-She married firstly, Viscount Hinchingbrook, only son of Edward, third
-Earl of Sandwich, by whom she had John, who succeeded his grandfather as
-fourth Earl, Edward, and William; and two daughters, Mary and Elizabeth.
-Lady Hinchingbrook married secondly, Francis Seymour, Esq., of Sherborne,
-Dorset, by whom she had two sons and one daughter.
-
-She died at her house in Charles Street, Berkeley Square, and was buried
-in South Audley Street Chapel.
-
-
-_The Hon. Richard Montagu_:
-
-BY RILEY.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Oval. Crimson Dress. Lace Cravat.)
-
-Born, 1671. Died, 1697.—The second son of the second Earl of Sandwich,
-by Lady Anne Boyle, daughter of the Earl of Burlington. He was M.P. for
-Huntingdon. Died unmarried.
-
-
-_Edward, First Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Star of the Order of the Garter on Shoulder.)
-
-
-_Edward Richard, Viscount Hinchingbrook_:
-
-BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Oval. Blue Jacket, and Velvet Cap. Hand resting on Hip.)
-
-
-_John, Earl of Rochester_:
-
-BY WISSING.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In Armour, with Crimson Robe. Lace Cravat.)
-
-
-_Elizabeth, Countess of Burlington_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Standing by an Arch. Dark Dress with Pearls; Dark Blue Scarf
- over the Shoulder. Holding a Wreath of Flowers.)
-
-The only daughter and heiress of Henry Clifford, Earl of Cumberland.
-Married Richard, Viscount Dungarvan, eldest son of the great Earl
-of Cork, at Skipton Castle, in Craven, 1635. Lord Dungarvan was
-distinguished for loyalty and bravery, in common with his father and
-brothers. In 1642, he and the Lord Inchiquin defeated the Irish army near
-Liscarrol, on which occasion the Earl of Cork’s four sons were engaged on
-the royal side, and Viscount Kynalmeakey was slain. After many successes
-Lord Dungarvan carried over his forces to England, on the cessation
-of arms in Ireland. In 1643, he landed with them near Chester, and
-subsequently joined his Sovereign in the County of Dorset, when by reason
-of his services, and his marriage with the daughter and heiress of the
-Earl of Cumberland, Lord Cork (he had succeeded his father in the Irish
-title) was created Baron Clifford, of Lanesborough, Co. York.
-
-On the triumph of the Parliamentary cause he went beyond seas, but he
-promoted the restoration of Charles II., and was advanced to the dignity
-of Earl of Burlington, Co. York. Lord Burlington died in the 86th year of
-his age, and by Elizabeth his wife he had two sons, and five daughters,
-the fourth of whom, Lady Anne, married Edward, second Earl of Sandwich,
-a match which Pepys much approved. He speaks of an interview with Lady
-Burlington at Burlington House, where he first saw and saluted her: “A
-very fine speaking lady and brave, and a good woman, but old and not
-handsome.” Perhaps Master Samuel was not at that moment in a humour to be
-pleased, as, “bringing in a candle to seal a letter, they set fire to my
-perriwigg, which made an odd noise.”
-
-
-_Edward, First Lord Montagu of Boughton_:
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (In Peer’s Parliamentary Robes. Holding in his Hand the Badge
- of the Order of the Bath suspended from his Neck.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1644.—The eldest son of Sir Edward Montagu, of Boughton,
-North Hants, by Elizabeth, daughter of Sir James Harrington, of Exton,
-Rutland, Knight, by whom he had eight sons and three daughters: the third
-son, Henry, being ancestor to the Dukes of Manchester and the Earls of
-Halifax: and the sixth, Sidney, to the Earls of Sandwich. Edward, the
-eldest, was also Knighted of the Shire, and then created Knight of the
-Bath at the coronation of James I, he did good service in Parliament;
-was much opposed to Popish doctrines, was one of the first named on the
-committee to consider the confirmation of the Book of Common Prayer, and
-many weighty matters, was the principal promoter of keeping a day of
-public thanksgiving on the 5th of November, in remembrance of the failure
-of the Gunpowder Plot, on which day he also instituted a charitable gift
-of “forty shillings yearly to the world’s end,” to be given to the poor
-of certain towns in Northamptonshire, if present at Divine Service the
-same day. He was advanced to the dignity of Baron Montagu, of Boughton,
-for his services and great abilities, in the nineteenth year of the
-reign of James I. He was remarkable for his piety, not only attending
-constantly and punctually at church, but having regular prayers on week
-days, “as also singing of two psalms after supper in the hall in his own
-house.” He was a patron to men of letters and learning, showing great
-discrimination in his choice of bestowal of livings in his gift, and
-“an enemy to pluralities and non-residency.” Not only did he do good
-“to the good to make them better, but also to the bad to keep them from
-worse.” It is scarcely credible how many poor as well as rich he fed. It
-is reported that a hired coachman of London, who had been at my Lord’s
-house, told on his return that he had seen 1200 people served in a day
-at my Lord Montagu’s door, which was not credited, and a wager of £10
-laid. It was brought to trial and proved. He built a fair Hospital at
-Weekly for eight persons, with a liberal allowance, and a blue gown to
-each every second year.
-
-But this good and noble Peer fell into misfortune through his loyalty
-to King Charles I., and Lord Clarendon relates that the Parliament took
-him prisoner at his House of Boughton, “a person of great reverence
-above fourscore years of age, and of unblemished reputation, because he
-declared himself unsatisfied with their disobedient proceedings towards
-the King.”
-
-Sir Philip Warwick also says: “The family of Montagu is noble and worthy.
-It had six brothers, four remarkable for several qualifications; the
-eldest, Lord Montagu, a man of plain, downright English spirit, of
-steady courage and a devout heart, a son of the Church of England, yet
-so devout that he was by some reckoned among the Puritans.” He was a
-great benefactor to the town of Northampton, (being Lord Lieutenant of
-the County), and he bore such sway there, that “the multitude of vulgars
-flocked about him when he came to town, as if he had been their topical
-deity.” When he was taken prisoner on his road to London, he met my Lord
-Essex at Barnet, who was proceeding with the army against the King. That
-nobleman stopped his coach, intending to go and salute Lord Montagu,
-who presently ordered his coachman to drive on, as this was no time for
-compliments. When brought before the Committee of State, where he pleaded
-nobly, the verdict was that he should be detained a prisoner, but that it
-might be in his own daughter’s house. This he utterly refused, saying,
-that if he deserved to be a prisoner, he deserved to be sent to a prison,
-and that he would not be sent to the house of the Countess of Rutland,
-which would be irksome to him, that lady being busy in the Parliament’s
-cause—unless the warrant named her house as his prison; “whereat the
-Countess was much disgruntled.”
-
-Lord Montagu was accordingly conveyed to the Savoy, near the Strand, in
-the suburbs of London, where he departed this life on the 15th of June,
-1644. He was thrice married; first to Elizabeth, daughter and heiress
-of Sir John Jeffrey, of Chitingley, Sussex, Knight, Lord Chief Baron of
-the Exchequer, by whom he had an only daughter; secondly, to Frances,
-daughter of Thomas Cotton, of Connington, Hunts, by whom he had a son who
-died unmarried, Edward his successor, William, and the aforesaid Countess
-of Rutland; thirdly, to Anne Crouch, of Cornbury, Herts, by whom he had
-no issue.
-
-Lord Montagu was grandfather to Ralph, first Duke of Montagu. He was
-interred in Weekly Church, Northamptonshire, where a splendid monument
-commemorates his many virtues.
-
-
-_Mrs. Elizabeth Cromwell_:
-
-BY WALKER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Green Cardinal edged with Gold, fastened in Front with a
- Jewel. White Satin Hood, White Tippet, Pearl Necklace.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1654.—Daughter of William Stewart, Esq., through whom
-she claimed distant kinship with the King of England. Widow of William
-Lynne, of Basingbourne; married Robert Cromwell, Esq., by whom she
-had four sons, of whom only one, Oliver, grew up to manhood, and six
-daughters. On the death of her husband she continued the Brewery, out of
-the profits of which and a scanty pittance of £60 a year, she gave her
-numerous daughters a good education, and dowries on their marriage, “with
-which they were not ashamed to ally themselves with good families.” Mrs.
-Cromwell was indeed a most exemplary and loveable woman; of an angelic
-temper and disposition, yet full of self-help, she retained the simple
-tastes and gentle humanity which had characterised her in the Brewery,
-at Huntingdon, when transplanted, by her son’s wish, to the splendour of
-the Palace at Whitehall, where her life was fretted by her anxiety for
-the safety of her beloved son. Oliver’s filial duty was undeniable: he
-appreciated to the utmost his mother’s excellent qualities; and on her
-death he caused her to be buried with great pomp in Westminster Abbey,
-though her tastes would have pointed to a quiet funeral, in a country
-churchyard, where her remains would have been left unmolested. At the
-Restoration her body was dug up, and with many others, cast ignominiously
-into a hole.
-
-In one of the many “Lives of the Protector,” the portrait at
-Hinchingbrook is alluded to as most characteristic. “The small pretty
-mouth, the full large melancholy eyes, the fair hair under the modest
-little hood, the simple but refined dress with the one small jewel
-clasping her handkerchief.” The same writer speaking of her says: “Her
-single pride was honesty, her passion love.”
-
-
-_William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury_:
-
-A Copy of Vandyck in Lambeth Palace.
-
-BY STONE.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
-Born at Reading, 1573.—Beheaded, 1645. Son of a clothier. Fellow of
-St. John’s College, Oxford. He afterwards took Orders, and was very
-vehement against the Puritans. Had many different livings; became
-Chaplain to James I., whom he accompanied to Scotland. Became Prebendary
-of Westminster, and consecutively Bishop of St. Davids, Bath and Wells,
-and London, and subsequently Prime Minister and Archbishop of Canterbury.
-In 1622 he held a famous conference with Fisher the Jesuit in the
-presence of the Duke of Buckingham and his mother, who were wavering
-in their allegiance to the Protestant faith, and were fixed therein
-by the eloquence of Laud. He was more than once tempted to abjure his
-own religion by the offer of a Cardinal’s hat, but each time he gave
-an emphatic denial. He was very strict in requiring the revision and
-licensing of published books by high ecclesiastical authority, and
-concerned in several prosecutions of the Star Chamber against Bishop
-Williams, the master of Westminster School, &c.
-
-When the Parliament of 1639 was abruptly dissolved, the odium of the
-measure was thrown on Laud, and he was attacked in his Palace at Lambeth
-by the mob. The execution of Strafford was the forerunner of his own;
-he had made himself unpopular with the Nation and with the Commons, and
-on the accusation of Sir Henry Vane, he was sent to the Tower in 1641,
-where he was detained for three years and treated with much severity.
-In 1644 he was tried, and though nothing treasonable was proved, a bill
-of attainder was passed. He made an eloquent defence, but all in vain,
-and he suffered death on Tower Hill in 1645, displaying great courage.
-Clarendon says: “His learning, piety, and virtue, have been attained by
-few, and the greatest of his infirmities are common to all men.”
-
-Of all the Prelates of the Anglican Church, Macaulay says that Laud
-departed farthest from the principles of the Reformation and nearest to
-Rome. He hated Calvinism, he had a passion for forms and ceremonies,
-disapproved of the marriage of ecclesiastics; all which opinions would
-have made him detested by the Puritans, even if he had used legal and
-gentle means only for the attainment of his ends. His understanding was
-narrow, he had but scanty knowledge of the world under his direction;
-every corner of the realm, every separate congregation, even the
-devotions of private families were subjected to the vigilance of his
-spies. Unfortunately for himself and for the country, the King was
-influenced in all public matters by the counsels of the Primate.
-
-
-_Robert Cromwell_:
-
-BY WALKER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Black Gown, White Collar, Black Skull Cap.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1617.—The second son of Sir Henry Cromwell, Knight
-(surnamed the Golden Knight) of Hinchingbrook, Huntingdon, by Joan,
-daughter of Sir Ralph Warren, Lord Mayor of London. A younger son with a
-slender pittance, he was, by the countenance of his brother, Sir Oliver,
-made Justice of the Peace. He went, on his marriage, to live in the town
-of Huntingdon, at a house which had been a Brewery for many years, and
-the business of which he thought it prudent to continue with the help
-and good management of his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of William Stewart,
-of Ely, undoubted descendant of the royal line of Stewart; a connection
-on which the Protector, with the inconsistency he often evinced in such
-matters, prided himself highly. Robert Cromwell’s immediate ancestors
-were of a Welsh family named Williams, one of whom married the sister of
-Cromwell, Earl of Essex, Prime Minister to Henry VIII., whose son having
-risen into favour at Court and received the grant of several Church lands
-near Huntingdon, fixed his residence in that town, and assumed the name
-of Cromwell. In a tournament at Westminster, on May Day, 1540, where Sir
-Richard Cromwell had stricken down challenger after challenger in honour
-of his King; Henry VIII., in high good humour, called out: “Formerly thou
-wast my Dick, but hereafter thou shalt be my diamond,” at the same moment
-dropping a diamond ring, which the knight picked up and restored to his
-Majesty. “No,” said Henry, laughing, and placing it on his favourite’s
-finger: “henceforth thou shalt bear such an one in the forejamb of the
-demi-lion in thy crest;” and such a ring, says one of his chroniclers,
-did Oliver wear when he entered the lists against his lawful sovereign.
-
-“Mr. Cromwell and his wife,” we are told by the same biographer, “were
-persons of worth, in no way inclined to disaffection, civil or religious;
-they lived on a small pittance, and brought up their children well,
-through the exercise of honest frugality.” Robert Cromwell died at
-Cromwell House, Huntingdon, in 1617, and was buried at All Saints Church
-in that town. His widow survived him 37 years.
-
-
-PORTRAIT OF A DARK YOUTH IN ARMOUR: UNNAMED.
-
-
-THREE PORTRAITS UNNAMED.
-
-
-_Elizabeth, Countess of Northumberland_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Auburn Ringlets. Orange Satin Gown with Pearls. Right Hand
- holding her Dress.)
-
-Born, 1647. Died, 1690.—Elizabeth Wriothesley was the youngest daughter
-of Lord Treasurer Southampton, by Lady Elizabeth Leigh, sole daughter
-and heiress of the Earl of Chichester. Her eldest sister, Lady Audrey,
-was betrothed to Josceline, Lord Percy, son of the tenth Earl of
-Northumberland, but dying before her fifteenth year was completed, the
-name of her sister was substituted for hers (by family arrangement) in
-the marriage contract. In the year 1662, Elizabeth being then about
-fifteen, and Lord Percy barely 18, the marriage was solemnised. The
-bride’s sister, Lady Rachel Russell, observes it was acceptance rather
-than choice; yet the union proved very happy. At first the young pair
-were not much together; the bridegroom remained with his tutor, and the
-bride with her parents, at Titchfield, in Hampshire; but in 1664-5, her
-letters to Lady Rachel are dated from Petworth, where she was living
-with her husband. She had a daughter born in 1666, and a son and heir in
-1668; in 1669, another daughter, who died an infant. Lord Percy succeeded
-his father in 1668, and the following year their son died, which made so
-sad an impression on Lady Northumberland, then just recovering from her
-confinement, that change of scene was considered necessary for her, and
-she left England for Paris with her husband and the celebrated Locke (as
-their physician), in whose care Lord Northumberland left his wife while
-he proceeded to Italy. At Turin he was attacked by fever, and died in
-the flower of his age, a brilliant future lying before him, with every
-prospect of happiness.
-
-Lady Northumberland remained at Paris, where Ralph, Lord Montagu, was
-then Ambassador, and he soon became attracted by the beautiful young
-widow, paying her gradual and delicate attentions; but it was two years
-before he ventured to pronounce himself her ardent admirer. In the
-winter of 1672 she went to Aix, where Montagu followed her. Madame de la
-Fayette writes: “Je vous envoie un paquet pour Madame de Northumberland;
-on dit que si M. de Montagu n’a pas eu un heureux succès de son voyage,
-il passera en Italie pour faire voir que ce ne’est pas pour les beaux
-yeux de la Comtesse qu’il court le pays.”
-
-But it seems he followed her back to Paris, in spite of those
-predictions. In another letter from Madame de la Fayette, she writes:
-“Madame de Northumberland me parait une femme qui a été fort belle,
-mais qui n’a pas un seul trait de visage qui se soutienne, ni oû il
-soit resté le moindre air de jeunesse; elle est avec cela mal habillée,
-point de grâce, etc.” She also alludes to her understanding, what Madame
-de la Fayette said to her as if her knowledge of the French language
-was limited. The same writer says: “J’ai fort parlé d’elle à Montagu;
-il ne fait aucun façon d’étre embarqué à son service, et parait rempli
-d’espérance.” (April 15, 1673.)
-
-There were as usual fluctuations in his hopes and fears, the lady being
-at one time jealous, we are told, of the Duchesse de Brissac, a former
-“flame” of the Ambassador’s; but in 1673 they came to England, and
-were privately married at Titchfield, Lady Northumberland’s paternal
-home. Evelyn talks of her eight, or even ten years after this, as the
-“beautiful Countess,” a testimony we accept more willingly than that of
-the fault-finding Madame de la Fayette. She was in England in 1675, and
-was at issue for some time with the Dowager Countess of Northumberland,
-her mother-in-law, respecting the care and guardianship of Lady Elizabeth
-Percy, the only surviving child and heiress of the late Earl; the subject
-of the girl’s marriage, and the choice of a husband being a great bone
-of contention. Lady Rachel Russell says: “My sister urges that her only
-child should not be disposed of without her consent, and in my judgment
-it is hard, yet I fancy I am not partial.” The old lady was triumphant,
-however, and contrived to get the young heiress into her power, or rather
-to assert her power over her fortunes, and Elizabeth Percy had the
-strange fate of being three times a wife, and twice a widow ere she was
-sixteen. She married, when only thirteen, Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle,
-who immediately assumed the name and arms of Percy; but he died a few
-months after his marriage, in 1680. The child-widow had then among many
-other suitors, Count Königsmark, the celebrated adventurer, and Thomas
-Thynne, of Longleat, to whom her grandmother hastened to betroth her,
-lest she should show a preference for the foreigner. But before the
-marriage could be actually solemnized, he was murdered in his coach at
-the instigation of his rival; and the beautiful heiress married shortly
-afterwards the sixth Duke of Somerset, surnamed the Proud.
-
-The girl’s mother does not seem to have been consulted in any of these
-matchmakings; her own married life was not a happy one. Montagu was
-boundlessly extravagant; he was now occupied in building Montagu House
-with his wife’s money; he was involved in political intrigues which
-did not redound to his honour, and in 1678 he went to Paris on his
-astrological mission, and renewed his loves and quarrels with the Duchess
-of Cleveland and others. He returned to England, to involve himself in
-fresh plots, and in 1680, accompanied by his wife, he went to Paris in
-disgrace and pecuniary difficulties; circumstances not calculated to
-improve a temper naturally irritable.
-
-Lady Rachel Russell often speaks of her sister when in Paris; of that
-lady’s sympathy with the Protestants after the Revocation of the Edict of
-Nantes; her anxiety on account of her daughter, Anne Montagu’s, health,
-etc. A year afterwards she lost her eldest son, aged 12; and it must have
-been a source of regret that she was not at hand to comfort Lady Rachel
-in the hour of her sorrow, Lord William Russell’s execution taking place
-while his sister-in-law was still in Paris. On Lady Northumberland’s
-return to England, we hear of her at Windsor with her “lovely boy,” and
-little Anne. On her husband’s creation as Earl, his wife dropped her
-widowed title, and called herself Countess Montagu. After the Revolution,
-Lord and Lady Montagu spent most of their time at Boughton, at which
-place the latter died in September, 1690, aged forty-four.
-
-Lady Rachel Russell speaks thus of her death: “She was my last sister,
-and I loved her tenderly. It pleases me to think she deserves to be
-remembered by all who knew her; but after 40 years’ acquaintance with so
-amiable a creature, one must needs, in reflecting, bring to remembrance
-so many engaging endearments as are at present embittering and painful.”
-
-One son and one daughter survived; John, Lord Monthermer, afterwards
-second Duke of Montagu; and Anne, mother to the Lady Hinchingbrook, by
-whose Will this picture was bequeathed to her son, the fourth Earl of
-Sandwich.
-
-
-_Edward, first Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Buff Coat and Cuirass. Lace Cravat and Ruffles. Blue Sash
- over the Shoulder. Broad Red Sash round the Waist. Right Hand
- holding a Truncheon, which rests on the Mouth of a Cannon; Left
- Hand on his Hip.)
-
-
-_Ralph, Duke of Montagu_:
-
-BY RILEY.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Curled Wig. Loose Gown of Orange Silk.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1708. The only surviving son of Edward, second Lord
-Montagu of Boughton, by Anne, daughter of Sir Ralph Winwood. He was
-educated at Westminster and on the death of his elder brother succeeded
-him as Master of the Horse to Queen Catherine, Consort of Charles II.
-He was sent as Ambassador to Paris, in 1669, for which office, says a
-contemporary, he was more indebted to the partiality of the fair sex,
-than to his own merits. He told Sir William Temple he was resolved to
-become Ambassador in France, and Sir William asked him on what he founded
-his hopes, as neither the King nor the Duke of York were attached to him.
-“They shall act” said Montagu, “as if they were;” upon which Sir William
-Temple remarks that his appointment was brought about by the favour of
-the ladies, who were always his best friends, for some perfection the
-rest of the world did not discover.
-
-He was famous when in France, for the state in which he lived. “He
-entered Paris,” (says Collins) “with a more than common appearance,
-having seventy-four pages and footmen in rich liveries, twelve led
-horses with their furniture, twenty-four gentlemen on horseback, and
-eighteen English noblemen and gentlemen of quality in four rich coaches
-with eight horses each, and two chariots with six, made as costly as
-art could contrive.” The King and the Duke of Orleans received him with
-great honour, and he was entertained both at St. Cloud and Versailles,
-the fountains of which played in his honour; and it was here he imbibed a
-taste for building and laying out gardens, which he afterwards indulged
-to a great extent. The beautiful and youthful Countess of Northumberland,
-who had lately become a widow, was residing in Paris, and as we mention
-in the notice of her life, Montagu became her suitor, and eventually
-her husband. They were married privately in England in 1673. After his
-marriage he became a Privy Councillor and Master of the Great Wardrobe,
-an office he bought of the Earl of Sandwich. He busied himself in
-building on a magnificent scale, and found his wife’s money most useful
-to him in carrying out his plans.
-
-Although already rather in disrepute at Court, King Charles II. did not
-disdain to employ Montagu in 1678 on a new, and in every sense of the
-word, extraordinary mission to Paris. At that time there resided in the
-French capital, an astrologer who had gained great credit by predicting,
-not only the restoration of the English Monarch, but the exact date,
-May 29, 1660, of his return to England, and that some time before it
-actually happened. Charles, in consequence, had the firmest belief in
-the wise man’s auguries, and he despatched Montagu on an errand to ask
-his advice and predictions on some subject of political importance.
-The Envoy-extraordinary sounded the Necromancer, and finding the black
-art did not blind its professor to self-interest, the King’s messenger
-offered the wise man a large bribe to shape his predictions according
-to his (Montagu’s) directions; then, with an imprudence which was
-inconsistent with his previous cunning, he went off to the Duchess of
-Cleveland and confided his secret to her. But Barbara was angry with her
-former admirer, and jealous of his admiration for her own daughter, and
-she resolved to be revenged. Accordingly she wrote to the King and told
-him the whole story. “Montagu,” she says, “has neither conscience nor
-honour; he has told me several times he despises you in his heart, and
-that he wishes the Parliament would send you and your brother to travel,
-for you are a dull, ungovernable fool, and he is a wilful fool.” This
-version of the story is taken from Algernon Sidney’s correspondence.
-
-In consequence of this letter Montagu was recalled, and found himself but
-coldly received at Court, and all hopes of a place under Government were
-at an end. The ex-Plenipotentiary now threw himself into all manner of
-contending intrigues of a political nature. He was accused of receiving a
-large bribe from Louis XIV. to compass the impeachment and ruin of Lord
-Danby (Treasurer) who was very obnoxious to the French Government, and
-an enemy to the Roman Catholics; yet at the same time he took a prominent
-position in the popular party. He was said to have been instrumental in
-bringing over Louise de la Quérouaille, afterwards Duchess of Portsmouth,
-and to have endeavoured to persuade her to use her influence with the
-King to exclude his brother from the succession. Finally his vote for
-the exclusion bill rendered him so obnoxious at Court, that he thought
-it best to depart once more to Paris with his wife and children. Hence
-he was summoned by a sad catastrophe, he had lent his magnificent house
-in Bloomsbury to the Earl of Devonshire, whose servant, in airing one
-of the rooms, set fire to it, and the “noble mansion” was burned to the
-ground. The conflagration was witnessed by Lady Rachel Russell, who says:
-“I heard a great noise in the square, and sent a servant to know what
-it was, and they brought me word Montagu House was in flames. My boy
-awaked and said he was nearly stifled, but being told the cause, would
-see it, and so was satisfied, and accepted a strange bed-fellow, for the
-nurse brought Lady Devonshire’s youngest boy, wrapped up in a blanket.”
-The loss was computed at £30,000; but Montagu rebuilt it on a more
-magnificent scale. Collins says: “It is not exceeded in London.”
-
-Under William III. Montagu’s star was once more in the ascendant; he
-being one of the Lords who invited over the Prince of Orange. In 1689
-he was created Viscount Monthermer and Earl of Montagu, and attended
-their Majesties’ coronation in his new dignity. In 1690, while engaged
-in beautifying and laying out Boughton, his excellent wife, who called
-herself Countess Montagu, died, but he soon gave her a successor. The new
-made Earl was not content with his coronet, and coveted the “strawberry
-leaves.” He applied to the King for a dukedom, mentioning among many
-other cogent reasons: “I am now below the younger branches of my family,
-my Lord Manchester and my Lord Sandwich;” also that he had taken to his
-second wife, the daughter of the Duke of Newcastle; and above all that he
-had been first and last to advocate the cause of William. “I hope it will
-not be to my disadvantage that I am alive, and ready to do so again,
-instead of having lost my head with Lord William Russell.” The King
-refused the dukedom, but showed Lord Montagu much favour, and was his
-visitor at Boughton, in Northamptonshire where the Court was sumptuously
-entertained.
-
-Collins says: “My Lord was content with his fortune, and would accept
-no office save the one he had bought.” Of this he had been unlawfully
-deprived by James II., who bestowed it on Lord Preston. My Lord Montagu
-thought himself bound in honour to bring Preston to account, and when
-the office was restored to him and considerable damages awarded, he was
-so considerate of Lord Preston’s ill circumstances that he generously
-forgave him not only the damages, but the costs of the suit.
-
-Queen Anne bestowed upon him the coveted dukedom; in the fourth year of
-her reign she created him Marquis of Monthermer, and Duke of Montagu.
-His first wife died in 1690; when he lost no time in soliciting the
-hand of the relict of Christopher Monk, second Duke of Albemarle, and
-daughter and sole heiress of Henry Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle. He
-does not appear to have been so disinterested in his views where money
-was concerned as Collins would have us believe; since this lady, in
-spite of her enormous wealth, was a confirmed lunatic, and an obstacle
-to their union existed in the fact that she had announced her resolution
-of wedding no one but a sovereign. Montagu was accordingly presented
-to her as the Emperor of China, and after a short period of eccentric
-wooing they were married. Until her death the poor maniac was addressed
-as Empress of China, and served on the bended knee. Lord Ross wished to
-marry her, and when the Duke prevailed in his suit wrote the following
-lines:—
-
- “Insulting Rival, never boast
- Thy conquest lately won;
- No wonder if her heart was lost,
- Her senses first were gone.
- From one that’s under Bedlam’s laws
- What glory can be had?
- For love indeed was not the cause,
- It proves that she was mad.”
-
-She survived her husband twenty-six years, and died at Newcastle House in
-Clerkenwell, being interred in Westminster Abbey, as became her Imperial
-dignity.
-
-Ralph, Duke of Montagu was, as his picture shows, of a middle height,
-inclining to fat, and of a dark complexion. He was a man of pleasure, and
-self-indulgence, but of refined taste in architecture, and his gardens
-at Boughton were world famed. On one occasion he was showing them to the
-Duke of Marlborough, who said he believed the water-works were the finest
-in the world. “They are not to be compared,” replied the courteous host,
-“to your Grace’s fireworks.” St. Evremond, who was a constant visitor at
-Boughton and in London, and who met the Duke frequently at the Duchesse
-de Mazarin’s little salon in Chelsea, was a pensioner on his bounty, and
-is never tired of extolling his hospitality and generosity, also the
-charms of the Saturday and Wednesday receptions, at Montagu House.
-
- “On admire avec raison
- Votre superbe maison,
- A tous étrangers ouverte;
- Les jets d’eau de Boughton,
- Les meubles de Ditton, etc.”
-
-He says the cascade at Boughton, though smaller than the one at
-Versailles, is more beautiful. The old _gourmet_ is never tired of
-praising the good living and extolling the comestibles that the Duke
-had sent him, and he says: “J’ai été à Boughton voir milord, la bonne
-compagnie, l’érudition, les perdreaux, les truffes;” in fact all that
-had charms for him in the absence of the Duchesse de Mazarin herself, to
-whom he writes. The two men met frequently at the house of the beautiful
-Hortense, one of whose most fervent admirers was the Duke of Montagu.
-To her he was most generous, for in one of her letters she says that if
-Montagu discovered you liked or admired a thing, you need take no more
-thought about it: “‘Quelque dépense qu’il faille faire, quelque soin,
-quelque peine qu’il faut employer pour l’avoir, la chose ne vous manquera
-pas.’ Ce sont les propres paroles de la feue Duchesse de Mazarin.” But it
-seems that there was some interruption in their intimacy, for in one of
-Algernon Sidney’s letters there is this passage: “Montagu goes no more
-to the Duchesse de Mazarin; whether his love or his politics proved too
-pressing, I know not, but the town says he is forbid the house.”
-
-His Grace departed this life on the 9th of March, 1708, at Montagu House
-in Bloomsbury, afterwards the British Museum.
-
-
-_Anne, Viscountess Hinchingbrook_:
-
-BY MRS. BEALE.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Seated. Light Auburn Hair, Dove-coloured Dress. Pearl
- Ornaments. Holding a Flower in the Left Hand.)
-
-Lady Anne Boyle was the fourth daughter of Richard, second Earl of Cork
-and first Earl of Burlington, by Lady Elizabeth Clifford, only daughter
-and heiress of the fifth Earl of Cumberland. In 1667 she married Viscount
-Hinchingbrook, eldest son of the first Earl of Sandwich, by whom she
-had two sons and one daughter. Pepys seemed well contented with the
-marriage for his patron’s son, though he is dissatisfied at not having
-a favour sent him, and Lady Sandwich was so much pleased with her new
-daughter-in-law as apparently to be consoled for her first born having
-lost the chance of marrying the great heiress, Mistress Mallet.
-
-The first time Pepys saw her at Lord Crewe’s he saluted her and invited
-her to his house; he thought her mighty pleasant and good humoured, but
-neither did he count her a beauty or ugly, but a comely lady; and when
-she accepted his hospitality next day he found her “a sweet natured
-and well disposed lady, a lover of books and pictures, and of good
-understanding;” and he goes on to visit her and her lord afterwards at
-Burlington House next to Clarendon House, which he was glad to see for
-the first time.
-
-Lady Hinchingbrook and her sister Henrietta, Countess of Rochester,
-were undoubtedly shining lights of modesty, and domestic virtue in this
-profligate age.
-
-She was buried in the family vault at Barnwell, where a touching
-inscription records her many virtues, and the regret her death occasioned.
-
-
-_Elizabeth Popham, Viscountess Hinchingbrook_:
-
-BY HIGHMORE.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In an Orange Gown, Lace Tippet and Ruffles. Holding a Fan. A
- Blue Hood tied under the Chin.)
-
-
-_The Honourable Mary Montagu_:
-
-BY WHOOD.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (As a Child: in a Rich Crimson Dress, embroidered with Silver.
- White Apron, Lace Cuffs, and Stomacher. Holding a Basket of
- Cherries, with which she is Feeding a Parrot.)
-
-The eldest daughter of Edward Richard, Viscount Hinchingbrook, by
-Elizabeth Popham. Died in childhood.
-
-
-_Louisa, Sixth Countess of Sandwich_:
-
-BY SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (In a White Dress with Brown Drapery. Leaning on an Anchor.)
-
-Born, 1781. Died, 1862. The only daughter of Armar Corry, first Earl
-of Belmore, by Harriet, eldest daughter and co-heiress of the second
-Earl of Buckinghamshire. Married in 1804, George, Earl of Sandwich, who
-died at Rome; by whom she had John William, seventh Earl; Harriet, Lady
-Ashburton, and Caroline, Comtesse Walewska.
-
-
-_Pendant to the First Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY VAN ZOORST.
-
-PORTRAIT OF A YOUTH IN BLACK. UNKNOWN.
-
- (Brown Hair and Eyes. Small Moustache.)
-
-
-_Edward, First Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY VAN ZOORST.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Purple Vest, Broad Belt, Buckle on Shoulder.)
-
-
-_Elizabeth, Countess of Sandwich_:
-
-BY WISSING.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Loose Dress. Blue Scarf. Seated on a Bank, putting a Wreath of
- Flowers round the Neck of a Lamb.)
-
-
-_The Honourable Edward Montagu_:
-
-BY HOGARTH.
-
-SMALL HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (A Fair Boy in Crimson Coat and Waistcoat, and Frilled Shirt.)
-
-The fourth son of John, fourth Earl of Sandwich. Born, 1745. Died, 1752.
-Buried at Barnwell.
-
-
-_The Honourable Elizabeth Montagu_:
-
-BY WHOOD.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Seated, with her Hand on the Neck of a Lamb.)
-
-The second daughter of Edward, Viscount Hinchingbrook, by Elizabeth
-Popham. Married first to Reginald Courtenay, second son of Sir William
-Courtenay, of Powderham Castle, Devon, by whom she had one son, Charles,
-(killed at the battle of Dettingen), and two daughters, co-heiresses:
-Isabella, wife of William Poyntz, Esq., of Midgham, Berks; and Anne,
-married to the Earl of Cork and Orrery. Mr. Courtenay died in 1745, and
-his widow re-married in 1759, William Smith, comedian, better known as
-“Gentleman Smith.” They lived together at Leiston, near Saxmundham, an
-estate bequeathed to her by her grandmother, Lady Anne Harvey, where
-she died. Mr. Smith survived her 57 years. There is a portrait of him
-by Hoppner, in the National Portrait Gallery. Her brother was very much
-averse to her marriage with the actor, but the correspondence seems to
-show they lived happily.
-
-
-
-
-_DRAWING ROOM._
-
-
-_The Duchesse de Berri_:
-
-BY RIGAUD.
-
-HALF-LENGTH: OVAL.
-
- (Hair Dressed High. White and Gold Boddice. Blue Velvet Mantle,
- lined with Ermine.)
-
-Born, 1694. Died, 1719. Marie Louise, daughter of Philip, second Duke of
-Orleans, afterwards Regent, by Mademoiselle de Blois, daughter of Louis
-XIV. and Madame de Montespan. This marriage, which had been determined on
-by the King, was not only strongly opposed, by the Duchess of Orleans,
-his mother, but Philip himself, then Duc de Chartres, was repugnant
-to the _mésalliance_. He was at length overruled by the commands
-of his father, and the King his uncle, and proceeded to break the
-announcement of his engagement to the proud German Princess his mother,
-who congratulated the _fiancé_ with a blow. One son and five daughters
-were born to Philip, the second of whom, Marie Louise, married in 1710
-the Duc de Berri, third son to the Dauphin, and consequently grandson
-to Louis XIV. He was a handsome Prince, full of endearing and sterling
-qualities, but his education had been shamefully neglected, and on this
-point he was most sensitive. It made him shy of society, and fearful of
-speaking in public, and on one occasion he was subjected to terrible
-mortification. At the general Treaty of Peace, when it was settled that
-the crowns of France and Spain should never devolve on the same person,
-the Dukes of Orleans and Berri proceeded to the Parliament House to
-attend to some necessary formalities, on the occasion of the death of
-the Duc de Bourgogne, and the Duc de Berri found himself compelled to
-speak. After stammering and stuttering for some time he entirely broke
-down, and retired in confusion. Relating the circumstance to a friend,
-he was said to have shed tears of mortification, bitterly complaining at
-the same time of the manner in which his education had been neglected
-for the express purpose of keeping him in the background. “J’avois,”
-said he, “autant de disposition [for learning] que les autres; on ne
-m’apprit qu’à chasser, on n’a cherché qu’à m’abattre.” In spite of
-these disadvantages the Duc de Berri was very popular, and is said to
-have won all hearts, save that of the ill-conditioned Princess whose
-outward charms had subjugated him. Even at an early age Marie Louise
-d’Orléans laid herself open to the tongue of scandal, and had been
-censured for habits of intemperance. On finding there was a chance of
-making a brilliant marriage she changed her whole line of conduct, and
-persuaded every one, including the wary Madame de Maintenon, that she
-was a reformed character. But no sooner was the marriage consummated
-than the young Duchess threw off the mask, and returned to all her evil
-ways. In nowise touched by the kindness and devotion of her husband, she
-thwarted him on every occasion, and delighted to turn him into ridicule,
-which was easy in the case of one so diffident and sensitive. But even
-his forbearance had a limit; her conduct disgraced them both, and one
-day, maddened by jealousy and the insolence of his wife’s Chamberlain, he
-sought the advice of his trusty friend, the Duc de St. Simon.
-
-St. Simon spoke strongly on the subject, urging the Duc de Berri to
-seek redress from the King, and strengthening his counsel by producing
-a correspondence that had fallen into his hands, between the Duchess
-and the aforesaid chamberlain. These letters left no doubt of their
-guilt: in one of them the lady proposed to elope, but her lover refused
-on the plea that the step would not be conducive to his advancement in
-life. The Duc de Berri, in conformity with his friend’s advice and his
-own convictions, determined to carry the correspondence to Rambouillet
-where Louis XIV. was then staying; but unfortunately his movements were
-not sufficiently prompt. The Duchess discovered that her husband and
-the Duc de St. Simon had been closeted together for some time over some
-animated and highly confidential business; it was not difficult to guess
-the subject, and no sooner had the Duc de Berri started, than she leaped
-into her coach, and pursuing him with all haste, broke into the Royal
-presence just in time to find the King examining the contents of the
-fatal correspondence. A scene of disgraceful violence and altercation
-ensued, and so exasperating and shameless was the language of the
-Duchess, that the hitherto indulgent and forbearing husband raised his
-heavy riding boot and with one kick sent his wife spinning into the arms
-of Madame de Maintenon. The King, whose dignity was outraged on all
-sides, lifted his cane to strike the unhappy Prince, but he had already
-withdrawn, full of shame at the violence into which he had been betrayed.
-As for the Duchess, no sooner had she recovered from the shock, than
-without a word to her sovereign, or Madame de Maintenon, she left the
-room in a paroxysm of rage. “It is true,” she said afterwards to one of
-her ladies, “that I have sustained no bodily injury, but the mark will
-ever remain here,” placing her hand upon what, by courtesy, she called
-her heart. It undoubtedly remained in her memory; the Duke apologised,
-and she pretended to be appeased; a reconciliation was patched up, and
-at a wolf hunt held by the King in the Forest of Marly, the Duc de
-Berri, who was passionately fond of the sport, rode hard and well. He
-was suffering from intense thirst when he fell in with his wife’s coach,
-and riding up asked anxiously if she could supply him with a draught of
-any kind. The Duchess smiled benignly, and drew from the pocket of the
-carriage a beautiful little case containing a bottle in which she said
-she always carried some excellent Ratafia in the event of over-fatigue.
-The unsuspecting man raised it to his lips and drained the last drop with
-many expressions of gratitude. The Duchess smiled again: “It is fortunate
-we met,” she said; and the heavy coach rolled on. In a few hours the Duke
-was taken ill, and after four days of suffering he expired on May 4th,
-1714, at the early age of 28. As in the case of Madame no one doubted the
-existence of poison, and at first, public opinion was so violent against
-the Duke of Orleans that he had a narrow escape of his life from the fury
-of the mob, at the funeral of his son-in-law. Later evidence, however,
-seemed but too strong against the guilty wife, although the matter was
-gradually hushed up, as in those days the art of poisoning had become a
-fashionable pastime. The Duchess did not long survive her victim; she
-gave herself up to excesses of all kinds, and concluded her ill-spent
-life of 24 years in 1719.
-
-In some letters of “Madame, veuve de Monsieur,” the first Duke of
-Orleans, the Princess of Bavaria to whom allusion has already been made,
-we are told that the Duchesse de Berri at the time of her death was
-undoubtedly married clandestinely to Captain de Rious, whose portrait
-Madame paints in the most unflattering terms as remarkable for his
-ugliness, in spite of which he was a great favourite with the ladies.
-He was absent on duty with the regiment the Duchess had bought for him
-at the time of her death. Madame goes on to say: “Pour se tirer de
-l’embarras que pouvoit lui donner une oraison funêbre, on a pris le parti
-de n’en point faire du tout.” Apparently a prudent decision. The same
-authority states that the Duchesse de Berri had grown very large and
-florid, (and that she often jested on the change in her own appearance),
-which would account for her looking twice her real age in this picture.
-
-
-_Elizabeth, Countess of Sandwich_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (White Déshabille with Coloured Scarf. Hair en Négligé.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1757. She was the second daughter of John, Earl of
-Rochester, by Elizabeth Mallet. She married Edward, third Earl of
-Sandwich, in 1691. As we have mentioned in the short notice of his life,
-the marriage was very unhappy, and Lady Sandwich’s conduct in every
-respect most reprehensible, in spite of her numerous panegyrists. She
-was a brilliant member of society, and we are told that at the early
-age of ten years, she already showed a great taste for reading, and had
-begun to cultivate several foreign languages. She spoke French, Italian
-and Spanish; Montaigne was one of her favourite authors. She danced and
-sang, and played on several instruments, and though learned was in no
-wise pedantic. Neither did she waste so much time on dress, as was usual
-with ladies of her time. Lady Sandwich went to Paris not very long after
-her marriage, and St. Evremond, whose admiration she appears to have
-shared with the Duchesse de Mazarin and Ninon de l’Enclos, thus speaks
-of her in a letter (without date) to the latter: “Le Docteur Morelli,
-mon ami particulier, accompagne Madame la Comtesse de Sandwich qui va
-en France pour sa santé. Feu Monsieur le Comte de Rochester, Père de
-Madame Sandwich, avoit plus d’esprit qu’homme en Angleterre. Madame de
-Sandwich en a plus que n’avoit Monsieur son père; aussi généreuse que
-spirituelle, aussi aimable que spirituelle et généreuse. Voilà une partie
-de ses qualités.” According to St. Evremond’s implied wishes, his two
-friends formed a close intimacy, and Lady Sandwich at Paris seems to
-have merited Ninon’s report of her when she says: “J’ignore les manières
-Anglaises, mais elle a été très française.” It must have been during
-this first visit to Paris that Lady Sandwich made the acquaintance of
-the French celebrities whose portraits now adorn the Drawing-room at
-Hinchingbrook, as on her return to the French metropolis in 1729 they
-were all dead. Mademoiselle de l’Enclos is never tired of praising her
-English friend; in a letter dated August, 1698, she says to St. Evremond:
-“Madame Sandwich m’a donné mille plaisirs, par le bonheur que j’ai eu de
-lui plaire; je ne croyois pas sur mon déclin, pouvoir être propre à une
-femme de son âge. Elle a plus d’esprit que toutes les femmes de France,
-et plus de véritable mérite. Elle nous quitte; c’est un regret pour tous
-qui la connoissent, et pour moi particulièrement. Si vous aviez été ici
-nous aurions faits des repas dignes du temps du passé. Vous allez revoir
-Madame Sandwich, que nous voyons partir avec beaucoup de regret.” Again
-in July, 1699: “Vous allez voir Madame Sandwich, mais je crains qu’elle
-n’aille à la campagne; elle sait tout ce que vous pensez d’elle; elle
-vous dira plus de nouvelles de ce pays ci que moi. Elle a tout approfondi
-et tout pénétré: elle connoit parfaitement tout ce que je hante, et
-a trouvé le moyen de n’être pas étrangère ici.” In the lengthened
-correspondence between Mademoiselle de l’Enclos and her faithful Abbé,
-she constantly reverts to the English lady after her departure from
-Paris: “Madame Sandwich conservera l’esprit en perdant la jeunesse.
-Faites la souvenir de moi; je serois bien fâchée d’en être oubliée;”
-while St. Evremond on his part tells her: “Tout le monde connoit l’esprit
-de Madame la Comtesse; je vois son bon goût par l’estime extraordinaire
-qu’elle a pour vous. Elle est admirée à Londres comme elle fut à Paris.”
-
-There is a long tedious poem from the same pen, describing the presents
-(comestibles) which Lady Sandwich had sent the Duchesse de Mazarin, with
-whom she had become very intimate: “Des moutons et des lapins de Bath.”
-He speaks of Morelli as friend and physician of all three:
-
- “Sandwich et Mazarin que le Ciel vous unisse,
- Et que cette union de cent ans ne finisse.”
-
-He alludes to meeting her often in society, more especially at Boughton,
-the beautiful country house of Lord (afterwards Duke of) Montagu. “Jamais
-personne n’a mieux mérité d’être reçue magnifiquement, et galamment
-régalée, que Madame Sandwich; jamais homme ne fut plus propre pour la
-bien recevoir que my Lord Montagu. J’espère que la cascade l’octagone,
-les jets d’eau, etc., auront fait oublier la France à Madame Sandwich, et
-comme my Lord est assez heureux pour inspirer son goût et ses desseins
-sur les bâtiments et les jardins, je ne doute point qu’elle n’entreprenne
-bientôt quelque nouvel ouvrage à Hinchinbrooke. On ne sauroit être plus
-sensible que je le suis à l’honneur de son souvenir. Il ne manquoit rien
-pour combler mon déplaisir de n’avoir pas vu Boughton et le maître du
-lieu, que de ne point voir Hinchinbrooke et sa maîtresse, qui est le plus
-grand ornement de tous les lieux où elle se trouve.” He writes to Ninon
-to tell her of a wager he had with Lady Sandwich, respecting their eating
-powers at a dinner at Lord Jersey’s: “Je ne fut pas vaincu,” boasts the
-epicure, “ni sur les louanges ni sur l’appétit.”
-
-At Bath she evidently was the head of a coterie; and Pope writes: “I am
-beginning an acquaintance with Lady Sandwich, who has all the spirit
-of the past age, and the gay experience of a pleasurable life. It were
-as scandalous an omission to come to the Bath, and not to see my Lady
-Sandwich, as it had been to have travelled to Rome, and not to have seen
-the Queen of Sweden. It is, in a word, the best thing the country has to
-boast of, and as she has been all that a woman of spirit could be, so she
-still continues that easy and independent creature, that a sensible woman
-always will be.” Such is Pope’s standard of female excellence! In another
-letter to his friend, Charles Boyle, Earl of Orrery, he says: “This lady
-is both an honour, and a disgrace to her native country. She resided in
-France for some time; but it is a melancholy reflection that we have
-either nothing in England, valuable enough to make her prefer her own
-country to another, or that we will not suffer such a person to reside
-quietly among us.”
-
-In 1729, on the death of her ill-fated husband, the object of so much
-praise and admiration, returned to the more genial atmosphere of Paris,
-for the remainder of her life.
-
-In June 1751, Lord Chesterfield writes to his son, then at Paris, as
-follows: “A propos of beaux esprits, have you les entrées at Lady
-Sandwich’s, who, old as she was, when I saw her last, had the strongest
-parts of any woman I ever knew in my life. If you are not acquainted with
-her, the Duchesse d’Aiguillon or Lady Hervey can, and I daresay will,
-introduce you. I assure you it is worth while both on her own account,
-and for the sake of people of wit and learning, who frequent her salon.
-In such companies there is always something to be learned as well as
-manners; the conversation turns on something above trifles; some point of
-literature, customs, history, etc., is discussed with ingenuity and good
-manners; for I must do the French people of learning justice; they are
-not bears as most of ours are, but gentlemen.”
-
-Lady Sandwich died at Paris, at her house in the Rue Vaugirard, July 1,
-1757, in the Faubourg St. Germains. In a letter of Horace Walpole’s, to
-John Chute, Esq., the same year, he says: “Old Lady Sandwich is dead
-at Paris, and my Lord (her grandson) has given me her picture of Ninon
-de l’Enclos in the prettiest manner in the world. If ever he should
-intermeddle in an election in Hampshire, I beg you will serve him to
-the utmost of your power. I fear I must wait for the picture.” At Lady
-Sandwich’s death in Paris, although she had taken every precaution to
-prevent such a casualty, there arose a great difficulty in securing the
-property to her grandson and heir. The French officers rushed in, put
-seals on everything, and claimed le “mobilier, les tableaux, etc., par
-le droit d’aubaine.” Lord Sandwich sent over his solicitor, who had a
-roughish time of it, with these “harpies.” He appealed to the Duchesse
-d’ Aiguillon and other illustrious friends of the deceased countess, who
-promised him every assistance, and as he discovered afterwards, were
-working against him all the time. But the good lawyer was triumphant in
-the end and wrote to his noble client that everything was safe, including
-the pictures, and he especially notes that of Ninon de l’Enclos, “which
-is very valuable,” he says, “and innumerable offers have been made for
-it, here.” But it was reserved for Horace Walpole’s Gallery, and some
-letters passed on the subject, for although Horace could express his
-opinion of Lord Sandwich in no flattering terms, he did not object to
-receive a present at his hands; and he offers in return (later) a copy
-of the memoirs of the Comte de Grammont, printed at his own press at
-Strawberry Hill, which contains an engraving of the afore-mentioned
-portrait of Mademoiselle de l’Enclos, Lord Sandwich’s letters on the
-subject are in his most jocose style.
-
-
-_Ninon de l’Enclos_:
-
-BY PIERRE MIGNARD.
-
- (Oval. Crimson and Orange Dress.)
-
-Born at Paris, 1615. Died, 1705.—The early education of Anne de l’Enclos
-was not calculated to lead to favourable results. The characters of
-her parents were strangely opposed to each other, and remarkable for
-violent extremes. “M. de l’Enclos, duelliste, musicien, homme de
-plaisir, gentilhomme; Madame de l’Enclos, sévère, exacte.” The mother’s
-wish was to immure her daughter in a convent, a project which the
-father strenuously opposed. But by the time the girl had attained her
-fifteenth year she was left an orphan, at liberty to follow her own
-devices. Scepticism and Epicureanism were very prevalent at this epoch,
-and of these schools Ninon became a too willing disciple. She soon
-became the centre of attraction; her conquests were legion. Voltaire
-said: “There will be soon as many histories of Ninon as there are of
-Louis XIV.” Voltaire was only thirteen years old when he was first
-presented to Mademoiselle de l’Enclos, who was much struck with him, and
-evidently detected some promise of his future greatness. At her death
-she bequeathed him 2000 francs to buy books. She was a strange mixture
-of self-indulgence and self-restraint: at one time her conduct was so
-outrageous in its immorality as to scandalize even the Court of the Great
-Monarch, and it was reported that she was advised to emigrate, “Mais
-elle ne partit point,” says St. Beuve; “elle continua la même vie, en
-baissant légèrement le ton.” Later on, he says: “Elle rangea sa vie et
-la réduisit petit à petit, sur le pied honorable, où on la vit finir.”
-St. Simon “le sévère,” says: “Ninon eût des amis illustres de toutes
-les sortes, et elle les conserva tous. Tout se conduisit chez elle,
-avec un respect et une décence extrème—jamais ni jeu, ni ris élevés, ni
-dispute; sa conversation était charmante, désinteressée, fidèle, secrète
-au dernier point.” She was temperate in eating and drinking, and would
-never suffer drunkards at her table; indeed in her youth, she appears
-to have drunk no wine, though occasionally in some of her later letters
-to St. Evremond, she discourses somewhat enthusiastically on a subject
-so near to her correspondent’s heart, and speaking of her advanced age
-she says: “L’appétit est quelque chose dont je jouis encore.” St. Beuve
-tells us: “Qu’elle réfléchissait dans un âge, et dans un train de vie,
-où à peine les autres sont capables de penser, et elle, qui resta si
-longtemps jeune par l’esprit, se trouva mûre par là aussi avant l’âge.”
-La Force says: “Je n’ai pas connu cette Ninon dans sa beauté, mais à
-l’âge de cinquante et de soixante [the report ran until past 80] elle a
-eu des amants qui l’ont fort aimé, et les plus honnêtes gens de France
-pour amis.” Her salon was the most brilliant in Paris; parents schemed
-that their children’s débût in the world should be made under Ninon’s
-auspices, and Madame de Coulanges observes: “Les femmes courent après
-elle aujourd’hui, comme d’autres gens y couraient autrefois.” Even the
-straight-laced Madame de Maintenon, in speaking of her brother, writes
-to her thus: “Continuez, Mademoiselle, à donner de bons conseils à M.
-d’Aubigné: il à bien besoin des leçons de Leontium; [this was Ninon’s
-nickname, so called from the favourite disciple of Epicurus] les avis
-d’une amie aimable persuadent toujours plus que les conseils d’une sœur
-sévère.” Tallemant says that her beauty was never very remarkable: “Son
-esprit etoit plus charmant que son visage—dès qu’elle parloit, on était
-pris et ravi.” She sang, and played on the lute. “‘La sensibilité,’
-dit elle, ‘est l’ame du chant.’” Her portrait is drawn by Mademoiselle
-de Scudéry in her novel of “Clélie.” “Elle parle volontiers; elle rit
-aisément, elle aime à faire une innocente guerre à ses amis. Les cheveux
-d’un beau chatain, le visage rond, le teint vif, la bouche agréable,
-les lèvres fort incarnates, une petite fosse au menton, les yeux noirs,
-brillants, pleins de feu, souriants, et la physionomie fine, enjouée,
-et fort spirituelle.” It can scarcely be denied that this description
-entitles to beauty, and so indeed do the portraits at Hinchingbrook and
-Althorp, though she was apparently at an advanced age when the latter was
-painted. “On a dit d’elle, qu’à la table elle étoit ivre dès la soupe!
-ivre de bonne humeur, et de saillies;” for as we have seen before, she
-was always temperate. Her letters to St. Evremond when they were both
-old, are most characteristic. They occasionally lament together over
-their age, but appear to have had many gleams of consolation. From the
-highest and truest of all comfort, they seem to have cut themselves off;
-and yet, in Ninon’s touching and eloquent letter to her correspondent, on
-the occasion of the death of the Duchesse de Mazarin, his dearest friend,
-there is this passage: “Si on pouvoit penser comme Madame de Chevreuse,
-qui croyoit en mourant, qu’elle alloit causer avec tous ses amis en
-l’autre monde, il seroit doux de le penser.” In another letter to the
-same, she says: “Nous allons mériter la louange de la postérité, pour la
-durée de nos vies, et celle de l’amitié; je crois que je vivrai autant
-que vous. Adieu Monsieur; pourquoi n’est ce pas un bon jour?” This was
-something like a prophecy, as they died within two years of each other,
-one having completed, the other within a few months of, ninety years of
-age. In speaking of her reception of a friend, whom St. Evremond had
-recommended to her notice, she says: “J’ai lu (devant lui) votre lettre
-avec des lunettes, mais elles ne me sieyent pas mal; j’ai toujours eu la
-mine grave.” Again: “Tout le monde me dit, que j’ai moins à me plaindre
-du temps qu’une autre; de quelque sorte que cela soit, qui m’aurait
-proposé une telle vie, je me serois pendue.” In spite of which, her
-letters are invariably cheerful. St. Evremond says, in very nearly the
-same strain as he writes to his other frequent correspondent the Duchess
-of Mazarin: “La nature commence à faire voir par vous, qu’il est possible
-de ne point vieillir. Vous êtes de tous les pays, aussi estimée à Londres
-qu’à Paris: vous êtes de tous les temps, vous êtes la maîtresse du
-présent et du passé.” Ninon died at her house at Paris about five o’clock
-in the evening, having outlived her ninetieth birthday by five months.
-
- NOTE.—The Abbé Charles de St. Evremond, to whom we are indebted
- for so much information relating to Ninon de l’Enclos, and
- the Duchesse de Mazarin, was (originally) a soldier, an
- author, and a statesman—likewise a _bon vivant_, in all of
- which characters, he distinguished himself. He was in great
- favour at one time with Cardinal Mazarin, but having incurred
- that potentate’s displeasure, he thought it prudent to take
- refuge in England, where he remained till his death, in 1703,
- having made friends with all the leading men in that country,
- and being in great favour with the ladies, for his agreeable
- conversation and delicate flattery.
-
-
-_Hortense Mancini, Duchesse de Mazarin_:
-
-BY MIGNARD.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Oval. Dark Hair and Eyes. Very loose Déshabille.)
-
-Born, 1646. Died, 1699.—The five nieces of the Cardinal Mazarin were all
-remarkable for beauty and intelligence, and for lives full of dramatic
-interest. Ninon de l’Enclos says: “Toutes les nièces du Cardinal avaient
-un don singulier d’attrait, et comme une magie: la source des charmes
-est dans le sang Mazarin.” They were the daughters of Lorenzo Mancini,
-by the Cardinal’s beloved sister. Lorenzo was a great astrologer,
-and had not only correctly foretold his own death, and that of their
-only son, but had also predicted that his widow would not survive her
-fifty-second year. The prophecy weighed on her mind, and perhaps hastened
-the fulfilment. Her eldest daughter Laura, Duchesse de Mercœur, died in
-childbed, it is supposed brokenhearted at her mother’s loss. Hortense
-Mancini, the fourth, and apparently the favourite niece of the Cardinal,
-was born at Rome in 1646, and on her arrival in Paris, became the centre
-of attraction from her surpassing beauty. After many negociations,
-the Cardinal bestowed her hand, and an enormous fortune on the Duc de
-Meilleraye, on condition that he would assume the name of Mazarin. No
-sooner was she betrothed, than Hortense received at the hands of her
-uncle, who had hitherto been very niggardly towards her, a splendid
-_corbeille de noces_, and a large sum in gold. She was so elated by this
-sudden accession of fortune, that she sent for her brother, and sisters,
-and encouraged them to take what they pleased, and when this curious trio
-had helped themselves, she took handfuls of money, and flung them out to
-the lacqueys in the court-yard beneath, and was much amused by watching
-the scramble. The Cardinal, at that time very near his end, was furious
-at this wanton manner, of disposing of his bounty.
-
-The marriage proved most unhappy; the husband morose, jealous, exacting;
-the wife beautiful, brilliant, wayward. In her later correspondence with
-St. Evremond, she makes many excuses for having left her husband, and not
-returning to him, in spite of all his solicitations and the action which
-he brought against her, for separating herself from him. She fled from
-his roof, in the disguise of a man, and by all accounts not empty handed;
-“mais tous les chemins mènent à Paris,” and on her return there she
-received a pension from the King, which, however, she did not consider
-sufficient to enable her to reside there. She accordingly retired to
-Chambéri. But in the year 1675 she went to England in the train of Mary
-of Modena, the youthful Duchess of York. The real object of this journey
-is believed to have been a mission, with which she was entrusted by the
-numerous enemies of Mademoiselle de Quérouaille (afterwards Duchess
-of Portsmouth) to destroy that favourite’s influence by supplanting
-her, in the affections of Charles II. Nor did such a result appear
-improbable, as Hortense surpassed her rival, both in wit, and beauty,
-and it was well known that the King had already admired her so much, as
-to entertain serious notions of making her his wife. He gave her a most
-warm reception, and settled a pension on her, the Duke of Mazarin having
-already found means to possess himself of the pittance, allowed her by
-Louis XIV. But unfortunately for all these deep-laid schemes, Hortense
-was so much enamoured of the Prince de Monaco, then in England, as to
-incur the King’s anger, and cause him for a while even to suspend her
-pension.
-
-She never left England; persuasions, stratagems, and menaces, all were
-useless to induce her, to return to France. Her husband sent over Madame
-de Rutz to try and bring her back to him, or induce her to enter a
-convent, but she says to St. Evremond: “La liberté ne coute jamais trop
-chére à qui se délivre de la tyrannie.” She speaks of the alternative
-of returning to the Duke’s roof, or immuring herself in a convent, as
-“deux extrémités à éviter, autant l’une que l’autre.” Yet at one time,
-on the occasion of a lover being killed in a duel in Spain, she seems
-to have entertained the notion of embracing the latter alternative; but
-the easy-going St. Evremond advised her strongly against such a step,
-assuring her the loss of a lover, might soon be repaired. Her enemies in
-France, founded a scandal on the discovery that she did not reside under
-the roof of her Royal mistress, at Whitehall, “mais dans un Pavillon
-tout près du Château de St. James.” She also incurred blame in many
-quarters, for not sharing Queen Mary’s exile in 1688; but she excuses
-herself, by saying that if she did so, not only would she place herself
-once more in the power of her enemies, but that it was impossible for
-her to leave England. She was deeply in debt; she scarcely dared leave
-the house, for fear of being arrested. She makes a most pitiful lament,
-(probably about the time of the escape of James II. to France) over her
-destitution, always to the same friend, and confidant. “Nul bien de
-moi, nulle assistance où je suis, nulle espérance d’ailleurs.” Yet she
-received at different times, pensions from four different monarchs, for
-William III. continued her allowance. Be this as it may, she contrived
-to amuse herself, in her house at Chelsea, where St. Evremond was a
-constant visitor, in spite of his complaints to Lady Anne Hervey, of
-the occasional cold and discomfort. She assembled round her bassette
-table, (for in later years she was much addicted to play) a brilliant,
-aristocratic, literary circle. She gave dinners too, and the St. Evremond
-correspondence shows us, that presents of meat, wine, and fruit, were as
-common in those days, as baskets of game in the nineteenth century. Her
-friends, Lady Sandwich, and the Duke of Montagu in particular, appear to
-have been very generous, in such contributions, and both the Duchess,
-and St. Evremond, appreciated to their fullest extent, the pleasures of
-eating, and drinking, although the latter often expostulates with the
-former against over-indulgence in stimulants. He warns her against excess
-in white wine, absynthe or usquebaugh, which are bad for the lungs; her
-heart, and her head, were given her for better things. There seems every
-reason to believe the learned man’s precepts, and example, were not
-always in unison. She occasionally played too high, or too frequently
-at bassette, to please him. He wrote a poetical scene in which, playing
-with the handsome “Madame Middleton,” Hortense discusses with her the
-comparative beauties of “Madame Grafton, Madame Kildare, and Madame
-Lichfield.” In another letter, an answer no doubt to some lamentations
-over her pecuniary distresses, he says: “Demandez toujours de l’argent;
-s’il n’en vient point, c’est vous qui avez sujet de vous plaindre.”
-
-She numbered amongst her friends and acquaintance the _habitués_ of her
-house at Chelsea, many of the noblest names in England; the Duke of
-Montagu, one of her warmest admirers; Lord Godolphin, the Duke of St.
-Albans, Mr. Villiers, etc. Most of these gentlemen seem at a loss “où
-passer leurs soirées” when she is absent from London. Lady Sandwich, a
-kindred spirit, Lady Anne Montagu, and many other members of the English
-aristocracy frequented her house. This was again in accordance with the
-exhortations of her counsellor, for he writes soon after her flitting
-to Chelsea: “Tout est triste à Londres; il n’est pas de même à Chelsea.
-Montrez vous de temps en temps, où laissez vous voir à Chelsea.” The
-picture that he draws of her charms, although in the high-flown language
-of the period, and of his nation, does not appear over-done when we look
-at Mignard’s beautiful portrait, of this undoubtedly beautiful woman. Her
-venerable adorer bids the young beauties of England tremble, at the name
-of Hortense; he describes her white teeth, her mouth a lovely opening
-flower, her pretty dimples, her bright dark eyes, (which were sometimes
-a source of great suffering to her), and her luxuriant hair; and in his
-description he begs you not to let the modelling of her dainty ear,
-escape your notice. He also assures her, that it is a pity to conceal her
-attractions in splendid robes, for that a simple _déshabille_ becomes
-her best. Surely she acted on this hint, when she sate to Mignard. The
-titles of Madame, or Duchesse, ought not to be given her in speaking to,
-or of her: “Vous êtes au dessus des titres, et il me semble qu’on ôte à
-votre mérite tout ce qu’on donne à votre qualité.” She did not disdain
-to dine with St. Evremond, but he was well aware how particular she was
-in her tastes, and provided for her accordingly. “Le mouton de Windsor
-cède au mouton de Bath, c’est la décision de Hortense; Bath aura donc
-la préférence. Si vous voulez du fruit, apportez en; le vin j’en ai de
-bon.” In one of her temporary absences, at Bath, or elsewhere, he went to
-Chelsea, and describes how melancholy, and deserted were the house, and
-household, her waiting maid Isabelle, her little Moorish page, the parrot
-Pretty, the lap-dog Chop, and Filis the canary bird; nothing is wanting
-to complete this picture of the English house of Hortense, Duchesse
-de Mazarin, in the country, which a contemporary and a compatriot
-designated as “un pays hérétique, l’objet du courroux du Ciel, et de la
-haine des hommes.” The beautiful exile had little to complain of, in the
-welcome she received in this vilified country.
-
-St. Evremond’s letters to Ninon de l’Enclos, on the death of his dearest
-and best friend, are expressive of deep and sincere grief. She died
-heavily in his debt, but he would have given that, and all he had, to
-bring her back to life. People might live a century, and never see her
-equal: “Tout le monde vous imite, personne ne vous ressemble,” were the
-words, he once addressed to her. She scolded her friends at times, but in
-so charming a manner:
-
- “‘Hélas, autre source de larmes,
- Tous ses défauts, avoient des charmes.’
-
-Elle n’avoit jamais su ni tromper, ni haïr.” He praises the manner of
-her death, and says: “Les Anglais, qui surpassent toutes les nations à
-mourir, la doivent regarder avec jalousie.” What added poignancy to his
-regret, was the conviction that her own imprudence hastened the end, a
-circumstance over which he, and Ninon lament together. To the man who
-was within four years of ninety, Hortense at fifty-three, and evidently
-still most attractive, must have appeared comparatively young. She died
-in her house at Chelsea in the summer of 1699.
-
-
-_Mary, Queen of James II., King of England_:
-
-BY L’ARGILLIERE.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Murrey-coloured Dress. Blue Scarf. Pearl Necklace and
- Ornaments.)
-
-Born, 1658. Died, 1691.—The daughter of Alfonso the Fourth, Duke of
-Modena, by Marie Mancini. Became an orphan at an early age; was married
-to the Duke of York (soon after the death of his first wife, Anne
-Hyde) first by proxy, and then in London in 1673. Young, handsome,
-single-minded, impulsive, full of affection to a husband twenty years
-her senior, remarkable in an immoral Court for the modesty, and decorum
-of her conduct, Mary devoted herself to the restoration of the Catholic
-religion, and in consequence became the idol of its votaries, and was
-hated in proportion by the Protestants.
-
-James had a great respect and even affection for his wife, in spite of
-the frequent causes he afforded her for jealousy, and there is no doubt
-that she influenced him very much in religious matters, and contributed
-to his downfall. They had several children who died in their infancy;
-but in 1688 the unfortunate Prince of Wales, afterwards called the Old
-Pretender, or Chevalier de St. George, was born. The Queen’s romantic
-adventures when, aided by the Duc de Lauzun, she escaped in the dead of
-night, with her infant in her arms, are too well known to be recorded
-here. She fled to St. Germains, where Louis XIV received her with royal
-honours, and human sympathy, and she was soon joined by her husband.
-Madame de Sévigné’s portrait of Mary of Modena on her first arrival,
-might well be said to rival that of L’Argillière: “La Reine a des yeux
-beaux, et noirs, qui ont pleuré, un beau teint un peu pâle, la bouche
-grande, de belles dents, une belle taille, et pleine d’esprit, tout cela
-compose une femme qui plait beaucoup. Tout ce qu’elle dit est juste,
-et de bon sens.” She was most grateful to the French King, and on one
-occasion when he held the Prince of Wales in his arms she said: “Hitherto
-I have been glad that my son was too young to understand his misfortunes;
-now I pity him that he cannot appreciate the goodness of your Majesty.”
-
-Nothing could equal the consideration and generosity of Louis XIV.
-towards the exiled sovereigns. The ex-Queen of England had a small
-Court of her own, at St. Germains, where she presided with gentle quiet
-dignity, cheering the declining days of her unhappy husband, by her
-unceasing devotion. Whatever the faults of Mary of Modena may have been
-in public life, no one could deny to the exiled Princess a reputation for
-virtue, tenderness, and charity, very uncommon in the age in which she
-lived.
-
-She was witness to the unsuccessful attempts of both her husband, and
-son, to recover the Crown, and died after a short illness in the “very
-odour of sanctity.”
-
-
-_Henrietta Maria, Duchess of Orleans_:
-
-BY MIGNARD.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Oval. Auburn Hair. White Satin Dress. Pearls.)
-
-Born, 1644. Died, 1670.—Daughter of Charles I., King of England, by
-Henrietta Maria of France. When the Queen of Charles I., a fortnight
-after her confinement, was compelled to fly before the Parliamentary
-army, she confided the infant Princess to the care of her governess, Lady
-Morton, who retired with her charge to Oatlands. Two years afterwards,
-when the Parliament threatened to deprive that lady of her little ward,
-she determined to thwart them in the attempt. She disguised herself as a
-poor French servant, and provided herself with a humpback, in which she
-carried little Henrietta dressed as a boy. They proceeded in this way on
-foot to Dover, where they embarked, and the faithful governess restored
-the child to her mother at Paris. But Lady Morton had an enemy to contend
-with in the proud spirit of the English Princess, who was indignant at
-being clothed in a coarse dress, and still more at being mistaken for
-a boy; and she kept informing the passers by of her royal state, which
-information was fortunately unintelligible.
-
-On the death of the King, she accompanied her mother to France, where
-they lived in great seclusion; on her first arrival indeed, the widowed
-Queen of England had established a small court, and some degree of state,
-but the niggardliness of the Cardinal-Minister, Mazarin, soon reduced her
-means. The first appearance of the young Princess was on the occasion
-of a select ball at court, given by Anne of Austria in her own private
-apartments. The Queen-Mother had taken a fancy to the beautiful girl,
-and the entertainment was given in her honour: Anne was therefore most
-indignant, when the King selected one of the beauties of her own Court,
-as his partner for the first dance. She separated their hands sharply,
-and in a peremptory tone, desired her son to dance with the English
-Princess. Louis XIV., in a pet, replied, “he did not care to dance with
-little girls,” and that in so audible a tone, as to be overheard by
-mother, and daughter. In vain Queen Henrietta Maria, stung to the quick
-by the slight put upon her child, declared she could not dance, having
-sprained her ancle; Anne of Austria insisted, and the King reluctantly
-led out his unwilling partner, whose crimson cheeks, and streaming eyes,
-drew the attention of the whole society upon her. For some time the King
-cherished a feeling of dislike towards the young Princess, so much so
-as to oppose the union between her, and his brother Monsieur, the Duke
-of Orleans. But this marriage was resolved on by the two royal mothers,
-and it was finally arranged that the nuptials should take place, on the
-return of the Queen and Princess Henrietta from England, whither they
-went for the ostensible motive of congratulating Charles II. on his
-restoration to the throne, although it was well known that political
-intrigues were mixed up with these congratulations.
-
-At her brother’s Court the young Henrietta “turned all heads, and
-inflamed all hearts,” says a contemporary. The Duke of Buckingham, who
-accompanied them on their return to France, incurred the maternal anger,
-by his undisguised devotion to the fiançée of Monsieur. The voyage
-was a disastrous one, the vessel struck on a rock, and nearly went to
-pieces, and no sooner had they gained the shore in safety, than the
-Princess sickened of the measles. The Duke of Buckingham, maddened by
-the dangers both by sea, and land, to which the beautiful object of his
-sudden passion, was exposed, became so demonstrative in the expressions
-of his grief, and affection, that the English Queen judged it prudent,
-to despatch him as avant-courier, to Paris. On her recovery, and return
-thither, the Princess found herself as much admired as she had been at
-her brother’s Court, and the King opened his eyes and wondered at himself
-for not caring to dance with “such a little girl.” “Les yeux vifs, noirs,
-brillans, pleins de feu,” says Choisy, “elle fut l’objet de tous les
-empressemens imaginables, compris ceux de Monsieur. Elle a l’esprit aussi
-aimable que le reste.” The Duke of Orleans was not supposed to be much
-in love with his wife, but that did not prevent his being very jealous
-of the Dukes of Buckingham, and Guiche, in particular. Buckingham
-indeed had brought the husband’s jealousy on his own head, by his absurd
-demeanour, and had been the means of instilling suspicion into his mind,
-with regard to the Duc de Guiche, a remarkably handsome, and attractive
-young courtier. In another quarter, jealousy was rife, for the newly
-married Queen of France, Maria Theresa, deeply attached to a husband who
-remained always indifferent to her, watched with dismay the influence
-“Madame,” (as Henrietta was now called) exercised over the King.
-
-The second Court under “Madame’s” auspices, with its young beauties,
-its easy conversation, and pleasant pastimes, was exactly suited to
-the Monarch’s taste, and he was known to have said, in speaking of the
-Duchess of Orleans, “qu’il connoissoit en la voyant de plus près, combien
-il avoit été injuste, à la plus belle personne du monde.” The admiration
-she excited, and the influence she obtained over her brother-in-law,
-ended indeed, only with her life. Her small Court was brilliant, in the
-extreme, and they amused themselves in divers ways. “Madame, montoit à
-cheval, suivie de toutes ses dames, habillées galamment, avec mille
-plumes sur leurs têtes, accompagnées du Roi, et de la jeunesse de la
-Cour.” Monsieur lived a great deal in the Palais Royal, and there she
-would go to sup with him, taking all her ladies, and chosen friends with
-her. Mademoiselle de la Vallière was one of her Maids of Honour, and the
-liaison with the King, began under Henrietta’s roof. She had been very
-fond of the beautiful girl, but treated her with marked displeasure, in
-the latter days.
-
-Madame made a second journey to England, for the purpose of concluding
-a private treaty, between her brother, and the French monarch, and of
-detaching the former from his alliance with Holland. On this occasion,
-she was accompanied by the celebrated Mademoiselle de la Quérouaille,
-afterwards Duchess of Portsmouth, who had also her sealed orders. The
-mission was successful, though neither advantageous, nor honourable,
-as far as England was concerned. Madame returned in triumph, took up
-her abode at the Palace of St. Cloud, and appeared to have reached the
-zenith of worldly prosperity, always excepting the unhappy difference,
-with her husband, which commenced so soon after their marriage, and had
-increased rather than diminished. Her tried friend, and trusty confidant
-in these trials, was Cosnac, Bishop of Valence, afterwards Archbishop of
-Aix, a distinguished, but eccentric man. At twenty-four years of age, he
-preached a sermon, which made such an impression on the mind, of Mazarin,
-the Cardinal Minister, that on the conclusion of the service, he promised
-the preacher a bishopric; what he called “faire un maréchal de France
-sur la brêche.” Cosnac was afterwards appointed almoner to Monsieur, and
-resided with him, for some time, during which period, he endeavoured to
-gain an influence for good, over the mind of this fickle, and vacillating
-Prince, and often expostulated with him, on his conduct to the Duchess.
-They quarrelled, and separated, but his indignation against Monsieur’s
-unworthy favourite, the Chevalier de Loraine, so enraged the Duke that
-he contrived to procure a sentence of exile, against Cosnac. But absence
-could not sever the bonds of friendship, which bound him to Henrietta,
-and of which he gave a valuable proof, on the occasion of a libel, that
-was published against her in Holland, at the time of her negociations
-between England, and France. The Duchess dreaded lest the scurrilous
-pamphlet, most damaging to her reputation, should fall into her husband’s
-hands, and she wrote off in terror to her exiled friend, to ask his
-assistance. Cosnac immediately despatched an emissary to Holland, who
-did his work so effectually, that the whole edition was bought up, the
-publication stopped, and all the extant copies brought over, to be
-destroyed by this zealous friend. As in duty bound, “Madame” worked hard
-to obtain the Bishop’s recall, so much so that the King thought her
-attachment to him, must be of a more tender nature than she confessed.
-Louis XIV., in all probability, was not a good judge of friendship, or a
-believer in it, where a woman was concerned.
-
-In her correspondence with Cosnac, in speaking of her mission to England,
-she hints at the hope of Charles II. becoming a Roman Catholic, in the
-event of which she promises that he shall obtain a Cardinal’s hat. On
-her return from England, four days before her death, describing the
-affectionate reception, she had met with from the French King, she says:
-“Le Roi même à mon retour m’a témoigné beaucoup de bonté; mais pour
-Monsieur rien n’est égal à son acharnement, pour trouver moyen de se
-plaindre. Il me fit l’honneur de me dire, que je suis toute puissante,
-et que par conséquent si je ne fais pas revenir le Chevalier de Loraine,
-exilé par le Roi, je ne me soucie pas de lui plaire, et il fait ensuite
-des menaces, pour le temps à venir.” To the same correspondent, she
-complains that her little girl is brought up, to hate her. Three days
-later, towards five o’clock in the afternoon, the Duchess of Orleans
-asked for a glass of iced chicory water; a short time after drinking
-which, she was seized with excruciating pain, and strong convulsions.
-As her condition grew worse, it became evident to herself, and all
-around her, that the end was approaching. Her confessor, Feuillet, was
-sent for, and in his questions, and exhortations, he did not spare his
-dying penitent, but both he, and Bossuet, who was also present, became
-deeply affected, by the humble devotion, and pious resignation, to the
-Divine Will, which the unhappy Princess, evinced in the midst of all her
-sufferings. She was most anxious not to forget any one, and recalling
-a promise she had made, some time ago to a friend, she called one of
-her weeping attendants to her, and gave orders where she would find a
-ring, and to whom it should be sent, as her parting gift. As the last
-moment approached, she placed her hand in that of her husband, and gazing
-earnestly in his face said most emphatically: “Monsieur, je ne vous ai
-jamais manqué.” She thought of every one in her last moments, and closed
-an adventurous, and chequered life, at the early age of twenty-six, at
-peace, with all mankind, repentant, and trusting in the mercy of God.
-
-That her death was the effect of poison, none could doubt: the question
-arose, who was the murderer. The King sent for his brother, and charged
-him with the crime, and a violent scene ensued between them; but the
-real criminal appears to have been the exiled Chevalier de Loraine, and
-evidence of the strongest nature was brought to show, that he sent the
-poison from Rome by a Monsieur Morel (who was not in the secret) to the
-Marquise d’Effiat, and a footman deposed, to seeing the Marquise rubbing
-the inside of the cup, which was immediately afterwards given to Madame,
-with the chicory water, when she complained of thirst. Be this as it may,
-no sooner was she dead, than the Chevalier de Loraine was recalled from
-exile, and the whole matter hushed up.
-
-Cosnac’s description of Madame, was as follows: “Elle avoit l’esprit
-solide, et du bon sens, l’âme grande, et fort éclairée, sur tout ce
-qu’il faudroit faire, mais quelque-fois elle ne le faisoit pas, par une
-faiblesse naturelle.... Elle mêlait dans toute sa conversation, une
-douceur qu’on ne trouvoit point dans les autres personnes royales; ce
-n’est pas qu’elle eût moins de majesté, mais elle en savoit user d’une
-manière plus facile, et plus touchante. Pour les traits de son visage,
-on n’en trouve point de plus achevés; les yeux vifs, sans être rudes,
-la bouche admirable, le nez parfait (chose rare), le teint blanc et
-uni, la taille médiocre mais fine: son esprit animait tout son corps;
-elle en avoit jusqu’aux pieds; elle dansait mieux que femme au monde.”
-She loved poetry and befriended poets: Corneille in his old age, and
-Racine, whose heart she gained by shedding tears at the first reading of
-his “Andromaque.” La Force said after her death: “Le goût des choses de
-l’esprit avoit fort baissé. Il est certain qu’en perdant cette Princesse
-la cour perdoit la seule personne de son sang, qui était capable d’aimer
-et de distinguer le mérite, et il n’y a eu depuis sa mort, que jeu,
-confusion, et impolitesse.”
-
-
-_Charles V., Emperor of Germany_:
-
-BY TIZIANO VECELLI.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In Armour, Standing by a Table, on which is his Plumed Helmet.)
-
-Born at Ghent, 1500. Died 1558.—The son of Philip, Archduke of Austria,
-by Joan the Mad, heiress of Castile, and daughter of Ferdinand and
-Isabella. Became King of Spain in 1516, and Emperor of Germany in
-1519, on the death of Maximilian. Francis I., King of France, was his
-competitor for the imperial dignity, and a war was the result, when the
-French King was defeated, and made prisoner. But Charles’s whole life
-was spent in warfare, until his abdication, and final seclusion from the
-world, in the Convent of San Yuste, in Estremadura, where he died. He
-married the daughter of the King of Portugal, by whom he had Philip II.
-and two daughters.
-
-
-_Prince Rupert_:
-
-BY VANDYCK.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Rich Dress of Murrey Coloured Satin, with Cuirass.)
-
-Born, 1619. Died, 1682.—The fourth son of Frederic, Elector Palatine,
-afterwards King of Bohemia, by Elizabeth, daughter of James I., King of
-Great Britain. His birth at Prague was hailed with great joy, and his
-baptism was an occasion of extraordinary pomp. He was an intelligent
-and merry child, and as a youth, his elder brother writes home accounts
-of his proficiency in study, and in athletic exercises, describing “our
-Rupert,” as a species of Admirable Crichton. Both he, and his brother
-Charles were educated at Leyden, and stood very high at the collegiate
-examination, when their father, the unfortunate King of Bohemia,
-travelled thither, and saw his boys for the last time. Rupert studied
-war under Henry, Prince of Orange: at thirteen he was present at the
-siege of Rhymberg; at eighteen he commanded a regiment of cavalry. After
-her husband’s death, Elizabeth was advised to send her two elder sons
-to colonise in distant countries; the elder in Madagascar, and Rupert
-in the West Indies: but the high spirited Princess declared “no son of
-hers, should become a knight errant.” Prince Rupert’s later career might
-well have entitled him to the epithet, Elizabeth so much disapproved. He
-distinguished himself in several campaigns, was made prisoner, and at
-the termination of his captivity, accepted the invitation of his uncle,
-Charles I., to repair to England.
-
-The Queen of Bohemia had considered herself aggrieved, by the
-unsatisfactory replies which her brother returned to her frequent
-applications for sympathy and assistance, but on the arrival of Rupert
-and his brother in England, the former was granted an English title,
-installed as Knight of the Garter, and made Commander in Chief of
-Cavalry. The Prince was zealous and loyal, and his courage undoubted; but
-he laid himself open to just censure by his imprudence, and temerity.
-Charles loved his nephew, but the blame which attached to his tactics in
-the fatal battle of Naseby, was confirmed by the Prince’s feeble defence
-of Bristol, for the safety of which place, he had pledged himself. The
-King deprived him of his command, and wrote him so severe a letter,
-that Rupert sought an audience of his royal uncle at Belvoir Castle,
-indignantly denying the charge of treason imputed to him, but honestly
-confessing his imprudence, and shortcomings. Pepys many years afterwards,
-alludes to this incident when he says: “The Prince was the boldest
-attaquer in the world, and yet in the defence of Bristol, no man ever
-did worse, wanting in patience and a seasoned head, etc.” Pepys did not
-love Rupert, who once rated him roundly, in the presence of the King,
-Charles II. The same authority says on another occasion, that the nation
-was displeased at Rupert’s obtaining a command, as he was accounted a
-“most unhappy man.” His next adventure was especially so: Charles I.
-sent him to Ireland, in charge of that portion of the fleet, which had
-remained faithful to the royal cause, but his unlucky star was still in
-the ascendant. He was compelled to seek safety at Lisbon, pursued by the
-Parliamentary squadron, and after many losses, and disasters, he took
-refuge in America, where he remained some years. Thence to France, where,
-says, one of his biographers, “ses aventures romanesques, ses esclaves
-Maures, son train bizarre, le firent un objet de curiosité et le héros de
-plus d’une intrigue galante.” He returned to England on the restoration
-of Charles II. “The Prince Rupert is come to Court,” says Pepys; “welcome
-to nobody;” yet his great courage and the frequency of his exploits in
-the war against Holland, when he was appointed to a command in the
-fleet, first under the Duke of York, then conjointly with the Duke of
-Albemarle, and finally in 1673, when he had the sole command, might well
-have entitled him to the gratitude of the King and the nation.
-
-The wear, and tear, of an adventurous life, the effects of a deep wound,
-received in Flanders, determined Rupert at length, to retire from public
-life, and seek the repose so necessary to him. He was made Governor
-of Windsor Castle, and he found great resource in the cultivation of
-arts, which had always occupied the few leisure hours he had hitherto
-enjoyed; physics, chemistry, the improvement of fire-arms, etc. Horace
-Walpole says: “It is a trite observation, that gunpowder was invented
-by a monk, and printing by a soldier: and it is an additional honour
-to the latter profession, to have invented mezzotinto;” upon which he
-relates the following anecdote: Prince Rupert, when in Holland, was one
-morning, attracted by seeing a sentinel rubbing the barrel of his musket,
-vehemently. On approaching, and examining the gun, he found that the
-damp of the early morning, had rusted the metal, and this, combined with
-friction, had produced a kind of arabesque, or pattern on the metal,
-like a friezed work eaten in with numerous little dots, part of which
-the soldier was scraping away. This set the Prince thinking, how he
-could produce a lasting effect of the same kind, and in combination with
-his friend, Vaillant the painter, he invented a steel roller, cut with
-tools to make teeth in the manner of a file, or rasp, with projecting
-points which produced the black ground, and this being scraped away, or
-diminished at pleasure, left the gradations of light.
-
-Prince Rupert was never married, but he left two illegitimate children.
-
-Grammont says: “Il étoit brave, et vaillant, jusqu’à la témérité. Il
-avoit le génie fécond en expériences de mathématique, et quelque talent
-pour la chimie. Poli jusqu’à l’excès, quand l’occasion ne le demandait
-pas, fier, et même brutal quand il étoit question de se humaniser, son
-visage étoit sec, et dur....” But Lely, and Vandyck paint more comely
-portraits of the brave “Knight-errant.” He was a messmate of the Earl
-of Sandwich, and it is no wonder the portraits of the two brave sailors,
-should hang together in the Englishman’s ancestral home. Lely painted,
-(as we are told by Pepys,) “all the Flaggmen; and in his studio I saw
-the pictures of the Earl of Sandwich, Prince Rupert, etc.” But from his
-account of the campaign at sea, he leads us to believe that both Rupert,
-and the Duke of Albemarle, were jealous of the popularity, and fame which
-Lord Sandwich has justly gained in England, through his prowess.
-
-
-_Henrietta Maria, Queen of England_:
-
-BY VANDYCK.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (White Satin Dress. Lace, Pearls. Standing by a Table, on which
- the Crown is placed.)
-
-Born, 1607. Died, 1669.—Daughter of Henry IV., King of France, by Marie
-de Medicis. Attracted the notice of Charles, Prince of Wales, on his
-route to Madrid, where he travelled in disguise, with the Duke of
-Buckingham, to ask the hand of the Infanta of Spain. On the failure of
-the negociations between France and Spain, Charles remembered the young
-French Princess, and became her suitor. The marriage was concluded, under
-circumstances which appeared to promise great prosperity; but alas, for
-human foresight! the young Queen’s life was destined to be one prolonged
-struggle, of sorrow, distress, and difficulty. She took refuge in France,
-soon after the birth of her daughter Henrietta, and was there warmly
-welcomed, and treated with liberality by the King; her constant pecuniary
-difficulties being usually attributed to her generosity, to the English
-Royalists.
-
-When Charles I., took leave of the Princess Elizabeth, who had remained
-in England, he sent his last farewell to the Queen, assuring her that
-during the whole course of their union, he had never been unfaithful to
-her, even in thought. In 1660, Charles II. having been proclaimed King
-in London, his mother, accompanied by the Princess Henrietta, visited
-him, ostensibly to offer her congratulations, but really to recover
-part of her dowry, and also to prevent, if possible, the acknowledgement
-of the private marriage of her son, the Duke of York, with Anne Hyde.
-But her opposition to this marriage was overruled, from political, and
-prudential motives. On her return to Paris, and after the union of her
-daughter, with the Duke of Orleans, Queen Henrietta Maria, bought a house
-at Colombes, where she lived a most retired life. “Elle étoit,” says
-Madame de Motteville, “sans nulle façon.” In her frugal manner of life,
-and the courage she displayed in danger, and vicissitude, this Princess
-resembled her father, the great Henry. She was much disfigured by illness
-and sorrow: “Elle avoit même la taille un peu gatée; sa beauté,” says
-Madame de Motteville, “n’avoit duré que l’espace d’un matin, et l’avoit
-quitté avant son midi; elle maintenoit que les femmes ne peuvent plus
-être belles, passé vingt-deux ans. Elle avoit infiniment de l’esprit;
-elle étoit agréable dans la société, honnête, douce, et facile; son
-tempérament étoit tourné du côté de la gaieté.” Henrietta Maria died
-suddenly at her house at Colombes, and was buried at St. Denis, but
-she desired that her heart should rest in the Convent of Ste. Marie de
-Chaillot, a Sisterhood, for whom she had much affection.
-
-
-_Edward, first Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
- (When Young. In a Brown Dress. Pointing to a Globe. Curtain in
- Background.)
-
-
-
-
-_MORNING ROOM._
-
-
-_Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough_:
-
-BY SIR GODFREY KNELLER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH: OVAL.
-
- (Light Coloured Dress. Blue Scarf.)
-
-Born, 1658. Died, 1744.—The youngest daughter of Richard Jennings, Esq.,
-of Sundridge, near St. Albans, by the daughter and heiress, of Sir
-Gifford Thornhurst. She was presented when quite young at Court, where
-her sister Frances, (afterwards Lady Tyrconnel) had already distinguished
-herself by her laxity of conduct, as well as her beauty. Sarah’s features
-may not have rivalled her sister’s in regularity, but her countenance was
-full of expression, her complexion delicate, and the profusion of her
-fair hair, formed a most attractive combination. She became the centre of
-a host of adorers, amongst whom she preferred, in spite of his poverty,
-“the young, handsome, graceful, insinuating, and eloquent Churchill.” On
-his side, the young Colonel who, even in early days, had established a
-character for avarice, was so enamoured of the portionless girl, as to
-refuse a rich heiress with a plain face, who had been proposed to him.
-But in her beauty, her ambition, her indomitable will, and the close
-friendship which united her to the Princess (afterwards Queen) Anne, the
-bride brought her husband, a dowry which made him “a Duke, a sovereign
-Prince of the Empire, the Captain General of a great coalition, the
-arbiter between mighty Princes, and the wealthiest subject in Europe.”
-The friendship between Lady Churchill, and Anne, the tyranny which the
-high-spirited, hot-tempered and wilful Lady of the Bedchamber, exercised
-over her royal mistress, for many years, are matters too well known, to
-be here recapitulated. The romantic friendship of Mrs. Morley, and Mrs.
-Freeman, the manner in which Anne as Princess, and Queen, even after her
-marriage to the Prince of Denmark, gave herself up to the dominion of
-her favourite, until the self-imposed yoke became unbearable, and was
-suddenly and completely discarded, are historical facts, bound up with
-public events.
-
-The Duchess of Marlborough was supplanted by her own _protégée_, Mrs.
-Masham, and peremptorily dismissed, in spite of prayers, rages and
-“scenes.” Voltaire says: “Quelques paires de gants qu’elle refusa à la
-Reine, un verre d’eau qu’elle laissa tomber par une méprise! sur la
-robe de Madame Masham, changèrent la face de l’Europe,” alluding to the
-political changes, which ensued on the downfall of Sarah, Duchess of
-Marlborough. In her latter days, her temper, embittered by these untoward
-circumstances, became ungovernable; she quarrelled with her husband, her
-son-in-law, her grandchildren, and gave way to the most violent outbursts
-of passion. The Duke of Marlborough was a constant, and affectionate
-husband, and it is related that on one occasion, when he strove to pacify
-her rage by a compliment to the beauty of her luxuriant hair, she seized
-the scissors, cut it off, and flung it in his face. When the Duke died,
-the long fair tresses, were found carefully preserved in a drawer.
-
-Sarah was a widow for twenty-two years; in spite of her age, perhaps
-on account of her immense fortune, the Duke of Somerset, and Lord
-Coningsby were both suitors, for her hand. To the latter, she replied,
-after reminding him that she was sixty-three, “but were I only thirty,
-and could you lay the world at my feet, I would never bestow on you, the
-heart and hand, which belonged exclusively to John, Duke of Marlborough.”
-
-
-_John, Second Duke of Montagu_:
-
-BY PHILLIPS.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (Right Hand on a Table, Left on the Back of a Chair, on which a
- Greyhound is standing. Court Suit, Star, Garter, and Ribbon of
- the Order.)
-
-Born, 1682. Died, 1749.—The only surviving son of Ralph, first Duke of
-Montagu, by his first wife, the Countess of Northumberland. In 1705, he
-married Lady Mary Churchill, youngest daughter, and co-heiress of the
-Duke of Marlborough, by Sarah Jennings, his wife, by whom he had several
-sons, who all died in their childhood, as did one of his daughters;
-but two survived him, Lady Isabella, married to the Duke of Manchester,
-and Lady Mary, to the Earl of Cardigan. He was Lord High Constable of
-England, at the coronation of George I., Knight of the Garter, and one
-of the first Knights of the Bath, as well as Great Master of that new
-Order, with several other honours. Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, in
-her unpublished volume of remarks and axioms, (which does her little
-honour) is very hard upon her son-in-law. She declares he had no just
-claim for place, or favour on the Government, on account of services,
-by sea, or land; but this statement is emphatically contradicted,
-in a marginal note, stating that Montagu had served under the great
-Duke of Marlborough himself. He seems by all accounts, to have been
-a kind hearted, and benevolent man, but undoubtedly whimsical, and
-eccentric; witness an anecdote told of him in one of the periodicals
-of the day. In his walks in St. James’s Park, he was attracted by the
-daily sight of an old gentleman, of military aspect, but shabby, and
-poverty stricken in his dress, who usually sat, and sunned himself,
-on one of the benches in the avenue. The Duke sent his servant, one
-day to the old soldier, and asked him, to come and visit him. Nothing
-loth, but much bewildered, the stranger followed the lacquey, through
-the corridors, and well furnished rooms, to the ducal presence. Here
-he was asked, and had to tell, his sorrowful tale. He had served his
-country, but had no pension; he had married a wife without a dowry, and
-she and her children were half starving, down in Wales, while he had
-come to London on the sad, and hopeless errand, of getting something,
-to live upon. He had a wretched room, where he slept, and spent most
-of his time, on a bench, in the Park. The Duke listened, and fed him,
-gave him a trifling sum, and said he hoped to see him again, ere very
-long. Accordingly, some time afterwards, the old man received a letter
-from the Duke, begging him to come to dinner, telling him that he had a
-most mysterious, and confidential communication, to make. The soldier,
-to whom his whole acquaintance with Montagu appeared like a fairy tale,
-brushed up his thread-bare suit, and presented himself to the Duke, who
-in a most private, and mysterious manner, assured him, that there was a
-certain lady, who admired him very much, and who had earnestly desired
-an interview with him; indeed, the Duke went on to say, so entirely was
-her heart set on the meeting, that he had consented to be the go-between.
-More bewildered than ever, the soldier pleaded his wrinkled face, his
-scanty grey hairs, and, above all, his allegiance to the poor wife,
-far away among the Welsh mountains. The Duke was jocose, treated the
-matter with levity, and gave his arm to lead the astonished guest to
-the hospitable board, where the lady would be seated; and there indeed,
-smiling amid her tears, sate his wife, and her children, and after a
-sumptuous repast, the happy couple left the ducal roof, with their
-pockets sufficiently well lined (with the addition of a small pension
-also promised by their noble friend), to keep the wolf from their humble
-door. Such whimsical fancies as these, would not have suited the stern
-and economical Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough.
-
-John, Duke of Montagu, died at Montagu House, Whitehall, in the
-sixty-eighth year of his age, when his title became extinct.
-
-
-_John, Fourth Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY ZOFFANY.
-
-SMALL FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (Seated near a Table, on which he rests his Left Arm. Crimson
- and Gold Court Dress.)
-
-
-_Miss Margaret Ray_:
-
-BY GAINSBOROUGH.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Blue Dress.)
-
-Born, 1742, Murdered, 1779.—Some say the daughter of a stay-maker in
-Covent Garden, others that she was born at Elstree, in Herts, where
-her father was a labourer. In early life, she was apprenticed to a
-dressmaker in Clerkenwell, but her first meeting with John, fourth Earl
-of Sandwich, was at a shop in Tavistock-street, where he was buying some
-neck-cloths. Struck with her extreme beauty, his lordship took her under
-his protection, established her at Hinchingbrook, and superintended her
-education. Margaret repaid the pains that were bestowed on her, but
-her especial talent was for music, and under the tuition of Mr. Bates,
-(afterwards secretary to Lord Sandwich) and Signor Giardini, her sweet
-and powerful voice, was fully developed, and she sang to perfection,
-in the Oratorio of “Jephthah,” in Italian bravuras, and in the catches
-and glees, which so often formed part of the varied entertainments, at
-Hinchingbrook. Every Christmas, indeed, Lord Sandwich caused an oratorio
-to be performed, at his country house, where Miss Ray was the principal
-attraction, although she had several rivals in musical talent, both
-professional, and amateur. On one occasion Mr. Cradock, an intimate
-friend of Lord Sandwich’s, tells us that he accompanied his lordship, Mr.
-Bates, Miss Ray and another lady, to Vauxhall, where some musical friends
-met them, and they sang catches, and glees, in the box, to the delight
-of the audience, who greatly admired the beauty and vocal powers, of the
-fair (to them) unknown performer.
-
-Miss Ray was remarkable, while under Lord Sandwich’s roof, for her
-discreet and circumspect conduct, in a most equivocal position; and his
-lordship appears to have been very strict, lest anyone, as he expressed
-himself, “should exceed the boundary line,” that he had drawn. For
-example, at the oratorios where she shone so conspicuously, the society
-were not expected to notice her, and she herself was sadly embarrassed
-one evening, when Lady Blake advanced between the scenes to converse
-with her, the singer well knowing such a step would arouse the noble
-host’s displeasure; a well grounded suspicion as he went so far as to say
-“such a trespass might occasion the overthrow of our music meetings.”
-The Bishop of Lincoln’s wife pays this tribute to Margaret: “She was so
-assiduous to please, so excellent and unassuming, I felt it cruel to sit
-directly opposite to her, and yet find it impossible to notice her.”
-
-At these oratorios, the Duke of Manchester’s band generally attended,
-and Lord Sandwich took the direction of the kettledrums, as, indeed, he
-sometimes did at public music meetings, at Leicester (and elsewhere),
-where Mr. Cradock says: “The Earl and the Otaheitan, Omai, (whom he had
-brought with him) divided public attention.”
-
-Mr. Cradock was with Lord Sandwich, when he first became acquainted
-with Hackman. My Lord had taken Mr. Cradock to Cambridge, to vote for a
-candidate for a professorship in whom he was interested, and brought his
-friend back with him, in his chaise to Hinchingbrook. Under the gateway
-they met a neighbour, Major Reynolds, with a brother officer, who was
-presented as Captain Hackman. Lord Sandwich, with his usual hospitality,
-invited the two officers to a family dinner, and in the evening, he and
-Miss Ray encountered Major Reynolds, and Mr. Cradock at whist, Captain
-Hackman preferring to overlook the game. There can be little doubt that
-Miss Ray inspired the young soldier with love, at first sight. Hackman at
-that time was on a recruiting party at Huntingdon; he became a constant
-visitor at Hinchingbrook, and it seems that whenever Miss Ray drove out,
-he constantly waylaid her, bowing low as she passed. There was evidently
-a great difference of opinion as to Miss Ray’s feelings, with regard to
-her new admirer. One account of the transaction affirms that she was
-not insensible to his devotion, and that the black servant, believing
-she was false, imparted his suspicions to Lord Sandwich. The same
-authority states that his Lordship taxed his beautiful companion with her
-inconstancy, and either through his influence, or that of Major Reynolds,
-Hackman obtained a recommendation to Sir John Swaine, Adjutant-general
-in Ireland, where he remained nearly two years. But he never forgot
-the beautiful Margaret, and leaving the army, he entered the Church,
-obtained a living in Norfolk, and wrote her a passionate love letter, in
-which he proposed marriage, and went so far as to promise tenderness,
-and protection for her children by Lord Sandwich. This offer was refused
-with decision, whether from fidelity to her protector, anxiety for her
-children’s welfare, or indifference to her adorer, we cannot say. Her
-situation was certainly not one of calm enjoyment. One evening at the
-Admiralty she complained to Mr. Cradock, that she did not believe either
-Lord Sandwich, or herself was safe to go out, from the fury of the mob,
-and that coarse ballads, and libels were sung under the windows, which
-looked upon the Park. Bursting into tears, she besought Mr. Cradock to
-intercede with Lord Sandwich, to make some settlement on her, not from
-mercenary motives, but because she wished to relieve my Lord from greater
-expense, and to go on the stage. Her voice was at its best, Italian music
-her forte, and she was sure that through her friend Signor Giardini,
-and Mr. Cradock’s friends Mrs. Brooke and Mrs. Yates, she could secure
-an advantageous engagement. As might have been supposed, Mr. Cradock
-declined to interfere, and the matter dropped.
-
-In the meantime, Hackman, on the receipt of Miss Ray’s letter, which
-put a stop to his long cherished hopes, stung to the quick, and in such
-distress of mind, as brought him to the verge of madness, rushed up to
-London. He strove to effect an interview with the singing master, Signor
-Galli, but this was prevented by the vigilance of Lord Sandwich, who
-entrusted the Italian with the task of informing Mr. Hackman that Miss
-Ray would have no more communication with him. He took a lodging in
-Duke’s Court, St. Martin’s Lane, and on the 7th of April, 1779, he passed
-the morning in reading Blair’s Sermons, and dined with his sister, and
-her husband, a newly married couple. He then went out, proceeded to the
-Admiralty, and seeing Lord Sandwich’s coach at the door, he imagined
-it likely that Miss Ray might be going in it, to call on her friend
-Signora Galli, at her lodgings in the Haymarket. Thence he walked to
-the Cannon Coffee-house, Charing Cross, and watching the carriage pass,
-he followed it in time to see Miss Ray, and Signora Galli enter Covent
-Garden Theatre. On going in, he was distracted with jealousy at seeing
-her addressed by “a gentleman of genteel and handsome appearance,” whom
-he afterwards found to be Lord Coleraine. The performance was “Love
-in a Village.” He went out, furnished himself with a brace of loaded
-pistols, and returned to Covent Garden. When the play was over, he kept
-Miss Ray with her two companions in view, through the lobby, where there
-was a great crowd, until she was under the piazza, and her coach was
-called, in the name of Lady Sandwich. He was pushed down by a chairman,
-running suddenly against him, but recovered himself in time to pursue his
-victim to her coach, in which Signora Galli had already taken her place.
-Stepping between Miss Ray, who had accepted the arm of Mr. McNamara (of
-Lincoln’s Inn Fields), and the coach, he discharged his right hand pistol
-at her, and his left at himself. The beautiful and unfortunate woman,
-raised her hand to her head, and dropped down dead at his feet. Hackman
-fell at the same moment, but finding that he was still alive, he beat
-himself about the head, with the pistol, crying to the bystanders to kill
-him. The murderer, and the victim, were both carried to the Shakespeare
-Tavern; the corpse lay in one room, while the wounded man was attended
-to, in another. He enquired for her, and declared he only meant to kill
-himself, and had failed in his object. He was taken before Sir John
-Fielding, who committed him to Tothill Fields Bridewell, and afterwards
-to Newgate, where he was constantly watched to prevent his making away,
-with himself. He was attended on his trial by a friend, and on first
-entering the court, was much agitated, sighing, and weeping while the
-evidence was being given, yet at the same time showing a courageous, and
-even noble deportment as concerned his own fate. He made a most pathetic
-speech, in which he confessed his guilt, but attributed it to sudden
-phrensy, as regarded murder. The suicide, he said, was premeditated. He
-had no wish to avoid punishment; he was too unhappy to care for life,
-now she was gone, and he submitted himself to the judgment of Almighty
-God. A letter found in his pocket, to his brother-in-law, taking leave of
-him, and speaking in the most affectionate terms of his “beloved woman,”
-seemed to bear out his testimony. His hearers were much affected, but on
-his return to the cell he became composed, and said he was rejoiced to
-think, his time on earth was so short. After his sentence was passed, he
-received the following letter in prison:
-
- “If the murderer of Miss —— wishes to live, the man he has most
- injured, will use all his interest to procure his life.”
-
-The prisoner’s reply was as follows:
-
- “Condemned Cell, Newgate.
-
- “The murderer of her, whom he preferred, far preferred to life,
- suspects the hand from which he has just received, such an
- offer as he neither desires, nor deserves. His wishes are for
- death, not life. One wish he has: Could he be pardoned in this
- world, by the man he has most injured? Oh, my Lord, when I meet
- her in another world, enable me to tell her—if departed spirits
- are not ignorant of earthly things—that you forgive us both,
- and that you will be a father to her dear children.”
-
-He suffered death calmly, and thus ended the career of a man, who seemed
-formed for better things.
-
-Mr. Cradock, who was sincerely attached both to Lord Sandwich, and the
-unfortunate cause of so much sorrow, tells us that on the day following
-the murder, he went to the Admiralty, and saw old James, the black
-servant, whom he found overwhelmed with grief. It was he who began to
-break the terrible news to his master, when Lord Sandwich interrupted
-him, by bidding him “allude no more to the ballads and libels, of which
-he had heard enough.” “Alas,” said the faithful old man, “it is something
-more terrible than that.” Others then came in from the theatre and
-related the dreadful intelligence. Lord Sandwich, stood for awhile
-transfixed with horror, then raising his hand exclaimed, “I could have
-borne anything but this,” and rushed upstairs, desiring that no one
-should follow him. He shunned society, for a long time after the dreadful
-catastrophe, and his friend Cradock tells us, that he went to see him,
-and found him terribly depressed one day, sitting under the portrait of
-Miss Ray, “a speaking likeness;” doubtless the one in question.
-
-By Miss Ray, Lord Sandwich had four children, viz., Admiral Montagu,
-Basil Montagu, Q.C., John Montagu, and Augusta, married to the Comte de
-Viry, of Savoy, an Admiral in the Sardinian Navy.
-
-This beautiful portrait by Gainsborough, belonged to Admiral Montagu, and
-was purchased by John, seventh Earl of Sandwich, in 1857, of a picture
-dealer, at the instigation of Mr. Green, of Evans’s Rooms, who told him
-he much wished to possess it himself, having a collection of portraits of
-celebrities, but the price was beyond his mark.
-
-
-_Lady Louisa Corry, Afterwards Countess of Sandwich_:
-
-BY HAMILTON.
-
-SMALL HALF-LENGTH.
-
-
-_John William, Seventh Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY THE HON. HENRY GRAVES.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Peer’s Coronation Robes, over Lord Lieutenant’s Uniform.)
-
-
-_Mary, Countess of Sandwich_:
-
-BY THE HON. HENRY GRAVES.
-
-OVAL.
-
- (Leaning on her Hand.)
-
-Born, 1812. Died, 1859.—She was the youngest daughter of the first
-Marquis of Anglesey, by his second wife, Lady Emily Cadogan, (whose
-first husband was Lord Cowley.) Lady Mary Paget was married in 1838, to
-John William, seventh Earl of Sandwich, and died, universally regretted,
-on the 20th of February, 1859, in Curzon Street, Mayfair.
-
-
-_Edward George Henry, Viscount Hinchingbrook, and his Brother, The Hon.
-Victor Alexander Montagu_:
-
-BY HURLSTONE.
-
- (Children of the Seventh Earl of Sandwich.)
-
-Lord Hinchingbrook was born in London on July 13, 1839. Educated at
-Eton. Joined the Second Battalion Grenadier Guards, December 18, 1857.
-Lieutenant and Captain, May, 1862. Adjutant, 1864. Captain and
-Lieut-Colonel, July, 1870. Has been employed as Commandant of a
-School of Instruction of the Reserve Forces, and Military Secretary at
-Gibraltar. Was attached to Lord Stratford de Redcliffe’s special Embassy
-to Constantinople, 1858. Accompanied H.R.H. the Prince of Wales to
-North America, 1860. Attached to Lord Breadalbane’s Mission, (to confer
-the Order of the Garter on the King of Prussia) 1861, and in the same
-year to Lord Clarendon’s Embassy, when the King of Prussia was crowned
-at Königsberg. On the occasion of the marriage of H.R.H. the Duke of
-Edinburgh, when Lord Sydney represented the Queen of England at the
-Court of St. Petersburg, Lord Hinchingbrook accompanied his uncle to the
-Russian capital; and in 1875 he went with Sir John Drummond Hay, K.C.B.
-to the Court of the Sultan of Morocco. Was elected M.P. for Huntingdon,
-February, 1876.
-
-The Hon. Victor Montagu was born in 1841. Entered the Royal Navy in 1853,
-as naval cadet on board H.M.S. “Princess Royal,” Captain Lord Clarence
-Paget (his uncle). On the declaration of war with Russia, in 1854, he
-proceeded to the Baltic, with the Fleet under Sir Charles Napier. Early
-in 1855 he went to the Black Sea, and remained on that station till the
-fall of Sebastopol. In 1856 he sailed to China, under Admiral Keppel in
-the “Raleigh,” 50 guns, (which vessel was lost off Macao, in April,
-1857,) and in the Chinese War, he served in a gun-boat at the operations
-up the Canton River. On the news of the Mutiny in India, in 1857, Victor
-Montagu was ordered to join the “Pearl” at Hong-kong, and left in company
-with the “Shannon” for Calcutta, where he landed with the Naval Brigade,
-and joined the field force under Brigadier Rowcroft, and Sir Hope Grant,
-with which he was employed until February, 1859.
-
-In the Oude and Goruckpore districts, he was in seventeen out of
-twenty-six engagements; and in 1859 he returned to England, having
-seen four campaigns before he was eighteen years of age. He afterwards
-served as lieutenant in the Channel, and Mediterranean Fleets, and in
-1864, was appointed to H.M.S. “Racoon,” in which vessel H.R.H. Prince
-Alfred was also serving as lieutenant. In 1866, he was Flag-Lieutenant
-to Lord Clarence Paget, Commander in Chief in the Mediterranean; and in
-the autumn of the same year commanded the “Tyrian” gun-boat on the same
-station. In 1867, he was promoted, returned to England, and has since
-commanded the “Rapid” steam sloop in the Mediterranean.
-
-In 1867, Victor Montagu married Lady Agneta Harriet Yorke, youngest
-daughter of the fourth Earl of Hardwicke, by the daughter of the first
-Lord Ravensworth, by whom he has two daughters, Mary Sophie, and Olga
-Blanche, and one son, George Charles.
-
-
-_The Honourable Oliver George Powlett Montagu_:
-
-BY THE HON. HENRY GRAVES.
-
-Born, 1844. Youngest son of the seventh Earl of Sandwich. Educated at
-Eton. Appointed lieutenant in the Huntingdon Rifle Regiment of Militia,
-in 1862; cornet in the Ninth Lancers, in 1863; exchanged into the Royal
-Horse Guards, in 1865.
-
-
-_Portrait of a Lady, supposed to be Lady Rochester_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-HALF-LENGTH.
-
- (Blue Dress with Pearls.)
-
-
-
-
-_CORRIDOR—DOWNSTAIRS._
-
-
-_Edward, Viscount Hinchingbrook_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH: OVAL.
-
- (Red Jacket with Frogs. Blue Cap.)
-
-Born, 1692. Died, 1722.—The eldest son of Edward, third Earl of Sandwich,
-by the daughter of the Earl of Rochester. Member for the Town, and
-subsequently for the County of Huntingdon; also Lord Lieutenant, and
-Custos Rotulorum; was in the army. Noble says his unfortunate father
-“became so much a cypher, that all the duties of his station devolved
-on Lord Hinchingbrook, who was an amiable, active and spirited young
-man.” He married Elizabeth, only daughter of Alexander Popham, Esq., of
-Littlecote, Wilts, by Lady Anne Montagu, (afterwards Harvey) daughter of
-Ralph, Duke of Montagu. His portrait and that of his wife, are alluded to
-by Noble.
-
-Lord Hinchingbrook, in his early youth, appears to have been a great
-swain, if we can trust the bantering style of the _Tatler_, in the pages
-of which, he figures constantly under the _soubriquet_ of Cynthio. In a
-paper dated White’s Chocolate House, North Side of Russell Street, Covent
-Garden, he comes in, and gives an elaborate lecture on the art of ogling.
-
-He says: “Twenty men can speak eloquently, and fight manfully, and a
-thousand can dress genteelly at a mistress, who cannot gaze skilfully.”
-He gives the benefit of his experience, on the subject at some length;
-speaks of the late fallings off in the passion of love, boasting that he
-himself is the only man who is true to the cause. One day, while cleaning
-his teeth at the window of a tavern, he caught sight of a beautiful face,
-looking from the window of a coach, and he followed the fair object up,
-and down the town—a long time, indeed, without success; but this incident
-is proof of his zeal. There is a ludicrous account of his (imaginary)
-death from a broken heart; his companions had hoped, that good October
-and fox hunting would have averted this catastrophe. They propose to
-erect a monument to his memory, with a very long inscription. The paper
-is signed by the witty, and mirth-loving Dick Steele. Collins says Lord
-Hinchingbrook died much regretted: “He had a martial spirit, tempered
-with fine breeding, which made his company much coveted, and gained him
-great ascendancy in the House of Commons.” He was a strenuous upholder of
-the Protestant Succession, and of the rights and liberty of the subject.
-
-By his wife he had two daughters, Mary and Elizabeth, and a son who
-succeeded his grandfather in the Earldom of Sandwich.
-
-
-_Lady Anne Montagu_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Blue Satin Gown. Rows of Pearls round the Waist. A Scarf over
- the Shoulder, a long White Glove in Left Hand.)
-
-Born, 1674. Died, 1742.—The only surviving daughter of Ralph, first
-Duke of Montagu, by his first wife, the Countess of Northumberland.
-Lady Anne’s delicate health in her childhood, seems to have given
-great uneasiness, to her mother. Lady Rachel Russell often mentions the
-little fair, pale girl. She married; first, Alexander Popham, Esq.,
-of Littlecote, in Wiltshire, (by whom she had Elizabeth, Viscountess
-Hinchingbrook); and secondly, Daniel Harvey, of Combe, in Surrey. The
-parents were friends, and cousins, and Lady Northumberland often visited
-at Combe. By her second marriage, she had no children.
-
-St. Evremond constantly corresponded with Lady Anne, who was a friend of
-the Duchesse de Mazarin, and an _habituée_ of her salon at Chelsea. He
-writes a poetical epistle complaining of the cold of this miserable bit
-of a room, where all the doors were left open, and where the beautiful
-hostess occasionally cheated at cards. All this, however, is couched
-in most flattering language, extolling the charms, moral (query) and
-physical, of the lovely gambler. “Prenez garde à Madame,” he goes on to
-say, after describing his losses at Ombre, for she will cheat you “avec
-la plus belle main du monde.”
-
-La Fontaine dedicated one of his Fables, to Lady Anne Harvey, who had a
-great admiration for his talent. St. Evremond says: “L’estime que M.
-de la Fontaine s’est acquis en Angleterre étoit si grand, que Madame
-Harvey, et quelques autres personnes d’un très grand mérite, ayant su,
-qu’il ne vivoit pas commodément à Paris, résolurent de l’attirer auprès
-d’elles, oû rien ne lui auroit manqué.” La Fontaine was grateful to his
-English friends, but declined, on the plea of being too old, to seek a
-strange country. Lady Anne, or Madame Harvey, as the Abbé calls her, is
-constantly mentioned in the letters of St. Evremond.
-
-
-_Elizabeth, Third Countess of Sandwich_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Seated. Resting on her Left Arm. Right Hand holding Flowers.
- Loose Coloured Déshabille.)
-
-
-_General Daniel Harvey_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In Armour, with a Blue Scarf. Right Hand resting on Hip; Left
- on the Hilt of Sword.)
-
-Born, ——. Died, 1732.—The youngest son of Sir Edward Harvey, of Combe,
-near Kingston-on-Thames, by Lady Elizabeth, daughter of Francis,
-first Earl of Bradford. In 1712, he was appointed Lieutenant-governor
-of Guernsey, which office he held till 1726. He married his cousin,
-Lady Anne, daughter of Ralph, Duke of Montagu, by the Countess of
-Northumberland, relict of Alexander Popham, of Littlecote, Wilts, by
-whom he had no issue. General Harvey died at Mitcham, in Surrey, and was
-buried within the rails of the altar, in that church.
-
-
-_Captain the Hon. William Montagu_:
-
-BY T. HIGHMORE.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In a Brown and Red Uniform laced with Gold. Pointing to a Ship
- with his Right Hand; holding a Telescope in his Left.)
-
-Born, 1720. Died, 1757.—He was the youngest son of Edward, Viscount
-Hinchingbrook, and entered the Navy, at an early age, in which profession
-he was destined to distinguish himself, not only by his courage, and
-skill as an officer, but by his extraordinary eccentricity, which gained
-him the _soubriquet_ of “Mad Montagu.” He commanded the “Mermaid” at the
-taking of Cape Breton, in 1745, whence he brought letters from Commodore
-Warren, with an account of the surrender of the fortress of Louisburg,
-and the adjoining territories, after a siege of forty-nine days. He
-commanded the “Prince Edward,” and the “Bristol,” and took the “Orvena,”
-a rich Spanish register ship. He appears to have been in constant
-scrapes, both private, and public, frequently writing to his brother,
-Lord Sandwich, in extenuation of some escapade, usually accompanied with
-a confession that he had erred through his propensity for drinking. But
-his genial humour, and untiring fun, generally extricated him from the
-difficulties, into which his folly had plunged him, and his mad freaks
-were a constant topic of conversation, and amusement. When under the
-orders of Sir Edward Hawker, in 1755, he solicited permission to go to
-town. The Admiral, thinking to compromise the matter and palliate his
-refusal by a jest (as he had no intention of complying with so improper
-a request), said he might go in his barge as far as he pleased from the
-ship, but no farther. Captain Montagu immediately caused a truck to be
-constructed at Portsmouth, to be drawn by horses; on this truck he placed
-his barge filled with provisions and necessaries for three days, and
-entering it with his men, gave orders to imitate the action of rowing
-with the oars. Sir Edward, it is said, having heard of this wonderful
-proceeding, in every sense of the word, soon after the boat was landed,
-sent the coveted permission to the Mad-cap.
-
-In the sea-fight of May 3rd, 1747, Captain Montagu, and Captain Fincher,
-were rival competitors for fame. The “Bristol” having got up to the
-“Invincible,” and brought her to action, the “Pembroke” (Captain Fincher)
-attempted to get in between them, desiring Montagu, to put his helm
-a-starboard, or he should be aboard of him. “Run on board and be d——d!
-Neither you nor any other man shall come between me and my enemy,”
-was his answer. This action is the subject of a fine picture, in the
-Ship-room at Hinchingbrook, by Scott.
-
-While commanding the same vessel in the Channel, Montagu fell in with
-a fleet of outward bound Dutch merchantmen, to whom he gave chase and
-overtook. Having done so, he ordered two boats to be manned, and sent
-a carpenter’s mate in each, desiring them to cut off the heads of
-twelve—not of the ship’s company, but of the ugliest of the grotesque
-ornaments with which the Dutch usually decorated the extremity of their
-rudders. When brought back to him, he arranged them, in as ridiculous
-a position, as he could devise round his cabin, and inscribed them
-with the names of the twelve Cæsars. A jest of a more ghastly nature,
-is recorded of Mad Montagu. Landing one day at Portsmouth, just after a
-Dutch vessel had been wrecked, he perceived about a dozen of her crew
-lying dead, on the shore. He immediately ordered his men to put all
-the poor fellows’ hands, into their pockets. He then proceeded to the
-coffee-house, where he found the Dutch captain, with whom every one was
-condoling. “D—— the idle lubbers!” said Montagu, “they were too lazy to
-take their hands out of their breeches pockets, even to save their lives.”
-
-The Dutch captain was naturally indignant, when Montagu proposed to bet
-him six dozen of wine, that if any of the crew chanced to be washed
-on shore, his words would be proved. The waiter was despatched to
-reconnoitre; the result of course, was in the English captain’s favour,
-and not only had the poor foreigner to pay the forfeit, but the laugh on
-a most melancholy matter was turned against him. Captain Montagu sat in
-Parliament for a borough in Cornwall. He married Charlotte, daughter of
-Francis Nailor, of Offord, Huntingdonshire, but died in 1757, without
-issue.
-
-
-_John, fourth Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY ZOFFANY.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In a Plum-coloured Court Suit, embroidered in Gold. Seated by
- a Table, on which he rests his Arm. In his Right Hand a Letter
- directed to himself.)
-
-
-_Edward Richard, Viscount Hinchingbrook_:
-
-BY KNELLER.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Painted at the Age of Eighteen, in 1710. In Armour. Right Hand
- on Hip, Left Hand on a Helmet.)
-
-
-_Edward, Second Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Long Fair Curling Hair, or Wig. Loose Brown Dress, Lace Cravat
- and Ruffles. Left Hand on Hip.)
-
-Born, 1648. Died, 1688.—The eldest son of the first Earl, by Jemima
-Crewe. Born at Hinchingbrook, baptized at All Saints’ Church, Huntingdon.
-Pepys does not tell us much about his young Lord, but he seems to have
-been much attached to him. He relates how sorry he was for the misfortune
-that had befallen him through killing his boy, by the accidental
-discharge of his fowling-piece; and another time he mentions that Lord
-Hinchingbrook, with some other gentlemen, visited him at his house,
-having been to inspect the ruins of the city, (after the great fire)
-where he “set before them good wines of several sorts, which they took
-mighty respectfully, but I was glad to see my Lord Hinchingbrook.”
-While Mistress Mallett, (the great heiress whom Lady Sandwich desired
-for her son’s wife) was still unsettled, “my young Lord” attended her to
-Tunbridge; but there she told him plainly her affections were engaged;
-besides, Lord Hinchingbrook was not much pleased with her vanity, and
-liberty of carriage. A better marriage in every respect, was in store
-for him, and though not quite so wealthy as Mistress Mallett, Lady Anne
-Boyle had a dowry of £10,000, and was indeed a great alliance, coming
-of a noble stock. She was daughter of Richard, second Earl of Cork,
-and first Earl of Burlington. The match appears to have been arranged
-between the parents, and confided as a secret to Pepys, before Lord
-Hinchingbrook himself, was acquainted with the project. It seems to have
-been made by Sir George Carteret: “A civil family, and a relation to my
-Lord Chancellor, whose son has married one of the daughters, [this was
-Lord Rochester, son to Lord Clarendon, who had married Lady Henrietta
-Boyle] and the Chancellor himself, do take it with great kindness.”
-What a pity that the amusing chronicle should have come to so sudden an
-end, through the weakness of poor Pepys’ eyes; otherwise we should have
-heard details of how the sad news of the hero’s death was received in
-his family, and more particulars respecting his son and successor. We
-only know he attended his father’s funeral, as chief mourner, that he
-was sent Ambassador to Portugal in 1678, and died in 1688, being buried
-at Barnwell. He left issue: Edward, who succeeded him; Richard and
-Elizabeth, who both died unmarried.
-
-
-_Edward, First Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-AFTER LELY.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In a Cuirass with Red Sash. Holding a Bâton. Left Hand on the
- Mouth of a Cannon.)
-
-
-_George, Sixth Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY BEACH.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (In a Trinity College Gown, over a Green Coat. Standing by a
- Pillar. View of Trinity College in Background.)
-
-Born, 1791. Died, 1818.—Second son of John, fifth Earl of Sandwich, by
-Lady Mary, daughter and heiress of the sixth and last Duke of Bolton.
-He was born in Wimpole Street; married in 1804 at the house of Lord
-Castlereagh, in Upper Brook Street, Lady Louisa Corry, daughter of Armar,
-first Earl of Belmore. In 1798, he was appointed Deputy Lieutenant for
-Hunts, and in 1804, Lieutenant-Colonel of the Hunts Volunteers. Lord
-Sandwich died at Cardinal Gonsalvi’s villa, near Rome, in 1818, both
-he and Lady Sandwich having contracted a sincere friendship with the
-Cardinal. His remains were brought to England, and interred with those of
-his ancestors at Barnwell.
-
-He left issue by his wife, (who survived him forty-four years), one son,
-John William, present and seventh Earl, and two daughters; Lady Harriet,
-born 1805, married to Bingham Baring, (afterwards Lord Ashburton,) (she
-died in 1857), and Lady Caroline, born 1810, married in 1831, to Count
-Walewski, and died in 1834.
-
-
-_Edward, third Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY CLOSTERMAN.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (Blue Velvet Coat and Coronation Robes. Standing near a Table,
- on which is placed his Coronet.)
-
-Born, 1670. Died, 1729.—The eldest son of Edward, second Earl of
-Sandwich, by Lady Anne Boyle. Born at Burlington House; married in 1691
-Lady Elizabeth Wilmot, daughter of the Earl of Rochester, by whom he had
-one son, and one daughter. He was Master of the Horse to Prince George
-of Denmark, Doctor of Laws in the University of Oxford, Lord-Lieutenant
-and Custos-Rotulorum of the County of Huntingdon. The Earl of Sandwich
-died at Burlington, in Yorkshire, but was buried in the family vault at
-Barnwell. His union with the unprincipled daughter, of an unprincipled
-father, was a most unhappy one. Noble affirms that his “eccentric”
-Countess put him in durance vile in his own house, whether on a plea
-of insanity, or not, does not appear; but much mystery hangs round her
-extraordinary proceedings. Tradition still points to an apartment, in the
-house at Hinchingbrook, as the place of Lord Sandwich’s imprisonment,
-which for many years bore the name of the “Starved Chamber,” for it
-is said the cruel wife denied her husband sufficient food, and would
-allow no one to have access to him. The dates of these transactions are
-difficult to identify.
-
-
-
-
-_SHIP ROOM._
-
-
-THE TAKING OF TWO FRENCH PRIVATEERS AND ALL THEIR PRIZES BY THE
-BRIDGEWATER AND SHEERNESS MEN-OF-WAR.
-
-BY SAMUEL SCOTT.
-
-
-VICE-ADMIRAL ANSON’S ENGAGEMENT WITH THE FRENCH SQUADRON COMMANDED BY
-M. DE LA JONQUIERE, MAY, 1747; FOUGHT TWENTY-FOUR LEAGUES S. E. OF CAPE
-FINISTERRE.
-
-BY S. SCOTT.
-
-
-ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN THE “BLAST,” SLOOP, AND TWO SPANISH PRIVATEERS. 1745.
-
-
-THE TAKING OF THE SHIP “ACAPULCO” BY COMMODORE ANSON, IN THE SOUTH SEAS.
-1743.
-
-BY S. SCOTT.
-
-
-BATTLE OF SOUTHWOLD BAY, WHERE THE FIRST EARL OF SANDWICH PERISHED, MAY
-28, 1672.
-
-BY W. VAN DE VELDE.
-
-A case hangs near this picture, containing miniatures by Cooper, of
-Edward, first Earl of Sandwich, and Jemima his wife; also a fragment of
-a Ribbon of the Order of the Garter, and the watch; both of which were
-found on the body of Lord Sandwich, when washed ashore.
-
-
-ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN THE SHIPS “LION” AND “ELIZABETH,” 1745.
-
-BY S. SCOTT.
-
-This desperate, and sanguinary engagement was fought on the 9th of May,
-1745. The “Lion” had fifty-eight guns, and four hundred and forty men,
-and was commanded by Captain Piercy Brett. The “Elizabeth,” a sixty-four
-gun ship, was convoying another, of sixteen guns, with the Pretender on
-board. They fought for five hours, within pistol shot of each other,
-during which time, the frigate, with the Pretender on board, managed to
-make her escape. The “Elizabeth” also at length, effected her entrance
-into Brest Harbour. She had £400,000 on board, for the use of Charles
-Edward. The “Lion,” unable to pursue, lay a complete wreck on the water.
-
-
-EVENING. A CALM. ENGLISH MAN-OF-WAR AND SMALL CRAFT CRUISING.
-
-BY VAN DE VELDE.
-
-
-A SKETCH FOR THE ENGAGEMENT IN SOUTHWOLD BAY.
-
-W. VAN DE VELDE.
-
-
-THREE SKETCHES OF THE ENGAGEMENT BETWEEN THE “LION” AND “ELIZABETH.”
-
-
-
-
-_DINING ROOM._
-
-
-_Louis XIV., King of France_:
-
-BY MIGNARD.
-
-Born, 1638. Died, 1715.—The son of Louis XIII., by Anne of Austria, who
-was Regent during her son’s minority, though the real power was vested in
-Cardinal Mazarin. In this prelate’s lifetime, the King himself interfered
-little in public affairs, but at his death, in 1661, Louis determined to
-be his own Prime Minister. He married Maria Theresa, daughter of Philip
-IV., King of Spain. His reign was brilliant in arts, commerce, and arms,
-but disgraced by immorality.
-
-As regards the exterior of the “Great Monarch,” his sister-in-law, (the
-Duke of Orleans’ second wife, a Princess of Bavaria,) thus describes
-him: “Personne n’avoit un si beau port, un aspect noble, la voix très
-agréable, et des manières aisées. Quand il étoit dans la foule, on
-n’avoit pas besoin, de demander qui étoit le Roi.”
-
-
-_Henry William, First Marquis of Anglesey, K.G._:
-
-BY THE HON. HENRY GRAVES.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (In Uniform, as Colonel of the Seventh Hussars.)
-
-Born, 1768. Died, 1854.—Henry William Paget, the eldest child of the
-first Earl of Uxbridge, by the eldest daughter of Arthur Champagné, Dean
-of Clonmacnoise. Lord Paget was educated at Westminster, and Christ
-Church, and in 1793, he raised a regiment among his father’s tenantry,
-(the 80th Regiment of Foot, or Staffordshire Volunteers,) afterwards
-eminently distinguished in foreign service. At the head of his own
-regiment, Lord Paget joined H.R.H. the Duke of York in Flanders, and soon
-gave proofs of skill, and gallantry. At Turcoing, he was remarkable for
-his “dashing bravery,” and in the memorable retreat of Bois-le-duc, which
-took place under great difficulties, and during intensely cold weather,
-Lord Paget, then only twenty-six years of age, gained great honour,
-and replaced Lord Cathcart at the head of the Brigade, during that
-nobleman’s temporary absence. After several exchanges, and promotions,
-he was appointed to the command of the seventh Light Dragoons, which was
-stationed at Ipswich with other bodies of cavalry, for drill. Here he
-laid the foundation of that system of discipline, which brought about an
-entire reform in cavalry practice. In 1790-6, he sat in Parliament.
-
-In 1799, he accompanied the Duke of York to Holland, where he again
-distinguished himself, on several occasions. He became a Major-General
-in 1802, and a Lieutenant-General in 1808. Towards the end of this year,
-he was ordered to Spain, with two Brigades of cavalry, where he remained
-until the autumn of 1809, having reaped fresh laurels, in innumerable
-engagements. On his return, a piece of plate was presented to him, by
-the Prince Regent, the Duke of Cumberland, and the inscribed officers
-of the Hussar Brigade, who served under Lord Paget, “in token of their
-admiration of his high military acquirements, and of the courage, and
-talent, constantly displayed in leading the Hussars to victory against
-the French cavalry, during the Peninsular Campaign of 1808.”
-
-He sate in the House of Commons, till 1812, when the death of his
-father, removed him to the Upper House. In 1815, he was employed with
-the troops assembled in London, to quell the Corn Bill riots, but he was
-soon appointed to a nobler office, and left England in command of the
-cavalry of the Anglo-Belgian army. His name is well known in conjunction
-with the great day at Waterloo: and well did he sustain “the honour of
-the Household Troops,” which was his rallying cry to his men, in the
-frequent charges they made, on the enemy. Almost the last shot that was
-fired wounded our gallant soldier in the knee; amputation was considered
-necessary, and the leg that was ever in advance, was buried with honour,
-in a garden at Waterloo.
-
-Five days after the battle, he was raised to the Marquisate, by the title
-of Anglesey. He was also created Knight of many Orders, both British,
-and foreign. He rode as Lord High Steward, at the Coronation of George
-IV., became a Privy Councillor, was twice Lord Lieutenant of Ireland,
-where he was deservedly popular. He held several high posts under
-Government at home, and at his death was the only Field Marshal in the
-English Army, with the exception of Her Majesty’s Consort, and her uncle.
-
-“It was the peculiarity,” was said of Lord Anglesey, “of his frank nature
-to make itself understood; it might almost be said his character could
-be read off at sight; he was the express image of chivalry. His politics
-were so liberal, as to be called radical in those days, for he was in the
-advance of his age; but the measures which were then opposed have since
-been extolled, and carried, such as Catholic Emancipation, Reform, Free
-Trade, etc. He was not a ‘speaker,’ and could not talk well, of what he
-did well.” His administration of the Ordnance Department, was remarkable
-for its scrupulous justice, and he was always the soldier’s true friend.
-
-On the death of the Duke of Gordon, King William IV. offered Lord
-Anglesey the command of the Scots Fusilier Guards. He sought an interview
-with the King, and after warmly expressing his gratitude, he added: “I
-am sure that in naming me to this honour, your Majesty has not borne in
-mind, the fact that Lord Ludlow lost an arm in Holland, at the head of
-this regiment.” The King was delighted with this proof of generosity, and
-Lord Ludlow had to thank his comrade, for the regiment.
-
-Till past three score, Lord Anglesey retained a wonderful share of
-vigour, and activity, in spite of the loss of his limb, and the terrible
-nervous sufferings entailed thereby. In his last moments the ruling
-passion showed itself, for when his mind wandered for a few moments, the
-gallant veteran would enquire what brigade was on duty, and he appeared
-relieved, when they answered it was not his own. His death was serene;
-his bedroom, and the one adjoining crowded by relatives, and his last
-words to them were cheering.
-
-Lord Anglesey married first in 1795, Lady Caroline Villiers, daughter
-of the Earl of Jersey, from whom he was divorced. She re-married the
-Duke of Argyll, and died in 1835. By his first wife he had three sons,
-of whom the eldest succeeded him, and five daughters. His second wife
-was the daughter of Earl Cadogan, whose marriage with Lord Cowley had
-been dissolved. She died in 1853: by whom he had three sons and three
-daughters, of whom the second, became the Countess of Sandwich.
-
-This portrait was painted by Lord Anglesey’s nephew, the Hon. Henry
-Graves.
-
-
-_William, Duke of Cumberland_:
-
-BY SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (In the Robes of the Garter. Standing by a Table. River,
- Bridge, and Castle in the Background.)
-
-Born, 1721. Died, 1765.—The third son of George II., King of England, by
-Carolina Wilhelmina, daughter of the Margrave of Anspach. In 1743, he
-was wounded by the side of his father, at the Battle of Dettingen; he was
-unsuccessful at Fontenoy. His name is ever coupled with the discomfiture
-of Charles Edward’s forces in Scotland, and their entire defeat, at
-the Battle of Culloden. He gained a name for severity, and cruelty,
-during this campaign, and is still remembered in the north as “Billy the
-Butcher.”
-
-This fine portrait was presented by H.R.H., to John, fourth Earl of
-Sandwich, with whom he formed a friendship, at the time of the Treaty of
-Aix-la-Chapelle.
-
-
-_Maria Theresa, Queen of France_:
-
-BY MIGNARD.
-
-Born, 1638. Married, 1660. Died, 1683.—Daughter of Philip IV., King of
-Spain, by his first wife, Elizabeth of France. Mazarin arranged this
-marriage to ensure peace. The Duke de Grammont went to Madrid, as
-Plenipotentiary in 1659, and thus addressed the King of Spain: “Sire,
-le Roi mon maître vous accorde la paix, et à vous, Madame, il offre
-son cœur, et sa couronne.” She accepted both, but was compelled to
-share the first, with innumerable rivals. Gentle, modest, loving, and
-sensitive, she was constantly insulted by the King’s favourites; yet her
-devotion to him, never wavered, and a kind word from her royal master,
-made her happy for the rest of the day. He appointed her Regent, when
-he went to Holland, but she was not fitted for public life. “To serve
-God, and honour the King,” was her golden rule. Madame d’Orléans, (the
-German Princess), one of the other few good women of that age, pays her
-sister-in-law, this tribute: “Elle étoit d’une extrême simplicité en
-tout; la femme la plus vertueuse, et la meilleure, du monde. Elle avoit
-de la grandeur, et elle savoit représenter, et tenir sa cour; elle avoit
-une foi entière, et sans réserve pour tout ce que le Roi lui disoit. Le
-Roi l’aimoit à cause de sa vertu, et de l’ardent amour qu’elle lui a
-constamment conservé, quoiqu’il lui fût infidèle.” On her return from
-an expedition she had made, with her husband to Alsace and Bourgogne,
-the Queen fell ill and died. “Voilà,” observed “le Grand Monarque” on
-that occasion, “le premier chagrin qu’elle m’ait donné.” Had she been the
-survivor, she could not assuredly have paid Louis a similar tribute.
-
-These two portraits, formed part of the collection of the celebrated
-“Capability Brown.”
-
-
-_John William, Seventh Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY LUCAS.
-
-Born, 1811. Educated at Trinity College, Cambridge; was Captain of the
-Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms, in 1852, and Master of the Buckhounds,
-1858-9. Colonel of the Huntingdon Rifle Militia, and High Steward of
-Huntingdon, Lord Lieutenant and Custos Rotulorum of Huntingdonshire.
-Married first; Lady Mary Paget, daughter of the first Marquis of
-Anglesey, by whom he had four sons and two daughters, and who died in
-1859. He married secondly, Lady Blanche Egerton, daughter of the first
-Earl of Ellesmere.
-
-
-_Mrs. Ruperta Howe_:
-
-BY WISSING OR MYTENS.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (Standing by a Doric Column. Light Red Riding-dress,
- embroidered Petticoat, Long Coat, Waistcoat. Hat in Hand.)
-
-Born, 1671. Died, 1741.—The natural daughter of Prince Rupert, third
-son of Frederick, King of Bohemia, “a studious Prince,” who being
-enraptured with Mrs. Hughes, a beautiful actress, bade adieu to alembics,
-mathematical instruments, and chemical speculations, to subdue the heart
-of the “impertinent gipsy.” At his death the Prince left the whole of
-his property in trust, with a beautiful estate he had purchased on
-purpose, for the use, and behoof of Mistress Hughes and their daughter.
-Ruperta married Emanuel Scrope Howe, Esq., the second son of John
-Howe, Co. Gloucester, by Arabella, natural daughter of Emanuel Scrope,
-Baron Bolton, and Earl of Sunderland, to whom Charles II. granted the
-precedence of an Earl’s daughter, lawfully begotten. The husband of
-Ruperta was in the army, and rose to the rank of Brigadier-General. He
-was Groom of the Bedchamber to Queen Anne, and in 1707, went as Envoy to
-the Court of Hanover. He represented Morpeth, and Wigan, in Parliament,
-and died in 1709, having had issue three sons, William, Emanuel, and
-James, and one daughter, Maid of Honour to Caroline, Princess of Wales,
-(afterwards Queen). She died unmarried. This picture is mentioned in
-Noble, but the painter’s name is not given.
-
-
-_John, Fourth Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY JOHN LIOTARD.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (In a Turkish Costume, of Crimson, and Ermine. Green and White
- Turban, Yellow Slippers. Right Hand extended. Left on Hip.)
-
-Born, 1718. Died, 1792.—he was the son of Edward, Viscount Hinchingbrook,
-by Elizabeth Popham. Educated at Eton, and Trinity College, Cambridge,
-where he distinguished himself. In 1738, he set out on his travels
-through Italy, Egypt, Turkey, etc., accompanied by some friends, during
-which time he made a collection of coins, and antiquities, of all kinds,
-some of which, he presented to the University of Cambridge. He wrote a
-book of his travels, and on his return to England, took his seat in the
-House of Lords, and entered on a political life. He spoke remarkably
-well in Parliament, and in 1744 became a Lord of the Admiralty under
-the Duke of Bedford, “into whose favour” says a contemporary with much
-acrimony, “Lord Sandwich had ingratiated himself, by cricket matches,
-acting of plays, and intrigues.” But Horace Walpole, although he did not
-appear very friendly to Lord Sandwich, is constantly compelled to do him
-justice, in his public capacity. “He is a lively, sensible man, and very
-attentive to business;” and on the famous occasion of Wilkes’ libel, he
-again says: “I do not admire politicians, but when they are excellent
-in their way, give them their due; no one but Lord Sandwich could have
-struck a stroke like this.”
-
-In 1746, he was appointed Plenipotentiary to the States General, and
-again at the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle, where he distinguished himself,
-in such a manner as to recommend him for high offices of trust, on his
-return to England. It was on this occasion, that at a large international
-dinner, toasts were passing, and the different Envoys became poetical, as
-well as loyal in their phraseology. The Frenchman gave “his Royal Master
-the Sun, who illuminates the whole world;” the Spaniard “his Master the
-Moon, scarcely inferior in brilliancy or influence;” when Lord Sandwich
-rose, doubtless with the twinkle in his eye, and the laughing curl round
-the corners of his mouth, we see in most of his portraits, and toasted
-with all the honours “his Master Joshua, who made both the sun and moon
-to stand still.”
-
-During the King’s absence from England, Sandwich was chosen one
-of the Commissioners of Government. He was also Vice-treasurer,
-Receiver-general, &c., for Ireland, and under the new King George III,
-was nominated Ambassador to Spain; but in the same year he succeeded
-George Grenville as First Lord of the Admiralty. Few men ever filled that
-office with more ability, and under his direction the maritime force
-of Great Britain, was kept on such a footing as enabled us to meet our
-numerous foes in every quarter of the globe with honour, and ensured to
-us the victories we gained over the Trench, Spaniards, and Dutch. Lord
-Sandwich was world-famed for his regularity, dispatch, and industry in
-business; it is said that he invented sandwiches in order to take some
-nourishment without interrupting his work.
-
-The following lines were written on him and Lord Spencer:—
-
- “Two noble Earls, whom if I quote,
- Some folks might call me sinner;
- The one invented half a coat,
- The other half a dinner.”
-
-He gained the name of “Jemmy Twitcher,” through a curious circumstance.
-Wilkes and Sandwich had once been friends, but the former having composed
-a scurrilous and disloyal poem, the latter was so incensed as to procure
-a copy and read it aloud, in the House of Lords. Just at this juncture
-the “Beggar’s Opera” was being acted, and when Macheath exclaimed: “But
-that Jemmy Twitcher should peach, I own surprises me,” the chief part of
-the audience, who were partisans of “Wilkes, and Liberty,” burst into
-a round of applause, applying the passage to Lord Sandwich, who never
-afterwards lost the _soubriquet_.
-
-There are many passages in his life which compel us to agree with his
-constant censor Horace Walpole, when he says: “Bishop Warburton is at
-this moment reinstating Mr. Pitt’s name in the dedication of a Book
-of Sermons, which he had expunged for Sandwich’s. This nobleman is an
-agreeable companion, but one whose moral character, does not exactly
-fit him to be the patron of sermons.” But Mr. Cradock (and none knew
-him better) in his most amusing reminiscences, tells us, whatever his
-errors may have been, Lord Sandwich was most severe in the observance of
-decorous language, and behaviour, under his roof. No oath, or profligate
-word, was ever uttered at his table. The same authority states, that in
-political life he underwent many persecutions, and bore daily insults,
-and misrepresentations with the courage of a stoic, without stooping to
-retaliation. “Others,” says Mr. Cradock, “received emoluments, but Lord
-Sandwich retired without any remuneration, for his services.” His public
-career lasted for more than half a century, when he made Hinchingbrook
-his chief abode. He spoke French and Italian fluently, was acquainted
-with the German, and Spanish languages, and had a smattering of the
-oriental tongues.
-
-In the midst of all his hospitality, he was very frugal in his own
-living, and was much beloved by his dependants, not forgetting Omai the
-Otaheitan, and the faithful black servant, Jemmy, who lies buried in
-Brompton Churchyard, and a characteristic little sketch of whom still
-exists. An amusing incident occurred respecting the latter, which is
-worth recording. It seems that on one occasion, the day after some
-dramatic representation had taken place at Hinchingbrook, Lord Sandwich
-enquired at breakfast of a gentleman who was proverbial for cavilling,
-and finding fault, whether he had been satisfied with the performance.
-The visitor answered in the affirmative, but in so hesitating a manner,
-that Lord Sandwich insisted on knowing the fault. “So slight, my Lord,
-scarcely worth alluding to.” “The easier remedied next time.” “Well,
-it only struck me, that the coloured servant in the piece was not
-sufficiently blackened.” The noble host rose silently and rang the bell:
-enter Jemmy. “Jemmy,” says his master, “this gentleman says you are not
-black enough.” “I bery sorry, my Lord, I be as God Almighty made me.”
-
-Miss Burney, in her youth, saw Lord Sandwich, and thus describes him:
-“He is a tall stout man, and looks as furrowed and weatherbeaten as
-any sailor in the Navy; and, like most of the old set of that brave
-tribe, he has the marks of good nature, and joviality in every feature.”
-Another contemporary gives him this character: “Slow, not wearisome, a
-man of sense, rather than of talent; good-natured, and reliable as to
-promises. His house was filled with rank, beauty and talent, and every
-one felt at ease there. The patron of musicians, the soul of the Catch
-Club [he might have added a proficient on the kettledrum], although
-deficient in ear, and knowledge of harmony.” He had an engaging manner in
-private life, which put every one at their ease, although he occasionally
-tried his friends’ patience by a playful bantering, or what Mr. Cradock
-calls badgering, such as; “Ladies, here is Cradock says, a man cannot
-be punctual unless he wears a wig.” “No, my Lord, I said a man may be
-punctual, but his hair dresser may be late, and make him so.”
-
-He dressed well, and looked “noble,” but he had a shambling unequal gait.
-When in Paris he took dancing lessons, and, bidding his master good-bye,
-told him if he came to London, he would willingly recommend or serve
-him. “Ah, milor,” said the man, “pray do not say _I_ taught you to dance.”
-
-Lord Sandwich retained his faculties almost to the end, and spoke with
-great clearness and precision, of all the remarkable public events, of
-which he had been a witness, in his stirring life. He was an F.R.S., a
-Governor of the Charterhouse, the eldest of the elder Brothers of the
-Trinity House, and the oldest General in the army.
-
-In 1740, he married Judith, third daughter of Charles, Viscount Fane, of
-Basildon, Berks. The marriage was unhappy, and they were separated for
-several years before her death. Their children were: John, who succeeded
-him, Edward, William Augustus, and one daughter, Mary. Lord Sandwich died
-at his house in Hertford Street, Mayfair, in 1792.
-
-
-_Edward, First Earl of Sandwich_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-FULL LENGTH.
-
- (In the Robes of the Garter.)
-
-
-_Mariana, Queen Regent of Spain_:
-
-BY SEBASTIAN HERRERA.
-
-FULL LENGTH.
-
- (Seated. In a Religious Habit, the Widow’s Weeds worn in Spain.)
-
-Born, 1631. Died, 1696.—The eldest daughter of Ferdinand III., Emperor of
-Germany, by the daughter of Philip III., King of Spain. Married Philip
-IV., in 1649. On her arrival in Spain, as a youthful bride, Mariana’s
-deportment had to undergo severe discipline, from the strict etiquette
-of the court, and the stern dignity of her royal husband, whom she
-shocked by the exuberance of her animal spirits, and above all, her
-immoderate laughter at the sallies of the Court Fool. When admonished on
-one occasion, she excused herself by saying it was out of her power to
-restrain her merriment, and that the Jester must be removed, or she must
-laugh on. Mariana was remarkable for the extravagance and tawdriness of
-her dress, as may be seen in the portraits by Velasquez. Her chief beauty
-consisted in her magnificent hair, which she disfigured by dressing it,
-in an outrageous manner, with feathers, flowers, and love knots. At a
-period when rouge was much worn, the immoderate use of it, made her
-“brick-dust cheeks” a ridiculous object, and altogether, says Stirling:
-“She is far more interesting wearing the widow’s weeds, in which she sate
-to Carreno, and Herrera, than in the butterfly garb in which she flaunts
-on the canvas of Velasquez.” She was as inferior to her predecessor,
-Isabelle de Bourbon, Philip’s first wife, in qualities of mind, as in
-graces of person. She became a widow; and Regent of the Kingdom, on the
-accession of her son Charles II., in 1665.
-
-Mariana divided her confidence, between her confessor, a German Jesuit,
-and a gentleman of her household, Valenzuela by name. He was remarkably
-handsome; and the Queen Mother made a marriage between him, and one of
-her German ladies, which established him in her Palace, where he became
-her chief confidant, and was admitted to her apartments at all hours,
-his wife being generally present, to avoid scandal. Mariana’s faction was
-strongly opposed by Don John of Austria, the late King’s natural son, (by
-the beautiful actress, Maria Calderona.) He was handsome, intellectual,
-and accomplished, and in military genius alone, was he inferior to his
-namesake, the hero of Lepanto. His father loved him dearly, but the
-Queen had contrived to estrange them, some little time before Philip’s
-death. The ups and downs of the struggle between Don John, and Mariana
-were never ending: now her star appeared in the ascendant, then the
-evil repute of her confessor, his inefficiency in business, and the
-overbearing insolence of Valenzuela, brought down the influence of the
-Regent to a low ebb. Now at open variance with her husband’s son, now
-consenting with a bad grace to his participation in the Government, and
-then procuring for him an office at some distance from Madrid, so as to
-be rid of his immediate presence.
-
-Don John ruled well, and held a little Court at Saragossa, but he and the
-Regent were always at variance, and so disgusted were the people with
-her government, and that of her favourites, that many clamoured for Don
-John, while some went so far as to say he was the rightful heir, and that
-Mariana’s and Maria Calderona’s infants, had been changed.
-
-Whether from motives of patriotism or ambition, Don John worked steadily
-to undermine the Regent’s power, and the vanity and ostentation of
-Valenzuela contributed unconsciously to the same end. He was generally
-supposed to be a spy, and was called the Queen’s “Duendo.”[1] At
-tournaments he wore the Queen Mother’s colours of black and silver, with
-many ostentatious mottos, which seemed to insinuate the high favour, in
-which he stood with that Royal Lady. One day, when the Court were hunting
-near the Escurial, the King shot at a stag, and wounded Valenzuela in
-the thigh, whereat Queen Mariana shrieked, and fell senseless. On this
-“hint” many spake, especially Don John, and his party, who told the King
-plainly, that he and Spain were not only governed by the Regent, but
-by her paramour. The King went to Buen Retiro, and denied himself to
-his mother, who was desired to leave Madrid; Valenzuela was arrested,
-his wife and children shut up in a convent, and the “handsome, vain,
-well-dressed courtier, with his fine curling locks, who had considered
-many of the nobles of Spain beneath his notice,” was sent off to the
-Philippine Islands. Don John came into power, and Mariana had a small
-Court, which was little better than a prison, at Aranjuez, where Madame
-d’Aulnoy visited her. She was dressed in the manner of this portrait,
-served on the bended knee, and waited on by a hideous little dwarf,
-clothed in gold and silver brocade. Don John’s government was no
-sinecure; cabals were rife, and he died so suddenly that it was currently
-reported that he had been poisoned, at Mariana’s instigation. Be that as
-it may, no sooner was the death of Don John announced, than the King went
-off to his mother, in person, and insisted on her return to Madrid.
-
-Charles II. had just married his second wife, an alliance which Mariana
-had supported from the beginning. But she did not long survive; shortly
-after the Peace of Ryswick, died Mariana of Austria, Queen Mother of
-Spain; her death was supposed to have been hastened by her reluctance to
-consult the physicians, although her health had been failing for some
-time past.
-
-This interesting portrait, together with that of her son, King Charles
-II., was presented by the Queen Mother, then Regent, to Edward, first
-Earl of Sandwich, when Ambassador, to the Court of Madrid, in 1666.
-
-[1] Wizard or Familiar.
-
-
-_Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (Seated, leaning on a Table, resting her Head on her Hand.
- Wears a White Satin Dress, trimmed with Blue, and Pearls.)
-
-Born, 1640. Died, 1709.—The only child of William Villiers, Viscount
-Grandison, by Mary, third daughter of the first, and sister and
-co-heiress of the second Viscount Bayning.
-
-Lord Grandison, of whom Clarendon gives an exalted character for
-piety, loyalty, and valour; died in 1643, at Oxford, (of a wound which
-he had received a few weeks before, at the siege of Bristol), leaving
-a widow of 18, who five years afterwards, was re-married to Charles
-Villiers, Earl of Anglesey, cousin-german to her first husband. She
-did not long survive, and at her death, left her beautiful daughter to
-the stepfather’s care. It was under Lord Anglesey’s roof, that Barbara
-passed her early years, and we hear of her, on her first arrival in
-London, dressed in “a plain and countrified manner,” but this fashion
-was soon changed for the last “mode” of the town, and her surpassing
-beauty made her the object of general admiration. At the age of 16,
-the precocious coquette had already captivated Philip Stanhope, second
-Earl of Chesterfield, a young widower, who had just returned from his
-travels, and succeeded to his title, and property—“a beauty, a wit, a
-duellist,” and according to Swift, “the greatest knave in England.”
-His correspondence with Barbara, and her confidante and cousin, Lady
-Anne Hamilton (which was found in the Library of Bath House, in 1869),
-breathes the most ardent passion, which did not however, interfere with
-his being called three times in Church, the same year, with the daughter
-of Lord Fairfax, (who subsequently married George, Duke of Buckingham).
-
-So early in life had Barbara embarked in a career of guilt, and artifice,
-that in spite of her liaison with Chesterfield, she threw her spells to
-such purpose round Master Roger Palmer, student of the Middle Temple,
-second son of Sir James Palmer, of Hayes, Middlesex, that the misguided
-youth married her in spite of the paternal prohibition. But the young
-wife did not break off her connection with her former lover, and not long
-after her marriage, she writes to Chesterfield, in a most affectionate
-manner, speaking of her recovery from the small-pox, and alluding to
-“Mounseer’s” (Mr. Palmer) jealousy, and how “he is resolved never to
-bring me to towne again.” Lord Chesterfield, in consequence of killing
-a young man in a duel, was compelled to fly the country, and he took
-refuge at Paris, at the Court of the Queen Mother (Henrietta Maria),
-and afterwards joined the English King, at Breda, where he solicited,
-and received the royal pardon, and returned to England with Charles on
-his restoration: all the time he was on the continent, keeping up his
-correspondence with his adored Barbara.
-
-There exists great difference of opinion, as to the date of the first
-meeting between the King, and Mistress Palmer, but there seems little
-doubt that the favourite’s reign began on Charles’s eventful day, the
-29th of May, 1660. Mr. Palmer, now a member of Parliament, had a house in
-King Street, Westminster, close to the Palace, as also to the lodgings
-of the Earl of Sandwich, whose housekeeper, “Sarah,” supplied his
-lordship’s cousin, and daily visitor, Mr. Pepys, with abundant gossip.
-The far-famed diary abounds in anecdotes of Barbara, praises of her
-beauty, alternating with blame of her conduct, but every word shewing the
-fascination she exercised over the writer. The Earl of Anglesey died in
-1660-61: and about the same time a daughter was born to Mistress Palmer,
-which was the occasion of much scandal. [Roger Palmer was now raised to
-the title of Earl of Castlemaine, and Baron Limerick]. In 1662 Charles
-II. married Catherine of Braganza, but “Sarah” informed Pepys, that the
-King supped every night in the week preceding his nuptials, with Lady
-Castlemaine: “Likewise, when the whole street was aglow with bonfires,
-the night of the Queen’s arrival, there was no fire at my lady’s door.”
-On the birth of a second child a dreadful altercation took place between
-the husband, and wife, but the feud was ostensibly a religious one, for
-Lord Castlemaine, who had lately embraced the Roman Catholic faith,
-caused the infant to be baptized by a Popish Priest. Madam was furious,
-and, as usual, victorious in her struggles, and a few days afterwards
-“Charles” was re-baptized by a Protestant Minister, in the presence of
-his godfathers, the King, Lord Oxford, &c. Shortly after this event,
-Lady Castlemaine left her lord, carrying with her all her plate, and
-valuables. “They say,” writes Pepys, “that his Lordship is gone to
-France, to enter a Monastery.”
-
-On the appointment of the Ladies of the Bedchamber to the Queen, Lady
-Sandwich was justified in her fear, “that the King would still keep in,
-with Lady Castlemaine.” A great commotion occurred, in the old Palace
-of Hampton Court. The Queen had never mentioned the favourite’s name;
-therefore Charles hoped she was ignorant of her rival’s existence; but
-when the list of the proposed Ladies of the Bedchamber, was submitted
-to her Majesty, Catherine deliberately pricked out the name of my Lady
-Castlemaine, which much disturbed her husband. By the King’s command,
-Lord Clarendon, sorely against his inclination, waited on Her Majesty,
-to try and induce her to cancel her refusal, but the Queen “was much
-discontented with her husband,” and declared that rather than submit
-to the insult, she would desire to return to her own country. Lady
-Castlemaine through an artifice however, approached her Royal mistress,
-and kissed her hand; who, on discovering the trick, fell into a swoon,
-and was carried from the apartment. The King was furious; the Queen for
-a while appeared inflexible, but Charles gained his point in the end,
-for after some time had elapsed, Barbara’s appointment was confirmed,
-and from that time forth, the Queen, by some strange persuasion, or
-obedience to the King’s orders, treated her rival with familiarity, and
-confidence; “was,” says Pepys, “merry with her in public, and in private
-used nobody more friendly.” But then, according to the same authority,
-“the Queen is a most good lady, and takes all, with the greatest meekness
-that may be.”
-
-The syren seems indeed to have bewitched every one, Dryden himself did
-not disdain to write a poem in her honour. On one occasion the Countess
-had a violent altercation, with “la belle Stewart,” Maid of Honour, who
-had excited her jealousy, and the King, taking part against her, the
-imperious lady walked off to her uncle’s at Richmond, whither Charles
-soon followed her, on pretence of hunting, but really to ask pardon.
-Not long after, however, Pepys saw her on horseback, with the King, the
-Queen, Mistress Stewart, etc.; but he thought the King looked coldly on
-her, “and when she had to ’light, nobody pressed to take her down, but
-her own gentleman, and she looked, though handsome, mighty out of humour,
-and had a yellow plume in her hat.” A report reached the Queen’s ears,
-that Barbara had turned Papist, but though a zealot in her religion,
-Catherine “did not much like it, as she did not believe it was done for
-conscience sake.” Perhaps her Majesty agreed, with the learned Divine who
-said that “if the Church of Rome had got no more by Lady Castlemaine,
-than the Church of England had lost, the matter was not much.”
-
-A curious, and unpleasant adventure befell Lady Castlemaine, in the Park,
-returning from a visit to the Duchess of York at St. James’s Palace,
-attended only by her maid, and a little page. She was accosted by three
-gentlemen in masks, who upbraided her in the strongest language, and
-reminded her that the mistress of Edward IV. had died of starvation, on a
-dunghill, abandoned by all the world. The infuriated and terrified beauty
-no sooner reached home, than she swooned; the King ran to the rescue,
-ordered the gates of the Park to be shut, but it was too late—several
-arrests were made, but no discovery ensued.
-
-In the year of the Plague, the Court being at Oxford, Lady Castlemaine
-gave birth to a son, at Merton College. The lady and the King had high
-words on the occasion of the Duke of Buckingham being sent to the Tower,
-she speaking up boldly, in his behalf, Charles saying she was a jade
-that meddled in matters she had nothing to do with; she retorting that
-he was “a fool to suffer his business to be carried on by fools,” and so
-forth. But before five days had elapsed the Duke was at liberty. Lady
-Castlemaine was a determined enemy to Chancellor Clarendon, and she had
-declared in the Queen’s chamber, she hoped to see his head upon a stake
-to keep company with those of the Regicides, and there is no doubt she
-was instrumental in procuring the downfall of the King’s “faithful and
-able adviser.” Gambling was another vice in which Barbara indulged, and
-Pepys tells us she won £15,000, one night, and lost £25,000 another. But
-her favour was on the wane: she was libelled, and abused, and the King
-was weary of her, and it was reported that he had given her large sums of
-money and a fine house, (the residence of the Earls of Berkshire, on the
-south-west corner of St. James’s Street,) merely to get rid of her. Yet
-she still ruled him in many points, and she made great friends with the
-Duke and Duchess of York, while one of her violent hatreds was against
-the Duke of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, because he would not
-confirm the grant of Phœnix Park, a house near Dublin, which the King
-had promised her. Meeting him in one of the royal apartments, she fell
-upon him with a torrent of abuse, and ended by expressing a hope that she
-might live to see him hanged. His Grace replied with calm dignity, “he
-was in no haste to shorten her days; all he wished was to live, to see
-her old.”
-
-In 1670, Barbara, Countess of Castlemaine, was created Baroness Nonsuch,
-Countess of Southampton, and Duchess of Cleveland, in the Peerage of
-England, with the Palace and Park of Nonsuch, in Surrey, and an enormous
-increase of income: so that as far as pecuniary advantages went, the King
-was still sufficiently under her spell, to comply with her exorbitant
-demands. John Churchill, (afterwards the great Duke of Marlborough,)
-when a Court Page attracted the attention of Barbara. She lavished gifts
-upon him, procured him the post of Groom of the Bedchamber to the Duke
-of York, and obtained his promotion in the army. But in later years when
-her beauty had passed away, and her favour at Court, the man who had
-risen by her influence, refused to speak a word in her behalf, respecting
-the renewal of her ill-paid pension. The last grant made to the Duchess
-of Cleveland, and to the Earl of Northumberland, for their lives, was
-the Rangership of the honour, and manor of Hampton Court; but the lodge
-in Bushy Park was not habitable. It was about this time, that Barbara
-went to France, her name appearing as a liberal patroness to the Convent
-of the Blue Nuns, in the Faubourg St. Antoine (where she had placed her
-daughter Barbara), and other religious houses.
-
-In 1678 occurred the episode, with the English Ambassador, to which we
-have alluded in the notice of the Duke of Montagu, when Barbara on her
-return from London, found that her own daughter, the Countess of Sussex,
-had supplanted her, in the favour of that fickle nobleman. In 1694, she
-was living in Arlington Street, Piccadilly, and received as a companion
-a certain Madame De la Rivière, one of the daughters and co-heiresses of
-Sir Roger Manley, Bart., a woman of no reputation, save as the authoress
-of some inferior literary productions; who after a stormy friendship,
-repaid her patroness’s hospitality by contriving a clandestine marriage
-for her eldest son, the Duke of Southampton, with the daughter of Sir
-William Pulteney, a match very much disapproved by his mother.
-
-Lord Castlemaine died in 1705. After his separation from his wife, as
-far back as 1662, his life was eventful; he travelled far, fought at
-Solebay, was twice sent to the Tower, went as Ambassador to Rome, was the
-author of several political pamphlets, and in fact “meddled a little in
-everything around.” Four months after his death, his widow married the
-celebrated “Beau” Feilding, the widower of two heiresses, viz., the only
-daughter of Lord Carlingford, and the only daughter of the Marquis of
-Clanricarde, widow of Viscount Muskerry, and of Robert Villiers, Viscount
-Purbeck. Both ladies died without children, and the Beau at the time of
-his marriage with Duchess Barbara, was a man of desperate fortune, and
-character. He ill-treated his wife, who was most generous to him, and
-would have divested her of all her property, had not her sons stood by
-her. Fortunately, for her Grace, it was discovered that the Beau had
-already, but a few days before his marriage with her, espoused a certain
-Mary Wadsworth, who had been palmed off upon his credulity, as a widow of
-enormous wealth. He was tried, and found guilty of bigamy, Barbara being
-in court during the trial, and the marriage was pronounced null, and void.
-
-She passed the remainder of her life at Chiswick, where she died of
-dropsy in the sixty-ninth year of her age, 1709. She left a considerate
-will, and gave strict orders concerning her funeral, desiring to be
-buried at the parish church. Her pall was borne by six Peers of the
-realm. Barbara’s three sons were the Duke of Cleveland and Southampton,
-the Duke of Grafton, and the Duke of Northumberland; the first and last
-titles became extinct. Her daughters were the Countess of Sussex, the
-Countess of Lichfield, “a blameless beauty,” and Lady Barbara Fitzroy,
-(disowned by the King, and supposed to be the daughter of John Churchill,
-afterwards Duke of Marlborough), who took the veil, and died as Prioress
-of a convent in France. Bishop Burnet, in speaking of Barbara, Duchess
-of Cleveland, says: “She was a woman of great beauty, vicious, ravenous,
-foolish, and imperious.” Another contemporary says: “She was a great
-contradiction, unboundedly lavish, yet sordidly covetous.”
-
-Portrait galleries teem with likenesses of Barbara, at different ages,
-in different costumes, and “moods.” In the celebrated “Bellona” of the
-Hampton Court Beauties we detect the “arrogant virago” who carried all
-before her: but in the portrait in question, her beauty is far more
-captivating from the pensive and languid expression, which softens her
-brilliant eyes, and smooths the corners of her finely cut but usually
-severe lips. No wonder, Lord Sandwich was delighted with his present.
-Pepys does not specify the donor, whether the lady, or the artist; but he
-says: “My Lady Sandwich showed me, and Mistress Pepys, Lady Castlemaine’s
-picture, at the new house in Lincoln’s Inn Fields, finely done, and given
-my Lord;” and in another page, he calls it “that most blessed picture.”
-
-
-_General Ireton_:
-
-BY DOBSON.
-
-THREE-QUARTER LENGTH.
-
- (Long Hair. Red Doublet. A Cuirass and Sash. Buff Gloves. Right
- Hand holding the Sash. Left on his Hip.)
-
-Born, 1611. Died, 1651. Son of Gervase Ireton, Esq., of Attenborough, Co.
-Notts. Was a gentleman-commoner, at Trinity College, Oxford. Destined for
-the bar; but the Civil War breaking out, he obtained a commission in the
-Parliamentary Army. In 1645 he married at Norton, near Oxford, Bridget,
-the eldest daughter of Oliver Cromwell, by whom he had one son, and
-four daughters. In 1649 he was appointed one of the King’s judges, and
-signed the warrant for his execution. He was a man of undoubted courage,
-and distinguished himself in numerous engagements, more especially at
-the battle of Naseby. His views were violently republican, but his
-integrity stern and uncompromising; no mercenary motives influenced
-him. Eleven years the junior of Cromwell, and his son-in-law, he dared
-to differ with him, and to expostulate boldly when he disapproved of
-the Protector’s conduct. After the battle of Worcester he was offered
-pecuniary remuneration, with several other members of the Parliamentary
-Army, but he was disinterested enough to refuse £20,000, and to tell the
-government roundly, he should be more content to see them paying off the
-debts they had incurred, than thus disposing of the public money. It was
-thought that his appointment as Lord Deputy in Ireland, was intended by
-the Protector to remove him from all possibility of interference with his
-own proceedings; and there seems little doubt that Ireton, shortly before
-his death, had contemplated crossing the Channel to speak face to face
-with his father-in-law, in reference to many measures he disapproved. But
-he was suddenly seized, and carried off by the Plague, during the siege
-of Limerick in 1651.
-
-Ireton was held in great esteem by his party and his comrades, and it was
-said of him that he grafted the soldier on the lawyer, and the statesman
-on the saint. Cromwell was much affected at his death, and caused the
-body to be brought over, and deposited with great pomp in Westminster
-Abbey, in Henry VII.’s Chapel. At the Restoration however, the body was
-dug up, and hung upon a gibbet at Tyburn.
-
-
-_Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of England_:
-
-BY WALKER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH: OVAL.
-
- (In Armour, with a Plain Falling Collar.)
-
-Born, 1599. Died, 1658—The only surviving son of Robert Cromwell, by
-Elizabeth Stewart: born in Huntingdon, named after his uncle, Sir Oliver
-Cromwell, of Hinchingbrook, where he passed many of his earlier days.
-Numerous stories are told, (some ridiculed, some generally believed,)
-of Oliver’s infancy, and boyhood. It is said that on one occasion he
-was snatched from his cradle by a monkey, who jumping out of the window,
-scampered over the roof of Hinchingbrook, to the consternation of the
-family, who stood watching the beast, with great anxiety. Whether or not
-the monkey felt, that he bore in his arms the future ruler of England,
-the chronicler does not affirm, but he goes on to relate, that the fears
-of the relatives were soon appeased by seeing the baby safely restored
-to his cradle, by the conscientious ape! Another incident connected with
-Hinchingbrook was more currently believed, viz., that Charles I., when a
-boy, visited Sir Oliver, on his road from Scotland to London. The good
-knight sent for his nephew to help him entertain the Prince, which he did
-by disputing violently with his Royal Highness: a quarrel ensued, and
-Oliver, being the strongest of the two, caused Charles’s blood to flow,
-an ominous presage of after times. We do not know how Sir Oliver visited
-his nephew’s outbreak, but he was a staunch cavalier, and supported the
-Royalists till his death.
-
-Oliver, when a school-boy, was wilful, and wayward, and fond of wild and
-sometimes coarse jests. One Christmas night, the revels at Hinchingbrook
-were interrupted by some unseemly pranks of his conceiving, which called
-down upon him, a sentence from the Master of Misrule that Sir Oliver
-ordered into immediate execution, viz., that the young recreant should be
-subjected then, and there, to a severe ducking in one of the adjoining
-fishponds. When still a school-boy, another anecdote is told of Oliver;
-that on awaking from a short sleep, one hot day, he electrified his
-schoolfellows with the description of a dream, he had had. How a woman
-of gigantic stature had appeared at the side of his bed, and slowly
-undrawing the curtains, had announced to him that some day, he would
-be the greatest man in England—the word “King” did not however pass
-her lips. The young visionary was rewarded for this lie, (as it was
-considered) by a severe flogging. A better authenticated story is told
-of his rescue from drowning, by one Johnson, a citizen of Huntingdon, of
-whom General Cromwell enquired (when in after years, he marched through
-his native town, with the army) if he remembered the circumstance:
-“Yes,” was the indignant reply, “and I wish to my heart I had let you
-drown, rather than to see you in arms, against your King.”
-
-At the age of seventeen, Oliver Cromwell left the Grammar School, at
-Huntingdon, and entered Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. Both as a
-school-boy and a collegian he distinguished himself more in athletic
-sports, than in application to study, and he appears to have led a wild
-irregular life, according to his own admission, for it is difficult
-to sift the truth, from the preposterous flattery on the one hand,
-and the unqualified abuse on the other, which characterise Cromwell’s
-biographers, according to their political opinions. In recording his own
-conversion, at the age of twenty years, he says: “Before which time, I
-hated holiness, and the Word of God.” His mother sent him to study at
-Lincoln’s Inn, “where,” says Carrington, “he associated with those of
-the best rank, and quality, and the most ingenious persons, for though
-not averse to study and contemplation, he seemed rather addicted to
-conversation, and the reading of men’s characters, than to a continual
-poring over authors.” On completing his twenty-first year, he married
-Elizabeth, daughter of Sir James Bourchier, of Felsted, in Essex, a
-kinswoman of Hampden’s, who brought him a modest dowry, which she nobly
-relinquished with the additional money he had settled on her for life, to
-rescue her husband from pecuniary difficulties in after years; a woman of
-irreproachable life, and unobtrusive manners, who tolerated rather than
-coveted grandeur, and distinction, an excellent housewife, and a loving
-help-mate. The newly married pair fixed their residence in Huntingdon,
-where his mother still lived, and where several children were born to
-them.
-
-Cromwell now turned his mind to those studies, and pursuits which paved
-his way to future greatness. He made his house the refuge for the
-“disaffected,” or the “persecuted” Nonconformist Ministers; he encouraged
-them in their opposition, prayed, preached, built a chapel for them,
-supported them on all occasions, and became so popular, that the chief of
-his fellow townsmen offered to return him for the Borough, in the next
-Parliament that was summoned. In 1625 he failed—in 1628 he was returned
-as member for Huntingdon, when his cousin Hampden also took his seat.
-Dr. South describes Oliver’s appearance on this occasion, in a manner
-that caused the Merry Monarch to observe: “Oddsfish! that chaplain must
-be a Bishop; put me in mind of him, next vacancy.” “Who that beheld such
-a bankrupt, beggarly fellow, as Cromwell, first entering the Parliament
-House, with a torn, thread-bare coat, and greasy hat (perhaps neither of
-them paid for) would have believed that in a few years.” ... &c.?
-
-After the dissolution of this Parliament, where Hampden, Cromwell, and
-Pym bore bold testimony to their political, and religious faith, Oliver
-returned to Huntingdon, and afterwards flitted to a small farm, near St.
-Ives, with his wife and family. Hume says the long morning and afternoon
-prayers he made, consumed his own time, and that of his ploughmen, and
-he had little leisure for temporal affairs. A property in, and near Ely,
-left him by his maternal uncle, determined him to settle in that city,
-in 1636. In 1640 he was returned for Cambridge, by the majority of a
-single vote. From this moment the history of Cromwell is the history of
-England, and his acts and all that he did, are written in the chronicles
-of Clarendon, Hume, and other historians, whose name is Legion. From that
-time, whether in Parliament, or the field, he was in arms against the
-King, whose execution took place on the 30th of January, 1649. But the
-inscription over the bed on which the Protector lay in state, will assist
-the memory as to dates.
-
-Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector, etc., born at Huntingdon, was educated
-in Cambridge, afterwards at Lincoln’s Inn. At the beginning of the wars,
-captain of a troop of horse raised at his own charge. By the Parliament
-made Commander-in-Chief, he reduced Ireland and South Wales, overthrew
-Duke Hamilton’s army, and the Kirk’s at Dunbar, reduced all Scotland, and
-defeated Charles Stuart’s army, at Worcester. He was proclaimed Protector
-in 1654, and while refusing the title of King, sate on a Chair of State,
-the only one covered, in that vast assembly, and drove back to his Palace
-at Whitehall, with more than regal pomp. Thither, keeping up great state,
-he removed his aged mother, whose remaining days were embittered by
-alarm, for her son’s safety, his favourite daughter, Mrs. Claypole, from
-whom he would scarcely ever separate, the gentle and handsome likeness of
-himself, Mary, etc.
-
-Hard, cruel, and uncompromising in public life, Oliver was tender, and
-loving in his domestic relations. He lost two sons, Robert, who died
-in childhood, Oliver, who fell in battle, a great favourite with his
-father, who in his last moments alluded to the young soldier’s death,
-“which went as a dagger to my heart, indeed it did.” His other children
-were, Richard, his successor for a short time only; Henry, Lord Deputy
-of Ireland; Bridget, married first, to General Ireton, and secondly,
-to Lieutenant-General Fleetwood; Elizabeth, married to Mr. Claypole,
-his favourite daughter, whose death was supposed to have hastened her
-father’s; Mary married to Viscount Fauconberg; and Frances married to the
-Hon. Robert Rich.
-
-It is almost too well known, to be worthy of writing down, how Cromwell’s
-last days were embittered by suspicion, and distrust of all around him,
-and constant fear of assassination. He died, however, after fourteen
-days sickness, of ague, “peaceably in his bed,” on his “fortunate day,”
-September the Third, the anniversary of the victories of Worcester, and
-Dunbar, in a storm so tremendous, and so universal, that it reached the
-coasts of the Mediterranean. The funeral was conducted with more than
-regal pomp, and splendour, but on the accession of Charles II., the
-Protector’s body was dug up, and hung upon the “Traitor’s Tree.”
-
-
-_General Monk_:
-
-BY WALKER.
-
-HALF-LENGTH: OVAL.
-
- (In Armour. Long Hair. White Cravat, tied with large Bow, and
- Black Ribbon.)
-
-Born, 1608. Died, 1670. A younger son of Thomas Monk, of Potheridge,
-Devon. When only seventeen, in consequence of a domestic quarrel,
-where (says the _Biographie Universelle_) “par excès d’amour filial,
-il maltraita le sous-sheriff d’Exeter,” he went to sea, and afterwards
-served under the Duke of Buckingham. In 1629, he entered one of the
-English regiments in Holland, where he studied the art of war, with great
-diligence, and was remarkable for his steadiness, and for the discipline,
-he maintained among the soldiers, treating them at the same time with
-great kindness. In 1639, he returned to England. When Charles I., was
-embarked in that unfortunate war with Scotland, which was the forerunner
-of terrible disasters, Monk, as Lieutenant-Colonel of artillery,
-displayed much skill, and courage, though both proved useless; and he
-then went to Ireland on promotion. Here he did considerable service, was
-made Governor of Dublin, but Parliament intervening, he was superseded
-in the office, and on the conclusion of a truce (by the King’s commands)
-with the Irish rebels, he returned to England. On his arrival he found
-that doubts of his fidelity had been instilled into Charles’s mind; but
-joining that monarch at Oxford, he soon dispelled them, was promoted to
-the rank of Major-General, and sent to relieve Sandwich, where he was
-taken prisoner, and thence committed to the Tower by the Roundheads.
-
-His captivity lasted two years, during which time he rejected all
-overtures, made him by the Protector, and occupied his leisure hours
-in noting down his observations on military, and political subjects.
-Cromwell entertained a high opinion of Monk as a soldier, and he offered
-him the alternative of prolonged imprisonment, or a command in the
-Parliamentary army, to march against O’Neill, the Irish rebel. Monk
-accepted the latter, and behaved in this expedition with his usual
-courage, and determination; but he was ill-supported by the Government at
-home, who, as we are told, “had too many irons in the fire,” to attend
-to the Irish war. He was reluctantly compelled to sign a treaty with
-O’Neill, for which proceeding he was called to account, on his return
-to England. But the Protector considered his services necessary, and
-despatched him in command to Scotland, where he again saw much service.
-Yet in Oliver’s mind there lurked suspicions of Monk’s fidelity; and not
-long before his death, he wrote to the General saying: “There be that
-tell me, there is a certain cunning fellow in Scotland, called George
-Monk, who is said to lie in wait there, to introduce Charles Stuart; I
-pray you use your diligence to apprehend him, and send him up to me.”
-
-Monk’s proceedings from this time, form part of history, and the share he
-took in the restoration of Charles II., is too well known to be repeated
-here. Charles called him his father, invested him with the Order of the
-Garter, created him Duke of Albemarle, Earl of Torrington, and Baron
-Monk, and appointed him Lieutenant-General of the Forces of the United
-Kingdom, with a large income.
-
-In 1653, he married (or acknowledged his marriage with) Anne, daughter of
-John Clargis, who had long resided under his roof: “A lady,” says Guizot,
-“whose manners were more vulgar, and less simple, than those of her
-husband, and who was the laughing-stock, of a witty and satirical court.”
-
-The French historian speaks disparagingly of the great general, but in
-the time of the Plague, when the court, and ministers left London, the
-Duke remained to watch over the necessities of the wretched inhabitants,
-to save families from pillage, and to alleviate the sufferings of the
-poor.
-
-He was afloat in joint command of the fleet with Prince Rupert, when the
-Great Fire occurred, and the general cry was: “Ah, if old George had been
-here, this would not have happened.” He died in his sixty-second year,
-leaving an enormous fortune to his spendthrift son Christopher, (who
-died without children), and was buried in Westminster Abbey with great
-splendour, Charles II. attending his obsequies.
-
-Guizot says: “C’étoit un homme capable de grandes choses, quoiqu’il n’eût
-pas de grandeur dans l’âme.” His jealousy of his noble colleague Lord
-Sandwich, bears out the French historian’s Opinion, in some measure.
-
-In his last illness, he was much occupied with arranging the alliance
-of his surviving son, Christopher, (the death of the elder had been a
-terrible blow to him) with the heiress of the wealthy Duke of Newcastle.
-The nuptials were celebrated in his own chamber, and a few days
-afterwards, George Monk, Duke of Albemarle, expired in his arm-chair,
-without a groan.
-
-
-_Charles II., King of England_:
-
-BY SIR PETER LELY.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (Standing by a Table, on which are his Helmet and Staff.)
-
-Born, 1630. Died, 1685.—He was the second surviving son of Charles I.,
-by Henrietta Maria of France, born at St. James’s Palace, on the 29th
-of May. When only twelve years old was appointed to the command of a
-troop of horse, his father’s Body Guard at York, and sent with the title
-of General, to serve in the Royal army when fifteen. After the defeat
-of Naseby, he went to Scilly, then to Jersey, and in 1646 joined his
-mother, at Paris. He was at the Hague, when the news of his father’s
-death reached him, and he immediately assumed the title of King. In
-1649, he was proclaimed King at Edinburgh. He left Holland, returned to
-Paris, and thence again to Jersey, where he received a deputation from
-Scotland, and accepted the Crown offered him by the Presbyterians, under
-such humiliating conditions, as disgusted him with that sect, for the
-rest of his life. In 1650, he arrived in Scotland, being compelled to
-take the Covenant before he landed; was crowned at Scone on New Year’s
-Day, 1651; but marched south, on hearing of the advance of Cromwell, and
-was proclaimed King at Carlisle. Defeated by Cromwell, at the Battle
-of Worcester, Charles had a narrow escape, with all the well known
-incidents of the hiding place in Boscobel Oak, etc. He embarked from
-Shoreham for Normandy, thence to Paris, Bruges, Brussels. In the latter
-city he heard of the Protector’s death; then, when at Calais and Breda,
-he kept up constant communication, not only with General Monk, and his
-own acknowledged partisans, but he also sent addresses to both Houses
-of Parliament. On the 1st, of May 1660, they voted his restoration; on
-the 8th, he was proclaimed in London; on the 23rd, he embarked from
-the Hague; and on the 29th, his thirtieth birthday, he made his public
-entry into London, amidst the enthusiastic acclamations of the people.
-In 1662, he married Catherine of Braganza, daughter of John IV., King of
-Portugal, and died at Whitehall, in the twenty-fifth year of his reign.
-Some say he confessed himself a Roman Catholic; some that he was a victim
-to poison. It was his brother’s wish to prove the former statement, and
-several of his contemporaries, including the Duke of Buckingham, believed
-the latter. The last named nobleman gives apparently an impartial
-character of the “Merry Monarch,” who was remarkable for contradictions,
-and inconsistencies, even above the average, in an inconsistent world.
-Buckingham says: “His very countenance set all rules of physiognomy at
-defiance, for being of a cheerful and compassionate disposition, his
-expression was melancholy, and repelling. He had a wonderful facility
-in comprehending trifles, but had too little application to master
-great matters. Generous, extravagant, lavish in the extreme, he had a
-reluctance to part with small sums, and it was often remarked that he
-grudged losing five pounds at tennis to the very people on whom at other
-times he would bestow five thousand. Gentle and yielding in trifles, he
-was inflexible in important matters. Profligate in the extreme, weak
-and capricious, he was,” says the same witness, “a civil and obliging
-husband, a kind master, an indulgent father, and an affectionate [and he
-might have added, forbearing] brother. Hating the formalities of royalty,
-he was ready to assert his dignity, when it was necessary to do so. So
-agreeably did he tell a story, that his hearers never cavilled at its
-repetition, not through civility, but from the desire to hear it again,
-as is the case with a clever comedy.”
-
-So far the Duke of Buckingham. We know what his boon companion Rochester,
-wrote of him, in a provisional epitaph; perhaps one of the only sallies
-proceeding from his favourite, that “Old Rowley” did not relish:
-
- “Here lies our Sovereign lord the King,
- Whose word no man relies on:
- Who never said a foolish thing,
- And never did a wise one.”
-
-Also Andrew Marvell’s satire:
-
- “Of stature tall and sable hue,
- Much like the son of Kish, that lofty Jew;
- Ten years of need, he lingered in exile,
- And fed his father’s asses, all the while.”
-
-
-_Charles II., King of Spain_:
-
-AGED FOUR YEARS.
-
-BY SEBASTIAN HERRERA.
-
-FULL-LENGTH.
-
- (Long flowing Light Hair. Red Coat, trimmed with Silver. Lace
- Ruffles. Holding a Truncheon in one Hand, and his Hat in the
- other. Above him an Eagle, with extended Wings, bearing a
- Sword. An Angel hovering over the King, holding the Spanish
- Crown.)
-
-Born, 1661. Died, 1700. Eldest surviving son of Philip IV., by Mariana,
-of Austria. Succeeded his father, when four years of age. His first wife
-was Marie Louise, daughter of Philip, Duke of Orleans, by Henrietta Maria
-of England. Transplanted from the brilliant Court of France, to the
-stiff formality of Spain, and the Spaniards, at a time when the jealousy
-of France was so great, that the Mistress of the Robes was said to have
-wrung her parrots’ necks for speaking French, Marie Louise, the wife of
-a half idiot King, bore herself wisely and bravely, and during the few
-short years of her reign, gained an influence for good, over her husband,
-who loved her dearly. But the mirror which broke to pieces in her fair
-hands, on the day of her arrival in Madrid, was but too true an omen. She
-died in the 27th year of her age, a victim to poison (as her mother had
-been before her), supposed to have been administered by the beautiful
-and infamous Olympia Mancini—at least this was the general belief. Her
-husband lamented her deeply; yet he re-married the next year, Anna Maria,
-daughter of Philip, Count Palatine, of Neuburg, a good-humoured, amiable
-Princess; but Charles remained indifferent to her, and so faithful was
-he to the memory of his first wife, that one of his last acts was to
-cause the tomb in which she was interred to be opened, while he hung in
-speechless sorrow, over the embalmed remains of the once beautiful Marie
-Louise; and when he looked upon her still comely features, he exclaimed,
-with tears, “I shall meet her soon in Heaven.”
-
-“Charles II., of Spain,” says Sir William Stirling, “might well be called
-the Melancholy Monarch in contradistinction to his uncle Charles II.,
-of England, the Merry Monarch.” In the early years of his reign, he was
-in entire subjugation to the Regent-Mother, who at open variance with
-Don John, and his party, only agreed with him in this, to keep the young
-monarch under. True it is, the unhappy Prince was ill-suited to his
-position. From his earliest years, he was a martyr to despondency, and
-detested everything connected with public affairs. His gun, his dogs,
-and his beads, were his favourite companions. He had a zealous love
-for art, and artists, but little taste, or knowledge, patronising, and
-befriending alike the worthy, and the worthless. His paramount favourite,
-was Luca Giordano, to whose studio he paid frequent visits, and whom
-he commanded to remain covered in his presence: a mandate which that
-self-approving artist, readily obeyed—a contrast to the conduct of the
-distinguished Carreno, to whom the young King was one day sitting for
-his portrait, in the presence of the Queen-Mother. Charles enquired to
-what order the artist belonged. “To none,” was the reply, “except that of
-your Majesty’s servants.” The Badge of Santiago, was sent to Carreno that
-very day, but so great was his diffidence, that he never assumed it. “His
-portraits of Charles II.,” says Stirling, “as a child, have something
-to please the eye in the pale pensive features, and long fair hair; the
-projection of the lower jaw, so remarkable in after life, is scarcely
-discernible, and there is something pitiful, and touching in the sadness
-of the countenance, contrasted with the gala suit he wears.” Herrera died
-soon after Charles’s accession, but besides Giordano he retained in his
-service Coello, and Muñoz, and invited Murillo, to remove from Seville,
-to Madrid.
-
-He had a magnificent carriage, for himself and his second wife, painted
-with mythological subjects: he amused himself by building, visiting from
-one studio to another, and shooting wolves; while occasionally he might
-be seen, walking barefoot in the procession at an Auto da Fé. Charles
-II., without doubt stood on the verge of imbecility, or insanity, and
-the treatment he endured from those around him, on his death-bed, was
-sufficient to deaden the small share of intellect that was his portion.
-In his last days he was tormented, and harassed by questions as to the
-succession, (he being childless): and in his dying moments, he was
-tortured by the frightful ceremony of exorcism, it being currently
-supposed, or at least affirmed by the superstitious, and cruel, that he
-was possessed.
-
-“Thus,” says Stirling, “died one of the most unfortunate monarchs, ever
-cursed by a hereditary crown.”
-
-
-IN THE ENTRANCE HALL ARE PORTRAITS OF KINGS GEORGE II. AND GEORGE III.,
-BY SHACKLETON AND RAMSAY, OF JOHN, FOURTH EARL OF SANDWICH, AND OF
-SEVERAL BRITISH ADMIRALS, BY DANCE.
-
-
-
-
-_LORD SANDWICH’S ROOM._
-
-
-_Omai, the Otaheitan._
-
-AN ENGRAVING.
-
-He played such a prominent part in the entertainments at Hinchingbrook,
-and had such a curious life of adventure, that a brief notice will
-scarcely be misplaced. His father was a man of considerable property
-in Whetea, one of the South Pacific Islands, which had been conquered
-by a neighbour, and he took refuge in Huaheine, where he died, leaving
-Omai, and several other children, in a state of poverty, and dependence.
-Captain Cook tells us, that Captain Furneaux, visiting these islands,
-becoming interested in Omai, conveyed him to England, where he became a
-resident under Lord Sandwich’s roof, (John, fourth Earl, then First Lord
-of the Admiralty.) Captain Cook and Mr. Cradock give the same character
-of the half savage, “intelligent, indolent, childlike, full of affection,
-and gratitude to his noble patron, but cherishing a feeling of revenge
-towards those of his own countrymen, who had ill-treated his father,
-and reduced himself to poverty. Lord Sandwich took him about to music
-meetings, races, etc.” “At Leicester,” says Mr. Cradock, “he divided
-public attention, with the Earl of Sandwich when that nobleman played on
-the kettledrum, his favourite instrument at the music meetings. ‘What
-has become of poor Omai?’ was the question once asked on some festive
-occasion. ‘Oh,’ was the answer, ‘I have just left him in the tea room,
-very happy, gallantly handing about bread and butter, to the ladies.’”
-Omai was not averse to admiration, and adapted himself curiously to his
-new life, showing such an aptitude for dancing, among other things,
-that a lady assured me with a little tuition he would make an excellent
-partner. On one occasion Lord Sandwich proposed that he should dress a
-shoulder of mutton, after the fashion of his country, and he proceeded
-accordingly to dig a hole in the lawn at Hinchingbrook, placed fuel
-covered with clean pebbles at the bottom, then laid the mutton neatly
-enveloped in leaves at the top, and having closed the hole walked
-constantly round it, observing the sun. The joint was then served at
-table, and much commended. Having been offered some stewed morella
-cherries, he jumped up, and assured the society he no more wished to
-partake of human blood, than they did. One summer’s day he entered the
-breakfast room at Hinchingbrook, in great pain, his hand much swollen,
-not being acquainted with the word “wasp,” he made Dr. Solander, who
-was present, understand he had been wounded by a “soldier bird,” upon
-which the doctor remarked: “No naturalist could have better described
-the obnoxious insect.” “He was,” says Cradock, “naturally genteel, and
-prepossessing, and fond of good clothes, once finding fault with those
-prepared for him, as being inferior to the quality of the dress, of the
-same cut the gentleman who sat beside him wore—this was of Genoese,
-and Omai’s of English velvet.” So far had he advanced in civilization.
-The government judged it best, he should return to his own country,
-lest the natives should suspect us of having made away with him. Mr.
-Cradock says he bade him good-bye on the steps of the Admiralty, when
-the poor fellow was deeply affected. Captain Cook says his feelings were
-mingled: “When he talked on the voyage, about England, and his friends,
-and protectors there, he was much moved, and could scarcely refrain from
-tears, so full of gratitude was his heart—but when we spoke of his return
-to his country, his eyes sparkled in the expectation of the reception he
-should meet with, on account of his superior knowledge, and still more
-on account of the treasures, with which he was laden.” The King, Lord
-Sandwich, Mr. Bankes (afterwards Sir Joseph), and many other friends,
-had furnished him with every article, which the sailors’ knowledge of
-the country, made them believe would be acceptable there. In fact,
-every means had been taken during his abode in England, as also at his
-departure, to make him the instrument of conveying to the Islands of the
-Pacific Ocean, an exalted opinion of England’s greatness, and generosity.
-Omai, as may have been conjectured, was very useful to Captain Cook on
-the voyage out, serving as interpreter, and mediator, on many occasions,
-at the Friendly Islands, and elsewhere. On their arrival at Otaheite,
-several canoes came off, but Omai took no notice of the crews or they of
-him, neither did they appear to recognise him, as a countryman. At length
-Ootee, a chief, brother-in-law to Omai, and three or four others, who all
-knew him before he went to England, came on board. But their meeting was
-in no wise tender—on the contrary, great indifference was manifested on
-both sides, till Omai, taking Ootee down into the cabin, displayed his
-treasures of trinkets etc., but more especially some red feathers, of a
-few of which, he begged his relative’s acceptance. When this was known
-on deck, the whole state of affairs was changed, and Ootee, who would
-scarcely speak to Omai before, now begged they might be Tayos (friends)
-and exchange names—an honour Omai accepted with dignity, and Ootee, in
-return for the valuable feathers, sent on shore for a hog. Such were
-the civilities that passed, on our friend’s return, and it was evident
-that all the affection was for his property, and not his person. When
-present at some of the barbarous customs, prevalent in these Islands,
-Omai, by desire of Captain Cook, expostulated with the chiefs on their
-cruelty with so much spirit, as to incur their displeasure. The gallant
-commander gives an elaborate account of the dainties prepared for him,
-and some of the ship’s crew, when they dined on shore with the two
-brothers-in-law. Captain Cook endeavoured to persuade Omai to settle at
-Otaheite, but his wishes turned to Whetea, his native place, where his
-father had originally held land. The Captain thought he could get it
-restored to him, if he would make friends with the conquerors, but Omai
-was a staunch patriot, and refused, begging that he might be reinstated
-through the intervention of the English arms. No way likely, said Captain
-Cook, who, however, willing to serve him, sought an interview with the
-chief men of the Island, to induce them to permit Omai to reside at
-Huaheine. A grand function took place, when Omai made his offering to the
-gods, of red feathers, and fine cloth from England; and a set of prayers
-dictated by himself, was pronounced, in which his English friends were
-duly remembered, Lord Sandwich and Tootee (Cook) in particular. He also
-told them of his kind reception in England by the King and his Earees,
-(nobles), that he had returned enriched with all sorts of treasures, that
-would be useful to his countrymen, etc., and that it was Captain Cook’s
-wish that they should give him a piece of land to build a house, etc.;
-and that if they would not do so——here followed some threats, which the
-Englishman had to disavow, and the chiefs were so much edified by the
-gallant sailor’s speech, that one of them assured him, the whole Island
-was his own, and therefore he could give what portion he pleased, to
-his friend. The result of all this was, that land was granted, and the
-ships’ carpenters built Omai a house, and laid out, and planted his small
-garden. He found several relatives at Huaheine, “who did not indeed rob
-him,” says Captain Cook, “but I fear they are scarcely of sufficient
-influence, to protect him from others.” The kind Englishman was under
-great apprehension, at the danger Omai incurred from being the only rich
-man in the Island, and he took every precaution he could think of, to
-ensure his safety, declaring that he would soon revisit the Island, and
-if any one had proved an enemy to Omai, he might dread the wrath of the
-British commander. All the English treasures were carried on shore, as
-soon as Omai’s house had progressed sufficiently—pots, kettles, dishes,
-plates, and better still, a box of toys and of fireworks—the latter an
-object of pleasure, and fear to the inhabitants. But most of the English
-utensils were useless to him here, and he wisely disposed of them, for
-hatchets, or other tools.
-
-Before he sailed, Captain Cook saw Omai settled in his own house, with
-an establishment consisting of his brother, and eight or nine other men,
-(no female—Omai was too volatile to choose a wife), and there the English
-officers were received with hospitality and excellent cheer. Cook made
-the new householder, a present of several fire-arms, which he coveted,
-and had the following inscription cut on the house:
-
- “Georgius Tertius, Rex;
- 2 Novembris, 1777.
- Names { Resolution, JAC. COOK, Pr.
- { Discovery, CAR. CLERKE, Pr.”
-
-At four in the afternoon, of the 2nd of November, the two English vessels
-sailed. “Many of the Natives remained on board, to hear five guns fired,
-and then took their leave, but Omai lingered, till we were at sea, and
-then returned in a boat, sent to recover a hawser that had been broken.
-He took leave of his English friends, and showed a moody resolution till
-he approached Captain Cook, to bid him farewell. Then his tears could
-no longer be suppressed, and he wept the whole time the boat was going
-ashore.” Captain Cook heard from him when the ships were at Whetea; he
-sent two men in a canoe to say, that he was prospering and at peace, and
-that his only misfortune consisted in the loss of a goat, who had died in
-kidding.
-
-One would gladly have heard something of the latter days of Omai, and
-can only hope that his state of semi-civilization did not make him
-discontented, with his life in Otaheite, or obnoxious to its inhabitants.
-If, as is most probable, the terrible details of his benefactor’s murder
-ever reached him, the grateful heart of Omai must have been wrung with
-sorrow.
-
-
-_Count Walewski._
-
-Born, 1801. Died, 1868.—He was the son of the Emperor Napoleon I.,
-by a Polish lady of rank. When only nineteen he went on a diplomatic
-mission to London, to plead the cause of Poland, having inherited from
-his mother, an enthusiastic love for her country. Charles Greville says
-in his Diary, that “his agreeable manners and remarkable beauty made
-him welcome in society;” and in 1831, he married Lady Caroline Montagu,
-sister to the Earl of Sandwich. He served for a time, under the Polish
-flag; was present at the Battle of Grokow, and was decorated with the
-National Military Cross. He afterwards obtained a commission in a
-regiment of French Hussars, but before long he laid down the sword to
-take up the pen. Among his past publications was “Un mot sur la question
-d’Afrique, et de l’alliance Anglaise.” He became the editor of the
-_Messager_, and wrote a five-act comedy, called “L’Ecole du Monde,” which
-was put on the stage in 1840.
-
-He resumed his diplomatic career in the same year, and was sent to Egypt
-under the ministry of Thiers; he also held several appointments under
-Guizot.
-
-When Louis Napoleon became President, Walewski attached himself to his
-cause. In 1849, he went as minister to Florence, and Naples, and in
-1854, he came as Ambassador to England, but was recalled to Paris, the
-ensuing year, to take the portfolio of Foreign Affairs, vacant by the
-resignation of M. Drouyn de l’Huys. In this post his connection with, and
-knowledge of, England, made him instrumental in cementing the alliance of
-the two nations. In 1856, he presided as French Plenipotentiary over the
-Congress of Paris. In 1860, he resigned his post, but was again employed
-as successor to M. Fould. In 1863, he retired from public life, it was
-supposed on account of his strong Polish tendencies. He had the Grand
-Cross of the Legion of Honour, and other decorations.
-
-He married as his second wife the grand-daughter of Stanislaus
-Poniatowski, nephew to the last King of Poland. To France and its
-Emperor, he was an irreparable loss.
-
-
-_William Poyntz, Esquire_:
-
-BY SIR GEORGE HAYTER.
-
-Born, 1769. Died, 1840. The last male representative of the ancient
-family of Poyntz. His grandfather, Stephen Poyntz, was in diplomacy, and
-employed on several foreign missions. He married Anna Maria Mordaunt,
-cousin of the Earl of Peterborough, and Maid of Honour to Caroline, Queen
-of George II. To Mr. and Mrs. Poyntz’s care was confided the bringing
-up, of William, Duke of Cumberland, and a curious picture was painted,
-according to the taste of the day, in which the Queen presents her son to
-her _ci-devant_ Maid of Honour, the lady in the garb of Minerva, and the
-young Prince in the stiff coat and breeches of the period. Mrs. Poyntz’s
-influence at Court stood her once in good stead, when she pleaded
-in behalf of Lord Cromartie, under sentence of death in the ’15, in
-compliance with a touching appeal from his unhappy wife. The letter is
-now in possession of Mrs. Poyntz’s great grand-daughter, Mary Boyle. Lord
-Cromartie’s life was spared, though fortune, and title were lost to him.
-The Queen bestowed as a dowry on Miss Mordaunt, the estate of Midgham, in
-Berkshire, but the gift is said never to have been paid for, out of the
-royal purse!
-
-Stephen died in 1750, and was succeeded by his son William, who married
-a daughter and co-heiress of Kelland Courtenay, Esq., of Painsford,
-Devon, by Elizabeth Montagu, daughter of Viscount Hinchingbrook. They had
-issue: William Stephen, the subject of this notice, Montagu Mordaunt,
-who died early in life, and four daughters; Georgiana, married first to
-Mr. Fawkner, and afterwards to Lord John Townshend; Louisa, married, as
-his second wife, to the Hon. George Bridgeman; Isabella, married to her
-cousin, the Earl of Cork and Orrery; and Carolina, married to his brother
-Captain, the Hon. Courtenay Boyle. William Poyntz was at one time in the
-Tenth Hussars, and afterwards Captain of the Midhurst Volunteers. In
-1796, he sat in Parliament for St. Albans, and was re-elected in 1802,
-and 1806. In 1807, he was returned for Callington, and again in 1812-18.
-He represented Chichester from 1823 to 1826, and Ashburton, from 1831
-to 1835; and then sat for Midhurst, till he resigned, and was succeeded
-by his son-in-law, Captain the Hon. Frederick Spencer. In politics he
-was a Liberal in the best sense of the word; firm and unwavering in his
-opinions in favour of progress, but opposed to destruction, and a staunch
-upholder of the Church.
-
-In 1794, he married the Hon. Elizabeth Browne, only sister, and sole
-heiress of Viscount Montagu, who was drowned the year before at the Falls
-of Schaffausen. By her, Mr. Poyntz became possessed of Cowdray Park, in
-Sussex, and an extensive property, where they resided almost entirely
-after their marriage. They had two sons drowned in the prime of life, and
-in the sight of both parents, Mr. Poyntz being in the boat, and his wife
-looking on from the window of a house at Bognor, where the tragedy took
-place in 1815. Their three daughters in consequence became co-heiresses:
-Frances, Lady Clinton; Elizabeth, married to the Hon. Frederick Spencer,
-who succeeded to the Earldom; and Isabella, Marchioness of Exeter.
-
-In 1830, after a happy union of thirty-six years, Mrs. Poyntz died,
-deeply and universally regretted; and the widower removed to Hampton
-Court, after a time, to be nearer his daughters. For some years before
-his death, he was the cause of great anxiety to his family and friends
-from being constantly subject to fainting fits, the result, as was
-afterwards proved, of an accident in the hunting field, in 1833. In one
-of these seizures he expired suddenly, at his house on Hampton Court
-Green, beloved and lamented, not only by his surviving children, and
-his two surviving sisters, but by a large circle of acquaintance, and
-friends. In every class he was known, and loved for his warm heart, his
-genial humour, his sparkling wit. He was interred by the side of his
-wife, in her ancestral chapel in Easebourne Church, adjoining Cowdray
-Park, where a monument had been already erected to their two sons.
-
-In early life Mr. Poyntz was a friend, and companion of his cousin
-George, Lord Sandwich, by whose will he was entrusted with the
-guardianship of the young earl, then only seven years of age. Between
-the guardian and his ward an affection subsisted, scarcely inferior to
-that of parent, and child. Lord Sandwich spent many of his holidays at
-Cowdray, and the friendly relations which subsisted between him, and Mr.
-Poyntz were never interrupted till the death of the latter, in 1840.
-
-The two families of Poyntz and Browne, (Lord Montagu) are now extinct, in
-the male line.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-EMILY FAITHFULL, Printer, 85, Praed Street, Paddington, W.
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Biographical Notices of the Portraits at
-Hinchingbrook, by Mary Louisa Boyle
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Biographical Notices of the Portraits at Hinchingbrook
-
-Author: Mary Louisa Boyle
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2020 [EBook #63204]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES--PORTRAITS HINCHINGBROOK ***
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-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_1"></a>[1]</span></p>
-
-<h1><i>BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES</i><br />
-<br />
-<span class="smaller">OF THE</span><br />
-<br />
-Portraits at Hinchingbrook:</h1>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-MARY L. BOYLE.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><i>1876.</i></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">LONDON:<br />
-<span class="smaller">PRINTED AT THE VICTORIA PRESS, PRAED STREET, W.<br />
-(OFFICE FOR THE EMPLOYMENT OF WOMEN.)</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[2]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-
-<p class="dedication"><span class="smaller">TO</span><br />
-JOHN WILLIAM,<br />
-SEVENTH EARL OF SANDWICH,<br />
-<span class="smaller">THESE SKETCHES ARE INSCRIBED BY HIS FAITHFUL KINSWOMAN,</span><br />
-MARY LOUISA BOYLE.<br />
-<span class="smaller">MDCCCLXXVI.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span></p>
-
-<p class="hanging">In the notices of the more celebrated characters in
-this Catalogue, it will be understood that historical
-and well-known events (which will be
-found in the annals of England), have been made
-purposely, to give way to details of a more domestic
-nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">UPSTAIRS-CORRIDOR, STAIRCASE,<br />
-<span class="smaller">AND</span><br />
-ADJOINING ROOMS.</h2>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Edward, First Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By FELIZIANO.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a long black doublet, with the Star of the Garter, and
-the Jewel given him by the King of Sweden, over a
-long white waistcoat with innumerable buttons and
-gold embroidery; deep ruffles; holds his hat in one
-hand, the other rests on his hip. Painted during
-his Embassy in Spain.)</p>
-
-<p>Lord Sandwich is here much altered in appearance from
-his former portraits, but Pepys tells us he wore his
-beard in the Spanish fashion on his return from his
-Embassy; and a French correspondent about this time
-says: “Le Comte de Sandwich étoit bien fort, l’air
-doux, assez d’embonpoint, qui ne commençoit de l’incommoder
-qu’après son retour de l’Espagne.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1623. Died, 1672.—The second son of
-Sir Sidney Montagu, by Paulina, daughter of
-John Pepys, of Cottenham, near Cambridge.
-Sidney was the seventh son of Sir Edward
-Montagu, and brother to the first Lord Montagu<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-of Boughton, was Groom of the Bedchamber
-to James I., and Master of Requests in the
-succeeding reign; sat for Huntingdon, and in
-1640 was expelled the House for declining to
-subscribe to an oath framed by the Commons,
-“that they would live and die with their
-General, the Earl of Essex.” Montagu said he
-would not swear to live with Essex, as being an
-old man he would probably die before him,
-neither would he swear to die with him, as the
-Earl was in arms against the King, which he
-(Sidney) did not know how to separate from
-treason. For this boldness he was expelled the
-House by a majority of three, and sent prisoner
-to the Tower, where he remained a fortnight.
-Thus did he prove his loyalty, though he had
-nobly withstood on the other hand those
-measures which he considered detrimental
-to the liberties of the subject. He had two
-sons, and a daughter, married to Sir Gilbert
-Puckering of Tichmarch, in the County of
-Hunts. His eldest son Henry was drowned
-through the carelessness of a nurse, when only
-three years of age: his second son Edward
-became his heir; who married before he was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-twenty, Jemima, daughter of John, Lord Crewe
-of Stene, a family that sided with the Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Clarendon tells us, that Sir Sidney Montagu
-never swerved from his allegiance; but his son
-being emancipated from his father’s control
-when very young, and married into a family
-which “trod awry,” was won over by the
-“caresses” of Cromwell to take command in
-his army, when new modelled by Fairfax,
-Montagu being then little more than twenty
-years of age. Indeed, when only eighteen he
-had already raised a regiment, and distinguished
-himself at its head in several actions, to wit;
-Lincoln, Marston Moor, and York; and the
-following year at Naseby, Bridgewater, and
-Bristol; his conduct at the storming of which
-last named town was reported to Parliament with
-the highest encomiums, not only for his gallantry,
-but for the successful manner in which he
-carried on the negociations with Prince
-Rupert. But notwithstanding Montagu’s
-military zeal, he opposed the undue influence
-of the army in the House of Commons,
-especially in their bringing about the seclusion<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-of eleven members, and he formed and kept
-his resolution not to resume his seat (for
-Huntingdon) until the members were restored.
-In spite of this independent conduct, he was
-appointed (on the elevation of Cromwell to
-the Protectorate) one of the Supreme Council
-of Fifteen—and he only then in the twenty-fifth
-year of his age; and shortly afterwards
-he became Desborough’s colleague in the office
-of High Admiral.</p>
-
-<p>In 1656 he accompanied the gallant Blake to
-the Mediterranean, on whose death he succeeded
-to the sole command of the fleet, in the exercise
-of which, says Lord Clarendon, “he was
-discreet and successful.” But the death of
-Oliver Cromwell changed the whole face of
-affairs, and Montagu, who had been on a mission
-to carry on diplomatic negociations with Sweden
-and Denmark, returned from Copenhagen (without
-orders), resigned his command, and retired
-for a short time into the country. On the reinstalment
-of the secluded members, he was
-sworn Privy Councillor, and again appointed
-Admiral of the Fleet (or as Pepys has it, “one
-of the generals at sea”), conjointly with Monk,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-who was minded, as Montagu says, “to get into
-the saddle,” and would not be left out in anything;
-but Monk was to remain on shore, and
-Montagu to put to sea, an arrangement at
-which the latter did not cavil.</p>
-
-<p>A reaction of loyalty had set in lately; affairs
-were in a doubtful state; negociations were set
-on foot to recall Charles; the King’s health was
-drunk openly, whereas before, it had only been
-done in private, and Montagu became most
-zealous in the royal cause, although, as he told
-his kinsman Pepys, “he did not believe if the
-Protector [Richard] were brought in again, he
-would last long, neither the King himself,
-(although he believes he will come in), unless
-he behaves himself very soberly and well.”
-Indeed, before he embarked, Montagu had a
-conversation with Richard Cromwell in which
-he told him roundly that he would rather find
-him (on his return from sea) in his grave, than
-hatching mischief; upon which that mild man
-replied that he would do “whatever Montagu,
-Broghill (afterwards Earl of Orrery) and Monk
-would have him.”</p>
-
-<p>We now quote constantly from Samuel Pepys,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-(Montagu’s kinsman and “Boswell”) who had
-been appointed his secretary, and he says:
-“Yesterday there were bonfires, and people
-calling aloud ‘God bless King Charles the
-Second.’” While the fleet was fitting out,
-Clarendon records that Montagu sent over his
-cousin to the King in Holland, to say that as
-soon as the ships were ready, he would be on
-board and prepared to receive and obey His
-Majesty’s commands. He also sent word what
-officers he trusted, which he suspected, etc., and
-desired to know privately if Charles had faith
-in Monk; this was no small inconvenience to
-the King, seeing he was debarred from communicating
-to either the trust he had in both,
-which might have facilitated their designs.
-Pepys accompanied his patron on board the
-“Nazeby,” which the youthful Admiral had
-already commanded with honour, and for which
-ship “my Lord” (for so Pepys prematurely
-designated his noble kinsman) “discovered in
-his discourse a great deal of love.” Again, “a
-messenger from London brought letters which
-will make May-day 1660, remembered as the
-happiest May-day in England for many years.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-In the House of Parliament a letter from the
-King had been read, during which time the
-Members remained uncovered, and an answer
-of thanks had been returned to His Majesty’s
-gracious communication, and better still a
-supply of £50,000 unanimously granted to
-him. Then the City of London made a declaration
-that they would have no other Government
-than King, Lords, and Commons, and ‘both
-Houses of Parliament did concur in the same.’
-My Lord told me plainly that he thought the
-King would carry it, and that he did think
-himself happy that he was now at sea, as well
-for his own sake as that he thought he could do
-his country some service in keeping things
-quiet.” About this time, Montagu was elected
-M.P. for Dover. May 3rd, 1660, a letter and
-declaration were received on board the “Nazeby”
-from His Majesty, offering “grace” under
-certain conditions, and stating the royal wishes
-and requirements; upon which Admiral
-Montagu called a Council of War, and dictated
-to his secretary the form of a vote which was
-then read and passed unanimously. Afterwards
-Pepys accompanied “my Lord” to the quarter-deck,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-and there read the declaration to the
-ship’s company amid the loud cheers and “God
-bless King Charles!” of the seamen. After a
-merry dinner, Pepys took boat and visited every
-ship in the fleet to make known the royal
-message, and doubtless it was as he said, “a
-brave sight and pleasant withal” to be received
-with “respect and honour” and to bring “joy
-to all men.” On his return to the “Nazeby,”
-Montagu was much pleased to hear the fleet
-received the communication from the King
-with a transport of joy, and he showed his
-secretary two private letters that he had
-received from Charles, and the Duke of York,
-couched in the most friendly language.</p>
-
-<p>Montagu had now indeed, as Clarendon
-observes, betaken himself most generously to
-the King’s service. He was occasionally much
-tried by the over-interference of his colleague,
-Monk, “yet was he willing to do him all the
-honour in the world,” and let him have all the
-honour of doing the business, though “he will
-many times express his thoughts of Monk being
-a thick-skulled fool.” But Monk was most
-influential, and Montagu, with his wonted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-magnanimity, sacrificed his own pride to
-advance the cause of his royal master, and the
-prosperity of his country. So wise, judicious,
-and temperate was he, though still young.</p>
-
-<p>He dearly loved his profession, and seemed to
-take a pride and pleasure in adorning and
-ornamenting the vessels under his command.
-“My Lord went about to-day to see what alterations
-were to be made in the armes and flags,
-and did give me orders to write for silk flags
-and scarlet waist-clothes (to be hung round the
-hull of the ship to protect the men in action)
-for a rich barge, a noise of trumpets, and a set
-of fiddlers. He oftentimes played himself on
-the guitar with much contentment,” and appears
-to have been as hospitable in his house of
-wooden walls, as at his fine seat of Hinchingbrook,
-“receiving the gentlemen who visited him
-with great civility. Frequent messengers from
-and to the King at Breda, and divers bearing
-letters from the Houses of Parliament. On
-the 9th of May, a certain noble from the House
-of Lords, to desire my Lord to provide ships for
-the transport of the Commissioners to His
-Majesty, who had just been proclaimed in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-London with great pomp. On the same day
-the Admiral received his orders to sail presently
-for the King, a command which he obeyed with
-alacrity, and of which he was very glad.”</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at the Hague they anchored
-before that “most neat place in all respects,”
-where “my Lord” kissed by proxy the hands
-of the Queen of Bohemia, and the Prince of
-Orange, sending a deputation on shore including
-his secretary and youthful son. The Prince
-of Orange himself, is a “pretty boy.” In the
-evening “my Lord showed me his fine cloaths,
-which are as brave as gold and silver can make
-them.” His royal master appears to have been
-in a different plight and badly off both for
-“cloaths” and gold and silver too, and when
-he received a supply of both his Majesty was
-so much overjoyed that he called the Princess
-Royal and the Duke of York to inspect the
-treasures, as they lay in the portmanteau. The
-Duke of York was now named High Admiral,
-and visited the “Nazeby,” (where he was received
-with due honour), accompanied by the Duke of
-Gloucester. On the 23rd, the King came off
-from shore, and entering Montagu’s boat (he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-having gone off to meet his Majesty), “did
-kiss my Lord most affectionately.” The two
-Dukes, the Queen of Bohemia, the Princess
-Royal, and the Prince of Orange accompanied
-Charles in his visit to the “Nazeby,” a proud day
-for Samuel Pepys as well as for the commander;
-and the “Nazeby” was re-christened “Charles”
-by her royal Sponsor; and no wonder, for the
-first name could be in no ways pleasing to any
-of the parties concerned. And so they set sail
-for England, “his Majesty walking up and
-down the quarter-deck, and telling mightily
-interesting stories of his escape from Worcester,
-and other adventures.” At Dover the King
-was received by General Monk with great acclamations,
-but Montagu remained in his
-barge, “transported with joy that he had done
-all this without any the least blur or obstruction
-in the world.” Two days afterwards he
-received the Order of the Garter, with which
-he was invested on shipboard; the like honour
-being conferred on General Monk, a rare
-occurrence, as it was seldom given to any one
-beneath the rank of Earl.</p>
-
-<p>On the Admiral’s arrival in London, he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-received the Office of the Great Wardrobe, and
-had the thanks of Parliament for his services
-and loyalty. Pepys describes with much perspicuity
-the constant labours in which he and
-his patron were engaged at the Admiralty,
-showing that habits of business were a part of
-this remarkable man’s qualifications, and that
-in whatever capacity he acted, it was done
-zealously and diligently. In July 1660, he
-was raised to the Peerage, by the titles Baron
-of St. Neots, Viscount Hinchingbrook, and
-Earl of Sandwich.</p>
-
-<p>He was very merry at the expense of his
-matter-of-fact secretary when he dined at
-Whitehall soon after, and “my Lord talked
-very high how he would have a French cook,
-and a Master of Horse, and his Lady and child
-to wear black patches (which methought
-strange), and when my Lady said she would
-get a good merchant for her daughter ‘Jem,’
-[afterwards Lady Carteret], he said he would
-rather see her with a pedlar’s pack at her back,
-than to marry a citizen. But my Lord is
-become quite a courtier.”</p>
-
-<p>At the coronation of Charles II. my Lord<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-carried the staff of St. Edward, and when he
-accompanied the King from the Tower to
-Whitehall, even in “a show so glorious with
-gold and silver that we were not able to look
-at it, Lord Sandwich’s embroidery and diamonds
-were not ordinary;” and afterwards “he talked
-to me of his coat, which was made in France,
-and cost £200.” The prudent Pepys occasionally
-regrets in his patron a magnificence
-and generosity pushed to extravagance, which
-indeed caused great anxiety and trouble at
-different times, not only to himself but to his
-good wife and housewife, Jemima, and his
-trusty secretary. Likewise the noble Lord
-himself confessed, and lamented a taste for card
-playing.</p>
-
-<p>The marriage of Charles II. with Katherine,
-daughter of the King of Portugal, being now
-agreed on, the King chose Lord Sandwich to be
-his proxy on the occasion, and to fetch over the
-new Queen from Lisbon, proceeding also to
-Algiers to settle affairs there. On arriving at
-Lisbon, Lord Sandwich detached Sir John
-Lawson, and ordered him to the Mediterranean
-to curb the insolence of the Corsairs, after<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-which he himself proceeded to Tangiers,
-where he did some execution on the Turks, and
-managed his negociations so well, that the place
-was given up to him by the Portuguese, and
-Lord Peterborough was appointed Governor.
-Pains were afterwards taken to preserve the
-fortress, and a fine mole built: but in 1683,
-the King sent Lord Dartmouth to bring home
-the troops and destroy the work, and it fell
-into the hands of the Moors. There still exists
-a gate named after Lord Sandwich. “When
-at Lisbon my Lord sent over presents of
-mellons and rare grapes to his Countess in
-London; the grapes so fine that Mistress Pepys
-packed some up in a basket to send to the
-King’s Majesty.” Lady Sandwich also received
-a civet cat, parrot, apes, and many other eccentric
-proofs of her Lord’s remembrance,
-which she showed to Mr. Pepys when he dined
-with her at the Wardrobe.</p>
-
-<p>The ambassador had some trouble with the
-matrimonial negociations, and “‘great clashing’
-with the Portuguese Council, before he could
-get the portion paid. But the King of
-Portugall is a very foole almost, and his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-mother do all, and he is a poore prince.” The
-Queen was a great recluse on board and would
-never come on deck, but sent for Lord
-Sandwich’s “musique,” [he loved a band on
-board his vessel] and would sit within her
-cabin listening to it. Pepys did not admire
-the ladies her Majesty brought over, thought
-their farthingales a strange dress, and regrets
-that they have learned to kiss, and look up
-and down freely, already forgetting the recluse
-practice of their country. Queen Katherine
-gave no rewards to any of the captains or
-officers, save to “my Lord,” but that was
-an honourable present, a bag of gold worth
-£1400.</p>
-
-<p>In the same year, 1662, “when the Duke
-of York went over to fetch the Queen Mother
-Henrietta Maria, they fell into foul weather
-and lost their cables, sayles and masts, but
-Mr. Coventry writes me word they are safe.
-Only my Lord Sandwich, who went before in
-the King’s yacht, they know not what is
-become of him;” which troubles his poor
-secretary much, “and there is great talk he
-is lost, but I trust in God the contrary.” A<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-watery grave, indeed, awaited him, but after
-a nobler fashion. “He carried himself bravely
-in danger while my Lord Crofts did cry.”</p>
-
-<p>The same faithful chronicler, although
-uneasy at his Lord’s predilection for play,
-and for the little regret he evinced at losing
-£50 to the King at my Lady Castlemaine’s,
-is never tired of extolling his magnanimity
-and forbearance, especially in the matter of
-his kinsman, Mr. Edward Montagu, with
-whom he had altercations, and “who did
-revile him to the King,” as was supposed;
-but “my Lord,” pitied and forgave him. He
-was an ill-conditioned man, and got into great
-disfavour at Court, “through his pride and
-affecting to be great with the Queen.” In
-1663, my Lord leased a house in Lincoln’s
-Inn Fields for £250 per annum. He determined
-to go to sea once more, and confides
-to Pepys the state of his finances, having
-£8000 a year, and being in debt £10,000;
-but there is much due to him from the
-Wardrobe. In the middle of this discourse
-Lady Crewe came in to inform his Lordship
-another son was born to him, upon which the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-devout Samuel remarks, “May God send my
-Lord to study the laying up something for it.”</p>
-
-<p>In the latter days of July 1664, our gallant
-sailor once more put to sea. The fleet in
-which he served under the Duke of York was
-most successful, striking such terror on the
-coast of Holland that the Dutch Admiral was
-afraid to venture out. There was also great
-success with his fleet in the Goree, and 150
-ships of the Bordeaux fleet laden with wine
-brandy, etc., were brought into our ports.
-In the meantime there were all manner of
-Cabals at home, not only ignoring Lord
-Sandwich’s prowess, but impugning his courage
-and disinterestedness. Pepys is much vexed
-with the silence maintained on my Lord’s
-account as regards some of those grand naval
-victories “to set up the Duke and the Prince,
-[Rupert] but Mr. Coventry did declare that
-Lord Sandwich, both in his councils and
-personal service, had done honourably and
-serviceably.”</p>
-
-<p>Jealous of his fame at sea and his favour at
-court, the Admiral’s enemies, with Monk at
-their head, sought for some pretext to undermine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-his prosperity, and they hit on the
-following. It appeared that it was contrary to
-the strict regulations of the Admiralty that
-Bulk, as it was called, should be broken into
-until the captured vessels were brought into
-port. Now in a noble engagement with the
-Dutch, Sandwich, Admiral of the Blue Squadron,
-broke through the enemy’s line, being the first
-who practised that bold expedient: and he,
-willing to reward his seamen for their gallant
-conduct in the action, gave them some portion
-of the prize money, (which was their due) at sea,
-not waiting until they had come into port.
-This was turned to his disadvantage, and his
-adversaries even dared to insinuate that he had
-helped himself, as well as his crew. But this
-accusation was too barefaced, and the King
-stood by him in these difficult times.
-Charles II. has often been accused of ingratitude,
-but at least he never forgot his obligations to,
-or his personal friendship for, Lord Sandwich,
-although His Majesty’s unconquerable indolence
-prevented his influence being as great and
-decisive as might have been expected in the
-Monarch of the Realm.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the intervals of his employment, Lord
-Sandwich, who was the fondest of fathers, came
-up to London frequently to settle the preliminaries
-of his daughter Jemima’s marriage
-to the son of Sir George Carteret, an alliance
-which gave great satisfaction to both families,
-and the negociations for which were carried on
-by the indefatigable Pepys. Indeed it was a
-good thing at that moment to find any cause for
-rejoicing, as our Diarist’s pages are now full of
-the record of calamities, caused by the Plague
-then raging—“no boats on the river, the grass
-growing up and down Whitehall; all the people
-panic stricken, and flying from one place to the
-other for safety”—with innumerable ghastly
-records of that terrible time.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Sandwich was appointed Ambassador
-Extraordinary to the Court of Madrid, to
-mediate a Treaty of Peace between Spain and
-Portugal. After some conference with the
-Queen-Regent Mariana, he prevailed with her
-to acknowledge the King of Portugal, and to
-agree that the King of England should be
-Mediator to the Peace. For this purpose he left
-Madrid and arrived at Lisbon, January 22, 1667.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-The Peace was concluded in the most satisfactory
-manner, and the King and the Duke
-of York wrote Sandwich autograph letters
-of thanks and commendation. He returned to
-Spain to take leave of the Queen-Mother, who
-was most friendly and grateful to the English
-Envoy, and presented him with full length
-portraits of herself and her son, the Child-King,
-painted, says Lord Sandwich, “by her Court
-painter, Don Sebastian de Herrera, and most
-excellent likenesses.” The portrait of himself,
-of which we are now speaking, was also painted
-during his residence in Spain, and he pronounces
-that also an excellent resemblance.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Sandwich’s letters show his steady
-adherence to the Protestant religion, and to the
-interests of his country: likewise his excellent
-judgment. He was much opposed to the sale
-of Dunkirk, and strove to arrest the increasing
-power of France. In fact, the measures he advocated
-gained him the good will of the whole
-fleet and of the disinterested part of the nation,
-but gave great offence to the Duke of York. In
-the year 1672, on a new war breaking out with
-the Dutch, Lord Sandwich served as Vice-Admiral<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-under the man who had become his
-enemy. On May the 19th, the English fleet,
-which had been joined by a French squadron,
-came in sight of the Dutch fleet about eight
-leagues off Gunfleet, but being separated by
-hazy weather, the English stood into Southwold
-Bay, and there anchored till May 28th. Jollity
-and feasting seem to have been the order of the
-day on board the English ships, whereupon Lord
-Sandwich expostulated at such a critical moment,
-advising that they should stand out to sea, seeing
-they ran in danger of being surprised by the
-enemy, as the wind then stood. The Duke of
-York not only declined to follow this excellent
-advice, but is said to have returned an insolent
-and taunting reply. The next day proved the
-prudence of his wise Admiral’s advice, as the
-firing of the scout ship’s cannon gave notice of
-the enemy’s advance. Then the cables were cut
-and the vessels ranged in as good order as time
-would permit. Lord Sandwich, in his brave
-ship the “Royal James,” one hundred guns,
-sailed almost alone, and was the first to engage
-the enemy at seven o’clock in the morning: his
-Royal Highness was the next to fire, his vessel<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-being becalmed; and this sudden calm, combined
-with the resolution and prompt bravery of Lord
-Sandwich, saved the fleet, otherwise endangered
-by the fireships. Interposing between his yet
-disordered squadron and the “Great Holland,”
-Captain Brakel, sixty guns, (which was followed
-by a fireship, and soon seconded by the
-whole squadron of Van Ghent,) the gallant
-Englishman defended himself for many hours,
-disabled several of the enemy’s men-of-war,
-and sank three of their fireships single handed!
-while Sir John Jordan, his own Vice-Admiral,
-and several others, instead of coming to the
-rescue of the Blue, sailed to the Red to assist
-the Duke of York. About noon, until which
-hour he stood at bay like the brave lion that he
-was, and after giving, as a Dutch historian has
-it, the utmost proofs of “unfortunate valour,” a
-fourth fireship, covered by the smoke of the
-enemy, grappled the “Royal James,” and set
-her in a blaze. Of one thousand men who
-formed his crew at the beginning of the action,
-six hundred were killed on the deck, (among
-whom was his son-in-law Carteret) many
-wounded, and only a few escaped. When Lord<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-Sandwich saw it was all over with the “Royal
-James,” he ordered his first captain, Sir Richard
-Haddock, the officers, his own servants, etc.,
-into the long-boat, peremptorily declining to
-leave the ship, in spite of every entreaty: and
-when the boat pushed off, the noble form of
-their commander still stood erect on the quarter-deck
-of the burning vessel. As Sir John Jordan,
-whose duty it was to relieve him, sailed past in
-the morning, Lord Sandwich had remarked to
-the byestanders that if they were not relieved
-they must fight it out to the last man, and
-bravely did he keep his word. Thus perished
-the man whose noble end to a noble life, called
-forth eulogiums from friend and foe. Bishop
-Parker, a partisan of the Duke of York, says:
-“He fell a sacrifice to the service of his country:
-endued with the virtues of Alcibiades, untainted
-by his vices; capable of any business; of high
-birth, full of wisdom, a great commander on
-sea and land; learned, eloquent, affable, liberal,
-magnificent.” The Duke of Buckingham,
-who was in the fleet says: “Lord Sandwich was
-such a loss, the Dutch might almost have called
-it a victory.” Gerard Brandt, a Dutchman,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-says: “He was valiant, intelligent, prudent,
-civil, obliging in word, and deed, and of great
-service to his King, not only in war, but in
-affairs of state and embassies.” We have seen
-by Pepys’ testimony, how beloved he was in
-domestic life.</p>
-
-<p>On the 10th of June, his body was found off
-Harwich, clad in the uniform he had worn with
-so much honour, still adorned with the insignia
-of England’s noblest Order, of which he had
-proved himself so worthy a knight, the gracious
-form, strange and almost miraculous as it may
-appear, unblemished in every part, save some
-marks of fire on the face and hands. Sir
-Charles Littleton, Governor of Harwich, received
-the remains, and took immediate care for
-the embalming and honourably disposing of the
-same, despatching the master of the vessel who
-had discovered the body to Whitehall, to present
-the George belonging to the late Earl,
-and to learn his Majesty’s pleasure, upon
-which the King, “out of his regard for
-the great deservings of the said Earl and his
-unexampled performances in this last act of his
-life, (and indeed it might have been said his life<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-throughout) hath resolved to have the body
-brought to London, there at his charge to receive
-the rites of funeral due to his quality and
-merit.” The remains were conveyed to
-Deptford in one of the royal yachts, and there
-taken out, and a procession formed of barges,
-adorned with all the pomp of heraldry, the
-pride of pageantry, with nodding plumes of
-sable hue—attended by his eldest son as chief
-mourner, by eight Earls his peers, by the Lord
-Mayor and many companies of London, with
-drums all muffled, and trumpets, and minute
-guns discharged from the Tower and Whitehall:
-the body covered by a mourning pall of
-sumptuous velvet, beneath the shadow of the
-British Flag under which he had served so long
-and died so nobly. All that was mortal of
-Edward Montagu, first Earl of Sandwich, was
-interred on the north side of the altar in Henry
-VII.’s chapel in Westminster Abbey, on July
-3rd, 1672.</p>
-
-<p>The compass which he wore during the last
-hours of his glorious life, and the Blue Ribbon
-which clung to the heart even when it beat no
-longer, still hang in the same frame with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-miniature portraits of himself, and his wife,
-beside the spirited picture of his last action, by
-Vandevelde, in the ship-room at Hinchingbrook,
-where the hero’s name is still revered, and his
-memory cherished with honest pride by his
-descendants.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Pride in the just whose race is run,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose memory shall endure,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Binding the line from sire to son</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To keep the ’scutcheon pure!”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>The Honourable John George Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HOPPNER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born, 1767. Died, 1790.—The eldest son of
-Viscount Hinchingbrook, afterwards fifth Earl
-of Sandwich, by Lady Elizabeth Montagu,
-daughter of the Earl of Halifax. In 1790, he
-married Dorothy, daughter of Stephen Beckenham Esq.,
-and died a few months afterwards at
-Mrs. Beckenham’s house in Grosvenor Square.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Crimson Robe, over a Cuirass.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WISSING.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Armour, holding a Truncheon.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1648. Died, 1680.—Son of the second
-Earl, by Anne, daughter of Sir John St. John
-Bart., and widow of Sir Harry Lee, of Ditchley.
-The father, a staunch Royalist, died before
-the Restoration, and left his son little inheritance
-beyond his title; but that little was
-well and carefully managed by the widowed
-mother. Rochester distinguished himself at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-school, and also at the University, and although
-he fell into bad habits in early life, he
-always retained a love of learning which
-was most beneficial to him in his latter
-days. He travelled under the care of a
-learned Scotchman, Dr. Balfour, whose name
-he never mentioned without affection. He
-distinguished himself in several naval engagements
-under the brave Earl of Sandwich and
-other commanders, and married Elizabeth,
-daughter of John Mallet, Esq., “the beautiful
-heiress,” who, after supping with Mistress
-Stewart, was quietly returning to her lodgings
-when she was seized upon at Charing Cross
-by some emissaries of my Lord of Rochester.
-The lady did not incline to his suit, although
-it would appear the King himself had spoken
-to her in behalf of his favourite. But this
-violence so incensed his Majesty, that he ordered
-my Lord Rochester to the Tower, and there
-seemed every chance of his being supplanted
-by his numerous rivals. Pepys does not tell
-us how the adventurous lover at length
-prevailed on the lady to accept his hand, but
-he enumerates “Mistress Mallet’s servants:”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-“My Lord Herbert,” [afterwards 6th Earl of
-Pembroke,] “who would have had her, my
-Lord Hinchingbrook, who was indifferent to
-her, my Lord John Butler [son of the Duke
-of Ormond] who might not have her, Sir ...
-Popham who would do anything to have her,
-and my Lord Rochester, who would have run
-away with her.” Verily, she made a bad
-choice among so many.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Rochester was remarkable for his wit,
-but also for the extreme licentiousness of his
-manners and writings. He was a great satirist
-and had many readers in an age when grossness
-of style was not only tolerated but admired.
-His Poem on “Nothing,” and the satire
-against Man, showed great ability, lavished on
-a bad cause. Of an elegant person, easy
-address, and winning manners, he was, indeed,
-a dangerous companion, and his profligacy
-was notorious, even in the reign of Charles II.
-He was a great favourite with his royal master,
-who delighted in his sallies, and declared he
-preferred Rochester’s company, even when he
-was drunk, to that of any other man, when
-sober. In his pursuits after adventures he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-would assume all sorts of disguises, sometimes
-that of a beggar, or porter, or even a quack
-doctor; and he well knew how to sustain
-every kind of character. Horace Walpole says
-of him, “the Muses loved to inspire him, but
-were ashamed to avow him.” De Grammont
-said he had more wit, and less honour than
-any man in England.</p>
-
-<p>But it was reserved for Bishop Burnet, in
-whose society and conversation he fortunately
-took great delight, to effect a radical change
-in the opinions of a man whom the Divine
-himself had always declared born for better
-things. By gentle forbearance, considerate
-kindness, and honest candid friendship, Dr.
-Burnet brought the suffering and unhappy
-man, to a sense of the error of his ways, and
-the letter the Bishop received from the penitent
-shortly before the death of the latter, is most
-conclusive on this head:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“Woodstock Park, June 25, 1680.</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">“My most honoured Dr. Burnet,</p>
-
-<p>“My spirits and body cling so equally together, that
-I shall write you a letter as weak as I am in person. I begin
-to value Churchmen above all men in the world. If God<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-be yet pleased to spare me longer in this world, I hope in
-your conversation to be exalted to that degree of piety, that
-the world may see how much I abhor what I so long loved,
-and how much I glory in repentance, and in God’s service.
-Bestow your prayers upon me that God would spare me (if
-it be His good will) to show a true repentance and amendment
-of life for the time to come, or else, if the Lord please
-to put an end to my worldly being now, that He would
-mercifully accept of my death-bed repentance, and perform
-His promise that He has been pleased to make, that at what
-time soever a sinner doth repent, He would receive him.
-Put up these prayers then, dear Doctor, to Almighty God,
-for your most obedient, and languishing servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Rochester</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>During his last, and most painful illness, he
-listened with meek deference to the exhortations
-of many godly men, and received the Sacrament
-with his Lady, which he told Dr. Burnet
-gave him the more satisfaction, as for a time
-she had been misled by the errors of the Church
-of Rome.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the wife who had so much cause of
-complaint against him he expressed the sincerest
-affection and contrition, so much so as to call
-forth the most passionate grief on her side.
-He took leave of all, sent messages to many of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-his thoughtless comrades, hoping that as his
-life had done much hurt, so by the mercy of
-God his death might do some good; called often
-for his children, his young son, and three
-daughters, thanked God in their presence
-for the blessing they were to him; and died
-quietly, and peacefully at the last, after suffering
-terrible anguish of body, on the morning
-of the 26th of July, 1680, at the Ranger’s Lodge
-at Woodstock.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Frances, Lady Carteret</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a White Dress, playing on a Spinnet.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1694. Died, 1713.—The daughter of
-Sir Robert Worsley, of Appledurcombe, Isle of
-Wight, by Frances, only daughter and heiress
-of the first Viscount Weymouth. Married in
-1710 at Longleat, the seat of her grandfather,
-to John, Lord Carteret, great grandson of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-first Earl of Sandwich, Ambassador Extraordinary
-to the Court of Sweden, principal
-Secretary of State, and Lord Lieutenant of
-Ireland, and one of the Chief Justices for
-England, during the Sovereign’s absence beyond
-seas; in fact the holder of many offices and
-dignities which he filled with honour. Lady
-Carteret accompanied her husband when he
-attended the Queen to Hanover, and in that
-city she died, quite suddenly, while playing on
-the harp. She was a friend and correspondent
-of Jonathan Swift.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Charles, Lord Wilmot</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HAWKER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length: Oval.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(A Boy in a Blue Mantle.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. He was the only son of John, Earl
-of Rochester. Died in 1681, a minor and unmarried,
-when the title became extinct. With<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-all his faults Lord Rochester appears to have
-loved his only boy tenderly, and to have
-earnestly desired to keep him from the evils
-into which he himself had fallen. The following
-letter addressed by the father to the son is
-a touching proof of these better feelings:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“To my Lord Wilmot:—</p>
-
-<p>I hope, Charles, when you receive this and know that
-I have sent this gentleman to be your tutor, you will be
-very glad to see I take such care of you, and be very grateful,
-which is the best way of showing your obedience. You
-are now grown big enough to be a man, if you are wise
-enough, and the way to be truly wise, is to serve God, learn
-your books, observe the instructions of your parents first,
-and next your Tutor, to whom I have entirely resigned you
-for these seven years, and according as you employ that time
-you are to be happy or unhappy for ever. But I have so
-good an opinion of you that I am glad to think you will
-never deceive me. Dear child, learn your book and be
-obedient, and you shall see what a father will be to you.
-You shall want no pleasure, while you are good, and that
-you may be so is my constant prayer.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Rochester.</span>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Lady Brooke</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Blue Dress.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>This portrait has no name in the original
-catalogue, but it appears almost certain that it
-represents the Lady Anne Wilmot, eldest
-daughter of the Earl of Rochester, and sister to
-Lady Lisburne, and Elizabeth, Countess of
-Sandwich. She married Francis Greville, son
-and heir to Lord Brooke (he died in 1710,
-eleven days before his father), by whom she had
-Fulke, who succeeded his grandfather in the
-title, William, and two daughters.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Viscountess Lisburne</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Loose Blue Dress, Blue Veil.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1716.—Lady Mallet Wilmot,
-was the third and youngest daughter, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-co-heiress, of John, Earl of Rochester, by
-Elizabeth, daughter of John Mallet, Esq. She
-married John Vaughan, Esq., afterwards created
-Baron Feathard and Viscount Lisburne, County
-Antrim, Ireland. They had two sons and
-several daughters. Lord Lisburne died in
-1721.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Lady Anne Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Oval. As a Child, White Dress.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1674. Died, 1746.—Daughter of
-Ralph, Duke of Montagu, by his first wife.
-Married first, Alexander Popham, Esq., and
-secondly, her cousin, Lieutenant-General Daniel
-Harvey, Governor of Guernsey.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Jemima, First Countess of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By ADRIAN HANNEMANN.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Blue Satin Dress. Scarf in the Left Hand.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The eldest daughter of John, first Baron
-Crewe of Skene, North Hants, by Jemima,
-daughter and co-heiress of Edward Waldegrave,
-Esq., Co. Essex. Married in 1642, to Edward
-Montagu, first Earl of Sandwich, by whom
-she had five sons and four daughters.</p>
-
-<p>That useful gossip Pepys was very proud
-of his acquaintance with Lady Sandwich and
-he seems to have neglected no opportunity
-of getting news for his “Chronicle,” from her,
-as well as from her housekeeper, Sarah, who
-knew a great deal about Court matters
-and was most communicative, particularly in
-affairs of scandal. His first mention of Lady
-Sandwich is where he goes to dine with her
-and tell her the news (by order of Sir William<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-Pen,) how that “an expresse had come from
-my Lord [then with the fleet] that by a great
-storm and tempest the mole at Argier had
-been broken down and several of our ships
-sunk,” and he thanks God, “that unlucky
-business is ended.” In another dinner at the
-“Wardrobe,” my Lady showed him a civet
-cat, parrot, and ape, which her Lord had sent
-her as a present from beyond seas. Her Ladyship,
-moreover seems to have taken Mr. Pepys
-into her councils, as regarded matrimonial
-alliances for her daughters, as we find him
-commissioned to inquire into the estate of Sir
-George Carteret, whose son Phillip was a
-suitor for my Lady Jemima, a marriage which
-afterwards took place, and every particular of
-which is detailed with a great sense of reflected
-importance by Pepys “who wore his new
-coloured silk suit on the occasion.” He assisted
-Lady Sandwich to settle accounts at that time,
-and he does not forget to inform us that he
-was invited down to Hinchingbrook, to keep
-her company, “so mighty kind is my Lady;
-but for my life I could not.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 28th of May, 1665, he goes to my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-Lady Sandwich’s, “where to my shame I had
-not been a long time,” primed with a highly
-spiced story of “how my Lord of Rochester
-had run away with Mistress Mallet, the great
-beauty and fortune of the north,” and he
-found Lady Sandwich both interested and
-distressed by the news, as she had intended
-the fair heiress for her son, Hinchingbrook;
-and even now, she hoped the match might be
-broken off between the lady, and Lord
-Rochester, in which particular she was disappointed.
-But strangely enough, the daughter
-of the run-away couple did, unfortunately for
-her poor husband, become Countess of Sandwich.</p>
-
-<p>Pepys goes all alone with my Lady to Dagenham,
-near Romford, in Essex, where Lady
-Jemima Carteret and her husband resided:
-“and a pleasant going it was, very merry, and
-the young couple well acquainted; but Lord!
-to see what fear all the people here do live in”—on
-account of the Plague. Two years afterwards
-we find our Chronicler walking up from
-Brampton, where he resided for some time, to
-Hinchingbrook, to spend the afternoon with
-that most excellent discreet and good lady, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-was mightily pleased, as she informed him,
-with the lady who was to be her son Hinchingbrook’s
-wife. He found the two Ladies Montagu
-“grown proper ladies and handsome enough;”
-and the Countess, as was often the case, conferred
-with Mr. Pepys on financial matters,
-complaining they were much straitened in
-circumstances, and she had had to part with
-some valuable plate, and one of the best suites
-of hangings. We are assured by the same
-gentleman that “the House of Hinchingbrook
-is excellently furnished, with brave rooms and
-good pictures,” and that “it pleased infinitely
-beyond Audley End.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Sandwich died at the house of her
-daughter, Lady Anne Edgecumbe, at Cothele,
-County Devon, and was buried at Carstock, in
-Cornwall. The children of the first Earl and
-Countess of Sandwich were: Edward, who
-succeeded as second Earl; Sydney, who married
-the daughter and heiress of Sir Francis
-Wortley, of Wortley, County York, which
-patronymic he assumed, and was father-in-law
-to the famous Lady Mary Wortley Montagu;
-Oliver, who died unmarried, aged 38; John, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-Holy Orders, died unmarried, aged 73; Charles
-married first, Elizabeth, daughter of Francis
-Forster, and secondly, Sarah, daughter of ——
-Rogers, of Newcastle-on-Tyne, Esq., by both of
-whom he left issue. The daughters: Jemima,
-married to Sir Philip Carteret, who fell with
-his father-in-law in the battle of Southwold
-Bay, May, 1672, in consideration of whose
-services the King elevated his son George to the
-peerage, as Baron Carteret; Paulina, who died
-unmarried; Anne, married to Sir Richard
-Edgecumbe, by whom she was mother of the
-first Lord Edgecumbe, of Mount Edgecumbe,
-County Devon; she was married secondly, to
-Christopher Montagu, brother to the Earl of
-Halifax, and died in 1727; Catherine, married
-to Nicholas, son and heir to Sir Nicholas Bacon,
-of Shrubland Hall, Suffolk, and afterwards to
-the Rev. Mr. Gardeman. She died at the age
-of ninety-six.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Edward, First Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By ADRIAN HANNEMANN.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Armour. Badge of the Order of the Garter, or lesser
-George, suspended from the Neck by Gold Chain, Lace
-Cravat, Long Hair.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Elizabeth, Viscountess Hinchingbrook</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Seated, holding a Book. White Satin Dress. Blue Ribbon
-in Front.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1761.—The only daughter
-of Alexander Popham, Esq., of Littlecote, Wilts,
-by Lady Anne, daughter of Ralph, Duke of
-Montagu. She married firstly, Viscount
-Hinchingbrook, only son of Edward, third Earl<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-of Sandwich, by whom she had John, who
-succeeded his grandfather as fourth Earl,
-Edward, and William; and two daughters,
-Mary and Elizabeth. Lady Hinchingbrook
-married secondly, Francis Seymour, Esq., of
-Sherborne, Dorset, by whom she had two sons
-and one daughter.</p>
-
-<p>She died at her house in Charles Street,
-Berkeley Square, and was buried in South
-Audley Street Chapel.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>The Hon. Richard Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By RILEY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Oval. Crimson Dress. Lace Cravat.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1671. Died, 1697.—The second son of
-the second Earl of Sandwich, by Lady Anne
-Boyle, daughter of the Earl of Burlington.
-He was M.P. for Huntingdon. Died unmarried.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Edward, First Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Star of the Order of the Garter on Shoulder.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward Richard, Viscount Hinchingbrook</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Oval. Blue Jacket, and Velvet Cap. Hand resting on Hip.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>John, Earl of Rochester</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WISSING.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Armour, with Crimson Robe. Lace Cravat.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Elizabeth, Countess of Burlington</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Standing by an Arch. Dark Dress with Pearls; Dark Blue
-Scarf over the Shoulder. Holding a Wreath of Flowers.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The only daughter and heiress of Henry
-Clifford, Earl of Cumberland. Married Richard,
-Viscount Dungarvan, eldest son of the great
-Earl of Cork, at Skipton Castle, in Craven, 1635.
-Lord Dungarvan was distinguished for loyalty
-and bravery, in common with his father and
-brothers. In 1642, he and the Lord Inchiquin
-defeated the Irish army near Liscarrol, on which
-occasion the Earl of Cork’s four sons were
-engaged on the royal side, and Viscount
-Kynalmeakey was slain. After many successes
-Lord Dungarvan carried over his forces to
-England, on the cessation of arms in Ireland.
-In 1643, he landed with them near Chester,
-and subsequently joined his Sovereign in the
-County of Dorset, when by reason of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-services, and his marriage with the daughter
-and heiress of the Earl of Cumberland, Lord
-Cork (he had succeeded his father in the
-Irish title) was created Baron Clifford, of
-Lanesborough, Co. York.</p>
-
-<p>On the triumph of the Parliamentary cause
-he went beyond seas, but he promoted the
-restoration of Charles II., and was advanced to
-the dignity of Earl of Burlington, Co. York.
-Lord Burlington died in the 86th year of his
-age, and by Elizabeth his wife he had two sons,
-and five daughters, the fourth of whom, Lady
-Anne, married Edward, second Earl of Sandwich,
-a match which Pepys much approved. He
-speaks of an interview with Lady Burlington
-at Burlington House, where he first saw and
-saluted her: “A very fine speaking lady and
-brave, and a good woman, but old and not
-handsome.” Perhaps Master Samuel was not
-at that moment in a humour to be pleased, as,
-“bringing in a candle to seal a letter, they set
-fire to my perriwigg, which made an odd
-noise.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Edward, First Lord Montagu of Boughton</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Peer’s Parliamentary Robes. Holding in his Hand the
-Badge of the Order of the Bath suspended from his
-Neck.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1644.—The eldest son of
-Sir Edward Montagu, of Boughton, North
-Hants, by Elizabeth, daughter of Sir James
-Harrington, of Exton, Rutland, Knight, by
-whom he had eight sons and three daughters:
-the third son, Henry, being ancestor to the
-Dukes of Manchester and the Earls of Halifax:
-and the sixth, Sidney, to the Earls of Sandwich.
-Edward, the eldest, was also Knighted of the
-Shire, and then created Knight of the Bath at
-the coronation of James I, he did good service
-in Parliament; was much opposed to Popish
-doctrines, was one of the first named on the
-committee to consider the confirmation of the
-Book of Common Prayer, and many weighty
-matters, was the principal promoter of keeping<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-a day of public thanksgiving on the 5th of
-November, in remembrance of the failure of
-the Gunpowder Plot, on which day he also
-instituted a charitable gift of “forty shillings
-yearly to the world’s end,” to be given to the
-poor of certain towns in Northamptonshire, if
-present at Divine Service the same day. He
-was advanced to the dignity of Baron Montagu,
-of Boughton, for his services and great abilities,
-in the nineteenth year of the reign of James I.
-He was remarkable for his piety, not only
-attending constantly and punctually at church,
-but having regular prayers on week days, “as
-also singing of two psalms after supper in the
-hall in his own house.” He was a patron to
-men of letters and learning, showing great
-discrimination in his choice of bestowal of
-livings in his gift, and “an enemy to pluralities
-and non-residency.” Not only did he do good
-“to the good to make them better, but also to
-the bad to keep them from worse.” It is
-scarcely credible how many poor as well as rich
-he fed. It is reported that a hired coachman
-of London, who had been at my Lord’s house,
-told on his return that he had seen 1200 people<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-served in a day at my Lord Montagu’s door,
-which was not credited, and a wager of £10
-laid. It was brought to trial and proved. He
-built a fair Hospital at Weekly for eight
-persons, with a liberal allowance, and a blue
-gown to each every second year.</p>
-
-<p>But this good and noble Peer fell into
-misfortune through his loyalty to King Charles
-I., and Lord Clarendon relates that the Parliament
-took him prisoner at his House of
-Boughton, “a person of great reverence above
-fourscore years of age, and of unblemished
-reputation, because he declared himself unsatisfied
-with their disobedient proceedings
-towards the King.”</p>
-
-<p>Sir Philip Warwick also says: “The family
-of Montagu is noble and worthy. It had six
-brothers, four remarkable for several qualifications;
-the eldest, Lord Montagu, a man of
-plain, downright English spirit, of steady
-courage and a devout heart, a son of the Church
-of England, yet so devout that he was by some
-reckoned among the Puritans.” He was a
-great benefactor to the town of Northampton,
-(being Lord Lieutenant of the County), and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-he bore such sway there, that “the multitude
-of vulgars flocked about him when he came to
-town, as if he had been their topical deity.”
-When he was taken prisoner on his road to
-London, he met my Lord Essex at Barnet,
-who was proceeding with the army against
-the King. That nobleman stopped his coach,
-intending to go and salute Lord Montagu,
-who presently ordered his coachman to drive
-on, as this was no time for compliments.
-When brought before the Committee of State,
-where he pleaded nobly, the verdict was that
-he should be detained a prisoner, but that it
-might be in his own daughter’s house. This
-he utterly refused, saying, that if he deserved
-to be a prisoner, he deserved to be sent to a
-prison, and that he would not be sent to the
-house of the Countess of Rutland, which
-would be irksome to him, that lady being busy
-in the Parliament’s cause—unless the warrant
-named her house as his prison; “whereat the
-Countess was much disgruntled.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Montagu was accordingly conveyed to
-the Savoy, near the Strand, in the suburbs of
-London, where he departed this life on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[59]</span>
-15th of June, 1644. He was thrice married;
-first to Elizabeth, daughter and heiress of
-Sir John Jeffrey, of Chitingley, Sussex, Knight,
-Lord Chief Baron of the Exchequer, by whom
-he had an only daughter; secondly, to Frances,
-daughter of Thomas Cotton, of Connington,
-Hunts, by whom he had a son who died
-unmarried, Edward his successor, William, and
-the aforesaid Countess of Rutland; thirdly, to
-Anne Crouch, of Cornbury, Herts, by whom he
-had no issue.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Montagu was grandfather to Ralph,
-first Duke of Montagu. He was interred in
-Weekly Church, Northamptonshire, where a
-splendid monument commemorates his many
-virtues.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Mrs. Elizabeth Cromwell</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WALKER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Green Cardinal edged with Gold, fastened in Front with a
-Jewel. White Satin Hood, White Tippet, Pearl
-Necklace.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[60]</span></p>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1654.—Daughter of William
-Stewart, Esq., through whom she claimed
-distant kinship with the King of England.
-Widow of William Lynne, of Basingbourne;
-married Robert Cromwell, Esq., by whom she
-had four sons, of whom only one, Oliver, grew
-up to manhood, and six daughters. On the
-death of her husband she continued the
-Brewery, out of the profits of which and a
-scanty pittance of £60 a year, she gave her
-numerous daughters a good education, and
-dowries on their marriage, “with which they
-were not ashamed to ally themselves with
-good families.” Mrs. Cromwell was indeed
-a most exemplary and loveable woman; of an
-angelic temper and disposition, yet full of
-self-help, she retained the simple tastes and
-gentle humanity which had characterised her
-in the Brewery, at Huntingdon, when transplanted,
-by her son’s wish, to the splendour
-of the Palace at Whitehall, where her life was
-fretted by her anxiety for the safety of her
-beloved son. Oliver’s filial duty was undeniable:
-he appreciated to the utmost his mother’s
-excellent qualities; and on her death he caused<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[61]</span>
-her to be buried with great pomp in
-Westminster Abbey, though her tastes would
-have pointed to a quiet funeral, in a country
-churchyard, where her remains would have
-been left unmolested. At the Restoration her
-body was dug up, and with many others, cast
-ignominiously into a hole.</p>
-
-<p>In one of the many “Lives of the Protector,”
-the portrait at Hinchingbrook is alluded to as
-most characteristic. “The small pretty mouth,
-the full large melancholy eyes, the fair hair
-under the modest little hood, the simple but
-refined dress with the one small jewel clasping
-her handkerchief.” The same writer speaking
-of her says: “Her single pride was honesty, her
-passion love.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center">A Copy of Vandyck in Lambeth Palace.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By STONE.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born at Reading, 1573.—Beheaded, 1645.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[62]</span>
-Son of a clothier. Fellow of St. John’s College,
-Oxford. He afterwards took Orders, and was
-very vehement against the Puritans. Had
-many different livings; became Chaplain to
-James I., whom he accompanied to Scotland.
-Became Prebendary of Westminster, and
-consecutively Bishop of St. Davids, Bath and
-Wells, and London, and subsequently Prime
-Minister and Archbishop of Canterbury. In
-1622 he held a famous conference with Fisher
-the Jesuit in the presence of the Duke of
-Buckingham and his mother, who were wavering
-in their allegiance to the Protestant faith,
-and were fixed therein by the eloquence of
-Laud. He was more than once tempted to
-abjure his own religion by the offer of a
-Cardinal’s hat, but each time he gave an
-emphatic denial. He was very strict in
-requiring the revision and licensing of
-published books by high ecclesiastical authority,
-and concerned in several prosecutions of the
-Star Chamber against Bishop Williams, the
-master of Westminster School, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>When the Parliament of 1639 was abruptly
-dissolved, the odium of the measure was thrown<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[63]</span>
-on Laud, and he was attacked in his Palace at
-Lambeth by the mob. The execution of
-Strafford was the forerunner of his own; he
-had made himself unpopular with the Nation
-and with the Commons, and on the accusation
-of Sir Henry Vane, he was sent to the Tower
-in 1641, where he was detained for three years
-and treated with much severity. In 1644 he
-was tried, and though nothing treasonable was
-proved, a bill of attainder was passed. He
-made an eloquent defence, but all in vain, and
-he suffered death on Tower Hill in 1645,
-displaying great courage. Clarendon says:
-“His learning, piety, and virtue, have been
-attained by few, and the greatest of his
-infirmities are common to all men.”</p>
-
-<p>Of all the Prelates of the Anglican Church,
-Macaulay says that Laud departed farthest
-from the principles of the Reformation and
-nearest to Rome. He hated Calvinism, he
-had a passion for forms and ceremonies, disapproved
-of the marriage of ecclesiastics; all
-which opinions would have made him detested
-by the Puritans, even if he had used legal and
-gentle means only for the attainment of his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[64]</span>
-ends. His understanding was narrow, he had
-but scanty knowledge of the world under his
-direction; every corner of the realm, every
-separate congregation, even the devotions of
-private families were subjected to the vigilance
-of his spies. Unfortunately for himself and
-for the country, the King was influenced in all
-public matters by the counsels of the Primate.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Robert Cromwell</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WALKER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Black Gown, White Collar, Black Skull Cap.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1617.—The second son of Sir
-Henry Cromwell, Knight (surnamed the Golden
-Knight) of Hinchingbrook, Huntingdon, by
-Joan, daughter of Sir Ralph Warren, Lord
-Mayor of London. A younger son with a
-slender pittance, he was, by the countenance
-of his brother, Sir Oliver, made Justice of the
-Peace. He went, on his marriage, to live in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[65]</span>
-the town of Huntingdon, at a house which had
-been a Brewery for many years, and the
-business of which he thought it prudent to
-continue with the help and good management
-of his wife, Elizabeth, daughter of William
-Stewart, of Ely, undoubted descendant of the
-royal line of Stewart; a connection on which
-the Protector, with the inconsistency he often
-evinced in such matters, prided himself highly.
-Robert Cromwell’s immediate ancestors were
-of a Welsh family named Williams, one
-of whom married the sister of Cromwell,
-Earl of Essex, Prime Minister to Henry VIII.,
-whose son having risen into favour at Court
-and received the grant of several Church lands
-near Huntingdon, fixed his residence in that
-town, and assumed the name of Cromwell. In
-a tournament at Westminster, on May Day,
-1540, where Sir Richard Cromwell had
-stricken down challenger after challenger in
-honour of his King; Henry VIII., in high good
-humour, called out: “Formerly thou wast my
-Dick, but hereafter thou shalt be my diamond,”
-at the same moment dropping a diamond ring,
-which the knight picked up and restored to his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[66]</span>
-Majesty. “No,” said Henry, laughing, and
-placing it on his favourite’s finger: “henceforth
-thou shalt bear such an one in the forejamb of
-the demi-lion in thy crest;” and such a ring, says
-one of his chroniclers, did Oliver wear when he
-entered the lists against his lawful sovereign.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Cromwell and his wife,” we are told
-by the same biographer, “were persons of worth,
-in no way inclined to disaffection, civil or
-religious; they lived on a small pittance, and
-brought up their children well, through the
-exercise of honest frugality.” Robert Cromwell
-died at Cromwell House, Huntingdon, in 1617,
-and was buried at All Saints Church in that
-town. His widow survived him 37 years.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Portrait of a Dark Youth in Armour:
-Unnamed.</span></h3>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Three Portraits Unnamed.</span></h3>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[67]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Elizabeth, Countess of Northumberland</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Auburn Ringlets. Orange Satin Gown with Pearls. Right
-Hand holding her Dress.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1647. Died, 1690.—Elizabeth Wriothesley
-was the youngest daughter of Lord Treasurer
-Southampton, by Lady Elizabeth Leigh, sole
-daughter and heiress of the Earl of Chichester.
-Her eldest sister, Lady Audrey, was betrothed
-to Josceline, Lord Percy, son of the tenth Earl
-of Northumberland, but dying before her
-fifteenth year was completed, the name of her
-sister was substituted for hers (by family
-arrangement) in the marriage contract. In
-the year 1662, Elizabeth being then about
-fifteen, and Lord Percy barely 18, the marriage
-was solemnised. The bride’s sister, Lady
-Rachel Russell, observes it was acceptance
-rather than choice; yet the union proved very
-happy. At first the young pair were not much
-together; the bridegroom remained with his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[68]</span>
-tutor, and the bride with her parents, at
-Titchfield, in Hampshire; but in 1664-5,
-her letters to Lady Rachel are dated from
-Petworth, where she was living with her
-husband. She had a daughter born in 1666,
-and a son and heir in 1668; in 1669, another
-daughter, who died an infant. Lord Percy
-succeeded his father in 1668, and the following
-year their son died, which made so sad an
-impression on Lady Northumberland, then
-just recovering from her confinement, that
-change of scene was considered necessary for
-her, and she left England for Paris with her
-husband and the celebrated Locke (as their
-physician), in whose care Lord Northumberland
-left his wife while he proceeded to Italy. At
-Turin he was attacked by fever, and died in the
-flower of his age, a brilliant future lying before
-him, with every prospect of happiness.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Northumberland remained at Paris,
-where Ralph, Lord Montagu, was then
-Ambassador, and he soon became attracted
-by the beautiful young widow, paying her
-gradual and delicate attentions; but it was two
-years before he ventured to pronounce himself<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[69]</span>
-her ardent admirer. In the winter of 1672 she
-went to Aix, where Montagu followed her.
-Madame de la Fayette writes: “Je vous envoie
-un paquet pour Madame de Northumberland;
-on dit que si M. de Montagu n’a pas eu un
-heureux succès de son voyage, il passera en
-Italie pour faire voir que ce ne’est pas pour les
-beaux yeux de la Comtesse qu’il court le pays.”</p>
-
-<p>But it seems he followed her back to Paris,
-in spite of those predictions. In another letter
-from Madame de la Fayette, she writes:
-“Madame de Northumberland me parait une
-femme qui a été fort belle, mais qui n’a pas un
-seul trait de visage qui se soutienne, ni oû il soit
-resté le moindre air de jeunesse; elle est avec
-cela mal habillée, point de grâce, etc.” She
-also alludes to her understanding, what Madame
-de la Fayette said to her as if her knowledge
-of the French language was limited. The
-same writer says: “J’ai fort parlé d’elle à
-Montagu; il ne fait aucun façon d’étre
-embarqué à son service, et parait rempli
-d’espérance.” (April 15, 1673.)</p>
-
-<p>There were as usual fluctuations in his
-hopes and fears, the lady being at one time<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[70]</span>
-jealous, we are told, of the Duchesse de Brissac,
-a former “flame” of the Ambassador’s; but in
-1673 they came to England, and were privately
-married at Titchfield, Lady Northumberland’s
-paternal home. Evelyn talks of her eight, or
-even ten years after this, as the “beautiful
-Countess,” a testimony we accept more willingly
-than that of the fault-finding Madame de la
-Fayette. She was in England in 1675, and
-was at issue for some time with the Dowager
-Countess of Northumberland, her mother-in-law,
-respecting the care and guardianship of
-Lady Elizabeth Percy, the only surviving child
-and heiress of the late Earl; the subject of the
-girl’s marriage, and the choice of a husband
-being a great bone of contention. Lady Rachel
-Russell says: “My sister urges that her only
-child should not be disposed of without her
-consent, and in my judgment it is hard, yet I
-fancy I am not partial.” The old lady was
-triumphant, however, and contrived to get the
-young heiress into her power, or rather to assert
-her power over her fortunes, and Elizabeth
-Percy had the strange fate of being three times
-a wife, and twice a widow ere she was sixteen.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[71]</span>
-She married, when only thirteen, Cavendish,
-Duke of Newcastle, who immediately assumed
-the name and arms of Percy; but he died a few
-months after his marriage, in 1680. The
-child-widow had then among many other
-suitors, Count Königsmark, the celebrated
-adventurer, and Thomas Thynne, of Longleat,
-to whom her grandmother hastened to betroth
-her, lest she should show a preference for the
-foreigner. But before the marriage could be
-actually solemnized, he was murdered in his
-coach at the instigation of his rival; and the
-beautiful heiress married shortly afterwards
-the sixth Duke of Somerset, surnamed the Proud.</p>
-
-<p>The girl’s mother does not seem to have been
-consulted in any of these matchmakings;
-her own married life was not a happy one.
-Montagu was boundlessly extravagant; he was
-now occupied in building Montagu House with
-his wife’s money; he was involved in political
-intrigues which did not redound to his honour,
-and in 1678 he went to Paris on his astrological
-mission, and renewed his loves and quarrels
-with the Duchess of Cleveland and others.
-He returned to England, to involve himself in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[72]</span>
-fresh plots, and in 1680, accompanied by his
-wife, he went to Paris in disgrace and pecuniary
-difficulties; circumstances not calculated to
-improve a temper naturally irritable.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Rachel Russell often speaks of her
-sister when in Paris; of that lady’s sympathy
-with the Protestants after the Revocation of the
-Edict of Nantes; her anxiety on account of
-her daughter, Anne Montagu’s, health, etc.
-A year afterwards she lost her eldest son, aged
-12; and it must have been a source of regret
-that she was not at hand to comfort Lady
-Rachel in the hour of her sorrow, Lord William
-Russell’s execution taking place while his
-sister-in-law was still in Paris. On Lady
-Northumberland’s return to England, we hear
-of her at Windsor with her “lovely boy,” and
-little Anne. On her husband’s creation as
-Earl, his wife dropped her widowed title, and
-called herself Countess Montagu. After the
-Revolution, Lord and Lady Montagu spent
-most of their time at Boughton, at which
-place the latter died in September, 1690, aged
-forty-four.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Rachel Russell speaks thus of her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[73]</span>
-death: “She was my last sister, and I loved
-her tenderly. It pleases me to think she
-deserves to be remembered by all who knew
-her; but after 40 years’ acquaintance with so
-amiable a creature, one must needs, in reflecting,
-bring to remembrance so many engaging
-endearments as are at present embittering and
-painful.”</p>
-
-<p>One son and one daughter survived; John,
-Lord Monthermer, afterwards second Duke of
-Montagu; and Anne, mother to the Lady
-Hinchingbrook, by whose Will this picture
-was bequeathed to her son, the fourth Earl of
-Sandwich.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward, first Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Buff Coat and Cuirass. Lace Cravat and Ruffles. Blue
-Sash over the Shoulder. Broad Red Sash round the
-Waist. Right Hand holding a Truncheon, which rests
-on the Mouth of a Cannon; Left Hand on his Hip.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[74]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Ralph, Duke of Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By RILEY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Curled Wig. Loose Gown of Orange Silk.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1708. The only surviving
-son of Edward, second Lord Montagu of
-Boughton, by Anne, daughter of Sir Ralph
-Winwood. He was educated at Westminster
-and on the death of his elder brother succeeded
-him as Master of the Horse to Queen
-Catherine, Consort of Charles II. He was
-sent as Ambassador to Paris, in 1669, for
-which office, says a contemporary, he was
-more indebted to the partiality of the fair
-sex, than to his own merits. He told Sir
-William Temple he was resolved to become
-Ambassador in France, and Sir William asked
-him on what he founded his hopes, as neither
-the King nor the Duke of York were attached
-to him. “They shall act” said Montagu,
-“as if they were;” upon which Sir William
-Temple remarks that his appointment was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[75]</span>
-brought about by the favour of the ladies,
-who were always his best friends, for some
-perfection the rest of the world did not discover.</p>
-
-<p>He was famous when in France, for the
-state in which he lived. “He entered Paris,”
-(says Collins) “with a more than common
-appearance, having seventy-four pages and
-footmen in rich liveries, twelve led horses
-with their furniture, twenty-four gentlemen
-on horseback, and eighteen English noblemen
-and gentlemen of quality in four rich coaches
-with eight horses each, and two chariots with
-six, made as costly as art could contrive.”
-The King and the Duke of Orleans received
-him with great honour, and he was entertained
-both at St. Cloud and Versailles, the fountains
-of which played in his honour; and it was
-here he imbibed a taste for building and laying
-out gardens, which he afterwards indulged to
-a great extent. The beautiful and youthful
-Countess of Northumberland, who had lately
-become a widow, was residing in Paris, and as
-we mention in the notice of her life, Montagu
-became her suitor, and eventually her husband.
-They were married privately in England in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[76]</span>
-1673. After his marriage he became a Privy
-Councillor and Master of the Great Wardrobe,
-an office he bought of the Earl of Sandwich.
-He busied himself in building on a magnificent
-scale, and found his wife’s money most useful
-to him in carrying out his plans.</p>
-
-<p>Although already rather in disrepute at
-Court, King Charles II. did not disdain to
-employ Montagu in 1678 on a new, and in
-every sense of the word, extraordinary mission
-to Paris. At that time there resided in the
-French capital, an astrologer who had gained
-great credit by predicting, not only the restoration
-of the English Monarch, but the exact
-date, May 29, 1660, of his return to England,
-and that some time before it actually happened.
-Charles, in consequence, had the firmest belief
-in the wise man’s auguries, and he despatched
-Montagu on an errand to ask his advice and
-predictions on some subject of political importance.
-The Envoy-extraordinary sounded
-the Necromancer, and finding the black art did
-not blind its professor to self-interest, the
-King’s messenger offered the wise man a large
-bribe to shape his predictions according to his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[77]</span>
-(Montagu’s) directions; then, with an imprudence
-which was inconsistent with his
-previous cunning, he went off to the Duchess
-of Cleveland and confided his secret to her.
-But Barbara was angry with her former
-admirer, and jealous of his admiration for her
-own daughter, and she resolved to be revenged.
-Accordingly she wrote to the King and told
-him the whole story. “Montagu,” she says,
-“has neither conscience nor honour; he has
-told me several times he despises you in his
-heart, and that he wishes the Parliament
-would send you and your brother to travel, for
-you are a dull, ungovernable fool, and he is a
-wilful fool.” This version of the story is taken
-from Algernon Sidney’s correspondence.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of this letter Montagu was
-recalled, and found himself but coldly received
-at Court, and all hopes of a place under Government
-were at an end. The ex-Plenipotentiary
-now threw himself into all manner of contending
-intrigues of a political nature. He was
-accused of receiving a large bribe from
-Louis XIV. to compass the impeachment and
-ruin of Lord Danby (Treasurer) who was very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[78]</span>
-obnoxious to the French Government, and an
-enemy to the Roman Catholics; yet at the same
-time he took a prominent position in the
-popular party. He was said to have been
-instrumental in bringing over Louise de la
-Quérouaille, afterwards Duchess of Portsmouth,
-and to have endeavoured to persuade her to
-use her influence with the King to exclude his
-brother from the succession. Finally his vote
-for the exclusion bill rendered him so obnoxious
-at Court, that he thought it best to depart
-once more to Paris with his wife and children.
-Hence he was summoned by a sad catastrophe,
-he had lent his magnificent house in Bloomsbury
-to the Earl of Devonshire, whose servant,
-in airing one of the rooms, set fire to it, and
-the “noble mansion” was burned to the ground.
-The conflagration was witnessed by Lady
-Rachel Russell, who says: “I heard a great
-noise in the square, and sent a servant to know
-what it was, and they brought me word
-Montagu House was in flames. My boy
-awaked and said he was nearly stifled, but
-being told the cause, would see it, and so was
-satisfied, and accepted a strange bed-fellow,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[79]</span>
-for the nurse brought Lady Devonshire’s
-youngest boy, wrapped up in a blanket.” The
-loss was computed at £30,000; but Montagu
-rebuilt it on a more magnificent scale. Collins
-says: “It is not exceeded in London.”</p>
-
-<p>Under William III. Montagu’s star was once
-more in the ascendant; he being one of the
-Lords who invited over the Prince of Orange.
-In 1689 he was created Viscount Monthermer
-and Earl of Montagu, and attended their
-Majesties’ coronation in his new dignity. In
-1690, while engaged in beautifying and laying
-out Boughton, his excellent wife, who called
-herself Countess Montagu, died, but he soon
-gave her a successor. The new made Earl was
-not content with his coronet, and coveted the
-“strawberry leaves.” He applied to the King
-for a dukedom, mentioning among many other
-cogent reasons: “I am now below the younger
-branches of my family, my Lord Manchester
-and my Lord Sandwich;” also that he had
-taken to his second wife, the daughter of the
-Duke of Newcastle; and above all that he had
-been first and last to advocate the cause of
-William. “I hope it will not be to my disadvantage<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[80]</span>
-that I am alive, and ready to do so
-again, instead of having lost my head with
-Lord William Russell.” The King refused the
-dukedom, but showed Lord Montagu much
-favour, and was his visitor at Boughton, in
-Northamptonshire where the Court was
-sumptuously entertained.</p>
-
-<p>Collins says: “My Lord was content with his
-fortune, and would accept no office save the
-one he had bought.” Of this he had been
-unlawfully deprived by James II., who bestowed
-it on Lord Preston. My Lord Montagu thought
-himself bound in honour to bring Preston to
-account, and when the office was restored to
-him and considerable damages awarded, he was
-so considerate of Lord Preston’s ill circumstances
-that he generously forgave him not
-only the damages, but the costs of the suit.</p>
-
-<p>Queen Anne bestowed upon him the coveted
-dukedom; in the fourth year of her reign she
-created him Marquis of Monthermer, and Duke
-of Montagu. His first wife died in 1690;
-when he lost no time in soliciting the hand of
-the relict of Christopher Monk, second Duke
-of Albemarle, and daughter and sole heiress of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[81]</span>
-Henry Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle. He
-does not appear to have been so disinterested
-in his views where money was concerned as
-Collins would have us believe; since this lady,
-in spite of her enormous wealth, was a confirmed
-lunatic, and an obstacle to their union
-existed in the fact that she had announced her
-resolution of wedding no one but a sovereign.
-Montagu was accordingly presented to her as
-the Emperor of China, and after a short period
-of eccentric wooing they were married. Until
-her death the poor maniac was addressed as
-Empress of China, and served on the bended
-knee. Lord Ross wished to marry her, and
-when the Duke prevailed in his suit wrote the
-following lines:—</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Insulting Rival, never boast</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thy conquest lately won;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No wonder if her heart was lost,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Her senses first were gone.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">From one that’s under Bedlam’s laws</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">What glory can be had?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For love indeed was not the cause,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">It proves that she was mad.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[82]</span></p>
-
-<p>She survived her husband twenty-six years,
-and died at Newcastle House in Clerkenwell,
-being interred in Westminster Abbey, as
-became her Imperial dignity.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph, Duke of Montagu was, as his picture
-shows, of a middle height, inclining to fat, and
-of a dark complexion. He was a man of
-pleasure, and self-indulgence, but of refined
-taste in architecture, and his gardens at
-Boughton were world famed. On one occasion
-he was showing them to the Duke of
-Marlborough, who said he believed the water-works
-were the finest in the world. “They are
-not to be compared,” replied the courteous host,
-“to your Grace’s fireworks.” St. Evremond,
-who was a constant visitor at Boughton and in
-London, and who met the Duke frequently at
-the Duchesse de Mazarin’s little salon in
-Chelsea, was a pensioner on his bounty, and is
-never tired of extolling his hospitality and
-generosity, also the charms of the Saturday
-and Wednesday receptions, at Montagu House.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“On admire avec raison</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Votre superbe maison,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A tous étrangers ouverte;</div><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[83]</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">Les jets d’eau de Boughton,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Les meubles de Ditton, etc.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He says the cascade at Boughton, though
-smaller than the one at Versailles, is more
-beautiful. The old <i>gourmet</i> is never tired of
-praising the good living and extolling the
-comestibles that the Duke had sent him, and
-he says: “J’ai été à Boughton voir milord, la
-bonne compagnie, l’érudition, les perdreaux,
-les truffes;” in fact all that had charms for
-him in the absence of the Duchesse de Mazarin
-herself, to whom he writes. The two men met
-frequently at the house of the beautiful
-Hortense, one of whose most fervent admirers
-was the Duke of Montagu. To her he was
-most generous, for in one of her letters she
-says that if Montagu discovered you liked or
-admired a thing, you need take no more
-thought about it: “‘Quelque dépense qu’il
-faille faire, quelque soin, quelque peine qu’il
-faut employer pour l’avoir, la chose ne vous
-manquera pas.’ Ce sont les propres paroles de la
-feue Duchesse de Mazarin.” But it seems
-that there was some interruption in their
-intimacy, for in one of Algernon Sidney’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[84]</span>
-letters there is this passage: “Montagu goes
-no more to the Duchesse de Mazarin; whether
-his love or his politics proved too pressing, I
-know not, but the town says he is forbid the
-house.”</p>
-
-<p>His Grace departed this life on the 9th of
-March, 1708, at Montagu House in Bloomsbury,
-afterwards the British Museum.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Anne, Viscountess Hinchingbrook</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By MRS. BEALE.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Seated. Light Auburn Hair, Dove-coloured Dress. Pearl
-Ornaments. Holding a Flower in the Left Hand.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Lady Anne Boyle was the fourth daughter
-of Richard, second Earl of Cork and first Earl
-of Burlington, by Lady Elizabeth Clifford, only
-daughter and heiress of the fifth Earl of
-Cumberland. In 1667 she married Viscount
-Hinchingbrook, eldest son of the first Earl of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[85]</span>
-Sandwich, by whom she had two sons and one
-daughter. Pepys seemed well contented with
-the marriage for his patron’s son, though he is
-dissatisfied at not having a favour sent him,
-and Lady Sandwich was so much pleased with
-her new daughter-in-law as apparently to be
-consoled for her first born having lost the
-chance of marrying the great heiress, Mistress
-Mallet.</p>
-
-<p>The first time Pepys saw her at Lord Crewe’s
-he saluted her and invited her to his house;
-he thought her mighty pleasant and good
-humoured, but neither did he count her a
-beauty or ugly, but a comely lady; and when
-she accepted his hospitality next day he found
-her “a sweet natured and well disposed lady,
-a lover of books and pictures, and of good
-understanding;” and he goes on to visit her
-and her lord afterwards at Burlington House
-next to Clarendon House, which he was glad
-to see for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Hinchingbrook and her sister Henrietta,
-Countess of Rochester, were undoubtedly
-shining lights of modesty, and domestic virtue
-in this profligate age.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[86]</span></p>
-
-<p>She was buried in the family vault at
-Barnwell, where a touching inscription records
-her many virtues, and the regret her death
-occasioned.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Elizabeth Popham, Viscountess Hinchingbrook</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HIGHMORE.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In an Orange Gown, Lace Tippet and Ruffles. Holding a
-Fan. A Blue Hood tied under the Chin.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>The Honourable Mary Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WHOOD.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(As a Child: in a Rich Crimson Dress, embroidered with
-Silver. White Apron, Lace Cuffs, and Stomacher.
-Holding a Basket of Cherries, with which she is Feeding
-a Parrot.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[87]</span></p>
-
-<p>The eldest daughter of Edward Richard,
-Viscount Hinchingbrook, by Elizabeth Popham.
-Died in childhood.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Louisa, Sixth Countess of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR THOMAS LAWRENCE.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a White Dress with Brown Drapery. Leaning on an
-Anchor.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1781. Died, 1862. The only daughter
-of Armar Corry, first Earl of Belmore, by
-Harriet, eldest daughter and co-heiress of the
-second Earl of Buckinghamshire. Married in
-1804, George, Earl of Sandwich, who died at
-Rome; by whom she had John William, seventh
-Earl; Harriet, Lady Ashburton, and Caroline,
-Comtesse Walewska.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[88]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Pendant to the First Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By VAN ZOORST.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Portrait of a Youth in Black. Unknown.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Brown Hair and Eyes. Small Moustache.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward, First Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By VAN ZOORST.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Purple Vest, Broad Belt, Buckle on Shoulder.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Elizabeth, Countess of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WISSING.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Loose Dress. Blue Scarf. Seated on a Bank, putting a
-Wreath of Flowers round the Neck of a Lamb.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[89]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>The Honourable Edward Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HOGARTH.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Small Half-length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(A Fair Boy in Crimson Coat and Waistcoat, and Frilled
-Shirt.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The fourth son of John, fourth Earl of
-Sandwich. Born, 1745. Died, 1752. Buried
-at Barnwell.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>The Honourable Elizabeth Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WHOOD.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Seated, with her Hand on the Neck of a Lamb.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>The second daughter of Edward, Viscount
-Hinchingbrook, by Elizabeth Popham. Married
-first to Reginald Courtenay, second son of Sir<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[90]</span>
-William Courtenay, of Powderham Castle,
-Devon, by whom she had one son, Charles,
-(killed at the battle of Dettingen), and two
-daughters, co-heiresses: Isabella, wife of William
-Poyntz, Esq., of Midgham, Berks; and Anne,
-married to the Earl of Cork and Orrery. Mr.
-Courtenay died in 1745, and his widow
-re-married in 1759, William Smith, comedian,
-better known as “Gentleman Smith.” They
-lived together at Leiston, near Saxmundham,
-an estate bequeathed to her by her grandmother,
-Lady Anne Harvey, where she died. Mr.
-Smith survived her 57 years. There is a
-portrait of him by Hoppner, in the National
-Portrait Gallery. Her brother was very much
-averse to her marriage with the actor, but the
-correspondence seems to show they lived
-happily.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[91]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[92]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="DRAWING_ROOM"><i>DRAWING ROOM.</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>The Duchesse de Berri</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By RIGAUD.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length: Oval.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Hair Dressed High. White and Gold Boddice. Blue
-Velvet Mantle, lined with Ermine.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1694. Died, 1719. Marie Louise,
-daughter of Philip, second Duke of Orleans,
-afterwards Regent, by Mademoiselle de Blois,
-daughter of Louis XIV. and Madame de
-Montespan. This marriage, which had been
-determined on by the King, was not only
-strongly opposed, by the Duchess of Orleans, his
-mother, but Philip himself, then Duc de
-Chartres, was repugnant to the <i>mésalliance</i>.
-He was at length overruled by the commands
-of his father, and the King his uncle, and proceeded
-to break the announcement of his
-engagement to the proud German Princess his
-mother, who congratulated the <i>fiancé</i> with
-a blow. One son and five daughters were
-born to Philip, the second of whom, Marie<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[93]</span>
-Louise, married in 1710 the Duc de Berri,
-third son to the Dauphin, and consequently
-grandson to Louis XIV. He was a handsome
-Prince, full of endearing and sterling qualities,
-but his education had been shamefully neglected,
-and on this point he was most sensitive. It
-made him shy of society, and fearful of speaking
-in public, and on one occasion he was
-subjected to terrible mortification. At the
-general Treaty of Peace, when it was settled
-that the crowns of France and Spain should
-never devolve on the same person, the Dukes
-of Orleans and Berri proceeded to the Parliament
-House to attend to some necessary
-formalities, on the occasion of the death of the
-Duc de Bourgogne, and the Duc de Berri found
-himself compelled to speak. After stammering
-and stuttering for some time he entirely broke
-down, and retired in confusion. Relating the
-circumstance to a friend, he was said to have
-shed tears of mortification, bitterly complaining
-at the same time of the manner in which his
-education had been neglected for the express
-purpose of keeping him in the background.
-“J’avois,” said he, “autant de disposition [for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[94]</span>
-learning] que les autres; on ne m’apprit qu’à
-chasser, on n’a cherché qu’à m’abattre.” In
-spite of these disadvantages the Duc de Berri
-was very popular, and is said to have won all
-hearts, save that of the ill-conditioned Princess
-whose outward charms had subjugated him.
-Even at an early age Marie Louise d’Orléans
-laid herself open to the tongue of scandal, and
-had been censured for habits of intemperance.
-On finding there was a chance of making a
-brilliant marriage she changed her whole line
-of conduct, and persuaded every one, including
-the wary Madame de Maintenon, that she was
-a reformed character. But no sooner was the
-marriage consummated than the young Duchess
-threw off the mask, and returned to all her
-evil ways. In nowise touched by the kindness
-and devotion of her husband, she thwarted him
-on every occasion, and delighted to turn him
-into ridicule, which was easy in the case of one
-so diffident and sensitive. But even his forbearance
-had a limit; her conduct disgraced
-them both, and one day, maddened by jealousy
-and the insolence of his wife’s Chamberlain, he
-sought the advice of his trusty friend, the Duc
-de St. Simon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[95]</span></p>
-
-<p>St. Simon spoke strongly on the subject,
-urging the Duc de Berri to seek redress from
-the King, and strengthening his counsel by
-producing a correspondence that had fallen into
-his hands, between the Duchess and the aforesaid
-chamberlain. These letters left no doubt
-of their guilt: in one of them the lady proposed
-to elope, but her lover refused on the plea that
-the step would not be conducive to his advancement
-in life. The Duc de Berri, in conformity
-with his friend’s advice and his own convictions,
-determined to carry the correspondence to
-Rambouillet where Louis XIV. was then
-staying; but unfortunately his movements were
-not sufficiently prompt. The Duchess discovered
-that her husband and the Duc de St. Simon had
-been closeted together for some time over some
-animated and highly confidential business; it
-was not difficult to guess the subject, and no
-sooner had the Duc de Berri started, than she
-leaped into her coach, and pursuing him with
-all haste, broke into the Royal presence just in
-time to find the King examining the contents
-of the fatal correspondence. A scene of disgraceful
-violence and altercation ensued, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[96]</span>
-so exasperating and shameless was the language
-of the Duchess, that the hitherto indulgent and
-forbearing husband raised his heavy riding boot
-and with one kick sent his wife spinning into
-the arms of Madame de Maintenon. The King,
-whose dignity was outraged on all sides, lifted
-his cane to strike the unhappy Prince, but he
-had already withdrawn, full of shame at the
-violence into which he had been betrayed. As
-for the Duchess, no sooner had she recovered
-from the shock, than without a word to her
-sovereign, or Madame de Maintenon, she left
-the room in a paroxysm of rage. “It is true,”
-she said afterwards to one of her ladies, “that
-I have sustained no bodily injury, but the mark
-will ever remain here,” placing her hand upon
-what, by courtesy, she called her heart. It
-undoubtedly remained in her memory; the
-Duke apologised, and she pretended to be
-appeased; a reconciliation was patched up, and
-at a wolf hunt held by the King in the Forest
-of Marly, the Duc de Berri, who was passionately
-fond of the sport, rode hard and well. He was
-suffering from intense thirst when he fell in
-with his wife’s coach, and riding up asked<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[97]</span>
-anxiously if she could supply him with a
-draught of any kind. The Duchess smiled
-benignly, and drew from the pocket of the
-carriage a beautiful little case containing a
-bottle in which she said she always carried
-some excellent Ratafia in the event of over-fatigue.
-The unsuspecting man raised it to
-his lips and drained the last drop with many
-expressions of gratitude. The Duchess smiled
-again: “It is fortunate we met,” she said; and
-the heavy coach rolled on. In a few hours the
-Duke was taken ill, and after four days of
-suffering he expired on May 4th, 1714, at the
-early age of 28. As in the case of Madame
-no one doubted the existence of poison, and at
-first, public opinion was so violent against the
-Duke of Orleans that he had a narrow escape of
-his life from the fury of the mob, at the funeral
-of his son-in-law. Later evidence, however,
-seemed but too strong against the guilty wife,
-although the matter was gradually hushed up,
-as in those days the art of poisoning had become
-a fashionable pastime. The Duchess did not
-long survive her victim; she gave herself up
-to excesses of all kinds, and concluded her ill-spent
-life of 24 years in 1719.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[98]</span></p>
-
-<p>In some letters of “Madame, veuve de
-Monsieur,” the first Duke of Orleans, the
-Princess of Bavaria to whom allusion has already
-been made, we are told that the Duchesse de
-Berri at the time of her death was undoubtedly
-married clandestinely to Captain de Rious,
-whose portrait Madame paints in the most
-unflattering terms as remarkable for his ugliness,
-in spite of which he was a great favourite with
-the ladies. He was absent on duty with the
-regiment the Duchess had bought for him at
-the time of her death. Madame goes on to say:
-“Pour se tirer de l’embarras que pouvoit lui
-donner une oraison funêbre, on a pris le parti
-de n’en point faire du tout.” Apparently a
-prudent decision. The same authority states
-that the Duchesse de Berri had grown very
-large and florid, (and that she often jested on
-the change in her own appearance), which would
-account for her looking twice her real age in
-this picture.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[99]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Elizabeth, Countess of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(White Déshabille with Coloured Scarf. Hair en Négligé.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1757. She was the second
-daughter of John, Earl of Rochester, by
-Elizabeth Mallet. She married Edward, third
-Earl of Sandwich, in 1691. As we have
-mentioned in the short notice of his life, the
-marriage was very unhappy, and Lady
-Sandwich’s conduct in every respect most
-reprehensible, in spite of her numerous
-panegyrists. She was a brilliant member of
-society, and we are told that at the early age
-of ten years, she already showed a great taste
-for reading, and had begun to cultivate several
-foreign languages. She spoke French, Italian
-and Spanish; Montaigne was one of her
-favourite authors. She danced and sang, and
-played on several instruments, and though
-learned was in no wise pedantic. Neither did<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[100]</span>
-she waste so much time on dress, as was usual
-with ladies of her time. Lady Sandwich went
-to Paris not very long after her marriage, and
-St. Evremond, whose admiration she appears to
-have shared with the Duchesse de Mazarin
-and Ninon de l’Enclos, thus speaks of her in a
-letter (without date) to the latter: “Le
-Docteur Morelli, mon ami particulier,
-accompagne Madame la Comtesse de Sandwich
-qui va en France pour sa santé. Feu Monsieur
-le Comte de Rochester, Père de Madame
-Sandwich, avoit plus d’esprit qu’homme en
-Angleterre. Madame de Sandwich en a plus que
-n’avoit Monsieur son père; aussi généreuse
-que spirituelle, aussi aimable que spirituelle et
-généreuse. Voilà une partie de ses qualités.”
-According to St. Evremond’s implied wishes,
-his two friends formed a close intimacy, and
-Lady Sandwich at Paris seems to have merited
-Ninon’s report of her when she says: “J’ignore
-les manières Anglaises, mais elle a été très
-française.” It must have been during this
-first visit to Paris that Lady Sandwich made
-the acquaintance of the French celebrities
-whose portraits now adorn the Drawing-room<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[101]</span>
-at Hinchingbrook, as on her return to the
-French metropolis in 1729 they were all dead.
-Mademoiselle de l’Enclos is never tired of
-praising her English friend; in a letter dated
-August, 1698, she says to St. Evremond:
-“Madame Sandwich m’a donné mille plaisirs,
-par le bonheur que j’ai eu de lui plaire; je ne
-croyois pas sur mon déclin, pouvoir être propre
-à une femme de son âge. Elle a plus d’esprit
-que toutes les femmes de France, et plus de
-véritable mérite. Elle nous quitte; c’est un
-regret pour tous qui la connoissent, et pour moi
-particulièrement. Si vous aviez été ici nous
-aurions faits des repas dignes du temps du passé.
-Vous allez revoir Madame Sandwich, que nous
-voyons partir avec beaucoup de regret.” Again
-in July, 1699: “Vous allez voir Madame
-Sandwich, mais je crains qu’elle n’aille à la
-campagne; elle sait tout ce que vous pensez
-d’elle; elle vous dira plus de nouvelles de ce
-pays ci que moi. Elle a tout approfondi et tout
-pénétré: elle connoit parfaitement tout ce que
-je hante, et a trouvé le moyen de n’être pas
-étrangère ici.” In the lengthened correspondence
-between Mademoiselle de l’Enclos and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[102]</span>
-her faithful Abbé, she constantly reverts to the
-English lady after her departure from Paris:
-“Madame Sandwich conservera l’esprit en
-perdant la jeunesse. Faites la souvenir de moi;
-je serois bien fâchée d’en être oubliée;” while
-St. Evremond on his part tells her: “Tout le
-monde connoit l’esprit de Madame la Comtesse;
-je vois son bon goût par l’estime extraordinaire
-qu’elle a pour vous. Elle est admirée à Londres
-comme elle fut à Paris.”</p>
-
-<p>There is a long tedious poem from the same
-pen, describing the presents (comestibles) which
-Lady Sandwich had sent the Duchesse de
-Mazarin, with whom she had become very
-intimate: “Des moutons et des lapins de Bath.”
-He speaks of Morelli as friend and physician of
-all three:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Sandwich et Mazarin que le Ciel vous unisse,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Et que cette union de cent ans ne finisse.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>He alludes to meeting her often in society,
-more especially at Boughton, the beautiful
-country house of Lord (afterwards Duke of)
-Montagu. “Jamais personne n’a mieux mérité
-d’être reçue magnifiquement, et galamment
-régalée, que Madame Sandwich; jamais homme<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[103]</span>
-ne fut plus propre pour la bien recevoir que my
-Lord Montagu. J’espère que la cascade
-l’octagone, les jets d’eau, etc., auront fait oublier
-la France à Madame Sandwich, et comme my
-Lord est assez heureux pour inspirer son goût
-et ses desseins sur les bâtiments et les jardins, je
-ne doute point qu’elle n’entreprenne bientôt
-quelque nouvel ouvrage à Hinchinbrooke. On
-ne sauroit être plus sensible que je le suis à
-l’honneur de son souvenir. Il ne manquoit
-rien pour combler mon déplaisir de n’avoir pas
-vu Boughton et le maître du lieu, que de ne
-point voir Hinchinbrooke et sa maîtresse, qui est
-le plus grand ornement de tous les lieux où elle
-se trouve.” He writes to Ninon to tell her of a
-wager he had with Lady Sandwich, respecting
-their eating powers at a dinner at Lord Jersey’s:
-“Je ne fut pas vaincu,” boasts the epicure, “ni
-sur les louanges ni sur l’appétit.”</p>
-
-<p>At Bath she evidently was the head of a
-coterie; and Pope writes: “I am beginning an
-acquaintance with Lady Sandwich, who has all
-the spirit of the past age, and the gay experience
-of a pleasurable life. It were as scandalous an
-omission to come to the Bath, and not to see my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[104]</span>
-Lady Sandwich, as it had been to have travelled
-to Rome, and not to have seen the Queen of
-Sweden. It is, in a word, the best thing the
-country has to boast of, and as she has been all
-that a woman of spirit could be, so she still
-continues that easy and independent creature,
-that a sensible woman always will be.” Such
-is Pope’s standard of female excellence! In
-another letter to his friend, Charles Boyle, Earl
-of Orrery, he says: “This lady is both an
-honour, and a disgrace to her native country.
-She resided in France for some time; but it is a
-melancholy reflection that we have either
-nothing in England, valuable enough to make
-her prefer her own country to another, or that
-we will not suffer such a person to reside
-quietly among us.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1729, on the death of her ill-fated
-husband, the object of so much praise and
-admiration, returned to the more genial
-atmosphere of Paris, for the remainder of her
-life.</p>
-
-<p>In June 1751, Lord Chesterfield writes to
-his son, then at Paris, as follows: “A propos of
-beaux esprits, have you les entrées at Lady<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[105]</span>
-Sandwich’s, who, old as she was, when I saw
-her last, had the strongest parts of any woman
-I ever knew in my life. If you are not
-acquainted with her, the Duchesse d’Aiguillon
-or Lady Hervey can, and I daresay will,
-introduce you. I assure you it is worth while
-both on her own account, and for the sake of
-people of wit and learning, who frequent her
-salon. In such companies there is always
-something to be learned as well as manners;
-the conversation turns on something above
-trifles; some point of literature, customs,
-history, etc., is discussed with ingenuity and
-good manners; for I must do the French
-people of learning justice; they are not bears
-as most of ours are, but gentlemen.”</p>
-
-<p>Lady Sandwich died at Paris, at her house in
-the Rue Vaugirard, July 1, 1757, in the Faubourg
-St. Germains. In a letter of Horace Walpole’s,
-to John Chute, Esq., the same year, he says:
-“Old Lady Sandwich is dead at Paris, and my
-Lord (her grandson) has given me her picture
-of Ninon de l’Enclos in the prettiest manner
-in the world. If ever he should intermeddle
-in an election in Hampshire, I beg you will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[106]</span>
-serve him to the utmost of your power. I fear
-I must wait for the picture.” At Lady
-Sandwich’s death in Paris, although she had
-taken every precaution to prevent such a
-casualty, there arose a great difficulty in
-securing the property to her grandson and heir.
-The French officers rushed in, put seals on
-everything, and claimed le “mobilier, les
-tableaux, etc., par le droit d’aubaine.” Lord
-Sandwich sent over his solicitor, who had a
-roughish time of it, with these “harpies.” He
-appealed to the Duchesse d’ Aiguillon and other
-illustrious friends of the deceased countess,
-who promised him every assistance, and as he
-discovered afterwards, were working against
-him all the time. But the good lawyer was
-triumphant in the end and wrote to his noble
-client that everything was safe, including the
-pictures, and he especially notes that of Ninon
-de l’Enclos, “which is very valuable,” he says,
-“and innumerable offers have been made for
-it, here.” But it was reserved for Horace
-Walpole’s Gallery, and some letters passed
-on the subject, for although Horace could
-express his opinion of Lord Sandwich in no<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[107]</span>
-flattering terms, he did not object to receive
-a present at his hands; and he offers in return
-(later) a copy of the memoirs of the Comte de
-Grammont, printed at his own press at
-Strawberry Hill, which contains an engraving
-of the afore-mentioned portrait of Mademoiselle
-de l’Enclos, Lord Sandwich’s letters on the
-subject are in his most jocose style.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Ninon de l’Enclos</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By PIERRE MIGNARD.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Oval. Crimson and Orange Dress.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born at Paris, 1615. Died, 1705.—The early
-education of Anne de l’Enclos was not
-calculated to lead to favourable results. The
-characters of her parents were strangely
-opposed to each other, and remarkable for
-violent extremes. “M. de l’Enclos, duelliste,
-musicien, homme de plaisir, gentilhomme;
-Madame de l’Enclos, sévère, exacte.” The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[108]</span>
-mother’s wish was to immure her daughter
-in a convent, a project which the father
-strenuously opposed. But by the time the
-girl had attained her fifteenth year she was
-left an orphan, at liberty to follow her own
-devices. Scepticism and Epicureanism were
-very prevalent at this epoch, and of these
-schools Ninon became a too willing disciple.
-She soon became the centre of attraction; her
-conquests were legion. Voltaire said: “There
-will be soon as many histories of Ninon as
-there are of Louis XIV.” Voltaire was only
-thirteen years old when he was first presented
-to Mademoiselle de l’Enclos, who was much
-struck with him, and evidently detected some
-promise of his future greatness. At her death
-she bequeathed him 2000 francs to buy books.
-She was a strange mixture of self-indulgence
-and self-restraint: at one time her conduct was
-so outrageous in its immorality as to scandalize
-even the Court of the Great Monarch, and it
-was reported that she was advised to emigrate,
-“Mais elle ne partit point,” says St. Beuve;
-“elle continua la même vie, en baissant légèrement
-le ton.” Later on, he says: “Elle rangea<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[109]</span>
-sa vie et la réduisit petit à petit, sur le pied
-honorable, où on la vit finir.” St. Simon “le
-sévère,” says: “Ninon eût des amis illustres de
-toutes les sortes, et elle les conserva tous. Tout
-se conduisit chez elle, avec un respect et une
-décence extrème—jamais ni jeu, ni ris élevés,
-ni dispute; sa conversation était charmante,
-désinteressée, fidèle, secrète au dernier point.”
-She was temperate in eating and drinking, and
-would never suffer drunkards at her table;
-indeed in her youth, she appears to have drunk
-no wine, though occasionally in some of her
-later letters to St. Evremond, she discourses
-somewhat enthusiastically on a subject so near
-to her correspondent’s heart, and speaking of
-her advanced age she says: “L’appétit est
-quelque chose dont je jouis encore.” St. Beuve
-tells us: “Qu’elle réfléchissait dans un âge, et
-dans un train de vie, où à peine les autres sont
-capables de penser, et elle, qui resta si longtemps
-jeune par l’esprit, se trouva mûre par là aussi
-avant l’âge.” La Force says: “Je n’ai pas
-connu cette Ninon dans sa beauté, mais à l’âge
-de cinquante et de soixante [the report ran
-until past 80] elle a eu des amants qui l’ont<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[110]</span>
-fort aimé, et les plus honnêtes gens de France
-pour amis.” Her salon was the most brilliant
-in Paris; parents schemed that their children’s
-débût in the world should be made under
-Ninon’s auspices, and Madame de Coulanges
-observes: “Les femmes courent après elle
-aujourd’hui, comme d’autres gens y couraient
-autrefois.” Even the straight-laced Madame de
-Maintenon, in speaking of her brother, writes
-to her thus: “Continuez, Mademoiselle, à
-donner de bons conseils à M. d’Aubigné: il à
-bien besoin des leçons de Leontium; [this was
-Ninon’s nickname, so called from the favourite
-disciple of Epicurus] les avis d’une amie
-aimable persuadent toujours plus que les conseils
-d’une sœur sévère.” Tallemant says that her
-beauty was never very remarkable: “Son esprit
-etoit plus charmant que son visage—dès qu’elle
-parloit, on était pris et ravi.” She sang, and
-played on the lute. “‘La sensibilité,’ dit elle, ‘est
-l’ame du chant.’” Her portrait is drawn by
-Mademoiselle de Scudéry in her novel of
-“Clélie.” “Elle parle volontiers; elle rit
-aisément, elle aime à faire une innocente guerre
-à ses amis. Les cheveux d’un beau chatain, le<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[111]</span>
-visage rond, le teint vif, la bouche agréable, les
-lèvres fort incarnates, une petite fosse au
-menton, les yeux noirs, brillants, pleins de feu,
-souriants, et la physionomie fine, enjouée, et
-fort spirituelle.” It can scarcely be denied
-that this description entitles to beauty, and so
-indeed do the portraits at Hinchingbrook and
-Althorp, though she was apparently at an
-advanced age when the latter was painted.
-“On a dit d’elle, qu’à la table elle étoit ivre dès
-la soupe! ivre de bonne humeur, et de saillies;”
-for as we have seen before, she was always
-temperate. Her letters to St. Evremond when
-they were both old, are most characteristic.
-They occasionally lament together over their
-age, but appear to have had many gleams of
-consolation. From the highest and truest of
-all comfort, they seem to have cut themselves
-off; and yet, in Ninon’s touching and eloquent
-letter to her correspondent, on the occasion of
-the death of the Duchesse de Mazarin, his
-dearest friend, there is this passage: “Si on
-pouvoit penser comme Madame de Chevreuse,
-qui croyoit en mourant, qu’elle alloit causer
-avec tous ses amis en l’autre monde, il seroit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[112]</span>
-doux de le penser.” In another letter to the
-same, she says: “Nous allons mériter la louange
-de la postérité, pour la durée de nos vies, et celle
-de l’amitié; je crois que je vivrai autant que
-vous. Adieu Monsieur; pourquoi n’est ce pas
-un bon jour?” This was something like a
-prophecy, as they died within two years of each
-other, one having completed, the other within a
-few months of, ninety years of age. In
-speaking of her reception of a friend, whom
-St. Evremond had recommended to her notice,
-she says: “J’ai lu (devant lui) votre lettre avec
-des lunettes, mais elles ne me sieyent pas mal;
-j’ai toujours eu la mine grave.” Again:
-“Tout le monde me dit, que j’ai moins à me
-plaindre du temps qu’une autre; de quelque
-sorte que cela soit, qui m’aurait proposé une
-telle vie, je me serois pendue.” In spite of
-which, her letters are invariably cheerful. St.
-Evremond says, in very nearly the same strain
-as he writes to his other frequent correspondent
-the Duchess of Mazarin: “La nature commence
-à faire voir par vous, qu’il est possible de ne
-point vieillir. Vous êtes de tous les pays, aussi
-estimée à Londres qu’à Paris: vous êtes de tous<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[113]</span>
-les temps, vous êtes la maîtresse du présent et
-du passé.” Ninon died at her house at Paris
-about five o’clock in the evening, having
-outlived her ninetieth birthday by five months.</p>
-
-<p class="smaller"><span class="smcap">Note.</span>—The Abbé Charles de St. Evremond, to whom we
-are indebted for so much information relating to Ninon de
-l’Enclos, and the Duchesse de Mazarin, was (originally) a
-soldier, an author, and a statesman—likewise a <i>bon vivant</i>,
-in all of which characters, he distinguished himself. He
-was in great favour at one time with Cardinal Mazarin, but
-having incurred that potentate’s displeasure, he thought it
-prudent to take refuge in England, where he remained till
-his death, in 1703, having made friends with all the leading
-men in that country, and being in great favour with the
-ladies, for his agreeable conversation and delicate flattery.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Hortense Mancini, Duchesse de Mazarin</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By MIGNARD.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Oval. Dark Hair and Eyes. Very loose Déshabille.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1646. Died, 1699.—The five nieces of
-the Cardinal Mazarin were all remarkable for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[114]</span>
-beauty and intelligence, and for lives full of
-dramatic interest. Ninon de l’Enclos says:
-“Toutes les nièces du Cardinal avaient un don
-singulier d’attrait, et comme une magie: la
-source des charmes est dans le sang Mazarin.”
-They were the daughters of Lorenzo Mancini, by
-the Cardinal’s beloved sister. Lorenzo was a
-great astrologer, and had not only correctly
-foretold his own death, and that of their only
-son, but had also predicted that his widow
-would not survive her fifty-second year. The
-prophecy weighed on her mind, and perhaps
-hastened the fulfilment. Her eldest daughter
-Laura, Duchesse de Mercœur, died in childbed,
-it is supposed brokenhearted at her mother’s
-loss. Hortense Mancini, the fourth, and
-apparently the favourite niece of the Cardinal,
-was born at Rome in 1646, and on her arrival
-in Paris, became the centre of attraction from
-her surpassing beauty. After many negociations,
-the Cardinal bestowed her hand, and an
-enormous fortune on the Duc de Meilleraye, on
-condition that he would assume the name of
-Mazarin. No sooner was she betrothed, than
-Hortense received at the hands of her uncle,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[115]</span>
-who had hitherto been very niggardly towards
-her, a splendid <i>corbeille de noces</i>, and a
-large sum in gold. She was so elated by this
-sudden accession of fortune, that she sent for
-her brother, and sisters, and encouraged them to
-take what they pleased, and when this curious
-trio had helped themselves, she took handfuls
-of money, and flung them out to the lacqueys in
-the court-yard beneath, and was much amused
-by watching the scramble. The Cardinal, at
-that time very near his end, was furious at this
-wanton manner, of disposing of his bounty.</p>
-
-<p>The marriage proved most unhappy; the
-husband morose, jealous, exacting; the wife
-beautiful, brilliant, wayward. In her later
-correspondence with St. Evremond, she makes
-many excuses for having left her husband, and
-not returning to him, in spite of all his solicitations
-and the action which he brought against
-her, for separating herself from him. She fled
-from his roof, in the disguise of a man, and by
-all accounts not empty handed; “mais tous les
-chemins mènent à Paris,” and on her return
-there she received a pension from the King,
-which, however, she did not consider sufficient<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[116]</span>
-to enable her to reside there. She accordingly
-retired to Chambéri. But in the year 1675 she
-went to England in the train of Mary of
-Modena, the youthful Duchess of York. The
-real object of this journey is believed to have
-been a mission, with which she was entrusted
-by the numerous enemies of Mademoiselle de
-Quérouaille (afterwards Duchess of Portsmouth)
-to destroy that favourite’s influence by supplanting
-her, in the affections of Charles II.
-Nor did such a result appear improbable, as
-Hortense surpassed her rival, both in wit, and
-beauty, and it was well known that the King
-had already admired her so much, as to
-entertain serious notions of making her his
-wife. He gave her a most warm reception, and
-settled a pension on her, the Duke of Mazarin
-having already found means to possess himself
-of the pittance, allowed her by Louis XIV.
-But unfortunately for all these deep-laid
-schemes, Hortense was so much enamoured of
-the Prince de Monaco, then in England, as to
-incur the King’s anger, and cause him for a
-while even to suspend her pension.</p>
-
-<p>She never left England; persuasions, stratagems,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[117]</span>
-and menaces, all were useless to induce
-her, to return to France. Her husband sent
-over Madame de Rutz to try and bring her back
-to him, or induce her to enter a convent, but she
-says to St. Evremond: “La liberté ne coute
-jamais trop chére à qui se délivre de la
-tyrannie.” She speaks of the alternative of
-returning to the Duke’s roof, or immuring
-herself in a convent, as “deux extrémités à
-éviter, autant l’une que l’autre.” Yet at one
-time, on the occasion of a lover being killed in
-a duel in Spain, she seems to have entertained
-the notion of embracing the latter alternative;
-but the easy-going St. Evremond advised her
-strongly against such a step, assuring her the
-loss of a lover, might soon be repaired. Her
-enemies in France, founded a scandal on the
-discovery that she did not reside under the roof
-of her Royal mistress, at Whitehall, “mais dans
-un Pavillon tout près du Château de St. James.”
-She also incurred blame in many quarters, for
-not sharing Queen Mary’s exile in 1688; but
-she excuses herself, by saying that if she did so,
-not only would she place herself once more in
-the power of her enemies, but that it was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[118]</span>
-impossible for her to leave England. She was
-deeply in debt; she scarcely dared leave the
-house, for fear of being arrested. She makes a
-most pitiful lament, (probably about the time of
-the escape of James II. to France) over her
-destitution, always to the same friend, and
-confidant. “Nul bien de moi, nulle assistance
-où je suis, nulle espérance d’ailleurs.” Yet she
-received at different times, pensions from four
-different monarchs, for William III. continued
-her allowance. Be this as it may, she contrived
-to amuse herself, in her house at Chelsea, where
-St. Evremond was a constant visitor, in spite
-of his complaints to Lady Anne Hervey, of the
-occasional cold and discomfort. She assembled
-round her bassette table, (for in later years she
-was much addicted to play) a brilliant, aristocratic,
-literary circle. She gave dinners too,
-and the St. Evremond correspondence shows us,
-that presents of meat, wine, and fruit, were as
-common in those days, as baskets of game in
-the nineteenth century. Her friends, Lady
-Sandwich, and the Duke of Montagu in
-particular, appear to have been very generous,
-in such contributions, and both the Duchess, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[119]</span>
-St. Evremond, appreciated to their fullest extent,
-the pleasures of eating, and drinking, although
-the latter often expostulates with the
-former against over-indulgence in stimulants.
-He warns her against excess in white
-wine, absynthe or usquebaugh, which are bad
-for the lungs; her heart, and her head, were
-given her for better things. There seems every
-reason to believe the learned man’s precepts,
-and example, were not always in unison. She
-occasionally played too high, or too frequently
-at bassette, to please him. He wrote a poetical
-scene in which, playing with the handsome
-“Madame Middleton,” Hortense discusses with
-her the comparative beauties of “Madame
-Grafton, Madame Kildare, and Madame
-Lichfield.” In another letter, an answer no
-doubt to some lamentations over her pecuniary
-distresses, he says: “Demandez toujours de
-l’argent; s’il n’en vient point, c’est vous qui
-avez sujet de vous plaindre.”</p>
-
-<p>She numbered amongst her friends and
-acquaintance the <i>habitués</i> of her house at
-Chelsea, many of the noblest names in England;
-the Duke of Montagu, one of her warmest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[120]</span>
-admirers; Lord Godolphin, the Duke of St.
-Albans, Mr. Villiers, etc. Most of these
-gentlemen seem at a loss “où passer leurs
-soirées” when she is absent from London.
-Lady Sandwich, a kindred spirit, Lady Anne
-Montagu, and many other members of the
-English aristocracy frequented her house.
-This was again in accordance with the exhortations
-of her counsellor, for he writes soon after
-her flitting to Chelsea: “Tout est triste à
-Londres; il n’est pas de même à Chelsea.
-Montrez vous de temps en temps, où laissez vous
-voir à Chelsea.” The picture that he draws of
-her charms, although in the high-flown
-language of the period, and of his nation, does
-not appear over-done when we look at Mignard’s
-beautiful portrait, of this undoubtedly beautiful
-woman. Her venerable adorer bids the young
-beauties of England tremble, at the name of
-Hortense; he describes her white teeth, her
-mouth a lovely opening flower, her pretty
-dimples, her bright dark eyes, (which were
-sometimes a source of great suffering to her),
-and her luxuriant hair; and in his description
-he begs you not to let the modelling of her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[121]</span>
-dainty ear, escape your notice. He also assures
-her, that it is a pity to conceal her attractions
-in splendid robes, for that a simple <i>déshabille</i>
-becomes her best. Surely she acted on this
-hint, when she sate to Mignard. The titles of
-Madame, or Duchesse, ought not to be given her
-in speaking to, or of her: “Vous êtes au dessus
-des titres, et il me semble qu’on ôte à votre
-mérite tout ce qu’on donne à votre qualité.”
-She did not disdain to dine with St. Evremond,
-but he was well aware how particular she was
-in her tastes, and provided for her accordingly.
-“Le mouton de Windsor cède au mouton de
-Bath, c’est la décision de Hortense; Bath aura
-donc la préférence. Si vous voulez du fruit,
-apportez en; le vin j’en ai de bon.” In one of
-her temporary absences, at Bath, or elsewhere,
-he went to Chelsea, and describes how
-melancholy, and deserted were the house, and
-household, her waiting maid Isabelle, her little
-Moorish page, the parrot Pretty, the lap-dog
-Chop, and Filis the canary bird; nothing is
-wanting to complete this picture of the English
-house of Hortense, Duchesse de Mazarin, in
-the country, which a contemporary and a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[122]</span>
-compatriot designated as “un pays hérétique,
-l’objet du courroux du Ciel, et de la haine des
-hommes.” The beautiful exile had little to
-complain of, in the welcome she received in
-this vilified country.</p>
-
-<p>St. Evremond’s letters to Ninon de l’Enclos,
-on the death of his dearest and best friend, are
-expressive of deep and sincere grief. She died
-heavily in his debt, but he would have given
-that, and all he had, to bring her back to life.
-People might live a century, and never see her
-equal: “Tout le monde vous imite, personne
-ne vous ressemble,” were the words, he once
-addressed to her. She scolded her friends at
-times, but in so charming a manner:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“‘Hélas, autre source de larmes,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Tous ses défauts, avoient des charmes.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">Elle n’avoit jamais su ni tromper, ni haïr.” He
-praises the manner of her death, and says:
-“Les Anglais, qui surpassent toutes les nations
-à mourir, la doivent regarder avec jalousie.”
-What added poignancy to his regret, was the
-conviction that her own imprudence hastened
-the end, a circumstance over which he, and
-Ninon lament together. To the man who was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[123]</span>
-within four years of ninety, Hortense at fifty-three,
-and evidently still most attractive, must
-have appeared comparatively young. She died
-in her house at Chelsea in the summer of 1699.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Mary, Queen of James II., King of England</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By L’ARGILLIERE.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Murrey-coloured Dress. Blue Scarf. Pearl Necklace and
-Ornaments.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1658. Died, 1691.—The daughter of
-Alfonso the Fourth, Duke of Modena, by Marie
-Mancini. Became an orphan at an early age;
-was married to the Duke of York (soon after
-the death of his first wife, Anne Hyde) first by
-proxy, and then in London in 1673. Young,
-handsome, single-minded, impulsive, full of
-affection to a husband twenty years her senior,
-remarkable in an immoral Court for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[124]</span>
-modesty, and decorum of her conduct, Mary
-devoted herself to the restoration of the Catholic
-religion, and in consequence became the idol
-of its votaries, and was hated in proportion by
-the Protestants.</p>
-
-<p>James had a great respect and even affection
-for his wife, in spite of the frequent causes he
-afforded her for jealousy, and there is no doubt
-that she influenced him very much in religious
-matters, and contributed to his downfall. They
-had several children who died in their infancy;
-but in 1688 the unfortunate Prince of Wales,
-afterwards called the Old Pretender, or Chevalier
-de St. George, was born. The Queen’s romantic
-adventures when, aided by the Duc de Lauzun,
-she escaped in the dead of night, with her infant
-in her arms, are too well known to be recorded
-here. She fled to St. Germains, where Louis
-XIV received her with royal honours, and
-human sympathy, and she was soon joined by
-her husband. Madame de Sévigné’s portrait of
-Mary of Modena on her first arrival, might
-well be said to rival that of L’Argillière: “La
-Reine a des yeux beaux, et noirs, qui ont pleuré,
-un beau teint un peu pâle, la bouche grande,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[125]</span>
-de belles dents, une belle taille, et pleine d’esprit,
-tout cela compose une femme qui plait
-beaucoup. Tout ce qu’elle dit est juste, et de
-bon sens.” She was most grateful to the French
-King, and on one occasion when he held the
-Prince of Wales in his arms she said: “Hitherto
-I have been glad that my son was too young
-to understand his misfortunes; now I pity him
-that he cannot appreciate the goodness of your
-Majesty.”</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could equal the consideration and
-generosity of Louis XIV. towards the exiled
-sovereigns. The ex-Queen of England had a
-small Court of her own, at St. Germains, where
-she presided with gentle quiet dignity, cheering
-the declining days of her unhappy husband, by
-her unceasing devotion. Whatever the faults
-of Mary of Modena may have been in public
-life, no one could deny to the exiled Princess a
-reputation for virtue, tenderness, and charity,
-very uncommon in the age in which she lived.</p>
-
-<p>She was witness to the unsuccessful attempts
-of both her husband, and son, to recover the
-Crown, and died after a short illness in the
-“very odour of sanctity.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[126]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Henrietta Maria, Duchess of Orleans</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By MIGNARD.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Oval. Auburn Hair. White Satin Dress. Pearls.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1644. Died, 1670.—Daughter of
-Charles I., King of England, by Henrietta
-Maria of France. When the Queen of Charles
-I., a fortnight after her confinement, was
-compelled to fly before the Parliamentary army,
-she confided the infant Princess to the care of
-her governess, Lady Morton, who retired with
-her charge to Oatlands. Two years afterwards,
-when the Parliament threatened to deprive that
-lady of her little ward, she determined to
-thwart them in the attempt. She disguised
-herself as a poor French servant, and provided
-herself with a humpback, in which she carried
-little Henrietta dressed as a boy. They proceeded
-in this way on foot to Dover, where they
-embarked, and the faithful governess restored
-the child to her mother at Paris. But Lady
-Morton had an enemy to contend with in the
-proud spirit of the English Princess, who was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[127]</span>
-indignant at being clothed in a coarse dress,
-and still more at being mistaken for a boy; and
-she kept informing the passers by of her royal
-state, which information was fortunately unintelligible.</p>
-
-<p>On the death of the King, she accompanied
-her mother to France, where they lived in great
-seclusion; on her first arrival indeed, the
-widowed Queen of England had established a
-small court, and some degree of state, but the
-niggardliness of the Cardinal-Minister, Mazarin,
-soon reduced her means. The first appearance
-of the young Princess was on the occasion of a
-select ball at court, given by Anne of Austria
-in her own private apartments. The Queen-Mother
-had taken a fancy to the beautiful girl,
-and the entertainment was given in her honour:
-Anne was therefore most indignant, when the
-King selected one of the beauties of her own
-Court, as his partner for the first dance. She
-separated their hands sharply, and in a
-peremptory tone, desired her son to dance with
-the English Princess. Louis XIV., in a pet,
-replied, “he did not care to dance with little
-girls,” and that in so audible a tone, as to be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[128]</span>
-overheard by mother, and daughter. In vain
-Queen Henrietta Maria, stung to the quick by
-the slight put upon her child, declared she
-could not dance, having sprained her ancle;
-Anne of Austria insisted, and the King
-reluctantly led out his unwilling partner, whose
-crimson cheeks, and streaming eyes, drew the
-attention of the whole society upon her. For
-some time the King cherished a feeling of dislike
-towards the young Princess, so much so as to
-oppose the union between her, and his brother
-Monsieur, the Duke of Orleans. But this
-marriage was resolved on by the two royal
-mothers, and it was finally arranged that the
-nuptials should take place, on the return of the
-Queen and Princess Henrietta from England,
-whither they went for the ostensible motive
-of congratulating Charles II. on his restoration
-to the throne, although it was well known that
-political intrigues were mixed up with these
-congratulations.</p>
-
-<p>At her brother’s Court the young Henrietta
-“turned all heads, and inflamed all hearts,”
-says a contemporary. The Duke of Buckingham,
-who accompanied them on their return<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[129]</span>
-to France, incurred the maternal anger, by his
-undisguised devotion to the fiançée of Monsieur.
-The voyage was a disastrous one, the vessel
-struck on a rock, and nearly went to pieces, and
-no sooner had they gained the shore in safety,
-than the Princess sickened of the measles.
-The Duke of Buckingham, maddened by the
-dangers both by sea, and land, to which the
-beautiful object of his sudden passion, was
-exposed, became so demonstrative in the
-expressions of his grief, and affection, that the
-English Queen judged it prudent, to despatch
-him as avant-courier, to Paris. On her recovery,
-and return thither, the Princess found herself
-as much admired as she had been at her
-brother’s Court, and the King opened his eyes
-and wondered at himself for not caring to dance
-with “such a little girl.” “Les yeux vifs,
-noirs, brillans, pleins de feu,” says Choisy, “elle
-fut l’objet de tous les empressemens imaginables,
-compris ceux de Monsieur. Elle a l’esprit
-aussi aimable que le reste.” The Duke of
-Orleans was not supposed to be much in love
-with his wife, but that did not prevent his
-being very jealous of the Dukes of Buckingham,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[130]</span>
-and Guiche, in particular. Buckingham indeed
-had brought the husband’s jealousy on his own
-head, by his absurd demeanour, and had been
-the means of instilling suspicion into his mind,
-with regard to the Duc de Guiche, a remarkably
-handsome, and attractive young courtier.
-In another quarter, jealousy was rife, for the
-newly married Queen of France, Maria Theresa,
-deeply attached to a husband who remained
-always indifferent to her, watched with dismay
-the influence “Madame,” (as Henrietta was
-now called) exercised over the King.</p>
-
-<p>The second Court under “Madame’s”
-auspices, with its young beauties, its easy
-conversation, and pleasant pastimes, was exactly
-suited to the Monarch’s taste, and he was
-known to have said, in speaking of the Duchess
-of Orleans, “qu’il connoissoit en la voyant de
-plus près, combien il avoit été injuste, à la plus
-belle personne du monde.” The admiration
-she excited, and the influence she obtained over
-her brother-in-law, ended indeed, only with her
-life. Her small Court was brilliant, in the
-extreme, and they amused themselves in divers
-ways. “Madame, montoit à cheval, suivie de<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[131]</span>
-toutes ses dames, habillées galamment, avec
-mille plumes sur leurs têtes, accompagnées du
-Roi, et de la jeunesse de la Cour.” Monsieur
-lived a great deal in the Palais Royal, and
-there she would go to sup with him, taking
-all her ladies, and chosen friends with her.
-Mademoiselle de la Vallière was one of her Maids
-of Honour, and the liaison with the King, began
-under Henrietta’s roof. She had been very
-fond of the beautiful girl, but treated her with
-marked displeasure, in the latter days.</p>
-
-<p>Madame made a second journey to England,
-for the purpose of concluding a private treaty,
-between her brother, and the French monarch,
-and of detaching the former from his alliance with
-Holland. On this occasion, she was accompanied
-by the celebrated Mademoiselle de la Quérouaille,
-afterwards Duchess of Portsmouth, who had
-also her sealed orders. The mission was
-successful, though neither advantageous, nor
-honourable, as far as England was concerned.
-Madame returned in triumph, took up her
-abode at the Palace of St. Cloud, and appeared
-to have reached the zenith of worldly prosperity,
-always excepting the unhappy difference, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[132]</span>
-her husband, which commenced so soon after
-their marriage, and had increased rather than
-diminished. Her tried friend, and trusty confidant
-in these trials, was Cosnac, Bishop of
-Valence, afterwards Archbishop of Aix, a
-distinguished, but eccentric man. At twenty-four
-years of age, he preached a sermon, which
-made such an impression on the mind, of
-Mazarin, the Cardinal Minister, that on the
-conclusion of the service, he promised the
-preacher a bishopric; what he called “faire un
-maréchal de France sur la brêche.” Cosnac
-was afterwards appointed almoner to Monsieur,
-and resided with him, for some time, during
-which period, he endeavoured to gain an
-influence for good, over the mind of this fickle,
-and vacillating Prince, and often expostulated
-with him, on his conduct to the Duchess. They
-quarrelled, and separated, but his indignation
-against Monsieur’s unworthy favourite, the
-Chevalier de Loraine, so enraged the Duke that
-he contrived to procure a sentence of exile,
-against Cosnac. But absence could not sever
-the bonds of friendship, which bound him to
-Henrietta, and of which he gave a valuable<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[133]</span>
-proof, on the occasion of a libel, that was
-published against her in Holland, at the time
-of her negociations between England, and
-France. The Duchess dreaded lest the scurrilous
-pamphlet, most damaging to her reputation,
-should fall into her husband’s hands, and
-she wrote off in terror to her exiled friend,
-to ask his assistance. Cosnac immediately
-despatched an emissary to Holland, who did his
-work so effectually, that the whole edition was
-bought up, the publication stopped, and all
-the extant copies brought over, to be destroyed
-by this zealous friend. As in duty bound,
-“Madame” worked hard to obtain the Bishop’s
-recall, so much so that the King thought her
-attachment to him, must be of a more tender
-nature than she confessed. Louis XIV., in all
-probability, was not a good judge of friendship,
-or a believer in it, where a woman was
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>In her correspondence with Cosnac, in
-speaking of her mission to England, she hints
-at the hope of Charles II. becoming a Roman
-Catholic, in the event of which she promises
-that he shall obtain a Cardinal’s hat. On her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[134]</span>
-return from England, four days before her death,
-describing the affectionate reception, she had
-met with from the French King, she says: “Le
-Roi même à mon retour m’a témoigné beaucoup
-de bonté; mais pour Monsieur rien n’est égal à
-son acharnement, pour trouver moyen de se
-plaindre. Il me fit l’honneur de me dire, que
-je suis toute puissante, et que par conséquent si
-je ne fais pas revenir le Chevalier de Loraine,
-exilé par le Roi, je ne me soucie pas de lui
-plaire, et il fait ensuite des menaces, pour le
-temps à venir.” To the same correspondent,
-she complains that her little girl is brought up,
-to hate her. Three days later, towards five
-o’clock in the afternoon, the Duchess of Orleans
-asked for a glass of iced chicory water; a short
-time after drinking which, she was seized with
-excruciating pain, and strong convulsions. As
-her condition grew worse, it became evident to
-herself, and all around her, that the end was
-approaching. Her confessor, Feuillet, was sent
-for, and in his questions, and exhortations, he did
-not spare his dying penitent, but both he, and
-Bossuet, who was also present, became deeply
-affected, by the humble devotion, and pious<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[135]</span>
-resignation, to the Divine Will, which the
-unhappy Princess, evinced in the midst of all
-her sufferings. She was most anxious not to
-forget any one, and recalling a promise she had
-made, some time ago to a friend, she called one
-of her weeping attendants to her, and gave
-orders where she would find a ring, and to
-whom it should be sent, as her parting gift. As
-the last moment approached, she placed her
-hand in that of her husband, and gazing
-earnestly in his face said most emphatically:
-“Monsieur, je ne vous ai jamais manqué.”
-She thought of every one in her last moments,
-and closed an adventurous, and chequered life, at
-the early age of twenty-six, at peace, with all
-mankind, repentant, and trusting in the mercy
-of God.</p>
-
-<p>That her death was the effect of poison, none
-could doubt: the question arose, who was the
-murderer. The King sent for his brother, and
-charged him with the crime, and a violent scene
-ensued between them; but the real criminal
-appears to have been the exiled Chevalier de
-Loraine, and evidence of the strongest nature
-was brought to show, that he sent the poison<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[136]</span>
-from Rome by a Monsieur Morel (who was not
-in the secret) to the Marquise d’Effiat, and a
-footman deposed, to seeing the Marquise rubbing
-the inside of the cup, which was immediately
-afterwards given to Madame, with the chicory
-water, when she complained of thirst. Be this
-as it may, no sooner was she dead, than the
-Chevalier de Loraine was recalled from exile,
-and the whole matter hushed up.</p>
-
-<p>Cosnac’s description of Madame, was as
-follows: “Elle avoit l’esprit solide, et du bon sens,
-l’âme grande, et fort éclairée, sur tout ce qu’il
-faudroit faire, mais quelque-fois elle ne le
-faisoit pas, par une faiblesse naturelle....
-Elle mêlait dans toute sa conversation, une
-douceur qu’on ne trouvoit point dans les autres
-personnes royales; ce n’est pas qu’elle eût
-moins de majesté, mais elle en savoit user d’une
-manière plus facile, et plus touchante. Pour
-les traits de son visage, on n’en trouve point de
-plus achevés; les yeux vifs, sans être rudes, la
-bouche admirable, le nez parfait (chose rare),
-le teint blanc et uni, la taille médiocre mais
-fine: son esprit animait tout son corps; elle
-en avoit jusqu’aux pieds; elle dansait mieux<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[137]</span>
-que femme au monde.” She loved poetry and
-befriended poets: Corneille in his old age, and
-Racine, whose heart she gained by shedding
-tears at the first reading of his “Andromaque.”
-La Force said after her death: “Le goût des
-choses de l’esprit avoit fort baissé. Il est
-certain qu’en perdant cette Princesse la cour
-perdoit la seule personne de son sang, qui était
-capable d’aimer et de distinguer le mérite, et
-il n’y a eu depuis sa mort, que jeu, confusion, et
-impolitesse.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Charles V., Emperor of Germany</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By TIZIANO VECELLI.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Armour, Standing by a Table, on which is his Plumed
-Helmet.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born at Ghent, 1500. Died 1558.—The
-son of Philip, Archduke of Austria, by Joan
-the Mad, heiress of Castile, and daughter of
-Ferdinand and Isabella. Became King of
-Spain in 1516, and Emperor of Germany in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[138]</span>
-1519, on the death of Maximilian. Francis I.,
-King of France, was his competitor for the
-imperial dignity, and a war was the result,
-when the French King was defeated, and made
-prisoner. But Charles’s whole life was spent
-in warfare, until his abdication, and final
-seclusion from the world, in the Convent of San
-Yuste, in Estremadura, where he died. He
-married the daughter of the King of Portugal,
-by whom he had Philip II. and two daughters.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Prince Rupert</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By VANDYCK.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Rich Dress of Murrey Coloured Satin, with Cuirass.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1619. Died, 1682.—The fourth son of
-Frederic, Elector Palatine, afterwards King of
-Bohemia, by Elizabeth, daughter of James I.,
-King of Great Britain. His birth at Prague
-was hailed with great joy, and his baptism was
-an occasion of extraordinary pomp. He was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[139]</span>
-an intelligent and merry child, and as a youth,
-his elder brother writes home accounts of his
-proficiency in study, and in athletic exercises,
-describing “our Rupert,” as a species of
-Admirable Crichton. Both he, and his brother
-Charles were educated at Leyden, and stood
-very high at the collegiate examination, when
-their father, the unfortunate King of Bohemia,
-travelled thither, and saw his boys for the last
-time. Rupert studied war under Henry, Prince
-of Orange: at thirteen he was present at the
-siege of Rhymberg; at eighteen he commanded
-a regiment of cavalry. After her husband’s
-death, Elizabeth was advised to send her
-two elder sons to colonise in distant countries;
-the elder in Madagascar, and Rupert in
-the West Indies: but the high spirited
-Princess declared “no son of hers, should
-become a knight errant.” Prince Rupert’s
-later career might well have entitled him to
-the epithet, Elizabeth so much disapproved.
-He distinguished himself in several campaigns,
-was made prisoner, and at the termination of
-his captivity, accepted the invitation of his
-uncle, Charles I., to repair to England.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[140]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Queen of Bohemia had considered
-herself aggrieved, by the unsatisfactory replies
-which her brother returned to her frequent
-applications for sympathy and assistance, but
-on the arrival of Rupert and his brother in
-England, the former was granted an English
-title, installed as Knight of the Garter, and
-made Commander in Chief of Cavalry. The
-Prince was zealous and loyal, and his courage
-undoubted; but he laid himself open to just
-censure by his imprudence, and temerity.
-Charles loved his nephew, but the blame which
-attached to his tactics in the fatal battle of
-Naseby, was confirmed by the Prince’s feeble
-defence of Bristol, for the safety of which
-place, he had pledged himself. The King
-deprived him of his command, and wrote him
-so severe a letter, that Rupert sought an
-audience of his royal uncle at Belvoir Castle,
-indignantly denying the charge of treason
-imputed to him, but honestly confessing his
-imprudence, and shortcomings. Pepys many
-years afterwards, alludes to this incident when
-he says: “The Prince was the boldest attaquer
-in the world, and yet in the defence of Bristol,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[141]</span>
-no man ever did worse, wanting in patience
-and a seasoned head, etc.” Pepys did not love
-Rupert, who once rated him roundly, in the
-presence of the King, Charles II. The same
-authority says on another occasion, that the
-nation was displeased at Rupert’s obtaining
-a command, as he was accounted a “most
-unhappy man.” His next adventure was
-especially so: Charles I. sent him to Ireland,
-in charge of that portion of the fleet, which had
-remained faithful to the royal cause, but his
-unlucky star was still in the ascendant. He
-was compelled to seek safety at Lisbon, pursued
-by the Parliamentary squadron, and after many
-losses, and disasters, he took refuge in America,
-where he remained some years. Thence to
-France, where, says, one of his biographers,
-“ses aventures romanesques, ses esclaves Maures,
-son train bizarre, le firent un objet de curiosité
-et le héros de plus d’une intrigue galante.”
-He returned to England on the restoration of
-Charles II. “The Prince Rupert is come to
-Court,” says Pepys; “welcome to nobody;” yet
-his great courage and the frequency of his
-exploits in the war against Holland, when he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[142]</span>
-was appointed to a command in the fleet, first
-under the Duke of York, then conjointly with
-the Duke of Albemarle, and finally in 1673,
-when he had the sole command, might well
-have entitled him to the gratitude of the King
-and the nation.</p>
-
-<p>The wear, and tear, of an adventurous life,
-the effects of a deep wound, received in
-Flanders, determined Rupert at length, to
-retire from public life, and seek the repose so
-necessary to him. He was made Governor
-of Windsor Castle, and he found great resource
-in the cultivation of arts, which had always
-occupied the few leisure hours he had hitherto
-enjoyed; physics, chemistry, the improvement
-of fire-arms, etc. Horace Walpole says: “It
-is a trite observation, that gunpowder was
-invented by a monk, and printing by a soldier:
-and it is an additional honour to the latter
-profession, to have invented mezzotinto;” upon
-which he relates the following anecdote:
-Prince Rupert, when in Holland, was one
-morning, attracted by seeing a sentinel rubbing
-the barrel of his musket, vehemently. On
-approaching, and examining the gun, he found<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[143]</span>
-that the damp of the early morning, had rusted
-the metal, and this, combined with friction, had
-produced a kind of arabesque, or pattern on
-the metal, like a friezed work eaten in with
-numerous little dots, part of which the soldier
-was scraping away. This set the Prince
-thinking, how he could produce a lasting effect
-of the same kind, and in combination with his
-friend, Vaillant the painter, he invented a steel
-roller, cut with tools to make teeth in the
-manner of a file, or rasp, with projecting points
-which produced the black ground, and this being
-scraped away, or diminished at pleasure, left the
-gradations of light.</p>
-
-<p>Prince Rupert was never married, but he left
-two illegitimate children.</p>
-
-<p>Grammont says: “Il étoit brave, et vaillant,
-jusqu’à la témérité. Il avoit le génie fécond en
-expériences de mathématique, et quelque talent
-pour la chimie. Poli jusqu’à l’excès, quand
-l’occasion ne le demandait pas, fier, et même
-brutal quand il étoit question de se humaniser,
-son visage étoit sec, et dur....” But Lely,
-and Vandyck paint more comely portraits of
-the brave “Knight-errant.” He was a messmate<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[144]</span>
-of the Earl of Sandwich, and it is no
-wonder the portraits of the two brave sailors,
-should hang together in the Englishman’s
-ancestral home. Lely painted, (as we are told
-by Pepys,) “all the Flaggmen; and in his studio
-I saw the pictures of the Earl of Sandwich,
-Prince Rupert, etc.” But from his account of
-the campaign at sea, he leads us to believe that
-both Rupert, and the Duke of Albemarle, were
-jealous of the popularity, and fame which Lord
-Sandwich has justly gained in England, through
-his prowess.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Henrietta Maria, Queen of England</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By VANDYCK.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(White Satin Dress. Lace, Pearls. Standing by a Table,
-on which the Crown is placed.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1607. Died, 1669.—Daughter of
-Henry IV., King of France, by Marie de
-Medicis. Attracted the notice of Charles,
-Prince of Wales, on his route to Madrid, where<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[145]</span>
-he travelled in disguise, with the Duke of
-Buckingham, to ask the hand of the Infanta of
-Spain. On the failure of the negociations
-between France and Spain, Charles remembered
-the young French Princess, and became her
-suitor. The marriage was concluded, under
-circumstances which appeared to promise great
-prosperity; but alas, for human foresight! the
-young Queen’s life was destined to be one prolonged
-struggle, of sorrow, distress, and difficulty.
-She took refuge in France, soon after
-the birth of her daughter Henrietta, and was
-there warmly welcomed, and treated with
-liberality by the King; her constant pecuniary
-difficulties being usually attributed to her
-generosity, to the English Royalists.</p>
-
-<p>When Charles I., took leave of the Princess
-Elizabeth, who had remained in England, he
-sent his last farewell to the Queen, assuring her
-that during the whole course of their union, he
-had never been unfaithful to her, even in
-thought. In 1660, Charles II. having been
-proclaimed King in London, his mother, accompanied
-by the Princess Henrietta, visited him,
-ostensibly to offer her congratulations, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[146]</span>
-really to recover part of her dowry, and also to
-prevent, if possible, the acknowledgement of
-the private marriage of her son, the Duke of
-York, with Anne Hyde. But her opposition to
-this marriage was overruled, from political, and
-prudential motives. On her return to Paris,
-and after the union of her daughter, with the
-Duke of Orleans, Queen Henrietta Maria,
-bought a house at Colombes, where she lived a
-most retired life. “Elle étoit,” says Madame
-de Motteville, “sans nulle façon.” In her
-frugal manner of life, and the courage she
-displayed in danger, and vicissitude, this
-Princess resembled her father, the great Henry.
-She was much disfigured by illness and sorrow:
-“Elle avoit même la taille un peu gatée; sa
-beauté,” says Madame de Motteville, “n’avoit
-duré que l’espace d’un matin, et l’avoit quitté
-avant son midi; elle maintenoit que les femmes
-ne peuvent plus être belles, passé vingt-deux
-ans. Elle avoit infiniment de l’esprit; elle
-étoit agréable dans la société, honnête, douce, et
-facile; son tempérament étoit tourné du côté
-de la gaieté.” Henrietta Maria died suddenly
-at her house at Colombes, and was buried at<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[147]</span>
-St. Denis, but she desired that her heart should
-rest in the Convent of Ste. Marie de Chaillot, a
-Sisterhood, for whom she had much affection.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward, first Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(When Young. In a Brown Dress. Pointing to a Globe.
-Curtain in Background.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[148]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[149]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="MORNING_ROOM"><i>MORNING ROOM.</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[150]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR GODFREY KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length: Oval.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Light Coloured Dress. Blue Scarf.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1658. Died, 1744.—The youngest
-daughter of Richard Jennings, Esq., of
-Sundridge, near St. Albans, by the daughter
-and heiress, of Sir Gifford Thornhurst. She
-was presented when quite young at Court,
-where her sister Frances, (afterwards Lady
-Tyrconnel) had already distinguished herself
-by her laxity of conduct, as well as her beauty.
-Sarah’s features may not have rivalled her
-sister’s in regularity, but her countenance was
-full of expression, her complexion delicate,
-and the profusion of her fair hair, formed a most
-attractive combination. She became the centre
-of a host of adorers, amongst whom she preferred,
-in spite of his poverty, “the young,
-handsome, graceful, insinuating, and eloquent
-Churchill.” On his side, the young Colonel
-who, even in early days, had established a character<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[151]</span>
-for avarice, was so enamoured of the
-portionless girl, as to refuse a rich heiress with
-a plain face, who had been proposed to him.
-But in her beauty, her ambition, her indomitable
-will, and the close friendship which united
-her to the Princess (afterwards Queen) Anne,
-the bride brought her husband, a dowry which
-made him “a Duke, a sovereign Prince of the
-Empire, the Captain General of a great
-coalition, the arbiter between mighty Princes,
-and the wealthiest subject in Europe.” The
-friendship between Lady Churchill, and Anne,
-the tyranny which the high-spirited, hot-tempered
-and wilful Lady of the Bedchamber,
-exercised over her royal mistress, for many
-years, are matters too well known, to be here
-recapitulated. The romantic friendship of
-Mrs. Morley, and Mrs. Freeman, the manner
-in which Anne as Princess, and Queen, even
-after her marriage to the Prince of Denmark,
-gave herself up to the dominion of her
-favourite, until the self-imposed yoke became
-unbearable, and was suddenly and completely
-discarded, are historical facts, bound up with
-public events.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[152]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Duchess of Marlborough was supplanted
-by her own <i>protégée</i>, Mrs. Masham, and
-peremptorily dismissed, in spite of prayers,
-rages and “scenes.” Voltaire says: “Quelques
-paires de gants qu’elle refusa à la Reine, un verre
-d’eau qu’elle laissa tomber par une méprise! sur
-la robe de Madame Masham, changèrent la face
-de l’Europe,” alluding to the political changes,
-which ensued on the downfall of Sarah, Duchess
-of Marlborough. In her latter days, her temper,
-embittered by these untoward circumstances,
-became ungovernable; she quarrelled with her
-husband, her son-in-law, her grandchildren,
-and gave way to the most violent outbursts of
-passion. The Duke of Marlborough was a
-constant, and affectionate husband, and it is
-related that on one occasion, when he strove to
-pacify her rage by a compliment to the beauty
-of her luxuriant hair, she seized the scissors,
-cut it off, and flung it in his face. When the
-Duke died, the long fair tresses, were found
-carefully preserved in a drawer.</p>
-
-<p>Sarah was a widow for twenty-two years;
-in spite of her age, perhaps on account of her
-immense fortune, the Duke of Somerset, and
-Lord Coningsby were both suitors, for her hand.
-To the latter, she replied, after reminding him
-that she was sixty-three, “but were I only
-thirty, and could you lay the world at my feet,
-I would never bestow on you, the heart and
-hand, which belonged exclusively to John,
-Duke of Marlborough.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>John, Second Duke of Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By PHILLIPS.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Right Hand on a Table, Left on the Back of a Chair, on
-which a Greyhound is standing. Court Suit, Star,
-Garter, and Ribbon of the Order.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1682. Died, 1749.—The only surviving
-son of Ralph, first Duke of Montagu, by
-his first wife, the Countess of Northumberland.
-In 1705, he married Lady Mary Churchill,
-youngest daughter, and co-heiress of the Duke
-of Marlborough, by Sarah Jennings, his wife,
-by whom he had several sons, who all died in
-their childhood, as did one of his daughters;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[153]</span>
-but two survived him, Lady Isabella, married
-to the Duke of Manchester, and Lady Mary, to
-the Earl of Cardigan. He was Lord High
-Constable of England, at the coronation of
-George I., Knight of the Garter, and one of the
-first Knights of the Bath, as well as Great
-Master of that new Order, with several other
-honours. Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough, in
-her unpublished volume of remarks and axioms,
-(which does her little honour) is very hard upon
-her son-in-law. She declares he had no just
-claim for place, or favour on the Government, on
-account of services, by sea, or land; but this
-statement is emphatically contradicted, in a
-marginal note, stating that Montagu had served
-under the great Duke of Marlborough himself.
-He seems by all accounts, to have been a kind
-hearted, and benevolent man, but undoubtedly
-whimsical, and eccentric; witness an anecdote
-told of him in one of the periodicals of the
-day. In his walks in St. James’s Park, he was
-attracted by the daily sight of an old gentleman,
-of military aspect, but shabby, and poverty
-stricken in his dress, who usually sat, and
-sunned himself, on one of the benches in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[154]</span>
-the avenue. The Duke sent his servant, one
-day to the old soldier, and asked him, to come
-and visit him. Nothing loth, but much
-bewildered, the stranger followed the lacquey,
-through the corridors, and well furnished rooms,
-to the ducal presence. Here he was asked, and
-had to tell, his sorrowful tale. He had served
-his country, but had no pension; he had married
-a wife without a dowry, and she and her children
-were half starving, down in Wales, while he had
-come to London on the sad, and hopeless errand,
-of getting something, to live upon. He had a
-wretched room, where he slept, and spent most
-of his time, on a bench, in the Park. The Duke
-listened, and fed him, gave him a trifling sum,
-and said he hoped to see him again, ere very
-long. Accordingly, some time afterwards, the
-old man received a letter from the Duke, begging
-him to come to dinner, telling him that he
-had a most mysterious, and confidential communication,
-to make. The soldier, to whom his
-whole acquaintance with Montagu appeared
-like a fairy tale, brushed up his thread-bare suit,
-and presented himself to the Duke, who in a
-most private, and mysterious manner, assured<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[155]</span>
-him, that there was a certain lady, who admired
-him very much, and who had earnestly desired
-an interview with him; indeed, the Duke went
-on to say, so entirely was her heart set on the
-meeting, that he had consented to be the go-between.
-More bewildered than ever, the
-soldier pleaded his wrinkled face, his scanty
-grey hairs, and, above all, his allegiance to the
-poor wife, far away among the Welsh mountains.
-The Duke was jocose, treated the matter with
-levity, and gave his arm to lead the astonished
-guest to the hospitable board, where the lady
-would be seated; and there indeed, smiling
-amid her tears, sate his wife, and her children,
-and after a sumptuous repast, the happy couple
-left the ducal roof, with their pockets sufficiently
-well lined (with the addition of a small pension
-also promised by their noble friend), to keep the
-wolf from their humble door. Such whimsical
-fancies as these, would not have suited the stern
-and economical Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough.</p>
-
-<p>John, Duke of Montagu, died at Montagu
-House, Whitehall, in the sixty-eighth year of
-his age, when his title became extinct.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[156]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>John, Fourth Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By ZOFFANY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Small Full-length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Seated near a Table, on which he rests his Left Arm.
-Crimson and Gold Court Dress.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Miss Margaret Ray</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By GAINSBOROUGH.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Blue Dress.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1742, Murdered, 1779.—Some say
-the daughter of a stay-maker in Covent
-Garden, others that she was born at Elstree, in
-Herts, where her father was a labourer. In
-early life, she was apprenticed to a dressmaker
-in Clerkenwell, but her first meeting with
-John, fourth Earl of Sandwich, was at a shop
-in Tavistock-street, where he was buying some
-neck-cloths. Struck with her extreme beauty,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[157]</span>
-his lordship took her under his protection,
-established her at Hinchingbrook, and superintended
-her education. Margaret repaid the
-pains that were bestowed on her, but her
-especial talent was for music, and under the
-tuition of Mr. Bates, (afterwards secretary to
-Lord Sandwich) and Signor Giardini, her sweet
-and powerful voice, was fully developed, and
-she sang to perfection, in the Oratorio of
-“Jephthah,” in Italian bravuras, and in the
-catches and glees, which so often formed part of
-the varied entertainments, at Hinchingbrook.
-Every Christmas, indeed, Lord Sandwich
-caused an oratorio to be performed, at his
-country house, where Miss Ray was the
-principal attraction, although she had several
-rivals in musical talent, both professional, and
-amateur. On one occasion Mr. Cradock, an
-intimate friend of Lord Sandwich’s, tells us
-that he accompanied his lordship, Mr. Bates,
-Miss Ray and another lady, to Vauxhall, where
-some musical friends met them, and they sang
-catches, and glees, in the box, to the delight of
-the audience, who greatly admired the beauty
-and vocal powers, of the fair (to them) unknown
-performer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[158]</span></p>
-
-<p>Miss Ray was remarkable, while under Lord
-Sandwich’s roof, for her discreet and circumspect
-conduct, in a most equivocal position;
-and his lordship appears to have been very
-strict, lest anyone, as he expressed himself,
-“should exceed the boundary line,” that he had
-drawn. For example, at the oratorios where
-she shone so conspicuously, the society were
-not expected to notice her, and she herself
-was sadly embarrassed one evening, when Lady
-Blake advanced between the scenes to converse
-with her, the singer well knowing such a step
-would arouse the noble host’s displeasure; a
-well grounded suspicion as he went so far as to
-say “such a trespass might occasion the overthrow
-of our music meetings.” The Bishop of
-Lincoln’s wife pays this tribute to Margaret:
-“She was so assiduous to please, so excellent
-and unassuming, I felt it cruel to sit directly
-opposite to her, and yet find it impossible to
-notice her.”</p>
-
-<p>At these oratorios, the Duke of Manchester’s
-band generally attended, and Lord Sandwich
-took the direction of the kettledrums, as,
-indeed, he sometimes did at public music<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[159]</span>
-meetings, at Leicester (and elsewhere), where
-Mr. Cradock says: “The Earl and the Otaheitan,
-Omai, (whom he had brought with him) divided
-public attention.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cradock was with Lord Sandwich, when
-he first became acquainted with Hackman. My
-Lord had taken Mr. Cradock to Cambridge, to
-vote for a candidate for a professorship in
-whom he was interested, and brought his friend
-back with him, in his chaise to Hinchingbrook.
-Under the gateway they met a neighbour,
-Major Reynolds, with a brother officer, who
-was presented as Captain Hackman. Lord
-Sandwich, with his usual hospitality, invited
-the two officers to a family dinner, and in the
-evening, he and Miss Ray encountered Major
-Reynolds, and Mr. Cradock at whist, Captain
-Hackman preferring to overlook the game.
-There can be little doubt that Miss Ray
-inspired the young soldier with love, at first
-sight. Hackman at that time was on a recruiting
-party at Huntingdon; he became a constant
-visitor at Hinchingbrook, and it seems that
-whenever Miss Ray drove out, he constantly
-waylaid her, bowing low as she passed. There was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[160]</span>
-evidently a great difference of opinion as to Miss
-Ray’s feelings, with regard to her new admirer.
-One account of the transaction affirms that she
-was not insensible to his devotion, and that the
-black servant, believing she was false, imparted
-his suspicions to Lord Sandwich. The same
-authority states that his Lordship taxed his
-beautiful companion with her inconstancy, and
-either through his influence, or that of Major
-Reynolds, Hackman obtained a recommendation
-to Sir John Swaine, Adjutant-general in Ireland,
-where he remained nearly two years. But he
-never forgot the beautiful Margaret, and leaving
-the army, he entered the Church, obtained a
-living in Norfolk, and wrote her a passionate
-love letter, in which he proposed marriage, and
-went so far as to promise tenderness, and protection
-for her children by Lord Sandwich.
-This offer was refused with decision, whether
-from fidelity to her protector, anxiety for her
-children’s welfare, or indifference to her adorer,
-we cannot say. Her situation was certainly not
-one of calm enjoyment. One evening at the
-Admiralty she complained to Mr. Cradock, that
-she did not believe either Lord Sandwich, or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[161]</span>
-herself was safe to go out, from the fury of the
-mob, and that coarse ballads, and libels were
-sung under the windows, which looked upon the
-Park. Bursting into tears, she besought Mr.
-Cradock to intercede with Lord Sandwich, to
-make some settlement on her, not from mercenary
-motives, but because she wished to relieve
-my Lord from greater expense, and to go on the
-stage. Her voice was at its best, Italian music
-her forte, and she was sure that through her
-friend Signor Giardini, and Mr. Cradock’s
-friends Mrs. Brooke and Mrs. Yates, she could
-secure an advantageous engagement. As might
-have been supposed, Mr. Cradock declined to
-interfere, and the matter dropped.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, Hackman, on the receipt
-of Miss Ray’s letter, which put a stop to his
-long cherished hopes, stung to the quick, and in
-such distress of mind, as brought him to the
-verge of madness, rushed up to London. He
-strove to effect an interview with the singing
-master, Signor Galli, but this was prevented by
-the vigilance of Lord Sandwich, who entrusted
-the Italian with the task of informing Mr.
-Hackman that Miss Ray would have no more<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[162]</span>
-communication with him. He took a lodging
-in Duke’s Court, St. Martin’s Lane, and on the
-7th of April, 1779, he passed the morning in
-reading Blair’s Sermons, and dined with his
-sister, and her husband, a newly married couple.
-He then went out, proceeded to the Admiralty,
-and seeing Lord Sandwich’s coach at the door,
-he imagined it likely that Miss Ray might be
-going in it, to call on her friend Signora Galli,
-at her lodgings in the Haymarket. Thence he
-walked to the Cannon Coffee-house, Charing
-Cross, and watching the carriage pass, he
-followed it in time to see Miss Ray, and Signora
-Galli enter Covent Garden Theatre. On going
-in, he was distracted with jealousy at seeing her
-addressed by “a gentleman of genteel and
-handsome appearance,” whom he afterwards
-found to be Lord Coleraine. The performance
-was “Love in a Village.” He went out,
-furnished himself with a brace of loaded
-pistols, and returned to Covent Garden. When
-the play was over, he kept Miss Ray with her
-two companions in view, through the lobby,
-where there was a great crowd, until she was
-under the piazza, and her coach was called, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[163]</span>
-the name of Lady Sandwich. He was pushed
-down by a chairman, running suddenly against
-him, but recovered himself in time to pursue
-his victim to her coach, in which Signora Galli
-had already taken her place. Stepping between
-Miss Ray, who had accepted the arm of Mr.
-McNamara (of Lincoln’s Inn Fields), and the
-coach, he discharged his right hand pistol at
-her, and his left at himself. The beautiful and
-unfortunate woman, raised her hand to her head,
-and dropped down dead at his feet. Hackman
-fell at the same moment, but finding that he
-was still alive, he beat himself about the head,
-with the pistol, crying to the bystanders to kill
-him. The murderer, and the victim, were both
-carried to the Shakespeare Tavern; the corpse
-lay in one room, while the wounded man was
-attended to, in another. He enquired for her,
-and declared he only meant to kill himself, and
-had failed in his object. He was taken before
-Sir John Fielding, who committed him to
-Tothill Fields Bridewell, and afterwards to
-Newgate, where he was constantly watched to
-prevent his making away, with himself. He
-was attended on his trial by a friend, and on<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[164]</span>
-first entering the court, was much agitated,
-sighing, and weeping while the evidence was
-being given, yet at the same time showing a
-courageous, and even noble deportment as
-concerned his own fate. He made a most
-pathetic speech, in which he confessed his guilt,
-but attributed it to sudden phrensy, as regarded
-murder. The suicide, he said, was premeditated.
-He had no wish to avoid punishment; he was
-too unhappy to care for life, now she was gone,
-and he submitted himself to the judgment of
-Almighty God. A letter found in his pocket, to
-his brother-in-law, taking leave of him, and
-speaking in the most affectionate terms of his
-“beloved woman,” seemed to bear out his
-testimony. His hearers were much affected,
-but on his return to the cell he became composed,
-and said he was rejoiced to think, his time on
-earth was so short. After his sentence was
-passed, he received the following letter in
-prison:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p>“If the murderer of Miss —— wishes to live, the man
-he has most injured, will use all his interest to procure his
-life.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[165]</span></p>
-
-<p>The prisoner’s reply was as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="right">“Condemned Cell, Newgate.</p>
-
-<p>“The murderer of her, whom he preferred, far preferred to
-life, suspects the hand from which he has just received, such
-an offer as he neither desires, nor deserves. His wishes are
-for death, not life. One wish he has: Could he be pardoned
-in this world, by the man he has most injured? Oh, my
-Lord, when I meet her in another world, enable me to tell
-her—if departed spirits are not ignorant of earthly things—that
-you forgive us both, and that you will be a father to
-her dear children.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>He suffered death calmly, and thus ended the
-career of a man, who seemed formed for better
-things.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Cradock, who was sincerely attached
-both to Lord Sandwich, and the unfortunate
-cause of so much sorrow, tells us that on
-the day following the murder, he went to the
-Admiralty, and saw old James, the black servant,
-whom he found overwhelmed with grief. It
-was he who began to break the terrible news to
-his master, when Lord Sandwich interrupted
-him, by bidding him “allude no more to the
-ballads and libels, of which he had heard
-enough.” “Alas,” said the faithful old man,
-“it is something more terrible than that.”<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[166]</span>
-Others then came in from the theatre and
-related the dreadful intelligence. Lord
-Sandwich, stood for awhile transfixed with
-horror, then raising his hand exclaimed, “I
-could have borne anything but this,” and
-rushed upstairs, desiring that no one should
-follow him. He shunned society, for a long
-time after the dreadful catastrophe, and his
-friend Cradock tells us, that he went to see him,
-and found him terribly depressed one day,
-sitting under the portrait of Miss Ray, “a
-speaking likeness;” doubtless the one in
-question.</p>
-
-<p>By Miss Ray, Lord Sandwich had four
-children, viz., Admiral Montagu, Basil Montagu,
-Q.C., John Montagu, and Augusta, married to
-the Comte de Viry, of Savoy, an Admiral in
-the Sardinian Navy.</p>
-
-<p>This beautiful portrait by Gainsborough,
-belonged to Admiral Montagu, and was
-purchased by John, seventh Earl of Sandwich,
-in 1857, of a picture dealer, at the instigation
-of Mr. Green, of Evans’s Rooms, who told him
-he much wished to possess it himself, having a
-collection of portraits of celebrities, but the
-price was beyond his mark.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[167]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Lady Louisa Corry, Afterwards Countess of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HAMILTON.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Small Half-length.</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>John William, Seventh Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the</span> HON. HENRY GRAVES.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Peer’s Coronation Robes, over Lord Lieutenant’s Uniform.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Mary, Countess of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the</span> HON. HENRY GRAVES.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Oval.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Leaning on her Hand.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1812. Died, 1859.—She was the
-youngest daughter of the first Marquis of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[168]</span>
-Anglesey, by his second wife, Lady Emily
-Cadogan, (whose first husband was Lord Cowley.)
-Lady Mary Paget was married in 1838, to John
-William, seventh Earl of Sandwich, and died,
-universally regretted, on the 20th of February,
-1859, in Curzon Street, Mayfair.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward George Henry, Viscount Hinchingbrook,
-and his Brother, The Hon. Victor Alexander Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By HURLSTONE.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Children of the Seventh Earl of Sandwich.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Lord Hinchingbrook was born in London on
-July 13, 1839. Educated at Eton. Joined the
-Second Battalion Grenadier Guards, December
-18, 1857. Lieutenant and Captain, May, 1862.
-Adjutant, 1864. Captain and Lieut-Colonel,
-July, 1870. Has been employed as Commandant
-of a School of Instruction of the Reserve
-Forces, and Military Secretary at Gibraltar. Was
-attached to Lord Stratford de Redcliffe’s special
-Embassy to Constantinople, 1858. Accompanied<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[169]</span>
-H.R.H. the Prince of Wales to North America,
-1860. Attached to Lord Breadalbane’s Mission,
-(to confer the Order of the Garter on the King
-of Prussia) 1861, and in the same year to Lord
-Clarendon’s Embassy, when the King of Prussia
-was crowned at Königsberg. On the occasion of
-the marriage of H.R.H. the Duke of Edinburgh,
-when Lord Sydney represented the Queen of
-England at the Court of St. Petersburg, Lord
-Hinchingbrook accompanied his uncle to the
-Russian capital; and in 1875 he went with Sir
-John Drummond Hay, K.C.B. to the Court of
-the Sultan of Morocco. Was elected M.P. for
-Huntingdon, February, 1876.</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Victor Montagu was born in 1841.
-Entered the Royal Navy in 1853, as naval cadet
-on board H.M.S. “Princess Royal,” Captain
-Lord Clarence Paget (his uncle). On the
-declaration of war with Russia, in 1854, he
-proceeded to the Baltic, with the Fleet under
-Sir Charles Napier. Early in 1855 he went to
-the Black Sea, and remained on that station till
-the fall of Sebastopol. In 1856 he sailed to
-China, under Admiral Keppel in the “Raleigh,”
-50 guns, (which vessel was lost off Macao, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[170]</span>
-April, 1857,) and in the Chinese War, he served
-in a gun-boat at the operations up the Canton
-River. On the news of the Mutiny in India,
-in 1857, Victor Montagu was ordered to join
-the “Pearl” at Hong-kong, and left in company
-with the “Shannon” for Calcutta, where he
-landed with the Naval Brigade, and joined the
-field force under Brigadier Rowcroft, and Sir
-Hope Grant, with which he was employed until
-February, 1859.</p>
-
-<p>In the Oude and Goruckpore districts, he
-was in seventeen out of twenty-six engagements;
-and in 1859 he returned to England,
-having seen four campaigns before he was
-eighteen years of age. He afterwards served
-as lieutenant in the Channel, and Mediterranean
-Fleets, and in 1864, was appointed to H.M.S.
-“Racoon,” in which vessel H.R.H. Prince
-Alfred was also serving as lieutenant. In 1866,
-he was Flag-Lieutenant to Lord Clarence Paget,
-Commander in Chief in the Mediterranean;
-and in the autumn of the same year commanded
-the “Tyrian” gun-boat on the same station.
-In 1867, he was promoted, returned to England,
-and has since commanded the “Rapid” steam
-sloop in the Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[171]</span></p>
-
-<p>In 1867, Victor Montagu married Lady
-Agneta Harriet Yorke, youngest daughter of
-the fourth Earl of Hardwicke, by the daughter
-of the first Lord Ravensworth, by whom he
-has two daughters, Mary Sophie, and Olga
-Blanche, and one son, George Charles.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>The Honourable Oliver George Powlett Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the HON. HENRY GRAVES.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born, 1844. Youngest son of the seventh
-Earl of Sandwich. Educated at Eton. Appointed
-lieutenant in the Huntingdon Rifle
-Regiment of Militia, in 1862; cornet in the
-Ninth Lancers, in 1863; exchanged into the
-Royal Horse Guards, in 1865.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Portrait of a Lady, supposed to be Lady Rochester</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Blue Dress with Pearls.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[172]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[173]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CORRIDORDOWNSTAIRS"><i>CORRIDOR—DOWNSTAIRS.</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward, Viscount Hinchingbrook</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length: Oval.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Red Jacket with Frogs. Blue Cap.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1692. Died, 1722.—The eldest son of
-Edward, third Earl of Sandwich, by the
-daughter of the Earl of Rochester. Member
-for the Town, and subsequently for the County
-of Huntingdon; also Lord Lieutenant, and
-Custos Rotulorum; was in the army. Noble
-says his unfortunate father “became so much
-a cypher, that all the duties of his station
-devolved on Lord Hinchingbrook, who was an
-amiable, active and spirited young man.” He
-married Elizabeth, only daughter of Alexander
-Popham, Esq., of Littlecote, Wilts, by Lady
-Anne Montagu, (afterwards Harvey) daughter
-of Ralph, Duke of Montagu. His portrait and
-that of his wife, are alluded to by Noble.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Hinchingbrook, in his early youth,
-appears to have been a great swain, if we can
-trust the bantering style of the <i>Tatler</i>, in the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[174]</span>
-pages of which, he figures constantly under the
-<i>soubriquet</i> of Cynthio. In a paper dated White’s
-Chocolate House, North Side of Russell Street,
-Covent Garden, he comes in, and gives an
-elaborate lecture on the art of ogling.</p>
-
-<p>He says: “Twenty men can speak eloquently,
-and fight manfully, and a thousand can dress
-genteelly at a mistress, who cannot gaze skilfully.”
-He gives the benefit of his experience,
-on the subject at some length; speaks of the
-late fallings off in the passion of love, boasting
-that he himself is the only man who is true to
-the cause. One day, while cleaning his teeth
-at the window of a tavern, he caught sight of a
-beautiful face, looking from the window of a
-coach, and he followed the fair object up, and
-down the town—a long time, indeed, without
-success; but this incident is proof of his zeal.
-There is a ludicrous account of his (imaginary)
-death from a broken heart; his companions
-had hoped, that good October and fox hunting
-would have averted this catastrophe. They
-propose to erect a monument to his memory,
-with a very long inscription. The paper is
-signed by the witty, and mirth-loving Dick<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[175]</span>
-Steele. Collins says Lord Hinchingbrook died
-much regretted: “He had a martial spirit,
-tempered with fine breeding, which made his
-company much coveted, and gained him great
-ascendancy in the House of Commons.” He
-was a strenuous upholder of the Protestant
-Succession, and of the rights and liberty of the
-subject.</p>
-
-<p>By his wife he had two daughters, Mary and
-Elizabeth, and a son who succeeded his grandfather
-in the Earldom of Sandwich.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Lady Anne Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Blue Satin Gown. Rows of Pearls round the Waist. A
-Scarf over the Shoulder, a long White Glove in Left
-Hand.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1674. Died, 1742.—The only surviving
-daughter of Ralph, first Duke of Montagu, by
-his first wife, the Countess of Northumberland.
-Lady Anne’s delicate health in her childhood,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[176]</span>
-seems to have given great uneasiness, to her
-mother. Lady Rachel Russell often mentions
-the little fair, pale girl. She married; first,
-Alexander Popham, Esq., of Littlecote, in
-Wiltshire, (by whom she had Elizabeth, Viscountess
-Hinchingbrook); and secondly, Daniel
-Harvey, of Combe, in Surrey. The parents
-were friends, and cousins, and Lady Northumberland
-often visited at Combe. By her
-second marriage, she had no children.</p>
-
-<p>St. Evremond constantly corresponded with
-Lady Anne, who was a friend of the Duchesse de
-Mazarin, and an <i>habituée</i> of her salon at
-Chelsea. He writes a poetical epistle complaining
-of the cold of this miserable bit of a
-room, where all the doors were left open, and
-where the beautiful hostess occasionally cheated
-at cards. All this, however, is couched in most
-flattering language, extolling the charms, moral
-(query) and physical, of the lovely gambler.
-“Prenez garde à Madame,” he goes on to say,
-after describing his losses at Ombre, for she will
-cheat you “avec la plus belle main du monde.”</p>
-
-<p>La Fontaine dedicated one of his Fables, to
-Lady Anne Harvey, who had a great admiration<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[177]</span>
-for his talent. St. Evremond says: “L’estime
-que M. de la Fontaine s’est acquis en Angleterre
-étoit si grand, que Madame Harvey, et quelques
-autres personnes d’un très grand mérite, ayant
-su, qu’il ne vivoit pas commodément à Paris,
-résolurent de l’attirer auprès d’elles, oû rien ne
-lui auroit manqué.” La Fontaine was grateful
-to his English friends, but declined, on the plea
-of being too old, to seek a strange country.
-Lady Anne, or Madame Harvey, as the Abbé
-calls her, is constantly mentioned in the letters
-of St. Evremond.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Elizabeth, Third Countess of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Seated. Resting on her Left Arm. Right Hand holding
-Flowers. Loose Coloured Déshabille.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[178]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>General Daniel Harvey</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Armour, with a Blue Scarf. Right Hand resting on
-Hip; Left on the Hilt of Sword.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, ——. Died, 1732.—The youngest son
-of Sir Edward Harvey, of Combe, near Kingston-on-Thames,
-by Lady Elizabeth, daughter of
-Francis, first Earl of Bradford. In 1712, he was
-appointed Lieutenant-governor of Guernsey,
-which office he held till 1726. He married his
-cousin, Lady Anne, daughter of Ralph, Duke
-of Montagu, by the Countess of Northumberland,
-relict of Alexander Popham, of Littlecote,
-Wilts, by whom he had no issue. General
-Harvey died at Mitcham, in Surrey, and was
-buried within the rails of the altar, in that
-church.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[179]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Captain the Hon. William Montagu</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By T. HIGHMORE.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a Brown and Red Uniform laced with Gold. Pointing
-to a Ship with his Right Hand; holding a Telescope in
-his Left.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1720. Died, 1757.—He was the youngest
-son of Edward, Viscount Hinchingbrook, and
-entered the Navy, at an early age, in which
-profession he was destined to distinguish
-himself, not only by his courage, and skill as an
-officer, but by his extraordinary eccentricity,
-which gained him the <i>soubriquet</i> of “Mad
-Montagu.” He commanded the “Mermaid”
-at the taking of Cape Breton, in 1745, whence
-he brought letters from Commodore Warren,
-with an account of the surrender of the fortress
-of Louisburg, and the adjoining territories, after
-a siege of forty-nine days. He commanded the
-“Prince Edward,” and the “Bristol,” and took
-the “Orvena,” a rich Spanish register ship.
-He appears to have been in constant scrapes,
-both private, and public, frequently writing to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[180]</span>
-his brother, Lord Sandwich, in extenuation of
-some escapade, usually accompanied with a confession
-that he had erred through his propensity
-for drinking. But his genial humour, and
-untiring fun, generally extricated him from the
-difficulties, into which his folly had plunged
-him, and his mad freaks were a constant topic
-of conversation, and amusement. When under
-the orders of Sir Edward Hawker, in 1755, he
-solicited permission to go to town. The
-Admiral, thinking to compromise the matter
-and palliate his refusal by a jest (as he had no
-intention of complying with so improper a
-request), said he might go in his barge as far as
-he pleased from the ship, but no farther.
-Captain Montagu immediately caused a truck
-to be constructed at Portsmouth, to be drawn
-by horses; on this truck he placed his barge
-filled with provisions and necessaries for three
-days, and entering it with his men, gave
-orders to imitate the action of rowing with the
-oars. Sir Edward, it is said, having heard of
-this wonderful proceeding, in every sense of the
-word, soon after the boat was landed, sent the
-coveted permission to the Mad-cap.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[181]</span></p>
-
-<p>In the sea-fight of May 3rd, 1747, Captain
-Montagu, and Captain Fincher, were rival
-competitors for fame. The “Bristol” having
-got up to the “Invincible,” and brought her to
-action, the “Pembroke” (Captain Fincher)
-attempted to get in between them, desiring
-Montagu, to put his helm a-starboard, or he
-should be aboard of him. “Run on board and
-be d——d! Neither you nor any other man
-shall come between me and my enemy,” was
-his answer. This action is the subject of a fine
-picture, in the Ship-room at Hinchingbrook, by
-Scott.</p>
-
-<p>While commanding the same vessel in the
-Channel, Montagu fell in with a fleet of outward
-bound Dutch merchantmen, to whom he gave
-chase and overtook. Having done so, he ordered
-two boats to be manned, and sent a carpenter’s
-mate in each, desiring them to cut off the heads
-of twelve—not of the ship’s company, but of the
-ugliest of the grotesque ornaments with which
-the Dutch usually decorated the extremity of
-their rudders. When brought back to him, he
-arranged them, in as ridiculous a position, as he
-could devise round his cabin, and inscribed them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[182]</span>
-with the names of the twelve Cæsars. A jest
-of a more ghastly nature, is recorded of Mad
-Montagu. Landing one day at Portsmouth,
-just after a Dutch vessel had been wrecked, he
-perceived about a dozen of her crew lying dead,
-on the shore. He immediately ordered his men
-to put all the poor fellows’ hands, into their
-pockets. He then proceeded to the coffee-house,
-where he found the Dutch captain, with whom
-every one was condoling. “D—— the idle
-lubbers!” said Montagu, “they were too lazy
-to take their hands out of their breeches pockets,
-even to save their lives.”</p>
-
-<p>The Dutch captain was naturally indignant,
-when Montagu proposed to bet him six dozen of
-wine, that if any of the crew chanced to be
-washed on shore, his words would be proved.
-The waiter was despatched to reconnoitre; the
-result of course, was in the English captain’s
-favour, and not only had the poor foreigner to
-pay the forfeit, but the laugh on a most
-melancholy matter was turned against him.
-Captain Montagu sat in Parliament for a
-borough in Cornwall. He married Charlotte,
-daughter of Francis Nailor, of Offord,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[183]</span>
-Huntingdonshire, but died in 1757, without
-issue.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>John, fourth Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By ZOFFANY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a Plum-coloured Court Suit, embroidered in Gold.
-Seated by a Table, on which he rests his Arm. In his
-Right Hand a Letter directed to himself.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward Richard, Viscount Hinchingbrook</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By KNELLER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Painted at the Age of Eighteen, in 1710. In Armour.
-Right Hand on Hip, Left Hand on a Helmet.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[184]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Edward, Second Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Long Fair Curling Hair, or Wig. Loose Brown Dress,
-Lace Cravat and Ruffles. Left Hand on Hip.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1648. Died, 1688.—The eldest son of
-the first Earl, by Jemima Crewe. Born at
-Hinchingbrook, baptized at All Saints’ Church,
-Huntingdon. Pepys does not tell us much
-about his young Lord, but he seems to have
-been much attached to him. He relates how
-sorry he was for the misfortune that had befallen
-him through killing his boy, by the
-accidental discharge of his fowling-piece; and
-another time he mentions that Lord Hinchingbrook,
-with some other gentlemen, visited him
-at his house, having been to inspect the ruins
-of the city, (after the great fire) where he “set
-before them good wines of several sorts, which
-they took mighty respectfully, but I was glad
-to see my Lord Hinchingbrook.” While<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[185]</span>
-Mistress Mallett, (the great heiress whom Lady
-Sandwich desired for her son’s wife) was still
-unsettled, “my young Lord” attended her to
-Tunbridge; but there she told him plainly her
-affections were engaged; besides, Lord Hinchingbrook
-was not much pleased with her vanity,
-and liberty of carriage. A better marriage in
-every respect, was in store for him, and though
-not quite so wealthy as Mistress Mallett, Lady
-Anne Boyle had a dowry of £10,000, and was
-indeed a great alliance, coming of a noble stock.
-She was daughter of Richard, second Earl of
-Cork, and first Earl of Burlington. The match
-appears to have been arranged between the
-parents, and confided as a secret to Pepys,
-before Lord Hinchingbrook himself, was
-acquainted with the project. It seems to have
-been made by Sir George Carteret: “A civil
-family, and a relation to my Lord Chancellor,
-whose son has married one of the daughters,
-[this was Lord Rochester, son to Lord Clarendon,
-who had married Lady Henrietta Boyle] and
-the Chancellor himself, do take it with great
-kindness.” What a pity that the amusing
-chronicle should have come to so sudden an end,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[186]</span>
-through the weakness of poor Pepys’ eyes;
-otherwise we should have heard details of how
-the sad news of the hero’s death was received
-in his family, and more particulars respecting
-his son and successor. We only know he
-attended his father’s funeral, as chief mourner,
-that he was sent Ambassador to Portugal in
-1678, and died in 1688, being buried at
-Barnwell. He left issue: Edward, who succeeded
-him; Richard and Elizabeth, who both
-died unmarried.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward, First Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">After LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a Cuirass with Red Sash. Holding a Bâton. Left
-Hand on the Mouth of a Cannon.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[187]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>George, Sixth Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By BEACH.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a Trinity College Gown, over a Green Coat. Standing
-by a Pillar. View of Trinity College in Background.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1791. Died, 1818.—Second son of
-John, fifth Earl of Sandwich, by Lady Mary,
-daughter and heiress of the sixth and last
-Duke of Bolton. He was born in Wimpole
-Street; married in 1804 at the house of Lord
-Castlereagh, in Upper Brook Street, Lady
-Louisa Corry, daughter of Armar, first Earl of
-Belmore. In 1798, he was appointed Deputy
-Lieutenant for Hunts, and in 1804, Lieutenant-Colonel
-of the Hunts Volunteers. Lord
-Sandwich died at Cardinal Gonsalvi’s villa, near
-Rome, in 1818, both he and Lady Sandwich
-having contracted a sincere friendship with the
-Cardinal. His remains were brought to England,
-and interred with those of his ancestors at
-Barnwell.</p>
-
-<p>He left issue by his wife, (who survived him<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[188]</span>
-forty-four years), one son, John William,
-present and seventh Earl, and two daughters;
-Lady Harriet, born 1805, married to Bingham
-Baring, (afterwards Lord Ashburton,) (she died
-in 1857), and Lady Caroline, born 1810,
-married in 1831, to Count Walewski, and died
-in 1834.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward, third Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By CLOSTERMAN.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Blue Velvet Coat and Coronation Robes. Standing near a
-Table, on which is placed his Coronet.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1670. Died, 1729.—The eldest son of
-Edward, second Earl of Sandwich, by Lady
-Anne Boyle. Born at Burlington House;
-married in 1691 Lady Elizabeth Wilmot,
-daughter of the Earl of Rochester, by whom
-he had one son, and one daughter. He was
-Master of the Horse to Prince George of
-Denmark, Doctor of Laws in the University
-of Oxford, Lord-Lieutenant and Custos-Rotulorum<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[189]</span>
-of the County of Huntingdon.
-The Earl of Sandwich died at Burlington, in
-Yorkshire, but was buried in the family vault
-at Barnwell. His union with the unprincipled
-daughter, of an unprincipled father, was a most
-unhappy one. Noble affirms that his
-“eccentric” Countess put him in durance vile
-in his own house, whether on a plea of insanity,
-or not, does not appear; but much mystery
-hangs round her extraordinary proceedings.
-Tradition still points to an apartment, in the
-house at Hinchingbrook, as the place of Lord
-Sandwich’s imprisonment, which for many
-years bore the name of the “Starved Chamber,”
-for it is said the cruel wife denied her husband
-sufficient food, and would allow no one to have
-access to him. The dates of these transactions
-are difficult to identify.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[190]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[191]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="SHIP_ROOM"><i>SHIP ROOM.</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">The taking of two French Privateers and
-all their Prizes by the Bridgewater and
-Sheerness Men-of-War.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SAMUEL SCOTT.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Vice-Admiral Anson’s Engagement with the
-French Squadron commanded by M. de la
-Jonquiere, May, 1747; fought twenty-four
-leagues S. E. of Cape Finisterre.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By S. SCOTT.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Engagement between the “Blast,” sloop, and
-two Spanish Privateers. 1745.</span></h3>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">The taking of the Ship “Acapulco” by
-Commodore Anson, in the South Seas. 1743.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By S. SCOTT.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[192]</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Battle of Southwold Bay, where the first
-Earl of Sandwich perished, May 28, 1672.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By W. VAN DE VELDE.</span></p>
-
-<p>A case hangs near this picture, containing
-miniatures by Cooper, of Edward, first Earl of
-Sandwich, and Jemima his wife; also a fragment
-of a Ribbon of the Order of the Garter,
-and the watch; both of which were found on
-the body of Lord Sandwich, when washed
-ashore.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Engagement between the Ships “Lion” and
-“Elizabeth,” 1745.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By S. SCOTT.</span></p>
-
-<p>This desperate, and sanguinary engagement
-was fought on the 9th of May, 1745. The
-“Lion” had fifty-eight guns, and four hundred
-and forty men, and was commanded by<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[193]</span>
-Captain Piercy Brett. The “Elizabeth,” a
-sixty-four gun ship, was convoying another, of
-sixteen guns, with the Pretender on board.
-They fought for five hours, within pistol shot
-of each other, during which time, the frigate,
-with the Pretender on board, managed to make
-her escape. The “Elizabeth” also at length,
-effected her entrance into Brest Harbour. She
-had £400,000 on board, for the use of Charles
-Edward. The “Lion,” unable to pursue, lay a
-complete wreck on the water.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Evening. A Calm. English Man-of-War
-and small Craft cruising.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By VAN DE VELDE.</span></p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">A Sketch for the Engagement in Southwold
-Bay.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center">W. VAN DE VELDE.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3 class="hanging"><span class="smcap">Three Sketches of the Engagement between
-the “Lion” and “Elizabeth.”</span></h3>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[194]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[195]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="DINING_ROOM"><i>DINING ROOM.</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Louis XIV., King of France</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By MIGNARD.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born, 1638. Died, 1715.—The son of Louis
-XIII., by Anne of Austria, who was Regent
-during her son’s minority, though the real
-power was vested in Cardinal Mazarin. In this
-prelate’s lifetime, the King himself interfered
-little in public affairs, but at his death, in 1661,
-Louis determined to be his own Prime Minister.
-He married Maria Theresa, daughter of Philip
-IV., King of Spain. His reign was brilliant in
-arts, commerce, and arms, but disgraced by
-immorality.</p>
-
-<p>As regards the exterior of the “Great
-Monarch,” his sister-in-law, (the Duke of
-Orleans’ second wife, a Princess of Bavaria,)
-thus describes him: “Personne n’avoit un si
-beau port, un aspect noble, la voix très agréable,
-et des manières aisées. Quand il étoit dans la
-foule, on n’avoit pas besoin, de demander qui
-étoit le Roi.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[196]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Henry William, First Marquis of Anglesey, K.G.</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By the</span> HON. HENRY GRAVES.</p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Uniform, as Colonel of the Seventh Hussars.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1768. Died, 1854.—Henry William
-Paget, the eldest child of the first Earl of
-Uxbridge, by the eldest daughter of Arthur
-Champagné, Dean of Clonmacnoise. Lord
-Paget was educated at Westminster, and Christ
-Church, and in 1793, he raised a regiment
-among his father’s tenantry, (the 80th Regiment
-of Foot, or Staffordshire Volunteers,) afterwards
-eminently distinguished in foreign service. At
-the head of his own regiment, Lord Paget
-joined H.R.H. the Duke of York in Flanders,
-and soon gave proofs of skill, and gallantry.
-At Turcoing, he was remarkable for his “dashing
-bravery,” and in the memorable retreat of Bois-le-duc,
-which took place under great difficulties,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_197"></a>[197]</span>
-and during intensely cold weather, Lord Paget,
-then only twenty-six years of age, gained great
-honour, and replaced Lord Cathcart at the head
-of the Brigade, during that nobleman’s temporary
-absence. After several exchanges, and
-promotions, he was appointed to the command
-of the seventh Light Dragoons, which was
-stationed at Ipswich with other bodies of cavalry,
-for drill. Here he laid the foundation of that
-system of discipline, which brought about an
-entire reform in cavalry practice. In 1790-6,
-he sat in Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>In 1799, he accompanied the Duke of York
-to Holland, where he again distinguished himself,
-on several occasions. He became a Major-General
-in 1802, and a Lieutenant-General in
-1808. Towards the end of this year, he was
-ordered to Spain, with two Brigades of cavalry,
-where he remained until the autumn of 1809,
-having reaped fresh laurels, in innumerable
-engagements. On his return, a piece of plate
-was presented to him, by the Prince Regent,
-the Duke of Cumberland, and the inscribed
-officers of the Hussar Brigade, who served
-under Lord Paget, “in token of their admiration<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_198"></a>[198]</span>
-of his high military acquirements, and of
-the courage, and talent, constantly displayed in
-leading the Hussars to victory against the
-French cavalry, during the Peninsular Campaign
-of 1808.”</p>
-
-<p>He sate in the House of Commons, till 1812,
-when the death of his father, removed him to
-the Upper House. In 1815, he was employed
-with the troops assembled in London, to quell the
-Corn Bill riots, but he was soon appointed to a
-nobler office, and left England in command of
-the cavalry of the Anglo-Belgian army. His
-name is well known in conjunction with the
-great day at Waterloo: and well did he sustain
-“the honour of the Household Troops,” which
-was his rallying cry to his men, in the frequent
-charges they made, on the enemy. Almost the
-last shot that was fired wounded our gallant
-soldier in the knee; amputation was considered
-necessary, and the leg that was ever in
-advance, was buried with honour, in a garden
-at Waterloo.</p>
-
-<p>Five days after the battle, he was raised to
-the Marquisate, by the title of Anglesey. He
-was also created Knight of many Orders, both<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_199"></a>[199]</span>
-British, and foreign. He rode as Lord High
-Steward, at the Coronation of George IV.,
-became a Privy Councillor, was twice Lord
-Lieutenant of Ireland, where he was deservedly
-popular. He held several high posts under
-Government at home, and at his death was the
-only Field Marshal in the English Army, with
-the exception of Her Majesty’s Consort, and her
-uncle.</p>
-
-<p>“It was the peculiarity,” was said of Lord
-Anglesey, “of his frank nature to make itself
-understood; it might almost be said his character
-could be read off at sight; he was the
-express image of chivalry. His politics were
-so liberal, as to be called radical in those days,
-for he was in the advance of his age; but the
-measures which were then opposed have since
-been extolled, and carried, such as Catholic
-Emancipation, Reform, Free Trade, etc. He
-was not a ‘speaker,’ and could not talk well, of
-what he did well.” His administration of the
-Ordnance Department, was remarkable for its
-scrupulous justice, and he was always the
-soldier’s true friend.</p>
-
-<p>On the death of the Duke of Gordon, King<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_200"></a>[200]</span>
-William IV. offered Lord Anglesey the
-command of the Scots Fusilier Guards. He
-sought an interview with the King, and after
-warmly expressing his gratitude, he added: “I
-am sure that in naming me to this honour,
-your Majesty has not borne in mind, the fact
-that Lord Ludlow lost an arm in Holland, at
-the head of this regiment.” The King was
-delighted with this proof of generosity, and
-Lord Ludlow had to thank his comrade, for the
-regiment.</p>
-
-<p>Till past three score, Lord Anglesey retained
-a wonderful share of vigour, and activity, in
-spite of the loss of his limb, and the terrible
-nervous sufferings entailed thereby. In his
-last moments the ruling passion showed itself,
-for when his mind wandered for a few moments,
-the gallant veteran would enquire what brigade
-was on duty, and he appeared relieved, when
-they answered it was not his own. His death
-was serene; his bedroom, and the one adjoining
-crowded by relatives, and his last words to them
-were cheering.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Anglesey married first in 1795, Lady
-Caroline Villiers, daughter of the Earl of Jersey,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_201"></a>[201]</span>
-from whom he was divorced. She re-married
-the Duke of Argyll, and died in 1835. By his
-first wife he had three sons, of whom the eldest
-succeeded him, and five daughters. His second
-wife was the daughter of Earl Cadogan,
-whose marriage with Lord Cowley had been
-dissolved. She died in 1853: by whom he had
-three sons and three daughters, of whom the
-second, became the Countess of Sandwich.</p>
-
-<p>This portrait was painted by Lord Anglesey’s
-nephew, the Hon. Henry Graves.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>William, Duke of Cumberland</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR JOSHUA REYNOLDS.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In the Robes of the Garter. Standing by a Table. River,
-Bridge, and Castle in the Background.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1721. Died, 1765.—The third son of
-George II., King of England, by Carolina
-Wilhelmina, daughter of the Margrave of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_202"></a>[202]</span>
-Anspach. In 1743, he was wounded by the
-side of his father, at the Battle of Dettingen;
-he was unsuccessful at Fontenoy. His name
-is ever coupled with the discomfiture of
-Charles Edward’s forces in Scotland, and their
-entire defeat, at the Battle of Culloden. He
-gained a name for severity, and cruelty, during
-this campaign, and is still remembered in the
-north as “Billy the Butcher.”</p>
-
-<p>This fine portrait was presented by H.R.H.,
-to John, fourth Earl of Sandwich, with whom
-he formed a friendship, at the time of the
-Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Maria Theresa, Queen of France</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By MIGNARD.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born, 1638. Married, 1660. Died, 1683.—Daughter
-of Philip IV., King of Spain, by his
-first wife, Elizabeth of France. Mazarin
-arranged this marriage to ensure peace. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_203"></a>[203]</span>
-Duke de Grammont went to Madrid, as Plenipotentiary
-in 1659, and thus addressed the
-King of Spain: “Sire, le Roi mon maître vous
-accorde la paix, et à vous, Madame, il offre son
-cœur, et sa couronne.” She accepted both, but
-was compelled to share the first, with innumerable
-rivals. Gentle, modest, loving, and
-sensitive, she was constantly insulted by the
-King’s favourites; yet her devotion to him,
-never wavered, and a kind word from her royal
-master, made her happy for the rest of the day.
-He appointed her Regent, when he went to
-Holland, but she was not fitted for public life.
-“To serve God, and honour the King,” was her
-golden rule. Madame d’Orléans, (the German
-Princess), one of the other few good women of
-that age, pays her sister-in-law, this tribute:
-“Elle étoit d’une extrême simplicité en tout;
-la femme la plus vertueuse, et la meilleure, du
-monde. Elle avoit de la grandeur, et elle savoit
-représenter, et tenir sa cour; elle avoit une foi
-entière, et sans réserve pour tout ce que le Roi
-lui disoit. Le Roi l’aimoit à cause de sa vertu,
-et de l’ardent amour qu’elle lui a constamment
-conservé, quoiqu’il lui fût infidèle.” On her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_204"></a>[204]</span>
-return from an expedition she had made, with
-her husband to Alsace and Bourgogne, the
-Queen fell ill and died. “Voilà,” observed “le
-Grand Monarque” on that occasion, “le premier
-chagrin qu’elle m’ait donné.” Had she been
-the survivor, she could not assuredly have paid
-Louis a similar tribute.</p>
-
-<p>These two portraits, formed part of the
-collection of the celebrated “Capability Brown.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>John William, Seventh Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By LUCAS.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born, 1811. Educated at Trinity College,
-Cambridge; was Captain of the Corps of
-Gentlemen-at-Arms, in 1852, and Master of
-the Buckhounds, 1858-9. Colonel of the Huntingdon
-Rifle Militia, and High Steward of
-Huntingdon, Lord Lieutenant and Custos
-Rotulorum of Huntingdonshire. Married first;
-Lady Mary Paget, daughter of the first Marquis
-of Anglesey, by whom he had four sons and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_205"></a>[205]</span>
-two daughters, and who died in 1859. He
-married secondly, Lady Blanche Egerton,
-daughter of the first Earl of Ellesmere.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Mrs. Ruperta Howe</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WISSING or MYTENS.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Standing by a Doric Column. Light Red Riding-dress, embroidered
-Petticoat, Long Coat, Waistcoat. Hat in Hand.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1671. Died, 1741.—The natural
-daughter of Prince Rupert, third son of
-Frederick, King of Bohemia, “a studious Prince,”
-who being enraptured with Mrs. Hughes, a
-beautiful actress, bade adieu to alembics,
-mathematical instruments, and chemical speculations,
-to subdue the heart of the “impertinent
-gipsy.” At his death the Prince left the whole
-of his property in trust, with a beautiful estate
-he had purchased on purpose, for the use, and
-behoof of Mistress Hughes and their daughter.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_206"></a>[206]</span>
-Ruperta married Emanuel Scrope Howe, Esq., the
-second son of John Howe, Co. Gloucester, by
-Arabella, natural daughter of Emanuel Scrope,
-Baron Bolton, and Earl of Sunderland, to whom
-Charles II. granted the precedence of an Earl’s
-daughter, lawfully begotten. The husband of
-Ruperta was in the army, and rose to the rank
-of Brigadier-General. He was Groom of the
-Bedchamber to Queen Anne, and in 1707, went
-as Envoy to the Court of Hanover. He represented
-Morpeth, and Wigan, in Parliament,
-and died in 1709, having had issue three sons,
-William, Emanuel, and James, and one
-daughter, Maid of Honour to Caroline, Princess
-of Wales, (afterwards Queen). She died unmarried.
-This picture is mentioned in Noble,
-but the painter’s name is not given.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_207"></a>[207]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>John, Fourth Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By JOHN LIOTARD.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In a Turkish Costume, of Crimson, and Ermine. Green and
-White Turban, Yellow Slippers. Right Hand extended.
-Left on Hip.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1718. Died, 1792.—he was the son of
-Edward, Viscount Hinchingbrook, by Elizabeth
-Popham. Educated at Eton, and Trinity
-College, Cambridge, where he distinguished
-himself. In 1738, he set out on his travels
-through Italy, Egypt, Turkey, etc., accompanied
-by some friends, during which time he made a
-collection of coins, and antiquities, of all kinds,
-some of which, he presented to the University
-of Cambridge. He wrote a book of his travels,
-and on his return to England, took his seat
-in the House of Lords, and entered on a political
-life. He spoke remarkably well in Parliament,
-and in 1744 became a Lord of the Admiralty
-under the Duke of Bedford, “into whose<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_208"></a>[208]</span>
-favour” says a contemporary with much
-acrimony, “Lord Sandwich had ingratiated
-himself, by cricket matches, acting of plays, and
-intrigues.” But Horace Walpole, although he
-did not appear very friendly to Lord Sandwich,
-is constantly compelled to do him justice, in his
-public capacity. “He is a lively, sensible man,
-and very attentive to business;” and on the
-famous occasion of Wilkes’ libel, he again says:
-“I do not admire politicians, but when they
-are excellent in their way, give them their due;
-no one but Lord Sandwich could have struck a
-stroke like this.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1746, he was appointed Plenipotentiary
-to the States General, and again at the Treaty
-of Aix-la-Chapelle, where he distinguished
-himself, in such a manner as to recommend him
-for high offices of trust, on his return to England.
-It was on this occasion, that at a large international
-dinner, toasts were passing, and the
-different Envoys became poetical, as well as
-loyal in their phraseology. The Frenchman
-gave “his Royal Master the Sun, who illuminates
-the whole world;” the Spaniard “his
-Master the Moon, scarcely inferior in brilliancy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_209"></a>[209]</span>
-or influence;” when Lord Sandwich rose,
-doubtless with the twinkle in his eye, and the
-laughing curl round the corners of his mouth,
-we see in most of his portraits, and toasted with
-all the honours “his Master Joshua, who made
-both the sun and moon to stand still.”</p>
-
-<p>During the King’s absence from England,
-Sandwich was chosen one of the Commissioners
-of Government. He was also Vice-treasurer,
-Receiver-general, &amp;c., for Ireland, and under
-the new King George III, was nominated
-Ambassador to Spain; but in the same year he
-succeeded George Grenville as First Lord of the
-Admiralty. Few men ever filled that office with
-more ability, and under his direction the maritime
-force of Great Britain, was kept on such a
-footing as enabled us to meet our numerous foes
-in every quarter of the globe with honour, and
-ensured to us the victories we gained over the
-Trench, Spaniards, and Dutch. Lord Sandwich
-was world-famed for his regularity, dispatch,
-and industry in business; it is said that he
-invented sandwiches in order to take some
-nourishment without interrupting his work.</p>
-
-<p>The following lines were written on him and
-Lord Spencer:—</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_210"></a>[210]</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Two noble Earls, whom if I quote,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Some folks might call me sinner;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The one invented half a coat,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The other half a dinner.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="noindent">He gained the name of “Jemmy Twitcher,”
-through a curious circumstance. Wilkes and
-Sandwich had once been friends, but the former
-having composed a scurrilous and disloyal poem,
-the latter was so incensed as to procure a copy
-and read it aloud, in the House of Lords. Just at
-this juncture the “Beggar’s Opera” was being
-acted, and when Macheath exclaimed: “But that
-Jemmy Twitcher should peach, I own surprises
-me,” the chief part of the audience, who were
-partisans of “Wilkes, and Liberty,” burst into a
-round of applause, applying the passage to Lord
-Sandwich, who never afterwards lost the
-<i>soubriquet</i>.</p>
-
-<p>There are many passages in his life which
-compel us to agree with his constant censor
-Horace Walpole, when he says: “Bishop
-Warburton is at this moment reinstating Mr.
-Pitt’s name in the dedication of a Book of
-Sermons, which he had expunged for Sandwich’s.
-This nobleman is an agreeable companion, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_211"></a>[211]</span>
-one whose moral character, does not exactly fit
-him to be the patron of sermons.” But Mr.
-Cradock (and none knew him better) in his
-most amusing reminiscences, tells us, whatever
-his errors may have been, Lord Sandwich was
-most severe in the observance of decorous
-language, and behaviour, under his roof. No
-oath, or profligate word, was ever uttered at his
-table. The same authority states, that in
-political life he underwent many persecutions,
-and bore daily insults, and misrepresentations
-with the courage of a stoic, without stooping to
-retaliation. “Others,” says Mr. Cradock,
-“received emoluments, but Lord Sandwich
-retired without any remuneration, for his
-services.” His public career lasted for more
-than half a century, when he made Hinchingbrook
-his chief abode. He spoke French
-and Italian fluently, was acquainted with the
-German, and Spanish languages, and had a
-smattering of the oriental tongues.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of all his hospitality, he was very
-frugal in his own living, and was much beloved
-by his dependants, not forgetting Omai the
-Otaheitan, and the faithful black servant,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_212"></a>[212]</span>
-Jemmy, who lies buried in Brompton Churchyard,
-and a characteristic little sketch of whom
-still exists. An amusing incident occurred respecting
-the latter, which is worth recording. It
-seems that on one occasion, the day after some
-dramatic representation had taken place at
-Hinchingbrook, Lord Sandwich enquired at
-breakfast of a gentleman who was proverbial
-for cavilling, and finding fault, whether he had
-been satisfied with the performance. The
-visitor answered in the affirmative, but in so
-hesitating a manner, that Lord Sandwich
-insisted on knowing the fault. “So slight, my
-Lord, scarcely worth alluding to.” “The
-easier remedied next time.” “Well, it only
-struck me, that the coloured servant in the
-piece was not sufficiently blackened.” The
-noble host rose silently and rang the bell:
-enter Jemmy. “Jemmy,” says his master,
-“this gentleman says you are not black
-enough.” “I bery sorry, my Lord, I be as
-God Almighty made me.”</p>
-
-<p>Miss Burney, in her youth, saw Lord
-Sandwich, and thus describes him: “He is a
-tall stout man, and looks as furrowed and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_213"></a>[213]</span>
-weatherbeaten as any sailor in the Navy; and,
-like most of the old set of that brave tribe, he
-has the marks of good nature, and joviality in
-every feature.” Another contemporary gives
-him this character: “Slow, not wearisome, a
-man of sense, rather than of talent; good-natured,
-and reliable as to promises. His
-house was filled with rank, beauty and talent,
-and every one felt at ease there. The patron
-of musicians, the soul of the Catch Club [he
-might have added a proficient on the kettledrum],
-although deficient in ear, and knowledge
-of harmony.” He had an engaging manner
-in private life, which put every one at their
-ease, although he occasionally tried his friends’
-patience by a playful bantering, or what Mr.
-Cradock calls badgering, such as; “Ladies,
-here is Cradock says, a man cannot be punctual
-unless he wears a wig.” “No, my Lord, I
-said a man may be punctual, but his hair
-dresser may be late, and make him so.”</p>
-
-<p>He dressed well, and looked “noble,” but he
-had a shambling unequal gait. When in Paris
-he took dancing lessons, and, bidding his
-master good-bye, told him if he came to
-London, he would willingly recommend or serve<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_214"></a>[214]</span>
-him. “Ah, milor,” said the man, “pray do
-not say <i>I</i> taught you to dance.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Sandwich retained his faculties almost
-to the end, and spoke with great clearness and
-precision, of all the remarkable public events,
-of which he had been a witness, in his stirring
-life. He was an F.R.S., a Governor of the
-Charterhouse, the eldest of the elder Brothers
-of the Trinity House, and the oldest General
-in the army.</p>
-
-<p>In 1740, he married Judith, third daughter
-of Charles, Viscount Fane, of Basildon, Berks.
-The marriage was unhappy, and they were
-separated for several years before her death.
-Their children were: John, who succeeded him,
-Edward, William Augustus, and one daughter,
-Mary. Lord Sandwich died at his house in
-Hertford Street, Mayfair, in 1792.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Edward, First Earl of Sandwich</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In the Robes of the Garter.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_215"></a>[215]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Mariana, Queen Regent of Spain</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SEBASTIAN HERRERA.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Seated. In a Religious Habit, the Widow’s Weeds worn
-in Spain.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1631. Died, 1696.—The eldest
-daughter of Ferdinand III., Emperor of
-Germany, by the daughter of Philip III., King
-of Spain. Married Philip IV., in 1649. On
-her arrival in Spain, as a youthful bride,
-Mariana’s deportment had to undergo severe
-discipline, from the strict etiquette of the court,
-and the stern dignity of her royal husband,
-whom she shocked by the exuberance of her
-animal spirits, and above all, her immoderate
-laughter at the sallies of the Court Fool.
-When admonished on one occasion, she excused
-herself by saying it was out of her power to
-restrain her merriment, and that the Jester
-must be removed, or she must laugh on.
-Mariana was remarkable for the extravagance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_216"></a>[216]</span>
-and tawdriness of her dress, as may be seen in
-the portraits by Velasquez. Her chief beauty
-consisted in her magnificent hair, which she disfigured
-by dressing it, in an outrageous manner,
-with feathers, flowers, and love knots. At a
-period when rouge was much worn, the immoderate
-use of it, made her “brick-dust
-cheeks” a ridiculous object, and altogether,
-says Stirling: “She is far more interesting
-wearing the widow’s weeds, in which she sate to
-Carreno, and Herrera, than in the butterfly garb
-in which she flaunts on the canvas of Velasquez.”
-She was as inferior to her predecessor, Isabelle
-de Bourbon, Philip’s first wife, in qualities of
-mind, as in graces of person. She became a
-widow; and Regent of the Kingdom, on the
-accession of her son Charles II., in 1665.</p>
-
-<p>Mariana divided her confidence, between her
-confessor, a German Jesuit, and a gentleman of
-her household, Valenzuela by name. He was
-remarkably handsome; and the Queen Mother
-made a marriage between him, and one of her
-German ladies, which established him in her
-Palace, where he became her chief confidant,
-and was admitted to her apartments at all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_217"></a>[217]</span>
-hours, his wife being generally present, to avoid
-scandal. Mariana’s faction was strongly opposed
-by Don John of Austria, the late King’s
-natural son, (by the beautiful actress, Maria
-Calderona.) He was handsome, intellectual,
-and accomplished, and in military genius alone,
-was he inferior to his namesake, the hero of
-Lepanto. His father loved him dearly, but the
-Queen had contrived to estrange them, some
-little time before Philip’s death. The ups and
-downs of the struggle between Don John, and
-Mariana were never ending: now her star
-appeared in the ascendant, then the evil repute
-of her confessor, his inefficiency in business,
-and the overbearing insolence of Valenzuela,
-brought down the influence of the Regent to a
-low ebb. Now at open variance with her
-husband’s son, now consenting with a bad grace
-to his participation in the Government, and
-then procuring for him an office at some distance
-from Madrid, so as to be rid of his immediate
-presence.</p>
-
-<p>Don John ruled well, and held a little
-Court at Saragossa, but he and the Regent
-were always at variance, and so disgusted were<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_218"></a>[218]</span>
-the people with her government, and that of
-her favourites, that many clamoured for Don
-John, while some went so far as to say he was
-the rightful heir, and that Mariana’s and Maria
-Calderona’s infants, had been changed.</p>
-
-<p>Whether from motives of patriotism or
-ambition, Don John worked steadily to undermine
-the Regent’s power, and the vanity and
-ostentation of Valenzuela contributed unconsciously
-to the same end. He was generally
-supposed to be a spy, and was called the
-Queen’s “Duendo.”<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> At tournaments he
-wore the Queen Mother’s colours of black and
-silver, with many ostentatious mottos, which
-seemed to insinuate the high favour, in which
-he stood with that Royal Lady. One day,
-when the Court were hunting near the
-Escurial, the King shot at a stag, and wounded
-Valenzuela in the thigh, whereat Queen
-Mariana shrieked, and fell senseless. On this
-“hint” many spake, especially Don John, and
-his party, who told the King plainly, that he
-and Spain were not only governed by the
-Regent, but by her paramour. The King went<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_219"></a>[219]</span>
-to Buen Retiro, and denied himself to his mother,
-who was desired to leave Madrid; Valenzuela
-was arrested, his wife and children shut up in
-a convent, and the “handsome, vain, well-dressed
-courtier, with his fine curling locks,
-who had considered many of the nobles of
-Spain beneath his notice,” was sent off to the
-Philippine Islands. Don John came into power,
-and Mariana had a small Court, which was
-little better than a prison, at Aranjuez, where
-Madame d’Aulnoy visited her. She was dressed
-in the manner of this portrait, served on the
-bended knee, and waited on by a hideous little
-dwarf, clothed in gold and silver brocade. Don
-John’s government was no sinecure; cabals
-were rife, and he died so suddenly that it was
-currently reported that he had been poisoned,
-at Mariana’s instigation. Be that as it may,
-no sooner was the death of Don John announced,
-than the King went off to his mother, in person,
-and insisted on her return to Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>Charles II. had just married his second wife,
-an alliance which Mariana had supported from
-the beginning. But she did not long survive;
-shortly after the Peace of Ryswick, died<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_220"></a>[220]</span>
-Mariana of Austria, Queen Mother of Spain;
-her death was supposed to have been hastened
-by her reluctance to consult the physicians,
-although her health had been failing for some
-time past.</p>
-
-<p>This interesting portrait, together with that
-of her son, King Charles II., was presented by
-the Queen Mother, then Regent, to Edward,
-first Earl of Sandwich, when Ambassador, to
-the Court of Madrid, in 1666.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<div class="footnote">
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> Wizard or Familiar.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Seated, leaning on a Table, resting her Head on her Hand.
-Wears a White Satin Dress, trimmed with Blue, and Pearls.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1640. Died, 1709.—The only child of
-William Villiers, Viscount Grandison, by Mary,
-third daughter of the first, and sister and
-co-heiress of the second Viscount Bayning.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Grandison, of whom Clarendon gives an<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_221"></a>[221]</span>
-exalted character for piety, loyalty, and valour;
-died in 1643, at Oxford, (of a wound which he had
-received a few weeks before, at the siege of
-Bristol), leaving a widow of 18, who five years
-afterwards, was re-married to Charles Villiers,
-Earl of Anglesey, cousin-german to her first
-husband. She did not long survive, and at her
-death, left her beautiful daughter to the stepfather’s
-care. It was under Lord Anglesey’s
-roof, that Barbara passed her early years, and we
-hear of her, on her first arrival in London,
-dressed in “a plain and countrified manner,”
-but this fashion was soon changed for the last
-“mode” of the town, and her surpassing beauty
-made her the object of general admiration. At
-the age of 16, the precocious coquette had already
-captivated Philip Stanhope, second Earl of
-Chesterfield, a young widower, who had just
-returned from his travels, and succeeded to his
-title, and property—“a beauty, a wit, a duellist,”
-and according to Swift, “the greatest knave in
-England.” His correspondence with Barbara,
-and her confidante and cousin, Lady Anne
-Hamilton (which was found in the Library of
-Bath House, in 1869), breathes the most ardent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_222"></a>[222]</span>
-passion, which did not however, interfere with
-his being called three times in Church, the same
-year, with the daughter of Lord Fairfax, (who
-subsequently married George, Duke of Buckingham).</p>
-
-<p>So early in life had Barbara embarked in a
-career of guilt, and artifice, that in spite of her
-liaison with Chesterfield, she threw her spells
-to such purpose round Master Roger Palmer,
-student of the Middle Temple, second son of Sir
-James Palmer, of Hayes, Middlesex, that the
-misguided youth married her in spite of the
-paternal prohibition. But the young wife did
-not break off her connection with her former
-lover, and not long after her marriage, she writes
-to Chesterfield, in a most affectionate manner,
-speaking of her recovery from the small-pox,
-and alluding to “Mounseer’s” (Mr. Palmer)
-jealousy, and how “he is resolved never to
-bring me to towne again.” Lord Chesterfield,
-in consequence of killing a young man in a
-duel, was compelled to fly the country, and he
-took refuge at Paris, at the Court of the Queen
-Mother (Henrietta Maria), and afterwards joined
-the English King, at Breda, where he solicited,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_223"></a>[223]</span>
-and received the royal pardon, and returned to
-England with Charles on his restoration: all
-the time he was on the continent, keeping up
-his correspondence with his adored Barbara.</p>
-
-<p>There exists great difference of opinion, as to
-the date of the first meeting between the King,
-and Mistress Palmer, but there seems little
-doubt that the favourite’s reign began on
-Charles’s eventful day, the 29th of May, 1660.
-Mr. Palmer, now a member of Parliament, had
-a house in King Street, Westminster, close to
-the Palace, as also to the lodgings of the Earl of
-Sandwich, whose housekeeper, “Sarah,” supplied
-his lordship’s cousin, and daily visitor, Mr.
-Pepys, with abundant gossip. The far-famed
-diary abounds in anecdotes of Barbara, praises
-of her beauty, alternating with blame of her
-conduct, but every word shewing the fascination
-she exercised over the writer. The Earl of
-Anglesey died in 1660-61: and about the same
-time a daughter was born to Mistress Palmer,
-which was the occasion of much scandal. [Roger
-Palmer was now raised to the title of Earl of
-Castlemaine, and Baron Limerick]. In 1662
-Charles II. married Catherine of Braganza, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_224"></a>[224]</span>
-“Sarah” informed Pepys, that the King supped
-every night in the week preceding his nuptials,
-with Lady Castlemaine: “Likewise, when the
-whole street was aglow with bonfires, the night
-of the Queen’s arrival, there was no fire at my
-lady’s door.” On the birth of a second child a
-dreadful altercation took place between the
-husband, and wife, but the feud was ostensibly
-a religious one, for Lord Castlemaine, who had
-lately embraced the Roman Catholic faith,
-caused the infant to be baptized by a Popish
-Priest. Madam was furious, and, as usual,
-victorious in her struggles, and a few days
-afterwards “Charles” was re-baptized by a
-Protestant Minister, in the presence of his godfathers,
-the King, Lord Oxford, &amp;c. Shortly
-after this event, Lady Castlemaine left her lord,
-carrying with her all her plate, and valuables.
-“They say,” writes Pepys, “that his Lordship
-is gone to France, to enter a Monastery.”</p>
-
-<p>On the appointment of the Ladies of the
-Bedchamber to the Queen, Lady Sandwich was
-justified in her fear, “that the King would
-still keep in, with Lady Castlemaine.” A great
-commotion occurred, in the old Palace of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_225"></a>[225]</span>
-Hampton Court. The Queen had never mentioned
-the favourite’s name; therefore Charles
-hoped she was ignorant of her rival’s existence;
-but when the list of the proposed Ladies of the
-Bedchamber, was submitted to her Majesty,
-Catherine deliberately pricked out the name of
-my Lady Castlemaine, which much disturbed
-her husband. By the King’s command, Lord
-Clarendon, sorely against his inclination, waited
-on Her Majesty, to try and induce her to cancel
-her refusal, but the Queen “was much discontented
-with her husband,” and declared
-that rather than submit to the insult, she would
-desire to return to her own country. Lady
-Castlemaine through an artifice however, approached
-her Royal mistress, and kissed her
-hand; who, on discovering the trick, fell into a
-swoon, and was carried from the apartment.
-The King was furious; the Queen for a while
-appeared inflexible, but Charles gained his
-point in the end, for after some time had elapsed,
-Barbara’s appointment was confirmed, and from
-that time forth, the Queen, by some strange
-persuasion, or obedience to the King’s orders,
-treated her rival with familiarity, and confidence;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_226"></a>[226]</span>
-“was,” says Pepys, “merry with her in public,
-and in private used nobody more friendly.”
-But then, according to the same authority, “the
-Queen is a most good lady, and takes all, with
-the greatest meekness that may be.”</p>
-
-<p>The syren seems indeed to have bewitched
-every one, Dryden himself did not disdain to
-write a poem in her honour. On one occasion
-the Countess had a violent altercation, with “la
-belle Stewart,” Maid of Honour, who had excited
-her jealousy, and the King, taking part against
-her, the imperious lady walked off to her uncle’s
-at Richmond, whither Charles soon followed
-her, on pretence of hunting, but really to ask
-pardon. Not long after, however, Pepys saw
-her on horseback, with the King, the Queen,
-Mistress Stewart, etc.; but he thought the King
-looked coldly on her, “and when she had to
-’light, nobody pressed to take her down, but her
-own gentleman, and she looked, though handsome,
-mighty out of humour, and had a yellow
-plume in her hat.” A report reached the
-Queen’s ears, that Barbara had turned Papist,
-but though a zealot in her religion, Catherine
-“did not much like it, as she did not believe<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_227"></a>[227]</span>
-it was done for conscience sake.” Perhaps her
-Majesty agreed, with the learned Divine who
-said that “if the Church of Rome had got no
-more by Lady Castlemaine, than the Church of
-England had lost, the matter was not much.”</p>
-
-<p>A curious, and unpleasant adventure befell
-Lady Castlemaine, in the Park, returning from
-a visit to the Duchess of York at St. James’s
-Palace, attended only by her maid, and a little
-page. She was accosted by three gentlemen in
-masks, who upbraided her in the strongest
-language, and reminded her that the mistress
-of Edward IV. had died of starvation, on a
-dunghill, abandoned by all the world. The
-infuriated and terrified beauty no sooner reached
-home, than she swooned; the King ran to the
-rescue, ordered the gates of the Park to be shut,
-but it was too late—several arrests were made,
-but no discovery ensued.</p>
-
-<p>In the year of the Plague, the Court being
-at Oxford, Lady Castlemaine gave birth to a
-son, at Merton College. The lady and the
-King had high words on the occasion of the
-Duke of Buckingham being sent to the Tower,
-she speaking up boldly, in his behalf, Charles<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_228"></a>[228]</span>
-saying she was a jade that meddled in matters
-she had nothing to do with; she retorting
-that he was “a fool to suffer his business to be
-carried on by fools,” and so forth. But before
-five days had elapsed the Duke was at liberty.
-Lady Castlemaine was a determined enemy to
-Chancellor Clarendon, and she had declared in
-the Queen’s chamber, she hoped to see his head
-upon a stake to keep company with those of the
-Regicides, and there is no doubt she was instrumental
-in procuring the downfall of the
-King’s “faithful and able adviser.” Gambling
-was another vice in which Barbara indulged,
-and Pepys tells us she won £15,000, one night,
-and lost £25,000 another. But her favour was
-on the wane: she was libelled, and abused, and
-the King was weary of her, and it was reported
-that he had given her large sums of money and
-a fine house, (the residence of the Earls of
-Berkshire, on the south-west corner of St.
-James’s Street,) merely to get rid of her. Yet
-she still ruled him in many points, and she
-made great friends with the Duke and Duchess
-of York, while one of her violent hatreds was
-against the Duke of Ormond, Lord Lieutenant<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_229"></a>[229]</span>
-of Ireland, because he would not confirm the
-grant of Phœnix Park, a house near Dublin,
-which the King had promised her. Meeting
-him in one of the royal apartments, she fell
-upon him with a torrent of abuse, and ended
-by expressing a hope that she might live to see
-him hanged. His Grace replied with calm
-dignity, “he was in no haste to shorten her
-days; all he wished was to live, to see her old.”</p>
-
-<p>In 1670, Barbara, Countess of Castlemaine,
-was created Baroness Nonsuch, Countess of
-Southampton, and Duchess of Cleveland, in the
-Peerage of England, with the Palace and Park
-of Nonsuch, in Surrey, and an enormous increase
-of income: so that as far as pecuniary advantages
-went, the King was still sufficiently
-under her spell, to comply with her exorbitant
-demands. John Churchill, (afterwards the great
-Duke of Marlborough,) when a Court Page
-attracted the attention of Barbara. She lavished
-gifts upon him, procured him the post of Groom
-of the Bedchamber to the Duke of York, and
-obtained his promotion in the army. But in
-later years when her beauty had passed away,
-and her favour at Court, the man who had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_230"></a>[230]</span>
-risen by her influence, refused to speak a word
-in her behalf, respecting the renewal of her
-ill-paid pension. The last grant made to the
-Duchess of Cleveland, and to the Earl of
-Northumberland, for their lives, was the Rangership
-of the honour, and manor of Hampton
-Court; but the lodge in Bushy Park was not
-habitable. It was about this time, that Barbara
-went to France, her name appearing as a liberal
-patroness to the Convent of the Blue Nuns, in
-the Faubourg St. Antoine (where she had placed
-her daughter Barbara), and other religious
-houses.</p>
-
-<p>In 1678 occurred the episode, with the
-English Ambassador, to which we have alluded
-in the notice of the Duke of Montagu, when
-Barbara on her return from London, found that
-her own daughter, the Countess of Sussex, had
-supplanted her, in the favour of that fickle
-nobleman. In 1694, she was living in Arlington
-Street, Piccadilly, and received as a companion
-a certain Madame De la Rivière, one of the
-daughters and co-heiresses of Sir Roger Manley,
-Bart., a woman of no reputation, save as the
-authoress of some inferior literary productions;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_231"></a>[231]</span>
-who after a stormy friendship, repaid her
-patroness’s hospitality by contriving a clandestine
-marriage for her eldest son, the Duke
-of Southampton, with the daughter of Sir
-William Pulteney, a match very much disapproved
-by his mother.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Castlemaine died in 1705. After his
-separation from his wife, as far back as 1662,
-his life was eventful; he travelled far, fought
-at Solebay, was twice sent to the Tower, went
-as Ambassador to Rome, was the author of
-several political pamphlets, and in fact
-“meddled a little in everything around.”
-Four months after his death, his widow married
-the celebrated “Beau” Feilding, the widower
-of two heiresses, viz., the only daughter of Lord
-Carlingford, and the only daughter of the
-Marquis of Clanricarde, widow of Viscount
-Muskerry, and of Robert Villiers, Viscount
-Purbeck. Both ladies died without children,
-and the Beau at the time of his marriage with
-Duchess Barbara, was a man of desperate
-fortune, and character. He ill-treated his wife,
-who was most generous to him, and would have
-divested her of all her property, had not her<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_232"></a>[232]</span>
-sons stood by her. Fortunately, for her Grace,
-it was discovered that the Beau had already,
-but a few days before his marriage with her,
-espoused a certain Mary Wadsworth, who had
-been palmed off upon his credulity, as a widow
-of enormous wealth. He was tried, and found
-guilty of bigamy, Barbara being in court
-during the trial, and the marriage was pronounced
-null, and void.</p>
-
-<p>She passed the remainder of her life at
-Chiswick, where she died of dropsy in the
-sixty-ninth year of her age, 1709. She left a
-considerate will, and gave strict orders concerning
-her funeral, desiring to be buried at the
-parish church. Her pall was borne by six
-Peers of the realm. Barbara’s three sons were
-the Duke of Cleveland and Southampton, the
-Duke of Grafton, and the Duke of Northumberland;
-the first and last titles became extinct.
-Her daughters were the Countess of Sussex,
-the Countess of Lichfield, “a blameless beauty,”
-and Lady Barbara Fitzroy, (disowned by the
-King, and supposed to be the daughter of John
-Churchill, afterwards Duke of Marlborough),
-who took the veil, and died as Prioress of a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_233"></a>[233]</span>
-convent in France. Bishop Burnet, in speaking
-of Barbara, Duchess of Cleveland, says: “She
-was a woman of great beauty, vicious, ravenous,
-foolish, and imperious.” Another contemporary
-says: “She was a great contradiction, unboundedly
-lavish, yet sordidly covetous.”</p>
-
-<p>Portrait galleries teem with likenesses of
-Barbara, at different ages, in different costumes,
-and “moods.” In the celebrated “Bellona” of
-the Hampton Court Beauties we detect the
-“arrogant virago” who carried all before her:
-but in the portrait in question, her beauty is
-far more captivating from the pensive and
-languid expression, which softens her brilliant
-eyes, and smooths the corners of her finely cut
-but usually severe lips. No wonder, Lord
-Sandwich was delighted with his present. Pepys
-does not specify the donor, whether the lady,
-or the artist; but he says: “My Lady Sandwich
-showed me, and Mistress Pepys, Lady
-Castlemaine’s picture, at the new house in
-Lincoln’s Inn Fields, finely done, and given
-my Lord;” and in another page, he calls it
-“that most blessed picture.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_234"></a>[234]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>General Ireton</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By DOBSON.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Three-quarter Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Long Hair. Red Doublet. A Cuirass and Sash. Buff
-Gloves. Right Hand holding the Sash. Left on
-his Hip.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1611. Died, 1651. Son of Gervase
-Ireton, Esq., of Attenborough, Co. Notts. Was
-a gentleman-commoner, at Trinity College,
-Oxford. Destined for the bar; but the Civil
-War breaking out, he obtained a commission in
-the Parliamentary Army. In 1645 he married
-at Norton, near Oxford, Bridget, the eldest
-daughter of Oliver Cromwell, by whom he had
-one son, and four daughters. In 1649 he was
-appointed one of the King’s judges, and signed
-the warrant for his execution. He was a man
-of undoubted courage, and distinguished himself
-in numerous engagements, more especially at
-the battle of Naseby. His views were violently
-republican, but his integrity stern and uncompromising;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_235"></a>[235]</span>
-no mercenary motives influenced
-him. Eleven years the junior of Cromwell,
-and his son-in-law, he dared to differ with
-him, and to expostulate boldly when he
-disapproved of the Protector’s conduct. After
-the battle of Worcester he was offered pecuniary
-remuneration, with several other members
-of the Parliamentary Army, but he
-was disinterested enough to refuse £20,000,
-and to tell the government roundly, he should
-be more content to see them paying off the
-debts they had incurred, than thus disposing
-of the public money. It was thought that his
-appointment as Lord Deputy in Ireland, was
-intended by the Protector to remove him from
-all possibility of interference with his own
-proceedings; and there seems little doubt that
-Ireton, shortly before his death, had contemplated
-crossing the Channel to speak face
-to face with his father-in-law, in reference to
-many measures he disapproved. But he was
-suddenly seized, and carried off by the Plague,
-during the siege of Limerick in 1651.</p>
-
-<p>Ireton was held in great esteem by his party
-and his comrades, and it was said of him that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_236"></a>[236]</span>
-he grafted the soldier on the lawyer, and the
-statesman on the saint. Cromwell was much
-affected at his death, and caused the body to be
-brought over, and deposited with great pomp in
-Westminster Abbey, in Henry VII.’s Chapel.
-At the Restoration however, the body was dug
-up, and hung upon a gibbet at Tyburn.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector of
-England</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WALKER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length: Oval.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Armour, with a Plain Falling Collar.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1599. Died, 1658—The only surviving
-son of Robert Cromwell, by Elizabeth
-Stewart: born in Huntingdon, named after his
-uncle, Sir Oliver Cromwell, of Hinchingbrook,
-where he passed many of his earlier days.
-Numerous stories are told, (some ridiculed, some
-generally believed,) of Oliver’s infancy, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_237"></a>[237]</span>
-boyhood. It is said that on one occasion he was
-snatched from his cradle by a monkey, who
-jumping out of the window, scampered over
-the roof of Hinchingbrook, to the consternation
-of the family, who stood watching the beast,
-with great anxiety. Whether or not the
-monkey felt, that he bore in his arms the future
-ruler of England, the chronicler does not affirm,
-but he goes on to relate, that the fears of the
-relatives were soon appeased by seeing the baby
-safely restored to his cradle, by the conscientious
-ape! Another incident connected with Hinchingbrook
-was more currently believed, viz., that
-Charles I., when a boy, visited Sir Oliver, on
-his road from Scotland to London. The good
-knight sent for his nephew to help him entertain
-the Prince, which he did by disputing violently
-with his Royal Highness: a quarrel ensued,
-and Oliver, being the strongest of the two,
-caused Charles’s blood to flow, an ominous
-presage of after times. We do not know how
-Sir Oliver visited his nephew’s outbreak, but he
-was a staunch cavalier, and supported the
-Royalists till his death.</p>
-
-<p>Oliver, when a school-boy, was wilful, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_238"></a>[238]</span>
-wayward, and fond of wild and sometimes
-coarse jests. One Christmas night, the revels
-at Hinchingbrook were interrupted by some
-unseemly pranks of his conceiving, which called
-down upon him, a sentence from the Master of
-Misrule that Sir Oliver ordered into immediate
-execution, viz., that the young recreant should
-be subjected then, and there, to a severe ducking
-in one of the adjoining fishponds. When still
-a school-boy, another anecdote is told of Oliver;
-that on awaking from a short sleep, one hot
-day, he electrified his schoolfellows with the
-description of a dream, he had had. How a
-woman of gigantic stature had appeared at the
-side of his bed, and slowly undrawing the
-curtains, had announced to him that some day,
-he would be the greatest man in England—the
-word “King” did not however pass her lips.
-The young visionary was rewarded for this lie,
-(as it was considered) by a severe flogging. A
-better authenticated story is told of his rescue
-from drowning, by one Johnson, a citizen of
-Huntingdon, of whom General Cromwell
-enquired (when in after years, he marched
-through his native town, with the army) if he<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_239"></a>[239]</span>
-remembered the circumstance: “Yes,” was the
-indignant reply, “and I wish to my heart I had
-let you drown, rather than to see you in arms,
-against your King.”</p>
-
-<p>At the age of seventeen, Oliver Cromwell left
-the Grammar School, at Huntingdon, and entered
-Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge. Both as a
-school-boy and a collegian he distinguished himself
-more in athletic sports, than in application
-to study, and he appears to have led a wild
-irregular life, according to his own admission,
-for it is difficult to sift the truth, from the preposterous
-flattery on the one hand, and the
-unqualified abuse on the other, which characterise
-Cromwell’s biographers, according to
-their political opinions. In recording his own
-conversion, at the age of twenty years, he says:
-“Before which time, I hated holiness, and the
-Word of God.” His mother sent him to study
-at Lincoln’s Inn, “where,” says Carrington, “he
-associated with those of the best rank, and
-quality, and the most ingenious persons, for
-though not averse to study and contemplation,
-he seemed rather addicted to conversation, and
-the reading of men’s characters, than to a continual<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_240"></a>[240]</span>
-poring over authors.” On completing his
-twenty-first year, he married Elizabeth, daughter
-of Sir James Bourchier, of Felsted, in Essex, a
-kinswoman of Hampden’s, who brought him a
-modest dowry, which she nobly relinquished
-with the additional money he had settled on
-her for life, to rescue her husband from pecuniary
-difficulties in after years; a woman of
-irreproachable life, and unobtrusive manners,
-who tolerated rather than coveted grandeur, and
-distinction, an excellent housewife, and a loving
-help-mate. The newly married pair fixed their
-residence in Huntingdon, where his mother still
-lived, and where several children were born to
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Cromwell now turned his mind to those
-studies, and pursuits which paved his way to
-future greatness. He made his house the refuge
-for the “disaffected,” or the “persecuted” Nonconformist
-Ministers; he encouraged them in
-their opposition, prayed, preached, built a chapel
-for them, supported them on all occasions, and
-became so popular, that the chief of his fellow
-townsmen offered to return him for the Borough,
-in the next Parliament that was summoned. In<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_241"></a>[241]</span>
-1625 he failed—in 1628 he was returned as
-member for Huntingdon, when his cousin
-Hampden also took his seat. Dr. South describes
-Oliver’s appearance on this occasion, in a manner
-that caused the Merry Monarch to observe:
-“Oddsfish! that chaplain must be a Bishop;
-put me in mind of him, next vacancy.” “Who
-that beheld such a bankrupt, beggarly fellow,
-as Cromwell, first entering the Parliament House,
-with a torn, thread-bare coat, and greasy hat
-(perhaps neither of them paid for) would have
-believed that in a few years.” ... &amp;c.?</p>
-
-<p>After the dissolution of this Parliament, where
-Hampden, Cromwell, and Pym bore bold testimony
-to their political, and religious faith, Oliver
-returned to Huntingdon, and afterwards flitted
-to a small farm, near St. Ives, with his wife and
-family. Hume says the long morning and afternoon
-prayers he made, consumed his own time,
-and that of his ploughmen, and he had little
-leisure for temporal affairs. A property in, and
-near Ely, left him by his maternal uncle, determined
-him to settle in that city, in 1636. In
-1640 he was returned for Cambridge, by the
-majority of a single vote. From this moment<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_242"></a>[242]</span>
-the history of Cromwell is the history of
-England, and his acts and all that he did, are
-written in the chronicles of Clarendon, Hume,
-and other historians, whose name is Legion.
-From that time, whether in Parliament, or the
-field, he was in arms against the King, whose
-execution took place on the 30th of January,
-1649. But the inscription over the bed on
-which the Protector lay in state, will assist the
-memory as to dates.</p>
-
-<p>Oliver Cromwell, Lord Protector, etc., born at
-Huntingdon, was educated in Cambridge,
-afterwards at Lincoln’s Inn. At the beginning
-of the wars, captain of a troop of horse raised at
-his own charge. By the Parliament made
-Commander-in-Chief, he reduced Ireland and
-South Wales, overthrew Duke Hamilton’s army,
-and the Kirk’s at Dunbar, reduced all Scotland,
-and defeated Charles Stuart’s army, at Worcester.
-He was proclaimed Protector in 1654, and
-while refusing the title of King, sate on a Chair
-of State, the only one covered, in that vast
-assembly, and drove back to his Palace at
-Whitehall, with more than regal pomp.
-Thither, keeping up great state, he removed his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_243"></a>[243]</span>
-aged mother, whose remaining days were
-embittered by alarm, for her son’s safety, his
-favourite daughter, Mrs. Claypole, from whom
-he would scarcely ever separate, the gentle and
-handsome likeness of himself, Mary, etc.</p>
-
-<p>Hard, cruel, and uncompromising in public
-life, Oliver was tender, and loving in his
-domestic relations. He lost two sons, Robert,
-who died in childhood, Oliver, who fell in
-battle, a great favourite with his father,
-who in his last moments alluded to the
-young soldier’s death, “which went as a dagger
-to my heart, indeed it did.” His other children
-were, Richard, his successor for a short time
-only; Henry, Lord Deputy of Ireland; Bridget,
-married first, to General Ireton, and secondly,
-to Lieutenant-General Fleetwood; Elizabeth,
-married to Mr. Claypole, his favourite daughter,
-whose death was supposed to have hastened
-her father’s; Mary married to Viscount Fauconberg;
-and Frances married to the Hon. Robert
-Rich.</p>
-
-<p>It is almost too well known, to be worthy of
-writing down, how Cromwell’s last days were
-embittered by suspicion, and distrust of all<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_244"></a>[244]</span>
-around him, and constant fear of assassination.
-He died, however, after fourteen days sickness,
-of ague, “peaceably in his bed,” on his
-“fortunate day,” September the Third, the
-anniversary of the victories of Worcester, and
-Dunbar, in a storm so tremendous, and so
-universal, that it reached the coasts of the
-Mediterranean. The funeral was conducted
-with more than regal pomp, and splendour, but
-on the accession of Charles II., the Protector’s
-body was dug up, and hung upon the “Traitor’s
-Tree.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>General Monk</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By WALKER.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Half-Length: Oval.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(In Armour. Long Hair. White Cravat, tied with large
-Bow, and Black Ribbon.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1608. Died, 1670. A younger son of
-Thomas Monk, of Potheridge, Devon. When
-only seventeen, in consequence of a domestic<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_245"></a>[245]</span>
-quarrel, where (says the <i>Biographie Universelle</i>)
-“par excès d’amour filial, il maltraita le sous-sheriff
-d’Exeter,” he went to sea, and afterwards
-served under the Duke of Buckingham. In
-1629, he entered one of the English regiments
-in Holland, where he studied the art of war,
-with great diligence, and was remarkable for
-his steadiness, and for the discipline, he
-maintained among the soldiers, treating them
-at the same time with great kindness. In 1639,
-he returned to England. When Charles I.,
-was embarked in that unfortunate war with
-Scotland, which was the forerunner of terrible
-disasters, Monk, as Lieutenant-Colonel of
-artillery, displayed much skill, and courage,
-though both proved useless; and he then went
-to Ireland on promotion. Here he did considerable
-service, was made Governor of Dublin,
-but Parliament intervening, he was superseded
-in the office, and on the conclusion of a truce
-(by the King’s commands) with the Irish rebels,
-he returned to England. On his arrival he
-found that doubts of his fidelity had been
-instilled into Charles’s mind; but joining that
-monarch at Oxford, he soon dispelled them, was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_246"></a>[246]</span>
-promoted to the rank of Major-General, and sent
-to relieve Sandwich, where he was taken
-prisoner, and thence committed to the Tower
-by the Roundheads.</p>
-
-<p>His captivity lasted two years, during which
-time he rejected all overtures, made him by the
-Protector, and occupied his leisure hours in
-noting down his observations on military, and
-political subjects. Cromwell entertained a
-high opinion of Monk as a soldier, and he
-offered him the alternative of prolonged imprisonment,
-or a command in the Parliamentary
-army, to march against O’Neill, the Irish rebel.
-Monk accepted the latter, and behaved in this
-expedition with his usual courage, and determination;
-but he was ill-supported by the
-Government at home, who, as we are told, “had
-too many irons in the fire,” to attend to the Irish
-war. He was reluctantly compelled to sign a
-treaty with O’Neill, for which proceeding he
-was called to account, on his return to
-England. But the Protector considered his
-services necessary, and despatched him in
-command to Scotland, where he again saw
-much service. Yet in Oliver’s mind there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_247"></a>[247]</span>
-lurked suspicions of Monk’s fidelity; and not
-long before his death, he wrote to the General
-saying: “There be that tell me, there is a
-certain cunning fellow in Scotland, called
-George Monk, who is said to lie in wait there,
-to introduce Charles Stuart; I pray you use
-your diligence to apprehend him, and send him
-up to me.”</p>
-
-<p>Monk’s proceedings from this time, form part
-of history, and the share he took in the restoration
-of Charles II., is too well known to be
-repeated here. Charles called him his father,
-invested him with the Order of the Garter,
-created him Duke of Albemarle, Earl of
-Torrington, and Baron Monk, and appointed
-him Lieutenant-General of the Forces of the
-United Kingdom, with a large income.</p>
-
-<p>In 1653, he married (or acknowledged his
-marriage with) Anne, daughter of John Clargis,
-who had long resided under his roof: “A lady,”
-says Guizot, “whose manners were more vulgar,
-and less simple, than those of her husband, and
-who was the laughing-stock, of a witty and
-satirical court.”</p>
-
-<p>The French historian speaks disparagingly of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_248"></a>[248]</span>
-the great general, but in the time of the Plague,
-when the court, and ministers left London, the
-Duke remained to watch over the necessities of
-the wretched inhabitants, to save families from
-pillage, and to alleviate the sufferings of the
-poor.</p>
-
-<p>He was afloat in joint command of the fleet
-with Prince Rupert, when the Great Fire
-occurred, and the general cry was: “Ah, if old
-George had been here, this would not have happened.”
-He died in his sixty-second year, leaving
-an enormous fortune to his spendthrift son
-Christopher, (who died without children), and
-was buried in Westminster Abbey with great
-splendour, Charles II. attending his obsequies.</p>
-
-<p>Guizot says: “C’étoit un homme capable de
-grandes choses, quoiqu’il n’eût pas de grandeur
-dans l’âme.” His jealousy of his noble colleague
-Lord Sandwich, bears out the French historian’s
-Opinion, in some measure.</p>
-
-<p>In his last illness, he was much occupied with
-arranging the alliance of his surviving son,
-Christopher, (the death of the elder had been a
-terrible blow to him) with the heiress of the
-wealthy Duke of Newcastle. The nuptials<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_249"></a>[249]</span>
-were celebrated in his own chamber, and a
-few days afterwards, George Monk, Duke of
-Albemarle, expired in his arm-chair, without a
-groan.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Charles II., King of England</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR PETER LELY.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Standing by a Table, on which are his Helmet and Staff.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1630. Died, 1685.—He was the second
-surviving son of Charles I., by Henrietta Maria
-of France, born at St. James’s Palace, on the
-29th of May. When only twelve years old was
-appointed to the command of a troop of horse,
-his father’s Body Guard at York, and sent with
-the title of General, to serve in the Royal
-army when fifteen. After the defeat of Naseby,
-he went to Scilly, then to Jersey, and in 1646
-joined his mother, at Paris. He was at the
-Hague, when the news of his father’s death
-reached him, and he immediately assumed the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_250"></a>[250]</span>
-title of King. In 1649, he was proclaimed King
-at Edinburgh. He left Holland, returned to
-Paris, and thence again to Jersey, where he
-received a deputation from Scotland, and
-accepted the Crown offered him by the Presbyterians,
-under such humiliating conditions, as
-disgusted him with that sect, for the rest of his
-life. In 1650, he arrived in Scotland, being
-compelled to take the Covenant before he landed;
-was crowned at Scone on New Year’s Day, 1651;
-but marched south, on hearing of the advance of
-Cromwell, and was proclaimed King at Carlisle.
-Defeated by Cromwell, at the Battle of
-Worcester, Charles had a narrow escape, with
-all the well known incidents of the hiding
-place in Boscobel Oak, etc. He embarked from
-Shoreham for Normandy, thence to Paris,
-Bruges, Brussels. In the latter city he heard of
-the Protector’s death; then, when at Calais
-and Breda, he kept up constant communication,
-not only with General Monk, and his own
-acknowledged partisans, but he also sent
-addresses to both Houses of Parliament. On
-the 1st, of May 1660, they voted his restoration;
-on the 8th, he was proclaimed in London;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_251"></a>[251]</span>
-on the 23rd, he embarked from the Hague; and
-on the 29th, his thirtieth birthday, he made
-his public entry into London, amidst the
-enthusiastic acclamations of the people. In
-1662, he married Catherine of Braganza,
-daughter of John IV., King of Portugal,
-and died at Whitehall, in the twenty-fifth
-year of his reign. Some say he confessed
-himself a Roman Catholic; some that he was
-a victim to poison. It was his brother’s wish
-to prove the former statement, and several of
-his contemporaries, including the Duke of
-Buckingham, believed the latter. The last
-named nobleman gives apparently an impartial
-character of the “Merry Monarch,” who was
-remarkable for contradictions, and inconsistencies,
-even above the average, in an inconsistent
-world. Buckingham says: “His very countenance
-set all rules of physiognomy at defiance,
-for being of a cheerful and compassionate disposition,
-his expression was melancholy, and
-repelling. He had a wonderful facility in comprehending
-trifles, but had too little application
-to master great matters. Generous, extravagant,
-lavish in the extreme, he had a reluctance to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_252"></a>[252]</span>
-part with small sums, and it was often remarked
-that he grudged losing five pounds at tennis to
-the very people on whom at other times he
-would bestow five thousand. Gentle and yielding
-in trifles, he was inflexible in important
-matters. Profligate in the extreme, weak and
-capricious, he was,” says the same witness, “a
-civil and obliging husband, a kind master, an
-indulgent father, and an affectionate [and he
-might have added, forbearing] brother. Hating
-the formalities of royalty, he was ready to assert
-his dignity, when it was necessary to do so. So
-agreeably did he tell a story, that his hearers
-never cavilled at its repetition, not through
-civility, but from the desire to hear it again, as
-is the case with a clever comedy.”</p>
-
-<p>So far the Duke of Buckingham. We know
-what his boon companion Rochester, wrote of
-him, in a provisional epitaph; perhaps one of
-the only sallies proceeding from his favourite,
-that “Old Rowley” did not relish:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Here lies our Sovereign lord the King,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Whose word no man relies on:</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who never said a foolish thing,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And never did a wise one.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_253"></a>[253]</span></p>
-
-<p>Also Andrew Marvell’s satire:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Of stature tall and sable hue,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Much like the son of Kish, that lofty Jew;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Ten years of need, he lingered in exile,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And fed his father’s asses, all the while.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<h3><i>Charles II., King of Spain</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Aged Four Years.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SEBASTIAN HERRERA.</span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Full-Length.</span></p>
-
-<div class="desc">
-
-<p>(Long flowing Light Hair. Red Coat, trimmed with Silver.
-Lace Ruffles. Holding a Truncheon in one Hand, and
-his Hat in the other. Above him an Eagle, with extended
-Wings, bearing a Sword. An Angel hovering
-over the King, holding the Spanish Crown.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Born, 1661. Died, 1700. Eldest surviving
-son of Philip IV., by Mariana, of Austria. Succeeded
-his father, when four years of age. His
-first wife was Marie Louise, daughter of
-Philip, Duke of Orleans, by Henrietta Maria of
-England. Transplanted from the brilliant Court<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_254"></a>[254]</span>
-of France, to the stiff formality of Spain, and the
-Spaniards, at a time when the jealousy of France
-was so great, that the Mistress of the Robes was
-said to have wrung her parrots’ necks for speaking
-French, Marie Louise, the wife of a half
-idiot King, bore herself wisely and bravely, and
-during the few short years of her reign, gained
-an influence for good, over her husband, who
-loved her dearly. But the mirror which broke
-to pieces in her fair hands, on the day of her
-arrival in Madrid, was but too true an omen.
-She died in the 27th year of her age, a victim to
-poison (as her mother had been before her), supposed
-to have been administered by the beautiful
-and infamous Olympia Mancini—at least this
-was the general belief. Her husband lamented
-her deeply; yet he re-married the next year,
-Anna Maria, daughter of Philip, Count Palatine,
-of Neuburg, a good-humoured, amiable Princess;
-but Charles remained indifferent to her, and so
-faithful was he to the memory of his first wife,
-that one of his last acts was to cause the tomb
-in which she was interred to be opened, while
-he hung in speechless sorrow, over the embalmed
-remains of the once beautiful Marie Louise;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_255"></a>[255]</span>
-and when he looked upon her still comely features,
-he exclaimed, with tears, “I shall meet
-her soon in Heaven.”</p>
-
-<p>“Charles II., of Spain,” says Sir William
-Stirling, “might well be called the Melancholy
-Monarch in contradistinction to his uncle
-Charles II., of England, the Merry Monarch.”
-In the early years of his reign, he was in entire
-subjugation to the Regent-Mother, who at open
-variance with Don John, and his party, only
-agreed with him in this, to keep the young
-monarch under. True it is, the unhappy Prince
-was ill-suited to his position. From his earliest
-years, he was a martyr to despondency, and
-detested everything connected with public
-affairs. His gun, his dogs, and his beads, were
-his favourite companions. He had a zealous
-love for art, and artists, but little taste, or
-knowledge, patronising, and befriending alike
-the worthy, and the worthless. His paramount
-favourite, was Luca Giordano, to whose studio
-he paid frequent visits, and whom he commanded
-to remain covered in his presence: a
-mandate which that self-approving artist, readily
-obeyed—a contrast to the conduct of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_256"></a>[256]</span>
-distinguished Carreno, to whom the young
-King was one day sitting for his portrait, in
-the presence of the Queen-Mother. Charles
-enquired to what order the artist belonged.
-“To none,” was the reply, “except that of your
-Majesty’s servants.” The Badge of Santiago,
-was sent to Carreno that very day, but so great
-was his diffidence, that he never assumed it.
-“His portraits of Charles II.,” says Stirling,
-“as a child, have something to please the eye
-in the pale pensive features, and long fair hair;
-the projection of the lower jaw, so remarkable in
-after life, is scarcely discernible, and there is
-something pitiful, and touching in the sadness
-of the countenance, contrasted with the gala
-suit he wears.” Herrera died soon after
-Charles’s accession, but besides Giordano he
-retained in his service Coello, and Muñoz, and
-invited Murillo, to remove from Seville, to
-Madrid.</p>
-
-<p>He had a magnificent carriage, for himself
-and his second wife, painted with mythological
-subjects: he amused himself by building,
-visiting from one studio to another, and shooting
-wolves; while occasionally he might be seen,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_257"></a>[257]</span>
-walking barefoot in the procession at an Auto
-da Fé. Charles II., without doubt stood on the
-verge of imbecility, or insanity, and the treatment
-he endured from those around him, on his death-bed,
-was sufficient to deaden the small share of
-intellect that was his portion. In his last days
-he was tormented, and harassed by questions as
-to the succession, (he being childless): and in
-his dying moments, he was tortured by the
-frightful ceremony of exorcism, it being
-currently supposed, or at least affirmed by the
-superstitious, and cruel, that he was possessed.</p>
-
-<p>“Thus,” says Stirling, “died one of the most
-unfortunate monarchs, ever cursed by a
-hereditary crown.”</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p class="hanging"><span class="smcap">In the Entrance Hall are Portraits of
-Kings George II. and George III., by
-Shackleton and Ramsay, of John, fourth
-Earl of Sandwich, and of several British
-Admirals, by Dance.</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_258"></a>[258]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="major" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_259"></a>[259]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="LORD_SANDWICHS_ROOM"><i>LORD SANDWICH’S ROOM.</i></h2>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_260"></a>[260]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Omai, the Otaheitan.</i></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">An Engraving.</span></p>
-
-<p>He played such a prominent part in the entertainments
-at Hinchingbrook, and had such a
-curious life of adventure, that a brief notice
-will scarcely be misplaced. His father was a
-man of considerable property in Whetea, one
-of the South Pacific Islands, which had been
-conquered by a neighbour, and he took refuge
-in Huaheine, where he died, leaving Omai, and
-several other children, in a state of poverty, and
-dependence. Captain Cook tells us, that Captain
-Furneaux, visiting these islands, becoming
-interested in Omai, conveyed him to England,
-where he became a resident under Lord
-Sandwich’s roof, (John, fourth Earl, then First
-Lord of the Admiralty.) Captain Cook and
-Mr. Cradock give the same character of the
-half savage, “intelligent, indolent, childlike,
-full of affection, and gratitude to his noble<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_261"></a>[261]</span>
-patron, but cherishing a feeling of revenge
-towards those of his own countrymen, who had
-ill-treated his father, and reduced himself to
-poverty. Lord Sandwich took him about to
-music meetings, races, etc.” “At Leicester,”
-says Mr. Cradock, “he divided public attention,
-with the Earl of Sandwich when that nobleman
-played on the kettledrum, his favourite
-instrument at the music meetings. ‘What has
-become of poor Omai?’ was the question once
-asked on some festive occasion. ‘Oh,’ was the
-answer, ‘I have just left him in the tea room,
-very happy, gallantly handing about bread and
-butter, to the ladies.’” Omai was not averse
-to admiration, and adapted himself curiously
-to his new life, showing such an aptitude for
-dancing, among other things, that a lady assured
-me with a little tuition he would make an
-excellent partner. On one occasion Lord
-Sandwich proposed that he should dress a
-shoulder of mutton, after the fashion of his
-country, and he proceeded accordingly to dig
-a hole in the lawn at Hinchingbrook, placed
-fuel covered with clean pebbles at the bottom,
-then laid the mutton neatly enveloped in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_262"></a>[262]</span>
-leaves at the top, and having closed the hole
-walked constantly round it, observing the sun.
-The joint was then served at table, and much
-commended. Having been offered some stewed
-morella cherries, he jumped up, and assured
-the society he no more wished to partake of
-human blood, than they did. One summer’s
-day he entered the breakfast room at
-Hinchingbrook, in great pain, his hand much
-swollen, not being acquainted with the word
-“wasp,” he made Dr. Solander, who was
-present, understand he had been wounded by
-a “soldier bird,” upon which the doctor
-remarked: “No naturalist could have better
-described the obnoxious insect.” “He was,”
-says Cradock, “naturally genteel, and prepossessing,
-and fond of good clothes, once finding
-fault with those prepared for him, as being
-inferior to the quality of the dress, of the same
-cut the gentleman who sat beside him wore—this
-was of Genoese, and Omai’s of English
-velvet.” So far had he advanced in civilization.
-The government judged it best, he should return
-to his own country, lest the natives should
-suspect us of having made away with him.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_263"></a>[263]</span>
-Mr. Cradock says he bade him good-bye on the
-steps of the Admiralty, when the poor fellow
-was deeply affected. Captain Cook says his
-feelings were mingled: “When he talked on the
-voyage, about England, and his friends, and
-protectors there, he was much moved, and could
-scarcely refrain from tears, so full of gratitude
-was his heart—but when we spoke of his return
-to his country, his eyes sparkled in the expectation
-of the reception he should meet with, on
-account of his superior knowledge, and still
-more on account of the treasures, with
-which he was laden.” The King, Lord
-Sandwich, Mr. Bankes (afterwards Sir Joseph),
-and many other friends, had furnished
-him with every article, which the sailors’
-knowledge of the country, made them believe
-would be acceptable there. In fact, every
-means had been taken during his abode
-in England, as also at his departure, to make
-him the instrument of conveying to the Islands
-of the Pacific Ocean, an exalted opinion of
-England’s greatness, and generosity. Omai, as
-may have been conjectured, was very useful to
-Captain Cook on the voyage out, serving as<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_264"></a>[264]</span>
-interpreter, and mediator, on many occasions, at
-the Friendly Islands, and elsewhere. On their
-arrival at Otaheite, several canoes came off, but
-Omai took no notice of the crews or they of him,
-neither did they appear to recognise him, as a
-countryman. At length Ootee, a chief, brother-in-law
-to Omai, and three or four others, who
-all knew him before he went to England, came
-on board. But their meeting was in no wise
-tender—on the contrary, great indifference was
-manifested on both sides, till Omai, taking
-Ootee down into the cabin, displayed his
-treasures of trinkets etc., but more especially
-some red feathers, of a few of which, he begged
-his relative’s acceptance. When this was known
-on deck, the whole state of affairs was changed,
-and Ootee, who would scarcely speak to Omai
-before, now begged they might be Tayos (friends)
-and exchange names—an honour Omai accepted
-with dignity, and Ootee, in return for the
-valuable feathers, sent on shore for a hog. Such
-were the civilities that passed, on our friend’s
-return, and it was evident that all the affection
-was for his property, and not his person. When
-present at some of the barbarous customs, prevalent<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_265"></a>[265]</span>
-in these Islands, Omai, by desire of
-Captain Cook, expostulated with the chiefs on
-their cruelty with so much spirit, as to incur
-their displeasure. The gallant commander
-gives an elaborate account of the dainties prepared
-for him, and some of the ship’s crew, when
-they dined on shore with the two brothers-in-law.
-Captain Cook endeavoured to persuade
-Omai to settle at Otaheite, but his wishes turned
-to Whetea, his native place, where his father
-had originally held land. The Captain thought
-he could get it restored to him, if he would
-make friends with the conquerors, but Omai
-was a staunch patriot, and refused, begging that
-he might be reinstated through the intervention
-of the English arms. No way likely, said Captain
-Cook, who, however, willing to serve him,
-sought an interview with the chief men
-of the Island, to induce them to permit
-Omai to reside at Huaheine. A grand
-function took place, when Omai made his offering
-to the gods, of red feathers, and fine cloth
-from England; and a set of prayers dictated by
-himself, was pronounced, in which his English
-friends were duly remembered, Lord Sandwich<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_266"></a>[266]</span>
-and Tootee (Cook) in particular. He also told
-them of his kind reception in England by the
-King and his Earees, (nobles), that he had returned
-enriched with all sorts of treasures, that
-would be useful to his countrymen, etc., and that
-it was Captain Cook’s wish that they should give
-him a piece of land to build a house, etc.; and
-that if they would not do so——here followed
-some threats, which the Englishman had to disavow,
-and the chiefs were so much edified by the
-gallant sailor’s speech, that one of them assured
-him, the whole Island was his own, and therefore
-he could give what portion he pleased, to his friend.
-The result of all this was, that land was granted,
-and the ships’ carpenters built Omai a house,
-and laid out, and planted his small garden. He
-found several relatives at Huaheine, “who did
-not indeed rob him,” says Captain Cook, “but
-I fear they are scarcely of sufficient influence,
-to protect him from others.” The kind Englishman
-was under great apprehension, at the
-danger Omai incurred from being the only rich
-man in the Island, and he took every precaution
-he could think of, to ensure his safety, declaring
-that he would soon revisit the Island, and if<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_267"></a>[267]</span>
-any one had proved an enemy to Omai, he
-might dread the wrath of the British commander.
-All the English treasures were carried
-on shore, as soon as Omai’s house had progressed
-sufficiently—pots, kettles, dishes, plates, and
-better still, a box of toys and of fireworks—the
-latter an object of pleasure, and fear to the
-inhabitants. But most of the English utensils
-were useless to him here, and he wisely disposed
-of them, for hatchets, or other tools.</p>
-
-<p>Before he sailed, Captain Cook saw Omai
-settled in his own house, with an establishment
-consisting of his brother, and eight or nine
-other men, (no female—Omai was too volatile
-to choose a wife), and there the English officers
-were received with hospitality and excellent
-cheer. Cook made the new householder, a
-present of several fire-arms, which he coveted,
-and had the following inscription cut on the
-house:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="noindent">“Georgius Tertius, Rex;<br />
-2 Novembris, 1777.<br />
-Names { Resolution, <span class="smcap">Jac. Cook</span>, Pr.<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 4em;">{ Discovery, <span class="smcap">Car. Clerke</span>, Pr.”</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_268"></a>[268]</span></p>
-
-<p>At four in the afternoon, of the 2nd of
-November, the two English vessels sailed.
-“Many of the Natives remained on board, to
-hear five guns fired, and then took their leave,
-but Omai lingered, till we were at sea, and then
-returned in a boat, sent to recover a hawser
-that had been broken. He took leave of his
-English friends, and showed a moody resolution
-till he approached Captain Cook, to bid him
-farewell. Then his tears could no longer be
-suppressed, and he wept the whole time the
-boat was going ashore.” Captain Cook heard
-from him when the ships were at Whetea; he
-sent two men in a canoe to say, that he was
-prospering and at peace, and that his only misfortune
-consisted in the loss of a goat, who had
-died in kidding.</p>
-
-<p>One would gladly have heard something of
-the latter days of Omai, and can only hope that
-his state of semi-civilization did not make him
-discontented, with his life in Otaheite, or
-obnoxious to its inhabitants. If, as is most
-probable, the terrible details of his benefactor’s
-murder ever reached him, the grateful heart of
-Omai must have been wrung with sorrow.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_269"></a>[269]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>Count Walewski.</i></h3>
-
-<p>Born, 1801. Died, 1868.—He was the son of
-the Emperor Napoleon I., by a Polish lady of
-rank. When only nineteen he went on a
-diplomatic mission to London, to plead the cause
-of Poland, having inherited from his mother, an
-enthusiastic love for her country. Charles Greville
-says in his Diary, that “his agreeable manners
-and remarkable beauty made him welcome in
-society;” and in 1831, he married Lady
-Caroline Montagu, sister to the Earl of
-Sandwich. He served for a time, under the
-Polish flag; was present at the Battle of Grokow,
-and was decorated with the National Military
-Cross. He afterwards obtained a commission
-in a regiment of French Hussars, but before
-long he laid down the sword to take up the pen.
-Among his past publications was “Un mot sur
-la question d’Afrique, et de l’alliance Anglaise.”
-He became the editor of the <i>Messager</i>, and wrote
-a five-act comedy, called “L’Ecole du Monde,”
-which was put on the stage in 1840.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_270"></a>[270]</span></p>
-
-<p>He resumed his diplomatic career in the same
-year, and was sent to Egypt under the ministry
-of Thiers; he also held several appointments
-under Guizot.</p>
-
-<p>When Louis Napoleon became President,
-Walewski attached himself to his cause. In 1849,
-he went as minister to Florence, and Naples,
-and in 1854, he came as Ambassador to
-England, but was recalled to Paris, the ensuing
-year, to take the portfolio of Foreign Affairs,
-vacant by the resignation of M. Drouyn de
-l’Huys. In this post his connection with, and
-knowledge of, England, made him instrumental
-in cementing the alliance of the two nations.
-In 1856, he presided as French Plenipotentiary
-over the Congress of Paris. In 1860, he
-resigned his post, but was again employed as
-successor to M. Fould. In 1863, he retired
-from public life, it was supposed on account of
-his strong Polish tendencies. He had the
-Grand Cross of the Legion of Honour, and other
-decorations.</p>
-
-<p>He married as his second wife the grand-daughter
-of Stanislaus Poniatowski, nephew
-to the last King of Poland. To France and its
-Emperor, he was an irreparable loss.</p>
-
-<hr class="minor" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_271"></a>[271]</span></p>
-
-<h3><i>William Poyntz, Esquire</i>:</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smcap">By SIR GEORGE HAYTER.</span></p>
-
-<p>Born, 1769. Died, 1840. The last male
-representative of the ancient family of Poyntz.
-His grandfather, Stephen Poyntz, was in diplomacy,
-and employed on several foreign missions.
-He married Anna Maria Mordaunt, cousin of
-the Earl of Peterborough, and Maid of Honour
-to Caroline, Queen of George II. To Mr. and
-Mrs. Poyntz’s care was confided the bringing
-up, of William, Duke of Cumberland, and a
-curious picture was painted, according to the
-taste of the day, in which the Queen presents
-her son to her <i>ci-devant</i> Maid of Honour, the
-lady in the garb of Minerva, and the young
-Prince in the stiff coat and breeches of the
-period. Mrs. Poyntz’s influence at Court stood
-her once in good stead, when she pleaded in
-behalf of Lord Cromartie, under sentence of
-death in the ’15, in compliance with a
-touching appeal from his unhappy wife. The<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_272"></a>[272]</span>
-letter is now in possession of Mrs. Poyntz’s
-great grand-daughter, Mary Boyle. Lord
-Cromartie’s life was spared, though fortune, and
-title were lost to him. The Queen bestowed as
-a dowry on Miss Mordaunt, the estate of
-Midgham, in Berkshire, but the gift is said
-never to have been paid for, out of the royal
-purse!</p>
-
-<p>Stephen died in 1750, and was succeeded
-by his son William, who married a daughter
-and co-heiress of Kelland Courtenay, Esq., of
-Painsford, Devon, by Elizabeth Montagu,
-daughter of Viscount Hinchingbrook. They
-had issue: William Stephen, the subject of this
-notice, Montagu Mordaunt, who died early in
-life, and four daughters; Georgiana, married
-first to Mr. Fawkner, and afterwards to Lord
-John Townshend; Louisa, married, as his second
-wife, to the Hon. George Bridgeman; Isabella,
-married to her cousin, the Earl of Cork and
-Orrery; and Carolina, married to his brother
-Captain, the Hon. Courtenay Boyle. William
-Poyntz was at one time in the Tenth Hussars,
-and afterwards Captain of the Midhurst
-Volunteers. In 1796, he sat in Parliament for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_273"></a>[273]</span>
-St. Albans, and was re-elected in 1802, and
-1806. In 1807, he was returned for Callington,
-and again in 1812-18. He represented
-Chichester from 1823 to 1826, and Ashburton,
-from 1831 to 1835; and then sat for Midhurst,
-till he resigned, and was succeeded by his son-in-law,
-Captain the Hon. Frederick Spencer. In
-politics he was a Liberal in the best sense of the
-word; firm and unwavering in his opinions in
-favour of progress, but opposed to destruction,
-and a staunch upholder of the Church.</p>
-
-<p>In 1794, he married the Hon. Elizabeth
-Browne, only sister, and sole heiress of Viscount
-Montagu, who was drowned the year before at
-the Falls of Schaffausen. By her, Mr. Poyntz
-became possessed of Cowdray Park, in Sussex,
-and an extensive property, where they resided
-almost entirely after their marriage. They
-had two sons drowned in the prime of life, and
-in the sight of both parents, Mr. Poyntz being
-in the boat, and his wife looking on from the
-window of a house at Bognor, where the tragedy
-took place in 1815. Their three daughters in
-consequence became co-heiresses: Frances, Lady
-Clinton; Elizabeth, married to the Hon.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_274"></a>[274]</span>
-Frederick Spencer, who succeeded to the
-Earldom; and Isabella, Marchioness of Exeter.</p>
-
-<p>In 1830, after a happy union of thirty-six
-years, Mrs. Poyntz died, deeply and universally
-regretted; and the widower removed to
-Hampton Court, after a time, to be nearer his
-daughters. For some years before his death, he
-was the cause of great anxiety to his family
-and friends from being constantly subject to
-fainting fits, the result, as was afterwards proved,
-of an accident in the hunting field, in 1833.
-In one of these seizures he expired suddenly, at
-his house on Hampton Court Green, beloved
-and lamented, not only by his surviving children,
-and his two surviving sisters, but by a large
-circle of acquaintance, and friends. In every
-class he was known, and loved for his warm
-heart, his genial humour, his sparkling wit.
-He was interred by the side of his wife, in her
-ancestral chapel in Easebourne Church, adjoining
-Cowdray Park, where a monument had been
-already erected to their two sons.</p>
-
-<p>In early life Mr. Poyntz was a friend, and
-companion of his cousin George, Lord Sandwich,
-by whose will he was entrusted with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_275"></a>[275]</span>
-guardianship of the young earl, then only seven
-years of age. Between the guardian and his
-ward an affection subsisted, scarcely inferior to
-that of parent, and child. Lord Sandwich spent
-many of his holidays at Cowdray, and the
-friendly relations which subsisted between him,
-and Mr. Poyntz were never interrupted till the
-death of the latter, in 1840.</p>
-
-<p>The two families of Poyntz and Browne,
-(Lord Montagu) are now extinct, in the male
-line.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter titlepage" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/deco.jpg" width="100" height="60" alt="" />
-</div>
-
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